FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Union To Begin Record Dance Series i ' O THIE HOUSIE 'KICKOFF' KAPERS: Elliott To Play for Annual A-Hop at League Bridge, Canasta, Top Platter Hits To Be Featured Weary couples, exhausted from the strain of long week-ends will have an opportunity to relax at the Union record dances to be held from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Sundays in the Terrace Room of the Union, The top recording stars in the country will perform for the in- formal dances. This Sunday Glenn Miller will be featured with some of his leading record hits. Card fiends can practice up on their bridge and canasta between records, for the Union will provide playing cards and card tables to add to the informal atmosphere of the dance. Union officials wish to empha- size the fact that the Sunday eve- ning disk dances will be provided free of cost to any campus cam- pus couples that want to come. If dancers find the strain of homework is overwhelming, they can plan to spend part of their time studying in the Union study hall, Room 3-D, which will be open to dates every Sunday evening. Hungry couples will also be able to buy snacks in the Union snack bar which is also open to coeds with escorts as a part of the Un- ion's new coed-participation poli- y. University coeds accompanied by Union members have a limit- ed use of the Union recreational facilities under the present Union ruling. A-Hop Tickets All A-Hop tickets that have not been sold must be handed in at the League Undergraduate Office between 9 a.m. and noon tomorrow morning. By BEA JOHNSON Parties, the Hoosier football game and dances will spark house activities this week-end. Some houses will start their social program tonight. * * * Final preparations are being made for the season's first big all- campus dance set for tomorrow night, Assembly's and Association the --Daily-Bruce Knoll DISC JOCKEYS-Sandra Reynolds, '54, and Mark Oscherwitz, '53, sort records for the first in a series of Sunday evening record dances to be held from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Sundays in the Terrace Room of the Union. New Coeds Urged to Try out Old members of "Michifish," the WAA-sponsored swimming club for women, will meet at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Union pool. 'Tryeuts for membership in the Michifish will be held from 9 to 11 e.m Saturday, Oct. 20 and 27. ** * IN ORDER TO qualify for ac- ceptance into the swmming club, women must be able to perform satistactorily the basic strokes . few other requirements include the ability to do the stanzling frort c:ve and the back dolphin. Those coeds who are unsue- pfayl in their bid for member- ship mnay take advantage of in- 0 ANN OWENS 0 Oh, I was born to wander, " ~ I was bornz to rama But the next best thing is knowing, having, and giving lovely things from far places. 500 East Liberty Phone 3-8731 U) : O~ "' tr)i~) }G C* Y) C1 0 ? st - ci;ion which is offered from 9 to 10 a.m. every Saturday in the Union pool. One of the main projects of the club this year will be the presen- tation of a water balle; at the Un- in ( cn House to be held in Lparch. * * * THE MICHIFISHERS will pee- form in group numbers, trios and duets, dcne to music with costumes and a central theme. Another undertaking of the club, now being planned by the ichelifcsh manager. Peg Sabin, is a 15-minute inte mxssion pro gram in the Varsity Swim Meet in December. Other activities of the club, out- side of regular meetings and prac- tice of stunts, include the inter- mission program for the all-cam- pus women's swimming meet, This year's coed meet will be held 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the In- tramural Building pool. A practice period has been scheduled for competing swimmers at 9 to 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Union pool. Participation points are earned by those entering the various events, which include the 25 and 50 yard free style, breast stroke and back crawl. Diving competi- tion and free style relays will also compose the evening's program. Women To Meet For Faculty Club Social activities of the Faculty Women's Club will be opened to- morrow with a pot-luck supper in the University Elementary Cafe- teria at 6:45 p.m. followed by a square dance in Barbour Gymnas- ium from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Any faculty club member inter- ested in square dancing with an old fashioned caller and music, and who would like to join the group, is requested to call Mrs. Robert Bartels, 508 West Davis Street, Ann Arbor. HOLDING THE WORLD'S record for the most record dances, Alpha Delta Phi is out to top this record by slating another record dance. Costumes from the cave man down to the man in the future will be present at the Alpha Delta Pi "Past and Future" party. * * * * FLETCHER HALL will play host at a mixer with Vicky Vaughan' house after the pep rally. Martha Cook women and their escorts will hold a picnic and barn dance at the Fresh Air Camp. Tomorrow will witness more parties and dances after the game. Dance band music by Chuck Stauffer will serenade couples at Beta Theta Pi while Bill Kline and his band will preside over the Theta Chi "dress up" dance. Record dances are scheduled at the Alpha Kappa Kappa, Delta Tau Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Tau Delta Phi and Triangle