SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27,1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVER THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGI F!VK Members of League Dance Class To Demonstrate teps, Routines Spring Weekend To Feature Poster Contest, Skits, Derby ANOTHER GILBERT? Sophomore s Lyrics Win Contest Previews of the variety of dance steps students may learn by joining the League dance classes will be exhibited in a floor- show at the dance class mass meeting 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the League Ballroom. The floorshow, prepared by Johnny 'T!rbanic, the instructor, and a group of exhibition danc- ers, will include demonstrations of the samba, tango, mambo, fox trot, waltz and charleston. Samba techniques will be pre- sented by Carol Ellis, David Shaub, Shirley Sikkenga, Ronald Miller, D. C. Woo, Barbara Swinkowski, James King and Jane Mumford. Tango dancers include Peter Ros- ko and Charlotte Rolnick. Johnny Urbanic, who will do the mambo with Julie Sage, will also exhibit fox trot anC waltz steps with Charlotte Rolnick as his partner. Charleston Versions Popular charleston versions will be danced by Carol Ellis, Shirley Sikkenga, Shirley Baylis, James King, Ronald Miller and David ' Shaub. Business matters will also be discussed at the meeting by the dance class committee in order to acquaint guests with League dance class opportunities. All students are welcome to the mass meeting to which there is no admission charge. Classes of beginners, intermedi- ate and advanced dancers, singles and couples, will begin March 7, 8 and 9. Exhibition Group Every Monday evening for a series of eight lessons, an advanced class for couples will be held from 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. and an exhibi- tion group will meet at 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. Members of the exhibi- tion group must receive an invita- tion, be a member of a past or present dance group or try out. -Daily-Esther Goudsmit TANGO TWOSOME-It takes two to tango the way Charlotte Rolnick and Peter Rosko demonstrate the various steps. The tango Is one of the dances in the floorshow program for the League dance class mass meeting at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday, in the League Ballroom, to which all students are invited. Another feature of Spring Weekend is well under way as Lois Union and Russ McKennan, co- chairmen of the stunts committee, are receiving entries in the cam- pus-wide poster contest sponsored by the Spring Weekend committee. The posters will be displayed around the diagonal. A trophy will be presented to the winner on Skit Night, March 11. Over 20 inches high, the trophy which was donated by a local mer- chant will be a traveling award. Each successive Spring Weekend it will pass to the house who en- ters the winning poster. Quality of art work and appro- priateness of the slogan to sup- port Spring Weekend will be the criteria for judging. Miss Union points out, "This is just one more way to get more student participa- tion in Spring Weekend and make it an all-campus event." Tuesday Deadline Deadline for posters is 9 p.m. Tuesday in Rm. 3A of the Union. Entry blanks may still be ob- tained from Miss Union at Nor- mandy33384 or McKennan at Normandy 25649. Specifications limit the posters to 40 by 30 inches. The poster must be nailed to a 5 foot board from one-half to two inches thick. One of the first features of the weekend to get underway, the poster contest will become a tra- ditional part of the festivities. Sponsored by the Union and the W o m e n 's Athletic Association jointly, Spring Weekend will be March 11 and 12. Features of the Weekend include Skit Night on Friday, March 11 and the Wol- verun Derby on Saturday, March 12. Skit Night Five houses are participating in Skit Night. Their skits were cho- sen from a group of nineteen en- tries to be put on in Hill Au- WAANotices] DIVING CLUB - The Diving Club will have a reorganizational meeting at 5:10 p.m. tomorrow at the women's pool. * * .* SWIM LESSONS-A six lesson beginning swim class will be of- fered to upperclass coeds by the Women's Physical Education De- partment. The class will meet at 8:15 p.m. every Tuesday beginning March 1. ditorium. They will compete for a trophy. Alpha Delta Pi and Sigma Al- pha Epsilon's "Dust of Tin Sol- diers," Alpha Gamma Delta and Theta Xi's "Nine to Five," Chicago House and Adams House's "The Man Who Came to Dinner," Sig- ma Phi Epsilon and Alpha Phi's "The Lottery," and Hobbs House and Phi Gamma Delta's "The Congo" will be presented. Wolverun Derby Saturday the festivities will be- gin with a parade from the diag to the Derby site. Derby partici- pants, girl's houses that are spon- soring them, and all interested students will follow with bands, songs, and a bevy of posters and booster signs. Twenty-five soap box cars will run in the Wolverun Derby. Run in heats, winners will be picked according to the fastest times. The winning car will be presented with a trophy at the close of the event. Cars entered in the Derby will be appropriately decorated to fit the theme of .Spring Weekend, "Life in these United States." By DEDE ROBERTSON When informed that he had been chosen winner last Wednes- day from 20 entrants in the Un- ion sponsored lyrics contest, Bob