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March 15, 1955 - Image 5

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Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1955-03-15

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TUESDAY, MARCH 1.5, 1955

THE MCHIGAN DAILY

PAOt1P

TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1955 THE MICHJGA1.J DAILY PAflI~ VUYU

1 f1 \JIL 1 1 T 1T

'U' Band, 'M' Singers
To Present Concerts

Famed Carnegie Hall in New
York City will be the scene of a
joint concert to be given by the
University Symphony Band and
the Michigan Singers at 8:30 p.m.
Friday, April 8.
Students living in the Metropol-
itan area or visiting New York
during Easter vacation may pur-
chase tickets in Rm. 3519, Admin-
istration Building. Seats are priced
from $1 to $2.50.
Students, Faculty
To Be Entertained
At Coffee Hour
Union officials will host mem-
bers of the history department for
a coffee hour at 4 p.m. tomorrow
in the Union terrace next to the
ballroom.
Allan Drebin, Union official in
charge of arrangements, empha-
sized the informality and casual-
ness of the meeting as contrasted
with the more formal relationship
between students and faculty dur-
ing class hours.
All Are Welcome
He mentioned that anyone in-
terested may come, even though
he is not a member of the spe-
cial department or majoring in
that subject.
Discussions may center around
the special field of faculty mem-
bers or may be pleasant banter on
topics of the day.
Next Wednesday members of the
political science department will
be present to talk with students
interested in that subject.
After spring vacation, econo-
mists will take over the terrace on
the afternoon of Wednesday, April
27.3
I~I.

Prof. William D. Revelli will
lead the band, and the Michigan
"Singers will be directed by Prof.
Maynard Klein. Edwin Franko
Goldman, composer of "The Mich-
igan March," will appear as guest
conductor with the band.
Tour By Bus
Band members will leave March
31 on University buses for the tour
which will take them through the
Eastern states. Boston will be an-
other one of their principal stops
during this Spring trip.
Departure date for the Michigan
Singers is April 3. After several
stops in Pennsylvania, they will
join the band in New York for
the final concert in Carnegie Hall.
The first half of the Carnegie
Hall program will include Bach's
"Toccata and Fugue in D Minor,"
and "Jubilee" from Symphonic
Sketches by Chadwier, played by
the band. The chorus will sing
Palestrina's "Stabat Mater" and
"Sing to the Lord a New Song"
by Schutz.
Following intermission, the band
will perform an excerpt from Ros-
sini's opera "The Barber of Se-
ville," while the Singers will pre-
sent selections by Schubert and
Brahms.
Composer To Conduct
Later, Goldman will join the
band, conducting two of his
marches. The final number of the
evening will be directed under the
baton of Prof. Revelli.
On a four day tour between se-
mesters, the 101 members of the
band played in Sturgis, Mich.; Des
Plaines, Ill. and Elkart and South
Bend, Ind.
The Singers have made several
appearances in the Midwest dur-
ing this season. They recently per-
formed at a meeting of the Music
Educators' National Conference in
Cleveland. Composed of about 40
singers, the group is only five-
years-old.
Dance Lesson
A master lesson in modern
dance directed by Miss D'Habler
from Detroit will be held at
8:15 a.m. Thursday for all
Women Physical Education Ma-
jors. Students attending are re-
quested to be ready to start no
later than 8:30 a.m.

Panhel Adds
Amendment
For Elections
New Motion Offered
For Sorority Housing
At Weekly Discussion
Panhellenic Association yester-
day adopted a constitutional
amendment allowing for a sliding
slate of candidates for Panhel of-
fices.
The proposal reads: "only candi-
dates who have petitioned and
been interviewed for any position
and have been defeated for that
position may be renominated for
another position, at the regular
meeting at which the vote is tak-
en."
This means that only coeds who
have taken the time to petition and
be interviewed will be nominated.
It overcomes objections to the or-
iginal plan which permitted any
nominations from the floor.
Housing Motion
Members of the Board of Dele-
gates will take back to their houses
for consideration the motion that
sororities insure fall semester
housing, in their chapter houses
or annexes for pledges who have
not made their grades.
If a sorority did not wish to in-
sure housing, they would have to
break the woman's pledgeship by
April 1 so that she would be eli-
gible to apply for dormitory hous-
ing.
The motion is designed to alle-
viate the confusion caused when
pledges find themselves ineligible
to move into the sorority house
upon receiving their grades in
June.
Deadline for petitioning for
Panhellenic offices and applica-
tions for Panhellenic scholarships
has been extended until 5 p.m. to-
morrow. Applicants may pick up
petitions and sign up for inter-
views in the League Undergradu-
ate Office.
Council Positions Open
Executive Council positions open
to junior coeds who will be seniors
in the fall are president, first and
second vice-presidents, rushing
chairman, public relations chair-
man and treasurer.
Future juniors may apply for the
office of secretary. The chairman-
ship of rushing counselors is also a
junior position.
Other offices available are as-
sistants to the rushing chairman
and to the chairman of rushing
counselors and the position of par-
liamentarian.
Administrative offices, for which
no petitioning is needed, include
three sophomore positions on both
the secretarial and public rela-
tions committees.
Three $100 scholarships are be-
Ing offered on the basis of need
and service to the University and
to the community.

