1 3E~frA. DEC. . '1f42TR tii iI Hillel oundation 46. To Give Annual Dance Saturday, ec.1 _ E ro- ._ Thirty Guests Frorn Custer To Be Invited All Proceeds To Be Donated To Bomber-Scholarship Fund; 'Warsages' Will Be On Sale "Dance for patriotism" will charac- terize Hillel's annual fall dance which will be held from 9 pm. to midnight. Saturday, Dec. 12 in the ballroom of the League, accordingto Grace Freud- berg, '45, social chairman of"the Foun- dation. -The dance will not only support the League's project of donating all pro- ceeds received for use of theballroom, to the Bomber-Scholarship,. but the social committee has invited 30 sol- diers from Fort Custer to be special guests of the Foundation for the eve- ning. Hardy to Play Gordon Hardy will play for the dance, admission to which will be free to members and guests of membei's. In place of -the usual formal affair, the social committee has decided to dispense with "white tie and tails" by declaring that informal dress is the order of the evening. This policy will presumably apply 'for "the duration" for Hillel's affairs.+ To Sell Warsags Warsages (war stamp corsages) will be sold at the dance. -A special com- mittee at Hillel has been set up to make these corsages up so that no extra cost will be entailed and the' full proceeds can be turned -into war stamps. The social committee, composed of Grace Freudberg, '45, and Harry Mil- ler, 45, co-chairmen; Edith Kohn, '45; Millie Getzoff, '43; David Crone,- '43; Bob Warner, '43 and Lew Warner, '45 will assume responsibility for the soldiers invited for the occasion. They will provide dates for the evening and dinners for them at various houses on campus. Athena Announces Pledging Of Women Athena, literary society, pledged seven women in a candle light cere- mrony at 8:30 p.m. yesterday in thex League. Those who were pledged are as fol- lows: Lois Arnold, '43, Carol Cothran, '45, Ruth Johnson, '44, Marcia Nel- son, '44, Shirley Raskey, '44, Esther Stevens, '44 and Sue Wood, '44. Re- freshments were served afterwards. Interviewing For Advisers To Begin Today Interviewing by Judiciary commit- tee of the women who petitioned to be orientation advisers for the year 1943-44 will ,be held from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30p.m. today through Dec. 11, in the League. Petitions, which were handed in last week, have been arranged alpha- betically and applicants are asked to come in the following order: To- day: Adams through Case; Tomor- row: Cast'icam through Garrels; Thursday: Gaskell through Iselman; Friday: Janiga through Mason; Mon- -day, Dec. 7: McCormick through Poniering; Tuesday, Dec. 8: Present through Scott; Wednesday, Dec. 9: Service through Ulrich; Thursday, fDee. 10: thderwood through Zuniack. It is important that applicants come for their interviews at the ap- pointed times. If it is impossible for the applicant to be presents atthe time assigned for her, she may come on Friday, Dec. 11, which has been reserved for those who are unable to be interviewed previously. A- notice will be in the D.O.B. each. day repeating the schedule of ap- pointments. Eligibility cards are re- quired at the interviews. WAA In fe rviewing Results Announced By Nancy Flstrup The results of interviewing yester- day to fill vacancies on the WAA 'oard were announced by Nancy Fil- strup, '43, president. Helen Willcox, '44Ed, was appointed vice-president of the board. Miss Willcox has been manager of the Dance Club for the past semester, and is on the central committee for the voluntary physical fitness pro- gram. Pat Coulter, '45, was chosen to head the auxiliary riding club of Crop and Saddle. Miss Coulter is a transfer from Randolph-Macon. Carol Grede, '44, will head the Hockey Club. Miss Grede is a trans- fer from Mt. Holyoke and is a Kappa Alpha Theta pledge. She is also a member of the Women's.Glee Club. Regents Head IFC Ball List Patrons Announced For 10th Annual Dance To Be Held Friday Patrons for the 10th annual Inter- fraternity Ball which will be held from 9 until 12 p.m. Friday in the Union Ballroom and which will fea- ture the music of Fletcher Henderson and his orchestra, have been an- nounced by Bud Brown, '44E, pub- licity chairman for the dance. Regent and Mrs. E. L. Burhans, Regent and Mrs. A. E. Connable. Re- gent Esther Cram andMr. L. V. Cram, Regent and Mrs. D. H. Crowley, Re- gent and Mrs. J. J. Herbert, Regent and Mrs. H. G. Kipke, Regent and Mrs. E. C. Shields, and Regent and Mrs. E. B. Elliott head the list of those who will be present. Others will be: Pres. and Mrs. Ruthven, Vice-Pres. and Mrs. S. W. Smith, Dean J. A. Bursley, Dean and Mrs. I. C. Crawford, Dean and Mrs. S. T. Dana, Dean and Mrs. C. E. Grif- fitN~ Dean and Mrs. E. H. Kraus, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Registrar and Mrs. I. M. Smith, Col. and Mrs. W. A. Ganoe, and Capt. and Mrs. R. E. Cas- sidy. The list continues with Prof. and Mrs. R. G. Adams, Prof. and Mrs. A. S. Aiton, Prof. and Mrs. F. E. Bar- tell, Prof. and Mrs. H. 0. Crosler, Prof. and Mrs. A. S. Hawley, Prof. and Mrs. --avid Mattern, Prof. and Mrs. J. K. Pollock, Assoc. Prof. and Mrs. J. O. Halford, Assoc. Prof. and Mrs. R. C. Hussey, Asst. Prof. and Mrs. A. L. 