100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 16, 1956 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1956-10-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

x : I

TUESDAY, OCTOBER. 16, 1956

THE MICHIGAN DAI7."

Va a 04 - -V-.Oo,

UE D , O O E1151

PAGE FI

r.

Coeds

Join

Juniors Will Gather Tonight
For Annual J-Hop Meeting

"GREET YOUR CORNER LADY, GREET YOUR PARTNERS ALL . .."-Square dancing, which
has gained increasing popularity in the last f ew years, will be featured at the Union sponsored
Barn Dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight S aturday in the Union Ballroom. Social dancing
will be alternated with square dancing during the course of the evening.
Union Will Sponsor Barn Dance

Panhel Ball
Committees
Each Group Will Hold'
Organizational Meeting
For Additional Women
Affiliated women who attended
a mass meeting for the Panhel
Ball last week were able to sign
up for various sub-committee posi-
tions.
New assistants on the programs
committee under the chairman-
ship of Linda Genthe, assisted by
Mary Morris, are Anne Morgan,
Barb Knapp and Sandra Louvre.
The tickets committee of which
Lorraine LeDuc is chairman and
Lynn Allie assistant, is now com-
posed of Betsy Parker, Carol Pilce,
Marilyn Benson and Nancy Wren.
Chairman of the publicity com-
mittee is Nancy Thompson, with
assistants, Charlotte Boop and Sue
Bonnell. Members who have just
signed up are Anne Doerr, Pat
Hund, Pat Parkinson, Karen Ang-
ers, Mimi Ryan, Ann Orebaugh,
Nancy Lynn Gamble, Suzy Bailey,
Sue Reissing, Judy Martin, Mary
Kay Bewalds and Joanne Schar-
bat.
The decorations committee will
function under the chairmanship
of Claudia Taylor, with Sara Dal-
iere as assistant, and Janet Myers,
Penny Adams, Judy MacDonald,
Sue Mosier, Kay Masters, Suzy
Klinn and Ann Davis as new
members. Alice Rasmussen, Sara
Baker, Lucy Carmichael, Marcia
Roth, Darlene Roose, Pat Wright,
Judy Barttett, Gay Gerber, Margo
Harris, Bonnie Watson, Beverly
Barchi, Carol Kirshner, Marianne
Goes, Fran Wilcox, Mary Lou Fish-
beck, Ann Thomas, Arlene DeCook,
Gail Sturgeon, and Diane Heidel-
meyer are also members.
Committee chairmen said that
any affiliated coeds who did not
attend the mass meeting, but who
wish to work on one of the com-
mittees may attend the organiza-
tional meetings of the committees.
Tickets, programs and decora-
tions will meet at 7 p.m. tonight
in the League and publicity, at
7 p.m. tomorrow also in the
League.
Panhel Ball is an annual dance.
held each fall semester. The theme
of this year's presentation, is yet
to be announced, officials in
charge have said.
Held as a function of Panhellen-
ic since 1946, the Ball used to be
given in conjunction with Assem-
bly Association, the independent
women's organization.

Members of the class of 1958 will
gather at 7:30 p.m. today in Rms.
3R and 3S of the Union for the
mass meeting that will begin pre-
parations for the annual J-Hop.
At this time, students will sign
up to work on committees and ap-
ply for the special positions which
are open.
These posts include publicity
sub-chairmen in charge of stunts,
posters, the J-Hop booklet, dis-
plays and the campus committee,
plus a three member secretariat.
Additional positions open are
chairmanships of the publicity,

-Daily-Vern Boden
FOURTH FOR BRIDGE?-Taking part in the bridge lessons
offered by the League are Maureen Murphy, Lee Sarral and
Barb Schiebler. These lessons will be given from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
tonight and every Tuesday night at the League. Sponsored by
the League Social Committee, the lessons are given by Mrs.
Walter MacLean, of Ann Arbor, who uses the Goren bridge play-
ing methods. The lessons are intended for beginner and Inter-
mediate bridge players.
Alpha Lambda Delta To Meet Today

ticket, ushering and general pro-
duction groups for the Saturday
night event, as well as head of the
building and grounds sub-commit-
tee.
Completing the list of jobs avail-
able are those in connection with
the J-Hop fashion show. Publicity,
programs and models chairmen
and a fashion co-ordinator will be
needed for this.
As well as applying for the spe-
cial positions listed above, juniors
may sign up at the mass meeting
today for committee work.

By PAT NORTON4
The, "Red River Valley" has
changed its position and course
and is heading towards the Barn
Dance which is being held from 9
p.m. to midnight Saturday in the
Union Ballroom.
According to the "Grapevine
Twist" Jim Servis and his Country
Couzens will be playing for the
event.
Servis' band, which is replacing
Red Johnson and his band this
year, specializes in danceable mu-
sic, but for the "hoedown" it will
also provide the background music
for the "Virginia Reel" and various
square dances.
Both Types of Dances
"Social dancing and square
dances will be alternated throug-
out the evening," Neil Gray, pub-
licity chairman for the Union
dances, emphasized.

!

