SIY ARH , 190-T lE MI CII AN DAILY Cabaret Booth Is Open Today Sophomore Coeds May Sign For Various Committee Posts A booth will be open from 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in the League for all sophomore women who wish to sign up for work on Soph. Cabaret committees. Coeds who have already registered for committee work do not need to do so again. The Cabaret booth is only for those women who are in- terested in signing up for a commit- tee, but who have not as yet done so. There are several committees which need members and every sphomore woman is urged to sup- port this social function of the Class of '47. Among the committees for which coeds may sign up are the finance, publicity, poster, skit, ticket and dec- or-tion committees. Other important committees are the floor show, script and dance committees. Working in close cooperation with these are the costume and props committee. Cabaret committees also include those of patrons, food, hostesses and eligibility. All women working on a committee must present an eligibility card. Further information may be obtained at the League booth. Supremacy Is Designers' Aim By LYNNE FORD With Paris looming again as a pos- sible rival to the newly established fashion centers of New York and Hollywood, American designers are striving this spring to maintain their supremacy in the fashion world. New trends evidenced in the spring collections are probably more radical than in any previous season, and their variety promises to satisfy ev- ery woman. There is no in-between in silhouets. Extreme fullness, or slim straight lines are equally good and are some- times combined into one ensemble. Full cape sleeves are used with cinch- ed-in waists, and the perennial dirndl has been modified into front full- ness or draping. Waistlines Are Accentuated Tiny waistlines are accentuated with corselet waists, some even lac- ing in the manner of peasant dres- ses. Shirred or flared peplums serve to whittle waistlines also, and never has the peplum enjoyed the hey-day it does today. Sleeves vary from narrow caps to full pleats and drapes. Huge flow- ing bows are perched on shoulder, hip, and neckline, and clever handl- ing of materials gives the illusion of straightness, and the feeling of full- ness and ease in many dresses. Jackets are every length, so just pick the one most flattering to you. The long close fitting tunic, some- times tiered, as well as the long fit- ted pullover, are naturals for lengthy girls. But short gals need not feel forgotten, for the waistcoat suits, eton jackets, and short yoked jack- ets make them look as willowy as a model. Coats of All Types Coats, like jackets, are of every conceivable type. Dressmaker coats have to be scrutinized to tell them from dresses, and the three quarter length coat is good for still another season. Greatcoats and trench coats are done in soft pastel fleeces for spring. To top it all off, hats are hair cov- ering and snug, but vary from the flat, brow-hugging look to the tow- ering, but still brow-hugging high hat. America nwomen have no cause to complain of fashion monotony or lack of originality this season. The new spring collection will make it diffi- cult for Paris to ever compete again with American clothes, designed for American women. INVEST IN VICTORY Results of Ping Pong Tourney Due March 31 Results of the playoffs in the indi- vidual houses for the ping pong tour- nament being sponsored by WAA must be turned in by March 31 at Barbour Gym. These lists will state which women will represent each house in the tour- nament and as soon as they are turned in, games will be scheduled between residences. WAA presents a campus-wide ping pong tournament each spring and all women on campus have been asked to participate in the annual event. At the present time, games are being played within the membership of each women's residence on campus and the final winners from each house will participate in the inter- house playoffs. For further information concern- ir.g rules, dates of events and other questions pertaining to the tourna- ment contact Alene Leeser, 2,3119. JQ Play News The scenery committee for Junior Girls Play needs more volunteers, ac- cording to Nancy Tressel, scenery chairman. Juniors interested in working on this committee should contact Miss Tressel, 2-4547. 