- -"Iwvw 11' - i wMPS THE MICHIGAN DAILY British Women Time Breaks Spell Out Success Houses Hold For Anne O'Hare McCormick Dances Today Will Receive 150 Jackets Mrs. Charles Koella Is Head Of Ann Arbor Seamstresses; Sample Jacket Is On Display Each Wednesday between 2 and 6:30 p.m. groups of Michigan women who were formerly making wind- breakers for fighting seamen are now constructing jackets for Britain's fighting women. In answer to a request from Brit- ain for jackets of this sort, Mrs. Charles E. Koella, wife of Professor Koella of the Department of Romance languages, and head of the Ann Ar- bor seamstresses, has arranged for the shipment of 150 heavy garments to England. The Ann Arbor work makes Michigan the first state to undertake this sort of a project. Idea Spreads Fast The idea for this work came from Mrs. John N. Stalker of Grosse Pointe who started a one-woman movement in her city after hearing from a Windsor friend of similar projects started during the first World War. Mrs. Stalker advertised the idea to all her friends and de- cided upon a quota of 1,000 for De- troit's contribution up to April 3 last. Spreading rapidly, the movement has called together women in a num- ber of Michigan communities, each windbreaker circle with its own quo- ta. The completed jackets are sent from Detroit to New York each Tues- day, where they are shipped on Fri- day by the English Speaking Union of that city to England for distribu- tion. British Are Grateful This last stage is in the charge of Lady Pound, wife of Admiral Sir Dudley Pound of the British Navy. In a personal letter from Lady Mountbatten, written for Lady Pound, who was ill at the time, the gratitude of the English people- for this contribution to their struggle is expressed, with the added request to "convey our deepest gratitude and sincerest appreciation to all those who have made it possible for these generous gifts to reach us." In re- gard to their need, she says, "they will make a great deal of difference to the women of England, who so often have to undergo such great hardships."r Materials for the completed gar- ment cost only 15 cents, the heavy fleece liningdand the scraps of lath- er being donations from a textile and automotive concern. To date 17 tons of leather have been given. In addition, many persons interested in the project have contributed help in the form of money to pay for postage and snaps. Jackets On Display The first meeting following a short vacation was held last Wednesday in Mrs. Koella's apartment, at which time materials were distributed for home work. The time required for completing each windbreaker is five or six hours. Jackets are being exhibited in the windows of several Ann Arbor stores, where all may see the type of work that is being done. Any woman in- terested is invited to attend the Wednesday meetings and receive in- structions and materials for making the garments. Attendance at the recent Cana- dian National Exhibition broke all previous records. Here's Style News I I * Parliament in London the day he startled the world by an abrupt abandonment of his policy of ap- peasement. But she will remember longer a! quiet tea one afternoon in Palestine with the District Commissioner of Jerusalem in his best British man- ner. For the official walked with her to the road where she had left a taxi - waiting and they talked for an in-f terval standing on the low stone wall , about his garden. Twenty minutes later it was blown to bits by a time bomb set the previous night, and ticking madly away under their feet as she took her leisurely departure.. Has Interviewed Hitler The girl who admits that she "has ' bumped into afew world crises" has interviewed, since she joined the Times, the biggest namestin world politics including Hitler, Stalin, de, Valera, Kurt Schuschnigg, Roosevelt and Leon Blum. Four years ago she became the first womanto be cited for a journal- istic award-the Pulitzer prize for the year's most distinguished foreign correspondence. And said Anne O'Hare McCormick: "I have been moving around amid thunderous events, and I have stolen some of the thunder.'' Currert Events Sway Fashions ANNE O'HARE McCORMICK Anne O'Hare McCormick is like a well-managed magazine. Call it her women's intuition, luck or chance, she gets the time-breaks-that is, she's there when things are breaking. And that, she says, is what has made her America's greatest woman foreign correspondent. Since 1922,' when, she joined the staff of the New York Times, world news and Anne McCormick have become traveling companions. Received Award "You're here again, what's going to happen now?" is the frequent greeting from her men colleagues when she arrives in different Euro- pean news posts. In 1939, the year she received the "Woman of -1939" award, she was abroad for five tumultuous months. Wherever she went, the air was crackling with the intensity of inter- national impacts, and one section after another exploded in her ears. For a climax to her experiences came the day at Huszt, Carpatho-Ukraine, where she xas under three flags in 27 hours when the border moved 'right over the travelers' heads as the Hungarian troops moved in and the Czech flag was torn down and a one-day republic perished in the making.