THURSDAY, NOV. 19 1942 TItE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE M'6'L+' THURSDAY, NOV. 19, 1942 PAGE ~ Fletcher Hendersons Orchestra Will Play For JFC Ball ... _ _ 4< Mrs. Roosevelt Calls On Women To Duplicate Work In England WASHINGTON, Nov. 18. -(IP)- Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, in the first recounting of her flying trip to Britain at a lengthy press confer- ence today, told of her impressions Of Britain's Royal Family, wartime life in England, her trips to Ameri- can military camps, and possible sug- gestions for Uncle Sam at war. Mrs. Roosevelt, who left for Lon- don Oct. 21 and whose return was. announced by the White House yes- terday, said that from her observa- tion the average Briton is not get- ting as much food as before the war but it is better balanced. "Dull but adequate," she described it. Mrs. Roosevelt said her trip had convinced her that if American citi- zens could only realize that the. length of the war will depend largely on what they are willing 'to do "We might put a great deal more into our war effort." Asked for examples of what Amer- icans could do, she said giving upJ non-essentials for one thing. Also if women were willing to do a great deal more work, there could be re- leased more manpower for war indus- try and the armed services. She said she doubted if anyone in England now, no matter how rich, had ser- vants. Vrs. Roosevelt said the British peo- ple were enormously grateful for the help given them by Americans-the warm clothing sent over, the ambu- lances, the canteens. In return the Bitish were doing what they could to make American boys feel at home. Many mutual friendships were de- veloping. Their dislike for K.P. duty didn't stop the American soldiers from mop- ping up in Africa. 1 MRS. ROOSEVELT Bomber Scholarship Committee Sponsors Dance For Victory Dance fbr victory! That's what the Bomber-Scholarship Committee wants you to do from 9 to midnight tomorrow and Saturday nights. The committee is sponsoring dances in the League Ballroom these two nights to raise money for their fund. All money coming from the sale of tickets to these dances will go di- rectly to the Bomber-Scholarship, a fund being raised here on campus toj provide post-war scholarships forI Michigan men in the army whose ed- \ication was interrupted by the war and who wish to return to school. . i a..rri i.a. rr..rr. .. RECORDS mclie ../4rcner Annual Dance To Take Place FridayDec4 Tickets To Go On Sale Today; Proceeds Of Affair Will Go ' To Bomber Scholarship Fund Fraternity men and their dates will dance to the "sweet and hot" music of Fletcher Henderson and his or- chestra when he plays for the 10th annual Interfraternity Ball to be held Friday, Dec. 4, in. the Union Ball- room. Henderson was recently with Ben- ny Goodman's band where he did all arrangements before he reorganized his own orchestra. Coming to Ann Arbor from an engagement in Chi- cago, he will bring his rhythms be- fore the Michigan dancing public for the first time. In spite of the fact that Henderson is known for his "hot" music, plenty of danceable numbers will fill the program. Tickets Go On Sale Tickets will go on sale today in fra- ternity houses, where representatives will have allotments proportioned to the size of the chapter. However, to keep the Ball exclusive for the "Greeks," fraternity men are urged to buy their tickets before the gen- eral sale, which will begin Nov. 30. As a new feature of their annual formal the IFC is inaugurating an Interfraternity Pledge Sing, the fi- nals of which wil be held during the intermission of the Ball. Pledge classes are rehearsing 'now for elim- inations which will begin in the near future Decorations Minimized Even in their social life Michigan students will see the effects of war, for in spite of the fact that proceeds of the dance will be given to the Bomber-Scholarship, the committee has announced that decorations will be less extravagant than usual. How- ever, Greek letters as well as crests 'of all campus fraternities will form a fitting background for the festivi- ties. A special "Sweetheart Dance" will be played honoring those cou- pIes that are pinned. League Tutors Advance Fees For Services It was decided this week that the fee for tutorial services at the League be raised from twenty-five cents to fifty aents per hour. Any woman wishing to register as a tutor may still see Barbara Alcorn, '43, director of the tutorial system, or sign up in the Undergraduate Office of the League. There are cards in Miss Alcorn's box in the Undergradu- ate Office which should be filled out and returned to the same place after the proper information has been filled in. Tutors are especially needed for mathematics, chemistry and lang- uages, Miss Acorn said that more tutors are necessary to fill the demand made by house-mothers and others who have made an effort to contact the committee for the benefit of wo- men desiring to be tutored. The only requirement for eligibility is for a woman to have a "B" in the course she wishes to teach. Upperclassmen may be tutored at the beginning of the semester, even though the system is primarily for freshmen. By University decree, freshmen should not receive assis- tance until five-week grades come out, in order