WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1941 TIHE M ICHIGA N D AILY PAGE IVE '.II _ . . t -- - - - - - _I _ College Camp To Undertake Nursing Work Red Cross Appeals For Women To Serve Country During Crisis While Receiving Training An appeal for graduating Michigan women to aid in Red Cross work at a special Bryn Mawr College nurses camp this summer was made yester- day by Norman H. Davis, chairman of the American National Red Cross. Mr. Davis sent the message by telegraph to Dean Alice C. Lloyd. Dean of Women, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. The American Red Cross asks your help in interesting your grad- uating class and younger alumnae in the Red Cross nurses training camp, opening June 26 at Bryn Mawr College and closing Septem- ber 12, in collaboration with the Women's Medical College. This course, with enrollment limited to two hundred women, is an emer- gency measure to overcome the acute national shortage of nurses. College graduates wishing to en- ter the nursing profession and also wishing to serve their country in a time of crisis have the advantage of transferring from the summer course to established schools of nursing with intensive preparation already gained in shorter time. The cost for the summer course is one hundred dollars. The camp administrators have' been fortunate in securing Miss Margaret F. Conrad, Professor of Nursing, Faculty of Medicine of Columbia University, as dean for the summer session. For particu- lars address the aJministrator, Red Cross Nurses Training Camp, Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania. May we count on your immediate coop- eration in this important project? Norman H. Davis; Art O f Keeing Cool Suggested During Exams When the thermometer reaches 80 degrees and you have an exam for which you must study, keeping cool and comfortable is essential for your mental and physical well-being. When cramming for finals, the temptation is great to neglect your- self. If the impulse is followed the results will be disastrous. Hair will fall as the barometer rises, clothes will wrinkle and stick, and you'll feel as hot and messy as you look. Shower Treatment There are lots of things one can do to get that cool, refreshed feel- ing. The oldest-known treatment may still be the best: a good, brisk shower will really be invigorating. One won't feel all hot and bothered again, thinking that the effort was futile, if one remembers to douse liberally with the witch hazel, al- cohol, or a very mild cologne. Fdr feet that are hot and swollen and aching, a foot-bath with very hot, then icy water, plus a mentho- lated foot lotion, will do the trick. Remember, also, to powder your feet before you put on your shoes. Keep Hair Back Probably most important in gain- ing that comfortable feeling is a head of hair that keeps out of the way. If you can't bear to cut off that long, flowing mop during the summer then at least you can keep it off your neck. If it's' long enough to braid, comb it up on the sides, and plait the back into two pigtails which can be pinned neatly around the back of your head. For ,rstraggly ends that descend as you progressively wilt in the summer heat, keep an atomizer of brilliantine handy as well as tucking combs that will secure large bunches out of the way. Short, Curly Locks In case you haven't noticed, how- ever, there is a definite campus trend toward short, curly locks. Ideal for the summer, the only care this short bob requires is frequent brush- ing to make it even more curly and glossy. Frequent shampoos to keep your hair clean and shiny will get rid of the excess oil that may be produced by the humidity, while the above- mentioned brilliantine will keep the sun from parching your locks com- pletely. Now you've got yourself in the right physical sta te to study, slip into a cool housecoat or 'a rayon shirt and slack set. Then order out for a coke to sip while you read, and if you don't pass that psychology exam, its won't be our fault! Student's Play Honored Della Rebish, '42, of New York Suits Of Plaid, Striped Cotton Play Dual Roles. Cooley Family To Be Honored Through Establishing Of Fund!; .\ . * * *, So you're in the market for some- thing cool to carry you through this frantic last minute cramming and then render you well equipped for vacation excitement? Then you're lucky this year as both street dnd play clothes are being designed with coolness and practicality in mind. Cottofi suits made from plaid seer- sucker and shantung materials hold the fashion spotlight this summer. Such suits are very appropriate for campus wear and the addition of gloves, spectator pumps and a smart coconut straw hat make them smart for church or for vacation traveling. Light weight rayon crepes in plain colors and in prints are converted into attractive summer date dresses. Sad- dle-stitched classics make cool and comfortable afternoon dresses. The popular broom-stick skirts and pinafore dresses are made with an eye to colorful cotton prints this sum- mer. Several original co-eds have em- ployed tablecloth materials in making their dirndl skirts! Refreshing are