THE MICHIGAN DAILY
PAGE FIVE
U U
PRE-VACATION FUN:
Union, Little Club To Provide
Entertainment This Weekend
Union .
For the last weekend before
spring vacation, the Union has
planned a full program of events
ranging from a Saturday, after-
noon mixer to its regular Sunday
evening entertainment.
Starting off the festivities will
be the "Spring Tonic Mixer" to
be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday
in the North Lounge of the Union.
* * *
JOEL SABASTIAN of WEQN,
the East Quad radio station, will
announce the record music to
which students may dance, and
Jay Mills, master of ceremonies
at the recent Gulantic's Review,
will add his talents to the enter-
tainment program.
In addition, there will be 175
hostesses representing the vari-
ous dormitories and sororities
on campus. Admission will be
free.
Next on the agenda will be the
"Wishing Well Ball" to be pre-
sented from 9 p.m. to midnight
Saturday in the Union Ballroom.
TRANSFERRING the spring at-
mosphere from the Arb to the
Union, the decorations committee
is hard at work constructing arti-
ficial trees which will line the
concourse to the ballroom. Inside
the room, an authentic wishing
-well will be constructed with arti-
ficial grass serving as the back-
ground.*
Even the bandstand will be
decorated to follow the spring
theme with a canopy over it
and a small yellow palisade
around the bottom.
Concluding the weekend of fun
will be the regular Sunday evening
entertainment to be presented
from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. in the
Union.
Little Club ..-.
Vacation minded students may
musically follow the paths of their
thoughts from 8:30 p.m. to mid-
night today, at the Association of
Independent Men's "Little Club"
on the second floor of the League.
For those who dream of the
sunny spots of South America, Bob
Leopold and his combo will play
a variety of rhumbas and tangos,
and those who will be traveling
a little farther north may dance
to the song of New Orleans, "Ba-
sin Street Blues."
* * *
THE WEST will enter the eve-
ning's program via "California,
Here I Come," and couples from
the Great Lakes area reminisce
with "Chicago."
Those who prefer to spend
their vacation at home, may
practice up for their parties
with the Charlestons which will
be played during the evening.
Daydreamers will not be neglec-
ted, for the combo is planning on
a few numbers such as "Out of
Nowhere" which = will be played
specially for these couples.
TAKING A REST from their
musical travels, couples may visit
the club's "bar" at which refresh-
ments will be sold.
Following t h e pattern of
nightclubs throughout the
world, the club will also present
a floorshow in which Conwell
Carrington will be featured.
Carrington will present a num-
ber of specialty acts.
Now entering its fifth week as
a campus nightspot, the club will
reopen after spring vacation.
For those who spend the entire
evening at the club, admission
will be $1 per couple, and those
coming after 10.30 p.m. will be
charged 74 cents.
Dental History
To Be Theme
Of Odonto Ball
This Year's Dance
To Mark Anniversary
Of Diamond Jubilee
Dentistry down through the
years will set the mood for the
annual Odonto Ball, which will
be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. to-
night in the Union Ballroom.
The evolution of dentistry will
be depicted in the decorations for
the dance. Murals and pictures
will portray scenes from the life
of a pioneering "tooth-doctor"
down to the familiar dentist's of-
fice of today.
Since this year marks the dia-
mond jubilee anniversary of the
founding of the University dental
school, this theme will also be in-
corporated into the decorations.
The University dental student
from 1875 to 1951 will be featured.
Although the entertainment for
the dance has not yet been re-
vealed, the committee has an-
nounced that it will be in keep-
ing with the theme.
Programs will also carry out
the idea of the evolution of den-
tistry.
The musical mood of the dance
will be provided by Frank Tinker
and his orchestra.
Soph Petitions
Due at League
Petitions for sophomore posi-
tions are due at 5 p.m. today at
the League Undergraduate Office.
Forty-five positions are open
to freshmen women. Petitions
may be obtained in the League
Undergraduate Office, or from
the activities chairmen in the
dormitories and league houses.
ACTIVITIES chairmen have
been supplied with information
about petitioning procedures and
the duties of the various positions
by the League Activities Work-
shop.
Among the positions open are
three sophomore places on the
interviewing and nominating
committee, six sophomore aides
on judiciary committee and
four sophomore captains on the
dance class committee.
Also the following positions are
open on the Sophomore Cabaret
central committee: chairman, as-
sistant chairman, secretary, as-
sistant secretary, treasurer and
assistant treasurer.
* * *
THE LIST continues with
chairmen of the hostess, programs,
refreshments, and special booths
committees, chairmen and assist-
ant chairmen of the decorations,
publicity and ticket committees.
