TItflttW lAY; OCT. 15, 1942 T I MICHIGAN DAILY League Reception Will Honor Lt. Pavlichenko ----- ------ Entire Campus To Be Invited To Meet Soviet Pres. And Mrs. Ruthven To Head Reception Line, While Specially Invited Guests Will Act As Hosts Soviet Lt. Liudmila Pavlichenko, famous Russian woman sniper, will personally meet students and faculty members at a League reception in her honor Friday night, immediately fol- lowing the war rally in Hill Auditor- Sponsored by the women's under- graduate council under the direction of Miss Ethel McCormick, the recep- tion will be open to the entire cam- pus. In the reception line with Lt. Pavli- ehenko and her party will be Pres. and Mrs. Ruthven, Dean Joseph A. Bursley, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Tibbetts, Prof. and Mad- aine Michael S. Pargment, Charlotte Thompson, '43, and Don West, '43. Specially invited guests who will act as hosts and hostesses for the affair will be members of the League Council, Student War Board, Russian War Relief and Union Executive Council. Refreshments will be served in the Grand Rapids room and Ethel Foun- tain Hussey room of the League. The reception line will form in the con- course on second floor. War Activities Group Names Miriam Dalby Head Of Stamp Sale Miriam Dalby, '44, new member of the Committee of War Activities for women, has been appointed head of the War Stamp selling committee for that group. The task will be taken over by Jun-. ior project, but until then, Miss Dal- by's committee will sell stamps at their booth located on the corner of State and South University. The booth is open daily from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m., from 10 a. m. until 2:15 p. m. on Saturdays. Since the women began on Monday of this week, the sales have been far short ofthe $50 daily quota that they set. Sales on the first day were $20 and the total was $27 for Tuesday. Tire Thief's Victim Rebuked By Robber RICHMOND, Va.-()-A thief took a tire from the automobile of a Richmond woman, then added insult to injury. He left two notes on the car's windshield, both of which were interspersed with profanity. The notes, with certain omissions read: "You dumb fool. Whoever gave you a driver's permit for this pile of junk. You should give it to the junk man if he will have it because it isn't worthy anything except getting in other people's way. Next time, I am going to take your fenders off this car." The notes were signed "The Boss." WAA To Hold Annual Swim At Union Pool Get in the swim and send in your entry blank for the W. A. A. women's swimming meet, to be held at 7:15 p. m., next Thursday at the Union pool. Sports-managers of league houses, dormitories and sororities will receive entry blan1gs through the mail, which they are to fill out with the names of their contestants and return no later than Saturday morning at Barbour gym, according to Oriel Straehley, '45, chairman of the affair. Events Listed League houses will be divided into eight zones for this activity, and, sports managers of the houses will be notified of their zone. List of events in the meet are as follows: three 50 yard events, a free style, a backstroke and a breast stroke competition. These will be followed by three 25 yard events in the same three styles. In the diving activity there will be a front, a back and one optional dive. Concluding the meet there will be a free style relay of four winners on a team. Cup To Be Awarded Plans are being made for a comic act in between events. Three League Council members will race three WAA Board members, ail of whom will be dressed in old-fashioned bathing suits and will carry candles. A traveling cup will be awarded to the house winning the meet, and indi- vidual winners will be asked to form the nucleus of the W. A. A. Swimming club. The first meeting of that club will be Thursday, October 29, at the Union pool, says Miss Straehley, and those interested are urged to attend. Freshmen are especially invited to this meeting. Last year 127 persons were in the swimming meet, and Kappa Alpha Theta was declared winner of the cup, with Collegiate Sororis coming in second. Tennis Tournament To Be Held By WAA "Fifteen-love - thirty," will soon mark of f the games in the annual fall W. A. A. tennis tournament. All wo- men are invited to participate, and entries are due at the W. A. B. Friday. Lists of tournament play will be posted Saturday and games will1begin on that day. If, for some reason the match cannot be played on the sched- uled day, the contestants will have three days in which to make up the missed match. If the game is not made up in that time, Nancy Hatters- ley, '44, head of the Tennis club, must be notified, or the player will be dis- qualified. Both singles and doubles will be played. Tennis Club will have its first meeting 4:15 p. m. today at the WAB. California's turkey crop this year is the biggest ever. Reminding us that it'll soon be time to start Christmas chopping. Houses AdoptI War Policies. Resident Heads Meet To Plan And Report On New Activities The house presidents of every wo- men's dormitory, sorority and league house of the University had their first meeting of the year in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Lorraine Judson, '43, president of Judiciary Judiciary Council, had the chair and reported to the gathering what the newly formulated policy. of University women in regard to war work is to be. The