)AY, JULY 12, 1950 THE .MICHIGAN DAILY .. ME? AN OLD MAID?:' June Trips to Altar Continue New 'Chapeau' ncient istory of Luxurious Cashmere Recalls Wonderment of Far East, Rome, Royal Courts Small Asiatic Animal Provides Fleece in Gray, Brown, White Shades; Long Journey, Intricate Process Necessary in Producing Scarce Wool Steady Decline, Experts Say i Although the final number will not be known for several months, there were probably fewer June weddings in the United States this year than in any June since 1946, the Institute of Life Insurance re- ports. For nearly four years the num- ber of marriages in the country has been declining steadily. Popu- lation experts see no signs of any immediate change in the trend. THERE IS no reason for alarm about America becoming a land of spinsters and bachelors, however, since one guess at the final num- [_Coed Calenar__ Bridge Lessons - Beginners will play at 7 p.m., while advanced players will meet at 8:30 p.m. to- day in the League. . Duplicate Bridge - A tourna- ment isascheduled for 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the League. * * * International C e n t e r - T h e weekly tea will be held from 4:30 to 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Center. * * * Dancing - The regular infor- mal League dances will take place from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday in the League Ball- room. Students may attend stag or drag. JOBS OPEN FOREIGN & DOMESTIC I ediate need for office help, pay- roll clerks, timekeepers, engineers,. draftsmen, skilled & unskilled work- ers all types, on large Government &private contracts in United states, awalit England, Belgium, Italy, Germany, Iran, South America, Far East. Living quarters, transporta- tion, high pay. Men_ and women, both. For information on thesemjob contracts and application blanks, send $2.00 mailing charge to: Em- ployme Information Cete Col. No. 68, P. o. Box 4, Brookline 46, Mass. No other fee or charge of any kind. Delivery guaranteed. We are Bonded. Members of Brookline Chamber of Commerce. ber of weddings last month hit 160,000. One reason why the marriage rate is declining is because the country is running short of spin- sters and bache ors. There are simply not enough of them to keep up the pace set just after the war. The busiest 12 months in the history of the United States so far as marriages are concerned began in December 1945. FROM THAT TIME until No- vember, 1946, more than 2;300,- 000,000 licenses had been issued to set an all-time national record. In December, 1946, the mar- riage rate began its decline. But population experts do not con- sider this rapid or dangerous. Some even prophesied a faster slacking off than what actually occured. News of the dwindling supply of bachelors and spinsters may strike this year's crop of bridesmaids and best men as very important news, whenactually it represents a trend of the past 50 years. * * * MORE AMERICANS of today get married. They marry younger and have more years together be- cause persons live longer than they did in past years. The steady increase in the number of families is the reason given for the added population of play-yards and nurseries. Relatively few parents today have large families of six or seven children, yet the birth rate remains high because there are so many more families of one, two or three children. Although the nation's divorce rate is much higher today than at the turn of the century, this, too, has been declining since 1946. CAMPUS OPTICIANS Conveniently Located 222 Nickels Arcade Phone 2-9116 All the exotic mystery and won- derment of the Orient is recap- tured in the history of cashmere cloth. The exquisite shawls of prehis- toric patterns prized by the Ro- man Caesars and esteemed centur- ies later by the French and Brit- ish Courts, the King of the Bel- gians, and the Due du Berri, were woven in Kashmr, land of maha- rajahs, last outpost of civilization, before the forbidding mountain masses of the impenetrable Hima- layas. ys. * * * TODAY, little of the cashmere wool comes from Kashmir. Most of it is found farther north. where the best grades originate in China, Inner and Outer Mongolia, Man- churia and Tibet. The world supply is not pro- portionately much greater than in the storied yesterdays when ermines, brocades and rare yarns of Kashmir were only for kings and their courts. A strange domestic animal whose only habitat is the remote lands of Central Asia is the provider of the rare fleece. "CHECHIA"-This "chechia" or new millinery creation based on cylindrical, t u f t e d skullcaps worn by Arabs and adopted by French troops in Africa, is one of a group of hats designed by a. 1 e a d i n g manufacturer. The group is called "Medits," in- spired by the fashions of such countries as Morocco, Algiers, Turkey, Egypt, and the Dalma- tian peasants.. SMALL, SHORTLEGGED and graceful, the horned cashmere goat is able to live on little food. A warm undercoat of fine fleece and a thick outer coat of coarse hair protect the petite animal from the severe moun- tain winters. Animals living at fantastic heights have 'the finest fleece. Nat- ural shades are gray, brown and white. White cashmere is rarest of all and commands a premium price,especially when pastel shades are in fashion. * * * ONE YEAR'S yield from four to six animals is needed for a sweater and the annual output from about twenty goats is neces- sary for an overcoat. The animal is not shorn, but rather the fleece is plucked or combed out by hand. Much of it is collected bit by bit from the shrubs on which the ani- mal scratches itself to get rid of its itching coat during the Spring molting time. Much of the coarse outre hair becomes mixed with the soft fleece during the first handculling pro- cesses and these unwanted hairs must be painstakingly removed. EVEN AFTER this handsorting process, remaining coarse hair must be removed by a highly intri- cate machine process. From animal to finished pro- duct, cashmere loses from one- half to three-quarters of its or- iginal weight. Often a year is needed to trans- port the fine fleece from Inner- Asia to ports on the China Sea. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 *1 ON SALE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE ALUMNAE FUND imported English WEDGE WOOD 9 Service Plates with Campus Scenes * Cups and Saucers * Ash Trays 1950 ENGAGEMENT CALENDARS, with 57 campus views were $1.00 - now 29c Large month-on-a-page APPOINTMENT CALENDARS- to keep track of your dates from now until September, 1951 - only 50c See these and other Michigan souvenirs at the ALUMNAE COUNCIL OFFICE - in the LEAGUE (Continued from Page 4) Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- ial Hall: Modern Graphic Art; Oriental Ceramics; through July 30; weekdays 9-5, Sundays 2-5. The public is invited. Clements Library. One Hundred Michigan Rarities (June 26-July 5). Events Today Opening Tonight: "Antigone and the Tyrant" presented by the Dept. of Speech at Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. Based on the ancient legend of Antigone, this adaptation will be done in modern dress and placed in a mo- dern setting. Tickets are available at the Mendelssohn box office for all fourperformances. Box office open from 10 a.m. thru 8 p.m. daily. Crafts Shop will open at Lane Hall 7:30-9:30 p.m. tonight. Bring your materials and ideas to work with. Those interested in giving instruction will be welcome. U. of M. Soaring Club. Meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in 1042 E.E. Final plans for obtaining plane, organization of club, and summer flying to be discussed. Important financialbmatters will be under consideration. Every- one interested, please attend. Michigan Christian Fellowship: Bible Study, "Upper Room," Lane Hall, 7:30 p.m. Topic: I Thessal- onians, chapter three. Geometry Seminar: Wed., July 12, 3 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Dr. Rainich will discuss "Order in Projective Geometry." Young Progressives of America: Meeting Wednesday, July 12, Mi- chigan Union, 7:30 p.m. Discus- sion of Korean war and Stock- holm Peace Appeal. Coming Events The Seminar in Applied Mathe- matics will meet Thursday, July 13 at 4 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering Bldg. Professor Paul F. Chenea of the Engineering Me- chanics Department will speak on "Numerical Methods in the Solu- tion of Shells of Revolution." Seminar to be held in East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Building-Thursday, July 13, at 7:30 p.m. Dr. J. W. Linnett of Queen's College- Oxford. "Force Constants of Chemical Bonds." French Club: Bastille Day will be celebrated on Thursday, July 13, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Lea- gue. A special program will be of- fered. Miss Grace Hampton will sing. A special invitation is ex- tended to all French citizens. Classical Studies Coffee Hour: Thursday, July 13, at 4 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the R a c k h a m Building. Professor Clark Hopkins will talk informally on the early migrations in Greece and Italy. Anyone interested in Classical Studies is invited to at- tend. The University Museums will have a program on next Friday evening, July 14, 1950, entitled "Nature's Balanced Economy." The exhibits to be featured in the Museums Building will be on dis- play from 7 to 9 p.m. Three short reels of motion pictures entitled "What is soil?", "Earthworm," and "Wonders in your own back yard," will be shown in Kellogg Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. The current rotunda exhibit of the Museums Building is entitled "The Coal Flora of Michigan." Deutches Haus 101 Church St. will hold open house Thursday, July 13, 7:30-10 p.m. There will be games and singing, and re- freshments will be served. Every- one is cordially invited. Newest Mode Ine Sunglasses Sunglasses are gayer, bigger and tranger-looking this year than anything seen in a previous season. One creation sports daisy chains blooming on big, snug-fitting glasses. Flowers are carved into the back, of the lightweight plastic frame. MODERN GOGGLES designed especially for men display wide earpieces which shade the corners of the eyes. They are fashioned of plastic made to resemble polished mahogany. Square cut frames have a fore- head band molded to fit natural bone contours. It keeps the glasses from sliding off a small nose. Butterfly shapes in bright colors contrast with black earpieces. Cor- ners of frames extend the protec- tive area but do not cut down the field of vision. * * * FOR SMALL FACES, specially scaled children's sunglasses are carefully designed to give maxi- mum protection from direct sun- light and glare. A band of gold across the top of the rims adds sparkle to an otherwise plain brown pair of spectacles. On a sunny day the gold gleams to make many a golfer stand out on the fairways. Eye appeal and eye protection are the keynotes of the 1950 look in sunglasses. 1. 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