20, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ......... -. -- ---- y ,, Gulantics Acts Will Feature Student Talent Union, League To Present Varied Schedule of Activities MAIZE AND BLUE: Frosh Weekend Petitioning Begins '} Eleven Groups To Vie For Three Awards; Others To Perform Subdued light, a bar and an or- chestra will set the nightclub at- mosphere for the fourth annual Gulantics Talent Revue on Sat- urday in Hill Auditorium. A variety of eleven musical and dancing acts chosen from previous auditions will be trying for the three awards of $25, $50 and $100. Five non-competing groups will round out a night of entertainment for more than 3,000 students ex- pected to attend. Some of the competing acts in- clude Robert MaGrath, an Irish tenor and Glee Club soloist, Russ Christopher, operatic baritone and first place winner of last year's Gulantics and Lyle Hanson with his guitar and hillbilly act. 4 Humor and art will be present in acts by Jill Coleman and Bob Rie- gand in a duo tap dance, a hum- orous but classical piano act by Carol Leybourne, a "Jimmy Dur- ante pantomine" by Max Daniels and the Conwell Carrington Com- bo featuring Phyllis Seput as vo- calist. Admission is $.65 for the show with no reserved seats available. Tickets can be purchased at Hill Auditorium box office or from Di- agonal salesmen, and members of the Men's Glee Club, the Union and the League staffs. Y The first year Gulantics was a contest to determine the name for the show. The winner used the letters G for glee club, U for Un- ion and L for League and added "antics" to form Gulantics. -Daily-Bruce Knoll NEARLY NORMAL-Mike Franzblau, senior in medicine, checks the blood pressure apparatus to be given as a door prize at Cadu- ceus Ball Saturday night in the League. His "patient" is Greta Lowy, sophomore in Architecture and Design. 0 * * * OPERATION DANCE: Caduceus Ball To Be Given By Honorary Medical Society Union PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST - "Watch the birdie" will be the theme song of photography con- testants as they snap cheesecakes and other feats of photography for the Union all-campus photog- raphy contest. Pictures for the contest will be accepted in the following classes: adults and young people, animals, children, still life and scenes. En- tries must be in black and white with the minimum size of eight by ten inches. The contest closes at 5 p.m. to- morrow. Cliff Dey and Ed Rent- schler, local photographers, will be the judges of the pictures. along with Dean Erich A. Walter, David Rider of the Arts and De- sign faculty and Eck Stenger, chief photographer of the Ann Arbor News. A $5 first prize and a $3 mer- chandise certificate second prize will be awarded in each class. An additional $5 will be presented for the best picture of all the class winners. The prizes were donated by lo- cal photographers, the Ann Arbor News, the Union and a local drug store. The winning photographs will be displayed in the Union lob- by from February 21 until March 3. BRIDGE TOURNAMENT - An atmosphere of tense keen compe- tition will be in the air at the Bridge Tournament at 7:15 to- night in the small ballroom of the Union.. Teams of competing under- grads will have the chance to win a free trip to Chicago for the National Inter-Collegiate Bridge Tournament on April 18-19. Eliminations will be held to- night to determine the eight suc- cessful player who will play the prepared hands sent in by the Directors of the National Tour- nament. On the basis of how well the hands are played, 32 contestants will be selected from the colleges in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin to spend an expense free weekend in the Windy City. League DANCE CLASSES-- M u s i c, varying from the Samba to the Charleston will fill the League Ballroom as the League dance classes begin at 7:15 p.m. Tues- day and Wednesday, March 4 and 5. Offering an opportunity for men and women to practice and to learn to dance, enrollment for the classes is scheduled for next week. Men who would like to attend the classes, may purchase tickets from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 26 and 27 on the second floor of the League. The classes will begin the fol- lowing week, and continue for eight weeks. The entire series will cost men $4. Women may attend the classes free. An enrollment mass meeting is scheduled for 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 26 at the League. Plans for the classes will be outlined in ad- dition to an exhibition of dances. For those who would like to at- tend in couples, a special couples dance class will also be held each week. It will meet at 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday. This year's classes will be taught by John Urbanic, previously an instructor with a professional studio in Detroit. He is now at- tending the University as a grad- uate student. In addition to instruction in the Latin American dances such as the Rhumba, samba, and tan- go, the fox trot, the waltz and the Charleston will also be taught. ADVENTURE 33 Dag -From "300 Offered by America's largest organization for educational travel. Scholarships available. See More-Spend Less TourstoMEXICO, The Scenic West, Alaska, South America, Bermuda or The Orient. Our 19th Year See yourTlocal represent. tive or write to: 4ITA ASTUDENTS ITERNATIONAL *53~ TRAVEL ASSOCIATION 545 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK 17 * MU 7.024 Petitions for positions on the central committee for F r o s h Weekend are due Monday in the League undergraduate office. Freshmen women will have their first opportunity to vie for League positions as Frosh Week- end is planned and given by freshman coeds. * * * SHEETS WILL be posted in the Undergraduate Office so that coeds can sign up for interviews when they hand in their petitions. Activities chairmen in the dormitories and League houses have blank petitions as well as helpful hints on how to fill them out. The presidents' re- ports and the League Lowdown are also useful guides to the du- ties of the various positions. Places open on the central committees for both the Maize ana Blue teams include general chairman, assistant chairman, 1171 awards and judges chairman, dec- orations chairman and floorshow chairman and her assistant. THE L I S T continues with chairman for finance committee, p a t r o n s committee, programs committee, publicity committee and tickets committee. This year's Frosh Weekend will be held Friday and Satur- day, April 18 and 19, on the en- tire second floor of the League. The project was originated four years ago by the members of As- sembly and Panhellenic to enable Square Dance There will be a meeting of the WAA sponsored Folk and Square Dance Club at 8 p.m. today in Barbour Gymnasium. Any interested men and women are invited to attend. IT WILL RETURN! .