SUNDAY, MAY 11, 1941 THE MICIlIGAN AIL" PAGE '1 T~lEMICIGAN DA IY P AG~ y a . . y;R wi a a a1 Senior Swing Out' Procession Will Be Held June 1 ) o Michigan Band Will Lead Cap, Gown Parade June Graduates Of 12 Schools Will March In Annual Event; Class Officers To Participate Seniors of all schools will 'Swing Out' in mortarboards and gowns for the annual cap and gown ceremony and processional to take place at 3 p.m. Sunday, June 1. In traditional garb and led by the University of Michigan Band, seniors will march from the Main Library to the Engineering Arch, thence to the Union and to Hill Auditorium where short speeches appropriate to the occasion will be given.{ Carillon Will PlayI Before the start of the march, Per- cival Price will give a carillon recital of famous Michigan songs, in keeping 1vith the mood of the day. Russell LaBelle, chairman of the "Swing Out" committee has an- nounced that the group will be com- posed of the senior class presidents of the 12 colleges in the university. Presidents In Charge George Gaunt, class president of the architectural college, Wanzer Bosworth, class president of the School of Business Admistration, Sol] Hiligman; class president of School of Dentistry, Earl Radley, Education School class president, Harry Dricka- mer, class president of the College of Engineering, and William Ferrell, School of' Forestry class president, are included. Also in the group are James French, class president of the College of Law, and Jane Krause, vice-president of the College of Liberal Science and Arts. Other Committee Members From tie School of Medicine, Pat Murphy; of Music, William Rhoads; Nursing, Margaret Lehman (acting president) and Pharmacy, Paul Nor- ris, will be on the committee. All seniors are urged to contact their school cap and gown committee city merchant to individually order and be fitted for their caps and gowns. These may be retained after "Swing Out" for Commencement and are returnable for deposit collection. S ~ « Q Cotton Skirts And Torso Dresses To Be Warm Weather Favoritesj a ? 'fit;;*., ti4 ": 1, . .tr y .z ;y :ltil tiff ": ryti is slim and we know that you want good-looking outfits too, so just hold on and maybe you'll get some ideas from this bit of information. When you're out playing tennis, sail- ing or just walking around, you'll want some snappy little cotton skirts that you can flip on over your fav- orite shirt or blouse. Well, here's one tlat's short without being awk-- ward and it looks crisp and fresh,. The skirt is gathered in front with a beautiful gored back, and it has great big patch pockets to serve you f when you don't want to carry a handbag. Not only that, but it has little silver rings on the waist-band so you can adjust it to fit your own particular waist-line, and it's made of a cotton weave which looks just1 like a pastel tweed. Make Your Own If you're one of those people who can't wear broomstick skirts, and yet want some extra skirts, you ct.n easily whip up one like we described above in almost two hours. All you 1 have to do is to get some material you like, gather it all into the waist- band, press it and there you ale. Maybe not quite as simple as that, but almost. Another idea for you, if you're in the mood to add a few items to youw wardrobe (and who isn't?) is to take the material you have left over from making your cotton skirts and make matching bands of them for your new cocoa straw hat. Even if these skirts do look cute with huar- aches and saddles, they look equally good with spectators and a hat. Green Accents Navy It's almost impossible to even start describing the scads of new cotton dresses on display for this summer, but here are a few we noticed that seemed especially attractive. That unusual but very smart color com- bination of navy blue and light green has been combined in a pert new dress which also features the mode of the moment, meaning the long torso. It has a navy blue, long torso linen top and a flared, seersucker, green and navy plaid skirt with tiny collar and short sleeves to match. Lantern Night. Drawing Held Order Of Group Participation Announced By Sing Chairman At a drawing held Friday at the W.A.B. the order of the groups sing- ing in the annual Lantern Night Sing, Monday, May 19, was determined, ac- cording to Virginia Paterson, '42,1 chairman of the Sing. SLeading the 24 entrants in the sing will be Tri Delta, Contens Hall, Kap- pa Kappa Gamma, and Zeta Tau Alpha. Fifth on the program will be Alpha Phi,athen come Gamma Phi Beta, Delta Gamma, Alpha Chij Omega and Alpha Xi Delta. Collegiate Sorosis will sing tenth after which Jordan Hall, Stockwell The 11 Ex-Editor's Note: Through the cour- tesy of Jan Hiatt and Grace Miller, new women's editors, and the one fan letter I wrote myself, .the Mite will continue to write her column for the rest of this year. Any complaints should be addressed to the dead- letter office. Sugar Coated Pill . . . If Mrs. Roosevelt's article in the current Ladies Home Journal can be construed as a shadow cast before, the next event on the defense calen- dar will be compulsory selective ser- vice for women. And what ajolly time that will be. e pite4 compulsory defense service, either in or out of the army, "a good opportun- ity for understanding what democra- cy