TH__MII I1IG AI~lt_____ _________ , - - v - 1 1- - Ill-.-..-, - I I LINEN OPERASi MAN% t wted tN 0tvr $8 95 140*4 - 1 v "- , 12 4 -Carlisle Marshall IT ISN'T FAIR-Three members of the Union Social Committee demonstrate a method of cribbing that would probably 6e de- tected by any professor. They promise, however, that there will be no cheating at the Bluebook Ball Saturday - a full measure of entertainment will be given. -N THE IHIOUSIE By PAT BROWNSON Thoughts of spring weather and the prospect of going home are marred only by the lurking cloud of finals just a little more than one week away. One last get-together in the form of a spring formal or maybe a picnic will serve as a brief respite this weekend from more serious pursuits. TYLER HOUSE SENIORS will be honored tomorrow at an in- formal dance to be held in the newly redecorated recreation room. KAPPA SIGMA'S pledge formal will take place tonight at the Washtenaw Country Club. Dinner will precede dancing to Joe Foder's music. THE BALLROOM at the Willow Run Airport will provide a pic- turesque setting for Sigma Phi Epsilon's pledge formal tonight. Party- goers will dine at the Stage Coach Inn beforehand. PICNICKING at the Island is on Chicago House's agenda tomor- row afternoon and evening. There will be ballplaying, singing and the usual picnic dinner. ALPHA SIGMA PHI'S annual sweetheart formal will take mem- bers and their dates into an enchanted forest. Entrance to the house will be gained by going underneath a waterfall at the front door. In- side, hidden lights will illuminate trees covered with angel hair. CHINESE LANTERNS, 120 of them, will be strung throughout1 Kappa Nu's lawn to paint a colorful scene for an open-air party to- morrow. Special guests will be members of Phi Kappa Tau, who col- laborated with them on an IFC Ball booth. JOHNNY HARBERD'S orchestra will be heard at Psi Omega's spring formal tomorrow. * * * A ROUSING FAREWELL will be given tomorrow to the men who are leaving Nelson International House at the end of the semester. A 7 p.m. dinner will precede dancing in the house and on the lawn. THETA XI'S spring formal will also center around a farewell theme tomorrow. White lilacs will bedeck the house as seniors attend their last undergraduate dance. Brute Gulley and his Dixie Five from Detroit will furnish the musical side. * * * SCHOOL DAYS will be reviewed tomorrow as Triangle members plan to honor their 10 graduating seniors. The front of the house will be transformed into a red brick school building. Other decorations will include an assortment of bluebooks, ranging from 0 to 100, and blackboards with caricatures of teachers. Union To Hold Bluebook Ball Elimination Dance. Prizes To Be Given Bluebooks on the ceilings, blue- books on the walls, bluebooks everywhere! This isn't the cry of a student with pre-exam jitters; it's a ver- balization of the theme for the annual Bluebook Ball, which will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union Ballroom. Two couples, chosen by means of an elimination dance, will be awarded prizes to help them for- get their examination worries. The dancers will be eliminated on the basis of the courses they are tak- ing. All those taking a certain course will leave the floor. This process will continue until only two couples remain. Intermission entertainment will include the performance of Alex Popp; pianist and Stuart Heifet and Stanley Caplan, comedy team. Bob Atkins will act as master of ceremonies. Bluebooks attached to streamers will hang from the ceiling. Frank Tinker's orchestra will play against a suitably academic background provided by a giant bluebook. D'ahce programs in the form of graded bluebooks will carry out the final exam theme. There will be blackboards in the corri- dors so- that students can keep in practice for exam-writing. Thedance, which is being held a week earlier than usual this year, is informal. ti - An unexpected series of events followed the announcement of the engagement of Miss Muriel Efty, house director of Stockwell Hall, to Eugene Sanders, assistant resi- dent advisor of Greene House. Wednesday night, Miss Efty was honored by a surprise shower about two hours after closing time. Five hundred coeds crowd- ed into a tiny portion of the main lounge to await the arrival of their house director. ** * A "LOOKOUT" was stationed at the door, and, at a quarter of twelve, she gave the signal that Miss Efty had finally come into view. Carol Eagle, seated at the piano, began to play the loudest piece she knew, and the shocked house director came running with the warning "Quiet Hours!" Five hundred voices cried "Surprise." 