SATURDAY, "APRIL 23, 1945 PAGE FOtte THE TAR HEEL Frolics Break Silence Period With Dance , Johnson Featured In Event Tonight After enduring a one-year silence period on account of, wartime diffi culties, the annual May Frolics . is staging a comeback on campus today with a party scheduled for this after noon and highlighted with a dance in the Woman's Gym tonight, announced Bill McKenzie, president of the or ganization. Freddie Johnson and his orchestra will furnish the music for the occa sion. The patry will be held at Spar row's Meadow from 2 to 6 o'clock. The May Frolics and" the German Club are said to be the two largest dance organizations in the South. On this campus the Frolics is made up of seven fraternities: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Nu, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, Zeta Psi and Delta Kappa Epsilon. Have 11 Sponsors . ' A representative of each of these seven organizations, the four officers of the club and their dates will form the traditional figure, and each of the girls in the figure will act as sponsors. In past years the Frolics v has gained the reputation of sponsoring some of the best dances at Carolina. Before the war and before the dance restriction bill was' passed in the student legislature the Frolics brought to the campus such top-notch bands as Tommy Dorsey and Shep Fields. Dorsey played in 42 ,and was the last big-timer that flayed for the dances. Was' Week-End Event It was the custom " in the past to set aside the complete week-end for the May Frolics. The event began with the first dance on Friday night as a primer. Then on Saturday after noon it was the tradition of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity to hold a beer party for the group. Saturday night saw another dance and the week-end was concluded Sunday morning with a rum and waffle party sponsored by the Kappa Sigma fraternity on Sun day morning. In 1942 the German Club spon sored the May Frolics because the club could not get organized and last year the group did not even attempt to hold their dances. . Plans had been made this, year to hold the May Frolics in the usual pre-war manner but V-12 restric tions and other difficulties limited the affair to a one-day run. CLASSIFIED Advertisements must be paid for In advance - and turned in at the TAB Heel business office. 206 Graham Memorial, by 1 o'clock the day preceding publication. Fifty cents ($.50) each insertion. LOST Shell rimmed glasses in brown leather case, Monday. . Please re turn to Mavis Mann, 205 Kenan. FOR YOUR CLASS RINGS SEE OR CALL . N . JJnnfe TiPflfiDB Sigma Nu House I will be at the "Y" Office at 11:00 on Monday-Wednesday-Friday to take . , your orders. . Other hours will be arranged Sponsors For Tonight's May Frolics . . reading from left to right, first Twohey, Sigma Chi; Miss Marian Van Trine of Duke with Sam Latty, Second row: Miss Phyllis Gainey of U.N.C. with Bynum Hunter, Zeta Psi; Epsilon; Miss Natalie Harrison of U.N.C. with Tom Campbell, Sigma Nu; shown in the picture are: Miss Jean Boots Walker, secretary. . Job Interviews Mr. Richard E. Pille, representa tive of the Connecticutt Mutual Life nsurance of Hartford, will be on campus May 1 to interview men in- terested in attending a management training program which is sponsored by the company. Only graduate men students are eligible to attend the training pro gram, but any boy may get an inter view. Appointments for interviews should be made through Dr. W. D. erry's office, 207 South. STUBBS (Continued from first page) As could be expected of an active person, Bill has hobbies, habits and interests by the dozen. Such things as playing tennis, dancing, drum ming, singing and sleeping come as second nature with him. He was business manager of Sound and Fury this year and has done some jitterbugging and bit parts. He is at his happiest when reviewing his collection of lamps, signs, paddles and pictures, and his prize posses sion is a life-size photo of Betty Grable, a choice collector's item. The Head Cheerleader likes most kinds of music, depending on his mood. He praises Tommy Dorsey's band, which has turned out such Stubbs-favorites as "Well. Git It!' and "Opus Number One." Bill's best-liked dreamy tune is "Good night Sweetheart, but he registers Phone 4071 row, are: Miss Polly Strobel of Baltimore, MdM with Charles LaMotte, sec.; Taylor of Mary Baldwin College with , a low Crossley when it comes to opera or "too much heavy stuff." Enjoying strictly American dishes, Bill can't get enough of ice cream or. hamburgers. Other Amer ican hankerings