TIFMSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FMv THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1954 PAflh! PIVII! JL L-ARAU iri G Michigan Students at Ohio State To Enjoy Full, Varied Weekend INDEPENDENTS PERFORM: Assembly Reveals Fortnite Skits "If you haven't a ticket for the Ohio State game Saturday, better not plan to make the trip," is the advice from the Ohio State Bureau of Public Relations. The Women's Self Government Association reports, "If students do not have tickets when they leave Michigan, they will not be able to get into the game, unless they wish tso pay 'scalper's pri- ces'." A similarly pessimistic report comes from the Ohio Hotel Associ- ation which states, "There are JUNIOR COEDS: JGP Committee Will Hold Mass Meeting at League Come on along to JGP" will echo from the League Ballroom trials and tribulations of a cen- between 7 and 8 p.m. tonight as tral committee without committee members of the Junior Girls' Play members. central committee hold a mass Costumes representative of the meeting for all junior coeds. chairman's duties will be donned Committee members will intro- by each member for her part in duce themselves to the assembled the song and dance routine. women with a skit depicting the After the opening program, the coeds attending the mass meeting will have an opportunity to dis- Martha Cook Tea cuss the work of each committee with its chariman and to sign up To Honor Coeds for the jobs they would like to do. Women who are interested in New women on campus will be helping with JGP but are unable guests of honor at a tea from 3:30 to attend the meeting tonight may to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Mar- sign up in the League Undergradu- tha Cook Building. ate office or call general chairman All freshman and transfer wom- Alice James. en may drop in after classes to Committees in need. of members meet the Martha Cook women, include music, make-up, stage, sample the punch and cookies and ushers, costumes, properties, pro- take a tour of the building. grams, tickets, scenery, posters and Friday tea is a tradition at Cook. publicity. Once or twice during each year the This year's JGP will open March residents invite various groups on campus to be guests of honor at Nigh t preshetation attndednior the informal event.Ni resen.atiatede nb In the past, guests of honor have senior women. It will be given included such groups as the pres- again Friday and Saturday eve- idents and secretaries of all the nings of that week. undergraduate clubs on campus, Music and lyrics for the annual the SL candidates and the house show have already been completed directors and presidents of all wom- and a title will soon be chosen. en's residences. Tryouts for the play, produced en- One of the other outstanding tirely by the junior girls, will be features of Cook is its many tradi- held later. Singing and dancing tions, such as the Messiah Supper, parts are included in the presen- Christmas Breakfast, Memorial tation. Service and the Formal Dinner for In discussing the mass meeting, women new to the building. general chairman, Miss James, The money for the Martha Cook said that JGP provides a good op- Building was donated by William portunity for junior women to take Cook as a memorial to his mother, an active part in campus and class Martha Wolford Cook. The building activities and urged them all to was opened in September, 1915. attend the meeting. practically no rooms left in Co- lumbus." For students who do have tick- ets and room accommodations, an interesting weekend is ahead, ac- cording to the WSGA. Dances, Concerts, Play On tomorrow evening students may attend "Candlelight Inn," an admission free dance featuring a nightclub atmosphere, at 9 p.m. in the Ohio Union Ballroom. The Michigan and Ohio State Men's Glee Clubs willpresent a concert at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Union ballroom. Tickets, which are available on both campuses, are $1.50, general admission, and $1.80, reserved. Following the concert an all- campus dance sponsored by Civi- tas, the Men's Independent Organ- ization, will be held. It will begin at 10:30 p.m., and there will be no admission charge. "The Emperor Jones," a play by Eugene O'Neill will be present- ed by the department of speech at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in the Drama Theatre of Derby Hall. Tickets are priced at $1.20 OSU's Marching Band willgive a concert at 3:15 p.m. Sunday Glee Club Program The Glee Club concert program will include classical and semi- classical numbers, as well as spir- ituals, selections from musical comedies and college songs. The Michigan Glee Club, direct- ed by Prof. Philip A. Duey, will present a program similar to the one performed at the Michigan State joint concert last Saturday. Directed by Norman Staiger, the Ohio State Glee Club will present their interpretations of "Fifty Men .and a Girl," "Break Forth Into Joy" from Handel's "Messiah," "Benedictus" f r o m "Messe Solennele" by Gounod and "Turn Back, O Man" by Holst and Lefebvre. The Ohio State quartet, the "Frosugleecqs," will present sev- eral varied selections. Both groups will sing "Father William" from "Alice in Wonder- land," "Ballad of Hurry Up" from Blitzstein's "Airborne Symphony," Negro spirituals, "Rock-a My Soul" and "If I Got My Ticket, Can I Ride?" and "Campus Echoes" ar- ranged by R. Heine and N. Staig- ler. Judges, skit titles and program have been announced by Assem- bly's Fortnite chairman, Claudia Moore Smith. Judges will be Mrs. Harlan Hatcher; Jean Bromfield, Pan-hel- lenic president; Lucy Landers, League president; John Baity, In- ter-Fraternity Council president; Tom Leopold, Union president; and Stan Levy, Inter-House Council president. Fortnite is initiating a new prac- tice, that of having four women emcee the program. These women will be Laura Webber, Carolyn Wysocki, Nora Granito and Rima Nickell. The program will begin with an explanation of the duties of Assem- bly board. 