31, 195 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE 31, 1951 PAGE FIVE I, Jsica I Show To Star Ellington, Vaughn, Cole SARAH VAUGHAN Other Artists To Perform Program Sponsored By CongerAlumnae Nat "King" Cole, Duke Ellington and Sarah Vaughan will be head- liners in the musical show to be presented at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15, in Hill Auditor- ium. The proceeds from the two per- formances which are being spon- sored by the Lucile B. Conger group of the Michigan Alumnae Club of Ann Arbor, will be used for scholarships and aid for Uni- versity students. MAIL ORDERS for tickets will be accepted at Box 2008 Ann Ar- bor till Nov. 5. After that date, tickets may be purchased at the Hill Auditorium box office. The King Cole group, which has recently become a quartet, has been well known for many years as a trio. Originally when Nat "King" Cole was hired for his first job in Los Angeles, the manager of the night club asked that he bring three other musi- clans with him. 4 The drummer failed to appear that night so the "King" was forced to feature the group as a trio. It was so much of a suc- cess that the group remained a trio until the recent addition of Bongo player Jack Costanzo. * * * THE OTHER members of the quartet that took eleven years to form are Irving Ashby, guitarist and Joe Comfort, bass. The group Opening Night at 'Little Club' To Feature Leopold Combo Nightclubbers Will Be Welcomed by AIM As Student-run Group Begins Second Year OLD KING COLE ... The King Cole quartet wil be among the featured entertainers in the musical show to be presented Thurs- day in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the Lucile B. Conger group of the Michigan Alumnae Club. DUKE ELLINGTON KOSHER DELICACIES: Sigma Alpha Mu To Sponsor First Dinner in Hillel Series Hillel will inaugurate a series of weekly Sunday evening suppeks with'a dinner at the Sigma Alpha Mu house from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Designed especially to accommo- date Jewish students who live in residences where an evening meal is not served on Sunday, the meals will gonsist of Kosher delicatessen sent from Detroit. The dinners are being started now so that when the Hillel Foun- dation building is open in Febru- ary tpe program will be well-devel- oped' and integrated; promoting closer relations among Hillel mem- bers. Until the opening of the build- STUDENT THESPIANS: Speech Department To Give Hopwood Play 'Live on Air' ing the suppers will be served at various sorority , and fraternity houses and other places on cam- pus. The meals will be served on a non-profit basis, according to Sam Dodek, '55, a member of the sup- per committee. For 75 cents a per- son can purchase a meal similar to the one to be served this Sun- day: two corned beef sandwiches, salami, potato salad, coke and re- lishes. Suggestions as to menu variations are welcome, Dodek said. This week only the number of participants will be limited to 150 so that the committee can esti- mate the quantity of food which will be required. has become well known through their many appearances on stage, radio and television shows in ad- dition to many motion picture productions. Sarah Vaughan, who is cur- rently being featured in the mu- sical film, "Disc-Jockey," has won popularity polls for the last four years sponsored by two leading musical magazines. She has since been known as the number one vocalist in the country. Miss Vaughan began her career as a singer in a Newark, New Jer- sey church choir. Since then sev- eral of her record hits have topped the half-million mark in sales. ALSO FEATURED on the pro- gram will be Duke Ellington and his orchestra. In addition to be- ing in ballrooms across the na- WAA Notices Square Dance-There will be a meeting of the WAA Square Dance Club at 8 p.m. today in Barbour Gymnasium. Camp Counselors-Members of the Camp Counselors will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Fencing Room at Barbour Gymnasium. /Anyone interested is invited to attend. Athletic Managers - A meeting is scheduled for the House Athle- tic Managers Club at 5 p.m. today in the WAB. tion and on radio, the orchestra has given concerts in Paris, Car- nagie Hall in New York and the Philharmonic in Los Angeles. The remaining supporting acts of the evening are also stars in their own right. Comedians Timmie Rogers, Stump and Stumpy and Patterson and Jackson will be included in the cast of entertainers. Also appearing will be Peg Leg Bates and the Marie Bryant danc- ers who recently appeared on Broadway in "Begger's Holliday." Cornell Trip sales To End Ticket sales for the Wolverine Special to Cornell are moving into their last three days. On sale from 1 to 4:30 p.m daily at the Administration build- ing, these tickets offer students an inexpensive opportunity to see the game, visit the beautiful Cor- nell campus and hear the joint men's glee club concert. The Wolverine Club has ar- ranged h o u s i n g for students aboard the Special, which leaves from here at 6:55 a.m., Friday, Nov. 9, at near-by Watkins Glen. Game tickets are also available. Trip chairman Bob Golten, '54 said, "This trip will be a great col- lege experience, a n d everyone should count it an integral part of "University life." Without the aid of an ID, stu- dents again may go night-clubbing on campus from 8:30 p.m. to mid- night Friday in the Michigan Room of the League at the As- sociation of Independent Alen's "Little Club." The student-run club is reopen- ing for its second year, providing the campus with new entertain- ment for Friday nights, either throughout the evening or as somewhere to go after a movie. Dancing to the music of Bob Leopold and his combo, couples will find themselves surrounded by a "strictly nightclub" atmos- phere. Tables decorated with whiskey bottle candle holders will be placed around the dance floor. A refreshment bar set up by members of AIM will give couples a chance to satisfy their appetites between waltzes and fox trots with "cokes" and potato chips. Furthering the bistro setting, entertainment will be provided at intermission time when novelty numbers by the band and singing of college songs by the couples will be featured. At other times Beacon Invites Empire Students To Club Activities Students from all the countries of the British Empire and Com- monwealth of Nations and any in- terested American students have a chance to exchange views of poli- tical, socialf and cultural differ- ences at the many functions planned by the BEACON Associa- tion. Picnics, lectures, movies of var- ious countries and