FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1949 r THE MICHIGAN iAILY Union Will Sponsor First All-Campus Formal Ball Tomorrow On n41 oJOtJe By PAT BROWNSON HAYRIDES appear to be in the spotlight for the socially inclined as many students settle down for a comparatively quiet weekend to cram for those first bluebooks or, in the case of fraternity men, to rest up after the time-consuming job of rushing. ADELIA CHEEVER HOUSE will cheer for the home team tomor- row at an informal dance and listening party. Hot spiced cider, which I hear on high-authority is quite a treat, and cookies will be served. 3 * * * * THE MUSIC OF DAVE WISE will be featured at Tau Delta Phi's r pledge formal tomorrow at the Union. A banquet will precede the dance, which, besides honoring the pledges, will celebrate the recent initiation of Eddie Cantor as an honorary member of the fraternity. Details of the intermission show to be staged by the pledges are being kept secret from the actives. Pledgeswill also present their gift to the house. The novelty programs will be miniature magazines. A HAYRIDE is in the offing for 20 couples who will leave from Adams House at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening. They will return at 10 p.m. to consume hot chocolate and cookies and to dance to records in the recreation room. REPORTS FROM PHI SIGMA KAPPA reveal that "a real old- fashioned wing ding hayride" is planned for tomorrow night. Cider, apples and doughnuts will be waiting for the couples when they return to the house for dancing. RESIDENTS OF TYLER HOUSE and their dates will leave at 2:30 tomorrow via University buses for the Fresh Air Camp. The af- ternoon will be spent playing baseball, and dancing will occupy the time from supper's end until the homeward trek. GREENE HOUSE will go out to the Circle 7 Ranch in Ypsilanti tomorrow night. From there residents and their dates will embark on a hayride, after which they will go back to the ranch for dancing and refreshments. -- - - - - Dance Will Have 'Autumn Nocturne' Theme Intermission To Feature Campus Personalities "Autumn Nocturne" Ball, the first all-campus formal of the year, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the Union Ballroom. Frank( Tinker's orchestra will play against a background of gaily colored fall leaves, designed to carry out the autumn theme. As a special feature, the Union Executive Council has planned in- termission entertainment starring four campus personalities. MIKE CRAVER, a senIor in the business school will act as master of ceremonies. He also will display his vocal talent by singing two se- lections, "Five Feet Two" and "I Want a Gal." Michigan students will prob- ably remember his performance in the Gulantics Review held last spring, He was one of fif- teen entertainers selected for that show. David Corbett, a pre-med sopho- more, will accompany Craver on the piano. THE THIRD student to be fea- tured during intermission is Joyce Howard, a sophomore in the liter- ary school. She will give a mono- rogue representing a salesgirl in a department store. Miss Howard has a featured role in the "Soph Satire," to be presented this evening, and is a member of the Gilbert and Sul- livan Society. Conwell Carrington will con- clude the intermission program by singing "Again" and "Four Winds and The Seven Seas." He, too, performed in the Review last year. Vassar CIu Miss Sarah Blandin ident of Vassar Coli speak to members of th Club at an informal g at 3 p.m. tomorrow at t of Mrs. J. G. Hays, 155 tenaw. At OpenHouse Gulantics "Welcome" will again be on the door tonight when the WAB holds a campus open house. b Sponsored by the Women's ng, pres- Physical Education Club, the get- ege, will together will provide for dancing, ie Vassar card games, refreshments and athering bowling. he home The open house starts at 8 p.m. 5 Wash- and lasts until midnight. Sopho- more women physical education majors will be hostesses. ................. ........ '.44:C.........................e.......: .:Y:......... f -Daily-Ed Kozma BEHIND THE SCENES-Arlene Lange and Harriet Brown press formals in preparation for the Union sponsored 'Autumn 'Noc- turne' ball. The dance will be held tomorrow evening in the Union Ballroom. Dance Ends Rahi-RaliWeek The mode of the evening will be strictly casual wear at the "Hard Times Dance," to be presented from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the main ballroom of the League. Tickets will be sold today on the Diag and in the Administration Building. They may also be pur-I chased at the door of the League tomorrow evening. Sponsored by the Student Leg- islature as the last event in the se- ries of Tug Week activities, the dance will feature the music of Clyde House and his orchestra. Formerly this orchestra was under the leadership of Del Elliott. During intermission, losers of yesterday's battle across the Huron will have a chance to re-establish their prestige in a mixed tug of war. Following this event, Bill Duerr, general chairman of the dance, will award the most casual- ly costumed couple with an appro- priate prize. Ful I Social Calendar Planned Students not journeying to Evanston for the Michigan-North- western game this weekend will find that there are a number of events on the social calendar to help them occupy their time here in Ann Arbor. DANCES: The finale of Tug- Week will be held in the form of an all-campus hard times party at the League tomorrow evening. The Women's Physical Educa- tion Club will hold its regular weekend dance tonight at the W.A.B. "Autumn Nocturne," the first all-campus formal of the season, will be held at the Union from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow. Music will be provided by Frank Tinker's orchestra. "SOPH SATIRE"-Members of the sophomore class will present a musical comedy at 8:30 p.m. to- day in Hill Auditorium. * * * MOVIES-"Black Magic," star- ring Orson Welles and Nancy Guild will be shown at the Michi- gan theatre this weekend. At the Orpheum the feature will be "A Night at the Opera" with the Marx Brothers, Kitty Carlisle and Allan Jones. "Les Miserables," a French movie with English titles, starring Harry Baur, will be presented by the Art Cinema League and the International Relations Club at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. * * * CONCERT-The Vienna Choir Boys will sing at 8:30 p.m. today at Hill Auditorium. NOT JUST A FLOWER BUT A MAKON CORSAGE Blooming now for you . . . 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