'TIIlUtSI)Ai, FEBRUARY i7d, i94k __ aa.s r Y is ... 1111 t ll.l l 'Sli1 Lt11Ll 1 t" t r: r rr r; Concentrated Rush Parties Cause Standstill in Activities, By MOLLY O'BRIEN Women's activities on campus have come to a virtual standstill during the past ten days. Authorities attribute the slow- down to the new system of con- centrated rushing which is being1 tried out for the first time in his- tory at the University. UNDER THE experimental set- Modern Dance DevelopsPos "Development of an emotion or an idea in movement rather than presenting it in a story is the concern of modern dance," accord- ing to Edith Daniels, manager of the University Modern Dance Club. "Unlike ballet," Miss Daniels explains, "the movements in Mod- !rn Dance are freer, more natural and less formally organized." UNDER THE DIRECTION of Dr. Juana de Laban, the Modern Dance Club at the University is organized to give those students interested in this art more oppor- tunity to study the techniques of dance and to learn and perform the fundamentals of composition work. This semester the club has been somewhat reorganized to divide the group into beginner and intermediate sections, The beginners' group will meet for the first hour on Wednesday nights while the intermediate group will meet the second hour, the hours being divided for eacht group into techniques and com- positions. , MEETINGS will be held eni masse for the first two weeks while the group decides the dance program for the spring semestere to be held in April. Interested men and women,k both beginners and interme-. diate, will be welcomed by the group to club meetings held on Wednesday nights in the Bar- bour dance studio.r Anyone interested but unablet to attend the first two meetings may call Edith Daniels, 2-4561.i JGP Meeting Ushering committee will meet at 4 p.m. today in the League. The room number will be post- ed. Members are 'asked toc bring their eligibility cards, ac-t cording to Lois Kennedy, chair-t man. up, rushing parties are jammed into a two week period. Formerly rushing was stretched over five weeks. The estimated 700 affiliated women and the 480 rushees have found, their time pretty well taken up by the full round of parties and teas. The average women taking part in rushing, either as a host or visitor, finds herself with little more than one free night a week. But despite the heavy demands on her time the average sorority woman and rushee has expressed approval of the experimental sys- tem. MEN ON CAMPUS are not too happy about the situation, how- ever. Usually scarce dates are even scarcer. If a male manages to snag a date he often discovers that rushing business will keep his gal tied up nutil late in the evening. Daily women's page staffers are finding it difficult to get news during the rushing period. too. Many affiliated female campus leaders, who are their best news sources, are busy rushing. Consequently there's little news being made. The revamped rushing systeml was borrowed from Minnesota and will be adopted by the Panhellenic Association here if it works out satisfactorily. Caduceus Ball Instituted in 1893 Everything from catacombs to this year's Gold Rush has been used for the Caduceus Ball dec- orations, since the ball was first instituted in 1893. Caduceus Ball is one of the old- est dances on campus, sponsored in the early days by the Medical School as a whole. Later the sen- ior class took over, until Galens began the sponsorship of the dance in 1916. Tickets are on sale now for stu- dents and faculty of Medical School and local doctors in the medical sorority and fraternities and at the Galens stand in Uni- versity Hospital. Undergraduate women attend- ing will be granted 1:30 a.m. per- mission, since the dance lasts from 9 p.m..to 1 a.m. The price of tickets includes flower favors. Today's rain togs are as smart as any current fashions. Designed with an eye to color and line, they serve the dual purpose of turning away the water, and fur- nishing the bright note for a dreary day's morale booster. QUEEN OF IFEARTS-Jane Pickens, named "Queen of Hearts" for the Heart Association's 1949 campaign for funds, suggests that everyone appropriately commemorate the Valentine season by joining the fight against heart disease. The NBC singing star was crowned queen of the drive in recognition of her excellent service during last year's campaign. February Provides Opportunity For Coed Warobe Bargains College Living Art Revealed To Freshmen There are a few points in the education of a freshman which the annual guide book, or the respec- Live bluebooks of rules for League- approved residences on campus. have somehow overlooked. From the point of view of an upperclassman, there is an art to living in a dormitory or League House, especially for one who has never been away from home be- fore. It entails, above all, getting along with a great many other people including roommates, the housemother, the dietician, and the other 50 coeds who may be liv- ing in the same house. TIE IIOUSEMOT1hER is em- ployed by the University to be just what her name suggests; that is, she's a kind of substitute for the home-grown mother left behind. The same rules for getting along with her apply to any rules one might have had to keep at home. The ideas of two extra minutes past closing hours of Joe's company, a nightly jam session right over the housemother's room, or even a strictly collegiate ap- pearance in the most comforta- ble pair of blue jeans and a sweatshirt in the living ruanm are guaranteed to keep the freshman and her housemother at odds. Once the freshman has secured her place in the housemother's af- fections, it should be the easiest thing in the world to be the ideat roommate. TRY PUTTING the room on a cooperative basis, which means that while your roommate empties the wastebaskets, dusts the dres- ers, and sweeps the floor, you see that she's doing a good job. There's nothing like (fe coopera- tive system. Of course, it must We renef)- bered