'There followed a shower of gifts from every corri- dor including pearl handled steel knives, a toaster, coffee maker, hand-carved salad bowl and a silver candy dish. The Michigan Daily announce- ment was the first that the men of Greene House knew of the in- tended marriage. * * *w NEXT EVENING Miss Efty was throing er ito te shwer SHOE SALE WAA serenaded by the residents of Greene House with such melodies as "A Pretty Girl is Like a Mel- ody," "Tell Me Why;" "I Love You Truly" and "Home On the Range.' The women of Stockwell beat Greene House to the punch, how- ever. At their dinner, which was held on the day the announce- ment was made, they presentec Miss Efty with a corsage and sere- naded her with one 'song: "It's Sc Nice To Have a Man Around the House." After the Greene House serenade the Stockwell women awarded Miss Efty the traditional honor of throwing her into the shower. Surveys y&~werwe AS SEEN IN VOGE- E, Residents of Stockwell Ha l, Greene House Honor Miss Efty at Surprise Shower, Serenad< 9:00-5:30 306 South Stae Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classifieds Co-Recreation. "What is co-recreation?" mur- inured many people yesterday as they passed the library and saw the white box with that word writ- ten on it. This box and another like it were conspicously placed on the Diag and in the Administration Build- ing. They constitute an attempt to make a survey of interest in co-recreation. Co-recreation means the joint participation in sports by men and women. At present there are five clubs under the auspices of the WAA which include this fea- ture. These clubs have been very popular, the WAA reports. Instruction in the chosen sport plus practice with other enthu- siastic participants makes club membership especially valuable. The survey blanks have been distributed to a representative number of students in dormitor- ies, sororities, fraternities and°in- dependent houses. Barbara Moly- neaux, manager of the co-recrea- tion clubs is conducting the sur- vey. The boxes will be in the same places today where the forms may be placed. of GI*rt Sport Shoes Beginning Thursday A.M., May 25 1.-150 prs. BASS WEEJUNS Red - Green - Dark Brown and some Light Tans. $9.95 values at $5.85- Sizes to 10. 2.-190 prs. SANDLER SPORTSTERS Browns - Greens - Reds - (Some with leather; some with crepe sales.) All at one price - $4.85. Sizes to 9. 3.-50 prs. SANDLER BALLETS Black only, some in suede, some in gabardine - $2.50. Sizes to 81/2. VAN BOVEN SHOES" s:J;+k LIGHTER MUSIC FOR SUMMER LISTENING ON 17 NICKELS ARCADE RCA VICTOR RECORDS tCHOPIN FAVORITES First Piano Ouartet MO 1227~............................$4.75 *tCHOPIN: Les Sylphides Boston "Pops" Orchestra under Fiedler DM 1119 ............................$4.75 COPELAND: Appalachian Spring Boston Symphony under Koussevitzky DM 1046 ............................$5.00 *tDELIBES: Coppelia and Sylvia Ballets Indianapolis Orchestra under Sevitzky DM 1305 ............................$7.25 tKHATCHATURIAN: Gayne Ballet Chicago Orchestra under Rodzinski DM 1212 ............................$3.50 *tKHATCHATURIAN: Masquerade Suite Boston "Pops" Orchestra under Fiedler DM 1166 ............................$3.50 MENDELSSOHN: Midsummer Night's Dream NBC Orchestra under Toscanini DM 1280 ............................$6.00 Mi FM2-WAY WONDER Just off North U. on South State $ 95 $22 r I I ' ; fi>.. \\, Jautzen's ""Jubiee" a rayon Sunyana boxer short set Figure-glorifying because it fits perfectly (the hidden drawstring elasticized waist and lined form-fit bra sees to that!), a short set meant to give you the maximum sun and security in action. Blue, white, coral. Sizes 10 to 18. .95 Sport Shop *tOFFENBACH: Gaite Parisienne Boston "Pops" Orchestra under Fiedler DM 1147 ........................ STRAUSS: Rosenkavalier Suite Cincinnati Orchestra under Goossens DM 997........................ *tTCHAIKOVSKY: Sleeping Beauty Stokowsky and His Symphony Orchestra DM 1205 ........................ ....$6.00 ...$4.75 N $:..$8.75 *tTCHAIKOVSKY: Swan Lake St. Louis Orchestra under Golschmann DM 1028 ............................$7.50 fTCHAIKOVSKY: Serenade for Strings Boston Symphony under Koussevitzk y DM 1346 ............................$6.00 'LAvailable on 33 V (LP) t Available on 45 RPM IN N I 1 I a - _ _ c+ tY ,r " n