CR 9,1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'anhel Board Petitions Due Today SYMPONIC SATIRES: Petitions for Panhellenic Board are due at 5 p.m. today in the Undergraduate t office , of the League. Positions are open to women who are juniors this semester and members of the Panhellenic As- sociation with the exception of Chairman of Counselors which is open to sophomore petitioners. Petitions can be obtained from the undergraduate office of the activities chairmen in the various sorority houses on campus. Coeds are requested to sign up for inter- views when they hand in their petitions. V Information about the various positions can be found in the President's reports in the League, the League Lowdown and the sorority activities chairmen. The various jobs open include president, first vice-president, sec- ond vice-president, secretary, treasurer, rushing chairman, chairman of counselors and chair- man of public relations. The president of Panhellenic Association is the chairman of the Executive Board and the Execu- tive Council. She shall also act as coordinator of the Executive Board and must notify all mem- Musical Depreciation Revue Will Invade Hill Auditorium FASHION FRESHNESS AT A LITTLE PRICE $95 -- - bers who have been elected to- office or committee positions. The duties of the first vice- president include being in charge of faculty teas, the displaced per- son of the Panhellenic Associa- tion, Rushing Workshops and sorority transfer relationships. She presides in the absence of the President and assumes the Presidency in the case of vacancy in that office as well as attend meetings for the President. Chairman of the Variety Show and Fresh Air Camp Drive and advisor to Junior Panhellenic are among the responsibilities of the second vice-president. The secretary takes minutes of all meetings of the various Pan- hel Boards and must type and send copies of the minutes to the Dean of Women and the Social Director's Office. She must take charge of all cor- respondence that pertains to the Panhellenic Association, keep the Panhel bulletin board up to date and obtain rooms for the weekly Panhellenic meetings and other functions. Budgets for members of the Ex- ecutive Council,, collections -of house dues, purchase orders and the Panhellenic section of, the League Lowdown are among the many things the treasurer over- sees. The rushing chairman's duties include many of the phases of rushing such as presiding at meet- ings of the rushing chairmen, re- vising rushing rules, and taking charge of the meeting for regis- tration of rushees. The junior position on the Pan- hellenic Council, chairman 4o counselors, is responsible for the training of counselors, all book- keeping required of the counselors and many other duties connected with the counselor system at, the University. WAA Notices Badminton Club-Meeting time of the co-recreational Badminton Club has been changed from 7:15 to 9 pvm. Mondays to Wednesdays. Rackets will be available in Wat- erman Gym, but players must ~furnish their own birds. Coaches and, Officials-There will V no meeting tomorrow, and members may conie to Barbour Gym and ask permission to um- pire intramural games. * * * Folk andkSquare Dances-There will be folk and square dancing at 8 p.m. Wednesday is Barbour Gym. Basketball Tournament - The schedule for the week is as fol- lows: Monday at 7 p.m.-Chi Omega I vs. Vaughan II; Thurs- day at 7:30 p.m.-winner of Chi Omega I vs. Vaughan II vs. An- gell I. Spike Jones and the City Slickers will invade Ann Arbor at 8 p.m. Monday, March 17 to star in Panhellenic Association's an- nual Variety Show in Hill Audi- torium. The Musical Depreciation Revue includes not only Spike and his band but comedians, acrobats, singers and novelty numbers. * * * MAIL ORDERS for tickets are now open and box office sales will start on March 10. Tickets are priced at $1.80, $1.50 and $1.20. George Rock, Freddy Morgan, Peter James, Bill King, the Wayne-Marlin Trio, Ruth Fos- ter and Helen Grayco, Spike's singing wife are just a few of the members of Spike's musical family who will be featured in the variety show. Spike Jones, whose real- name is Lindley Armstrong Jones, is star of radio, television, motion pictures and recordings although when his first record appeared in, '49 he was called a "flash in the pan" by critics. * *~ * JONE'S SENSATIONAL career was started by a colored cook working in a railroad station in Imperial Valley near Calexico, Cal- ifornia. The cook worked for Spike's father and was Spike's partner-in-mischief. He /carved Jones a makeshift pail of drumsticks from the rungs of an old chair which Spike used on a breadboard. His parents gave him a real set of drums for Christmnas soon after that under the condition he would confine himself to good music. As Spike grew older he forgot about the promise however and played in dance bands in high school and college that special- ized in novelty numbers. His first dance group in high school was UNION New releases by all time fav- orite bands will bespinning at the Union weekly record dance from 8 to 10:30 p.m. today in the Union terrace room. There is no charge for couples at- tending these Sunday dances. SPIKE JONES called "Spike Jones and Tacks." 4. * * His Five Senior Ball Theme Fetes Mother Goose 'Once Upon A Time, Semi-Formal Dance To Honor Graduates "Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, He had rings seats for Senior Ball. Though the drums blasted And trumpets joined in, In five years he promised to return again." Humpty Dumpty will be among the "personalities"1 seen at the '52 Senior Ball which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday in the Union Ballroom. Characters from Mother Goose will take on a collegiate personal- ity for the occasion. Couples at- tending "Once Upon A Time" will see Little Boy Blue in football garb, the Giant tracking down under 21 drinkers and Georgie Porgie, the campus wolf. Don Bari and his orchestra will play at the traditional dance. Bari, who is well-known in De- troit, has also played at several campus events during the past year. Senior Ball is open\to the entire campus, although te dance is given annually in honor of the graduating class. Semiformal at- tire has been suggested by the dance committee. Tickets for the ball are on sale at $2.50 a couple from 1 to 5 p.m. every day in the Administration Building. SENIOR SUPPER Tickets for Senior Supper to be held at 6 p.m. Thursday, March 20 will go on sale to- morrow in the residence halls and Undergraduate Office of the League. Tickets ire priced at $1.75. STUDENT SUPPLIES TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED "..7' RENTED SOLD BOUGHT Fountain Pens repaired by a factory trained man. Webster-Chicago Wirerecorders S. Rtt IL L'S 3S ttP-7 7 in' I I f. , FROM THIS beginning Jones has become one of America's most popular recording stars and has toured the country with his Mu- sical Depreciation company since '46. Spike Jones' records are top sellers all over the world even in countries where their sense of humor is different from ours and in places where few of the population speak English. One of his greatest thrills ac- cording to Spike was when the newspapers and -magazines all over the country printed political cartoons based on the recording of his song "All I Want for Christ- mas Is My Two Front Teeth." Not all of Spike's music is zaney, though. He says he can never for- get the thrill he had of playing the "Marseillaise,, for the first time for the French people who had not heard it during the four years of the Germarl Occupation. He played in France while he was in Europe to entertain the troops during the war. Spike Jones' band was the first to go overseas to spread a little cheer to the fighting men. Working Sheer 3 pair 3.95 . . WONDERFU'LY CUT BLOUSE with action-back pleats that leaves you free to concentrate on your game or classwork. 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