4' WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 19s52 T HE MICHIGAN D AILY PAGE FIVE ___________________________________________________________________________________ I I Netting Orchestra To Provide Music for South Quad Dance Leader, Arranger FamilIiar Figure IColegeTowns Fred Netting anmd his orchestra will be in charge of the musical end of South Quad's "Artistry in Abstract" to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday. Netting began his musical ca- reer as featured saxophonist with the Tony Pastor band. * * * FROM THERE be became an arranger for r'adio station WWJ in Detroit and later took over the orchestration of the staff orches- tra for the same station. Although ail of Mr. Netting's arrangements are written by himself, his style follows that of the Glenn Miller-Ralph Flana- gan orchestras. Judy Claire who appears daily on WXYZ-TV in Detroit is the featured vocalist with the orches- tra.* plThe Fed N etigorchestrat has Ball, at Michigan State College and Ypsilanti Normal's Sopho- more Swirl. It has also played numerous en- gagements at hotels in and about Detroit including the Statler and the Book-Cadillac. ATO To Give Shoe shining Is the current oc- cupation at the Alpha Tau Omega house as the men put on a high gloss for their annual Blackfoot Ball from 9 p.m. to midnight Sat- urday In the League Ballroom. Engraved invitations to this traditional formal will be pre- sented to friends of Alpha Tau Omega. Invitations have also been extended to the fraternity's hon- ored guests Governor and Mrs. G. Mennen Williams, President and Mrs. Harlan Hatcher and the ri- val Whitefeet of Sigma Nu. TED SMITH and his orchestra will provide the dance music for the ATO's and their guests. The dance will be highlighted by inter- mission entertainment composed of student talent. Bill Shriner, well-known for his performance as the mother-. in-law in the 1952 Union Opera, "Never Too Late," will again take his audience back to those "Good Old Vaudeville Times." The Eveningaires, winners of the 1952 GULantics Revue, will be on hand to offer their personal- ized renditions of some dreamy melodies. * * * THE LONG-STANDING ATO- Sigma Nu rivalry will be contin- ued at the dance. The feud began at Virginia Military Institute, the home of both fraternities. Alpha Tau Omega, founded at the institutions in 1865, custom- arily wore black boots with their dress uniforms and when Sigma Nu was founded four years later the new group chose white boots in order to distinguish them- selves from the ATO's*. * Every year the members of ATO sponsor Blackfoot ball as a com- memoration of this rivalry and I the Sigma Nu's appears bedecked in their white footwear, which has recently been in the form of white * bucks. General chairman of the dance is Bruce Martz. Other chairmen include Jay Mills, entertainment; Terry Damon, programs and invi- tations; and Don McClelland and Louis Klimecky, decorations. Interested Coeds To Vie for Posts OnWAA0Bord Petitions for the position of manager of the Women's Ath- letic Association's Badminton and Folk and Square Dance Clubs will be due at 5 p.m. Monday in the League Unuergraduate Office. te terviewing for these posts wil on Wednesday, May 14 at WAB. Petitioners will be interviewed by members of the WAA board. Petitions may be obtained in the League, WAB and Barbour Gym. Aid in filling out these blanks may be obtained from the present club managers, copies of old petitions and committee chair- men reports, which are available in the League Undergraduate Of- fice. The heads of these sports clubs will have important duties to per- form, including being responsible for the organization and adminis- tratiorn of the club. This year many activities in- IS A S ponsors Annual Dance International Customs, Costumes To Preva il International customs and cos- tumes will be emphasized at the tenth annual International Ball which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Friday, May 16, in the Union Ballroom. Dances from tangoes to Sambas will be featured by the Latin- American orchestra led by Pan- chito. The International Students Association is sponsoring the dance. This association is com- posed of 24 different campus or- ganizations. Each organization is planning to decorate a part of the ballroom accof1rigo +n a ,certain, natio-r'1''.A 4b IN. ~NtSIU A / n a'fl SINGIN' SONS OF MiCHIGAN: Fifteen Groups Entered in Annual IFC Sing Eliminations Eliminations for the annual Interfraternity Sing will be held tonight in room 3RS of the Union. Fifteen fraternities have planned to enter the sing, the finals for which will be next Thursday, May 15. Each fraternity has been as- signed a time that they will sing tonight. * * * STARTING AT 7:30, Phi Sigma Delta will sing "Begin the Be- guine." At 7:40, Chi Psi will offer "George Jones." Phi Gamma Delta will sing "Laudamus Te," sched- uled at 7:50. At 8:00, Theta Delta Chi is scheduled to sing "Go, Song of Mine." Sigma Phi Epsilon has been assigned 8:10, singing "Wo- men." Theta Xi will sing "Erie Canal" at 8:20. From there on, following the pattern of ten minute inter- vals. Kappa Sigma will present "Play. Gypsies, Dance, Gypsies"; Sigma Nu will sing "Some En- chanted Evening." AT 8:50 Phi Kappa Tau will AHLETIC MANAGERS house athletic manages atn 5 suggestions for next year's managers are to be discussed. sing "I Got Plenty of Nothin', Chi Phi is next with "Blow, Gab-. riel, Blow."