FI DiAY, MAY 18, 1945 ~~gHi L-IG$~WIJ . .... . ...... Soph Music B3ar To Be resen ed Cabaret To Feature Stageshow, Movie, Dance, Miniature Gf * * * Soph Music Bar, featuring a stage show, movie and dance, will be held from 7:30 p.m. to midnight EWT (6:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. CWT) tomor- row in the Michigan League. Taking over the entire second floor of the League, Soph Music Bar will present the coed stage show, "Swing's the Thing", from 8:30 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. EWT (7:30 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. CWT) in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The show will contain dia- logue and will revolve around singing and dancing numbers. Special Blues Singer Phyllis Knight is to be the blues soloist of the stage show and her feature number will be "I Surrender, Dear". A dance trio interpreting zoot suit jive will be Ruth McMorris, Jean Hole and Nina Goehring. Joan Schlee will present a{ballet dance. Following the stage show will be the technicolor movie, "A Star Is Born", starring Frederic March and Janet Gaynor. The movie was a hit of the '30's and has been brought back by request. Dancing will be from 9 p.m. to midnight EWT (8 p.m. to 11 p.m. CWT) in the League ballroom. Jim- my Strauss, his Detroit orchestra and vocalist will provide music for the dancers in the ballroom, which will be decorated by representations of popular song titles. Miniature Golf Miniature golf will be set up in the Hussey Room and will be under the direction of the WAA. Curving fair- ways, sand traps and water holes will abound for the delight of golfers. Scores will be kept and a prize awar- ded to the star player. The game will be played on a nine-hole course. The Grand Rapids Room will be transformed into a Parisian sidewalk cafe where all refreshments will be served. American favorites such as cokes, sandwiches and potato chips will be on the Cabaret menu. Caric- atures of Cabaret-goers will be sketched in the cafe by "Parisian" artists. Fortune tellers will be on hand to predict various futures, and many novelty games will be among the entertainments of Soph Music Bar. The 1945 Cabaret is open to all per- sons and both stag and couple tickets are being sold: Tickets are now on sale at the Union, League, Library and various campus posts., Proceeds for Seeing Eye Fund Proceeds from the Cabaret will be contributed to the Seeing Eye for the purchase of a trained dog for the blind. The Seeing Eye was estab- lished in this country ten years ago and has supplied hundreds of dogs to blind men and women all over the United States.7 Soph Music Bar will revive the old tradition of the Soph Cabaret, which was discontinued after the outbreak of the war. "Sunshine, Inc." was the 1940 Cabaret, and as the name de- notes, dealt with the theme of the' sunny south. A boardwalk was erec- PHYLLIS KNIGHT will be the featured blues singer in the Soph Music Bar stageshow, "Swing's the Thing" which will be presented at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre in the League. ted among evidences of Floridan and Cuban influences and local myr- chants displayed their merchandise. The affair was highlighted by a dance and floor show. The central committee of Soph Music Bar is headed by Alice Miller, assisted by Ann Robinson. Other central committee members are Ruth McMorris, Betty Lou Bidwell, Vir- ginia Scott, Jean Raine, Barbara Everett, Betty Jones, Barbara Ray- mer, Elaine Andrews, llen Hill, Pa- tricia Hayes, and Gwen Helm. Elaine Eagle, Robin Scherer, Betty Hutchins, Betty Pritchard, Nina Goehring, Jean Brown, Barbara Le- vin and Muriel Aaron are also mem- bers of the central committee. Petitions Due For JQ Play Committees for 1946 Junior Production Will Be Selected Petitions for the Junior Girls' Play, which will be presented during the first month of the 1946 spring semes- ter, are due at the Undergraduate Office in the League by noon Satur- day, according to Ruth Ann Bales, President of Judiciary Council. Interviewing will be from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. EWT (1 p.m. to 4 p.m. CWT) May 22, 23, and 25. Positions to be filled are chairman, assistant chairman, director, secre- tary-treasurer, stage managers, a music committee consisting of a composer, a lyrics writer, a choral director, and an arranger. Chairmen for the script, dance, ticket, costume, scenery, properties, make-up, pub- licity, ushering, and program com- mittees will also be selected. All petitions must contain specific and complete plans of the organiza- ticn, and also a criticism of this year's play. Women petitioning for the music, dance, and script com- mittees, and for the position of dir- ector, should have had previous ex- perience in those fields. Examples of writing and a specific outline for the play should be presented by those petitioning for the script committee. All first and second semester soph- omore women are urged to petition, regardless of previous experience or lack of experience in class project work, but all those who have peti- tioned in the past are urged to sub- mit petitions again. WACs Count Release Points Many Will Remain in Europe With Army Occupation Forces "Peace and Points" is the slogan of the 15,546 members of the Women's Army Corps now serving overseas, and the average WAC is busy adding up her length of service, medals and dependents to get a score that will release her for her real job in life- husband, home, and children. Office work and signals, in which WACs excel is just as important to the Army of Occupation as it was to running the war, and approxi- mately 10,800 WACs will be kept in the Army of Occupation, which means that more will be sent over- seas to augment the 8,000 now on duty in the European Theater of Operations. WACs whose husbands have been' returned 'to the United States for discharge may apply and be granted immediate discharge. Those whose husbands are returned to the United States for hospitalization or perma- nent assignment will be returned and stationed as close to their husbands as possible. No WAC will be sent to the Pacific unless she volunteers