TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1953
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
PAGE E
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PAGE FIVE
Booths Will Highlight
WUS Carnival Friday
Eleven dormitories, sororities,
fraternities and church groups
will man booths at "WUS-Ca-
pade," World University Service
carnival, which will be held from
8:30 p.m. to midnight Friday at
Lane Hall.
The booths and their chairmenI
are SRA, Sid Beal; Congregation-
al Disciples, Bob Bacon; Naku-
mara House, Bill Livant; Pres-
Review of Rules
To Be Presented
Today at League
Fred G. .Stevenson, consultant
in leadership training of the Uni-
versity Extension Service, will
speak on parliamentary procedure
at 8:30 p.m. today in the Hussey
Room of the League.
Sponsored by-the League Coun-
cil, the meeting will be followed
by a discussion period.
Although the Council especially
urges house presidents and mem-
bers of the Women's Senate to at-
tend, all those interested in parli-
amentary procedure are invited.
Stevenson is the author of "The
Pocket Primer of Parliamentary
Procedure."
cott House,
Guild, Lee
Legislature,
Lois Yendell; Baptist
Copple and Student
Connie Wagner.
OTHERS ARE Adelphi, Ninion.
Bloch; Unitarian group, Carol
Copp; Presbyterian Group, Joyce
Mosher; Wesleyan Guild, Anna
Marie Breyfogle, and a group from
1805 Washtenaw, Claire Rosell and
JoAnn Bregand.
Decorations for the carnival
will follow a world travel theme
and there will be a display of
WUS material in the lobby of
Lane Hall.
Partygoers will also be shown
various travelogues and a film
made by WUS during the evening.
* .* *
WUS IS sponsoring this carni-
val as part of an intensified fund
campaign which began last month
with a campus-wide bucket drive.
Porceeds from the carnival
will be used for building tuber-
culosis. sanitoriums and health
clinics, and supplying textbooks,
food and clothing to needy stu-
dents.
All the funds collected by WUS
are allocated by the central or-
ganization to the country where
the need is greatest.
Locally, the group is sponsored
by the Student Religious Associa-
tion.
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.....
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MORE DAYS
If you wish to select your
Personalized
CHRISTMAS CARDS
at
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The Largest Collection it Ann Arbor
312 SOUTH STATE
50 cards for $1.25 and up
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Union Dance
To.Be Held
On Saturday
Combined Glee Clubs
Will Feature Favorites
During Concert at Hill
'Cranberry' Ball .. .
T o m T u r k e y, traditional
Thanksgiving guest, will help set
the stage for "Cranberry Ball," to
be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sat-
urday in the Union Ballroom.
An annual informal Thanksgiv-
ing dance, this year's version is
under the direction of the Union
Dance Committee.
* * * .
COUPLES attending the all-
campus event will find themselves
carried back to the old "pioneer"
days, as the committee attempts
to recreate the Thanksgiving
scene.
Large figures of Pilgrim men
and women, amidst shocks of
corn, will line the hallway lead-
ing to the ballroom.
Dancing under a false ceiling
made of crepe paper in the fall
colors, couples will notice alarge
figure of Tom Turkey himself,
bearing the name of the dance.
.: * *
OTHER decorations in keeping
with the holiday theme will be in
evidence throughout the ballroom.
featured on the bandstand
will be Paul McDonough and his
orchestra. Providing the "down-
beat" McDonough and his group
will give a "sneak preview" of
two tunes from this year's Un-
ion Opera.
Entertainment is being planned
for intermission.
COEDS HAVE been granted late
permission for this dance.
Tickets, which May be purchas-
ed at the door on Saturday eve-
ning, are priced at $1.50 per
couple.
Staffman in charge of the an-
nual dance is Peter De Groot.
Glee Clubs.. ..
The combined concert featuring
the University and Ohio State Uni-
versity Men's Glee Clubs to be
held at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at Hill
Auditorium, will be the third such
concert that the Men's Glee Club
has presened.
