ARY 13, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Spring Fashions To Feature Veils in New, Unusual Styles Flowers Trim Simple or Dressy Bonnets; Combs Will Fasten Sheer Fabrics to Hair By JANICE JAMES Back in the days when grandpa twirled a mean moustache, grand- ma predicted the future by wear- ing veils of every texture and style, a fashion which experts . claim will make a reappearance in this spring's Easter parade. Grandma's . Sunday ensemble wasn't complete without the ad- dition of a veil to the dressiest or most simple hat. According to the fashion experts, however, modern woman is going to go grandma ' one better, for veils will be worn this year with or without a hat! These veils may be the tie-on type that fastens with combs be- hind the ears. Another popular type for daytime wear is a flow- er trimmed version which ties in back with narrow streamers of black rayon velvet ribbon. Popular for the month of St. Valentine is a soft veil trimmed with velvet hearts, each of which is centered with a mock diamond. This type may be worn without a Sunday Entertainment Provided for Students In Union Terrace Rm. Sunday evening entertainment will be provided for students when the Terrace Room of the Union opens for dancing and card playing from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Sun- day. A date event, the Sunday eve- ning entertainment will feature dancing in the small ballroom of the Union as well as canasta and bridge games in the Terrace Room. There will be no admission j charge( for the event which is to be held weekly. hat or draped around an older one, thus giving it a spring face lifting. Many gf the new styles, the ex- perts claim, will feature veils which are not worn across the head at all, but rather around the eyes giving a mask effect. According to predictions, veils will also be popular for evening wear, especially one version which fastens to the hair over each ear by means of combs set with shin- ing stars. AssembyBl Slated Mar. 2 "Show Boat" will be the gener- al theme of this year's all-cam- pus Assembly Ball which is to be held from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., Friday, March 2. Phil Brestoff and his band from Detroit will provide music for the semi-formal event. Assembly Ball is coed-bid and will be held on the second floor of the League. Tickets for the dance will go on sale Monday in all women's dormitories and at the League. They are priced at $2.841. Sign-up sheets for the various committees for Assembly Ball are posted in the dormitories. Nancy Pridmore is general chairman of the dance. Publicity co-chairmen are Joan Nelson and Harriet Copel. Other members of the central committee are Renee Levy and Ar- lene Suozzo, decorations co-chair- men; Joan Kaiser, ticket chair- man; Ann Black, finance chair- man; building and grounds, Mar- cia Goldfarb; and program and patrons, Ellen Haak. J I t t f r t f , RoyaltyFinds MIyriads of Uses For Perfume Sweet Scents Drifted From Swimming Pool At Rita's Wedding Long a favorite of kings and queens of the past, perfume has once again come into use at cele- brations and ceremonies honor- ing members of royalty. Among the details of the nup- tial ceremony of Aly Khan and Rita Hayworth, it has been noted that hundreds of gallons of per- fume were used to turn the swim- ming pool, beside which the wed- ding was held, into a pool of fra- grance. * * * AT THIS EVENT, which at- tracted almost as much attention as the news that a British king abdicated his throne to wed an American commoner, it has been said that the entire town was sur- rounded by the fragrance drifting from the pool. This serves as a reminder of the lavish use of perfume in the courts of olden times when perfume sprayed forth from the fountains in ancient Rome. Historians claim that at the funeral of Poppaea, Nero used more perfume than that which came from Arabia in an entire year. As a result of its great use in the days of old, perfume has been developed to serve many new and novel uses. Through the years, a tezidency has de- veloped to use it in cosmetics, glue and now-coal! Research workers have reveal- ed that studies are currently be- ing conducted that may lead to coal being used for its aroma as well as its heat producing quali- ties. By LORRAINE BUTLER ! tive of Los Angeles, has come to Finally American women have the rescue of American women. received some welcome flattery or He has just returned from a half- perhaps it is just the plain truth. year of recruiting talent for the The news that an expert on in- Roman epic, "Quo Vadis" and in ternational talent, Mel Ballerino, that time he cast 20,000 people considers American women the from every country in the world. most beautiful in the world is very * . . reassuring to the feminine spe- "AFTER SEEING them all, I cies, especially after the com- am convinced more than ever ments