MICHIGAN DAILY Scroll Will Give'Futurama', Tea For Senior Women, Today Formal Dance Tickets To Go On Sale Today George Kavanagh's Band Will Play For Graduate Dance; Name Chairmen Ticket sale for the second annual Graduate formal to be held from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, May 17, will begin from noon to 2 p.m. to- day and continue during these hours in the lobby of the Rackham School until May 17. The dance will be held in the Ballroom and Terrace of the Rackham School. George Kavanaugh and his orches- tra will furnish music for the affair which will be limited to 75 couples. Those attending the formal dance must have graduate standing in the University, although only one member of the couple need be a graduate stu- dent. There will be an informal dance for graduate students at the Rack- ham School tomorrow at which time tickets fo rthe formal dance will also be on sale. Graduate students on the commit- tee for the dance are headed by Jose- phine Hinds and James Reefer, gen- eral co-chairmen for the affair. Vi- vien Fruchtbaum and Edward Gray are in charge of publicity and are assisted by Homer King. Mildred Patterson assisted by Catherine Kerr and George Kiss are in charge of decorations for the Graduate for- mal. INTERVIEWING ANNOUNCED Interviewing for positions on the theatre-arts committee of the League for those girls who peti- tioned will be held from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow at the League, Jane Pinkerton, '41, announced. Matched Pastels Shown AAOP' 7,kw -w Meetings Of Committees To Be At League Today' There will be a mass meeting of the merit system committee at 4:30 p.m. today in the League, Barbara Dittman, '41, announced. All orientation advisers must at- tend a meeting at 5 p.m. today in the' League. Arrangements will be made immediately to replace those women who are not present. Annual Affair Will Introduce Town Groups Alumnae Council To Pour At Function; Hostesses Include League Council Senior women in all schools in the University are invited to attend "Fu- turama", the tea to be given from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today in the League Ballroom by members of Scroll, senior honorary sciety. The tea is an annual affair spon-' sored by Alumnae Council to pro- vide senior women the opportunity to meet members of the Alumnae group who will be living in the same towns they will next year. League Council Assists Besides members of Scroll, host- esses will include the League Coun- cil members for 1939-40. This is the first year that Scroll has been in charge of arrangements, and it is the first all-campus affair at which they have assisted since their founding last spring. Anne Hawley, '40, presi- dent, is in charge of the tea. Ann Arbor members of the board of directors of the Alumnae Council will pour. They include Mrs. Irene Johnson, Mrs. Clarence Skinner, Mrs. Theophile Raphael, Mrs. A. C. Furs- tenberg, Mrs. Alfred Connable, Re- gent Esther Cram, Mrs. Seymour P. Conger, and Mrs. James Kennedy. To Issue Pamphlets Pamphlets explaining the function of alumnae groups for women will be distributed to all who attend. The material was written by Jane Nuss- baum, '40, and illustrated by Ella Stowe, '40. The tea will be informal, and for all who wish to dance there will be music via victrola records, Miss Haw- ley said. Harriet Levy, '40, is in charge of publicity. It is hoped that all senior women will take advantage of this opportun- ity to meet alumnae of the University and to make the acquaintance of many friends for next year. Mem- bers of Scroll and League Council anticipate 100 per cent attendance. Patrons For Annual Hillel Spring Dance Listed By Chairman Patrons for the annual Hillel Foun- dation spring formal, to be held from 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday at the League, are announced by Mrs. V. Halpern, general chairman of the affair. Prof. Raphael Isaacs, Mr. and Mrs. Ozias Zwerdling, Prof. and Mrs. Reu- ben Kahn, Prof. and Mrs. Hersch Hootkins and Dr. Edward Blakeman will be the Ann Arbor patrons. From Detroit, Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Sid- lom, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Feiler, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Golden, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tanner, Miss Charlotte Gort, Mr. Aaron Drook, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rosenzweig are also to be patrons. The list continues with Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Stedman, of Lansing, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Warren, of Flint, and Mr. and Mrs. Julius Levin, of Jackson. Chaperons for the dance will be Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Rabino- witz, and Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Sacks. Buddy Friend's orchestra will play for the affair; admission will be 50 cents for affiliate members; mem- bers will have to bring both mem- bership cards and identification cards to the door when purchasing tick- ets. i ._.._._ __ __ IName Women To Announce At Style Show Jane Krause, '41, and Kay For- berg, '4', will be the announcers for "Vanity Affair," the style show spon- sored by the Michigan Daily, to be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Michigan Theatre, Jane Mowers, '40, general chairman announced Thirty models, chosen from the campus at large, will display spring and summer clothes in cooperation with 10 local stores. The clothes will be divided into four general groups including formal dresses, date clothes, campus sports outfits and cotton sum- mer play clothes. Bill Gail's orchestra will furnish the music for the show which will be carried out utilizing the theme of a, country club terrace. In addition to the models, Annabel Van Winkle, '41, feminine lead in "Hi-falutin!' will sing several selections. Jack Reed, '40, and Robert Titus, '42, from the Mimes production, "Four Out of Five" will attempt to show the wo- men