- McCormick was in Rome when Chamberlain was there. She was in Sterling Bracelets Dangle Appealingly On Latest Costumes Martha Cook t To Initiate 63 New Women Formal'" initiation for the 26tht class to enter Martha Cook Building will take place at 5 p.m. tomorrow, followed by a party honoring the new% members. The ceremony, whichhas been held ever since the building was opened, will be conducted by Marian Chown, '42, president of Martha Cook; assisted by the house directors. Initiated members will attend the service in formal dress to watch 63 new dormitory residents dressed in white pledge their allegiance. Ten among the entering group are sophomores, while the remaining up- perclassmen and graduates offer a variety in backgrounds and interests. Transfers from Duke, Stanford, Bos- ton University, Ward-Belmont, Skid- more, Mt. Holyoke, Vassar and nu- merous junior colleges will be ini- tiated tomorrow, as well as a Polish refugee who was in Warsaw at the time of the German invasion. Liter- ary courses are most common among the new residents of Martha Cook, but students of music, education, medicine and chemical engineering are also included. John Sherrill Now Shuns Five-Footers Excessive height has proved itself no obstacle to John Sherill, "sky- scraper" drum major at the Univer- sity last year, for he doesn't have to hobnob with five-footers. Visiting recently in Endicott, N. Y., the six-feet-eight-inch University graduate attended "Harmon of Mich- igan", in some shots of which he figures, in the company of Wanda Grant, who reaches the six feet mark without standing on hdr- toes. A newspaper photographer in En- dicott caught the two togeher for a special feature cut. Football Season Brings Many Informal Post-Game Buffets With the football season, now hit- ting its stride, as an impetus, the Ann Arbor social calendar is rapidly filling with post-game buffets, radio lances, and-just dances. Alpha Sigma Chi will be having a radio dance from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. today at the chapter house. Mr, andj Mrs. Douglas Hammial and Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Basom will chaperon. Alpha Tau Omega will hold a buf- fet dance immediately after the1 game, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the chapter house. Chaperoning the af- fair will be Prof. and Mrs. W. J. Em- mons and Prof. and Mrs, E. L. Erik- son. The Chi Phi's dance today will be held from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. at the chapter house. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. Matt Mann and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Kelsey. A tea dance will be presented to- day from 4:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. by Delta Upsilon at the chapter house. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Titus and Prof. and Mrs. George M. Bleekman will act as chaperons. Phi Sigma Delta is also holding a tea dance from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at its chapter house, with Mr. and I Mrs. Hersch Hotkins and Lieut. and Mrs. R. E. Palmer as chaperons. Sigma Chi's dance, to be held from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. today at the chapter house, will have as its chaperons Dr. and Mrs. D. D. DeWese and Mr. and Mis. John Johnstone. A radio' dance will be given by Sig- ma Phi Epsilon from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. today, at the chapter house. Chap- I erons will be Dr. and Mrs. F. Naylor and Mrs. Leila Vibert.t Xi 2i Phi dental fraternity will present its radio dance from 9 p.m.< to 12 p.m. today at the chapter house, with Dr. and Mrs. George Ac.ore and Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Bar- iows chaperoning. Byrn-May Betrothal, Lutz-Roth Marriage Revealed By Parents Mr. and Mrs. Marshall L. Byrn of Ann Arbor have announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Helen, to Donald C. May Jr. of Washington, D. C., son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. May of Ann Arbor, at a breakfast given September 27. No date has been set for the wedding. Out of town guests at the an-I nouncement breakfast were Caroline Anderson '42 of Muskegon; Carolyn Byrne '42 of Kent, Ohio, and Helen Aupperle, former classmate of the bride elect. Miss Byrn received her bachelor and master degrees in music while at the University of Michigan. She was also president of Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sorority. Mr. May '38 specialized in mathematics. The marriage of Mary Jane Lutz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Lutz of Ann Arbor and Alfred G. Roth of Lansing, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Roth of Ypsilanti, took place Septem- ber 27. Mr. Roth attended the College of Architecture at the University of Michigan.I t r C t r : just as much as it does big business. It's really a matter of economies too, this clothing business, tho' the couturiers probablywouldn'thadmit it. Every war seems to make us pinch our belts more tightly, to use less yards in our clothes, to make skirts narrower and styles simpler. It's happened as an aftermath of every major war in modern times; it seems to be happening again in World War IL.