-Daily--Dick Gaskill
SNACK TIME-Stanley Moskowitz (left) and Arthur Cornfeld
unload sandwiches and containers of cold milk from their delivery
truck before hawking them in a fraternity house.
Law School Student Heads
Evening Sandwich Service

Senior women participating in
their final League program, Sen-
ior Night will meet at 5:30 p.m.
Thursday in front of the Library.
Members of the Fiji marching
band will accompany the coeds to
the League. Suits or dressy dresses
will be acceptable attire.
Steak dinners await the class of
'55 in the League Ballroom. Dur-
ing the dinner, the traditional
status ceremony in which married
seniors hold candles, engaged coeds
suck lemons, and pinned women
wear safety pins instead of their
fraternity pins will take place.
Wishing Well
Unattached coeds are asked to
bring pennies, one for each year
of their age to throw in a wish-
ing well. Surprise entertainment
will round out the evening.
League Ballroom decorations, in
keeping with the theme "Pot 'O
Gold," will revolve around such
lucky objects as the "pot of gold
at the end of the rainbow," and
the wishing well. The St. Patrick's
Day table will exhibit programs
with sayings from previous League
productions, pipe cleaner figures
and a secret favor for each senior.
After dinner the seniors will at-
tend the first JGP performance
given in their honor. According to
tradition, they may call back acts
they like for repeat performance.
Five hundred seniors are expect-
ed to participate in this year's Sen-
ior Night, according to Muriel
Claflin,
Tickets On Sale
Tickets for the affair are priced
at $1.90 and may be purchased
from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1:30
to 5:30 p.m .today in the League
Undergraduate Office. This will be
the last opportunity for senior
women to purchase tickets for the
program.
Letters have been sent to mar-
ried senior women and those not
living on campus informing them
of the event and extending a spe-
cial invitation.
(Paid Political Advertisement)
SGC Needs
Paula Strong
(Paid Political Advertisement)

This annual affair, formerly
known as Senior Supper, was held
in Betsy Barbour until 1935. After
completion of the Union the sup-
pers were held there and the jun-
iors presented their play at the
old, Whitney Theater

TRADITION REIGNS:
JGP To Highlight Senior Affair

A.M. Night is getting closer.
Are you prepared?

P

I

T V U"W

110,

PIURINTING

Since 1936 the dinners have been
held in the League Ballroom.
Senior Supper was discontinued
during the war, but senior women
were still invited to attend the JGP
production.

KING SIZE SERVICE

Card to a Catalog
Push Button

by

Dressmaking
Alterations
and Repairs
for appointment
Call NOh 3-3294

By ROSE PERLBERG
"Sandwiches!" "Sandwiches and
cold milk!"
These are familiar words to
many University students who are
customers of a unique sandwich
service.
Owned and operated by Dick
Adams, a senior in law school, the
service delivers evening snacks
right to the doors of 25 fraternity
houses, several sororities and the
Law Quad.
Estimating that such a service
has been in existence for more
than eight years, Adams said that
he bought it last September from
a student who had graduated.
Business Proposition
"It's purely a business proposi-
tion, to help support my wife and
child," he declared.
Headquarters for the business is
space rented out in the back of a
store, which Adams shares with a
competitor who hawks his wares
along a different route. Here a
woman prepares the sandwiches in
the afternoon that will be sold that
evening. There are usually six dif-
ferent varieties, priced around 25'
cents.
Adams reported that there are
strict health regulations on his
business. "The premises are regu-

larly inspected and approved by
the Ann Arbor Health Dept.," he
said.
Every evening Monday through
Thursday, at about 9:30 p.m., the
five students whom Adams em-
ploys as delivery men load the
sandwiches and containers of cold
milk into a truck, and begin their'
rounds which end around 1 a.m.
There are two deliveries, both in
the afternoon and evening on Sun-
day.
Big Season
"We sold more than 230 sand-
wiches a night during our big sea-
son," Adams recalled. The "big
season" was last fall. Adams terms
exam time the worst for his busi-
ness. "Many of our customers are
studying away from their houses,
and residences often provide food
then," he remarked.
Commenting on extending his
service to dormitories, the law
school senior said that a University
policy prohibited it.
"One of the pccupational haz-
ards of this job is the late hours,"
Adams said with a smile. "I start
supervising the making of sand-
wiches early in the afternoon, help
the boys load the truck in the eve-
ning and usually finish an eve-
ning's work at 1:30 or 2 a.m.