first step is to be a stricter atti- tude toward the keeping of quiet hours in all places of residence. All infringements are to be reported to the Committee by the president of each house and offenders are to be subject to court-martial by that body. Junior Project Planned Charlotte Thompson, '43, president of the League Council, told the meet- ing about the prospective junior pro- ject of a large bond and stamp sale to be conducted by women of the jun- ior class. Nancy Filstrup, '43, president of the W.A.A., spoke of a possible future compulsory physical fitness program for women and suggested that the house presidents urge their groups to participate in voluntary sports, say- ing that it was hoped that a wide re- sponse would make compulsory action necessary. Assembly Board Enlarged Better representation for League House women at the League in the future was announced by Jean Con- way, '43, head of the League House group. Three more women are to be added to Assembly Board, all to be elected from League Houses and jun- iors may petition for the posts. The final speaker at the meeting was Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the League, who spoke of the need for voluntary workers in many fields of war work and of the opportunity of women to enlist in a 2 hour credit Nurses' Aide course. Women may sign up for all types of war work at the social director's office in the League. The next meeting is to take place next Friday. Change Is Made In Class Program For Nurses' Aides Hoping to interest more girls in the course, the hours of the Nurses' Aides classes have been changed. All classes will now be held from 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings. This was decided in the first meet- ing of this course held at 4 p. m., Monday in the Red Cross headquar- ters in North Hall. Offering 2 hours of Academic credit, the course has a special instructor to teach the girls so that they can help the hospital staff. Only 15 of the necessary 60 girls have signed up thus far for the course, which is under the direction of the Red Cross. Mrs. Henry Vaughn is supervising the work. Outdoor Trip, Roast To Be Held Sunday All students are invited to attend the canoe trip and outdoor roast, which will be held at 9:30 a. m. to 3 p. m. Sunday on the Huron River, according to Dorothy Lundstrom, '45 and Dan Saulson, '44, co-chairmen of the event. Those attending are to meet at 9:30 a. m. at Hill Auditorium, and the food will be bought collectively on the way out. A charge of .25 will be made to cover all expenses. For any other information, persons are re- quested to call the chairmen. Luncheon Sponsored For Nutrition Drive Will Be Held Today One of the outstanding events of Ann Arbor's Nutrition Drive this week is the Victory Luncheon which will be held at 11 a. m. to 1:30 p. m., today at the Masonic Temple. It is open to the public. Tickets for the affair can be ob- tained only at the door. The profits from the ticket sales will be used to help defray the expenses of Ann Ar- bor's Nutrition Week program. In the lobby of the Masonic Tem- ple there will be a display sponsored by the conservation committee of the Ann Arbor Garden Club under the direction of Mrs. Frederick C. Mat- thaei and Mrs. H. M. Hawkins. The display will show how to store fruits and vegetables from Victory gardens J~ay, ku I4l " Petites IPommes de Terre Within the confines of campus society-within the group within a group setup, there is a small, esoteric clique which gets practically no attention from its colleague groups, and which, heaven knows, deserves it if ever a hardy, staunch band of pioneers did. The particular informal organization of which we speak is the Com- position Course enrollees, and what started us to thinking about them, as an old columnist friend of ours would say, was the wailing moan of a pro- fessor who told us, in the deepest of despair, that the war was, if anything, (and in contradiction of his hopes) helping to swell the writing courses' instead of turning students' energies to diverse fields. The war, it seems, instead of making the English majors realize that life is real and life is earnest, is, instead just giving them a great, big, broad, un- cultivated new area into which they may release their self- expression, as it were. We felt slightly hurt at his remark, having personally, on our classification card a large, juicy number which is indicated in the catalogue as nothing less than a good, old composition course, and, naturally, we can find no fault with our own wish to express ourself. We do think though that the other dratted English majors ought to feel that life is real and life is earnest. e However, the fact remains that comp classes are swelling and so, in deference to all newcomers to our happy little band, perhaps a description of the Richer Way of Life which one finds in writing courses should be made. In the first place, you'll have to understand at the very beginning that to all composition-course-takers, life is to be thought of in terms of grimness and emptiness and vile, pawing bourgeois humanity, and back hall bedrooms which smell of old cabbage and strong lye soap and flat, rasping voices and Oh God, what's the use of it all? After you have allowed this rather complex feeling to burgeon in your- self, you are ready to face your first class period. The popula- tion of the class will consist of a strong, central body of persons