'No Bid'Need Not Mean Heartbreak _)URING the last two weeks hundreds of independent co- eds have been going to the Pan- hellenic office in the League to re- ceive invitations to sorority par- ties. Dormitory telephone lines have been crowded with calls ac- cepting and declining these invita- tions. Sorority members have been struggling to keep up with count- less meetings, parties, "hash" ses- sions and class assignments. Rush- ing at the University of Michigan is in full swing and approximately 2,000 coeds are directly involved. Stories in The Daily, talks by house mothers, Panhellenic lectures and bull sessions tend to emphasize rushing to such an extent that even freshmen who never heard of the supposedly famous Greek letter combinations before coming to col- lege, are greatly impressed with the vast significance of it all. Out of all this emphasis conc a great many erroneous ideas about the import- ance of belonging to or not belong- ing to a sorority. These ideas nur- ture the unnecessary friction that sometimes arises between sorority members and rushees who are not pledged, and lead to the complete- ly ridiculous heartbreak that some times succeeds a "no bid." *&c/ifah k/svneh at ka,'.. . Rehearsals will tomorrow in the League. At that will be ready and to the cast. begin at 7:30 p.m. JGP office in the time, the scripts will be distributed Mildred R. DeLong, '42, is now doing hospital recreation work in New Guinea. Previously she worked at. a Naval Hospital in Australia. Myrtle Patterson, a graduate of 1943, is an Ensign in the WAVES and is stationed in the Bureau of Ships in Washington. Ensign Pat- terson was affiliated with Alpha Omi- cron Pi sorority while at the Uni- versity. Another Ensign in the WAVES is Marie Sinclair, who is rlso stationed at the Bureau of Ships in Wash- ington. Ensign Sinclair is doing expediting in. the machine tool section, which provides the machines for many Navy contractors and Naval activi- ties. Marie Holmes, who graduated from the University in 1942, has arrived in India to serve with the armed forces as an American Red Cross staff as- sistant. Miss Holmes is from Wheaton, Ill., and attended Stephens Junior Col- lege before enrolling in the Uni- versity. Until her Red Cross ap- pointment Miss Holmes was doing Girl Scout, work in Santa Barbara, Calif. Sarah Eleanor Longbrake, a grad- uate of 1940, is an Ensign stationed with Naval Air Facility at Columbus, 0. She is now an aerologist after having finished the course in aerol- ogy at the University of Chicago. All House Presidents Will Meet at League There will be a meeting at 5 p.m. today for the presidents of women's dormitories and league houses. The dormitory presidents will meet in the Kalamazoo Room of the League and the meeting place of the league house presidents will - be posted on the bulletin board of the League. Each house must be represented. Crop and Saddle will not meet today. During the spring semester, the club will meet at 6 p. m. on Thursdays in front of Barbour Gym. * * - Chairmen of the various commit- tees on JG play may call for their copies of the script from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday at the JGP office in the League, according to Fran Goldberg, chairman. Women May Work As Scout Leaders Coeds who are interested in lead- ing Girl Scout troops of Ann Arbor are needed by the Child Care Com- mittee, it was announced yesterday by Dusty Miller, committee chairman. Student leaders will be in charge of Girl Scouts who meet in high school. Hours will be arranged. Women who wish to be leaders are to see Miss Jache at 303 S. State St., who is leader of the city Girl Scouts. Sororities are definitely a mi- superior or interior. every opportumiy wi le just as mstgodtoth .n. nority at the Universit and beunhappy in a sorority house as she bring the ri' he U ri an t - The fine organization for i- is in a dormitory. And the girl people should be the primary coi cause their membership is limited, dependent women at the Univer- who is cheerful and amiable and cern of University students. A they cannot possibly pledge more sity of Michian the excellent who tries to enjoy whatever she luxury which is as distasteful t than a small proportion of the gt e nsome as it is desirable to other girls who go through rushing. dormitories and the emphasis on "does, certainly needs no sorority should be considered in a pra Sororities are no more free to scholarship and extra-curricular to ma er appy. tical, realistic light uncolored b take all the rushees they want, activities rather than the "coun- Almost every sorority woman glamorous tradition and misguide than the rushees are free to try club" social type of college has independent friends whom social pressure. choose the house they want with atmosphere, accentuates the strict- she treasures as much as she does --Mavis Kennedy absolute certainty of getting it, ly secondary role played by sor- her sisters. Here there is no Women's Editor 4- - MOSELEY TYPEWRITER AND SUPPLY CO. 114 SOUTH FOURTH AVE. 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