THURSDAY, OCTQBER 12, 195I THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1951 PAGE FIVE Co-Recreational Club Will Organize First Meeting Is Announced Town, Country Club Plans Skating, Hikes Tobogganing, bicycling a n d square dancing are only three of the many activities offered by the co-recreational Town and Country Club, which will hold its organi- zational meeting at 5 p.m. today in the WAB. All men and women students at the University interested in parti- cipating in a varied sports pro- gran are eligible to join the club. GLEN MUSSELMAN, manager of the year-old organization, ex- tends a cordial welcome to all and a guarantee of ,fun and activity. The club offers a combined indoor and outdoor program, which includes such activities as ice skating, r o 11 e r skating, square and social dancing, to- bogganing, skiing and swim- ming. When Ann Arbor begins to en- joy spring weather again, the club members will launch upon a pro- gram of bicycle tirps, hikes, horse- back riding and picnics. '- During the holiday season, the Town and Country Club will form a group of basses, baritones, altos and sopranos and have a carolling party. MEMBERS OF the club, along with other WAA co-recrational clubs, are in charge of certain Fri- day night activities at the IM building. Mr. Musselman, as head of the Town and Country Club, works in cooperation with the other members of the Co-recr- ation Board. Mary Peterson, chairman of the board, serves as a representative to the WAA Board. Members of the club will set the dates for meetings and will help to plan activities, some of which may be in conjunction with Youth Hostel. The Town and Country Club was organized a year ago last spring after a poll conducted by the WAA disclosed that a large percentage of students were in- terested in belonging to such an organization. LAST YEAR invitations were sent to every organized house on campus and a group met in order to discuss plans for the club's first year. Men To Receive Union's Calendar Union calendar of events will be distributed Friday in all the men's houses on campus. For men not living in an organ- ized housing group, the calendar will also be available from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in the Union lobby. This semester's calendar con- tains a listing of all the cultural, athletic, 9lnd social functions on campus in a convenient form that is punched for insertion in a 3 ring binder. --Daily-L. Wilk COFFEE TIME-These members of the Town and Country Club seem to agree that food cooked outdoors tastes extra good. Outings are just a part of the many varied activities of this co-recreational club--they also plan dancing, skiing and ice-skating. NUMEROUS NOTICES: Bulletin Boards on Campus PerfOrm Useful Functions Union To .Give Record Dance Sunday Evening Plans To Include Glen Miller Couples desiring to give their weekends a one last fling before MondIay classes will have an op- portunity to attend the Union rec- ord dances to be held from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Sundays in the Ter- race Room of the Union. This Sunday's session will fea- ture Glen Miller on records as well as many other popular recording stars. To add to the record dance's in- formal atmosphere, playing cards will be available to couples who like to catch up on their math by playing canasta or bridge. Since the Union study hall will also be open on Sunday evenings for Union men and their dates, couples will be able to combine their classes and studies with con- gas and sambas.' Union officials stress the fact that the record dances are free from any cost-students simply have to walk in. This marks the second year of the Union Sunday night dances. Last year the dances were started as a part of the new Union coed- participation policy. Under the present Union ruling University coeds accompanied by Union members also have a limited use of Union recreational facilities. Women are also invited for the second year to participate in the Union all-campus bridge tourna- ments which are held at 7 p.m. Wednesday nights in the Union Ballroom. PositiOns Open For SophCab Amass meeting for girls wishing to work on Sophomore Cabaret will be held a't 7:30 p.m. tonight in the League. Positions are open on various committees including business, tickets, finance, publicity, decora- tions, make-up, costume, special booths and ushering. Chairman Sue Nasset has an- nounced the cast of the floor show, which will center around a New York pawnshop owner. Leads will be taken by Clara Jane Fredericks, Margaret Paysner, Elaine- Roth- man, Betty Magyar, Sue Spurrier and Helen Kermath. Dancers include Bev Blancett, Mary Brindak, Janet Deane, Lucy Lindsay and Judy Ohmans. Ann Christensen, Margie Darling, Ag- gie Dunn, Bonnie Finestone, Diane Halbrook, Janet Hodges, Joan Kleinpell, Joyce Roper, Jackie Schiff, Jane Thompson, Mary Beth Watson and Barbara Young. Panhel Ball Members of the publicity committee for Panhel Ball will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Lea- gue. Combining some chemical reac- tions with more elbow grease the Phi Rho Sigma professional medi- cal fraternity succeeded in creat- ing a winter atmosphere for a pre- season Christmas party last Satur- day. While rain was falling outside, snow balls were flying inside the Phi Rho house. Disregarding Mo- ther Nature, the Phi Rho men "manufactured" snow with the aid of a gasoline motor, ethal chlor- ide, and a deep freezer. The secret of success in making synthetic snow was not discovered without several trial tests. 