'ader, Major and Mrs. E. E. Renner, and Asst. Prof. and Mrs. A. H. Stockard. The Ball this year promises to be a true "Greek" dance, for tickets have been almost completely sold in the fraternity houses. A few which are still being turned in will be held for fraternity men who have put their names on a waiting list at the IFC office. A coke bar will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today in the Union Ballroom. Football Team To Be Honored At Victory Dance The football team will be honored at the Victory Dance to be held from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday in the League Ballroom. Following their cus- tom of having the Victory Dances sponsored by a different campus or- ganization each week-end, the Stu- dent Committee has announced that the "M" club will sponsor this affair. In accordance with the purpose of the Victory Dances all proceeds, ex- cept the expense of the orchestra, will be donated to the Bomber-Scholar- ship fund. These dances are now being held every Friday and Saturday night in the League Ballroom with all pro- ceeds going to the scholarship fundI to help raise the total to their $15,000 goal for the current year. All lettermen on the team will be admitted free to the dance Saturday. Tickets may be purchased from "M" club members. Duplicate bridge tournaments will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the League. All men and women interested are urged to come. The tournaments will be played off by , tables and prizes awarded to pairs. DEAN LLOYD COMMENTS ON: Weaknesses In College Women's Training At a conference of deans at North- western University, Dean Alice Lloyd challenged the type of training of- fered college women throughout the country. According to the New York Times, Dean Lloyd declared that women had not been encouraged to take mathe- matics, engineering, and other tech- nical subjects so vital today and "col- leges were remiss in not providing adequate character training . .", charges which brought forth a chorus of contradictions from heads of wom- en's colleges throughout the country who declared that Dean Lloyd had been unfair in her sweeping criti- cism. Some Ed'ucators Disagree These educators maintained that college women have arisen to thetest of the times; in fact, they have done far more than was expected of them. "It is pointed out that today thou- sands of college graduates are step- ping into war work, and within a short time they prove highly com- petent." In answer to these criticisms,Dean Lloyd explained her stand on the is- sue in a letter to the education edi- tor of the Times: "I said what I firmly believe: that the war and its demands upon wom- en have revealed' to us some of the errors in the education of our wom- en. I pointed to. the very small pro- portion of women with mathematical and scientific training and said that many young women with aptitude for this training had not been encour- aged by their academic advisors to go into these fields" . . . fields which were highly important in the train- ing of the WAVE and WAAC units. Dean Supports Statements Dean Lloyd emphatically denied that these criticisms were at any time leveled at women's colleges. She went on to explain that until the war she had never felt the need to encourage women to go into highly technical and scientific fields. But with the demands of war work, women would have been more capable of handling scientific training if they had been encouraged to take mathematics and physics. "It is my contention that we have not yet demanded of our young col- lege woman the best of which she is capable. Neither intellectually, voca- tionally, nor in community leader- ship has she had the significance that she should have. "It is because I believe in her po- tential power and ability that I now say that this is partly the fault of her school and college. "I believe also that if education is to be dynamic and not static, it should not be offended by honest and sincere criticism," Dean Lloyd concluded. Public Warned About Rumors By OWI WASHINGTON-(p)-The Office of War Information called on every American today to help win the war "by toughening his mind and ears" to sensational rumors. Here are the rules OWI suggests: 1. Never repeat a rumor. 2. Do not repeat a rumor verbally even to deny it. 3. If you know the facts which can spike a rumor, cite the facts prompt- ly. 4. If you don't knoW the facts which can stop a rumor, ask the rumor-teller where he got his facts. 5. Don't give a rumor the benefit of any doubt. ?