how to model in a novelty num- ber. Mrs.Roosevelt will also ap- pear in the person of Jack Silcott, '40, who made that part so success- ful in the Mimes play. The women who will model are as follows: Jeanne Abraham, '42, Fran- ces Besancon. '41, Marjorie Bowen, '43; Louise Carpenter, '42, Gerald- ine Cady, '41, Jane Connell, '42, Car- olyn Denfield, '42, Ann Faden, '43, Dorothy Farnsworth, '41, Jane Gra- ham, '43, Ruth Cram, '43, Mary Has- kell, '42, Harriett Johnson, '40, and Frances Kahrs, '40. Others who will model are Mary Kaspar, '41, Betty Keppler, '41, Pat Loughead, '42, Mary Alice McAndrew, '40, Joan Munn, '42, Frances Patter- son, '42, Phoebe Power, '42, Millie Radford, '42, Helen Rhodes, '42, Ellie Seare, '42, Ardath Terzia, '43, Mar- got Thom, '42, Jean Thompson, '40, Dorothy Trump, '42, Freda Vander- veen, '40, Mim Westerman, '43, Yvonne Westrate, '41, Mary Ellen Wheeler, '41, and Elaine Wood, '41. Final Dance Class Party To Be Held End of the League dance class. series for 1939-1940 will be celebrated by an informal radio-party from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday in the League Ballroom. Special requests from students of the classes to climax a year of in- struction with a practical applica- tion session will be fulfilled through this first dance class party. All men and women who participated in the instruction series during the year are invited; admission will be free to members. Mass Meeting Of Committee Will Be Today Virginia Osgood To Name Heads Of Sub-Groups For Social Committee Sub-chairmanships for the social committee of the League will be an- nounced at a mass meeting of all members of the committee to be held at 4 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the League, Virginia Osgood, '41, chairman, announced yesterday. All members should attend if they wish to work on the committee next year, or else get in touch with Miss Osgood at 2-2285, if they are unable to attend. The social committee arranges many of the campus affairs for both women and men, and sub-commit- tees include those in charge of Ruth- ven teas, Sunday night suppers at the League, mixers for orientation, Independent teas, guide service for visitors on campus, and a new pro- ject-the acquaintance bureau. This will probably be the last mass meeting of the year, Miss Osgood said, and all women who intend to work on the committee are expected to be there promptly. Plans for the acquaintance bureau will be discussed, and freshman, soph- omore and junior women will have an opportunity to choose which group they wish to work with. Club Will Give Dance Recital Women's Careers Depend On Broad, Varied Education By RIHODA LESHINE As the significant days of com- mencement draw near senior women are feeling a new anxiety about their future. They are coming to the reali- f zation, that comes June, they will de- part from their cloister-like college r world into the uncertainty that the f future holds. They will be among the thousands Y of college graduates who will bea pondering overthequestion of how to get a job. The present world of chaos is being brought closer to reality when they investigate the op- portunities that lie open to them. Need Sound Education Miss Virginia Gildersleeve, Dean of Barnard College, in a survey of current professional trends and em- ployment of women, stated that for all professions, women need, if they are to be successful, the best possible professional preparation based on a sound, broad general education. Teaching jobs, always a popular profession among women, she said, are much more difficult to obtain than formerly. Men are now forc- ing women out of many of these be- cause of the fewer jobs open during the depression. However, one type of teaching that still needs many good aspirants is the administration field, she advised. There are not nearly enough qualified women who have the background to do the administra- tive work. Positions Are Available a Government service, research lab- oratory work, and the statistical in- vestigations of some institutions offer excellent opportunities today, Miss Gildersleeve informed inquiring wo- men. Donald H. Moyer of the Harvard Alumni Placement Service has cau- tioned the graduating members of the Class of 1940 that the fields of journalism, publishing, radio, adver- tising, and the arts will absorb only those whose capacities show prom- ise of outstanding achievement. Me- diocre candidates had best look else- where for employment. Politics in this exciting election year beckons to youth, because the need for ability is great, Moyer as- serted. - - - - - - - R I L Y N Four To Groups Cooperate Present Program I U Two-Day SL Just 17 Spring Reversibles 9.098 Were 14.95 to 17.95 A SPECIAL SALE of once-in-a-blue-moon impor- tance! Tweed favorites in plaids, mixtures and plain colors . . .neutrals and pastels . . lined with gabardine to blend. Fitted and boxy styles with detachable hoods. Sizes 12 to 20. Modern Dance Club, in collabora- tion with the Play Production dance group, the Ballet Group, and Physi- cal Education majors, will present the annual dance program at 8:15 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in the dance studio of Barbour gymnasium. Neva Dilley, '41Ed., is chairman of the informal studio performance, which will consist of twelve numbers: chorus, duet, and solo, with music arranged by Stanley Lock, '42. Lock has been playing at practice meet- ings of the Dance Club throughout the year, and also wrote the music for two of the numbers, "Dance of Greeting", and "American Rondo." Among the chorus dances will be a concert version of "Cinderella", which was performed this fall for the Children's Theatre of the League. The numbers from Play Production's 1II Seraglio will also be revived. "Rur- al Diversion", and "Bach Suite" are two other group dances. '4r . ; :> f, s't G OODYCR 'S STATE STREET STORE ONLY and they will look fresh and new I $5. 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