Y, MLRC~ 2O~1941,
T H IE ICHiGA N DAILY
PACI'Spring Fever', Union Style how
To
Be Held Today
!
T-Dance Plans
May Theme
To Defy Winds'
Max Crossman's Orchestra
To Play For Mixer At League
From 3:30 P.M. to 5:30 P.M.
The snow may be on the ground
and the wind may be bitter cold, but
PACI's got "Spring Fever." The win-
try elements will play no part in the
May-time frivolity which will be the
theme of their T-Dance to be held
from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today
in the League Bhllroom.
Max Crossman's orchestra will play
for the dance, and the committee has
stressed that the emphasis for this
affair will be placed upon meeting
new people. The "mixer" qualities
of the PACT dances will be stressed.
Twenty hostesses and as many
hosts will be present to aid with the
introductions. The hostesses from
Panhellenic are Olga Gruhzit, '43;
Dorothy Lindquist, '42; Betty Bundt,
'44; Frances Bourke, '42; Patty Lew-
is, '44; Elaine Weidman, '42; Mary
Jane Morris, '42; Sonia Poloway, '41;
Barbara McLaughlin, '43, and Helen
Campbell, '43.
Hostesses chosen from Assembly
are Phyllis Hamilton, '42; Alice Jack,
'44; Phyllis Gardner, '44; Jean Elliot,
'42; Jane Peters, '44; Margaret Gose,
'41; Earla Smith, '41; Lorraine Jud-
son, '43, and Jean Misner, '43.
Hosts from Congress will be Art
Kollin, '42; Elmer Hitt, '42; Robert
James, '43; Louis Fogel, '43; David
Margold, '43; Irwin Kubin; '42, and.
Bill Strain, '43.
Interfraternity hosts will be Bob
Procter, '42; John White, '43; Ber
Cannon, '42; Art Leckner, '42; Ted
McLogan, '42; Don Stevenson, '42;
Jack Wiese, '44; Paul Cosper, '42, and
Jack Carlson, '44.
Chapter House
Activity Notes:,
BEe-
By JEANNE O'RUMVP
i
Both Women's
Wistful Veils Flatter
Tomorrow is the first day of spring,
and that's the start of the suit sea-
son. Stores are glowing, quite liter-
ally, with new suits that can, under,
coats, keep you warm in bitter winds,
and soon, with another sudden
I change in the weather, the suits will
go to classes unhidden. (By the
way, . here's hoping you're remem-
bering to use hand cream these days
or unexpected cold will play havoc
with you.)
So much can be done with suits,
and nothing can better give the
trim look which is the right spring
look. Let's limit ourselves to a
tailored outfit. Even then the
choice is large for there are Glen
rlaids, English tweeds, camel's
hair, long coats, loose coats, fitted
ones, straight skirts, box pleats,
wide lapels, nautical styles, and so
on for many more examples. So
even if they're all tailored, no suit
need be like its neighbor.
First use for a suit will be to take
you to class. Ligih sweaters will go
_nder the jacket, then later open-
collared silk blouses. (This will also
mark the time when stockings shall
no more be necessary, so use liquid
powder or pancake until the sun has
added color to your legs.) Two
beau'tiful sister suits that were just
made to be seen under campus sun
are one of pea green and the other
of Easter yellow. Solid colored skirts
contrast tweed jackets that each
have the faintest stripe of pink
running through them. (Incidental-
ly, start brushing your hair now so
that it will have that extra shine
when the spring sun comes to show
it up.)
A tailored suit can be a per-
fect companion for a tea party if
worn with a frou-frou blouse, and
a hat that has something frilly
and white on it. Or again a suit is
apropos to a variety of types of
dates. Especially if you are also
owner of pumps with detachable
bows. For instance, a tailored
blouse and plain pumps in the
middle of the week; then, during
the weekend for any event short, of
a dance, combine the suit with a
dressy and sophisticated silk
-Daily Photo by Will Sapp
ADELINE GITTLEN
Trim Tweed . -
blouse, add bows to your shoes,
maybe pull your hair back to show
up earrings, and the costume is
complete.
When wearing the suit for Sun-
day walking dates, remember thatl
sunny days require you to go a bit
easy on the make-up. For job-hunt-
ing this spring vacation, or just shop-
ping downtown, the suit is again your
ideal.
Adeline Gittlen, Best Dressed Co-
Ed of the Week, gives us an excel-
lent example of the trim spring
look in a tan and brown tweed. She
was seen arriving to practice her
part as Hero in the stage produc-
tion, "Much Ado About Nothing."