to make sure that they really need the aidoffered by the system. W yvern To Hold Project Discussion Today At League All college women who have ind- cated experience in nursery school and recreational training on the re- cent volunteer work'survey cards are requested to come to a discussion be- tween 3:30 and 5.:30 p.m.. today and tomorrow in the Undergraduate Of- fice at the League. Three inember, of Wyvern, which is sponsoring the CDVO project, will be on haru, according to Helen May Kresbach, '43, president, to talk with the applicants. The conferences are being called in answer to the need for women trained in this field, to help care for children whose parents are working in defense plants. These women will go to the various schools in Ann Arbor, and under =the direction of an adult adviser, will assist in providing gainful recreation to the many defense-orphaned young- P.1 Pe.n Just interviewed Lt. Mary Newell, a graduate of the University, and now a member of the WAACs at Des Moines, Iowa. It sure was wonderful to see such a charming woman, smart and efficient in her uniform, and really out doing her part toward winning this war. It won't be long before most of us now in college will be ready to offer our services in various ways also. WAA believes sincerely that each and every woman should be in a healthy mental and physical condition not only now while she is in college training, but also later when she actually meets up with her duties: Thus we have proposed and planned the voluntary calisthenics pro- gram among University women. WAA isn't out on any extensive muscular development program, by any means. Our purpose in, this program is that of a general toning up of the physical condition of the women on campus, and along with it an improvement in coordination. Athletic managers are requested to attend the first leadership meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow at Barbour Gym, but anyone else interested (such as those training for recreational leadership or camp counsel) is invited to take the course. Helen Clarke, a member of the WAA Board, will teach the exercises to those attending, in a series of six meetings. Now that the program has been formulated there will be no delay in bringing it directly to the women on campus. Those training to be leaders will be taught certain exercises tomorrow and will go back to their respective houses to lead their groups in the first calisthenics on Monday. Beginning with a five-minute period of exercise, this will continue progressively until a maximum of 20 minutes is reached. Remember that this program is purely voluntary, but the WAA Board. which is a fairly wide representation of campus women, feels that the coeds will be behind their efforts. Certainly a maximum of 20 minutes a day that will mean an improvement in your physical and mental behavior "tomorrow" is not too much to fit into your busy program. Some time ago we mentioned that several sorority houses, including Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Epsilon Phi, had already be- gun the program on their own. Jordan Hall is reported, also as having be- gun a policy of going to bed at 10:45 p.m. and getting up at 7 a.m. for a mass exercise program until 7:30 a.m. All this led the WAA Board to be- lieve that a program was being demanded by the students, and that capable leaders were needed to direct it. Conducting an experiment is the Women's Physical Education Depart- ment. At the first meetings of this new indoor season of physical education classes this week, the students of the classes are being asked to run through a series of endurance tests. For example, one of the tests will be to run around the track. The results will be tabulated at this time, and then at the end of the season, eight weeks later, the same tests will be given and reports made as to the changes in the endurance of the students. The Physical Education Department then expects to be able to show vital sta- tistics as to which classes lend themselves most appreciably to improvement in physical condition. Will it be fencing, body mechanics, badminton or what? That question will be answered at the end of the semester. Paul Bunyan, Legendary To Return With Blue By "SUDS" CORLETT Babe the Blu Shades of Great-Aunt Tessie! Who life. During said legends can't leave footsteps? found a youn The walks on campus seem coveredfrznHea with them and they're all pointing frozen He na to the Union. Paul Bunyan, the patron saint of Dug Great La all foresters, is in town a day early Both maste to remind students of the "formal" mendous pro tomorrow in his honor in the ball- and remainec room of the Union. Paul must feel Paul dug the C right at home haunting this campus ing hole for h for he started his fabulous career in Babe was sick Saginaw valley country by inventing so that the ox logging and milling. Babe adequat Exhausted 14 Storks devotion when . to move can Little is known of his origin except buildings toge that he was probably French-Cana- them as far a dian. Paul was born and raised inPaaswsfad o Maine, and twenty cows were kept Paul would o: just to supply him with milk. Four- end of a to teen storks were left in a state of col- straighten it lapse after bringing him into the Blast world. The horn tl