PAGE THE MICHIGAN DAILY I H I * I Don Bari To Furnish I-Hop Music 4> - - - - Annual Dance. To Feature Band, Combo Don Bari and his orchestra from Detroit will set the mood for the 1952 I-Hop which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, in the League ballroom. His dance band has been fea- tured throughout the state at high school and university dances. BARI GOT his start on the Bob Hope Show under the title of "Don Bari Debonairs." At the conclu- sion of the show the band was featured at hotels and ballrooms throughout the Middle West and South. He is already known to stu- dents who attended the Senior- Ball last year. The South Quad- rangle featured his music at their spring formal, 'Artistry in Abstract.' The orchestra specializes in the type of arrangements that please most dancers. A variety of cur- rent popular hits and old favorites will round out the evening of dancing and entertainment. * * * IN ADDITION to Don Bari's orchestra, Paul McDonough and his combo will play in another room of the League second floor. I-Hop is co-sponsored by As- sembly Association and Inter- House Council, but members of the central committee wish to make it clear that the dance is open to the entire campus, and affiliates are especially invited, In 1950 when the dance was called A-Hop, the system of hav- ing two orchestras play for the dance was initiated and it was continued last year. * * e' s IN THIS WAY a variety of mu- sic will be provided and the com- mittee hopes everyone's taste in dance music will be satisfied. IHop will be presented the night of the Michigan-Indiana football game, and an invitation will be issued to guests from the University of Indiana. Late permission until 1:30 a.m. has been granted for I-Hop by the office of the Dean of Women. Attire will be informal, which lass Divides Into Sections For Lectures Enrollment Increase Necessitates Change In Health Talk Plans Because of the large size of the freshman class this year's health lectures for women students will be divided into two sections. The first half of the class, those whose last names begin with A through L will take their health lectures this semester while the second half of the class, those whose lastlnames begin with Me through Z, will take their lectures the second semester. * * * EVEN THE FIRST half of the class which is meeting this semes- ter has had to be divided into two sections. Section I with last names beginning with A through C will meet at 4 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6 in the Natural Science Auditorium. Those coeds in section II whose last names begin with D through L will meet at ,7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6 in the Natural Science Auditorium. If anyone wishes to request a change of sections, it will be nec- essary to put the reason for this request in writing now and give it ininediately to the matron at the desk in Barbour Gym. * * * BECAUSE of the capacities of the amphitheatre only a limited number of students with valid ex- cuses will be shifted. Those coeds who are shifted Will be notified of this change by mail. Dr. JBell who will open the se- ries on Oct. 6 has entitled her speech, "The University Plan for the Protection and Promotion of Health." On Tuesday, Oct. 7 Dr. Swank will speak on the subject of major diseases and on Wednesday, Oct. 8, Dr. Forsythe will discuss minor di- seases. Dr. Beakes will be speaking on the subject of nutrition at the lec- ture to be given on Thursday, Oct. 9. A film on human reproduction and facts concerning mental hy- giene will highlight the lectures given by Dr. Sarnoff and Dr. Swank on Monday, Oct. 13. The last lecture will be given by Dr. Swank on Tuesday, Oct. 14. She will talk on the subject life and reproduction. NECESSARY 'Five Aces' Will Relocate In League Round-Up Room MOVE: -Daily-Alan Reid PACKING THE VOLKSWAGEN-Jerry and Robin Lepard, former Arts Theater club members, pack their German Volkswagen for a two-year, two-continent trip. ' * * * * The atre Cou ple Plans Tri p Ted Smith and his band will be moving Friday night to the larger Round-Up-Room for the weekly Friday night dance. This move has been necessitat- ed by the unexpected opening night crowd of 300 students who jammed the small recreation room of the League last Friday night. Conditions were very crowded, with little room to sit or dance, and it is hoped that the new room will give ample space for as many students as want to come. The atmosphere of the "big city night club" will still prevail in the new setting, including soft lights, smoke-filled air and gay laughter. There will also be room in the new quarters for the tables with red and white checkered table- clothes, for those who like to sit and listen to the music. Carrying out the theme