/Leddinqi and' nq'aqe mens II. ,_ The wedding of Dorotiiy Roth, '41, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roth of South Bend, Ind., and Leon- ard Philip Silk, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Silk of Detroit took place recently in South Bend. Miss Roth took part in JGP and Frosh Project while a student at the University. She was also a member of Assembly Board. The couple are now living in South Bend. ON THE CAMPUS FRONT NOTICE A special rehearsal of the Men's Varsity Glee Club will be held at '7:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium before the Varsity Nfght Conicert. i Now that the sophomore women are doing a Florence Nightingale, the juniiors have taken up hawking at football games. Although it may seem far afield from any war work, the JGP committee under the leadership of Marcia Zimmerman has found that there's more than one way to skin the proverbial pig. And to prove that the girls know what they're doing, they have reported $19.15 collected from selling what are now known as "War- sages" at Saturday's game, where loyal supporters sported real "victory" corsages. But what's most important-a grand total of $1,694.15 has been taken in by the juniors-who aren't by any means letting up on ideas for future sales. With Santa's sleigh bells practically jingling in our ears, YGP sutggests that we make this a truly patriotic Christmas, and Helen Garrels, publicity chairman, adds that this year's holiday motto should be, "A Defense Stamp in Every Package." * * It will be in the tropical rains of the Solomons, the dry heat of North Africa, or among the winter snows of Russia that the war work of the women in the University of Michigan is first felt, for the Surgical Dressing Unit has already sent' 500 bandages direct to some battlefront. Made up, wrapped, and sterilized here in Ann Arbor, the dressings prepared on this project sponsored by the seniors were checked and rechecked before being sent on their way to some distant country. Indirectly related to the senior project is the First Aid course, in which college women are learning the right technique of applying the dressings which they are making. The cartoons of first aiders won't seem quite so funny to the male element when the girls start cornering them with four- tailed bandages in hand and gleams in their eyes. Altogether nineteen sororities are participating in the program of first aid courses offered by the University. The Pi Phi's are at the head of the class with 23 girls enrolled, although there is a total of 285 women who are now cramming for bluebooks on cuts and bruises as well as history and philosophy. Quiet hoursare becoming more than just a name in women's residences as the University continues to stress the physical fitness program. Although as yet we can't quite claim to be able to hear a pin drop in any of the various halls, houses are taking definite steps to maintain reasonable silence. At the Alpha Chi Omega house proctors are chosen for each floor and a system of demerits has threatened the girls with a penalty for too much noise. It's all part of defense, and cooperation in this is as important as the most active project on campus. Dr. and Mrs. Raleigh Schorling of Ann Arbor have announced the en- gagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Ruth Mary, '39, to Robert Nelson Rickard of New York City and California. Miss Schorling attended Swarth- more College in Pennsylvania before attending the University here, where she received both her bachelor's and master'sdegrees. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Pi Lambda Theta honor societies. Mr. Rickard is a graduate of the University of Southern California and is now studying at the New York Medical College. The wedding will take place December 21. * * * Betty Fariss, '42, daughter of Col. and Mrs. Walter Byron Fariss of Fort Sam Houston, Tex. and Capt. Fred- erick V. Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emory S. Harris of West Palm Beach, Fla., were wed recently in the post chapel at Fort Sam Houston, Tex. Mrs. Harris was president of her sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, and a member of Wyvern and Scroll. She was also chairman of the social com- mittee of the League and Frosh Pro- ject. Marjorie High, '39, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. High of Muskegon, became the bride of Lieut. Chester Bayard Hansen, at 4 p.m. Saturday in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Ann Arbor. Lieut. Hansen is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hansen of Elizabeth, N. J. Mrs. Hansen is affiliated with Chi Omega sorority, and was a member of Theta Sigma Phi and Kappa Tau Alpha honor societies. She also took part in Choral Union and the Thea- tre Arts Committee while a student at the University. There will be a meeting of all women interested in working on the league house committee for Junior Project at 4 p.m.' today in the League. Comes t CNI o tho N, front! j POLISHED to a smooth, rich sheen . I I tailored, yet feminine pumps... dressmaker stitched.. bow'd "wol-toe'd" ARMY RUSSET or BLACK. *einVg seen in Vogue I I 1- Jocbo s I ~~ I. LAST NOTICE I qeal Relaxatil on Ensian Grad Photos 1. September, 1943, graduates may have Senior Pictures in the 1943 Michiganensian. 2. Your picture must be made, and your choice - of proofs returned, before Christmas vaca- tion. 3. The entire cost of picture and engraving is covered by the $3 coupon you buy at the Ensian office or the photo studio. Ensian photos may be made only by studios listed below: I I I