I THE MICHIGAN DAILY . PAGE ' I I I IFC Ball To Feature Ralph Flanagan Name Vocalists To Appear; 7 .0 Public Ticket Sales To Open 3 Annual Tag Day Contributions To Aid Underpivileged Boys Music in the dancing mood will be featured when Ralph Flanagan and his orchestra take over the bandstand at the annual Inter- fraternity Council Ball to be held from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Saturday, May 17, instead of May 9 as ori- ginally planned, in the Intramural Building. Public ticket sales for the all- campus formal will begin tomor- row. Tickets may be purchased any afternoon from 1:30 to 4:30' p.m. in the Administration Build- ing. The following week tickets will be sold on the diagonal as well as the Administration Building at the same hours. Price of tickets is $3.60 per couple. * * * FRATERNITY SALES will con- tinue until Wednesday, at which time house treasurers must turn in all unsold tickets to Eli Scho- enfield, chairman of the ticket committee. This year a trophy will be awarded to the fraternity with the largest percentage of ticket sales before Wednesday. The trophy will be presented by the IFC Ball board and will be per- manent property of the house winning it. This year IFC will present Ralph Flanagan and his orchestra JGP There will be an important meeting of the new J.G.P. cen- tral committee at 5 p.m. to- morrow in the League. along with his two vocalists, Har- ry Prime and Rita Hayes, and the quartet, the Singing Winds. * * * "SINGING WINDS," incidental- ly, is Flanagan's theme song which he himself wrote and recorded. He started work in the music world as pianist-arranger for Sammy Kaye. He worked for Kaye for almost three years and then retired to New York City with the intention of devoting himself entirely to arranging. From 1946 until 1949 Flanagan arranged for such name person- alities as Tony Pastor, Charlie Barnet, Tommy Tucker, Tony Martin and Perry Como. * * * IN 1949, a recording company asked Flanagan to make a few dance band records for them, leading a studio band. This he did, arranging the songs he recorded. These were immediately success- ful, especially "You're Breaking My Heart." After this start the recording company had Flanagan doing records for them pretty regular- ly until he formed his own band in 1950. Harry Prime, male vocalist with Flanagan, was a baseball hopeful for a Brooklyn Dodger farm club in New York until he decided to see if he could become a singer. * * *I'a. e HIS FIRST BIG break came in RALPH FLANAGAN * * * 1945 when he replaced Johnny Johnston as male vocalist on an evening radio show. After this, his success grew until, in 1949, when Flanagan organized his band, it was al- most natural that he select Prime for his vocalist. Prime has been with the orchestra ever since. Rita Hayes, Flanagan's female vocalist, worked as a medical sec- retary in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsyl- vania, until Flanagan asked her to fill a vocalist job he had open. The band will take about a half hour intermission during the course of the evening and will play continuously for the rest of the' time. Refreshments will be served dur- ing intermission for those who want to freshen lagging spirits and feet. To provide an opportunity for underprivileged boys to spend two weeks at Fresh Air Camp is the purpose of Tag Day, annual fund- raising drive which will take place from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, for one day only. Thirty-three posts tended by members of various campus organ- izations will be located throughout Ann Arbor. Students from most of the hous- es on campus will accept dona- tions and exchange them for a pink tag illustrated with a small, contented boy sitting on a diving board in a dripping bathing suit. A student committee assisted by members of the faculty is in, charge of the collections, which last year amounted to $3,400. The money collected from the drive has several purposes. It provides the opportunity for some all-around camping experi- ence as well as training and clini- cal analysis for these boys who did not have the care and opportunity to grow up within the limits in- posed by society. Some of the children come from institutional placements or foster homes. Others are from broken homes and some have records as delinquents. About 240 boys between the ages of seven and 14 go to the camp each summer. Each one is spon- sored by one of 25 cooperating so- cial work agencies, and the two weeks spent at camp are only part of a year-around rehabilitation program. This phase of the program is handled, however, so that the boys do things that camp life offers, and are as unaware when they1 leave camp, as they were when they came, of the "treatment" de- sign. Another purpose of the camp is to provide actual workshop ex- perience for both men and women students of the University in ad- vanced sociology, psychology and education. The students act in the capacity of counsellors and re- ceive credit in graduate courses. This will be the thirty-second season for the Fresh Air Camp. which was founded by a student worker who was affiliated with the Student Christian Association. In 1939 the University Summer Session began tooffer the coun- sellors related graduate courses. The camp was officially accepted by the Board of Regents in June, 1944, Donations from Michigan citi- zens, University faculty and alum- ni and the active campaigns of the students make approximately one- third of the camp operation bud- get. The University Summer Session and the Institute for Human Ad- justment provide the academic, administrative and maintenance Tag Day Salesmen Lead salesmen from each house taking part in Tag Day are asked to meet at 5 p.m. Tuesday in the League. At this time tags and buckets will be distributed so that students can go directly to their posts Wednesday morning. costs while the agencies sending boys pay fees approximating food costs. W The student organizations con- tributing to the fund are Assembly Association, Association of Inde- pendent Men, East Quadrangle and Interfraternity Council. The list continues with The Daily, League, Union, Panhellenic' Association, Student Legislature and West Quadrangle. The camp is situated 24 miles northwest of Ann Arbor, on Pat- terson Lake, which is one of a chain of seven small lakes near Pinckney, Michigan. WAA Notices] Co-Recreational Softball- The following teams in the co-recrea- tional softball league will play their games at 4 p.m. today: B.B's vs. Pi Beta Phi and Sigma Nu; Green vs. Tappan Tarantulas; Vanjordan vs. Alpha Phi and The- ta Chi; and Les Terribles vs. Hay- den. Softball Tournament-The sche- dule for this week's WAA softball tournament is as follows: Monday at 5:10 p.m.