for duty. Serviceworimen are fairly well sat- isfied with their lot, pointing out that they enlisted for the duration and six months, and as they aren't going to be forced to go to the Pacific, it is only fair to keep them overseas in the theater where they can do the most good. Novel Blouses. Add Qay Tone To Wardrobes By JEAN WHITNEY T HOSE old wardrobe mainstays, suits, skirts, and jumpers can be made to look fresh and different with a few good-looking blouses. A gay flowered blouse can do won- ders for a. plain colored jumper. A bold peppermint striped blouse with long, graceful sleeves and a bow-tie neckline in a cool washable material, or a paisley printed rayon jersey with soft shoulder lines, high round neck- line, and long sleeves which tie in small bows at the wrist will brighten any outfit. A black printed blouse is very striking when worn with a light colored jumper. There are many varieties of the sheer blouse, which is attractive with either a plain wool skirt or a bright cotton dirndl. One of these, seen recently, is a fresh white dotted swiss with short puffed sleeves and velvet ribbons tying at the ruffled cuffs and gathered neckline. THIS material can be laundered easily which is an important fac- tor in a summer blouse. Another is a frail lacy blouse which has a hand- made look. It has a high ruffed neck, four rows of ruffles down the front with a single row of buttons down the middle, and short sleeves with another ruffle about halfway up the side. It is made of a washable rayon which irons beautifully. More and still more summery blou- ses to wear with dirndls are being shown. There are cotton and rayon batiste blouses which button down the back and have short sleeves. One of these has a low round neckline in back as well as in front (really dar- ing) and is trimmed with eyelet em- broidery. Another has three rows of bright cross-stitching around the yoke and sleeves. A third is made of white waffle pique with lacy tatting- effect edging which is very flattering. A BRIGHT plaid seersucker is a must for every girl's wardrobe. These blouses have short sleeves and a variety of necklines, ranging from a high drawstring to a deep V-neck. A number of types of the cap- sleeved blouse have been seen. There are pastel prints with drawstring necks, plain colored blouses with lacy eyelet ruffles on the collar and cuffs, and blouses trimmed only with a monogrammed bow. A pinch-hitter for the cap-sleeved blouse is a wrap- around with the back tying at the waist in front. This would be an easy blouse to make for those who are so inclined and are lucky enough to have any cotton material. THE MOST versatile of all is the collarless white blouse. Long or Luscious, locally-grown orchids are a very special offer. Truly beautiful and moderately priced. CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP 203 East Liberty 79eddinrgs CN and -" Ethel Barrymore Carries On Family Tradition in Theater Engagements Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Michel of Detroit have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Helena, to Bernard Isenberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Isenberg also of De- troit. Miss Michel is a member of the junior class at the University. While at the University, Mr. Isenberg was affiliated with Phi Sigma Delta fra- ternity. * * * The engagement of Doris R. Les- ser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Lesser of Bridgeport, Conn., to Capt. William Garbose, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Garbose of Athol, Mass., has recently been announced. Miss Lesser is a junior at the Uni- versity and a member of Sigma Delta Tau sorority, and Zeta Phi Eta hon- orary fraternity. At the age of sixty-five, Ethel Bar- rymore is more real to millions of Americans than ever before. Those who were never able to see her on the stage are meeting her in the movies, or listening to her weekly radio pro- gram. She looks the same offstage as on, and her voice-that thrilling, throaty voice, is also the same. She has large square hands, very white skin and she wears lipstick. Like all the Barrymores, she is fiery, unpredictable and the complete master of any situation. That she makes fascinating reading is proved in a profile now appearing in "She" Magazine whose interviewer says of Miss Barrymore: "You speak to a great lady and never manage to reach a woman." She will tell you that she loves fire, sports, lace and furs. Her bar- onial mansion at Mamaroneck, N.Y. -closed for the duration-has a fire- place in every room. Her dresses are worn long, almost to the ankle. She dresses beautifully, with elegant sim- plicity, but people only remember the length of her clothes and her magnificent fur wraps. She is fond of pearls, but not very jewel-con- scious. Once upon a time she spent hours window-shopping. Now the crowds which follow her embarrass her and she tries not to enter public places. "Tea for Miss Barrymore" is a familiar phrase in theatrical circles. She drinks tea at any hour, prefers it to any other beverage. Nor does she abstain from smoking to save her throat. It is hard to persuade her to allow the use of any photograph which does not feature her profile. She feels that the profile is a better character study-almost a family trademark. Two maids and a chauffeur com- pose her service staff in her New York apartment. All three have been with Miss Barrymore for more than a decade. She reads two or three books a day -most of the reading is done in bed at night. She gets very little sleep but lots of rest. Someone once called Ethel Barry- more the best mother among Ameri- can actresses and the best actress among American mothers. The role of mother suits her well . . . though it is a personal part, a characteriza- tion the public seldom sees. She was the first New York star to install a telephone in her dressing room so that she could check with the chil- dren's nurse between acts. She is proud of her daughter Ethel's oper- atic voice-says she has a lovely range, and adds, "Ethel and her hus- band are so happy." 1:1: / / ' Versatile Jumper i. 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