FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Dance '53 Senioi To Presen ,Annual B T Fational Golf Day To Open oeaUe So. dM oiit Yearly Tournament rs- Streamers, Professors' Sketches To Decorate Bluebook BallTonight it al Tniversity tu enTls, moTeurs, r essionas To Vie Against Julius Boros, {open Charmpion I For the past week, seniors have "fiendishly" been cooking up dec- orations for "Abstract Aires," the 83rd Senior Ball which is to be pre- sented tomorrow night from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the League Ball- 0, room. Marion Charles and Bud Kil- gore, who are in charge of decora- tions, have planned the decora- tions in a completely abstract manner. HOWEVER, all is not abstract. A mural, which is to cover one wall of the ballroom, has conventional trees and grass in it. This scenery flat is to act as a background fort the very modern cutouts which will! be fastened to it. "I Programs will also be in an abstract mood. They will be takeoffs on the work of Peip Mondern, a contemporary art- ist, who works with areas of red, blue, yellow and black lines. Louis Zako, co-chairman of the dance, says that many local, na- tional and international figures A have been invited naming Brandy, President Eisenhower, Sen. Joseph McCarthy, Georgi Malenkov and General Nam Il, of the North Korean forces. * * * ZAKO ALSO said that Brandy called him and wanted to know if he should give hir lady friend a corsage for the dance. Zako told him "no," because, according to tradition, women do not receive corsages this dance. J The dance is semi-formal, which will give women an op- portunity to wear their summer formals, and men can wear any- thing from a business suit to a tuxedo. Paul McDonough's band will play for the affair and Ed Ravens- croft, Gulantics 1st prize winner, will "beat out" a drum solo for intermission entertainment. Members. of the Senior Ball dance committee are Jeanne Freshour and Louis Zako, general chairmen Tickets may be purchased at the Administration building from 21 p.m. to 5 p.m. for $2.25. Musical Society Gives Program Honoring Women Members of Mu Phi Epsilon, presented their annual musicale honoring freshmen women recent- ly at the home of President and Mrs. Harlan Hatcher. Participating in the musicale were Ann Young, '55SM, who gave a piano solo and Ruth Orr, Grad. SM, singing soprano solos. Jane Stolz, '55SM, played the violin and the program concluded b with Betty Ellis, '53SM, playing a piano solo. Ten freshmen women were re- cognized for receiving the highest scholastic averages in their class in the School of Music. Included in the group are Jane Cesler, Janet Dixner, Beverly Franzblau, Fern Law, Mary Matt- feld, Betty Jo Richter, Phyllis Rode, Martha Taugher and Shir- ley Tews. Rebecca Badger was awarded s the Mu Phi Epsilon scholarship medal for the highest average. Newly elected as president of Mu Phi Epsilon is Lucille Stans- berry, with Jane Stolz as vice- president. Camilla. Heller is re- cording secretary and Ellen Sher- man is the new corresponding sec- s retary. Ann Young will serve as treas- urer, with Ann Pletta and Carol Leybourne as rushing chairmen. The list of officers continues with Betty Ellis and Lenore. Brooks elected historians; Carol Van Asselt, alumnae secretary and Connie Jackson, student council representative. June Howe was elected chaplain; Ida Nyberg, warden; Faith Cook, chorister, and Joyce Roper, pro- gram chairman. e ..1 1 By ROZ SHLIMOVITZ Jamming the fairways, Univer- sity students will comprise only a small fraction of the populace out to beat National Open Golf Cham- 2Cham- pion Julius Boros Saturday in the second annual nationwide Golf tournament. Sponsored by Life magazine and the Professional Golf Association, the tourney, commemorating Na - tional Golf Day, is open to old aid young alike, in fact to any- one who pays the $1 entrance fee. WHILE BOROS has beaten both the outstanding amateurs and pros in the field, students still have a chance to beat the champ Saturday. When the golf kingpin plays on the difficult Oakmont Coun- try Club Course, in Pittsburgh, Pa., individual golfers through- out the country will attempt to better his score using their han- dicap. -Daily-Betsy Smith. les and Bud Kilgore are For entrants who do not have on Senior Ball decorations. handicaps, the Galloway system will be in effect. Under this plan 9:30 pm. to 1 a.m in the --a person's handicap is 80% of the difference between his aver- age scorer and par. P s AFTER PLAY is completed on event would be too difficult to administer here as most stu- dents do not have established handicaps. However the veteran added that play will continue on the course as usual from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Saturday with the customary 75 cent fee prevailing. * * * ALSO IN observation of Na- tional Golf Day Saturday the Standish Evans house will hold their own tournament. Residents of this house will estimate their own handicap and then those shooting in the 70's or 80's will draw for first prize. The 14 members of this house literally eat, sleep and breath golf, as all are attending school on Standish-Evans Scholar- ships awarded to outsanding caddies by the Western Golf As- sociation and Detroit District Golf Association. Probably able to beat any men's house on campus at the game, the group includes Bud Stevens, one of the mainstays of the varsity team, and Bob McMasters and Ray Zanarina, freshman team mem- bers. Oblicious to many spectators, Mrs. Violet Hanley of the Women's Physical Education Department, one of the nation's most outstand- ing women golfers still heads for the golf course at every spare mo- ment. s In recognition of her ability, Mrs. Hanley was selected manager of the first women's golf squad, the Ryder Cup Team, to play in international competition. Greeting couples as they enter1 the Union Ballroom for