-Kappa Kappa Gam- ma II vs. Palmer II*; Delta Delta Delta I vs. Collegiate Sorosis I*; at 7 p.m.-Barbour I vs. Stockwell I*. Tuesday at 5:10 p.m.-Alpha Delta Pi I vs. Kappa Delta I*; at 7 p.m.-Mosher I vs. Angell II*; Henderson I vs. Alpha Xi Delta I*; Jordan I vs. Chi Omega I*. Wednesday at 5:10 p.m.-Gam- ma Phi Beta I vs. Hinsdale I*; Al- pha Chi Omega I vs. Delta Gamma I*. Thursday at 5:10 p.m.-Cheever I vs. Jordan II*. The starred team will be res- ponsible for the bases and the home plate and the other team for the rest of the playing equipment. Men's Dorms Will Present Spring Dances Evening's Festivities Will Feature Dancing, Varied Entertainment South Quadt Late permission has been grant- ed for the South Quad spring for-1 mal, "Artistry in Abstract" to bej held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Satur- day. This marks one of the few times in recent years that a residence; hall has been granted such a privi- lege. The central committee has made plans for the dance to take advantage of late permission.- * * * FROM 9 P.M. to midnight there will be dancing in the main dining1 rooms with the,orchestra of Fred Netting supplying the music. At midnight couples will take' over the Quad Club 600 for more dancing and entertainment. Entering South Quad, men and their dates will be greeted by a patio scene featuring a modern mist-giving fountain. In one of the dining rooms, a huge modula- tor of colored fabrics will be the center of attraction in a huge seating area of small conversa- tion groups. * * * THROUGH THE combined ef- forts of two state power compan- ies, a unique lighting system will be employed involving among oth- er things the use of "black light." Throughout the evening, Hal Singer, f o r m e r pianist on WHRV, will be playing for the guests. Corsages of yellow daffodils and hether will be given away at the door. Refreshments will consist of a fruit punch and novel pastries. Tickets 'for "Artistry in Ab- stract," priced at $2.50 per couple are available to the entire campus and may be purchased at South Quad. West Quad "Moonlight Serenade" will be the theme of West Quad's Spring Fantasy dance to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday. The decorations will follow a Southern theme and will feature a waterfall, a pool and a rock gar- den. * * * COUPLES WILL walk through halls and rooms decorated with trees and shrubs. A stream with a rustic bridge over it, will flow through one of the halls. There will be winding paths among t h e greenery, leading through all the rooms and beside the stream. One of the dining rooms will be decorated as an outdoor Chinese garden, while the other dining room will be an indoor scene and will be a room of blue lights. General chairman of the dance is Ray Popp, with Fred Swart in charge of publicity. Other chairmen are Walt Bo- land, tickets; Stan Martin and Terry Hughes, decorations; Bert Braun, finances; Ray Lewis, mu- sic; Tom Smith, programs and favors, and Jim Hatton, clean-up. Refreshments will be served during the evening. EVERYONE WELCOME: GleeClub Will Give Concert Presenting their annual spring uates from every school in the concert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in University, has a long history. One Hill Auditorium, the Men's Glee of the earliest college glee clubs Club will feature a program of founded, it was organized in 1859. many and varied works. Today it has increased its popu- The program will include both larity and has appeared on radio, classical and popular numbers. television and recordings. It has Always a welcome variation is the also had a motion picture short group of traditional college songs released, which is entitled "Songs the Glee Club features. of the Campus." The Novelaires, a quartet com- A student-managed, self-perpe- posed of four Glee Club members, tuating organization, members of will sing several selections. This the Glee Club manage personal- group with Joan Robinson won appearance tours and handle their first place in this year's Gulantics. own publicity. Members of the quartet are Ara Among those on the distinguish- Berkerian, bass, Richard Frank, ed list of former Glee Club per- baritone, Robert McGrath, tenor formers are Chase Baremeo, a and David Calahan, lead, baritone formerly with the Metro- A popular organization, the Glee politan Opera Company, Stuart Club presents tours from New Churchill, for many years a soloist York to Portland. This year be- with Fred Waring's Pennsylvan- tween semesters they appeared in ians and Thomas E. Dewey, gov- Cleveland and Canton, Ohio, New ernor of New York. York City, Philadelphia, Washing- ton, D.C. and Pittsburgh. During spring vacation, they League Counc went on another tour, this time to There will be a meeting of all Chicago, where they gave two con- new and old League Council certs in that area. members at 5 p.m. tomorrow in The club, which is composed of the League. both graduates and undergrad- waistbander a wonderful buy 1 6jV 10.95 The carefree dress that's so easy to wash, pack and wear fashionably for work, play or dress up. With flexible waistline that fits without alteration. And so cool! Soft-flowing Sacony-Ciella acetate jersey won't wilt, sag, stretch.. will wash easily... stays crushfree. See it in LIFE d ELLA rereeshing colorss' SIZES 10-20 ackors jese wnt ilsa,1teiatc. _ _ _. _ , COLLEGE SHOP . r' i M . , cwt : < r . : . i " ,,, ., '' 's =;::. hrti .-.. ' .} y to. xf;:. vl , ' ,.:. s.: i:. x' ' :. sy ". #, " 'b .' 2 w 9 .4fm "4 $ n 4 r <. 5$ '> s !; ;: $ f :: W T. ' ;. p : ; r 4 r ;. s' ,.. j :: v ' . : , :. b,, . 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