_ _ __S -7i ~ t Y K ~ 1 3 71-T Dance H onors' Service Menr League Ballroom To Be Scene Today Of Party For 40 Men From Fort Custer, Willow Run Climaxing two days of patriotic revelry in honor of .44 soldiers from Fort Custer, six from the Willow Run Plant, and 15 students from Michigan State, Hillel will hold its annual in- formal dance from-9 p.m. to midnight today in the ballroom of the League. "Doc" Spracklin will lead the mem- bers of Gordon Hardy's old band for the dance, which is in step with the League's project, in that all the pro- ceeds over the expense of the band will be turned over to the Bomber Scholarship fund. Invited toDinners Fun and entertainment for the honored guests of the Foundation have been assured; several fraterni- ties, league houses and, sororities have invited the soldiers to dinner tomor- row, following which will be an in- formal .open house at the new Hillel headquarters on Hill Street, to which the whole campus is invited. Admission to the dance will be free for members and guests. To Sell Warsages Warsages will be on sale at the dance. A special Hillel committee un- der the direction of Charlotte Kauph- man, '43, has been established to make these war stamp corsages 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, has assured the guests "a won- derful time" and have provided dates for the dance for all guests 'of the Foundation. Semor Pictures Seniors and second-se- mester juniors may have photos made at home or in Ann Arbor, BUT the Ensian must have the print by JANUARY 1 sWeddings ~ and ~ «..anengagements Mr. and Mrs. Austin H. Beebe of Detroit announce theengagement of their daughter Olive Beatrice to Thomas Allison Booth, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Allison Booth of Little Rock, Ark. Miss Beebe, '43, is a member of Kappa Delta. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Stevens of Wheaton, Ill., announce the engage- ment of their daughter Esther to Ensign Frank Craighead, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Craighead of Wash- ington, D.C. Miss Stevens, a Chi Omega, is on the WAA Board, the Defense Council of the League, a member of Wyvern, Athena, and served as an orientation adviser this fall. Ensign Craighead graduated from Pennsylvania State in 1939 and re- ceived his M.S. from the University, of Michigan in 1940. * * * Liese Dorothea Price, daughter of: Prof. and Mrs. Hereward T. Price of, Ann Arbor, became the bride Satur- day afternoon, Nov. 28, of Dr. Urie Bronfenbrenner, of Asheville, N. C., and New York City. The bride was a senior this year. Dr. Bronfenbrenner, who received degrees from Cornell University and Harvard University, and his doctor of philosophy degree from the Uni- versity of Michigan, was school psy- chometrician for the University and is now United States Army 3psycholo- gist at Nashville, where the couple will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Parsons, of Cincinnati, 0., announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Gail, to Corp. Arthur Stanford Hopkins, son of Prof. and Mrs. L. A. Hopkins, of Ann Arbor. Miss Parsons, '43, a member of Kappa Delta, is secretary of Zeta Phi Eta, has worked on -Frosh Project, Soph Cabaret, JGP, and Senior Proj- ect. Corp. Hopkins was graduated from the University of Michigan in '42. Brigadier General and Mrs. Wil- liam Foster Daugherty of Pasadena, Calif., have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Alice Man- ning to Lt. William Thomas Hunter, Jr., '40, son of William T. Hunter of Chicago and Ann Arbor. Miss Daugherty is a graduate of Mt. Vernon Seminary in Washington,' D. C. Lt."Hunter graduatedfrom Of- ficers' Training School at Fort Bel- voir, Va., and is being transferred to Camp McCoy near Sparta, Wis. GET OUT YOUR MONEY, ... s 'FELLAS'! Figure-Skaters MdyJoin Qroup 'Forty-Two Finale' Tickets Will Be Sold Tuesday; MilitaryBallTickets, Wednesday New Year's Dance Sale To Take Place At 3 Campus Points Tickets for the " '42 Finale," the huge New Year's Eve dance planned by the Manpower Corps, will go on sale Tuesday noon at three points on campus, according to Bob Oddy, '44, publicity and ticket chairman for the affair. "A limited number of tickets will be sold," said Oddy, "and identifica- tion cards must be presented in or- der to purchase a ticket." Tickets can be bought at the League, Union and in the Manpower Corps Office which is at 1009 Angell Hall. "We're certainly expecting a crowd," con- tinued Oddy, "because this dance is the only approved University func- tion . . . and we're abiding by that ancient policy, "first come, first served." Proceeds to Bomber Scholarship "'42 