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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

June 08, 1941 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1941-06-08

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PA~GE 1SIGHT

THE MTCHT(AN BATTY

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Departing Seniors

To

Dance

Under

Stars

June

20

k .,,a6 6e

GLfiSS
It's hard to pick out gradua-
tion presents but you can't go
won t g fyo giv the graduate
THE GAGE LINEN SHOP has
an assortment of towels and
luneheon sets that would please
any bride-to-be . . . Bath tow-
els, dish towels, or guest towels.
Also formal and informal lun-
cheon sets . . . all at attractive
Fisher's lingerie is known for
its beauty as well as its quality.
Pure dye silk lavishly trinimed
with real lace . . . a truly lovely
graduation present. JACOB-
SON'S carry this lingerie. There
are gowns and slips . .. in
white or pink. These things are
also very suitable for a bride's
trousseau.
-
Cult ied parl are undoubted-
lyo aboutnthebet ossiblet gif
for the graduate or bride. The
finest thing about the onest.
found at EIBLER'S was the
price . . . from $8.50. Now, real
pearls are not an unobtainable
luxury, although they will make
a grand, lasting gift.
- -
THE COLLINS SHOP. has a
large selection of attractive
graduation gifts. There are
thossestuingieisekonbe rlp
wich lnd dignity to an dryles
Also, gowns and slips in match-
ed sets, housecoats, pajamas,
and delicate looking evening
purses o pearls and sequns.-
VAIl BOVEN'S has an excep-
tional offer which all girls
should take advantage of. The
all-wool Argoyle socks for girls
that have regularly been sell-
ing for $1.50 a pair are now re-
duced to 3 pairs for $3.50. All
college girls love these socks.
Be wise and stock up for next
fall.

I I

Bal Partners
Anocr1Ued
By Committee
Two Dance Floors For Students
Will Be Provided, One Outdoor;
Glenn Miller's Band To Play
Departing seniors, led by Hubert
Weidman, general chairman of Senior
Ball, and his guest Ruth Gram, '43,
will dance out their last night inY
college under the stars to the music
of Glenn Miller, who will play fromk
10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday, June 20, in
the Intramural Building.
Among committee members who
have announced their partners for
the dance are Dorothy Carter, who
will attend with Donald Davidson,
'42M; George Nadler, who will be
with Mrs. Nadler. William Vollmer
has asked Grace Topping, of Manis-
tee, to be his guest for the dance.
James Lau has invited Virginia Bar-F
rows, '41, while Phyllis Waters, '42,
will be the guest of Fred Dannen-
felser. Phyllis Beckwith, of Minne-
apolis, will attend the ball with Paul,
Rogers, while committee member Lee
Keller will be at the dance with
Joseph Johnson, '42E.
Guests Named
James Halligan, '40, will return
from Detroit to go to the dance with
Catherine McDermott; Helen Bohn-
sack will attend the dance with Wal-
ter Wolf. William Elmer and Mrs.
Elmer complete the list of committee
members.
Dancers will have two dance floors
the night of the ball; one is being
constructed outdoors, for "dancing
under the stars," which will be ap-
proximately 40 by 80 feet. This plat-
form will be left up for the regular
weekend dances of the League during
the Summer Session.
Indoors a modernistic effect will
be accented in yellow, blue and
white draperies-triangular shafts
of dead white sweeping boldly over
novel effects in indirect lighting along
the sides of the ballroom. There
will be no overhead lighting used,,
according to Elmer, publicity mem-
ber of the committee.
The double dance floors mean that
a record number of people can attend
the dance; large ventilating fans, al-'
ready installed in the building, will
be used for the first time for the
dance-everthing points to coolness.
TO give the dance an icy cap, there
will be coke bars where refreshments
will be served, indoors and outdoors.
Miller To Play
Miller, who played here last year
at Senior Ball, was so enthusiastically
received by the students at this school
and others that he is now acclaimed
number one band by college students,.
for the second consecutive year. He
has been rated at the top of other
nation-wide polls.
Appearing with the band will be'
vocalist Ray Eberle and the appeal-
ing-voiced Paula Kelly, who is the
newest addition to the group. Feature
vocals will be performed by a swing
quartet, the "Modernaires," one of
the famous Miller sidelights.
Raincoats Are Light
With the coming warm weather,
reversibles are hardly comfortable.
Far better are the oiled silk coats
which can be folded up into the
lightest of packages, available for
use on a moment's notice. Cellophane
raincoats which come in flattering
pastel shades are another answer to
the cool-by-dry problem.
Smart Everywhere

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~Jun~1 Gras
/with day Band Trim!
W Uide brims! Bonnet brims!