The felt bonnet and soft leather
pumps are of luggage tan.
Men's Clothes I
To Be Shown
Campus Couples Will Model
For Spring Fashion Review
To Be Held In Union Ballroom'
Michigan styles wil take their
places in the sun at the annual Union
style show, ."Co-eds in Fashions,"
which will be held at 8 p.m. today in
the large ballroom of the Union.
Gordon Hardy's orchestra will fur-
nish the music for the style sow,
and Chan Pinney will sing several
Union Opera songs, "Your Page In
My Memories In Blue," A Dream and
I Went Walking" and "Alone Again."
He will also sing special arrange-
ments of other tunes.
Campus couples will model clothes
from 10 local shops, demonstrating
appropriate wear for everything from
golf to the biggest formal dance of
the spring.
The models will walk in pairs down
the length of the ballroom to a plat-
form before the orchestra, where they
will be spotlighted.
Included in the list of models are
Claire Reed-Hill and Bill Todd, who
will model sailing costumes, Lop. Car-
penter and Bill Slocum, who will1
model campus wear. Formal dress willj
be shown by Mary Ellen Wheeler and
Bill Schoedinger, while summer for-
mals will be shown by Kay AlbersI
and Hugh Ayres.
Casual campus wear will be shown
by Helen Barnett and Bob Templinl
Templin will also model golf clothes,
while Marc Crapsey has found a fav-'
orite little congo cloth slack suit to
model.
Pat Hoeper is wearing a white
tilden sweater; Irl Brent will look
collegiate in a subdued way in a tan;
alpacuna topcoat, and tan hat, with
maroon hat-band.
Teagarden Will Be
Kappa Sigma's Guest
Kappa Sigma fraternity will hold
a formal dinner at 7 p.m. tomorrow
night preceding the Capitalist Ball.
Jack Teagarden, whose band will
play for the Ball, and Lynne Clark,
his soloist, will be honored guests at
the affair.
The entire central committee for
the dance, and their guests, have
also been invited to the dinner. Wan-
zer D. Bosworth, president of the
senior class of the School of Busi-
ness Administration, and Viola Mod-
lin, '42, will also attend.
lWomen's Club To Meet
The Interior Decorating Group of
the Faculty Women's Club will meet
at 3 p.m. today at the League.
Miss Julia Conlin of the Howard
T. Radcliffe Company, Toledo, Ohio,
will talk on "Fashion trends in home
furnishings."
Hillel To Hold 'P.M.'
Hillel "P.M.", regular open house,
will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
today at the Hillel Foundation,. It
is sponsored by the social committee
of the Foundation headed by Laura
Katzenel, '41. All students are in-
vited.
House Group To Meet
The League House Group will meet
at 4:30 p.m. today at the League to
elect officers for the coming semes-
ter. Each house should have a repre-
sentative."
Meeting To Be Held
There will be an important meet-
ing of the make-up committee for
JGP at 5:30 p.m. today in the
League. Room notice will be post-
ed on the bulletin board.
\ ,,z
y
New spring hats are definitely
off the face. On many Easter bon-
nets dreamy veils and huge clus-
ters of flowers will add the feminine
touch. Hats this year are designed
to flatter, and though the military
swing is still here, a new softened
effect is added.
Van Wagoners
To Be cjuests
At ATO Dance
Governor and Mrs. Murray D. Van
Wagoner and President and Mrs.,
Ruthven will head the list of patrons!
for "Blackfoot Ball." the Alpha Tau
Omega formal dance which will be
held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow
in the ballroom of the League.
Other patrons for the affair are
Mayor and Mrs. Edward J. Jeffries,
Jr., of Detroit, Dean Joseph A. Bur-
sley, Dean Alice Lloyd, Dean and
Mrs. Walter B. Rea, Dean and Mrs.
Wilber R. Humphreys, Prof. and
Mrs. Carl G. Brandt.
Prof. and Mrs. Arthur W. Brom-
age, Prof. and Mrs. Joseph H. Can-
non, Prof. and Mrs. Ora S. Duf-
fendack, Prof. and Mrs. Edward L.
Eriksen, Prof. and Mrs. Louis C.
Karpinski, Prof. and Mrs. James H.
Pollock, Prof. and Mrs. Wesley H.
Maurer, Prof. and Mrs. Karl Litzen-
berg have also been invited.
The list continues with Miss Ethel
McCormick, Dr. and Mrs. Edward W.