other activities are held by the club throughout the year. Beacon arose from the desire of students from the Empire to show their solidarity by working toge- ther for a commondcause, accord- ing to B. V. Govinderaj, secretary of the association. "It is the belief of this associa- tion that if people are consciously and willingly cooperative on a common cause they are destined to succeed. In this way the or- ganization of the group forms a pattern upon which the United Nations could be worked," he said. The association was set up on campus several years ago to bring about an understanding and good relationship of students coming from the countries represented in the Empire, but membership is open to American students. Officers for the fall semester are William Price Brown, president; Mary Austin, vice-president; Gov inderaj, secretary; Jagdish C. Ba- gal, assistant secretary; Greg Leins, treasurer and Prof. Percei- val Price, faculty adviser. ,4crob44 Catpu4 Attendance at conference and speaking engagements will make travelers out of six members of the medical school faculty. Traveling to a meeting and for- um of the American College of Surgeons to be held from Nov. 5 through 9 in San Francisco, will be four members of the surgery department, Dr. C h a r 1 e s E. O'Brien, Dr. Jack Lapides, Dr. Williaii W. Coon and Dr. Robert E. L. Berry. Dr. Reuben L. Kahn, chief of the serology laboratory is attend- ing the meeting of the American Public Health Association at San Francisco. Professor of Surgery Dr. Reuben L. Kahn will attend the Montgom- ery County Medical Meeting Fri- day in Dayton, O. Miss Mildred D. Webber, assist- ant to the director of the Univer- sity Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, h a s been elected recording secretary of the International "Association of Personnel Women. The election took place at the Association's founding meeting held October 20 and 21 in Cin- cinnati. Organized to bring together key women in personnel work through- out the United States, the Asso- ciation willserve as the profes- sional group for women in the field. THREE EDUCATORS have been visiting the School of Education since Monday, according to Dean James B. Edmonson. Members of the Visiting Com- mittee of the American Associa- tion of Colleges ifor Teacher Edu- cation are Dean M. R. Trabue of Pennsylvania State College, Dean Carter Good of the University of Cincinnati and Dean E. T. Mc- Swain of Northwestern University. during the year, other campus tal- ent will take the limelight. 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. AIM opened the club last year as a part of their social program and to provide a service for both independent and affiliated stu- dents. According to student reac- tion the "Little Club" has earned a prominent place in campus so- cial life. Tickets are now available for the premier production of Kenneth Goldstein's 1951 Hopwood Award play, "Live on Air," which the De- partment of Speech is presenting at 8 p.m. tomorrow, Friday and Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Described by its author as a "tragic comedy," "Live on Air" concerns the struggling efforts of a family of Lithuanian immigrants to adjust themselves to their en- vironment. The realistic play reaches a four- dimensional level throigh the use of an experimental device called the "dream sequence," which de- picts in ballet the introversion of the characters. Directed by Prof. William Hal- stead of the speech department, the drama stars Richard Burgwin, Grad., and Carol Kazahn, '52, as the world-weary parents. Mickey Sager, '52, and Herbert Rovner, Skit Chairmen To Be Assigned Fortnite Cues A cue rehearsal for all Fortnite skits will be held at 3 p.m. Sundayj in the League Ballroom. Chairmen and one representa- tive from each skit are requested Fortnite A meeting of the Central Committee of Fortnite will be held tomorrow (Friday) at 4:30 in the League. The room will be posted. to be present. No lines will be read, but each group will be assigned its place of order and seating posi- tion. Directions for getting on and off stage in the proper order will also be given and each chairman and representative is responsible for seeing that her group is following directions. Grad., portray the rebellious chil- dren. Choreography for the dream se- quences is being supervised by Esther E. Pease, associate super- visor Women's Physical Education Department. Original music was composed by Don-David Luster- man, '54 SM. The Thursday night perform- ance will be a student special, with all seats selling for 60 cents. Tic- kets for all performances can be purchased at Lydia Mendelssohn box office, open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. IFC and Panhel Activities on TV A sample of fraternity and sorority life at the University will be featured on the Television Hour at 1 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 5 on one of the Detroit T.V. channels. Beverly Clarke, president - of Panhellenic Association, and Jack Smart, president of the Interfra- ternity Council, will discuss the many activities of the fraternities and sororities on campus. Also appearing on the program will be the Delta Tau Delta fra- ternity chorus, winners in the LFC sing last year and the winning singing group of last year's Lan- tern Night, from the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. This program marks the first in a series of several Teletours on student living. A telecourse on "Man in his World: Human Behavior" will be the lesson subject. Winton H. Beaven, assistant prfoessor of speech, will discuss "The Rules" on a section of the program entitled "Democracy in Action." A student dramatic skit will supplement the lecture material. League Members of the Board of Repre- sentatives wil meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the League, rather than as reported in yesterday's Daily. The room number will be posted. Our version of the short cut keeps you chic, :~ trim and pretty.k Call today appointment. STAEBLER BEAUTY SHOP 0 641 East Liberty ..c--yo < cocacmacoemo ocoeeycm r/ The group, during its three visit, has been evaluating teacher education progran. day the Nothing could be finer -for busy feet! Sizes to fit everyone 4B to 1 1AAAA 4 S .. ยง ,i { t 4r '.. . l\ 1, .. ,- tt c .: SHEEN GABARDINE Storm Coat lined with alpaca pile At football games on or off the campus . . . the mouton-collared storm coat has an important role in your casual life. Knit wristlets defy winds; the alpaca pile keeps you warm as can be. 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