who are merely getting the composition credits, requisite to their major. Disregard them; their hearts and souls are not attuned to grimness and emptiness. There will be a sprinkling of young men and women who will, in the progress of the semester, let it be known that the pure, clear flame from Moscow is all they are living for, and they, too, are not feeling properly futile, and are consequently not one of the Group. The authenticity of the real Grade 1, unhappy boys may be determined by the frequency with .which they talk about Hemingway and verissimilitude, and the infre- quency with which they will mention Li'l Abner or the Atlantic Charter. One can always pick out odd characters, too, and these will often be- come your favorites. Our particular pet was a lad who had an idea when he was a freshman. The idea was "Brother Joe," and evidently it was his idea for the Decade. Poor little old "Brother Joe" was beaten to a pulp for six semesters of comp courses. He was made into everything from a boot- black to a Senate Page Boy, but he remained, with commendable consis- tency, in a background of the same plot and with all the dear,~ sweet traits of character which we grew to know and love. The remainder Qf the class will be made up of Michigan Daily staff members who grow just as desperate for ideas as the rest of the class, toward the end of the semester, and who inevi- tably begin to make themselves hated by their colleagues by submitting their latest editorials for credit. After this, you may enter comp courses if you wish, friends. We have warned you properly. Perhaps you feel as we do- that you are an artist who must express himself. And all of us- very artistically, of course, can sell real estate together some day. Soph Project Mass Meeting To Be Today Sophomore And Junior Women Are Invited To Attend Assembly At 4 P.M. In League Ballroom Sophomore women will attend a mass meeting for the Sophomore Vol- unteer Hospital Service at 4 p. m. to- day in the League ballroom. Any in- terested junior or sophomore woman may attend the meeting and may reg- ister to participate in the service at this time. Natalie Mattern, '45, general chair- man of the project, her committee of Over 50 women were interviewed for Sophomore Project, an unus- ually large number to turn out for any class affair, bringing to the foreground the rising interest in war work on -the campus. thirteen members and Suzanne Sims, '43, junior adviser for the service, will be introduced by Frances Thompson, '45, chairman of last year's Frosh Project. Mrs. N. R. Kretzschmar and Miss Karin Dahlberg will be present at the meeting to explain the volunteer ser- vice for the University Hospital. A Letter Home NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 14.- (IP)- Mrs. Anthony Cordasco received a letter from her nephew, Corporal John S. Bruno at Guadalcanal. On the end, it said: "Please excuse paper. All I have. Once belonged to unlucky Jap." L. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN m If you like good food- "You'll want to come back" On the corner - 122 WEST WASHINGTON (Continued from Page 4) The Sociedad Hispanica wishes to invite all former members as well as non-members to attend its first meet- ing of the year. Students wanting practical experience in speaking Spanish are especially urged to at- tend, and Latin Americans will have an excellent opportunity to mingle with their North American neighbors. There will be entertainment, conver- sation, and refreshments. The meet- ing will be held in Room 408, Ro- mance Language Bldg. tonight at 8:00. Zeta Phi Eta meeting today at 4:30 p.m. in the chapter room. Ushering for Art Cinema League: Everyone interested in ushering for "Carnival In Flanders", being given tonight, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 15, 16 and 17, sign up immediately in the Undergraduate Office of the League. 'Sign-up sheets are posted on the bulletin board. The Art Cinema League presents Load Stops Elevator Eleven Helen Newberry women set a new all time low for traveling by elevator the other day. They were stuck for 25 minutes before a me- chanic came to their rescue. "Carnival In Flanders", October 15, 16 and 17, at 8:15 p. m. at Mendels- sohn Theatre. Tickets at Mendelssohn Box Office. A mass meeting for sophomore women is to be held today at 4:00 p.m. in the Michigan League Ball- room. Volunteer Hospital Services will be explained and registrations taken. Inter-Guild will hold its weekly luncheon atA12:15 p.m. today at Lane Hall. All members of campus guilds are invited. The speaker will be Mr. Allan Booth, General Secre- tary of International Student Ser- vice in Great Britain and Ireland. The luncheon will be followed by a discussion meeting in the Fireplace Room of Lane Hall. Coming Events The Observatory public evening series will begin on Friday evening, October 16, with open house at the Angell Hall Observatory from 8:00 to 10:00. The moon will . be shown through the telescopes. Children must be accompanied by adults. Westminster Guild: Treasure hunt at Presbyterian church Friday night beginning at 8:30. All students wel- come. Refreshments. I I1 I err _----- Campus Casuals - . _. ._ 5.50 pr, I. [tM~ YOUR SPECIAL FAVORITES! Norwegian Moccasin: Narrow-heeled, hand-sewn. Rough 'n' ready for work or play. Sturdy calf inj antiqued red, green or brown. Leather soles. $5.50 pr. Ki.tvT --I C J If 1.l XT ii- Yr ~cl~ t t _ .1'nY I 11 11