:. S Y;MA 2g, 1941 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Senior Festivities Will Begin With Dance Today At Union Class Function Will Featurej Chapter Houses Will Celebrate Holiday With Dances And Picnics Coconut Straw Hats To Brave Summer Sun *, * * Mrs. Fraser Sees The World Bill Sawyer Hit Tunes Of Past Four Years To Be Played By Orchestra; Union To Be Closed On Friday Mecca for all socially-minded stu- dents at 9 p.m. today will be the Union Ballrom, where a festive Sen- ior ,Class Night dance will officially open a gala Senior weekend, to be climaxed by the annual Swing-Out ceremonies Sunday. Originally announced as pictures of the major athletic events of the past four years, the program of con- tinuous movies which will be offered on the Union Terrace during the eve- ning has now been expanded to in- clude pictures of honor society initiations as well as a second feature film, "A Coed's Year at Michigan." Glee Club To Sing Supplying the music for the eve- ning will be Bill Sawyer and his or- chestra, who will, in addition to keep- ing the dance floor filled, feature the hit tunes of the past four years. The intermission break will be well filled by the University Men's Glee Club, which will present its "Caval- cade of Michigan" program. T. Hawley Tapping, secretary of the University Alumni Association, will show the movies during the eve- ning, and will also supply a running commentary on the films. Far from being restricted to seniors alone, tickets are still on sale to all members of the University, and may be obtained at the Union desk or from members of the various senior honor societies. Due to the importance of the dance' tonight, the Union Ballroom will be closed for the first Friday night since the beginning of the year to- morrow night, it has been announced. Proceeds Go Into Fund Proceeds from the dance this year will be turned into a special scholar- ship fund to be used for awards for1 needy students who have proved themselves worthy by virtue of their extra-curricular activity and service, Harry Drickamer, '41E, president of' the senior class in the engineering' college, has announced. Senior Class Night committee mem- bers have been James Tobin, '41, Douglas Gould, '41, Paul A. Johnson, '41E, Robert Morrison, '41E, Drick-l amer and Annabel Van Winkle, '41. With a long weekend in sight, and exams not far off, eight organizations have planned dances for tonight to finish their spring social season. Alpha Phi Alpha will have a formal dance from 9 p.m. to .1 a.m. at the Michigan Wolverine. Mr. Kenneth Waynor and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fong will chaperon. The Chi Omega Spring Formal will be presented from 9 p.m. to 12:30 a.r. at the Huron Hills Country Club. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Upthe- grove, Dr. and Mrs. Howard C. Ross, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Steinhilber have been invited to chaperon. Chi Phi will have its Spring For- mal from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the chapter house. Chaperons will be Dr. William Brace and Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Mann. A spring formal from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Barton Hills Country Club will be given by Delta Upsilon with Mr. and Mrs. Warren Cook as chaperons. Kappa Sigma will hold its Spring Formal from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.. at the chapter house. Mr. and Mrs. A. Pet-. erson and Prof. and Mrs. F. N. Mene- fee will chaperon. Phi Gamma Delta will have two Nancy Bercaw Tops Archery , Tournament The eight highest scores made in the all-campus archery tournament, which ended last week were tele- graphed in as Michigan's scores in the 12th national intercollegiate tele- graphic meet, announced Eleanor Gray, '43, archery manager. Those scores were made by thel following women; Nancy Bercaw, '43,1 topped the list with 472 points, nextc came Eleanor Gray with 351. Arleen Helliesen, '43, with 333, Betty Lyman, '41, with 325, Joanne Woodward, '43, with 309 and Pauline Vihtelic, '41, with 269 ranked next. Seventh and eighth respectively were Gloria Carll, '43, with 256 and Virginia Baechle,1 '44, with 246. This year's team totaled 2,561 points and 495 hits over last year'st 2,444 points with 454 hits. OtherI campus women who participated int the campus tournament shooting the Columbia Round are, Betty Woods, '44; Mildred Stern, '4'; Mildred Da Lee, '42; Nancy Gossard, '41; Elizabeth Kinsey; Helen Kressbach, '44; Lyle1 Gunn, '43; Martha Leach, '44; Mar- garet Stevens; Jean Johnson, '42; Teefe Gabriel, '43.1 