~a4r~nA1T~ ~P~Tt 4. 1S4~ .~~~ ~~ -d 4~~~~~Y.U U . . . L £ .J i ,4 t t: i 1. s a s lri 1 l.c ii 1. % IV LEI 11 tv 1 A. Y , , vv i- Bill awyer Will Play for Bunny Hop' At Union Today Annual Dance Has Prevailing Easter Spirit Women To Receive Chocolate Eggs; Ballroom Decorations To Provide Spring Atmosphere Everyone left in town over this gay, festive week-end will not only have something to do but plenty to do by going to the Bunny Hop to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight today in the Union Ballroom. This Hop is one of those very an- nual affairs so popular with the Union, but will be like a regular week-end dance as far as ticket price is concerned. The purpose of the dance is to give those left behind a taste of genuine Easter eggs, bun- nies, grass, and Easter spirit in gen- eral. Easter Bunnies Decorate Decorations will consist of four large Easter bunnies silhouetted against the main wall pillars of the ballroom. Added effect will be ob- tained through the use of blue, yel- low, purple and white crepe paper streamers. Climax of the evening (though it'll probably take all evening for the climax) will be chocolate eggs given free of charge to each woman at- tending. Each egg will have the in- dividual's name written on in sucrose. The eggs will be inscribed at a spe- cial, decorated booth at the south end of the ballroom. Grass On Bandstand Bill Sawyer and his "wabbits" will furnish the music on a bandstand covered with grass and four-leaf clovers. Sawyer has promised a super-special dolled-up arrangement of the "Easter Parade"-quote Saw- yer "I promise" unquote. Gwen Coo- per will be attired in her best Easter bonnet and Bunny Burt in his new riding boots. Sawyer said that. at this timethe will reveal his new style of "sweet rhythm." Needless to say, the advance sale of tickets to the Hop has been unusu- ally heavy-due to the free Easter eggs, no doubt-and there is a lim- ited number of tickets left. The ten lucky men who won the Easter-egg hunt early in the week will be special guests of the Union and will be illuminated by a brief splash of the spotlight sometime dur- ing the evening. Cool Fabrics Soon To Lead In Fashion Since the Ides of March have come and gone, it is time for coeds to con- sider cool apparel for the University fashion parade. Seersucker is an important utility fabric for summer. More sheer than formerly and quite capable of being made into tailored dresses, it saves ironing, leaving more time and keeping you cool for that vital war work. Quaint, shiny chintz, soft rayons, and bold plaid ginghams add to the assortment. Linen, since it has be- come wrinkle resistant through a process called tebilizing, is another worthy fabric. Sheer chiffons and organdies lead for dress-up occasions. Outing Club Will Meet The Graduate Outing Club will hike tomorrow if the weather per- mits. A short trip down the river with supper ,in the open, or in the clubroom, will comprise the hike. Members and visitors meet at the1 northwest door of Rackham at 2:30 p.m. DAILY OFFICIALj BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) be Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. The pub- lic is cordially invited to all services. First Baptist Church: 10:15 a.m. Undergraduate class with Rev. C. H. Loucks in the Guild House, 502 E. Huron St. Graduate Class with Pro- fessor Charles Brassfield in the church. 11:00 a.m. "The Emmaus Road," sermon. 8:00 p.m. An Easter Play, "The Half of My Goods," will be given in the church by members of the Guild. Zion Lutheran Church: Easter services, Children's service at9:00 a.m. Church Worship Services at 10:30 a.m. with sermon by Rev. E. C. Stellhorn on "Jesus, Our Hope of Life." Styles New Music Russian War Relief Victory Dance To Be Today AtLeague I The gentleman pictured above is none other than Bill (Wilbur) Sawyer, leader, originator and de- signer of the well-known Union orohestra. If observed carefully, it may be seen that this is a very new picture of him especially de- signed to take the place of the one with which Daily readers have be- come so familiar. NortonCreates Sound Effects At Morris Hall By BERYL SHOENFIELD Frcm the old blue cabinet in stu- dio "C," Morris Hall, David Norton, radio technician and sound effects? man, lifted with gentle hands his "Voices of Things." "Cow," he said tersely. turning a little box upside down and waiting for the -pensive moo.r Equines offered more possibilities. Slapping a plumber's helper or coco- nut on a board or thumping one's chest simulates the sound of hooves pounding on the sod, Norton said. "Soldiers marching. We bring these wooden cylinders down rhythmically. Listen: Left face, company march!" And the cylinders were off with Fort Benefit Dance Will Feature Harberd Band Floor Show Entertains With Folk Dances, Russian Songs, Skit; To Present RWR Bazaar With the presentation of the col- orful Victory dance at 9 p.m. today in the Hussey Room of the League and the Russian charity bazaar held from 2 p.m. to midnight in the Kal- amazoo Room of the same building,' the local Russian War Relief organi- zation will go all-out tonight in an effort to reach its quota. Proceeds from the dance, sponsored by the student RWR unit, under the chairmanship of Harry Stutz, Grad., will be added to the $1050 collected to date toward its $2000 goal. Ularberd To Play Offered as inducements o the Vic- tory dance will be a hosdof enter- tainers, foremost among them John- ny Harberd and his popular Negro swing band who will "give out" for the cause. A three-star floor show will feature the Mexican, 