(Or we hope it will just so we can prove our little the- ory!) y e ,=' d n F l; k I x E ' . Y 1 t A F wa mi of a g otb is fas Styles Were Extreme Way back in the Middle Ages, women evidently weren't as fickle as they are today, or at least it took centuries to detect much perceptible difference in the female costume sil- houette. But let's get up to more modern times-say the period of the French Revolution when things real- ly began to happen. With the aid of whalebone, and buckram cages, a grand dame of Louis XIV's court, managed to im- prison herself effectively. Her skirts got wider and wider as yards were added in petticoats and panniers, so her headdress had to get higher and higher to balance the broadening sil- houette. Of course feminine fashion did then, as always, go to the ludi- crous extreme. Times Didn't Change Came the Revolution: fabrics were hard to get, women took the word liberty literally and returned to the simple, flowing garb of the Greeks. All very nice, but with the return of By JEAN GILMER Fashions are like depressions and rs. Or hadn't you noticed? Econo- sts get all excited about the cycles depression and woefully predict to loomy public that we're in for an- her drastic slump after the war cver; but the war affects feminine hions. tho' perhaps less obviously, Here's a dress that has everything -both for your figure and for theI trends of the season. It has a low waistline, style news in1 any woman's language and good news1 to any woman's "build". It has aj skirt gathered on the bodice, to drape1 softly about your hips and swirl1 gracefully around your legs. It has long sleeves and a graceful draping caught at the Wrist. There's an absolutely plain neck- line, smart when left as it is with no garnish-or attractive when set off with a sparkling clip or a chunky necklace. Simply done, in a soft jersey wool, and sporting no trimming except a single contrasting stripe, low on the bodice, it is a frock which can be either a background or the complete scene. Tiny hats have pushed almost every other style out of the limelight this season, and the model shown is as cute as they come. It's so very little that a fluffy baby bob or pompadour would almost hide it, but what it lacks in area is made up in sheer charm appeal. Dances To Continue League dances, featuring Herb Miller's orchestra, will be held again this week-end and every week-end hereafter. Tickets will be one dollar a couple and dancing will be from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Fridays and from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturdays. prosperity and peace, woman's travagant nature came out in until hoopskirts that could only Although you needn't swipe your mother's best silver teaspoons for, bracelets this fall, sterling silver jew- elry is receiving a great deal of atten- tion. Three or four thin silver bracelets jangling around your wrists add a touch of femininity to your costume. Wear them on the outside of your' new black gloves. sterlirng silver salt spoons make grand pins for your blouses and yet are not too decorative for even the trimmest shirts. Other more elaborate pins are set with coral and turquoise to add a dash of color. Choose one with a set to blend with the plaid in your suit and flaunt it on your lapel. The finishing touch to many a dress has been a simple silver neck- lace, many of which are set with rhinestones or pearls for contrast on black. Old fashioned sterling silver lavalieres are staging a comeback this year. Wear them dangling from a long fine chain around your neck. China has a three-year lian for increasing foodstuff's production. s] L f y!1 E{1 i I .,.. :Wmmmmmwm w I 1 .- ~lIT '37 Years of Dependability Zwerdling's Quality Furs Cost No More TAKE HEED of what's happened . . . and to hap- en! Buy your fur coat now-and save. No in- crease in prices as yet at Zwerdling's on early I i! N.: ;j bought skins-and no extra charge. The Fur I Market has sky-rocketed since we purchased our present stock. We can make replacements only at much higher costs-but you can save up to 50% if you make your selection now at dt n . Zwerdling Bldg. "Listen, baby - I'm not much on words of love, but I get positively lyric talking about Michigan Daily Want Ads. They helped me find my job and the wav to make you sav ves!" I iI 0 ._ I I I I III C-71I