~ Delta Tau Delta fol- lows with a medley of love songs which they call "Love Story." .At 9:20 Alpha Tau Omega will sing "September Song," to be followed by Sigma Alpha Epsilon singing "SAE Sweetheart." Next is scheduled Phi Delta Theta with '"Song of Joy" and last, at 9:50, will be Kappa Alpha Psi with "Sweet and Low-" The judges, Dr. Philip Duey, leader of the male glee club, and Prof. Norma Heyde, a teacher in music school, will make their selec- groups after the songs are through. The announcement will be made about 10 p.m. and will be an- nounced publicly in the Daily to- morrow. * . . EACH OF THE top ten frater- nities singing next week will be assigned a sorority as its official backer and rooter. These cheer- ing squads will be selected by lot tomorrow afternoon in the IFC Ofce roo 30 of thenion. at 4:30. Each1 sorority is to send a representative to the Union at that time to draw for her house. There will be ten slips with the winning fraternities' names on them and extra blank slips. Those sororities drawing a name will be that fraternity's cheer'ing section the night of IFC Sing. IFC Sing, which is now incor-. porated into the gala IFC Week, had its beginig in 1935, when the IFC, ROTC band and the Varsity Glee Club thought up an all campus sing, with no prizes. * * * THE NEXT YEAR, the first real competition was started and Theta Delta Chi brought home the first triumphant trophy. In the following prewar years the competition grew, with more entries each year. The winners of those years were Acacia, Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Theta Xi and Kappa Sigma, in that order. There was a five year cancella- tion of the event, and in 1946 Sigma Phi Epsilon took home the r I first postwar trophy for the new- ly started sing. * * * FOLLOWING the Sig Eps vic- tory, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Al- pha Epsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha won, in that order The finals will be held this year in Hill Auditorium. No admission will be charged. READ DAILY CLASSIFIEDS FRED NETTING SAE's Slate For Pledges Shades of black and white will prevail at the SAE traditional Black and White Ball to be held from 9 to 12 p.m. Friday in the Flight Room at Willow Run. Novel invitations, as yet unre- vealed, will be presented to the in honor ofthe pedges."c''' LAST YEAR, the women were presented with black goldfish in white sand. All the guests at the daince wear only black and white, and the men carry black and white top hats and canes. Champagne will bubble through a huge cellophane champagne glass which will be situated at one end of the ballroom. Behind the glass will be a machine which will create the effect of champagne bubbles. * * * BOB ELLIOT and his band will provide the music for the dance. The ball has long been a na- tional fraternity tradition and it is believed to have originated at the University of Alabama. There, the men used to bring their dates to the dance in black and white carriages drawn by black and white horses. The first local Black and White dance was held in the Spring of 1947 at the Washtenaw Country Club. Invitations to the dance have been sent to the presidents of all the dormitories and fraternities. flavor, such as African, Pakistan- ian and Hawaiian. Intermission will feature a floor show made up of acts put on by six organizations. The African Union will present two Nigerian dances, the Arab Association will offer a professional dance team, and the Philippine Michigan Club will put on a Moro wedding dance. Ticke s or h e se i- o r a or per couple and may be purchased at the International Center. Pro- ceeds from the dance will go to the Foreign Students' Emergency Fund. 4 '. 1' ~ ! ~ THE LITTLE 100% WOOL Pebbl TwisTope HAS BIG SUMMER PLANS Our 30-inch topper has a great summer future * for it's long enough to cover the longest suit jacket, and sotenough for cool comfort over cottons. Pink, white, beige, gold, mint or blue. Sizes 8 to 18 or 7 to 15. 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