fraternities. * * * * "DISEASE TRANSMITTER," another one of Acacia's Little The- ater productions will be the feature event at the fraternity's dance. A take off on Robert Service's poem, "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" will send chills through the guests at Kappa Nu's dance. Delta Chi "hoodlums" and their "gun moll" dates will be watching the roulette wheels closely at a gambling party. A hay loft outside the Pi Lambda Phi house will set the scene for a Hoosier farm party. An Ozzie Shane detective story will bring the house back to the city again. * * * * CHI PHI AND DELTA Sigma Phi have planned buffet supper dances while Phi Kappa Sigma will be swaying to the house combo music and records. Wedding bells will be ringing for the couple pulling the lucky number out of a hat at Alpha Epsilon Pi. A preacher and best man will be on hand to complete the ceremony. Honoring the new pledge class Theta Xi will decorate the walls with cartoons satirizing rushing at a record dance. A soft shoe rou- tine will be featured at the Delta Upsilon dance. Taylor house will jaunt out to the Fresh Air Camp for a wiener roast and barn dance. "Hogen's Alley" will sponsor an Indian Sum- mer dance as Michigan house plays host to Palmer house. ALPHA SIGMA PHI'S and their dates will dress like the title of the record that they bring to the record dance. A coke record dance with parlour games is slated at Alpha Omega, A square dance featuring a caller and lots of straw is scheduled at Theta Delta Chi. Sigmu Nu will swing to a band at their barn dance. Every thing will be "ship shape" at the Sigma Alpha Mu costume party, "Fisherman's Wharf." Fish, nets, buoys, beacon lamps and life preservers will set the wharf atmosphere both inside and outside the house. ** * * ON SUNDAY Kappa Kappa Gamma will entertain the faculty at a tea. The people who pay the bills, parents, will be in the spotlight at the Kappa Delta house tomorrow. Members of the sorority have arranged block seats for their parents at the football game, and a buffet dinner will be served following the event. Fathers' Week-end at the Phi Gamma Delta house will get off to a sound start tomorrow at a noon buffet lunch. Following the football game, at which the dad's will have block seats, guests and hosts will trek off to a bowling alley and work off their excess energy. Returning to the chapter house, talented active members will en- tertain their fathers with an original program. At 12:30 a.m. fathers and sons will serenade one of the campus sorority houses, the name of which remains a secret. A group picture of guests and hosts will be taken following their return from church Sunday morning. The fathers will then desert sons temporarily while attending their own private business meeting. Concluding the week-end of activities will be a banquet scheduled for noon Sunday. ..... ., .,^., r ,, ' k *, Co4.4 * j' =G, '_I tI-" ,,y4I / iiiir Newman Club Dance An "Autumn Whirl" dance will be sponsored by the New- man Club from 8 p.m. to mid- night tomorrow in the base- ment of Saint Mary's Chapel. Gold - Royal - Purple Red-Grey-Green-Maroon Navy - and 100% Wool Fleece - Suede Cloth Gabardine - Checks Tweeds - Broadcloth Velveteen - Poodle-cloth COATS with velveteen lining or little collars - reversibles - zip-linings. Priced from $49.95. PRINTZEES Millium lined coats from $75.00. of Independent Men's annual A- Hop. The dance, entitled "Kickoff," will be held from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. on the second floor of the Women's League. .1 coeds are granted late permission. Authentic representations of familier scenes around town will set the decoration theme. Bob Elliot's band, composed of students in music school, the mar- ching band and other campus mu- sical organizations will play for the dancing, while the Stan Keller Tri), a group from Detroit, will offer in-between entertainment. Pictures to be inscribed with A- Hop, '51. will be taken during the dance. The dance is infoirmal and is open to all students, affiliated and independent Tickets are on sale in Angell Hall, the Union, the Lea- gue or through any committee member. As advertTsed by "_ " r in Mademoiselle,, Better Living The smart is $5.95. is $7.95. VELVETEEN from $22.95. shorties, Long at winter $35.00. lined ILLUSTRATED at $55.00. square crown sailor hat The calf shoulder bag a °. Varsity Night T h e traditional "Varsity Night" program will be pre- sented Friday, Oct. 26, in Hill Auditorium. Tickets cost 65 cents and will go on sale this weekend. the difference it solid comfort the difference in custom styling the difference in longer wear per pair 31 :;:; ii < 't: :; s''. i 2: : A""' {": '$ sS. <; i; S : ?;: .:: i .;: If 'ii 7;,; "S t. {.'t i'.1 , [ti;.{ 'p YLti }: }':~t J: :i ti . .'il 1 .^ : :ti% >+:; v: ;; {' ;:; :,<: ::-% ' c.>: t .: yy .4 J.' J.} ': ! :" " ': .i f :" tiry Jam; J": knit. Green, russet, gold, navy or beige. Sizes 10 to 18. $35. The Wool I nit Dress is a beautiful traveler into fall . . your first class ticket to campus, to everywhere Sleek, figure-flattering knits look to fall with mellow new colors and designs free of clutter, to accessorize as you please. Left: Club collar two-piece knit with fashioned design. Navy, red, green, purple, russet. Sizes 10 to 18. 29.95. Right: Bat-wing sleeve hand-loomed . 'i : i } ~ * COHTS! 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