'Danish and Ukranian folk dances of Ruth and Edwin Hughes; songs of the Red Army, sung by students of Mrs. Lila Pargment, : of the Russein language department; and a dramatization, "The Story of Dnieprostroi," by Marvin Levey, '42, and Margaret Cotton, '42. To Present Skit With music by Shostakovitch and enacted against a backdrop painted by Dorothy Baun, the moving tale of Russian scorched earth principles will be revealed in "Dnieprostroi." The role taken by Levey in this skit, writ- ten in October for RWR's successful "Pageant of Nations" at Madison Square Garden, was played last Sat- urday by Tyrone Power in Detroit's Armenian Student Describes Turk Persecution In Near East By ALICE FRETZ Alice Jernazian, Grad., who is now supi ort as best she could by doing studying philology in the English de- handiwork. .oAfter a year and a half of this, Mr. partment, can tell of a family back Jernazian sent a message by an ground of persecution that went on Arabian officer for the family to flee before Hitler and his cohorts were to Syria, and he joined them a -little out of long dresses. later after an exciting escape across She was born at the end of the the border, riding bareback on an World War in Ourfa, which is in Arabian horse. Turkish Armenia near the Syrian Miss Jernazian says her only mem- border, but her story really starts in ories of Armenia are the sight from 1914 when her grandmother and a balcony of crowds of Turkish sol- mother were told, along with about diers with red, fetes and slippers sur- 3,000 others, to leave their homes andrding crpsesanipers sur-g start alkingrounding corpses which were being start walking, carried through the streets. She also Survive Trials remembers the Armenian candy They were among the 300 who sur- which is like colored loaf sugar, Of vived the attacks of the Turks, and Syria the memories are much pleas- hunger and exposure until a German anter, for the family lived in the mission 'was reached. During this same house with a kindly Arabian same time her aunt and her aunt's priest and his sister. She learned children were locked in their burning Arabic from them, but says the only home, where they perished, and an- word she can remember now is "ya- other small cousin was thrown into a habibi" which means "sweetheart., well along with some kerosene andC a lighted torch. Coe To America a ligted trch.The Jernazian family came to Her father had been the only sur- America when Alice was only four vivor of afamily of six children, years old. Mr. Jernazian has a par- had been brought up in an American ish in Boston, where by coincidence orphanage and attended the Ameri- his old college president is working can college of St. Paul's in Tarsus. in the Congregational Home Mission. He had intended to become an engi- Miss Jernazian has met some of the neer, but Armenia's need of minis- actual characters of the book, "Forty ters caused him to become a Congre- Days of Musa Dagh," who migrated gational minister instead. to Troy, N. Y. the same time. Decides To Marry Miss Jernazian says you can tell In order to accomplish more work an Armenian by the "ian" on the end for needy Armenia, he had also de- of his name, and she is justly proud cided not to marry, but after a severe that Saroyan the author, Rouben illness during which only an old Mamoulian, the Hollywood director, friend was near to take care of him, and Armand Tokatian, of the Met- he decided he needed a wife to weep ropolitan Opera Company are among for him when he died and a son to those who are showing what Arme- carry on the work he had started. nians con do when there isn't anyone It was in this susceptible mood around to start a massacre. that he came to the German mission and met the blonde, blue-eyed woman Architecture Exhibit who became his wife afterwards. To- gether they went to Ourfa to set up I Is Held In Rackham an orphanage which during the Turk- ish seige sheltered almost 3,000 peo- This week in the Rackham Gal- ple. And it was also in Ourfa two leries the Ann Arbor Art Association years later that their first daughter, in collaboration with the College of Alice, was born. Architecture and Design is holding Ungrateful Court an educational exhibition of archi- When Alice was still very small, tecture. The exhibition is intended the Reverend Jernazian was sent to to appeal to those interested in art the Turkish court as interpreter, but and to give the layman a better was thrown into prison after his job understanding of the meaning of was finished because he knew too architecture. It also demonstrates much. This left his wife with Alice, i modern ways of displaying material and, six months later, a new baby to 'for visual education. i I 3 Women Open Golf Tourney Lowest Scorers On April 27 Will Become Team Members The spring golf tournament opens today and any woman golfer on cam- pus is eligible to enter. Women par- ticipating in this tournament must play 18 holes of golf on the Univer- sity Golf Course and must turn their scored in before April 27 to Mrs. Stewart Hanley. at the WAB Members of the women's golf team need not turn in new scores unless they wish to improve the ones they made last fall. Those turning in the eight lowest scores will become members of the women's golf team, and will be privileged to play at the University Golf Course free until the tournament next fall. So much emphasis has been placed on physical fitness for defense that golf should be kept in mind as an easy way toward good health. "Wom- en have been fairly punishing them- selves with the Danish drills recent- ly," said