21 Acts Included 21 acts are included in the show. Houses will vie for first prize with such skits as Betsy Barbour's "Who Put the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy's Chowder," Couzens' "It's a Woman's World," Stockwell's "Give Me Five Minutes More" and, as the final offering, the Housemothers' skit, "Bermuda" which will not be entered for com- petition. Afterthe skits, Dean Elsie Ful- ler, assistant to the Dean of Wom- en, will present scholarship awards to women who maintained a four point average over both semes- ters last year. At the end of the program a cup will be presented to the winning house. Four cups will be given to resi- dence hall in each division, accord- ing to size, which has the highest scholastic average. Hazel Frank, Assembly president, will distrib- ute president's pins Fortnite is an annual project of Assembly Association. All coeds are invited to attend the show Mon- day evening Marching Band To Present Routines at Televised Game m. s - -Daily-Lynn Wallas NON-PERISHABLE DINNER-Left to right, Lois Yandell, Madge Lawrence, Lois Shein and Beverly Ashby look over plans for the drive today. Coed Food Parcel Collection To Aid Needy City Families Dance routines which have won applause this year for the Michi- gan Marching Band will be com- bined in the half-time show for Saturday's game with Ohio State University in Columbus. The show will include the Charleston, the Mambo and a high- ly-intricate dance routine which has been developed for the "St. Louis Blues." The band will do only one formation, that of a huge coffee maker in which hot "cof- fee" will be brewed. In its pre-game appearance, the band will salute Ohio State by forming four rotating O's while playing the "Buckeye Battle Cry." Both the game and the half-time entertainment will be nationally televised. The band will leave Ann Arbor at 8 a.m. tomorrow for Newark, 0., where a practice session is scheduled from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. Band members will spend the night at Newark and stage a pre- view of the Ohio State game show at 8:15 p.m. In White Field. The show will include the Walt Disney show given at the Northwestern and Minnesota games and the tribute to John Philip Sousa which was presented at the Illinois game. The band will move into Colum- bus Saturday at 9:45 a.m. for an hour long rehearsal, and start back to Ann Arbor at 6 p.m. Needy families in Ann Arbor will be aided by Assembly Association's "non-perishable foods" dinner to- night. Canned goods, cookies, fruits and other packaged items will be col- lected at the doors of women's res- idence hall dining rooms. The food will be distributed to families se- lected by the Dunbar Center. Last year's dinner was termed quite successful by committee members. The drive was limited to cans only, however. This semester the dinner collec- tion will include other foods, both to make selection easier for the coeds and to provide a larger va- riety for the families. Those chosen by the Center are largely families with five to ten , t I ,lcn'4 Comain 1 SING MERRY CHRISTMAS o WITH A GIFT OF We have a wide selection of Eaton's Stationery in a variety of weights and colors to meet all your Christmas gift needs. RAMSAY PRJINTIEKS a 119 EAST LIBERTY ANN ARBOR j ART CONTEST-Deadline for the Union Art Contest will be extended through this afternoon. Entries may be taken to the Student Offices be- tween 3 and 5 p.m. * * * VOLLEYBALL - The following teams will play in the volleyball tournamentat 7:15 p.m. today: the winner of Couzens I and Alpha Delta Pi vs. Chi Omega; winner of Delta Gamma and Yost vs. Alpha Chi Omega II. SCROLL-There will be a meet- ing of Scroll for an Ensian picture at 7:15 p.m. today in the League. MODERN DANCE CLUB - The Modern Dance Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Barbour Gym. Besides the usual lesson, casting and further plans for the Christmas Program will be announced. * * * INTERNATIONAL TEA - The weekly tea sponsored by the Inter- national Students Association and the International Center will be held from 4:30 to 6 p.m. today at Rackham Hall, in honor of Jap- anese student leaders now on tour of U.S. universities. SHOW TRIPS-Tickets for the Union-sponsored show trips may be purchased from 3 to 5 p.m. week- dayshuntil Thanksgiving vacation at the Union Student Offices. The trip to see "Seven Year Itch" on Nov. 29 will cost $3.25 and seats and transportation to "A Midsu'mmer Night's Dream" Dec. 9 are priced at $5.25. children, and in most cases one of the parents is sick or unable to work. "This is a chance for women to help people who would otherwise have very little to really enjoy at Thanksgiving," said Lois Shein, special projects chairman of As- sembly. Photo Contestants Receive Awards For Prize Entries Copping the grand prize in the Union-sponsored photo contest was Don Campbell with his entry in the curricular division of the compe- tition, showing a Michigan coed facing the confusion of registra- tion. Campbell also captured top hon- ors in the extra-curricular phase of the contest. The third first place, in the campus and community scenes, was taken by Gus Cout- sourakis. Second place awards went to Paul Kerastas in the campus and community division, C. G. Christo- fides for his curricular subject, and Kent Pickard's extra-curricular photograph. Receiving honorable mention for their photographic work were C. G. Christofides and Abraham Zyl- berman. Prof.Philip C. Davis and Prof. David H. Reider of the School of Design and Prof. C. Wilbur Peters, of the physics department, judged the pictures. Winners may go to the Union Student Offices from 3 to 5 p.m. this week to pick up their prizes. Winning photos will be entered in the National College Photography Contest and sent to a national magazine for possible publication. The pictures will be on display in the Union lobby until Thanks- giving vacation. Dick Cramer, con- test chairman, urges students to come to see the exhibited work. Select Save now in ou r Now! Coat Event The result of clever purchasing an amazing group of coats. o 0 0 0 UV LOVELIEST FABRICS, newest style with "Printzess" fine tailoring, mil- ium-lined or interlined for extra c warmth. THREE GROUPS: $38 ... originally to $55.00 $48 . ,.originally to $69.95 S$58 .. . . originally to $79.95 a Included in all groups is our Fall t0rr and Winter stock of coats. o0 Group of FUR TRIMMED COATS, v originally $98.95 to $15.00 at $69.95 ON FOREST a off South U. 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