really means." What we're getting into is a form of a planned order. Let's call it by its right name, and then if we still want to go ahead - well all right, then! "My main reason for believing that it is important to have this year of service compulsory," Mrs. Roose- velt writes, "is that I believe so much in the value of knowing many sides of our national life." If, for the sake of argument, we concede that the pro- gram the President's wire envisages will help us know the value of more of these sides of national life - and I can't really see how it will - it still seems peculiarly coincidental that this sudden interest in educa- Hall, Mosher Hall, Phi Sigma wig- "Granted that a year of servicel ma and Alpha Gamma Delta will ren- for boys is finally satisfactorily ad-, der songs. Continuing the order of justed," writes the First Lady, "I the evening will be Adelia Cheever, personally hope that a year of com- Martha Cook, Alpha Delta Pi, Chi pulsory service will also be considered * * Whew! It's hot, isn't it. Well, maybe it's not so bad right now, but don't you believe that it won't be the regular Michigan boiler of a summer pretty soon. Then's when you'll need all the cool summer clothes you can find! Now wait-we know your budget Softball schedule: At 5:10 p.m. Monday Mosher vs. Alpha Delta Pi. At 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Betsy Barbour vs. Alpha Epsilon Phi; Martha Cook I vs. Pi Beta Phi; Gamma Phi Beta vs. Tri Delta; Delta Gamma vs. Alpha Chi Ome- ga. At 5:10 p.m. Alpha Phi vs. Zeta Tau Alpha; Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Phi Sigma Sigma; Ann Arbor Independents vs. Alice Palmer Co-op. At 5:10 p.m. Wednesday, Chi Omega vs. winner of Palmer Co-opI vs. Ann Arbor Independents. Tuesday's participants will play again Thursday because of being rained out last week. Schedule for these games will appear Wednes- day. Archery: Club meets 4:15 p.m. Thursday at WAA. All campus tournament will begin Tuesday and end May 20. Dance: Club meets 7:30 p.m. Wenesday at Barbour Gymnasium. Golf: Pitch and Putt, inter-club day on Saturday at the University golf course. Outdoor sports: Breakfast bike ride planned to Delhi Falls on Sun- day. Crop and Saddle: Annual horse- show on Saturday. Special events open to all University women, Tennis: Club meeting at 4:15 p.m. Monday, at WAB. i Omega, Betsy Barbour and Kappaj Alpha Theta. Last year's winner, Pi Beta Phi, will sing next and winding up the pro- gram will be Alpha Omicron Pi and Kappa Delta. Annual Production Will Be PresentedI By Wesley Players f Wendell Baker, '42, and Barbara ("Bobby") Yale, '43, carry the title roles in the Wesley Player's annual spring production "Adam and Eve," to be presented in the Social Hall of the Methodist Church, Friday, May 16 at 8 p.m. Janet Sibley, '41, drama chairman of the Wesley Foundation and direc- tor of the Wesley Players, today an- nounced the complete cast for Fri- day night's performance. Elizabeth Decker, '43, Hubert Drake, '43, Dorothy Davidson}, '44, Byron Hatch, '42, Howard Parr, '41, Doris Reed, '42, Stan Summers, '44, and Ozzie Ullrich, '42, were awarded po- sitions on the all-star, all-university student cast, Miss Sibley announced today. Tickets for the play may be secured at Wahr's or at the Wesley Founda- Uion office at the Methodist Church. I for girls . . . I think," she adds demo- tion processes should be taken during cratically, "the opportunity should be a time when the federal government offered to girls to work and train is seeking to regulate, not only lives, themiselves along many different but opinons. If perhaps you do not lines." believe this, consider this revealing The' prdjgram Mrs. Roosevelt has statement from Mrs. Roosevelt's arti: in mind scunds like typical Women's cle, "Defense and Girls": ,"There club Work, on an extended and more . would' be no strikes, for instance, in honorable scale, of course. Girls would which the public would not know on be trained in home economics, in which side it stood, and would not hospitalization, in farm-management, speedily force a conclusion through and so forth. And all this training, the weight of public opinion." Mrs. Roosevelt points out, will not. Spirit Has Infected Nation only make them better equipped wives I don't know why our leaders insist and mothers; it will also "give girls on treating us as children. The spirit a good opportunity for understanding what democracy really means." seems to have infected the whole natipn. Newspaper editors won't print The Mite Can't SeeIt what they know for fear of "scaring" Frankly; I can't see that at all. It us. Government officials won't tell ounds to me like just one more meas- what they know for fear that the ure of regimentation - the kind of telling might interfere with the plans regimentation we used to read about they have already made. And even as characteristic of dictator coun- the First Lady, for whom I have tries about two years ago. Granted the profoundest respect, starts giv- that if we are to win this war we'll ing us this pill about defense sugar need the cooperation of a whole peo- coated with nobility and democrac. ple and that ths device is one step That kind of tactics, it seems to nie, is in achieving that total cooperation., as "out" as number 