TH MICHIGAN DAILY ADVERTISEMENT i FRIDAY, . THiE MICHIGAN DAILY ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY, Thirty-four Booths Compete in Michigras Evans Scholars and Alpha Xi Delta, 'Pizza Holiday;" Kappa Sigma and Alpha Omicron Pi, "Cosmic Cloud Candy" and Lamb- da Chi. Alpha and Delta Delta Delta, "Dive Inn." Sigma Nu and Kappa Kappa Gamma, "House of Blue Lights;" Theta Delta Chi and Alpha Gam- ma Delta, "Calypso Club" and Theta X and Alpha Phi, "The Sea Anchor." Skill Booths The following 13 skill booths will also be featured at Michigras: Alpha Epsilon Pi and Geddes House, "Rifle Range;" Chi Phi and Chi Omega; Delta Tau Delta 1 and Pi Beta Phi, "Maison Rou- lette;" Hayden and Tyler, "You Go Pogo;" Phi Epsilon Pi and Mosher, "18th Century Mobilizer." Phi Kappa Tau and Angell House, "Daffy Destruction;" Phi Sigma Delta and Delta Phi Ep- silon, "Snap the Trap;" Phi Kap- pa Delta and Lambda Kappa Sig- s ma, "Michigan-Apolis" and Pi Lambda Phi and Jordan, "Putter- ville." Sigma Alpha Mu and Victor Vaughan, "Create Your A Rate;" Allen Rumsey and Prescott, "Mich- ition;" Tau Delta Phi, "Rocket;" and Zeta Phi and Kleinsteuck, "Raise the Rocket." Final Preparations After the booths had been select- ed, the representatives from the housing units met with the booth committee to discuss general ideas and plans for construction. At their final meeting last week, it was agreed that show booths may charge a maximum -of $.50 for admission and 'that skill booths may charge up to $.25. From 7 a.m. to midnight on Wednesday and Thursday amidst sounds of hammers, whining saws and blaring loudspeakers, the booths were set up. Frantically, paint spattered students hastened to add the finishing touches. Announce Judges The skill booths will be judged by Mrs. Harlan Hatcher and Ches- ter Roberts, the show booths by Prof. Marvin Eisenberg of the fine arts department and Assistant Dean of Women Elizabeth Leslie, and the refreshment booths by Assistant Dean of Women Ger- trude Mulholland and Thomas Larkin of the architecture college. The booths will be judged on workmanship, originality and per- tinence to both the announced theme and the "Ventures-in Ven- tions" theme of Michigras. The winners will be announced by President Harlan H. Hatcher at 11 p.m. tomorrow. Michigras Program FRIDAY 3 p.m.-Parade 7 p.m.-Carnival and Yost Field House Open SATURDAY 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.-Kiddie Carnival 7 p.m. to 1 a.m.-Carnival and Yost Field House Open 11 p.m.-Presentation of prizes .at Yost Field House WONDERLAND OF LIGHTS-Bright lights, concession stands and carnival rides transform Yost Field House into a midway for Michigras weekend. The eleven rides will include "The Scrambler," "Dodgem" and "Roundup" as well as the traditional ferris wheel and Tilta-whirl. A Kiddie Karnival will be held tomorrow afternoon and evening. Michigras Booths Plan Refreshments Pizza To Be Sold At Weekend Carniv For First Time Participants in the Michigras carnival will have a wide enough selection of food to develop a con- siderable amount of stomach gas and peptic juice. Pizza will be sold at Michigras for the first time, according to Fred Holt, '59, of central commit- tee. In addition, numerous soft drink outlets and ice cream 4i dixie cups, on sticks, in sundaes, and in sandwich form will be avail- able. A concessionaire who travels the state fairs will be on hand to furnish cotton candy to the stu- dents through several fraternity and sorority booths. He will also have his own booth outside the field house. Another concession- aire will have carmel corn, cracker jack and popcorn outside the field- house. Amidst the rides and activities outside the central committee's booth will sell everything avail- able on the inside with the excep- tion of cotton candy. Hot dogs, with all the trimmings, will be available in four different booths. Pretzel, potato chip, and soft drink booths will line the Field House. Ten housing units will have re- freshment booths at the carnival, Holt said. Provisions will be made to have a sufficient supply of aspirins and seltzers on hand, he added. Prize Booths To Award c Micibueks' The 13 prize booths inside Yost Field House ae a main part of the Michigras carnival. Michibucks are awarded at these prize booths' upon completion, of the' required task. The Michibuck system works as follows: Theoretically, one Michibuck should equal five tickets. For every five tickets taken in, one Michi- buck is awarded by the booths. Michibucks are turned in to the prize booth