to cooperate to the fullest capacity when the telephone rings. Roommate's men aren't to be shared. Opinions about the food need not be shared with friends or dis- interested strangers. A sure dem- onstration of the true crusading spirit can be made by a daily complaint to the dietician alongj the line of "Don't you know I have a delicate appetite?" RAISING AN ISSUE: Shorter Hemline Applauded By BUDDY ARONSON At last the long suffering male las a cause for hope. Christian Dior, French women 's filln designer responsible for that form of mental persecution called the New Look, has an- notunced that the hem line will be' two to three inches shorter this year than last. Er s who have been driven to art mu- seums and aerial circuses for an unexpurgated view of the female leg. Of course, the shorter hem line is bound to produce devas- tating effects throughout the bourgeois women's world which seeks to keep up with the Jonses -and the new hem line. These repercussions may he summar- i'ed as follows: It will again be necessary that women wash their knees; Shorter hem lines will result in- evitably in higher popularity for well equipped females, and in a decline for their less fortunate sisters: We must once more fortify our- selves for weather reports read- ing, "High winds, followed by bil- lowing skirts, followed by men." It is appropriate that the short- er skirts make their appearance in the spring at which time they can nourish the fancy in young men which turns lightly io thoughts of what they have been pondering all winter long. TIE NEWS, though a coeds bearing marked blances to grasshoppers phone poles, is welcome blow to resem- or tele- to men . . RAIN 011 S I NE vte.d 0 3 WHAT A CLEVER RAINCOAT Dressy enough ()r your pretiest frocks. All rayon gabardine - water repellent even after severol diry cleaning; .-(letachable hood wear it liied , halfbelted or swinginq free -Sizes 10 to '18. JUST SEE WHAT WE HAVE \ Smooth gebardines - Corduroy and Tweed Roincoats, so expertly tailored no one would guess it's true purpose - every coat treated for water repellency -- grand selection of colors flattering flare-back, nipped waist and fitted styles - sizes 9 to 49 Amazingly low $16.95 to $45.00 ; February, slump month in the fasiaon world, provides an excel- lent opportunity for low cost ad- dition on the clothes-line of economy wise coeds. How many times does the bar- gain seeking woman glance at the gigantic February sale ads only to close up the paper quickly assur- ing herself that she can "put if oft' until'Wxt, Y(ar.' This so-called fashion-wise coed is sure that she is using common sense when she passes up the tail- end merchandise that the retail- ers are trying to pawn off on the bargain hounds. BUT HERE is a point the young lady missed. If she would pick up that paper again she might notice that there are many juicy invita- tions to come and buy, at slump season prices, articles that have, no time limit on style. The really wise buyer should check the sales on usuable and reusable accessories. What about that pair of winter suede gloves that are really needed to complete the wardrobe? Tail- ored gloves remain a timeless style and a wise investment at sale prices. Costume jewelry, if purchased with conservative taste and for quality is another time to pick from the tempting February sales. An attractive clasp, pin or neck- lace will gather no dust in the iewell box. TO INSURE read bargains in clothes as well as jewelry avoid buying leftovers from a current fal. The smart. women will buy the old standbys that have proven themselves through the years. .lw sad experience of millions f coeds with an oversupply of baggy sweater and short skirts is a good example of what happens after a reoccuring fad goes out. After four or five years a style change is bound to come, so check the age of that style before you buy. Dresses and shoes are to be carefully avoided while search- ing the pre-spring sales be- cause they are invariably the hangovers from the winter sea- son and would be valueless the following year. The one exception to thin rule is a wise one, however. This is a tailored wool or gabardine. If such a dress is hanging inconspicuously on the sale racks, pull it out. It will be well worth the sale price. This type dress can be dressed up or down with the style of the year or moment and will always hang in the front of your closet. The slogan for February should be "he is wise who buys," tem- pered by the previous advise of C(ourse. When cleaning your bedroom, be sure to wipe all lamp bulbs with a soapy cloth; you'll find you get more light from them. uJ > " . r , a < 41 UMBRELLAS Gay and smart-Plaids-- Prints and Solids in Plastic and Rayon - Stationary and Folding Styles. $3.98 to $14.95 7 4 t l r s i Y Dance programs tied together or attachd to a ribbon aind suspendi- ed from the molding of a wall will bring color into a room as well as eliminating the cluttered look of a bulletin board. Read and Use Daily Classified Ads AGENT WANTED Earn LIBERAL COMMISSIONS in school selling attractive kits of matched fabric and yarn, imported and hand-loomed, for sweater-skirt sets. For details, write to Loom- Sets, Box 251, G.P.O., New York 1, N.Y. -- WSJ 1 7A (ira6etAI09 Gout Sttiektr 309 South State Street PANTIE GIRDLES I CARMAN'S SHOE SALON z'le a a Z c y Cote OAJ CR(PE SOL E an active garment for active co-eds . . Foshioned all elastic body fabric from lastex rayon and nylon with full retention assures firm support. 6o~6& t;&&w4 i I f I t I { i i i "your yearbook" On Sale . . ! ., p ) ' 1 :w ;, w- ;.: ' s 4 } " GREY * BLUE "eSUN COPPER W BLACK 0 BROWN LORS: ,es A Wednesday and at League and Union MICHIGAN CO Blue Suede ~i Maize Lac rA Thursday Vassarette two-way stretch feature gives body fit without Cuitting or binding. 695 } t yt nyreru~n ur Gt art ntred by "= Good Hausekegi. Y .It abYSbTKID MTV IN -- 43ea f i REDWOOD Buy Now and Save! L °s L GP " i Q 6 Q i ai Ga lk 0 a- IL c 4 P ir. (b' f