The floor show committee has
places for the director, assist-
ant director, chairmen and as-
sistant chairmen of the cos-
tume, dance, make-up and mu-
sic committees.
Stage manager and assistant
stage manager, chairman of the
ushering committee and chairman
of script committee completes the
list of positions.
ON THIE HOUSE
By NAN TAYLOR
"PARTIES, PARTIES all around the town." ,
From gay New Orleans and the wild, woolly west to the crowded
chambers of the Kefauver crime investigation, students are gathering
party ideas.
* * * *
Kappa Nus and their dates will live for an evening in the
captivating, exciting city of New Orleans. Southern belles and dashing
gentlemen will mingle with the waterfront and shanty-town element
at the KN's Southern jazz spot.
CAP PISTOLS IN HAND, cowboys and cowgirls will ride herd
at-the Acacia Bar X and Square D Beta this weekend. Hitching posts
and other western features will set the mood of by-gone days on the
great plains.
* * * *
"Kefauver has nothing on us," was the comment of the
Phi Rho Sigma spokesman. Not to be outdone by a senatorial commit-
tee, the fraternity has decided to have its own crime-time (investiga-
tion, that is). The brothers will all be duly investigated, and "wanted"
signs bearing their pictures and lists of crimes will be displayed in the
"rogues gallery."
OLD MOVIE TITLES and Frank Costello characters will meet at
the Delt party Saturday night. Combining two ideas into one, the
fraternity is basing the event on Hollywood and Kefauver themes.
* * * *
Since the rainy weather seems to have put a damper on outdoor
activities, the Delta Chis have decided to make-believe it's Spring
anyway at their "we wish we were in the Arb" party. Decorations
will create an appropriate atmosphere, complete with beer (make-
believe, of course).
"GUNTHER BDU" will make his debut on campus at the AEPi
house this Saturday. The big question is "Who is he?" No one seems
to know exactly who, or what, he is, but the fraterpity is preparing to
welcome him with a big birthday cake and lots of presents. Each
couple attending the party must bring a gift for "Gunther," who will
donate them to the children in the University Hospital. '
* * * *
Tau Delta Phis and Phi Kappa Sigmas have decided that they
would rather stay home and study Saturday night instead of having
parties. (APRIL FOOL!) The Tau Delts will observe the eve of April
1 in Joe King's Ratskeller, while the Phi Kaps will celebrate the evening
among foolish things.
"FOOLS' FROLIC" will mark Greene House's observance of the
coming of the first day of April. Sub-titled "Stolton's Folly" in
recognition of their social chairman, the dance will feature pictures
of the house fools.
There will be "fooly" times at Prescott and Adams House also.
"Pier Six" and the type of people who inhabit it will make their
appearance at the Sigma Pi house this weekend.
DELTA SIGMA PI COUPLES will return to their second child-
hood at the fraternity "Baby Snooks" party.
Psi Omega will hold a buffet supper before Odonto Ball
tonight.
Through the "French sewers," Phi Taus and their dates will
make their way to the Parisien Cellar," the scene of the fraternity's
annual Apache Brawl.
KAPPA SIGS and their dates will go to the house after Union
Opera tonight to relax and review the performance over coke and
other refreshments.
Women attending the Phi Sigma Delta party tomorrow night
will get an idea of "what goes on at a fraternity house after the
girls leave." Members have prepared a skit to give the coeds the scoop
on post-party time at the house.
This weekend, it's pledge formal dinners and dances at Sigma
Chi, Alpha Sigma Phi and Sigma Nu, Alpha Chi Omega and Sigma
Delta Tau.
Ted Smith and his orchestra will play for the Law Club's annual
"Hillary Term Dance," which is the annual spring dance presented
by the lawyers.
CLANKING CHAINS and eerie ghosts wil invade Anderson
"Haunted" House tomorrow night. Weird and fantastic decorations
will create a spooky mood.
Lloyd House members and their dates will gamble away tomorrow
evening at the fabulous "Monte Carlo."
To honor the freshmen in the house who are about to take a gross
anatomy exam, Alpha Kappa Kappa is holding the "Skeleton-Rattle
Ball," an informal record dance.
Songs on tape-recorders will set the musical mood at the Phi
Sigma'Kappa house.
PLATTERS WILL ALSO SPIN at Chi Phi, Alpha Chi Sigma,
Allen Rumsey House, Tau Kappa Epilon, Phi Alpha Kappa, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Phi, Delta Sigma Phi
and Chicago House.
Phi Delta Theta will hold an informal dance with an orchestra
tomorrow night.
