vW I THE" MICHIGAN fDAILY I AGE!Fr Y i 11L 11 EI111 \l ii6 li/i ' PAGE iLVE j TV ToPreview / Barbour Gym To Be Scene Of Carnival Activities Today Aichigras '9-, # - * Festivities Television fans will get a pre- view of the Michigras carnival booths on the University televi- sion hour at 1 p.m. today. Barbour Gym will be temporar- ily transformed into Yost Field House for the occasion, and eight campus groups will simulate Mich- igras festivities. DELTA GAMMA and Sigma Phi Epsilon will set up their "Pies and Dolls" concession; which will invite customers to -toss pies at W otces ' . it Coaches and Officials-Anyone interested in joining the softball section, of the WAA Coaches and Officials Club is invited to attend the meeting at 5:10 p.m. tomorrow in Barbour Gym. Softball Tournament -- The schedule for the week's games in the WAA softball tournament is as follows: Monday at 5:10 p.m.- SKappa Alpha Theta I vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma I*; Delta Delta Delta II vs. Sigma Delta Tau I*; Delta Delta Delta I vs. Pi Beta Phi III*; Collegiate Sorosis I vs. Sigma Delta Tau II*; Kappa Kap- pa Gamma II vs. Pi Beta Phi I*; at 7 p.m .-Barbour I vs. Palmer III*; Stockwell I vs. Hinsdale II*. Tuesday at 5:10 p.m.--Palmer II vs. Kappa Alpha Theta II*; Stockwell IV vs. Alpha Delta Pi I*; Delta Giamma II vs. Kappa Delta I*; at 7 p.m.-Jordan IV vs. Mo- sher I*; Stockwell VII vs. Angell II*; Henderson I vs. Angell I*; Mosher II vs. Alpha Xi Delta I*. Wednesday at 5:10 p.m.-Gam- ma Phi Beta II vs. Kleinstueck I*; Alpha Epsilon Phi I vs. New- berry I*; Stockwell II vs. Hollis I*; Hinsdale I vs. Palmer I*; Al- pha Chi Omega II vs. Alpha Phi II*;,at 7 p.m.-Delta Gamma I vs. Vaughan I*; Stockwell V vs. Alpha Xi Delta II; Vaughan II vs. Stockwell III*. Thursday at 5:14 p.m.--Alpha Omicron Pi II vs. Chi, Omega I*; Kleinstueck II vs. Cheever I*; Col- legiate Sorosis. II vs. Delta Zeta I*; Jordan II vs. Chi Omega II*; at 7 p.m.-Jordan III vs. Couzens I*; Stockwell VI vs. Alpha Phi I*; Jordan I vs. Alpha Gamma Delta I*; and Newberry II vs. Cook I*. The starred team will be respon- sible for the bases and home plate and the other team for the basket containing the playing equipment. unfortunates with their heads in holes in a painted canvas. Sorosis and Zeta Psi will be presenting parts of their comic opera 'Pagliacci' in a show booth, and Delta Delta Delta and Phi Kappa Tau will have their re- freshment booth in operation dispensing ice cream. A "Wheel of Fortune" will be set spinning by Newberry and Del- ta Sigma Phi, and lucky winners will receive 'Michibucks' for prizes. A PRIZE BOOTH will also ap- pear on the scene, and viewers will get a chance to see what they will win if they collect enough 'Michi- bucks' at the real carnival. Jack Hamer, '52, and Pat Smith, '52, general co-chairmen will be interviewed on the pro- gram, and a song, written es- pecially for Michigras will be sung by the students participat- ing in the show. This song, a take-off on "Come to the Mardi Gras," and entitled "Come to the Michigras" will 'be recorded by the Evening-aires, to played on disc jockey shows throughout the following week. WHILE decorations are going up in Barbour for the TV hour, decor- ations for 'the real thing' will be going up in Yost Field House, starting at 2 p.m. today. Many helpers are needed, ac- cording to Fran Windham, '53, decorations co-chairman, and those who work hardest will be awarded freeradmission tickets for the Field House next week- end. Construction of booths in the Field House will begin Tuesday, and the booths committee is ask- ing for strong men to help with the heavy work. Anyone interest- ed in helping is requested to at- tend a meeting at 5 p.m. tomor- row in the Union, according to Mark Oscherwitz, '53, booths co- chairman. League of Voters To HoldMeeting An organizational meeting will be held by coeds interested in forming a student branch of the League of Women Voters at 4 p.m.' Thursday in the Chapel of the Michigan League. Officers will be elected and in- stalled by the group at this first meeting after a pre-organization- al session. Pearson Band Will Perform At Crease Ball Barristers To Present Annual Formal Dance In League Ballroom Crease Ball, formal dance given annually for lawyers, will be pre- sented from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, May 2 in the League Ball- room. Gene Pearson and his band will be playing for the ball which is presented by the Barristers, an honorary law society, and is open to all students. Crease Ball received its name from Old England times when common law was popular and law- yers, then called barristers, were forced to struggle for a living. With near-empty pockets, men of law walked the streets in torn, unkempt clothes. Noticeably lack- ing was a crease in their trousers. The dance has a long, tradition- filled history, based on the rivalry between lawyers and engineers which began