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December 03, 1949 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1949-12-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1949

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

s

PAGE FIVE

ISH Will Stage
Fll-CampusParty

Drawn to the Rackham Build-
ing tonight by the hum of a spin-
ning roulette wheel or the soft
strains of continental music, par-
ty-goers will find an authentic
representation of France's notori-
ous Monte Carlo.
From 9 p.m. to midnight the In-
ternational Students' Association
will sponsor a party guaranteed
to delight and excite the gambler.
ALL WHO enter will be given
an equal amount of stage money
which, Lady Luck withstanding,
they can parlay into millions. The
one who accumulates the most,
cash by midnight will receive a
grand prize.
Students can break the bank
or their billfolds at Galloping
Dominoes, Great Hazard, Pitch-
a-chip, Roulette, Horse Racing
or the gaming table.
An empty pocket need not curb
the fun. The house, unusually
generous, will provide a variety of
entertainment in addition to the
games for those reckless individ-
uals who lose their lucre before
the evening's end.
* * *
GUESTS MAY lounge at the
bar where punch and sandwichesi
will be served, or dance to music
supplied by a student band and a
juke box.
hRalph Gregorian, general
chairman of the affair, prom-
ises several surprise features de-
Sophs Slate
Sha key' Stunts
Cavaliers will clamor, romancers
will romance and stunts will
startle when Sophomore Cabaret's
"As You Shake It!" preants the
graces and disgraces of Shake-
speare and his buddies Dec. 9 and
10.
The multitude of daily visitors
to a popular State Street eating
spot have a chance to win a free
ticket to "As You Shake It!" pro-i
vided they can guess the correct
number of gum drops in a gigan-
tic jar which is on display there.
An easier method of carrying
books came the way of all sopho-
more women Tuesday, in the form
of shopping bags distributed to
one and all.
Emblazoned with "It's in the
Bag", they serve to enlighten the
< campus as to the Cab's future.
Seeing was believing when the
signs of a well known shaving-
soap manufacturer came to life on
the Diag this week. Standing at
strategic points along the way-
fare, they invited all students to
join Shakespeare and his com-
panions at the Cabaret.
- According to the slogan of a
recently constructed addition to
the Diag, any campus male may
escape being in the doghouse if
he asks his girl to Soph Cab.
With a ticket to support his
claim, he will be sure to escape
providing companionship for
Rover in his habitat.
Even though upperclassmen
may have the opinion that sopho-
more women have gone berserk,
r the Cabaret's publicity committee,
under the leadership of Cathy
Sotir, assure them, "There's more
to come!"

signed to entertain and amuse
those who attend.
The party will be I.S.A.'s biggest
social event of the year. Students
who have actually visited Monte
Carlo will supervise decorations
and re-create, as accurately as
possible, the exotic atmosphere
for which the casino is famed.
Tickets may be purchased from
12:30 to 1 p.m. and from 4 to 6
p.m. in the League and Union to-
day, and at the door this evening.

The party
campus.

is open to the entireI

Paul Bunyan

Wi
To

I

I

Bring Ox

"Formal"

Having recently arrived from
their cold quarters in the north,
the mighty Paul Bunyan and his
blue ox, Babe, plan to be on hand
to witness the gala event in their
honor at Waterman Gym tonight.
The Paul Bunyan "Formal,"
presented annually by the Univer-
sity Forestry Club, gives students
a chance to really "let their hair
down" as the usual formal attire
gives way to blue jeans, plaid
shirts and anything else adding
to the comfort of the wearers.
COUPLES WILL whirl from 9
p.m. to 1 a.m. among pine trees
and logs decorating the dance
floor to the music of Don Pablo
and his orchestra. Rae Kelly,
chairman of the "formal" wants
to assure those students who only
get confused by rhumba and tango
strains that Pablo is not a South
American Band.
Entertainment during the in-
termission will be a surprise.
The winners of the pine-cone
guessing contest will also re-
ceive their plaid shirts as prizes
at this time.
.* * *
THE FORMAL atmosphiere of'
the dance will not be overlooked
as spruce corsages will be avail-
able for the coeds, and photog-
raphers will be on hand to take
pictures of the spirited couples.
Tickets will be sold today in
the lobby of the Administration
Building and at the door before
the dance.
Having designated this eek as
"Plaid Shirt" Week, the Forestry
school has been wearing a variety
of checks and plaids on campus.
"Enraged" members of the Forest-
ry Club caught unloyal Chester
Ziemienski arriving in class one
day wearing a sweater and proper-
ly punished him with a lynching
on the diag.
Weddings &
Engagements
Yale-Moxon
Miss Barbara Yale became the
bride of Carl R. Moxon Thursday,
Nov. 24 in the First Presbyterian
Church, Ann Arbor.
The bride's parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Leon W. Yale of Johnson
City, N.Y., while Mr. Moxon is
the son of John I. Moxon of Spar-
ta, Mich.
Mrs. Moxon, a 1944 literary col-
lege graduate, is a staff member at
Lane Hall. Her husband, who is
affiliated with Sigma Nu, will re-
ceive his Master's degree in Busi-
ness Administration in February.