4
I
4
4
4
4
QUALITY PRINTING 4
4
4
4
4
4
PHONE-NO 2-1013
A A SA A. A ........... AA*S**A* 555 .A.A........A A,

LOWER PRICES

On Campumsn
(Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.)
THE STUDENT COUNCIL
Today let us investigate a phenomenon of American college
life called the student council. First of all, what is the student
council? The answer is simple: the student council is a council
of students.
Next, what does the student council do? Again the answer is
simple: it meets.
Next, what goes on at the meetings? This question is rather
more complicated than the others. Perhaps it can best be an-
swered by reproducing here the minutes of a typical meeting
of a typical student council.
Meeting scheduled for 8:30 p.m. at Student Union Building.
Call to order 9:51 p.m. by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding. Motion
to adjourn made by Louis Bicuspid, freshman representative.
Motion ruled out of order by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding.
Hunrath Sigafoos called "old poop" by Louis Bicuspid, fresh-
man representative. Seconded by Delores Wheatgerm, sophomore
representative. Tabled by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding.
Minutes of last meeting read by Zelda Pope-Toledo, secretary.
Motion to accept minutes made by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding.
Motion defeated.
Treasurer's report not read because Rex Mercredi, treasurer,
not present at meeting. Rex Mercredi, treasurer, impeached in
- absentia.
Motion made by Louis Bicuspid, freshman representative, to
allow sale of hard liquor in school cafeteria. Seconded by
Delores Wheatgerm, sophomore representative. Motion tabled
by Hunrath Sigafoos, old poop.
Motion made by Booth Fishery, fraternity representative, to
permit parking in library. Motion referred to committee.
Motion made by Gladys Algae, junior representative, to allow
attendance in pajamas and robes at first hour classes. Motion
referred to committee.
Motion made by Elwood Feldspar, athletics representative,
to conduct French Conversation classes in English. Motion
referred to committee.
Motion made by Esme Plankton, sorority representative, to
allow hypnosis during Rush Week. Motion referred to committee.
Motion made by Pierre Clemenceau, foreign exchange student,
to conduct German Conversation classes in French. Motion
referred to committee.
Motion made by Harriet Critter, ag campus representative,
to allow faculty members above the rank of assistant professor
to perform marriages. Motion referred to committee.
Observation made by Martha Involute, senior representative,
that in her four years on student council every motion referred
to committee was never heard of again. Miss Involute was tabled.
Motion made by Louis Bicuspid, freshman representative, to
allow sale of hard liquor in Sociology I and II. Seconded by
Delores Wheatgerm, sophomore representative. Motion tabled
by Hunrath Sigafoos, presiding crossly.
Refreshments served: Coffee, cake, Philip Morris Cigarettes.
The following resolution adopted by acclamation:
"WHEREAS Philip Morris is milder, tastier, more exhila-
rating, and chock full of rare rich vintage tobaccos; and
WHEREAS Philip Morris is contained in the patented Snap-
Open pack which is the quickest, simplest, neatest container yet
devised for cigarettes; and WHEREAS Philip Morris, the most
commendable of smokes in the most admirable of wrappings,
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FROSH WEEKEND-Floorshow
tryouts for the blue team of Frosh
Weekend will be held from 7 to 9
p.m. today in the League.
JGP-Tickets for the 1955 JGP,
"Cock-a-Hoop," to be given at 8
p.m. Friday and Saturday eve-
nings, are on sale from 1 to 5 p.m.
today through Friday and from 7
to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in
the Lydia Mendelssohn box office.
They are priced at 90 cents per
person. Tickets are also on sale at
60 cents for the matinee perform-
ance at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.
* * t
LEAGUE PETITIONING-Peti-
tioning closes at 5 p.m. today for
all freshmen petitioning for sopho-
more League positions. Today is
also the deadline for anyone peti-
tioning for Summer School League

positions.
it

Fountain Pens
Greeting Cards
Stationery
Office Supplies
Typewriters
e * *
Steel Desks,
Chairs, Files

".er
"rn*
G

MORRILL'S
314 S. State Ph. NO 8-7177
Open Saturday 'til 5 P.M.

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Just One of
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