Alpha Lambda Delta Announces Officers . Alpha Lambda Delta, women's freshman honorary society, recently elected officers for the coming year. Marlou Shartel, '44, is president; Constance Taber, '44, vice-president; Ann Podoley, '44, secretary, and Nell Fead, '44, treasurer. New faculty adviser for next year will be Dr. Claire Healy, in addition to Dean Alice Lloyd, present adviser. Guild To Hold Picnic Wesleyan Guld members will hold their final big affair of the year in the form of a picnic at 2:30 p.m. to- morrow; they will meet at the Meth- odist Church. Reservations are to be on student office bulletin board by noon today dances this weekend, with the Spring Formal being given today from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Barton Hills Country Club and a "Fiji Island" costume dance being held from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow at the chapter house. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Upton and Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Rea will chaperon the formal, and Prof. and Mrs. I. H. Anderson and Mr. and Mrsj F. E. Densmore will be chaperons for to- morrow's dance. Pi Lambda Phi will have a picnic and a dance from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Felch Park and at the chapter house. Mr. and Mrs. S. Bothman and Mr. and Mrs. N. Mandeberg have been invited to chaperon the affair. Sigma Alpha Mu's dinner-dance will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Farm Cupboard. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. George Pregul- , man and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Krause. WAA Group, Union To Sponsor Picnic Supper Tomorrow A mixed group sponsored by WAA's Outdoor Sports Club in conjunction with the Union will go swimming in Barton Pond and hold a picnic supper further on at Delhi tomorrow. The group will leave the W.A.B. at 3 p.m. As the last event of the year the Outdoor Sports group will hold an early morning breakfast cookout, to be held in conjunction with the Union, too, leaving the W.A.B. at 5:30 a.m. Sunday. The affair is open to anyone who is interested. If planning to at- tend, call either Daniel Saulson, '44. 24401 or Elizabeth Mahlman, '43, 24471. The hostel trip that was originally planned for Decoration Day has been called off and these two picnics have' been arranged to take its place, Elizabeth Mahlman, in charge of out- door sports, has announced. Bahai Group Guest To Present Lecture Mrs. Ruth McCormick of Winnet- ka, Ill., will discuss the 'Future of{ International Picture" at 8:00 p.m.j today at the home of Mrs. Harry Mills, chairman of the adult group of the Ann Arbor Bahai group, at 1400 Granger.; This speech is one part of a pro- gram designed to discuss rural peace. It will be presented under the aus- pices of the Ann Arbor Bahai groups of which Jim Hammond, '41A, is stu- dent program chairman of the group. Ann Arbor residents, faculty mem-1 bers and students are welcome to attend.1 In Exciting Flight From London By JEANNE CORDELL governor of the city and several From England to the Canary Is- friends who are connected with the lands to Africa to India to Aus- Congress Movement in Bombay, I saw tralia and finally to America! Such something of both sides of Indian was the forced itinerary of Mrs. Rob- politics," said Mrs. Fraser, a student ert Fraser, ex-London air-raid war- in politics herself. den, and her three-year-old daugh- From Bombay, Mrs. Fraser and her uer, Rosalind, when they left Lon- daughter went to Australia, making don in June ,1940, to come to Ann a transcontinental trip from Sidney Arbor. to Adelaide. The last leg of their Mrs. Fraser left England because journey was through the South Seas she and her husband feared a seri- to America on an American ship, ous invasion of England by Germany, which was their first contact with- but since that time she has done a American life. right-about-face and now believes Rumors Pervade Ship positively that there is no chance of We, on board ship, were positively such an invasion. She intends to re- I a closed community," she remarked. turn to London, possibly leaving her "We never knew what port we would daughter here, as soon as she can, hit next and we were warned not to Submarines Chase. Ship tell the name of our ship to anyone, To insure her small daughter's nor where we were going. Conse- safety and well-being, Mrs. Fraser quently the ship was always full of decided to leave London last June incredible rumors. At first everyone and come directly to Ann Arbor grumbled at the secrecy of the whole where they would stay with Prof. and thing, but by the end of the trip we Mrs. Charles Remer. "Our plans' were all prepared to take it as a were drastically altered however," re- matter of course if we found our- marked Mrs. Fraser. "We took a boat selves even at the North Pole!" from Southampton after the Dunkirk -----4®-_-----___ -___ ----__ evacuation and were forced to zig- zag continually all the way down the Channel because of submarines that were chasing our ship."