Honor Society
Releases List
Of Candidates,
Alpha Lambda Delta, national
freshmen women's honorary so-
ciety, has announced the names
of 62 coeds who, having attained
a 3.5 scholastic average, are eli-
gible for membership in the or-
ganization..
To be initiated, coeds may re-
gister at a booth which will be
open from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday
and Tuesday in the League lobby.
Those women who are eligible
to join are: Joan Bachmann, Hel-
en Beatson, Phyllis Bettman, Bev-
erly Blair, Marcia Blumberg, Alice
Bogdonoff, Nancy Bonvouloir, Ann
Broman, Elizabeth Brophy, Mary
Ann Chacarestos, Nancy Davis,
Barbara Dowd, Janice Everett,
and Karin Fagerburg.
The list continues with: Lois
Fink, Ann Frank, Beverly Goerke,
June Granstrom, Evelyn Gross-
man, Ann Hatch, Frances Hill,
Charlotte Hoyt, Catherine Hutch-
ins, Shirley Ind, Doreen Kollen-
berg, Ellen Kurath, Naomi Lem-
key, Sibyl Lutz, Roberta Mac-
Gregor, Millicent McIntyre, and
Mary Malcolm.
An Angell House team is the
new campus champion basketball
team.
Kappa Kappa Gamma held this
title until Wednesday afternoon
when the challenge game was
played.
* , ,*
KAPPA WAS the official winner
of the 'A' tournament in the WAA
all-campus tourney; Angell House
had procured the first place posi-
tion in the 'B' tournament.
As winner of the 'B' tourna-
ment, Angell was in third place
in the all-campus positions. It
was their privilege to challenge,
first, the runner-up of the 'A'
tournament, Newberry, the sec-
ond place team.
This game was played Tuesday
and Angell House came out the
victors by a score of 34 to 32.
Angell House Defeats Kappa
In Tournament Challenge Play
challenged the first place Kappa
team.
The score was close in this
game, too. In fact, the game
was won by two points, 28-26.
It has seldom, If ever, happened
that a 'B' tournament winner has
beaten the 'A' tournament first
place team, thus achieving the of-
ficial first place title. Often in
WAA tournament history, the 'A'
tourney runner-up has been beat-
en in challenge games and has
had to forfeit its second place po-
sition and be content witht tixd
place.
Classification in either 'A' or
'B' tournament depends on whe-
ther or not a team wins 'its first
tournament game. Winners are
automatically placed in the 'A' di-
vision and losers in the 'B'.
Thus, the two top teams in 'A'
receive the first and second places
while the winner of 'B' is' third
with the privilege tQ challenge the
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY
GUNTHER BDU
AE Pi
March 31
Mo==o<==>;ao0'o®tXno<: ~
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4 ANN OWENS
. FROM FAR AWAY GUATEMALA ,.
WE BRING BEAUTIFUL THINGS
TO YOU «.-.«
Skirts and dresses in colors as soft and -dusty
as the land itself; pink, blue, beige, green.
The same prices in our shop that you pay
in Guatemala City: 0
$10.95, $21.95 and $25.00
a
500 E. Liberty St. Phone 3-8781
)O)l OtUsC t 3 <= yo t
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7he lxury o'
SILK
POLKA DOTS
GAY PRINTS
TINY FLORALS
PASTEL AND
DARK SILK
SHANTUNGS
from
Your good man Friday for
everything in fine music
A _1I
Double Duty Dresses
Street-length formals, which
may lead a double life as evening
gowns and as cocktail dresses,
will be shown more and more this
spring. Either strapless with
matching bolero jackets or top-
ped in a peasant blouse style, the
dresses are invariably full-skirted
-either gathered or gored.
IL
" MA " t~lar4 I
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... in Ann Arbor
508 East William St.
I
SHEET
MUSIC
$1695
to $35
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Sizes from 9-15,
10-44, 121/ to 241/2
So right for travel, town,
office is this dotted silk
surah at left. Its push-up
sleeves and convertible
neck make it doubly at-
tractive, at 25.00.
MINIATURE SCORES-MUSIC ON MAY FESTIVAL PROGRAM:
Violin Concerto in D Minor, Op. 47 (Sibelius), $2.00.
Symphonie Fantastique, Op. 14 (Berlioz), $2.50.
Symphony No. 1, Op. 10 (Shostakovich), $2.50.
Die Moldau (Smetana), 85c.
The Hebrides "Fingal's Cave" Overture (Mendelssohn), 55c.
Euryanthe Overture, Op. 81 (Weber), 50c.
Rosenkavalier Waltzes, First Sequence (R. Strauss), $1.75.
OPERA VOCAL SCORES:
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