'The snow was finally produced when a gasoline motor compressed air which caused ethal chloride to be sprayed into a deep freezer. Twenty-five pound blocks of ice on aftile floor transformed the Phi Rho dining room into an ice skat- ing rink. A cool night breeze from open windows helped to keep the ice from melting. The stairway was converted into a ski slide by placing boards paral- lel to the steps. The medical men's prescription for a slippery slide is boric acid "rubbed well into the boards." Straw was piled on the landing to prevent accidents. Not content in just keeping fing- ers crossed in hopes that the win- ter phenomena woudln't melt, the Phi Rho men constructed a series of drain pipes to prevent any drownings. An igloo decorated basement served as a retreat for the guests to warm up after the strenuous cold winter activities. Russ Plim- mer and his band donned eskimo furs to complete the winter won- derland at Phi Rho Sigma. Read Daily Classifieds -Daily-Bruce Knoll IT'S A TOUCHDOWN--Loraine Stuerzl carries the ball across the goal line in the first Footbowl game, held on the diag. Sparking her teammates to a 12-6 victory over the men, Loraine leads with a flying wedge. The game was held as a publicity stunt for the Independent-sponsored dance, A-Hop, to be held Saturday, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the League. A-H ops Out pass pponents; Romp to Victory in Footbowi "'v""::{d "iir. :.:.T?:?::.:.}y.} ;{:.}:^* ..:": Rusty bicycles for sale, rides to football games for hire and houses for rent-these are just a few of the numerous notices that can be found on the many bulletin boards no campus. Few students realize the import- ant function these handy bits of wood perform at the University. For example there are over 200 notices on the Union bulletin board at all times. The variety of sub- jects posted on the board have given it the title of the campus swap shop. In order to accommodate the large flow of advertising, the Un- ion officials have issued a new rul- ing to the bulletin board. All no- tices to be placed on the board must be typed on 3 by 5 inch cards and approved by the officials in the Union Student Offices. To clear the constant muddle caused by the many notices, a new system of placing ads for similar things on brightly colored pieces of paper will be started by the Un- ion in the near future. Coeds plagued by bleak, barren dormitory walls have found bulle- tin boards to be a decorating aid. By hanging a bulletin board on one of the walls and covering it with dance favors and pictures of their favorite beaus, coeds can brighten up their rooms and give them a collegiate look. A spirit of rivalry is often start- ed by roommates to see who can collect the most party favors and knick-nacks to hang on their bulletin boards. To keep students informed and to give them some timely reading material while smoking a between- classes cigarette in Angell Hall, the journalirm department main- tains a bulletin board in the An- gell Hall lobby on which the latest news dispatches are placed. If any student needs anything from a few rusty fish hooks to a coed to type his English themes, he needs only to look on one of the many campus bulletin boards to satisfy his needs. Ten Counselors In League Off ice To Ai dRushees In preparation for the informal rushing session whch will begin Oct. 23, rushing counselors are now holding office hours from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Marianna Larson, chairman of the counselors, has urged senior, junior and sophomore coeds who are interested in rushing to con- tact their counselors as soon as possible. Ten counselors each year are chosen from ten sorority houses to aid rushees in the complicated business of rushing. Coeds who have these jobs are for all purposes disaffiliated from their houses, since they do not wear their pins, nor do they enter into their houses' rushing periods at any time. Since the installation of this system two years ago, much im- provement has been made, and League officers feel that it has become an important part of rushing. FRIGID FESTIVITIES: Synthetic Snow, Ice Create Atmosphere at Phi Rho Party The diagonal was the scene of a strange footbowl game yesterday when the Kickoffs met the A-Hops in a clash that will probably make advertising history. Under the coaching of Alberta Corht, the Kickoffs, team of eleven Michigan men, and the A- Hops, composed of evelen Michi- gan co-eds (and three Michigan men) took the field in a publicity stunt for the Independent's annual dance, A-Hop, to be held Satur- day. A band, featuring Bob Leopold on trumpet, Dave Cavitch on the saxophone and Jack Robertson pounding the drums, played typi- cal football music, including the 'Victors' and 'Varsity.' Leopold also refereed the game, with slight leanings towards the girls' team. Cheers were led for an enthusi- astic audience by Tom Leopold, complete with huge A-Hop mega- phone. The game was played on a unique gridiron. Instead of yard markers, the distances were mark- ed by days of the week. Wed- nesday stood at the fifty yard line, with the goal being Satur- day, the night of A-Hop. Thurs- day and Friday stood at appropri- ate intervals. The final score, as one might suspect, was A-Hops 12, Kickoffs 6. Both touchdowns for the girls were made by Loraine Stuerzl, on a flashing pass attack accompan- ied by a flying wedge. Jim Kanitz scored for the men in the first half on a pass from his teammate. Players wore the Footbowl emb- lem-a foot in a bowl, on their shirts along with their team name. 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