in the center of the field house for prizes ranging in value from one Michibuck to one hundred.Prizes includegrass hats, ukeleles, canes, lamps, shot glasses, leis, mechanical bears, flying saucers, golf tees, book cases,- thermos bags, sling shots, balloons, monkeys and other small animals. In all, a total of $2,300 worth of prizes are available. When a person has won 20 Michibucks, he should bring them to the prize booth to receive a stub. At 11 p.m. Saturday, President Harlan Hatcher will draw for the grand prizes. The first man and the first, woman whose names are drawn will each receive a hi-fi set. Pres- ident Hatcher will then draw again and the man and the woman whose names are drawn second will receive a Remington electric razor. To win a grand prize, the person must be at the Field House while the drawing is taking place. Other- wise, he is ineligible to win the prize and another name will be drawn. For every 20 Michibucks won, another stub may be submitted to the drawing. In addition, the per- son may receive smaller prizes up to the value of the Michibucks that he has won. These smaller prizes must be claimed before the stub is submitted for the drawing of the grand prize. STEP THIS WAY-Barkers compete for customers in the various show booths, refreshment stands and skill booths as the coinpetition for prizes increases. Prizes will be awarded to the booths on the basis of workmanship, originality and pertinence to both the announced theme of the booth and.the "Ventures-in-Ventions" theme of Michigras. EXTENSIVE CAMPAIGN: Publicity Committee Saturates Campus. With Hats, 'Graspins, Michigras Records The Michigras publicity has ab- sorbed a good deal of the time, energy, and money of the central committee. For the first time, a Michigras record was produced. Recorded by the Friars, a portion of men's glee club, and written by Paul Mc- Donough, '58L, the record sold through two recorders. The flip side of the recording was a piano solo, Errol 'Garner style, of the same song. 'Gras pin was selected as the symbol of this year's festival. The live pin, in costume, dismissed classes beginning Wednesday and cavorted about during the car- nival on the diag Wednesday. "Ape over Michigras" was per- sonified by a realistic gorilla walk- ing through town and around cam- pus. He admonished passersby to "Go to Michigras . . . I'm ape over it." Receives Cards Ann Arbor clothing merchants included with their purchases small cards saying, "Wear it to Michigras." One student reported receiving one of the cards with the purchase of a tennis racket. She did not plan to follow the ad- vice. On Wednesday, Michigras pre- sented a high-flying trampoline act, and a band, along with the gorilla and Gras pin. _ }1 Fifteen interviews over WCBN, WHRV and WPAG radio stations were conducted. Many disc jockeys also played the Michigras record. The committee in charge of the carnival was out on ladders at 7 a.m. Wednesday decorating the diag because they found them- selves in the ludicrous position of having eight o'clock classes. Send Telegrams Telegrams informing students of Michigras were sent to each dormitory, fraternity and sorority. In addition over 2,000 posters were distributed throughout Ann Arbor and the campus. Sandy Sol, '58, of the Central Committee, said each house was also doing its own publicity and that certainly ". . . the 1958 Michi- gras is not going to happen with- out anyone knowing about it." A bicycle parade was held yes- terday with hundreds of students "mounting up" and parading to the Michigras song. Michigras hats soli one-third of the total stock during the first day of sales. These white derby- type toppers were evident during the parade and throughout the week. - U Ah I Shl ,*~-- lHANDSEWN HANDLASTED With patented welt construction i1gM71t THE LATEST IN POLISHED COTTONI A man Just can't be bothered with his winter clothes, come spring. And who wants to cart all that stuff to Indianapolis, Toledo,, Detroit, or wherever? That's where Greene's -comes in In fact, Greene's come in your dorm or fraternity house and leave a Handi-Hamper tagged for you, and you put everything you wear in the fall and winter into it. Everything. (No skis, please.) Then we take it away, clean your clothes and store them in our mothproof vaults until you claim them in the fall. Makes going home easy. All that extra car space means you can give dozens of people rides home this June. Split the cost of gas, and pay for your box storage that way! 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