V. DAY, JANUARY 14, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE South Quad, Lane Hall Plan Weekend Parties Early Breakfast, Dance, Open House Scheduled To Fill Between Semester Break on Campus Open House .. . Students not attending the J-Hop dance are invited to the traditional Lane Hall Open House, to take place from 8 p.m. to 3:30 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 6, and from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 7, Sponsored by the "Lummies," a special committee 'of freshmen who attended Freshmen Rendez- vous in the fall, the event will provide social "doings" for those wishing to take advantage of a weekend free from studies. Both stags and dates are in- vited to attend. There is no ad- mission charge. On the program for the eve- ning is square, round and social dancing. Instructions in square dancing will be provided for those who have never heard the call of "swing r your partner" or "allemand left." Cards, chess sets, checkers and picture puzzles will be pro- vided for students who wish to rest between dances or who are interested in spending a quiet evening. A group of folk singers, accom- panying themselves on guitars, will also be on hand to entertain those attending the affair. Movies will be shown through- out the evening on the second floor. "Boundary Line" and "High Wall" will flash across the movie screen at no charge to the stu- -lents. "Lummie sticks," a hot-dog creation of the committee, will -k be available to satisfy the ap- petites of hungry men and wom- en. Also on the menu will be po- tato chips, cokes and coffee. Committees Set By Forestry Club For Annual Dance Members of the central commit- tee of thle Paul Bunyan dance have begun preparations for the Fores- try Club's annual affair. General chairman for this so- cial event is John Morgan. He will be assisted by six committee mem- bers including Henry Webster, in charge of programs; John Stew- art, who will handle publicity; and Pete Black, heading the re- freshment committee. Also on the list is Clint Erick- son, in charge of tickets; Gordy Garlick, chairman of displays and > decorations; and Dick Herman, who will direct art work and pos- ters. The dance is scheduled from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, in Barbour and Waterman gym- nasiums. It is sponsored by the Forestery Club and provides all- campus entertainment in a North- woods atmosphere, with couples wearing jeans and plaid shirts for the affair. Club 600 ... Club 600 in South Quadrangle will be open to couples on J-Hop Weekend, featuring a breakfast after the dance Friday night and a party Saturday night. This affair is under the sponsor- ship of the Inter-House Council and, facilities in South Quadrangle will be available for all independ- ents. Friday night's breakfast will be served from 2:30 to 3:15 a.m. in the Club which will be dec- orated in a night-club atmos- phere with a Valentine theme. Hearts and other appropriate decorations will adorn the walls and there will be red and white candles on the tables. As soon as couples are seated, they will be served by waiters at the tables. The meal will not be cafeteria style. Menu for the breakfast will in- clude ~frozen orange juice, grilled ham, two fried eggs, toast and jelly plus all the coffee a customer can drink. Small, heart-shaped menus will serve as souvenir programs for the breakfast guests. Entertainment will be provided by the Balladeers, a new combo on campus. The Balladeers are two students and a graduate of the Universityj who play guitars and feature folk songs, ballads, lullabies, sea chants, blues and songs about railroads and cowboys. This trio is composed of Jane Abelson, a sophomore in the literary college; Wym Price, a 1949 graduate of the University and Ted Anderson, a student in medical school. The group will play requests of the couples. Tickets for the Friday night af- fair may be purchased for the price of $2.50 and will be available at the desks in all three quads. On Saturday night a record dance will be held in the East dining room of the quadrangle. It is open to the public free of charge, and food will be avail- able in Club 600. A- fire in the lounge will add to the atmosphere in the Quad and couples may adjourn there be-, tween dances. The breakfast on S-Hop night will be carried' out in the same manner as the entertainment aft- er South Quadrangle's Christmas dance, Noel Moderne. After this dance couples went to Club 600 to round out the evening with songs and entertainment in a night-club atmosphere. -Daily-Larry Wilk MASKED BALL.-Members of the J-Hop central committee are shown trying on the masks that will be given as favors at the annual J-Hop, 'Grande Baroque,' to be held from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday, Feb. 6 at the Intramural Building. The Masks are only a part of the favors to be given to couples attending the dance, the rest of the gift is being kept secret. The masks are planned to lend a masked ball atmosphere to the dance which will be in a Louis XIV setting. * * * * e i-HopTo Assume MaskedfeCT Course open In Recreation To AlICoeds Students To Receive Leadership Training From Phys. Ed. Class Prospective camp counselors, playground directors and teachers who are interested in receiving practical experience, are offered opportunities to enroll in the Physical Education Department's course in Recreational Leadership. The course is open to any stu- dent. Although no credit is given for upperclassmen, freshmen may fulfill their Physical Education re- quirement. Any coed may enter the course by securing an application blank from Room 15 in Barbour Gym, filling it out, and returning it by January 16. Plans for the course, which will be offered from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. every Friday afternoon during the semester, include both theoretical and practical training situations. On the theoretical side the class will discuss techniques and meth- ods to be used in planning games and working with arts and crafts. Keeping these procedures in mind each member will prepare a program for one of the meetings planning such activities as a read- ing of suitable childrens stories, playing of campfire games and construction leather and metal goods. Near the end of the semester the students will be given an op- portunity to put these theoretical procedures into practice. A typi- cal camping experience will be simulated by the group for the purpose of providing an actual training situation. At the, successful completion of the course a certificate will be awarded showing that the student is equipped to leadrdifferent types of recreational programs. With the demand for trained leaders increasing every year, this' course prepares coeds with specific skills in handling