The year of the great blue snow, men to dinne Badminton Players To Meet Tomorrow "Come one, come all" is the call that Marjorie Giefel, '44, has made to all those interested in the Badmin- ton Club. The first organization meet- ing will be held at 5 p.m. tomorrow at Barbour Gym, and a regular meet- ing time will be decided. timber with e. ing of blasts,< kept botherin direction cont the North Po 689 miles fron Although ti jacks' exploits Paul Bunyan hinted that B tomorrow at the honor. I 'I - Clearance! I. e Ox came into Paul's the snow siege, P iul ng ox, lost and neerly med it Babe and caed akes r and pet grew to Ire- portions and stren.Ith d forever insepara )le. Great Lakes as a water- is pet; and, once, when ,he caught a cow wl- ale could have whale milk. ely repaid his mast pr's n it came time for Paul np. Paul tied all the ther and Babe drag ;ed s 3,000 miles in one c.ay. ften hitch Babe to )ne gging road and taus out. Clears Timber ;hat called Paul and his er cleared ten acres of ach blast. And, speak- one day the north. wind g Paul by changing its inually, so he tied it to le, and set the pole up m nowhere. he days of great lumber ations are gone fore'er, a returned today and 3abe would be with him the. "formal" to ,sare Ox, Logger, 'Babe' BRUCH Concerto No. 1 in G Minor Columbia MM-517 $3.78 -" E! _.~ 7. ,J . ."-" if '4, r Max Bruch's Concerto is a favorite with performers because it offers great opportunity for virtuosity. Listeners like it for its wealth of romantic melody. Nathan Milstein, violinist, is assisted by John Barbirolli and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. MOUSSORGSKY-STOKOWSKI Boris Godounov Columbia MM-516 $3.78 Stokowski's symphonic synthesis is based on the original score rather than on the popular Rimsky-Korsakov's paraphrase. The result is like a free modern symphony. We recognize several of the great choruses of the work, heard here in orchestral form: the brilliant and barbaric music of the Coronation Scene, the famous ballad of the Siege of Kozan, the pitiful Song of the Idiot, and the haunting Death of Boris. Stokowski and the All-American Youth Orchestra. KERN Mark Twain Columbia MX-227 $2.70 Of the three musical portraits commissioned by Andre Kostel- anetz, Jerome Kern's "Mark Twain" is outstanding. It describes Twain and his career in four episodes: Hannibal Days, Gorgeous Pilot House, Wanderings Westward and finally, Mark in Erup- tion. You can't miss Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. Andre Kostelanetz and his Orchestra. Classroom Team-mates >a .# ' Cardigans Pullovers For double duty in the class- room and for those chilly 8 o'clocks, you'll love twin sweater sets, cardigans and $3.95 up . Separate Sweaters pullovers. Wear them to- $7.95 up ... Twin Sets gether or separately and be U 3 Wool Coat Dresses, Sizes 10 and 12. .Were 2 Cashmere Wool Dresses, Sizes 10 and 18 Were 25.00 25.00 Autumn Group of CLASSICS 20o LESS GOOD NEWS for B. H. Wragge fanciers! This substantial price reduction on the balance of our autumn-stock of these famous tailored clothes. Wonderful colors, beautiful fabrics, wearable styles make them exceptionally good investments. 2 Wool Suits{Plain Top and Checked Skirt, Sizes '10 and 1 4.Were 39.95 2 Checked Wool Suits, Sizes 14 and 16 Were 39.95 1 Brown Wool Suit, Size 16..... Was 39.95 1 Matching Brown Wool Coat, Size 16 Was 39.95 2 Velveteen Suits, Sizes 12 and 16 Were 29.95 4 Wool Suit Dresses, Sizes 10, 12, 14 and 16 ............ Were 25.00 warm. 1 2-pc. Cashmere Wool Dress, Size 12. Was 25.00 CHOPIN Preludes Coluiabia M-523 $4,86 Honeker says, "As if wishing to exhibit his genius in perspective, he carved these cameos with exceeding finesse. Much in minia- ture are these sculptured Preludes pf the Polish Poet." Egon Petri ably plays these gems. SIrts + al styles To wear with sweaters or blouses. These skirts come in all colors and styles - with pleats or in multi- colored plaids. Match your sweat- ers or jackets and step out in a new outfit. (C., if . 3 Black Wool Crepe Dresses, Sizes 10, 12 and 16 Were 22.95 1 Beige Rayon Crepe Dress, Size 12 .... Was 22.95 1 Blue Rayon Crepe Dress, Size 16. .Was 19.95 3 Wool Dresses, Sizes 10, 12 and 14 Were 17.95 2 Patchwork Plaid Cashmere Wool Jackets, Sizes 12 and 14 ............... W ere 19.95 2 Patchwork Plaid Wool Dresses, Sizes 1 0 and 12 .. . . . . . . . . . . W ere 2500 - I Pr. Natural Mayon Gabardine Slacks, Size 12 . . . . . . .... . . ..W as 2 Prs. Velveteen Slacks, Sies 12 and 16 ..Were DICKENS A Uristmas Carol 10-95 12.95 Columbia MM-521 $3.78 Here is the most famous Christmas story in the English language in a version that is both good Dickens and good theater. Basil Rathbone as Scrooge is supported by a distinguished Hollywood cast. 1 Brown Cashmere Wool Skirt, Size 10. Was 10.95 1 Grey Menswear Flannel Skirt, Size 12. Was 2 Wool Skirts, Sizes 12 and 1 4....... Were 10.95 12.95 $3 .95 1 J L up SHOSTAKO WITCH Symphony No. 5 Columbia MM-520 $5.94 Also, wonderful natural cashmere wool blouses, sizes 10, 12 and 14, that were 10.00 . . . and an assortment of hats and handbags . . . . all 20% less. I Nearly everyone agree that Shostakovitch has struck a note of courage and belief in life. He 'here presents a song of man's BUY DEFENSE STAMPS AND BONDS II