%W A L K "We were finally on the open sea and fully one third of the way to America when we were taken back t to Las Palmas in the Canary Islands.! From there we went to Capetown in Africa and before we knew why or' wherefore we were on our way to Bombay, India. We didn't arrive there when we were supposed to GET EN either, because we were radioed to go!, to Mombasa, the only port of Kenya Colony, to pick up India evacuees from the Somaliland Frontier and also government supplies," Mrs. Fra- ser continued. Submarines Meant Danger Ton and Whit On its way to Bombay, Mrs. Fraser'sTd ship had to zigzag again almost all the way because of submarine trouble Cream and VW hite and had to stay in Bombay for five days. "Through the influence of the All W ite C -f t x r a t s , - _ r L r , * * *-- "Only mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the noonday sun." But that was written before the new coco- nut straw hats came into view. They are cool to wear and keep the sun from toasting your hair to a crisp. Anyone can go out, avoid the shade, and still maintain that refreshed look with her hair in place and a shaded face. With brims turned up or down, round or squared crowns, coconut straws can be found that are flat- tering to almost every type of face. What is really miraculous is the way they go with every color imaginable. Just get a supply of ribbons to match or harmonize with your dress and it will seem as if you have a dozen new hats. If you make your own clothes you can stitch up a band of the dress material and have a matching hat and dress. For the "big moment" require- ments in hats, enormous cartwheel hats of fine straw are recommend- ed, for their soft flopping lines that shade one eye are most becoming. For sultry days, when any vestige of blowing hair is troublesome, sophis- ticated turbans of white or pastels will be very welcome to ward off the hot sun and devastating winds, and will look becoming with summer suns and light clothes. 7-11 Club To Be Open Featuring bridge and dancing to a nickelodeon and with refreshments available as usual, the 7-11 Club at the League will be open today, to- morrow and Saturday, instead of the customary two weekend nights. TRADE THAT DREAMBOOK for a chieck book - Gibbs training turns timid B.A.'s into sauve and esteemed secretaries. Ask for catalogue describing Special Course for College Women. ~1i Fraternities Name Mid-Week Events Dr. Lenard Eklend, professor in the University of Detroit and a nationally known authirity on common stocks, will be the speaker at the Alpha Kap- pa Psi house tonight at 7 p.m. His subject will be "The Common Stock Market." Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a stag party at 6 p.m. today in Detroit. The party will be in.honor of the fraterni- ty's draftees. "BA RD-TO-GET-TO" PEOPLE A RE EASY TO GE T TO BY Te le graph CHARGES FOR TELEGRAMS 'PHONED IN APPEAR ON YOUR tELEPHONE BILL. i I i i i l i I i r I. I, ----- - ----- sun, summer and you in breezy spic and-span little shoes speckled with perfing...so cool arndsmart with all summer frceksl n I * * I '77HERE is more real joy in life-more security for you and your family, if you live in a home of __ ) ' CO ti u ., , r 'v rf > k. y p 3 . Cn 0 .. o . a u . +{ 4.' -:.t :. ' ' oY ,r.. -Y " y., ' N . ' :. y :: ;' h 1 l ;1' y al }., e ; - n pump, a tie and a slip-ir pump..,high, cubon or la.- r ~ heeled . and many others! ;;a='i>" 1 A ' ;R / You can do this if you have a steady income and can make a modest down payment. The balance can be paid' in monthly installments, probably no greater than the rent you now pay. Visit Ann Arbor Trust Company today. Our mortgage officers have years of experience in home financing. They will explain the details of the FHA plan for home ownership. Their friendly counsel will be helpful to you, as it has beendto hundreds of others, now living in attractive new homes of their I your own. 1.95 own. Pin-money price for shady summer bonnets to go with all your holiday outfits. In that special fabric favorite. . . breezy, feather- light coco-straw. Choose from flattering styles with gay print or solid color bands. Phone 4231 I II { 0 IIII l i IIII