, NA n, -194 T ~i WIHIGA '>AMLY I I Patrons List Of Senior Bal f Is Announced Cab Calloway And Orchestra To Furnish Music For Dance; Committee, Guests Are Named Hundreds of students and guests will cruise on the deck of a make- believe battleship, dancing to the music of Cab Calloway and his 22 piece orchestra at Senior Ball, to be held from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m., Fri- day, May 29, at the Sports Building. Weather permitting, there will be dancing under the stars on an out- door "deck," which will be equipped with a public address system to bring the music from the Sports Building. Scholarship To Profit All proceeds from the affair will go to charitable organizations. The greater part will be given to the Bomber Scholarship, and the re- mainder to other war agencies. Leading the list of committeemen and their guests is general chairman,. Tom Williams, '42, who will escort Mary May Scoville; followed by Mar- garet Johnson, of East Lansing, who will accompany Robert Getts, '42; Elizabeth MacFillan, '42', will attend with Harry Drickamer, '41; Peggy Bell, Ypsilanti, with Lawton Ham- mett, '42; and Dorothy Anderson, '42, with Bill Soskin, Grad. Committee, Dates Listed Continuing the list of couples are Phoebe Powers, '42, and Roy Wyland; Marjorie Ann Higgins and Ted Mc- Omber, '42; Edmere Bondeson, '44, and Ray Dietz, 42; Jean Hubbard, '42, and Tom Colbridge, '42E, and Carol Freeman, '42, and Burt Rub- ens, '42. Heading the lits of patrons for Senior Ball are Gov. and Mrs. Mur- ray D. Van Wagoner, followed by Regent and Mrs. E. L. Burhans, Re- gent and Mrs. A. B. Connable, Re- gent and Mrs. D. H. Crowley, Regent Esther Cram and Mr. L. C. Cram; Regent and Mrs. J. J. Herbert, Re- gent and Mrs. H. F. Kipke, RegentI and Mrs. J. D. Lynch and Regent and Mrs. E. C. Shields. Patrons List Continued Continuingsthe list are President and Mrs. Ruthven, Vice-President and Mrs. J. D. Bruce, Vice-President and Mrs. S. W. Smith, Vice-President and Mrs. C. S. Yoakum, Honorable and Mrs. E. B. Elliott, Dean and Mrs. W. I. Bennett, Dean and Mrs. R. W. Bunting, Dean J. A. Bursley, Dean M. E. Cooley Dean and Mrs. I. C. Crawfdrd Dean and Mrs. S. T. Dana and Dean and Mrs. J. B. Edmonson. Also patrons for the dance are Dean and Mrs. A. C. Furstenberg, Dean and Mrs. C. E. Griffin, Dean and Mrs. E. H. Kraus, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Dean and Mrs. W. B. Ra, Dean and Mrs. E. B. Stason, Dean and Mrs. N. F. Vaughan, Dean and Mrs. E. A. Walter, Dean and Mrs. A. R. Lovell, Dean C. T. Olmsted, Prof. and Mrs. L. M. Cram, Prof. Carl G. Brandt, Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Hop- kins, Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Lewis, Dr. and Mrs. E. V. Moore and Dr. and Mrs. Warner Rice. Concluding the list are Dr. Frank' E. Robbins, Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Sink, Registrar and Mrs. I. M. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Watkins, Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher and Miss Jeannette Perry. June Wedding Plans Are Told By Couple Dr. and Mrs. Frank Beardsley of Frankfort, Ind. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Betty Jane, to Dwight K. Homborsky, '44L, son of A. H. Homborsky of Detroit. The wedding will take place June 18 at Frankfort, Ind. Miss Beardsley is a graduate of Stephens College at Columbia, Mo., and she is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Homborsky graduated from Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind., before attending the University. 1 11 Petites Pommes de Terre When writing a last column, it is best to keep in mind that one has two alternatives; either you get so schmaltzy and sloppily sentimental that the printer's ink feels like treacle on the paper or else you throw your books at the front doors of Angell Hall in a sweeping surge of bitterness at the horror and futility of it all. We have decided that both of these moves are rather passe. People gag at the schmaltz and an Alpha Phi Omega would argue with you gently if you threw your books at Angell Hall. Heaving the volumes at the front door of the Phi Psi house or the front door of the Parrot might be a worthy alter- native, but we have the feeling, somehow, that the gesture wouldn't be par- ticularly effective, and anyway, both of those doors are protected from attack by a web of cable knit sweaters and fine, clean-limbed young Americans. So the only thing left to do is to tell about the thing we'll remember best in Ann Arbor-the laughs. Organizaions are the funniest things in the world, mostly because every one of them-even those with noble, beautiful purposes-get so wrapped up in details and little bits of work and sniffing at all the other organizations that are so stupid and feeling with all their might and all their strength a part of whatever they're in, that whatever they do becomes obscured in a welter of ridiculous emptiness. Ann Arbor is full of organizations. And the smaller ones aren't any more small time than the great impressive ones with presidents who get their pictures in the paper and swimming pools to swim in and council rooms to meet in. Everyone is very good and does what he or she is told and petitions for things and maybe even gets in an honor society some day, and everyone thinks he has the stuff and doesn't seem to realize that the only stuff he or she has is the general contour of the pattern of the whole thing. All of which sounds rather disgustingly profound but still makes most of the laughs in Ann Arbor. The best of the stories we can think of at the moment is the one that came off at one of the JGP meetings. A chairman thought it would be a good idea to have the program printed up in the form of a newspaper and there was thunderous applause from the rest 'of the committeewomen-until one of them thought of something. "I don't think they'll like it," she said. "You know this isn't supposed to be con- nected with any other organization, and besides, it was announced only the other day that the sophomores need practice on the mimeographing ma- chine." This with great earnestness. Call it pointless, if you want, but it's still very funny to us. Most of it is. Goodbye, fellows, it's been swell. Wily Freshmen Originate Ways Of Prining For Finals Attack Peasant Pledsantry 4',,+ r k-- :"v.. } Summer affords just the oppor- tunity everybody has been looking for to wear the bright gay prints that have been in hiding during the drab winter months. The object of sum- mer clothes is, of course, to keep the wearer as cool as possible and yet have her retain that well-groomed appearance. The answer to the summer clothes problem, in school and out, will be found wherever the print pictured above can be located. Cotton is the predominant fabric out of which summer apparel is mfade, but chintz, sharkskin, linen, chambray, pique, and others are pop- ular everywhere. Accessories too, are playing a greater part in ma- dame's wardrobe, gayly contrasting belts coming into their own at long last as well as a variety of uses for white blouses and collars. Mrs. Giard To Fill Harvard Social Post Mrs. Eugene A. Giard, House Di- rector at Lloyd House, has been ap- pointed Assistant Social Director for the summer term at Harvard Univer- sity at Cambridge, Mass. In addi- tion to the regular group of under- graduate students at Harvard this summer, 'there will be a group of undergraduate girls as well as naval and military people. Second Drama o Figtsh Run This Week-End Cinemactors Michael Whalen and Madge Evans will finish out the week in Mark Reed's "spontaneously fun- ny" "Petticoat Fever," second offer- ing of the 1942 Dramatic Season, now playing at the Mendelssohn Theatre. Five phases cover the rise of Michael Whalen-hopes of becom- ing a concert pianist, refusal to en-- ter his father's contracting business, the rise from stock boy to assistant manager of a 10-cent store, a brief period as radio baritone, and finally, the theatre. Discouraging Start His first role on the stage, in Eva Le Gallienne's civic repertory vehi- cle, "Twelfth Night," was rather dis- couraging, Whalen admits. He had one line to say-"This is the man"- but his voice was so weak that no one heard it. Next followed appear- ances in stock theatres where he was spotted by a movie scout from 20th Century-Fox. Now a resident of.Heartbreak City for nine years, Whalen has to his credit performances in "Professional Soldier," opposite Gloria Stuart, "Song and Dance Man," with Claire Trevor. "Inside Story," "Ellery Queen," "Time Out for Murder," and "While New York Sleeps." Dramatic Precosity Miss Evans, star of the 1940 Dra- matic Festival's "The World We Make," written by her husband, Sid- ney Kingsley, has been before the camera since the age of five. Stage appearances in "Peter Ibbetson" and "Daisy Mayne," and film portrayals in "Piccadilly Jim," "Pennies from Heaven," and "David Copperfield" have been acclaimed by critics. Celebrated dramatic artists Carl Benton Reid and Doris Dalton, cast in last week's "No Time for Com- edy," are included in the "Petticoat Fever" cast, as are Francis Compton, English character actor, and Peter Goo Chong, who played his present role in the original Broadway pro- duction of the play. Miss Reed To Star Next week Florence Reed will star in "Suspect," a murder mystery by Edward Percy and Reginald Den- ham, authors of the hair-raiser, "La- dies In Retirement." Among Miss Reed's distinguished performances were those in "Macbeth," "Shanghai Gesture," "Romeo and Juliet" and "Mourning Becomes Electra." Anne Burr, leading lady in the recent Orson Welles success, "Native Son," will appear in the "Suspect" cast, together with Margaret Mullen and Daisy Atherton. Finale of the Drama Season is Brandon Thomas' "Charley's Aunt," starring Puerto Rican Jose Ferrar in the role of the "lady" from Brazil. Ferrar was louded for acting in "Key By BEATRICE B3OUCHARD WomenEare playing a greater and greater role in the war emergency for, along with the calls for women in other fields, one of the most ur- gent requests come from the Volun- teer Land Corps. The farmers in this country are suffering an acute labor shortage since hired help is being drafted into' the army or is working in munitions, factories. It is essential that the. home-front increases its production of foodstuffs for the armed services, the workers and starving civilians in other lands. Through actual labor on farms, not only will, the production increase but it is desired that the volunteers will acquire perspective and under- standing of the relationship between the farm and 'city life and will also develop a responsibility for the care of natural resources. The areas most seriously under- manned are farms in Vermont and New Hampshire. These farms pro- duce such essential dairy products as milk, butter and eggs. The workers will be housed on these farms and in some cases they will work together as a community. The living arrangements will be care- y . t 'r =- SEN IORS! Order your Subscription for the Michigan Alumnus Now $2.00 for 1 year I ,.~ Wornen To Return To Country5 As Farr Labor Supply Wanes fully planned by the field assistants of the Land Corps. The tasks which will be assigned to women volunteers in the Land Corps will all be of a lighter type. They will engage in fruit and vege- table gardening, canning and milk ; room tasks. The workers will re- ceive board in addition to their lodg- ing plus whatever cash wages they , are worth. Plans have been made for the = workers to learn to know each other as well as the local residents, for they will join in community discus- sions and social activities. . .... Town & Country Make-up Film A really glamorous make-up is no trick at all-with TOWN & COUNTRY MAKE-UP FILM, Helena Rubinstein's flattering, protective foundation. Dot it on lightly.It's creamy, fluffy, never "coats" your skin. See what a lovely luminous look it gives your complexion. How smoothly ... evenly your powder clings. Conceals tiny blemishes too. And how it lasts! Your make- up never gets "mussed". always looks perfect with TOWN & COUNTRY MAKE-UP FILM, 1.00, 1.50. Yl ' , .. ' . 1 S +N '+ r . ;: !.. ):.' :' V 9: By CAROL COTHRAN Since freshmen have gone through the jolting experience of their first seige of finals and are about to launch into their second, they have become individuals strictly "in the know" about how to deal with them. No longer the unsuspecting newcom- ers of last semester, they now con- sider themselves wise to the wiles of those cagey mental manglers and have created their own peculiar tech- niques of preparing for the battle at hand. Take Suzy Lovett's method of en- couraging mental concentration, for instance. As she sits down to her desk and finishes lighting her cigar- ette with one hand and her midnight oil with the other, Suzy slaps a grey- brown felt masculine chapeau on her cranium. The hat, belonging to a special friend, (and its presence in her room involves a lurid story about the borrowing of it for a masquer- ade) seems to give her the incentive to work, work, work for dear old semester grades. Special Ceremonies And then there's Beth King's tried- and-true scheme. In order not to wreck her health by smoking stead- ily during intensive study, she and a friend, Ruth Strong, have cooked up a most engaging ceremony where Friend Strong quietly tiptoes into her room once every 60 minutes with a lighted weed, jams it in Beth's mouth, and then steals noiselessly out again. Or take the way Harriet Fischel and Jean Loree insure rapt attention to their intellectual pursuits. They have set up a unique little agree- ment whereby if one opens her mouth other than providing an opening for a coke bottle, she has to pay the other a cent. A remarkable conclu- sion cannot be drawn from the re- sults of such an intrigue, because as far as anyone knows, neither room- mate has gone bankrupt and neither has amassed an appreciable fortune. Home Remedies Employed Some persons are of the school, however, that believes in mental- gymnastics for conditioning the mind for factual assimilation. Joy Low is a staunch follower of this trend of thought. Joy has found that before one settles down to sink one's teeth into one's studies (and you can run up MORE dentist bills that way!) that if you gallop down the corridor kangaroo fashion, leap nimbly into your chum's room (abondoned mo- mentarily because of a telephone call), and then quick as an Orycto- lagus Cuniculus (go ahead . . . be common . . . call it a rabbit) climb into the cupboard over the closet, and scare you know what our of her when she returns that complete men- tal relaxation and diversion will re- sult. Whether such unusual study hab- its will bring the desired results re- mains to be seen. Helena Rubinstein's sheer, flattering Face Powder, 1.00, 1.50, 3.50. Velvet- textured Lipsticks, .60, 1.00, 1.50. Prices subject to taxes Available at all smart stores ti ''V Lhe.I. eelea robinstein -. . 1, , DON'T BE AN OSTRICH! No need to bury your head in a trivial temporary job. A worth-while career is yours through Gibbs secretarial training. Current enrollment includes 648 college women. Send for booklet. "GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK." 5 IeAkw will help chase away tho exam doldrums And we've the slacks - just scads of them, of all , kinds from $3.25. Also 2-piece slack suits from $3.25. 3-piece slack, top, and J r . skirt at $12.95, another beauty - 3-piece set of #r'c gabardine at $25. The finishing tonch is made with sweaters, sox, blouses, and trick costume jeuelry. 'C / R ' / '4. , ; 4' S *4: -ix G , ;' , : Ftb & a t" '4n #a 5 ; i p. M [ . . . Bk y}' .#{e e ff} f {i{ g a k$ i.4'..:... e# iii .. °4 A Sg : .1 5 4 a: . 5s I _S 5t KATHARINE GIBBS SCHOOL 90 MARLOOUGN STREET 230 PARK AvcrNi BOSTON PNEW YORK ' 1II I' I" Women who play lacrosse are needed to take part in the "Sports Demonstration" event, sponsored by the WAA during fall Orienta- tion, Wednesday, September 30, at Palmer Field. Anyone interested is urged to call Marcia Sharpe, '45, immediately before this se- mester ends. New under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration L Does not tot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantiy stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Removes odor from perspiration. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 5. Arrid has been awarded the Atrt-,rrIea( rth. Ameran I - "*""* Blunt in Front. All aboard for Summer fun in our new wall-toe Walk- Overs. They foreshorten your foot . ...give new, roomy comfort. ,. - . ~ fl:. . } 'V I I I N &~K 21 S N Spin through Summer Playtime in these gay seersucker, mile-wide skirts. Tiny waists and flared fullness to your knees --You'll want dozens of them - in blue, red and yellow. $3.95 °"" 4" T T " "T1""" i% "N DELPHI: Elasticized white ..... suede with tan calf."-.."- p "U" I$ $-45* '7 A T Y'T-_ ZT IWO m , 2., ., I X71.0 1