of certain foreign stars in that American girls are the most recent months. beautiful in the world," said Bal- THE NEW French attraction, lerio. Leslie Caron, says the women of "You can spot an American the United States mature too girl on the boulevard of any early. country in the world. Her form, Italian star Marina Berti de- her dress and the way she walks claredY they are unhappy be- make her stand out from all cause they seek equality with the other women," said the ta- men. Swedish Marta Toren ob- lent expert. serves that American women Ballerino finds the American hide their emotions too much. women distinctive in that she However, Mel Ballerino, talent stands much more erect than wo- executive of a film studio and na- men of any other nationality, she WELCOME WORDS OF WISDOM? Expert Admires Beauty of American Women is taller and more statuesque and she has long, beautiful legs. * * * "ACTUALLY," she is like a thoroughbred racehorse. We are a mixture of all nationalities, and the cross-breeding has created a race of long-limbed beauties," Ballerino pointed out. The talent expert reported that in Hollywood beauty can be bought by the bushel, but it was not so easy in Rome. Bal- lerino was faced with the prob- lem of locating 200 glamorous girls for atmosphere at a Ro- man feast scene. "We had a devilish time filling our quota," he said. He found the Italian woman too "dumpy" for American taste, the British wo- man "unusually cold and fragile" and the French girl "not especial- -ly beautiful but chic." OWNWA ETHEL MORRIS Engagements, Weddings Told By Coeds Between Semesters Morris-Foote Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Mor- ris of Philadelphia, Pa., have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Ethel Virginia,, to C. Richard Foote, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Foote of Grand Rapids, formerly of Detroit. Miss Morris is a junior in the degree program of the nursing school where she is vice-presi- dent of Couzens Hall Student Board. She has also served as president of the freshman class of the nursing school, as presi- dent of Wyvern and as general DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I. (Continued from Page 4) out previous ensemble experience. Prerequisite: ability to play the - easier chamber works. Prof. Oli- ver A. Edel. Eight weeks, $5.00. 1022 University High School, Tuesdays, 7 p.m., beginning Feb. 13. Administration of the Hospital Nursing Unit. (Nursing 20). The Y study and application of princi- ples of democratic administration to the head nurse unit. Miss' Vir- ginia Null, instructor. Sixteen weeks, $16.00. 4408 University Hospital, Tuesdays, 7 p.m., begin- ning Feb. 13. General Semantics - Scienti- fic Living I. Fundamentals of the science of meaning, with special reference to the meaning of words as a guide to successful living, sane thinking and sane conduct. Applications of general semantics to the solution of personal and social problems. Prof. Clarence L. Meader. Eight weeks, $5.00. 171 Business Administration Building, Tuesdays, 7 p.m., beginning Feb. 13. Painting. Individual attention will be given students in the tech- nical problems of painting, either in oil or watercolor. For both beginning and advanced students. Richard Wilt, instructor. Sixteen weeks, $16.00. 415 Architecture Building, Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m.,' beginning Feb. 14. Office Standards and Proce- dures (Business Administration 109). Instructs students in the principles and practices of sci- entific office management and gives them an understanding of the function of the office in the structure of the business organi- zation. It deals with all depart- ments of the modern office. Prof. Irene Place. 164 Business Admin- istration Building, Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m., beginning Feb. 14. Introduction to the Literature of Music. Designed to bring to the layman a practical method for listening to instrumental music and to familiarize him with the significant forms and styles of music composition heard cur- rently in the concert hall and ov- er the radio. Its aim is practical and its approach nontechnical; no previous knowledge of music is necessary. (Six sessions of the course will be devoted to the pro- grams of the 1951 May Festival and may be elected as a separate unit for $7.00.) Prof. Glenn D. McGeoch. Sixteen weeks, $16.00. 