Barbara Wallace, '45, presi- dent of the Pitch and Putt Club, ais she suggested that women come out to the golf links and build up their endurance the easy way. Besides free play at the University. course, there will be many activities planned for the winners of the tour- nament. The Northern Oratorical League Contest will be held at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, in Room 4203 Angell Hall. The public is invited to attend. Advance Sale Of Military Ball Tickets To End The announcement that ROTC checks would be paid Wednesday spurred the Military Ball ticket sale yesterday, as advanced corps cadets hastened to sign up for tickets while basics continued to eat into the sup- ply made available to them. Tickets now in the hands of Ball committee members, originally given out for advanced corps sale, will be called in Monday, Lieut. L. W. Peter- son of the military science depart- ment announced, and any advanced corps students who have not yet arranged for a ticket are advised to sign up for one before that time. Ball tickets will be available today at ROTC headquarters or from Lieu- tenant Peterson, while they may be obtained until 5 p.m. Monday from Lindley Dean, LitSpec, Dean Thomas, '42, William Strickland, '42E, Ivan Schaffer, '42E, Ray Gauthier, '42E, John Scheibe, '42M, Phil Levy, '43, Bob Ehrlich, '43E, Charles Thatcher, '43E, Robert Snow, '42E, or Francis Anderson, '43M. Additional impetus will soon be placed behind the ticket sale, Lieu- tenant Peterson hinted, as negotia- tions for a band have been all but completed. Members of the Frosh Project Decorations Committee will meet in the League on Monday, April 6, any time between 2:00 and 5:30 prepared to work. Custer precision under Norton's mili- "United Nations Victory Rally." tary manipulating. You could hear Across the hall Russian linens, cut the heels kicking up the dust in uni- glass, embroidery, heirlooms and son. foods will be on sale in the bazaar, Varied Weather promoted by the Ann Arbor RWR Weather, always a popular subject,I fforded Norton wide interpretation. BB shot rolled around in a half blown-up balloon and a special cli- .natic screen portrayed thunder. Can- vas rubbing against a wheel rotating it different rates can produce winds ranging from an east wind to ar tornado, Rain is poured from a wa- tering can. Only the reproduction of unshine has Norton stymied. "Squishing" cornstarch represented "man walking through the snow," while a roller skate mounted on a piece of wood meant "garage door sliding open." Blowing into hollow boxes created filtered telephone voi- ces and fog horns. Creates Fire Stepping up to the mike, Norton created a forest fire, complete with cracking branches and falling tim- ber, by crackling cellophone and splintering a strawberry box in his hand. "In fact," Norton claims, more strawberry boxes are used in radio than in the berry business." Then, while ringing door bells, tel- ephones, buzzers and auto horns, Norton was interrupted by a tousled student who shouted breathlessly, "Record a cock crowing, a blow torch in action, factory din and a saw saw- ing. Quick!'' This was a comparatively easy as- signment for Norton who is much more concerned with the production of next week's startling broadcast sound: the suggestion of Rudy the Rat mixing cement with his tail. Career-minded senior women of 1942 will be taking over the men's jobs. Because of the war new fields are opening for women every day. Banking, engineering, accounting, and advertising are only a few of the opportunities on new fronts. I division, and will be managed by Mrs. George Rainich and Mrs. Parg- ment. A similar project undertaken in the fall netted $300 and proceeds were utilized, as they will be this time, to buy knitting materials. So far, 300 knitted articles have been sent to the Soviet. Tickets for the informal Victory dance may be purchased at the League desk. k i i ... 7Zeddngs CNand .- engagements i Mr. and Mrs. Roland M. Krise of Ann Arbor have announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Jean Elizabeth Krise, '42, to John H. Th'ompson, '41, of Dearborn, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Thompson. No date has been set for the wedding. The bride-elect was elected to Al- pha Lambda Delta, freshman honor society, and to Pi Lambda Theta and Phi Kappa Phi, also honor societies. She is vice-president of Senior Soci- ety and a member of Assembly Coun- cil. Mr. Thompson was affiliated with Theta Chi and is now employed in the personnel division of the Willow Run plant. Engagement Announced Mrs. Myrtle Gray announced the engagement of her daughter, Grace, '37, to Henry Gomley, '42M, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gomley of Detroit, at a tea given in the League. The wedding will take place early in the summer. j EA wr/ ?SPLENDOR I -. 1'< ,;., . ; , f , t/. t .: - ;,f, t a ' , s . , a w , , s. °...'._ ' xri t h 3. , ( .i 'Una III IIIWI FOR YOUR DEFENSE BASIC DRESSES around which may be built the gay, smart outfit you've always dreamed of. $.95 7 .50 For that feminine look: pastel, navy, black, and prints in silks, crepes, and rayons -- cut with fall skirts and easy lines. " Jacket Dresses " One and Two Pc. S yles * Redij, oleq '; 1:a. i 't E { v 1 ,> ' i SPRIN fS in comfortable, casual, beautifully tailored box coat . . . with the pearl buttons, the vent in the back, and the roomy pockets you love. Navy, red, and pastels. Defense is an important word these days, and your bank can supply you with defense too. 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