Finale," a celebration strictly for University students, will be held from 9 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. in the Sports Building and will launch the Manpower's War Stamp and bond drive. War corsages will be sold and all proceeds for the dance will be turned over to the Bomber-Scholar- ship fund. Bill Sawyer's orchestra will play for this dance, which will be the first New Year's Eve celebration in Ann Arbor, to be followed the next morn- ing by 8-o'clock classes. The much-speculated question of curfew hours for the evening were settled at the time of the announce- ment of the dance. Women students will have to be in their living quar- ters at 1 a.m. -Be A Goodfelow - Sorority's Initiation Of Seventeen, Recent Pledging Announced Seventeen upperclassmen pledges were initiated recently by Chi Omega. They are Thelma Arehart, '44, Flint; Mary Helen Bradshaw, '45, Ann Ar- bor; Harriett Fishel, '45, Lansing; Ann Harmon, '45, Battle Creek; Mer- cedes Lackey, '45, Jefferson City, Mo.; Joyce Livermore, '45, Ann Arbor; Eli- nor Miller, '45, Sparta; Mary Payne Mountjoy, '45, Warsaw, Ky.; Barbara Novy, '44, Detroit; Patricia Page, '44, St. Paul, Minn. Jane Peters, '44, Charlotte; Jeanne Ramsay, '45, Bay City; Marilyn Ruch, '45, Toledo, Ohio; Mary C. Worsham, '45E, Detroit; Dorma Zar- bock, '45, Wheaton, Ill.; Barbara Steiler, '45, Wyandotte; and Jean Loree, '45, Lansing. Alpha Xi Delta announces the re- cent pledging of Betty Beernink, '45, Grand Haven; Jean Brumm, '44, Ann Arbor, and Mary Driver, '45, Euclid, Ohio. - Be A Goodfellow Newmanites To Hold Annual Holiday Party The Newman Club will hold their annual Christmas supper and dance at 5:30 p.m. Sunday evening in the club rooms of St. Mary's chapel. Bud Grimore, '46, and Bob Erbland, 46, are in charge of the supper ar- rangements. There will be a party after the supper at which time small Christmas gifts will be exchanged. The co-chairmen for the party ar- rangements are Betty Willging, '44, and Ida Bucci, '45. Dances Today Will Anticipate Holiday Spirit Celebrating the last week-end night before Christmas vacation, 19 campus organizations have planned activties for today. Acacia will hold a pledge formal from 9 p.m. to midnight at the chap- ter house today. Guests will dance to, the music of Don Johnson's orchestra.- Chaperoning the affair will be Mr. T. H. Tapping and Mr. C. R. Pryce. Alpha Chi Sigma will hold a radio dance from 9 p.m. to mdnight at the chapter house today. Dr. and Mrs. Lee Worrell and Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Feldkamp will chaperon. Alpha Kappa Psi will hold their' annual Christmas party from 9 p.m. to midnight today. It will be a radio' dance. Mr. and Mrs. Edward' Schmidt and Prof. and Mrs..Robert Dixon will be the chaperons. Alpha Omicron Pi will hold their1 annual Christmas party today. Alpha Xi Delta has scheduled a; scavenger hunt to be held from 9 p.m.1 to midnight today. Mr. and'Mrs. Cecil Creal, Prof. and Mrs. Mair and Mrs.- Miles will chaperon. Beta Theta Pi will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight at the chapter house today. Mr. and Mrs.i M. F. Coulson of Birmingham and Lieut. and Mrs. Shook will be the chaperons.l Chi Phi will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnight at the chapter house today. The chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. Floyd A. Bond and . Prof. and Mrs. Yntema. A party will be held by Chi Psi from 9:45 p.m. to midnight at the chapter house today. Dr. and Mrs.- J. O. Kennedy and Dr. and Mrs. A. W.; Coxon will chaperon. Delta Delta Delta will hold a formal from 9 p.m. to midnight at the chap- ter house today. Prof. and Mrs. H. O.1 Whittemore and Prof. and Mrs. Don- ald B. Gooch willbe the chaperons. Delta Sigma Delta will hold aI radio dance from 9 p.m. to mid- night at the chapter house today. Dr. C. R. Wright and Dr. Donald A. Kerr will chaperon the affair. Delta Tau Delta will hold a for- mal from 8:30 p.m. to midnight to- day at the chapter house. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shipman will be the' chaperons.' A radio dance-pledge formal willbe' held by Kappa Alpha Theta from 9 p.m. to midnight at the chapter house today. Mrs. Paul Kircher, house mother, Mrs. Rowles of Sorosis, Mrs. Burton of West Quadrangle and Mrs. Overton of Betsy Barbour will chap- eron. Kappa Sigma will hold a dance from 9 p.m. to midnght at the chapter house today. Lieut. and Mrs. Cyrus Brewer and Lieut. and Mrs. A. H. At- kinson will be the chaperons. A party will be held by Katharine Pickerill house from 9 p.m. to mid- night today. It will be chaperoned by Miss Dorothy Prauda, Prof. and Mrs. Eggertson and Prof. and Mrs. Norman Nelson. The Law Club will hold a Christ- mas formal from 9 p.m. to midnight at the Law Quadrangle today. Dean and Mrs. Stason and Col. and Mrs. Young will chaperon. Phi Chi will hold a dance from 9 Military Ball To Be In Sports Building;: Favors To Be Taboo Tickets for the annual Military Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, January 22, at the Sports Building will go on sale at ROTC and NROTC Headquarters Wednesday, according to Cadet Col. Charles Thatcher, '43E, and Cadet Lieut. Com. Al Mactier, '44, co-chairmen for the affair. Other members of the central com- mittee will be as follows: Cadet Lieut. Robert Begle, '43, music; Cadet Lieut. Bart Thomson, '44E, and Cadet Maj. Richard L. Cole, '43E, building com- mittee; Cadet Capt. Robert Miars, '43, patrons; and Cadet Maj. John Winters, '43, secretary-treasurer. Basic Students Invited Cadet Lieut. Col. John Stauch, '43, and Cadet Lieut. Comm. Mactier will handle the decoration committee, and Cadet Col. Thatcher will be respon- sible for publicity. Formerly, Military Ball has been open only to advanced corps men, but this year for the first time in its his- tory all members of the ROTC and NROTC, including the basic students, are invited to attend the dance in uniform. In order to keep expenses down in war time, no programs or other favors will be given away at the party. How- ever, the dance will be a colorful af- fair because of the uniforms, and decorations will consist of military equipment, flags and bunting. The proceeds will be divided between the Military Science department, Naval Science department and the Bomber- Scholarship. Date Advanced Ordinarily held in spring, the Ball' has been set ahead this year, because many of the advance corps men are graduating seniors. As it is possible that some basic students may leave at the end of this semester, also, the dance will provide a last get-together and a last chance to relax before exams for many of the members of the two military reserve forces. The orchestra for Military Ball will be announced soon, according to the co-chairmen. p.m. to midnight at the chaptef house today. Dr. M. H. Seevers and Dr. D. J. Bulmer will chaperon. A dance will be held by Sigma Al- pha Epsilon from 9 p.m. to midnight at the chapter house today. Major and Mrs. B. H. Vollrath and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Lagler will be the chap- erons. Stockwell Hall will hold a dance from9 p.m. to midnight today. The chaperons will be Mrs. M. Ray, Mrs. M. Reckemeyer, and Miss Kauf- man. Theta Xi will hold a tea from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. today. Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Basem and Lieut, and Mrs. N. A. Pananides will be the chap- erons. Be A Goodfellow - Acacia announces the recent initia- tion of Howard Spracklin, '43, Wil- liam Clark, '44E, Steward Kingsbury, '45E, and Paul Pospisil, '43. By CAROL COTHRAN All those potential Sonja Henies who can cut any figure from one to eight on ice have the chance to de- velop and display their talents by joining the Figure Skating Club. Headed by Nancy Upson, '44, thej organization meets twice a week at the Coliseum; half the members on. Tuesday and the rest on Wednesday. Nancy, who can write her name quicker on ice than she can on paper, will give general instructions to the group at first and then she will con- centrate on instructing the members individually. Practice for Carnival The group's activities this season will be mainly devoted to practicing for the ice carnival to be given in conjunction with the Ann Arbor Skating Club in the spring. The event will offer opportunities for perform- ing in chorus routines and for ap- pearing in duet or quartet numbers. At the present time, the club has an ample membership, but the addi- tion of a few more women will en- title the group to become a member in full standing of the U.S.F.S.A. 'Translated, this means the United States Figure Skating Association, the national amateur organization. Own Figure Skates The only prerequisite for belong- ing to the club here on campus is to own a pair of figure skates, charac- terized by the wide, rocker-type blades. The ordinary tubular blades are not designed for fancy skating because they are too narrow. Those who are interested in join- ing, but cannot meet on either Tues- day or Wednesday should contact Nancy and make arrangements ac- cordingly. fflARILYfl SHOPPC II light Weight WOOLS t Dressy Afternoon . CREPES DRESSES that will make a special hit at the holiday par- ties back home. 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