206 Burton Memorial Tower, Wednesdays, 7 p.m., beginning Feb. 14. Concerts Student Recital: Mary Lou Herrold, Mezzo-soprano, will pre- sent a recital at 8:30 Tuesday evening, Feb. 13, in Lydia Men- delssohn Theater, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. A pupil of Philip Duey, Mrs. Her- rold has planned her program to include compositions by Hopkin- son, Mozart, Faure, and Strauss. The public is invited. Student Recital: Mary Lown Richards, Organist, will present a program at 4:15 Wednesday af- ternoon, Feb. 14, in Hill Audi- torium, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. Her recital will include comopositions by Bach, Franck, Karg-Elert, and Liszt, and will be open to the public. Mrs. Richards is a pupil of Robert Noehren. Student Recital: Ormond San- derson, pianist, will be heard at 8:30 Wednesday evening, Feb. 14, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, in a program of works by Bach, Chopin and Schubert. Presented in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the Bachelor of Music degree, the recital will be open to the public. Mr. Sanderson is a pupil of Ava Comin Case. Exhibitions Handwoven Rugs by Bertha Frayer and Gertrude Conover. Architecture Building, first floor corridor; Feb. 12-24. Museum of Art. Alumni Me- morial Hall. Portraits-Museum of Art Collection: Art Privately Owned in Ann Arbor through E Recogniion Pins Are A Rushing Necessity Your gold Greek letters on your coat lapel are a subtle means of keeping your fraternity name before rushees. They are inex- pensive and are stocked for im- mediate delivery where your national regulations permit. 4 L. G. BALFOUR Co. r 1319 S. University Ph. 3-1733 through March 7. Weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is in- vited. Events Today Congregational, Disciple, Evan- gelical and Reformed Guild: Tea, 4:30 p.m., Guild House. Christian Science Organization: Testimonial meeting, 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. SRA Council meeting, Hall, 5 p.m. Lane' chairman of the 1948 Soph Cab- aret. She is now secretary of Mor- tar Board. Mr. Foote graduated from the University last June. He was af- filiated with Kappa Sigma fra- ternity and was a member of the Michigan Union Executive Coun- c'l and Board of Directors. Olson-Currier Miss Ruth Olson's engagement to James M. Currier, son of Mrs. F. Hale Currier of Capac and the late Mr. Currier, has .been an- nounced by the bride-elect's mo- ther, Mrs. Astrid Olson of Alpena. Miss Olson is a junior in nurs- ing school. Mr. Currier, a mem- ber of Delta Sigma Delta frater- nity, is a sophomore in the School of Dentistry. An early summer wedding will take place in Alpena. * * * Krafft-Garchow The betrothal of Miss Luella Krafft to Ensign Alvin Garchow, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Gar- chow of Farmington, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Krafft of Fran- kenmuth. " The bride-elect is a junior in the nursing school. Mr. Garchow is a graduate of the School of Business Administration. He is affiliated with Delta Sigma Pi fraternity. Niedelson-West Mr. and Mrs. William R. Nie- delson of Detroit have announced the engagement of their daugh- ter, Julia, to Charles West, son of i Mrs. Helen Weinfeld, also of De- troit. Miss Niedelson is a sophomore in the architecture school, while Mr. West graduated from the University in August, 1949. A June 24 wedding is planned. * * * Harris-Gottesman Miss Jean Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Harris of Detroit, became the bride of Mor- ton G. Gottesman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gottesman of Detroit, on Feb. 4. The former Miss Harris is a junior in the School of Education. Mr. Gottesman is a pre-law sen- ior in the literary college. He is affiliated with Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity. HANDBAGS A wonderful array of styles from shoulder strape to tiny clutch -- calf leathers from 5.95. Plastic patents from 2.95. I I has a gracious group of Valentine Gifts to give with pride to receive with pleasure Such a gala collection of "Little Things" that mean much to the well-groom- ed woman! ..)' AA Michigan Actuarial Club: Mr. John A. Bevan, Assistant Actuary of the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company, will speak on Gross Premiums. 3 p.m., Room 3D, Union. Open meeting. Square Dance Group: Lane Hall, 7 p.m. Business Administration and Economics Students are invited to a rushing smoker of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, 7:30 to 9 p.m., Chap- ter House, 1325 Washtenaw Ave. Union Opera Tryouts: Tryouts for all cast positions in the Union Opera (leads, singing chorus, dancing chorus, and specialty or novelty numbers) will be held this week. Call 2-4431, ext. Union Opera, between 2 and 5 p.m. for appointments. Wolverine Club: Meeting, 7:15 p.m., Union. Coming Events Canterbury Club: 7 a.m., Wed., (Continued on Page 6) r 7 r', ,,+,r gr } .a j/,rjr t rj yrvar j f. rr" {rte ai"".' r} ."Y.j%' i{f vjr .vr.;rrr:rrr"'r::;:r."r.";rrv ".;{. 'i, i}' ' i'rjti 11 ir'SS r1i:{tF67:ja..: a { ,' ;:.:S9a"s'' y WL-: : :- Mr"'..:~;v." r e+S v'."is r jr.!jir{SYi" :i:":r; .{..; r.".:rY;'rirr: erfiR.: r%".lr p;.. 1. 4' TWO-PIECE KNIT DRESSES Beautiful Wearable Spring Colors 27.95 Read and Use Daily Classifieds IL RIDES PI., wbb- .d I I n X1'1 I U U