< Last year a surprise faculty act was the feature of the program. dcri4(CInpu4 Ken Norman and his band will be playing for the twentieth an- nual Caduceus $all to be present- ed to all students on campus from- 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday in the League. Galens, honorary medical so- ciety, is sponsoring the dance which is the official Medical School social event. THE BALL is named after the caduceus, a rod entwined with snakes which has been a symbo: of medicine since Greek 'and Ro. man days. The caduceus is ar emblem now used by the Arm3 Medical Corps. This year's dance will offer a door prize for the first time. The holder of the winning tick- et will receive either blood pres- sure apparatus, or, for the non- medically minded, $42.50 in cash. "Musico-therapy" yv a s t h e theme of last year's dance in which the trials and tribulations of the famed master of medicine Dr. Mal Practice, were presented in skit form during an intermis- sion program. "A DOCTOR'S DREAM" has been chosen for the theme of the 1952 dance. This theme will be carried out in decorations and in the entertaining, which will fea- ture the young doctor looking ahead. ,1 e 1 z. Y to attend. Late permission will be given to women for the semi-formal dance, and photographs will be taken there. *. * * THE CENTRAL committee for Caduceus Ball is stressing that flowers are not to be worn. Tickets costing $3 may be pur- chased from members of Galens, at the Galen News Stand, located on the first floor of University Hospital, or at the door of the ballroom the night of the dance. Caduceus Ball is given pri- marily for medical students and members of the University Hospital staff, but students from other schools are invited 1 'l2 Wit aganlarge the wekn e o Ver the I 2e h anties kend ens teents den t o 8"Ice' TJi ey beo sche dy. S eyvbeen ove rlored fo the bes toa Was ey rettgit l Clvered c pus ve ysucces alsadth e n a t 'ne ce sso nitht .l22 i efue bs as oOf Agieed Witbutit he facult Secore dh D ie ft WOW2 Pbe i 022e the a nigh e s o en f rthe te an tics otbut tcotbetit i e Ine, Stlss Of th the talent ent to0 o0n12c e cio0ay eiThue1t e ooodao as nea s nfacunveied, the able. '1 .Oson be sho, 2n ° f r o the mother I.ge n0e ightWere are e erfr lace are the ilretroz as avai gather ego r; tefaculty 2/s hore bucks. 11ou d Iken d return'ke to Reed Tickets on Sale, Hill Auditorium Box Office and on The Diagonal I COFFEE HOUR - There will be ~a free student-faculty coffee hour with the English department from 4 to 6 p.m. today in the Union ter- race room. .. S HATCHER TEA-Pres. and Mrs. Hatcher will open their house for the regular Hatcher Tea to be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. today. The guests of honor will be Interna- tional Center, Nakamura House, Owens House, Delta Sigma Phi'; Phi Delta Phi, Shaefer House, Hu- ber House and Kelsey House of South Quad, Betsy Barbour and Helen Newberry. * * s INFORMAL RUSHING - At a Panhellenic meeting yesterday, the decision was made to extend informal rushing to Friday, Feb- ruary 29 for women who have not yet signed up. Those interested in rushing, are asked to sign up in the Panhel office in the League. Sororities will contact those who r are eligible. POETRY CLUB-Modern poetry enthusiasts will have an opportun- ity to get together and exchange 3 viewpoints when the Modern Po- etry Club holds its first meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the League. The club is now reorganizing un- der the auspices of Prof. Morris Greenhut of the English depart- ment. The club plans to meet ev- ery other week, and, according to Lea Eisner, '53, who is helping to reorganize the group, is "one of the most loosely organized groups on campus-anyone can belong to it who it interested." Artist's Works , o Be Displayed An exhibition of the works of local painter May. Brown and the Potters Guild is now on display at the Rackham Galleries. Opening with a reception at 7:30 p.m. yesterday, the show will last until Feb. 29, and is open to the public from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on weekdays. The cereamic exhibit, done by the Potters Guild, will include three types of work: pots made on the potter's wheel, free form pot- tery and ceramic sculpture. Among the professional members whose work will be represented are Har- vey Littleton, Rhoda Lopez, Mary Kring and Ellen Colmar. Mrs. Brown's exhibition is a retrospective display of the ar- tist's work over a period of twenty years. , . Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests 4 No. 33... THE SHEEP "They can't a pull the II They tried to fool him with the "quick-trick" cigarette mildness tests-but he wouldn't go astray! We know as well as he there's only one fair way to test cigarette mildness. Andmillions of smokers agree! It's the sensible test... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke, on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" ( T fn hrnT fnr Ta o Tl a a1 s ' 3 .. ..3 : i 4D, On i Ior/ o Three beautiful blouses. ,, with more than their share of outstanding fash- A~$I~.