To Lead Grand March At Senior Ball

Alumnae Announce
Winner Of Crujsel
To Central America
Anne Lukes of Detroit, has been an-
nounced as the winner of the cruise
to Guatemala in Central America,
chances on which were offered by the
Detroit Alumnae Association as a ben-
efit for Henderson House, women's
cooperative to be built on Observatory
Street.
Over 125 persons attended the final
meeting of the alumnae group yester-
lay at which the winning ticket was
drawn by Mrs. Arthur Vandenburg,
guest speaker for the day. Miss Lukes,
a graduate of Wayne University, is
a public speaking teacher in Detroit.
The winning ticket was sold by
Clarissa Vyn.
Summer M akeup
Should Be Na tural
Just as important as a golden sun-
tan this summer is the healthy, na-
tural look you can attain by using
lighter, less artificial makeup.
All that is essential to create a
cool, delightful appearance is a
smooth powder to give you confidence,
even on the hottest days.

Tite Ite Wnte4 I
Swaxn Sog .. .
sOON, VERY SOON, when I've
packed suitcases to the overflow-
ing with history texts, sweaters, fine
arts prints, theatre programs, tele-
grams and all the other memories
of Michigan I've collected during the
last four years, I will leave Ann Ar-
bor with a sharp brightness in my
eyes and a feeling of "forever" in
my throat, because I think now I will
never return.
W HEN PEOPLE have asked me, this
past week, if I weren't sad think-
ing about the last day of classes, the
last week of walking down the diagon-
al and saying "hello" to people I know
and to people whose names I don't
know, I have answered "no," because
I was worried about finals, and when
I was going 'to get those last two
novels read and my philosophy notes
memorized; but all the time I knew
I was intolerably sad because in all
the world there's nothing like this

life here, nothing so secure, so blind,
perhaps, but, in its way, magnificent.,
AND IF YOU THINK I won't miss it,
you're wrong!
NEVER THOUGHT I WOULD when
I was a freshman, though. I'll
never forget how scared I was of
everybody and:everything. Once when
I saw Hope Hartwig and Shirl Cros-
man walking up the steps in Angell
Hall I could hardly wait to get home-
and tell my room-mate about it.
SOPHOMORE YEAR is sort of hazy.
But I do remember coming back
and getting a big thrill out of know-
ing people" .And getting interested in
the League and The Daily . . . and
stuff.
O N TO GREATER% THINGS. Like
bigger and better bull sessions.
And trying to get sleep between worp-
ing on night desk and getting assign-
ments done.
NOT THAT I WON'T REGRET the
absence of sleepless nights. You
don't mind having trunks under your
eyes when you've had fun geting
them.
GOSH, I'm sure going to miss it. I'm
almost tempted to take the Mich-
igan Alumnus.

RUTH GRAM and HUBERT WEIDMAN

P'ractical And Coo
Shantung Is S art,
For Summer Wear
"Crisp as currency and cool as a
cave" is the appeal of shantung, fash-
ion headliner for summer. It is being
used in dresses for everything from
shopping to sports, for it is as prac-
tical as it is cool. Its half-silk, half-
linen texture resists creases, so that
it never looks mussed.
Shantung is back with a bang this
year after being neglected for a de-
cade. It comes in luscious colors -
pink, gold, caramel and woody greens,
but best and coolest of all - in sooty
black for everything from slacks to
dinner dresses.
One smart basic dinner dress has a
full skirt and a deep slashed neckline,
providing an opportunity for gobs of
jewelry to contrast with the inky silk.
Also effective is a street dress that
is worn with a pearl-studded dicky,
which offers unlimited opportunities
for varying accessories.
If you have intentions of pounding
a steaming pavement in the blazing
sun whlie job-hunting. or if you in-
tend to travel, then a suit of shantung
is the answer to your problem of

something that won't wilt the second
you put it on, and that won't make
you feel wilted despite the tempera-
ture.
UNDERARM PADS
ST Op DR
D Underarm _
KEEPunderarspn
Whisk one of these
lotionized pads over
your underarms, and
perspiration as well
as odor appear to
vanish for one .. two
three ..four ..,five
days, depending
upon how "perspire-y" you naturally
are! Wonderfully convenient?

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2ACQuarrc

ON STATE
at the Head of North U.
WE :E)vER

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eyeet
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You must be exceptionally care-
ful of your daintiness during
these sticky summer days. One
of the best ways to stay freq.?
and sweet in spite of sweltering
weather is with Tussey's deod-
orant cream. At CALKINS-
FLETCHER you can get a $1.00
size for 50c. Take advantage of
this special offer.

T
look you like! Fine
LINEN with beaej
- worked eyelets4
OPE N-BACK with
hee....or CLOSEt
BACK with mid-
.
T , _heels.
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, 1
tifully
high
D
nigh

FINALE for '41
Fnish :this 1grad year wi.th one of our <
breathtaking formals for Senior Ball.
We have a wonderful selection of for-
mals: dazzling ettons, +erseys, seer-
suckers, organdies, nets and mnarqui-
settes.. . all moderately priced.
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