Part of the effort of the Uni-
versity club to achieve more co-
operation between college glee
clubs, the group also hopes to
bring more college choral music to
the public.
STARTED IN the fail of 1951,
the club accompanied the football
team to Cornell University and
presented a combined concert
there.
That concert proved so suc-
cessful that the Cornell club was
invited to Ann Arbor last fall
to sing a joint concert on the
evening of the gridiron clash.
Members of the Glee Club feel
that the spirit that runs high on
football Saturdays carries over to
the concerts and to the audiences.1
Recognition of college glee
clubs throughout the country
has increased during the pastf
several years.
College songs have been popu-
larized, with the Yale "Wiffen-
poof Song" a notable example. Be-x
cause of heightened public sup-1
port, clubs have been able to make1
extensive tours in this countryk
and abroad.
ED SULLIVAN, television star,
recognizing this interest, has in-
vited many glee clubs to appear
on his show.
Tickets for the concert, priced
at 90 cents, $1.50 and $2.20, can
be purchased . from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. this week at the box office
in Hill Auditorium.
32 SHOPPIN GDAYS
UNTIL CHRISTMAS ..
It is time to place orders for
crested and special gifts for
that holiday occasion . . .
Items for every member of
the family, and for those spe-
cial friends you always want
to remember.
Buy the Best . . . Buy Balfour
"We manufacture and distribute
the Official Michigan Ring"
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
1321 South University
Phone: NO 3-1733
-Daily-Chuck Kelsey
PEP TALKS READY - Michigras co-chairmen, Gretchen Meiers
and Hal Abrams, prepare the short talks they will present at the
mass meeting to be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, at the Union Ball-
room, for all students interested in working on Michigras. At the
meeting the general theme of Michigras will be revealed.
Annual Fortnite Production
Stems from Solemn Dinner
A kickoff for Michigras activi-
ties will take place at 7:30 p.m. to-
morrow at the Union Ballroom
when the first mass meeting will
be held for all students interested
in working on the gala spring
weekend.
Besides showing movies, of the
1952 Michigras, Hal Abrams and
Gretchen Meiers, Co-chairmen of
the event, will reveal the theme of
this year's parade and carnival.
* * *
STUDENTS will have a chance
to learn more about organizational
structure and committee plans
from the various central commit-
tee chairmen and have an oppor-
tunity to sign up for the commit-
tee of their choice.
Committees are open to both
men and women, with or without
talent, according to the co-chair-
men, who would like to have the
attendance of the last Michigras
mass meeting topped. At that time
over 150 students turned out.
* * *
THE BOOTHS committee needs
students to help with electrical
wiring, to contact and select
judges, to design and construct
booths, to publicize the booths
and to take charge of the mass
buying of supplies.
Various sub - chairmanships
are available on the publici-
ty committee. Students will
be selected to serve as radio
and television chairman, skits
and stunts chairman, advteris-
ing chairman, public relations
chairman, assemblies chairman
and food chairman.
This committee also needs a lot
of students with original and un-
usual ideas to work on the sub-
committees, for the purpose of
making all the residents of Ann
Arbor and neighboring vicinities
Michigras conscious.
I Ballet Club
For Your Car ... MICHIGAN NAME PLATE
"Painters and Paintings," the
theme of this year's Fortnite, to
be held Nov. 23, will add another
chapter to the background of the
Annual Assembly production.
Begun many years ago as an As-
sembly banquet, it was primarily a
scholarship night when dormi-
tories with the highest averages
and outstanding women scholas-
tically were recognized. It was a
rather solemn affair with little of
the humor of its present day off-
spring.
DURING World War II all ban-
quets stopped, and Assembly offi-
cials felt that something was need-
ed to honor outstanding women
and dormitories, something that
was more for the students to have
fun with.
Assembly officers felt that
there should be some way for
coeds to show their ingenuity as
well as their scholastic achieve-
ments. As a result, the skits be-
came an important part of Fort-
nite.