Brandzel, music school sophomore from Chicago, let out with a shout from West Quad that could be heard even in The Michigan Daily offices. Although he had never had any formal music training before he came here, Brandzel good natur- edly mentioned that he had "done some composing and band and concert arranging on his own in high school." He now plays, at varying degrees of proficiency, the clarinet, saxophone, flute and pi- ano. High Point "One of the high points of my life," Brandzel related, "was when I had an opportunity to play clari- net with the Chicago Civic Orches- tra." Now an active member of the' University Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Brandzel will take a com- ic lead in the forthcoming produc- tion, "Iolanthe." In the Society's --Daily-SamChing ROBERT BRANDZEL performances of "The Pirates of Penzance" last fall, he played the Major-General. Brandzel also worked on the3 Gilbert and Sullivan Society's productions of "Pinafore," "The Mikado" and "Trial By Jury." Union Opera In addition, this busy lad di- Uma rected his talents to the Union Opera music committee last se- mester. When asked if he planned to continue with work along the line of composing lyrics, Brandzel cracked his amiable smile and said "Well, I suppose that' just depends but I'll let, you know in the future." The lyrics Brandzel submitted were selected as the most appro- priate for Dr. Edwin Franco Gold- man's new composition, "Michigan March." Dr. Goldman, composer of such noted marches as "On the Mall," introduced his piece at a band concert presented last spring in Hill Auditorium. Popularity Gains Since that time, the march has gained in popularity throughout the country. Presented at football games last fall, it is soon to be played by the University of Illi- nois band in its annual program. The contest was sponsored by the Public Relations Committee of the Union. PARIS INSPIRED SWEATERS IN MAZET ORLON Tuesday night classes will in- clude a beginners class for singles from 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. and a be- ginners class for couples from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. In addition, there will be an- other beginners class for singles from 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. and an in- termediate class for couples from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. every Wednes- day. All classes will be instructed by Johnny Urbanic, who has taught German Actors To Present Modern Comedy, 'Ingeborg' League dance classes for four years. Fee For Men Men students pay a fee of $4 for eight lessons in the singles classes, meaning that they come stag to the classes. Coeds, who do not pay for the lessons, may ob- tain tickets from the League Un- dergraduate Office or from their Ifouse representatives. The tickets allow admittance to a designated class which the coed must attend or send a substitute in order to in- sure an equal number of people in the class. A date bureau has been set up for the couples classes. According to this system, coeds who obtain membership tickets, will be called for each week by a different male student from their dance class. Men who purchase tickets pric- ed at $4 for couples dance classes may bring their. own dates or sign up for dates which will be ar- ranged by the date bureau. Tickets are now available in the League Undergraduate Office and mayialso be obtained at the mass meeting. The very same styles shown by French couturier, Givenchy recently - in his original courturier colors, fashioned of Mazet, the cream of the orlons. At Right: DEAUVILLE CARDIGAN--The newest look over bathing suits, golf clothes, with shorts and slim cotton dresses. Sizes 34-42. Full-Fashioned By Af w. .: .. . {. , h F , . . 1:;.< "?ate dti ::;. "Ingeborg," a modern Germanv comedy concerning the domestic problems of a conservative profes- sor and his young wife, will be pre- sented by professional German ac- tors at 8 p.m. Saturday in Patten- gill Auditorium. The sophisticated comedy by Curt Goetz is of the Noel Cowardl type. The professor of entomology is disturbed about his charming Union Show Trip ) Tickets for the Union-spon- sored trip to the Detroit show- ing, Sunday, March 6, of "Fifth Season" starring Chester Mor- ris may now be obtained at the Union Student Offices. Priced at $4.25, tickets include a $2.40 bus trip and a $4.40 orchestra seat. r. /, x. ii.; wife, Ingeborg, when a dashing young dramatist comes to visit. Deutsche Buehne, the German company, offers the only organ- ized, professional performances of German plays outside of New York. German Consul in Detroit,Dr. W. H. van Alsmick, reports that he was both amused and im- pressed by the first performance of "Ingeborg" in Detroit. The play will be brought to Ann Arbor under the .auspices of sev- eral German groups. The Schwa- ben Verein, the Greater Benefi- cial Union, the German Park Rec- reation Club, the Arbeiter Kran- kenkasse,, and the University of Michigan' Deutscher Verein are selling tickets for the March 5 performance. Student tickets priced at $1.00 may be obtained in the Tappan Hall German department office. $10.95 CE p/ )LI\N Above: RIVIERA JACKET. The feminine touch to slim or fuller skirts, for spectator wear or in- formal dresses. 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