The Country Couzens include a
piano, base, drums, trombone,
trumpet and three saxophones.
Engineering students, if they
"Take a Little Peek", will be sur-
prised to see the cause of many
of their headaches, Conrad Eich-
horn, an instructor in electrical
engineering, calling out the
dances.
To Use Popular Songs
"Today they are even writing
square dances to popular tunes,"
Eichhorn commented.
He named such tunes as "Be-
cause, Just Because", "Trail of The
Lonesome Pine" and even one to
a number with a boogie beat,
"Boomerang".
"They also have a nice mixer to
'Stardust'," the caller added.
Deviating from the usual Union

type specialty dance, the Barn
Dance will feature decorations in-
cluding bales of hay or straw about
the" ballroom, according to Gray.
Refreshments Served
Couples attending the dance will
be able to "Duck for the Oyster,
Dig for the Clam" in the way of
refreshments, as well as partici-
pating in this particular dance.
Jeans and colored shirts for the
men and full skirts and fancy
blouses for coeds will be the attire
for the evening festivities.
Sponsoring the barn dance is
the Union Social Committee under
the chairmanship of Joe Sherman.
Other members of the Social
Comfntitee, besides Gray, are Diet-
rich Bergman, as chairman of the
entertainment group, and Brian
Higgin in charge of the decora-
tions.

New members of Alpha Lambdav
Delta, National Freshman Wo-
men's Honorary, will meet at 7:15
p.m. today in the Ann Arbor Room
of the League to discuss pins, cer-
tificates and Ensian pictures.
Chosen to head the 84 members
of the group for this year are Sar-
ah Weiner, president; Sarah Dra-
cm, secretary; Mary O'Neil, vice-
president and Aileen Mulligan,
treasurer.
Advisor of the group is Deborah
Bacon, Dean of Women.
Must Have High Average
This honorary is for freshman
women who received a 3.5 average
in their first semester or a 3.5
for their first two semesters of
school. The University of Michi-
gan chapter was founded in 1928.
The first chapter of the organi-
zation was founded at the Univer-
sity of Illinois in the spring of
1924. Its stated purpose was to
"promote intelligent living with an
increased appreciation of both the
love of study and the cultural
phases of campus life and to en-
courage superior s c h o l a r s h i p
among freshman women.
Numerous Colleges
With the installation of a chap-
ter at Purdue University in 1926,
Alpha Lambda Delta became a na-
tional organization. Now there are

I

THE VERY BEST IN TRAVEL, EXPLORATION,
ADVENTURE'
-....yo.ur passport to see the world
6GREAT ADVENTURE FILM PRODUCERS IN PERSON
NARRATING THEIR- EXCLUSIVE COLOR MOTION PICTURES

ACROSS CAMPUS

SUN., OCT. 28,
3:000 P.M.

ADM.DONLD . MaMILAN ORT"BEYOND THE
ADMEDONLD . MaMILAN ORTERN LIGHTS."

The Famous Admiral Takes Us To The Arctic Aboard His Schooner "Bowdoin"
SUN., NOV. 11, ~ Emi I~E "H EUIU
3:00 P.M. ,CURTIS NAGEL TBLUE DANUBE"
An Enchanting Cruise From Germany's Lovely Black Forest To Austria's Gay Vienna

SUN., DEC. 9, 3:00 P.M.

RUSSELL WRIGHT

"SMILING DENMARK"

The Best of Denmark's Scenic Grandeur and True-Life Stories Of Its People

SUN., JAN. 27, 3:00 P.M.

JOHN GODDARD

"KAYAKS
DOWN THE NILE"

Marvelous Films Of The Only Expedition Down The Entire 4,200-Mile Nile River
SUN., FEB. 17, 3:00 P.M. HAL LINKER "EXOTIC JAPAN"
Acclaimed the Finest Film of Japan, One Of The Most Beautiful Places In The World

BURO-CAT - There will be a
Buro-Cat secretariat committee
meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in the
League.
VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT -
Teams playing in the second night
of the women's volleyball tourna-
ment will be Stockwell I versus
Gamma Phi Beta and Palmer I
against Kappa Alpha Theta at
5:10 p.m. tonight. Angell I versus
Jordan I and Palmer II versus
Mosher I will play at 7:10 p.m.,
with Angell II playing against
Mosher II at 7:45 p.m. tonight at
Barbour Gym.
* * *
PANHEL BALL - There will be
a meeting of the Panhel Ball dec-
orations, tickets and programs
committees at 7:10 p.m. tonight
in the League.
HOMECOMING - Students in-
terested in working on Homecom-
ing may sign up now in the Under-
graduate Office of the League or
the Student Offices of the Union.
Positions open are for selling tick-
ets and decorating for the Home-
coming Dance.
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA -The
University chapter of Kappa Kap-
pa Gamma received national

awards at their convention last
June in Swampscot, Mass.
The national standards cup for
the best all-around chapter and
first prize for the best printed pa-
per were the awards given.
The standards cup was for up-
holding the standards of scholar-
ship, campus leadership, hospi-
tality and several other qualities.
These awards were presented on
the basis of the field secretary's re-
port of all their chapters in the
country, over a two-year interval.

i

SUN., MAR. 10,
3:00 P.M.

AUBERT LAVASTIDA

"SOUTH AMERICA
COAST TO COAST"

Documents The Daring First Complete Surface Crossing of The Forbidding Continent
1956-57 SEASON TICKETS: Adults $5.00, Students and Children $3.00
ALL SEATS RESERVED 0 SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER
Mail Orders: Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope with remittance
TICKETS and'INFORMATION: Boersma Travel Service, 14 Nickels Arcade, Ann Arbor
THE WORLD TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE SERIES OF ANN ARBOR
ANN ARBOR HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM " 601 WEST STADIUM BLVD.

.,4
11/ 3

the saddle

that's

a sofie

.

r

i

I

Did you miss your
SENIOR PICTURE
APPOINTMENT?
Reschedule your appointment
TODAY - FRIDAY, 9 A.M.-5 P.M.

'
, '
>
, Jj
Y
I J

Your beloved black and white
saddle oxford ..
newly supple, slipper-sof t, trim
and snug as a second skin
... a streamlined little beauty
for campus-skimming comfort.
7.95

4 1 1

I

{

i

I

U - - U.

1i

m

I

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan