THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JITNTE 11, 19~44 Rl Seniors Invited To Participate in Swing-Out O dy Procession for Renewed Event To Be Formed at Main Library Women's Glee Club To Lead Campus Sing Following March The entire senior class of the Uni- versity is invited to the first Senior Swing-Out in four years, which will begin at 6:45 p. m. today in front of tfie Main Library. All students who will be graduated this month or in October or February are urged to participate in the af- fair. This includes members of the Navy V-12 Unit, and Army and Navy medical and dental students. Lit School To Lead March The same order of grouping which will be used at graduation exercises on June 24 will be followed at the Swing-Out. Signs will be posted in- dicating where each section, classi- fied according to schools, is to meet. Literary seniors will lead the pro- cession, followed by seniors from the schools of education, engineering, medicine, nursing, law, pharmacy, dental, business administration, for- estry, music, public health, and the graduate school. Sing To Be Held The line of march wil proceed from the Library toward Alumni Memorial Hall, and from there up State Street to North University. The procession will turn and march to Barbour Gymnasium and back to the Library. A campus sing will follow the Swing-Out, led by the Women's Glee Club, which will also present several special numbers. Caps and gowns must be worn by all seniors except servicemen and nurses. Engineering students may secure their caps and gowns between. 3 p. m. and 5 p. m. at the League, and al others may get theirs at Moe's Sport Shop. Dressings Unit Lists Honor Roll Delta Delta Delta sorority led the Surgical Dressings Unit competition on the final honor roll of the spring term with a total of 22 hours, Fran- ces Goldberg, publicity chairman, announced yesterday. Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi and Kappa Delta were next with 19%, 19 and 19 hours respectively. Gam- ma Phi Beta completed the list with 16 hours. Augsberger House was the only League house to make the weekly honor roll, and no dormitories com- pleted the minimum quota. "Because of the enthusiastic sup- port University women have given the unit, we have been able to finish the last quota of dressings set for us by the local Red Cross unit," Miss Goldberg said. Michigan Will Hold Dames Banquet The Michigan Dames will hold their annual banquet at 6:30 p. m., Tuesday, June 13, at the Michigan lLeague, according to Mrs. Frank J. Bell, general chairman in charge of the arrangements. The new officers are: president, Mrs. Matthew Van Winkle; vice- president, Mrs. Donald MacDonald; recording secretary, Mrs. H. E. Barsnes; corresponding secretary, Vrs. Austin H. Beebe, Jr.; and treas- urer, Mrs. Royal B. Brunson. Members of the advisory board who will be present are: Mrs. Alex- ander G. Ruthven, Dr. Margaret Bell, Mrs. E. W. Blakeman, Mrs. Roy W. Cowden, Mrs. Kenneth A. Easlick, Mrs. C. E. Griffin, Mrs. Charles H. Griffits, Miss Ethel McCormick, Mrs. Charles A. Sink and Mrs. Harry A. Towsley. Coeds Needed Now to Work in Union, Quad Part-Time Jobs Are Available At University Laundry and League; Any Hours Suitable Coeds interested in doing part- time work for board or pay during the summer session or term or for the remainder of the semester are urged to apply immediately at the League, Union or West Quadrangle, according to Pat Coulter, personnel l administrator for undergraduate wo- men. Help is also needed at University Laundry which handles all laundry work for University Hospital, the East and West Quadrangles, the League and Union. The Laundry is open from 7a.i m. to 5:30 p. m. and workers may arrange their own hours. A minimum of six hours each week is asked of each worker. Wages are 53 cents per hour. i Workers Needed Cafeteria workers are the chief requirement of the League, Union and West Quadrangle. Hours may be arranged at all those places and meals may be eatenr at the place of employment. The Union is open from 7 a. m. to 7:30 p. m. Wages start at 55 cents per hour. Students interested in working should apply in person at the manager's office. Further Information at League West Quadrangle workers are needed for breakfast from 6:45 a. m. to 7:45 a. in., for lunch from 11:45 a. in. to 1:45 p. m., for dinner from 5:45 p.m. to 7 p.m., and for Sunday supper from 5:30 p. in. to 6:30 p. m. 48 cents is the hourly rate and all meals may be eaten in the Quad- rangle. Further information about League work may be obtained at the bus- iness cffice on the first floor of the League. SoftballManager To Notify Houses All houses with softball games to be played this week will be notified by telephone, according to Pat Dan- iels, '46, Softball Manager. Since only a few games remain to be played, it is hoped that the wea- ther will permit the games to be played before the week of finals. I j/ wc eet , , \ \ \ \ \\\' \ \\\ \\ \ \ \\ t Od & By NANCY GROBERG IT ISN'T anything new, but we have arrived at the conclusion that nothing comes to people quite so easily as criticism. Not constructive criticism, mind you, but the type that tears down everything in sight, the type that masquerades as mature judgment, the type that veils itself in the embryo stage and emerges, finally, in tie nebulous, undefined collection of "ideas" known, sometimes, as "collegiate cynicism." T HE COLLEGIATE cynics are flourishing now. The University is a hotbed of them. They are not shy. Approach them with an Anti-Poll rax petition and you will receive, in place of a signature, a lecture on the futility of trying to make democracy work, the inherent evil in our govern- nent, the lost generation, the stupidity of officials, the blackness of the future. Idealism, in any form, they brand as naivete. Optimism is, in their eyes, the mark of immaturity. RIGHT NOW the collegiate cynics are laughing because MYDA and the Inter-Racial Association sent delegates to Washington to urge support )f the proposed Anti-Poll Tak measures. They curl their lips and report ,hat "it didn't help," and on this so-called facing of facts they base their refusal to believe in much of anything. WHAT THE collegiate cynics fail to see is that for every one of them, for every inert pessimist on this campus, there is a healthy, active in- dividual who believes that something can and will be done to make democracy work. Too busy sneering to see beyond their own noses, the ,ynics tell us that we are wasting our time-the country is a colossal mess; he position of the Negro is beyond hope; human nature will not allow for !mprovement; education ain't what it's cracked up to be; we are tilting at windmills. UT WHAT they do not see is that if enough people tilt, they may knock off one or two arms; that the Negro's position will not be beyond hope until the last healthy mind has become diseased enough to give up too; that human nature, if there really is such a thing, is more pliable than most people suspect; that education will become what it's cracked up to be, when we make it so. In the active Idealist whom he brands as a childish optimist, the passive, destructive critic fails to see the agent of change for the better-the only agent we have. What his conviction amounts to in the end is a curious and pathetic form of blindness. He professes to '1,ve thought things through, when he has, in reality, shut his eyes tightly lest he see beyond the scornful tip of his nose. AND THE wonderful thing about it is that the constructive critic, the one wljo refuses to believe that "it wouldn't help," has not given up hope even for the collegiate cynic. He proposes, instead, to take his blind compatriot by the back of the neck and toss him out into the open air. Once there, whether he stays or not is on his own shoulders. But there are lots of nice things to see out in the open air. Come on out, fellers-the weather's fine! each present a short report on a dif- week, and this will be the last meet- ferent breed of horse. A prize will ing of the semester. L/1'i? I . Yardley's Lan mtsei Slaave I i1I $1.00 .Ynardley's Lavender Slaate 41i.e on $1.25 :3. iardleyN Brilliaim d*ai1.00 4. Cop1ey MOeumN Suauvimng SeIs $ I.00 - $5.75 5. Ivan Shave lotiOli aud Coioalxe I 01 -$1.75 6. L'Ore Menl's Esseuitibs $1 .00 -$5.75 aL Fuheu-ge 1feuu's Co ogae $1 75 -$500 S H O P S F O R W O M E N ANN A4801R JACKSON * BATTLE CREEK * LANSING DIAL 9317 1108 SOUTH UNIVERSITY CeI ra Riding Clubs T( At a supper joint meeting in the Russian Tea Room of the League at 6 p. m. Wednesday Crop and Saddle and the University Women's Riding Club will discuss the various phases of horsemanship. Three women from each club will D Meet at Supper be awarded to the coed who, in the estimation of the clubs, has given the best report. Members of the clubs are to get their suppers in the cafeteria and then go directly to the Russian Room, Neither of the clubs will ride this For INDIVIDUALIZED II FUR STORAGE 217 East Liberty St. I ti, j ' 1 ' .zsJ" kt. ;r f } t o.:.,,... ... r e,: ..r. Y tt yy C 5 x0 y k } 55' 3FfS2 .Q t % ' fi w 1 t , .. a t . ' a ,, ; 4 t ^, c .y . § II DEFINITELY FRONT PAGE FASHION NEWS The Wfar ek I Bare shouldered beauties Heat defiers for Summer Play! " :; '>:. ,_, =:: as; ' . ; ?;:,,:: r I---, BLOUSES - "c" what we mean-they're Cool, Corn- fy, Charming. $2.50 to $12.95 7) G We're being practical this year ... in a charmingly femi- nine sort of way oiL~GyHAL V _ one-ounce bottle plus federal tax FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY. 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