H il lel Assembly
Slated for Sunday
Hillel Foundation will present a
Kenes, which is the Hebrew word
for assembly or gathering, from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at the Fresh
Air Camp.
As part of a Hillel leadership
training program, students will
have an opportunity to learn more
about problems of the Jewish Stu-
dent and its relation to the Hillel
Foundation.
Any student interested in at-
tending the event is asked to
call the Hillel Building, phone
NOrmandy 3-4129, between 3 and
6 p.m., today, tomorrow or Thurs-
day.
Food and transportation at the
assembly, which will feature talks
by Hillel President, Dan Fogel,
Hillel Director, Dr. H. Jacobs, Eve
Kadden and Arvine Kimmel, will
be furnished by the Hillel Foun-
dation.
With hundreds of little details
to check before a parade can
become a success, students on
the parade committee will work
under various subchairmen.
Men or women may fill the posi-
tions of floats chairman, the per-
son who receives petitions from1
house groups on campus and gets
the material for the floats; judges
chairman, who is in charge of
Club To Promote
Bus Ride Savings
If enough interest is shown, stu-
dents may be able to save 15 per
cent on bus trips to Cleveland, To-
ledo, Pittsburgh and all parts of
Michigan.
In order to operate the vacation
special buses, 32 passengerso are
needed. Therefore, students are
urged by Wolverine Club officials
to sign up at the Union today or
tomorrow.
Students are also urged to pur-
chase their tickets on Thursday,
Friday or next Monday in order
to reserve a seat on the special.
building the judges stand and se-
curing judges; electrical consult-
ant, or publicity chairman, a per-
son who runs the king and queen
contest for Ann Arbor children.
VALUABLE SALES, layout and
editorial experience may be gained
by students occupying these sub-
chairman posts on the programs
committee.
For individuals who want to
work much later in the spring,
many students will be needed to
sell general admission Michigras
tickets in the individual houses,
on campus or at the fleldhouse
during the carnival.
Highlight of the spring semes-
ter, Michigras, which is held once
every two years, features a mile-
long parade and a two day carni-
val at the fieldhouse.
SPONSORED by the Women's
Athletic Association and Union, the
event this year will take place
April 23 and 24.
Traditionally, the pr o c e e ds,
which amount to a couple of
thousand dollars, are donated to a
needy charity or University fund,
MICHIGRAS KICKOFF:
I
Committee Slates Mass Meeting
Newest addition to the Fortnite
scene was the idea of a central
theme. Because of the football
season, many of the skits last year
centered around a football theme.
However, the central theme this
year will promote a variety of
ideas.
Beside being an annual skit-
fest, Fortnite carries out the
idea of the Assembly banquet by
rewarding women with high
scholastic averages.
Included in the programs is the
installation of house presidents.
These officers are introduced to
the audience and given their offic-
ial house president's pin.
Brilliant
In University
Colors
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INITIAL COMPANY
Rochester 14, N.Y.
Size of Plate 6 " x 13 "
ORDER NOW AUTO
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The WAA Ballet Club will
hold its weekly meeting at 7:30
p.m. today in the Dance Studio
at Barbour Gym. All members
are urged to attend.
DON'T WALK*...
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ATTENTION!
A notice to those girls who are helping their hus.
bands obtain their college training.
...to
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Toggery
our
YOU
have an important responsibility in helping your
husband further his career. It is up to you to
choose a position that offers stability, good wages,
and a chance to advance.
The knee socks you've been waiting for have just come in!
They're warm, newsy, flattering-WH ISTLE-WORTHY!
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have such openings for order typists and tellers.
Also we have openings in the near future for tele-
phone operators. Visit our employment office soon.
Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
323 East Washington
CAMPUS
TOGGERY
1111 S. U. nearthe
East U. Diagonal
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It may be time to put
out the light, but it's
still time to return your
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Just Arrived
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