11 on the hit But let's not fool ourselves by calling ( parade. Don't you think so? Opportunities, Good Pay Open To Women In Advertising Field Scores Annour When the sunshine did fE er Field, Alpha Delta P Alumnae-Cheever 11-4, Lea and Kappa Kappa Gan whelmed Martha Cook II well III respectively 11 to9 5. Couzens defaulted to H berry and Collegiate Sorosi to Alpha Gamma Delta. I,~ nced Announce New Officers avor Palm- Alpha Sigma Phi announces its 'i defeated new officers for the first semester of ague House 1941-42: president, John Wilkie, '42E; vice president, John Averill, '42A; re- ma over- cording secretary, Benjamin Clarke, and Stock- '44; corresponding secretary, Robert 9 and 10 to Hoffman, '42; marshall, William o'- lelen New- Dell, '43, custodian, Richard Wayne, s defaulted '44; and house manager, Kenneth Nelson, '42E. '.x LOOKIFG / 144 SEERSUCKERS-c, cr materials for smart cotton wash Sdresses. THE COLLINS SHOP ,. Shas these in those "hard to get" sizes-9-17, 10-20. The prices, K we know, will meet with your approval-$4.00 up. '4' ZRecordings of Shakespeares masterpieces are wonderful to% j have. The RADIO AND REC- O S SUCPRs -anew olumne Sprominent Shakespeare plays. ,. 'Otis Skinner and his daughterj CorneliaOtis Skinner portray% famous characters. In another volumne Alice Duer Miller's% much loved poem "The White%. Cliffs of Dover" is narrated by Lynn Fontaine. Both of thesej volimnes sell fo $3.50. pe me. know will meet with your- LEEiOsteei eeyhn The yo um edots Criappro-t piue tennisdresses, and flat- jThere is also a wonderful col- lection of shorts-and slacks. rA TUSSEY PRODUCTS ARE FAOIES In tef Spice, Mountain Luarel, Blue SIris, and Natural CALKINS- PLETCHER is offering a spec- 'r al. The $2.00 bottle is sllngf fos $1.00ingdtre1.00nothtvle i seln fo 50.A oh rvlewe found ir this line- matched j powder, .liptick, and .rouge in a little set . . , 1.00. '41 7/. AWNING STRIPED SILK JER- SEY skirts topped by either white or colored silk jersey blouses are a modern fashion keynote. JACOBSON'S have j these skirts and blouses in bright red, green, yellow . y and navy. Skirts . . $3.5, short sleeved blouses ... $2.40, long sleeved blouses . . . $3.00. R. logseve .lue ^. .. $3.00 IF you're planning on being in a June wedding-(either your own or your roommate's) don't Swait until you get home to mad- ly dash arouind getting yourr foutfit together. The POLHEM- US HAT SHOP makes up ex- quisite bridal veils and headj dresses for bridesmaids in har- monizing colors. A By JEANNE CORDELL Perk up your ears, ye future ca-' reer women! It's supposed to be a well-known fact that the female of the species is more deadly than the male but she can prove that she's just as efficient along many lines too, according to Mr. Arthur M. Bri- lant, New York advertising and public relations counsel. end. We need them because there are certain selling jobs that they can do undeniably better than men," he remarked. To explain why and what jobs women can manage more efficiently than men, Brilant mentioned special- ized copy writing specifically. "Take women's wear, for instance. What man can write so convincingly about Sunshine-Bright Cottons Apparently getting a job in the flounces, flimsies and furbelows as a advertising field is just like getting a woman? Or take any merchandise job in any line, in that it requires where the feminine angle is the sell- plugging, perserverence and self- ing factor. Why shouldn't a woman salesmanship. However, a beacon of' copywriter do a better job than a encouragement shines almost brightly , man? when an authority says that adver- Ideas Are Needed tising is an ideal career for women Brilant pointed out that there is aI because it presents less formidable definite place for women in fields competition between the sexes than which are ordinarily recognized as most professions and fields of busi- belonging to men. He summarized ness activity. the qualifications in two words; ideas Women Are Welcome and copywriting. In fact Brilant goes even further In conclusion, he said, "Any woman to say that advertising is a craft who has the talent for creating sales where women are welcomed and to ideas and the ability to write effec- good paying jobs too. "Advertising be- tive copy, has little need to worry ing what it is, we need women in our about being turned down because of business, particularly in the writing. her sex." * DRESSES * PLAY SUITS * SLACK SUITS * SHIRTS I AT TOOK?4 C.orduroy Wrap-Around {{ l36.50 z -a TlIhe sort of l ittle throw-over" coat that's indispensable in sun- :mier wardrobes. Three-quarter length, belted waistline, two huge pockets, complete rayon lining, 'N Have it in beige, bright red, sap- phire blue, emerald green. :: : 4. v; f: M ,, 4 { ' 4 ) ?' S. / . + T' 24 ;J y _. f + : i. r. @' ,<,a b ) i ' :_ : .z .k '. yfy ' f { a .: "': s : . gib. yw :. .{,y ,.vn ',A ' } / .. , . :. Y'% g:: t:;:: b v T ' . 1 ' z l.:< A C f SPUN OWN TESTED RAYON FABRIC $6.50. beau' alore. fon sitthat ripe wi th notch' bodice t ulallY buttoned to collar, Sas'h endste hack. Sixes 9 to17 A0 _.ae- PICK COTTON CASUALS for real hot- weather confort... seersuckers, cham- brays, ginghams (and spun rayons) that will wash again and again. SIZES 9-17, 12-44. \ SSS ?I k .. $41.95 - $10.95 I F I I