of the Round-Up Room, the band mem- bers will continue to wear red and white checkered shirts with black string ties. Music will be varied this week, but according to Smith the num- bers will again feature a "style of modern dance music that every- one will enjoy." Members of the band have or- ganized the Round-up Room Club, and are all experienced in the mu- sical field. The leader of the combo is trombonist Ted Smith, who led his own band on the University cam- pus for over four years. Other members include Chuck Stauffer, alto saxophonist who has played professionally with several eastern name bands. Don Shetler who teaches instru- mental music in Ann Arbor plays piano for the newly organized combo, and Ed Skidmore, who was formerly with the Bob Elliot band, plays bassist. Rounding up the "Five Aces" is Fred Steinbaugh, who plays the drums. Students who want to spend an informal evening or casual date attending a "night club" aTe invit- ed to make the Round-up sessions a regular entertainment. Admission to the club will be 50 cents per person and refreshments will again be sold at the snack bar. Foreign Students Will Hear Dean Offer Welcome Newly-arrived foreign students will receive an official.welcome to the University at 8 p.m. Saturday in Rackham Lecture Hall. The program will feature an ad- dress on behalf of the University by Dean Charles E. Odegaard of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Dean Odegaard is at present at- tending a meeting of UNESCO in New York. Associate Dean Sarah L. Healy will greet the increased number of women students from abroad. Short talks in response will be given by representatives of foreign students, both those just arrived and those previously on campus. Following the program a recep- tion will be held in Rackham as- sembly Hall by Dr. Esson M. Gale, Counselor to-Foreign Students, the Board of Governors and the staff of the International Center. Refreshments will be served and dancing will follow. Invitations to the welcoming program have been designed to commemorate President James Burrill Angell, the initiator of the University's International Educa- tional program. To Cover Two Continents MUSICAL MOOD-Don Bari and his orchestra are scheduled to play for I-Hop, informal dance to be presented from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 11 on the second floor of the League. Bari has appeared before on campus, playing for Senior Ball and South Quad spring fornial last year. Also to be featured at the dance is Paul McDonough and his combo, who will help provide a variety of dance music. * * ,M means dressy dresses for and suits for the men. * * * 4> * * * women PRICE OF admission is $2.50 per couple. Besides being sold at the door, tickets will be on sale in Angell Hall, the League, and men's residences. Proceeds from the dance are traditionally given to a chari- table organization. In 1950 they went to the Phoenix Project and last year they were given to the University's Fresh Air Camp, which provides camping experi- ence for underprivileged chil- dren. The majority of the proceeds will be given to this dame organi- zation again this year. * * * DECORATIONS for the dance will illustrate the theme 'Blue Horizon,' and will feature modern- istic effects produced by black lighting on wood and cardboard abstract constructions. Behind the bandstand in the main ballroom yarn stretched on a wooden frame will repre- sent lines reaching to infinity. The band will be silhouetted against a luminous moon in front of the dark blue back- ground. Hanging from the ceiling in the center of the ballroom will be a revolving sphere four feet in dia- meter. Lights directed toward this sphere and reflections from mir- rors on its surface will illuminate the entire dance floor. * * * A FOUNTAIN in another room will set a scene in a park, and foliage and underbrush will com- plete the arrangement. In 1950 the theme of the dance was 'Moon Midst' and the couples were transported to an imaginary world among the mountains of the moon. In the center of the ballroom a rocket ship was poised ready for take- off. Last year the central committee chose for its theme "Kick-Off" and decorations showed scenes familiar to all students on the day of the big game. The main ballroom was the sta- dium, and bleachers were placed along the sides of the room. From the top of the stadium waved pen- nants of the team's traditional football foes. General chairman for this year's I-Hop is Gail Hyman, and she will be assisted by the other committee heads. These posts are divided between men and women because the dance is being co- sponsored by two organizations. By VIRGINIA VOSS The wanderlust has hit two for- mer Arts Theater Club members and they intend to do everything but take a raft