THE -M I I CHIGAN DAILY MA'Y' Y 19, 190 TH IHGNDIYFRDY UY1.14 lobe Trot To Feature Unique Dance Affair To Be With Travel Theme urkish Students To Give Sophisticated Slacks For Picnic Wear Dance In Native Style With Accordion Music rI E .T 14 J i ' T Eight women will hostess at the "Globe Trot" from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. today at the . League Ballroom, and will be assisted by a floor committee of eight men. Peggy Whitker, Josephine Clancy, Mary-Anna Jamison, Jean Wester- man, Marlou Shartel, Mary Peirsol, Betty Willging, and Eleanor Korstad will be the officials according to Jeanne . Crump, '42, in charge of the dance. The theme of the dance will be traveling, and decorations along this line are being arranged by Liese Price, '43. A prize will be awarded to the person coming from the far- thest distant point, and the town with the greatest amount of people at the dance willbe recognized from the floor. Dick Slade, '41, is-to do the announcing for this. Town tags are to be worn by the dancers. Five students are to do a Turkish folk dance in their native costume. They are Altan Baltacioglu, Hayati Dag, Connie Bryant and Doris Nash- old. Orhan Barim will play Turkish accordion music for the dancers. Men students who are to act as committeemen are Peter Antonelli, Henry Adams, John Ailing, Bob Al- len, Bill Coxon, Jimmy Dunlap, Jean Geniese and Bob Mitchell. The price of the dance is 35c a person, and one may come with or without partners. Cover Bathing Suit With Robe Of New Cotton a s a E i A :.i For the ever-popular picnic, the latest thing is a snappy candy- striped, long-sleeved blouse with navy slacks. The new long-sleeved style on sport blouses adds a feminine touch to outdoor ensembles. For hot weather outings the open neckline is especially comfortable and cool. Navy slacks are always appropriate and assure the wearer of a neat trim appearance; they look particularly snappy with bright blouses. To be acceptable to masculine taste, add femininity and gayety to your summer sports wardrobe. TWO ON THE ISLE By ..,. The Two B's .. . Lew Jenkins, the lightweight champion from Sweetwater, Tex., is shown bouncing on one of the three times that he fell to the canvas in the sixth round of his non-title bout in New York with welterweight champion Henry Armstrong. Standing over Jenkins is Armstrong, who won when Jenkins failed to come out for the seventh. Senator Lister Hill of Alabama is shown here- as he placed the name of Franklin D. Roosevelt in nomination at the Democratic Na- tional Convention for a third term. Hill was the first speaker after nominations were declared in order. Have you ever felt silly while slip- ping off the dress you are wearing in lieu of a swimming robe, and there you are amid the cars and staring eyes that line the shore of Loch Al- pine or any old swimming hole that doesn't boast a place to change? If you are among those who feel that way, there's a very good answer to your problem. Get a snappy little beach coat to wear out-something you can casually cast aside before you step in the water. Wear a long robe if you wish, but those fit in better with the sea shore. The best idea is, a short, colorful thing that wil stand a little beating. An example of such a wrap is a flowered cotton coat, fitted in prin- cess lines, with short slightly puffed sleeves, and lined in terry cloth. You can comfortably wear that for hours after you've come out of the water. Little coats made all of terry cloth fit intothe situation just well, or if you haven't yet gotten a bathing suit, they can be had with robe to match. Pastel gabardine frivolities are as nice to have on these occa- sions. Another idea is to have a skirt of the same color as your suit, so that the top of the suit looks like a halter until the skirt is unbuttoned and drops off. There you are ready for a swim. Dormitories Plan Tea, Radio Dance Among the social events of the dormitories, Betsy Barbour will hold its weekly tea for faculty and stu- dent friends of the residents on the lawn froni 4 to 5 p.m. today. Miss Edith Barnard, social director of the house, and Miss Rosemary Neuhaus, social director of Stockwell Hall, will pour. Residents of Mosher Hall will en- tertain friends at an informal radio dance from 9 to 12 tomorrow. Chap- erons for the evening will be Miss" Mary McCampbell and Mrs. Holl Dobbins, social directors of the house. The dance is arranged by Ruth Watt and Alvira Sata. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LAUNDERING -9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at a low price. SILVER LAUNDRY 609 Hoover Phone 594 Free pickups and deliveries Price List All articles washed and ironed. Shirts.f...........4....14 Undershirts ..............:.:. 4 Shorts-...................04 Pajama Suits ............ .10 Socks, pair ............... .03 Handkerchiefs .............. .02 Bath Towels............... .03 All Work Guaranteed Also special prices on Coed's laun- dries. All bundles done separately. No markings. Silks. wools our "Bill of Divercement," the current feature at the Michigan Theatre, is an immensely emotional drama of a family afflicted with hereditary insanity. Adolphe Menjou digresses from his usually gay, flippant roles to por- tray Hilary, the father of the family, who has been violently insane for twenty years. He escapes from the asylum, miraculously cured of his supposedly incurable insanity and returns home to find his wife, Fay Bainter, who has divorced him 12 months previously, about to marry Grey Meredith (Herbert Marshall). His daughter Sydney (Maureen O'- Hara), is also planning marriage, but upon hearing from her aunt, Dame May Whitty, that she also has inherited this peculiar streak of insanity, she sacrifices her chance for happiness by refusing to marry her fiance, Patric. Knowles. Her mother is firmly determined to give up Grey and stand by her former husband until Sydney convinces her that it would bring a misery that could very well be avoided, so the mother leaves only after securing a promise from her daughter that she will take care of him. The final dramatic scene shows the father and daughter finally com- pleting an unusually capable per- formance, that. we feel she stole the show. However, all the actors 91id actresses deserve our hearty com- mendation. Maureen O'Hara seemed somewhat weak at the beginning, but finished in a grand manner. Throughout the picture, we could- n't quite decide whether the father was insane or not, and the sound equipment was annoying in that occasionally it became harsh and irritating. During the showing of "Bill of Divorcement," we had a feeling that we were watching the actual stage play rather than the picture produc- tion. The characters seemed as though they were on the stage be- fore us. Group Discusses Hostess Situation At Social Hours Thirty hostesses gathered in the Kalamazoo room at the League yes- terday to discuss and revise the host- ess system which has been followed thus far at all the social hours on the League's program. Virginia Osgood, president of the Summer League Council, and Mary Ellen Wheeler, social chairman, led the group in discussion. It was de- cided that in the future there will be smaller and more select groups of 10 girls to officiate at the weekend dances and tea dances. These girls will be selected by Jean Crump, chairman of Friday nite dances, Betty Hoag, chairman of Saturday night dances and Ruth Streelman, chairman of Wednesday afternoon tea dances. The hostesses, Miss Osgood de- clared, are there to see to it that everyone has a good time and it is up to them to make people feel free to ask aid in obtaining a dancing partner. Also, she continued, it must be stressed that any one person need not feel obligated to dance more than onie dance with any one person and it will be perfectly cor- rect for the boy to take the girl to the side of the hall or back to the hostess group and then to excuse himself. The FRESH SHRIMP i and ORANGE SALAD is a FRIDAY SPECIAL u at the O COR NERjX V HOUSE Serving from 11:30 to 2:00 COMPLETE LUNCHEONS 35c Dinner hours: 5:30 to 7:30 202 SO. THAYER Phone 6056 .. > Elliott Roosevelt, son of the President, is shown on the platform at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago with Mrs. Roosevelt and party leaders. Lef t to right: Senator Alben Barkley, permanent chair- man of the convention; Edwin A. Halsey, sergeant-at- arms; L. W. "Chip" Robert, Jr., secretary of the con- vention; Elliott Roosevelt and Mrs. Roosevelt. Justin R. Whiting (above) was elected president and a member of the board of Commonwepfth and Southern Corp., to succeed Wen- dell L. Willkie, Republican pres- idential nominee. t Z0eddings San d . Egagements' The marriag of Margaret Virginia O'Neil, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hunt of W. South St., Kala- mazoo, to James Alfred Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer G. Hunt of Wheaton Ave:, Kalamazoo, was an- nounced in the Kalamazoo Gazette recently. The ceremony took place in Huntington, Ind., on November 11, 1939, at the Central Christian Church, with the f Reverend John Paul Pack, pastor of the church, officiating. Mrs. John Hunt is a graduate of Meher's Business School and attend- ed Western State Teacher's College for one year before enrolling in the University here. She is now a mem- ber of the class of 1941, and is also affiliated with the Ann Arbor Inde- pendent Group. Mr. and Mrs. Hunt are spending the summer at Crooked Lake, in Texas Township, and will be at home in 'Ann Arbor this fall. Among the steady stream of visitors who conferred with Secretary of Commerce harry Hopkins in his Chicago hotel suite was Rep. Joseph E. Casey (left), Massachusetts Democrat. Hopkins' quarters were con- sidered the center of the "draft Roosevelt" movement at the Demo- cratic National Convention. Hopkins received his guests in shirt sleeves and suspenders. Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace (left) and Senator Clyde L. Herring of Iowa, waving cornstalks, were among the notables in the Roosevelt demonstration at the Democratic convention. rihunta/h £p cia/4 HEAVY MALTED MILK... .......12c FRUIT SODAS......... ......12c FRESH ORANGEADE ............1Oc GRAPEFRUIT DRINK...........15c FRESH RASPBERRY SUNDAE. .... 15c LIME RICKEY or LIMEADE .......1Oc Toasted Sandwich CANTALOUPE and Malted Milk 22c SUNDAE 15c .. ...::: .... .:. ... . :::Y