non-crushable lin- ens made up in plain colors and fin- ished off with a harmonizing pique binding. By MARGARET AVERY With the establishment of the Mor- timer E. Cooley Foundation "to keep the College ,of Engineering at its present status as one of the great engineering schools of the country," once again public attention is called to the name of Cooley. The aims and objectives of an engineering foundation have been outlined in a booklet appeal to the "active interest of business men, en- gineers, manufacturers, and citizens who desire to endow worthwhile in- terests." Tribute was paid to Dean Emeritus Cooley's contribution to the engineering fame of Michigan. But omitted was a table of Cooley gene- ology. Such a chart with biographi- cal notes would be a veritable map of Michigan progress, touching nearly every department of the University. Mortimer Cooley Coming to Michigan in 1881 as Professor of steam engineering and iron shipbuilding, Mortimer Cooley became in succession Professor of mechanical engineering, Dean of the Colleges of Engineering, and Dean of the combined Colleges of Engin- eering and Architecture. Following his retirement in 1928 he was made Dean Emeritus of the Colleges of Engineering and Architecture. Distant cousin to the engineer was Judge Thomas McIntyre Cooley, in whose memory the Cooley Fountain is being constructed by the League. Judge Co.oley was one of the three professors of law who came to Michi- gan in 1857 when the law depart- ment was established. The author of numerous text and reference books on law, his "Constitutional Limita- tions" has won him special merit. In 1884 Judge Cooley's influence spread to the literary departments of the University as he took a staff position there as professor of Ameri- can and constitutional history. Judge Cooley served as a judge on the Michi- gan Supreme Court, and remained an authority on the interpretation of constitutional law until his death in 1898. Literary Influence Son of Judge Cooley was Thomas Horton Cooley, professor of sociology. Graduating from the University in 1888, Professor Cooley became a member of the faculty in 1891 as a professor of economics, and shortly thereafter transferred to sociology where he remained until his death in 1929. In this capacity Professor Cooley received national recognition, becoming president of the American Sociological Society. His books, in- cluding the well known "Social Or- ganization" written in 1908, are still used today as references, in spite of the usual tendency for sociological material to age rapidly. Dr. Thomas Benton Cooley, M.D., at present active in Detroit as a spe- cialist in children's diseases, is an- other son of Judge Thomas Cooley. At one time he served on the Uni- versity faculty as a professor in the medical school. These are some of the Cooleys and heir contributions to the prestige of Michigan and the enrichment of the fields of knowledge they chose to develop. It is a tribute not only to the man "who did more than any: other one person for th'e prestige of] the College of Engineering," but to the name of Cooley as it touched all] phases of tJniversity achievement, that the Board of Regents has ap- I proved the creation of the Mortimer' E. Cooley Foundation.] The objectives of the Cooley, Foundation are to supplement the funds provided by the State of Michi- gan for all branches of engineering, to encourage faculty research and] graduate work, and to foster grants for the establishment of libraries, laboratories, museums, scholarships and fellowships for the benefit of the+ College of Engineering. Panhellenic Group Of fers Membership To Zeta Phi Alpha Zeta Phi Alpha sorority was for- ] mally accepted into the University's official campus group of sororities yesterday by the :Executive Board of the Panhellenic Association, Patricia; Hadley, '42, president of Panhellenic' Association, announced. This Catholic sorority is one of 18 chapters that exist throughout the nation. Zeta Phi Alpha was founded at Michigan on Aug. 30, 1912, and left this campus in 1935. It re- turned to campus as an unorganized house in 1939-40, but was first opened for residence in 1940-41. Filling the offices are Ruth Par- sons, '42, president; Margaret Healey, '41, secretary, and Rosemary Ryan, '42, treasurer. Initlation Announced Kappa Delta sorority announces the intiation of Margaret Sundean, '44, Cambridge Springs, Pa,; Betty Merrill, '43, Detroit; Helen Clarke, '43, Wilmette, Ill., and Elaine Travis, '44, Detroit. Gift Portrait Of Dean Lloyd Is P'resented At a tea held Monday in the Grand Rapids room of the League, Panhel- lenic Association, Senior Society and Mortarboard presented a portrait of Dean Alice Lloyd to the University. Patricia Hadley, '42, Panhellenic president, introduced Annabel Van Winkle, '41, out-going president of Panhellenic Association, who un- veiled and presented the picture to President Ruthven, who accepted "it in behalf of the University. In 1938, Stephanie Parfet, then president of Panhellenic, initiated a plan by which sufficient funds for the picture could be obtained. Indi- vidual contributions from Senior