on campus many years ago. Couples attending the dance will receive copies of the "Raw Re- view," edited this year by Joe Stevens and Neil Lombardi, as- sisted by Dave Phillips and Gordy Smith. The "Raw Review" is a humor- ous satire on the Michigan Law Review in which professors give their views on cases and proce- dures. The publication will con- tain humorous articles about law students and professors. General chairman for Crease Ball is Burt Perlman and his as- sistant is Jim Taylor. Committee Chairmen are Jim Kendall, band; Cash Street and John Slavens, decorations; Wil- liam Lynch and Burt Ansell, pub- licity; and Chuck Yench and Pete Van Domelen, tickets. Bob Porter is in charge of ad- vertising for the "Raw Review," and his assistants are Cliff Dean and Joe Neath. Tickets will go on sale tomor- row and may be purchased from members of the Barristers or at a booth set up in Hutchins Hall. Repeating its spring tour per- formance. the Women's Glee Club will present the annual concert at 8 :30 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Auditorium. The program will open with Cain's "O Sing Your Songs" and continue with three liturgical pieces, including an "Alleluia" by Bach. . , ,. FOLLOWING these selections by the entire Glee Club, Soprano El- len Traxler will sing a solo group, followed by the Ensemble singing Quilter's "Go, Lovely Rose." Next in the program, Char- lotte Pritchard, soprano and Donna Hoffman, contralto will sing a duet, "I Would That My Love" by Mendelssohn. Another soloist, Susan Sharf- Latin Americans Members of the Pan American Group of the American Legion will host Latin American stu- dents from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. today at Madelon Pound House at 1024 Hill Street. man, mezzo-soprano, will present Thompson's "Velvet Shoes" which will be followed by a piece by the whole group. LATER in the program, pianist Mary Ann Smeltzer will play Kentkennan's "Three Preludes 1938" and the first movement of Shubert's "Sonata, Opus 143 in A Minor." In the second half of the pro- gram, a barber-shop quartette, "The Harmonettes," will sing several ballads, followed by a group of folk songs in the mod- ern idiom, Including Charles' "Sweet Song of Long Ago" and Rodgers' "With a Song In My Heart," featuring Ruth Krantz, soloist. During the concert, two of the selections, "The Song Is You" and "Goodnight Beloved," featuring Shirley Robinson as soloist will be directed by the student director, Neysa Imhof. * * * ALL THE other songs will be directed by the Glee Club direc- tor, Mrs. Jeanette Estep. During this part of thepro- gram, the Ensemble will present another selection, Gershwin's "Of Thee I Sing." The Glee Club will end the con- cert with a group of Michigan songs, including "When Night Falls Dear," "College Days," fea- turing contralto Donna Hoffman, and "I Want To Go Back To Michigan." AffiIiated Woman To Be Presented With Scholarship Applications for the first an- nual Scroll Scholarship are due at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the League Undergraduate Office. All applications, accompanied by two recommendations from either faculty members or family friends, must be turned in to a member of the Social Directors staff, At this time applicants may sign up for interviews to be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday. II '0 SING YOUR SONGS': Glee Club To Perform at Annual Concert UP IN THE AIR OVER MICHIGRAS-This swollen headed gen- tleman is one of the gigantic balloons which will highlight the Michigras parade next weekend. Starting at 3:30 p.m. Friday, the parade will move down State Street to the Union. Friday and Saturday nights the gala carnival will be held at Yost Field House. SATURDAY SCRUTINY: Organizations Will Sponsor Michigan League Open House - ) COLLEGE SHOP Special Purchase WONDERFUL WEATHERVANE SKIRTS Doors of the Michigan League will open wide for its first 'Open House' to be held from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, May 2. Sponsored by League organiza- tions such as the Board of Rep- resentatives, Assembly and Pan- hellenic Boards and house presi- dents, special rooms of the League will be open for inspection and special exhibits. Excerpts from JGP and Frosh Weekend will be presented. An- other highlight of the afternoon will be the Assembly sponsored fashion show with models coming from various women's dormitories on campus. The League dance classes will also present an exhibit of ball- room dancing while later, couples may dance to records or combo music. Although the "Open House" is planned to acquaint students, fac- ulty and alumnae with the facili- ties offered by the League, all in- terested people are also invited by the committee to attend any of the activities or exhibits. Special rooms in the League, such as the Round Up Room and the Ann Arbor Room, will be open. 1 . . . . 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