Blakeman, Dr. and Mrs. S. L. LeFever,
Dr. WilliamrBrace, Col. Francis H.
Brannan, Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Spaller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Wal-
drop, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Bjork.
Bill Gail and his orchestra will play
for the dance and Helen Rhodes, '42,
who has the lead in JGP, will sing.
About 450 couples have been invited
to the affair which is being held in
honor of the new initiates and the
[ounders of the fraternity.
Ticket Sales
To Open Today
Engineers Will Have Opportunity
To Buy Slide Rule Ball Passes
Engineers will have their first op-
portunity to purchase tickets for their
annual Slide Rule Ball from 1:30 to
4 p.m. today in the lobby of the East'
Engineering Building, Robert L. Im-
boden, '42E, ticket chairman, an-
nounced yesterday.
The tickets, which will be sold for
$3.75, can only be procured by stu-
dents with engineers' identification
cards.
The Slide Rule Ball, scheduled to
get under way at 9 p.m. Friday,
April 4, will feature the music of
Cab Calloway, nationaly famed as
"His Hi De Hi Highness of Ho De
Ho," and his Cotton Club Orchestra.
Theme of the dance will be "Four
Year Fantasy" and the decorations
will describe the different activities
of the Michigan student during each
of his four years at the University.
Independent Election
Will Be Held Today
The Ann Arbor Independents will
hold their annual spring election at
4:45 p.m. today in the League, Jean
Krise, '41, president, has announced.''
Officers elected now will be active
during the 1941-42 school year. Posi-,
tions open for competition include
president, vice-president and secre-
tary-treasurer.
Items move laster from
SHELVES
with the aid of
GOOD LIGHT
Customers like to SEE what they
are buying. Good merchandising
makes it easy for them to see.
Be sure your store and window
displays are well-lighted: You
will enjoy greater turnover and
increased profits. No charge for
the skilled services of our Light-
ing Staff. Call any Detroit Edison
office.
The decorations
Robert Morrison,
R. Tiernan, '41E.
were prepared by
'41E, and Charles
Engineers Attention
Slide Rule Ball Tickets On Sde
East Engineering. Lobby Today.
Bring Your Engineering
Identification Cards.
* :;1
Alpha Xi Delta
has elected itsI
officers for the coming year. Viola
Modlin, '42, is t o l:eW President;
Charlotte Thompson, '43, vice-presi-,
dnt; Elaine Weidman, '42, secretary,.
and Katherine Buszek, '43.
Geraldine Cilly, '42; Mary Jo Hall,'
'43; Mary Jane Morris, '42, and Betty
Sachs, '43, are Alpha Xi Delta's new
initiates.
Alpha Chi Omega
Alpha Chi Omega announces the
recent initiation of Joan Beardsall,
'44, Virginia Campbell, '42, Gertrude
Clubb, '44, Suzanne Cone, '43, Doro-
thy Dudgeon, '44, Jane Eiffert, '43,
Charlotte Iselman, '44, Mary McGill,
'44, Ann Rhoads, '43, Jane Rosin,
'43, Marjorie Sherman, '42, Madeline
Smith, '43, and Dorothy Turner, '42.
Vivian Seigler, '44, has just been
pledged by Alpha Chi Omega.
Kappa Delta
Kappa Delta announces the pledg-
ing of Helen Clark, '43, Betty Merrill,
'43, Margaret Sundean, '44, and Elaine
Travis, '44.
Delta Gamma
Delta Gamma has initiated the
following: Dorothy Bales, '44; Eliza-
beth Bunnell, '44; Mary Jane Has-
treiter, '44; Jane Lindberg, '44; Mar-
tha Opsion, '44; Alice Schutt, '44;
Marlou Shartel, '44, and Mary Ann
Stapp, '44.
Gamma Phi Beta
Gamma Phi Beta announces the
recent initiation of 13 women. The
new members are Janice Benson, 43;
Phyllis Bihn, '42; Eleanor Dodd, '44;
June Gustafson, 44; Josephine Fitz-
patrick, '44; Molly Hoffman, '43;
Katherine Lathrop, '44; Susan Ort-
mayer, '44; Margaret Shearer, '44;
Anne Stresau, '42; Nancy Upson,
'44SM; Frances Vyn, '44; Ruth Wood,
'43, and Marcia Zimmerman, '44.
Kappa Alpha Theta
The recent pledging of Sally Hunt-
er, '44, of Bloomfield Hills, has been
announced by Kappa Alpha Theta.