So- ciety and Mortarboard and proceeds from parties and dances given by Panhellenic Association over a period of three .years, made it possible for the portrait to be presented this year.j Pictured in a black formal evening dress, set off by a scarlet cape, this oil painting will have a permanent place over the mantel in the Grand Rapids room of the League. Edmund Archer, youthful artist from New York, has been engaged in this painting for the past month., He is originally of Richmond, Va,, where he is listed as the state's num- ber one artist. Suggested by Prof. Jean Paul Slusser, of the College of Architec- ture, Mr. Archer was a curator of the Whitney Museum in New York. His works have been shown in all the large exhibitions in Chicago, Washington and in the Carnegie In- ternational and Pennsylvania Acad- emy displays. Betrothal Announced Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Levy of South Bend, Indiana, announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Harriet, '40, to Morton L. Linder, '40, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Linder of Buffalo, New York. While in school Miss Levy was affiliated with Alpha Epsilon Phi and Mr. Linder was an associate editor of The Daily. By JEANNE CORDELL If you, like a lot of people we know, (including ourselves), are getting lit- tle lines in your smooth, white brow from worrying about a certain exam and decide you want a tutor or a' car or a ride to No-Man's-Land, you'll find the answer to your prayers (maybe not the answer you want, but an answer nevertheless), on those little cards posted on bulletin boards in the League and in University Hall. "Are the Bees and the Bugs driving you Bats?" asks a sympathetic would- be zoology tutor. If they are, just hop over to the League and get her telephone number. Sounds like she has a good sense of humor along with an intimate knowledge of the lepidoptera and the platyhelminthes. Another willing tutor with a sense for the melodramatic prints his offer as follows: "Be Prepared! Avoid a Fail- ure!" However, he isn't suggesting that you register for the draft or be- come a Boy Scout. He merely wants to help you get through mathematics. Very Well Furnished As tbhe old saying goes, there's no sense in hiding your light under a barrel or a bushel or whatever it is, and there's one ad we saw which could never be accused of doing that. It's advertising an apartment and runs as follows: "Furnished apartment for rent (well-furnished) near campus." Maybe they have an inferiority com- plex, d'you suppose? We could practically see the tears dripping from the eyes of whoever put this little number up: "I will sell my beloved Cadillac phaeton to the highest bidder!" For heaven's sake, somebody bid for the thing and break up the poor fellow's suspense. Oh yes, and here's a tip for some of you five-hundred pounders. There's a card posted in the League which says: Wanted: Business girl to share three rooms. Guess that" gives you plenty of leeway. Whoever put this ad up certainly has a generous nature! "Four rooms and bath, sleeps six people, boat in- cluded." Just in case you want to take a short cruise, maybe? Another would-be landlady offers: "One single room for a girl - one block N.E. of League -- excellent location facing Spark- hot water??-shower and tub." Oh well, iced tea will do just as nicely, thank you. BeachesTry Black Black against white, black against suh-tan, black wool jersey or black slipper satin will be the fashion note seen most.often on the beaches this summer, or out at Loch Alpine with the summer session students. Cool and brief in suits designed for swimming, black will also be feminine and decorative in beach-lounger suits. Witticisms On Bulletin Boards Answer Strangest Of Prayers *N O ;2,59 co,. 'o'5' K ' r.,: /'°f o i 0CC . , 7 . VO t~o &a' ca~ps ~l121& ax ar a~h 3x5' $1 a1 O - ,k n "' ( less ;t FAR EVERY . 2 t ' " *~* " BE L LE-SH ARME ER ST OCKINGS For slim girls and tall girls . . . for pump girls and all girls Belle-Sharmeer Stockings are the one graduation gift. Sized to fit... shaped to atter.. individually proportioned in width as well as in length from toe to hem. In every girl graduate's leg size: B3rev for smalls, Modite for mediums, Duchess for talls,~ Classic for plumps. Here exclusively-. $1 .00 to $1.35 a par ,'3OFIEI of crushed white calf elasticized for sleek glove-lit. Wedge heel............ 5.95 a: : ;. i.:: ". i.;.., j i::: i:: . .. >'.;{.;: ;" iii. y ,..; ...,.. ;9:: . , , . ' k . r \ .. .. . \ " Y 1S may) f a e O 4 i '" ! a' . "; f t ' t , 7OW-KNOT PUMP for teamug and dancing. Of breeze-cool perforated white buck.........6.75 - t*: ar . ,s - w Fi s+ e w * s s s'" . " w " a s w " a' w s w s w s " w " w w M w w ± 4 FOR ALL-OCCASIONS, white perforated crushed calf. With navy, brown or black. All white ....................4.95 sPECTATOR in white buck with navy or brrown calf or. black patent trim. High, med- ium heels............... 4.95 GIFTS for the GRADUATE In a quandry about what to get her for graduation? Let us help you with gift suggestions in jewelry, hosiery, gloves and handbags .... modestly priced! ,