jibe with his loud coats, flambuoyant ties, and a good bit of party life. Bill refuses to re veal his nickname, but says he gets kidded a lot for trailing his camera ace roommate, Baxter Sapp, in hopes of being included in any snapshots. You're likely to meet Bill Stubbs almost anywhere on campus, but his frequent haunts are the "Y," the Pines, the Battle Seat, and the Ar-f boretum, where he has been known to take long walks on sunny after noons. (Favorite phone numbers 8066 and 8061). As the Most-Interesting-Charac-ter-on-Campus, Bill nominates Sam Lapedis of Washington, D. C. Ser iously, Bill names Dean "Pete" Parker, now serving with the Ameri can Red Cross Field Service, as one of the greatest - guys in the world, and as his political ideal Bill has Bob Burleigh, president of the 1943 senior class at UNC, who was in the Golden Fleece, the Grail, head of Graham Memorial, and also a Phi Delt. Bill has a brother in the Naval Air Corps, and expects to be called into the Merchant Marine Cadet Corps sometime soon. v tJ'jmJ Nr II ' T" ,.wwf? V f &, -nAV &&?H riffle- V- I V" ' II t ; I So . . . Give "Something Special" on HER Day, May 13th Order Now at ' vice-president; Miss Ann Smoot of Duke Miss Julia Garrett of Salem College Miss Ann Farr of U.N.C. with Pete Bill McKenzie, president; and Miss June Montague of Winston-Salem with Senior Invitations All Seniors who did not put in their order for invitations when orders were taken this week may contact Bill Mc Kenzie and place their order. Orders will be taken Monday and Tuesday of next week. ARTICLES (Continued from first page) committee includes June Mindlin, Mary Catherine Mclnnis, Margie Pullen, Betty Lou Thrush, Monique Michele and Evelyn Davis. The mem bers of the committee are requested to be at the "Y" Sunday at 2:30 o'clock to help decorate. "When will we grow up?" The Wildcat at Louisiana College urges greater student participation in col lege affairs as practical training for adult responsibilities. THE YOUNG MEN'S SHOP Main at Church Sts. Durham j Your Shopping Center j Miss Mary Murphy of U.N.C. with Ed with Guy Andrews, Beta Theta Pi. with Dick Willingham, Sigma Alpha Withers, Kappa Sigma. Sponsors not 'KEEP OH iviTii ran BONDS Fordham University SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK Three-Year Day Course Four-Year Evening Course CO-EDUCATIONAL Member Association of American Law Schools Under accelerated plan day course may be completed . in two years ; evening course in two years and eight months DAY and EVENING CLASSES FIRST YEAR CLASSES BEGIN On June 11th and Sept. 24th, 1945 and February 4th, 1946 For further information address Registrar Fordham University School of Law 302 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. LUX ET UBERTAS (Continued from page two) ment among my frietds, who are inclined to think that I am going a little off the deep end, but otherwise it has not caused too much disturb ance. In another three weeks I hope to be able to see part of what the artist saw. Anyway, I decided each month to rent a picture that I am not familiar with to condition my self for greater artistic apprecia tion. I can only hope that all my experiments will not be quite so painful and so difficult to assimi late. Anyone interested in undergoing a similar experiment may rent a painting of their choice at Person Hall for twenty-five cents per month. The pictures can be exchanged at the end of each month for others, or they may be kept indefinitely. NEW SORORITY (Continued from first page) cuse University in 1904, and, accord ing to Miss Kelley, has held to a con servative expansion and placed chap ters in the leading state universities and colleges throughout the country. Transfer students on the campus who are already members of the soror ity are: Ida Jean Tinley, Pineville, Ky.; Jane Cromartie, Garland; Bar bara Saunders, Opelika, Ala., and Lil lian Leonhard, St. Petersburg, Fla. Patronesses are Mrs. Grady Prit- chard, Mrs. O. J. Coffin, Mrs. Robert W. Madry, Mrs. Henry E. House, Jr., and Mrs. George E. Shepard. i ".Tin (n w-h i' ! f.r.'t.i!r4 j.jt. r 3 NOW PLAYING All the hidden evil of the world's center of crime! VICKI BAUM'S . "HOTEL BERLIN" with FA YE EMERSON RAYMOND MASSEY PETER LORRE Also DISNEY CARTOON Latest War News SUNDAY-MONDAY "GOD IS MY CO-PILOT" with DENNIS MORGAN RAYMOND MASSEY TUESDAY You'll find a world of adventure in "LIFEBOAT" with TALLULAH BANKHEAD WILLIAM i BENDIX EXTRA! Watchtower Over Tomorrow" It explains the Dum barton Oaks Plan, the San Francisco meeting:.

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