Kappa Alpha Theta has also initi-
ated Elizabeth Brian, '42; Barbara
Burns, '43; Josephine Carpenter, '42;
Janet Clarke, '44; Ann Highley, '44;
Katherine Jones, '43; Jean L'Hom-
medieu, '42; Josephine Lloyd, '44;
Phyllis Robison, '44; Marjorie Smith,
'43; Laura Vial, '44; Mary Lee Wag-
ner, '42, and Morrow Weber, '44.
Newly-elected officers are also an-
nounced by Kappa Alpha Theta. Alice
Louise Haas, '42, is the new president;
Sue Barbour, '42, vice-president; Lois
Basse, '42, recording secretary; Phyl-
lis Water, '42, corresponding secre-
tary, and Dorothy Bridgen, '42,
treasurer.
FROM "HORTHAND PAD TO
ECUTIVE RATING goesIl
many a Gibbs secretary-with-
coulege-background!Ask for
Jum pin' Jupiter' To Keep Song'
Secret Until Friday, March
28
JGP songs are being whistled,
hummed and shouted all over campus,
but you won't hear a single bar of
one song until the Friday, March 28,
performance of the production,
"Jumping Jupiter!", when it will be
dedicated to the fraternity which
buys the most advanced sale tickets.'
All that can be divulged about the
song is that it will be a smooth num-
ber, guaranteed to pack a wallop,
according to Marny Gardner, who is
ticket chairman for JOP. Profes-
sional fraternities will be included in
this contest.
Scene To Be Night Club
Jane Connell, who plays the part
of a night club hostess, will sing the
song in the night club scene at the
Friday performance. All perform-
ances are open to everyone after the
Wednesday, March 26 opening, which
is given in honor of the senior wo-
men, and will be preceded by the tra-,
ditional Senior Supper at the League.
The production will runl four nights,
opening March 26.
Tickets will be sold in blocks for
any performance to organizations
wishing to buy them that way. The
tickets, which are priced at one dol-
lar, are now on sale at the main desk
of the League or may be bought
through students who are canvassing,
dormitories, league houses, sororities
and fraternities.
Tickets Must Be Exchanged
It is emphasized that these tickets'
are exchange tickets, and must be
turned in at the Lydia Mendelssohn
box office before 6 p.fn. Tuesday,
March,,25, for reserved seats for any
performance. All seats will be re-
served, Miss Gardner announced.
The box office will open Monday,
March 24. Balcony seats priced at
50 cents and 75 cents will be obtain-
able Monday, when the office opens.
Aail orders are now being accepted.
These should be addressed to the
Box Office, care of Lydia Mendels-
sohn Theatre.
Helen Rhodes Is Heronie
Each performance of "Jumping
Jupiter!" will begin at 8:30 p.m. in
the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Hel-
en Rhodes is playing the part of
Mariadne, the heroine, and Dorothy
Knode is taking the part of Dion,
the hero.
Others taking part in the play,
which was written by Frances Pat-
terson, '41, are Fay Goldner, Veitch
Purdom, Dorothy Merki, Dorothy
Turner, Nancy Drew, Edith Longyear,
Eleanor Neubert, Kay Ruddy, Irene
Ferguson, Helene Herzfeld, Helen Van
Dyke, Agnes Crow, Margaret Wright,
and Marie Holmes, as well as a large
number of singers, dancers and the
much talked-of Bird Women.
- I
HOW TO HELP
SELL THEMSELVES
Florists have a product that
needs little in the way of "sales
aids." Properly displayed, color-
ful flowers sell themselve,, One
thing needed to show them off
to best advantage is GOOD
LIGHT. Are you overlooking
the color and beauty of a "pic-
ture window?" For expert light-
ing advice, call any Detroit
Edison office.
o I
a,. Lbown-o-6ari
N#-
DRESS-UP' PUMP
0 /,4.95
Equipped with one of the
lowest of spring's newly pop-
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graceful pump, slim and flat-
tering as a dancing slipper.
A special fashion find for tall
girls, have it in brown
gabardine with saddle calf
fringed bow, or navy with
patent.
Have you ever noticed how the fellas perk up
when a lovely head of hair in a long dress walks
by? You can bet on one thing: Unless your hair
s as irresistible as the rest of you, you don't get
the attention you should. GLO-RNZ keeps, your
hair the way you like to have it. It cleans as it
beautifies as it tints-enriches the natural color
r- ,--