Bluebook Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to mid- night tonight, will be a huge blue- book. Placed over the bandstand, the timely replica will highlight dec- orations at the semi-annual dance. . * * * STREAMERS from the walls and ceiling, as well as smaller bluebooks about the room will also help carry out the theme. In keeping with the exam week accent, caricatures of local pro- fessors have been drawn on slates about a foot square. These sketches will line the corridor leading to the ballroom. Souvenir programs, in the form of miniature bluebooks, will be on hand for all women attending the dance. * * * FEATURING THE music of Jim Gilmartin and his orchestra, the ball is open to everyone on cam- pus. Fast becoming a tradition, it is one of the last social events of the semester. Planned to help students "dance away those bluebook blues," the semi-annual affair will help attending students re- lax during intermission with a floorshow. Included in the program will be vocal and piano varieties by Tom Leopold. Leopold, who is social chairman of the Union Executive Council, will present "Isle of Capri" and "Frankie and Johnnie." * * * LEOPOLD, IN cooperation with Dick Pinkerton, secretariat-chair- man of the Union Executive Coun- cil, will entertain the audience' with a comedy argument. The team, which has provided laughs at several other campus functions, will also do imperson- ations of the well-known Ink Spots. Continuing the show, Audrey McIntyre will do Hawaiian spec-I ialty numbers.. Dressed in tradi- tional costume, she will be accom- panied by the Hawaiian Club. Miss McIntyre studied in Hawaii last summer and while there, learned to do the hula. Bringing the program to a close, Al "Wildcat" Wahl will sing novel- ty numbers, accompanying him- self on the baritone "uke." Tickets for the ball, the only specialty dance &ponsored by the Union this spring, may be pur- chased at the door. They will be sold for $1 per couple. General chairman of the ball is Santo Ponticello. In charge of decoratiogs are Pete Degroot and Don McNaught. Dick Myers and Bill Cartwright are handling pro- grams. Publicity is being handled by George Fomin of the Union Pub- licity Committee and John Col- lins. It. .i1 DANCING Friday and Saturday Nites Broadcasting every Saturday Evening over WHRV from 10:30 to 11:00 Members and Guests W* l* ). 314 E. Liberty St. Ph. 2-3972 ClUlYou Must Be21 MARY LOU Vocalist "CALDRON BUBBLE"-Marion Char brewing up a gluey concoction to usec "Abstract Aires" will take place from League Ballroom. EXAM WORRIES? _ _ _ HALL RENTALS & BANQUETS "I Merit-Tutorial Committee Provides Student Service I,/ If Economics 51 or Chemistry 5E is bothering anyone, students at the Merit-Tutorial desk in the Under-graduate office of the Michigan League may be able to offer study aid. The Merit-Tutorial Committee of the Michigan League offers tu- toring services to both men and women, and keeps a file of activity records for every women on cam- pp.* * * "BOTHERED" students should contact the committee and ar- range a meeting with a tutor in their field. A tutor can offer help with individual problems for the oncoming exams. Tutors receive $l per hour, except those who tutor in Phy- sics or Chemistry, whose fee is $2. Requirements for a tutor are a B average in the tutor's field of specialization or an A grade in any other subject. * * * THE MERIT-TUTORIAL Office is open from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday. With the aid of the dorm and sorority activity chairmen, Merit-Tutorial also has an up to date file of all the extra-cur- ricular activities in which Uni- versity women participate. Filed under the year of gradua- tion of the women, the list is used by honor societies seeking women candidates and consulted when coeds petition for campus activi- ties. After graduation the women's names and activities are sent to the Bureau of Appointments. These lists may help the women on campus in obtaining post-grad- uate jobs. and furthering her graduate school activities. All records of activities are filed on a cumulative card, and include such things as campus clubs,: church guilds, WAA sports clubs, class projects, music organizations, and honor societies.j Iris Jeja has headed the Merit-I Tutorial Committee this year. She! has been assisted by Ruth Blight, Shirley Coy, Vonda Genda, Bar- bara Palmer and Phyllis Peterson. Phyllis Peterson will serve as chairman next year. the 18 holes, golf courses will re- cord all results on special score sheets and send them into the tournament sponsors. All golfers who better Boros' score, which will be announced between 5 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Saturday on CBS will receive gold medals inscribed with "I Beat Julius Boros" and the date. Proceeds from the tournament go to the USO and National Golf Fund. AROUND THE Ann Arbor area, four of the courses, the Municipal, Barton Hills. Plymouth and Ann Arbor Golf and Outing Club ex- pect large turnouts. However the Huron Hills Country Club and University course will not par- ticipate in the program. According to the manager of the U course, Harry Koseberg. who has been a professional player for 30 years, the national For Life's most 12-Diamond Bridal Pair, beautifully matched and mounted in 14K gold. $354 1001,1 b' 1 r i i i I i i I E I i I m II on an interesting career in telephone work. We have many excellent positions about which we would like to tell you. Also we have - NEW INCREASED STARTING WAGES for all of our positions. Stop in and let us show you what we have to offer. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. 323 E. Washington Years from now . . a fine dia- mond will say "I Love You" . . as eternal as the stars is the message of a beautiful diamond .. fine in color, skillfully cut and full of brilliance. 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