Rules Change
In Basketball
For Women
New basketball roles were in-
troduced last week to the record-
breaking 115 women's basketball
teams scheduled to compete in
the intramural tournaments which
began Tuesday.
Major changes in the game are
four-fold, said Miss Marie Hart-
wig, Associate Supervisor in Phy-
sical Education. The limited drib-
ble ncw allows a play to bounce
the ball twice in succession.
:e
FOULS NOW impose virtually a
double penalty. Time-out is taken,
a free shot is given and the ball
is again awarded to the same for-
ward out of bounds whether the
free shot is made or not.
Time-outs -.611 rnot be taken
in tournament play at the Uni-
versity, since playing-time is
too limited to allow stopping the
game after each foul,
Legalizing unlimited substitu-
tion is designed to encourage
fatigued players to leave the game
knowing they can come back at
any time. Team fouls no longer
count towards disqualifying the
captain.
"SPEEDING UP the game
through these new rules has ren-
dered man to man defenese some-
what ineffective," said Miss Hart-
wig. The limited dribble may in-
crease fouls and als the tecnique
of officiating has been affected,
with a greater burden placed on
timers and scorers, she added.
Rules are changed annually
with a view toward attaining
the best basketball game for
women. A year's experimenta-
tion precedes publication of rule
changes. They are then given
out to the country to test, and
if popular opinion favors them
the rules stay.
Much promotional and educa-
tional work is needed to acquaint
all high school and college teach-
ers with the rule changes, Miss
Hartwig believes.
A basketball clinic has been
slated for tomorrow at Michigan
State Normal College. All persons
interested in seeing the changes
demonstrated may attend.
Coed Cale dal'
Recognition Night-Women who
wish to work on the publicity,
patrons or programs committees
for Panhellenic Recognition Night
may sign up in the Undergraduate
Office in the League today.
Junior Dues - All junior women
who have not paid their junior
dues or Ann Arbor coeds who have
not been contacted may pay at a
booth in the League lobby from
9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5
p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday.
Women who do not pay their
dues are not eligible to partici-
pate in the Junior Girls' Play,
said Betty Tornquist, JGP finance
chairman.
JGP-Coeds interested in work-
ing on JGP Programs Committee
may attend a meeting slated for
5 p.m. Monday in the League.
The room number will be
posted and women are asked to
bring their eligibility cards said
Barb Hansen, chairman of the
Programs' Committee.
This years look is the golden

look. Take a dress of the stiffest
satin possible with a touch of
lace, add imaginative bits of
jewelry and then you'll be a can-
didate for Mt. Olympus.

POCTURE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NVEWWS

' o R T A B L E T H E A T E R - The Alu-Palast (above) in Hamburg, Germany, is an aluminum
portable theater with a stage 40 by 66 feet and seats for 1,200 and can be assembled in 12 days.

THREE-STORY CABIN - Three-story log cabins
house residents in Whitehorse, Yukon territory, sub-Arctic jump-
ing-off place for the rush into Keno Hill lead and silver area.

I

PLAN E-BOU ND PRIZE P A C K A G E S- Three prize miniaturepoodles, Peter;'Dd.
do and Jacko, garbed in blue and maroon jackets, wait at London Airport for a plane to America.'

P Q S T E R C I R L - Barbara Teig, 3, of Slayton, Minn., has
been selected-as the poster girl for the Sister Elizabeth-Kenny
Foundation's 1949 appeal for funds to combat infantile paralysis.

A:

. o
Everyone's
Happy...
caus they are getting 1 Oc
for every ENSIAN Year-
book that they sell. What
an opportunity to make
money and be a salesman.

TOUR DIFFERENT
' WAYS TO WEAR IT!
4

$595

} .

MEW OWN SMIQ

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