children. Using the theoretical and prac- tical experience gained in the course many coeds have found this training program invaluable in securing jobs. Besides this specialized course in Recreational Leadership, the Physical Education Department offers many other activities which will satisfy the required program for entering Freshmen. In the Fall students may take part in such activities as Arch- ery, field hockey, outing, golf, swimming, riding, badminon, bas- ketball, fencing, figure skating and numerous other individual and team sports. Besides these regular classes, there is also the opportunity in the spring to participate in La- Crosse, Diving and Recreational Leadership. TRY YOUR LUCK: Soph Cab 'Music Heaven' To Feature Booths,_Games Booths at this year's Sophomore Cabaret, which will be presented February 13 and 14 at the League, will be in keeping with the theme, "Music Heaven," according to Mir- iam Buck, booths chairman. The booths, which will be lo- cated in the Vandenburg and Hus- sey Rooms and the Concourse on the second floor of the League, will include many types of skill- testing games. S* * AMONG THEM are "Test Your Perfect Pitch," a ring-toss game, and "Get On Key with Three Sharps," a dart game. A grab-bag game entitled "Find the Lost Chord," a foot- ball guessing game, %Who's Playing Second Fiddler for the Wolverines?" and the game of Musical Chairs will also be fea- tured. A Laughograph machine will also be on hand to chart the laugh- ter of those attending the Cab- aret., From the graphs of their laughter couples may learn their fortunes. PRIZES WILL BE awarded at all booths, and a door prize will be presented to the person who %guesses the correct number of "beets" in a measure. For those who wish to dance after visiting the various booths, Paul Root's orchestra will fur- nish smooth dance music in the League Ballroom, which will be decorated as Music Heaven. A vibraharp, which adds a mellow quality to musical tones, is fea- tured in Root's group. The Ann Arbor Alleycats will be on hand in the Michigan Room to play jazz numbers, Charlestons and polkas for couples who prefer a more lively type of music. IN THE LYDIA Mendelsohn Theatre, the floorshow, "The Lost Chord in Music Heaven," will deal with the plight of Pizzicato, a de- linquent sixteenth-note, who yearns to be a jazz note against his parent's wishes. , Proceeds from the production will be used to furnish the Music Room in the League. Soph Cab will be the first organization to donate to the room, and members of the central committee will help choose the furniture for it. Housing Needed In Private Homes For 'U" Women Ann Arbor residents living near campus who would be interested in housing women students next semester are urged to contact Mrs. Leslie in the Dean of Wom- en's Office. It is hoped that situations may be worked out whereby women can perform light household tasks or care for children in the homes in which they live in exchange for board and room. Townspeople who wish to house coeds may get in touch with Mrs. Leslie by calling 3-1511, Ext. 341. Final plans for decorations for the annual J-Hop, 'Grande Baro- que to be held from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday., Feb. 6 at the Intra- mural Building have been laid by the central'committee. The element of surprise and mystery still shrouds part of the ideas to be seen at the dance since the committee has decided not to reveal their complete plans. IN KEEPING with the theme, part of the favors to be given to couples on the night of the dance will be masks for dancers to wear in order to turn the dance into a masked ball. A permanent momento of the dance will also be given to each coed but the exact nature of the favor will not be disclosed until the night of the dance. The general theme of the dance, "Grande Baroque," will be car- ried out in the decorations. The ballroom will be fashioned like the court of Louis XIV of France. YARDS OF ROSE drapes in dif- ferent shades will lend to the re- gal atmosphere as will the indirect lighting which is planned to sim- ulate the soft glow of the candles used during that period in history. The style of art, architecture and music developed during the sixteenth to eighteenth cen- turies has been termed the Bar- oque period by historians and it is from this that the theme of the J-Hop has been drawn. The bands chosen to provide the music for the dance are Tommy Dorsey and Ralph Marterie. Ac- cording to custom the two bands will alternate at the bandstand to give continuous and varied music to the couples attending the dance. MARTERIE and his band have risen to sudden heights in the mu- sical world on the basis of his rec- ordings. The bands first record- ings appeared in 1949. Trumpet playing Marterie, dubbed "The Man Born for the Horn" is known to popular mu- sic fans through his recordings and radio programs. The band has claim to several hundred arrangements in their li- brary so that their knowledge of material is encyclopedic, accord- ing to the leader. THE INSTRUMENTATION of Marterie's band is made up of four trombones, five trumpets, hfive reeds, three rhythms, and both a man and woman vocalist. Badminton Club Badminton Club members will not meet today. Announce- ment of the reorganizational date of the club will be made in the Daily early next semes- ter. Ralph Marterie sums up the band's style by saying, "The public wants good, sweet, and tastefully arranged music with a danceable beat-and that's what my band is prepared to give them." The Sentimental Gentleman, Tommy Dorsey, is a veteran of the bandstand and has appeared at several campus dances includ- ing 'Autumn Nocturne' last fall. . ,* THE DORSEY name has been in the "major leagues" since 1934 when Tommy and his brother formed a bigtime band of their own. Many claim that the Dorsey band has had more influence than any other in determining the song favorites of the nation via the recording business. The J-Hop central committee has prepared a yellow folder of J-Hop rules which has been mailed to the various housing groups on campus. One regulation the committee wants to stress is the fact that furniture for the booths may be taken into the sports building only between the hours of 9 a.m. and 12 noon on Friday, February 5. Such furniture must be removed by Saturday, February 7, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 12 noon. I. I hdQ4 71G fe p RESOLUTION That your next job will be a job with a Future! Michigan Bell has classes starting as early as Janu- ary 5 and 12 for many interesting positions. Start your New Year right by calling 9984 or visiting our Employment Office at 323 E. Washington St. for more information. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. 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