i 4 1 Cl.C1 ll}lj.y< i , ' Ly' \ i f' y. .. .- .{. a y }J J 1 \ A New Year S Eve Dance Tickets To Be Sold After Vacation 0 Deadline To Be December 30 For AII Sales Bond, Stamp Drive To Begin; Warsages Sold At Special Booth; Proceeds To Bomber Scholars Tickets for "'42 Finale," the Man- power Corps' huge New Year's Eve dance at the Intramural Building, will be on sale after vacation-for one day only. Wednesday, December 30, is the deadline for obtaining "'42 Finale" tickets which may be bought at the League, Union and Manpower Corps Office at 1009 Angell Hall. No tickets will be sold at the door, declared Bob Oddy, publicity and tickets chairman for the dance, "and only 1,500 tickets have been issued." Promises Atmospheric Pressure The dance, which will be held from 9 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. will be informal- both as far a§ dress is concerned and atmosphere, or rather atmospheric pressure. It is reported that enough confetti and streamers have been or- dered to put quite a strain on the capacity of the I-M Building. Bill Sawyer has ordered special instru- ments for his band loud enough to be heard over the horns and other noisemakers which the Manpower Corps will provide for all merry- makers. Only New Year's Eve dance on this campus to be followed by eight- o'clock classes, "'42 Finale" will still have "plenty of holiday spirit-prob- ably all we can take care of, remarked a Manpower Corps representative. Warsages To Be Sold The dance will launch. a war bond and stamp drive by selling warsages at a specially constructed booth at the I-M Building; and proceeds from the dance will go to the Bomber- Scholarship fund. Identification cards and $2.20 are' required for a ticket. Identification cards will not be required for admit- tance to the dance, thus allowing students to accompany guests not en- rolled in the University. 'We'd Like To, But.-..' American women who wish to vol- uhteer for seriice inEngland may as well set their minds at rest, accord- ing to a statement by attaches of the British Consulate here. "Much as Britain would like to employ the services of these American women volunteers," it was pointed out, "the United States State Depart- ment has rules which make it impos- sible. In no instance has such a volun- teer been able to get a visa, so far as we know here." Results Listed For Voluntary WAA Program Here are the facts as to the success of the WAA Voluntary Physical Fit- ness program, in which 2634 under- graduate women are expected to par-' ticipate. Statistics show that for the week ending Dec. 5, a total of 1,475 women took part in the exercises. Out of that number 468 were sorority wom- en, 415 league house members and 592 participated in all the dormi- tories. The total increased to 1,523 for the next week ending Dec. 12, but this, was due entirely to a large increase in dormitory participation, as both the sororities and league houses showed a decrease. The increase to 859 in the dormi- tories was due to better organization' and the division of roll-taking into floors. Sororities for this second week slipped to 350, and league houses to 319. According to Helen Willcox, '44, chairman of the "Invasion on the Home Front" chart, the drop was partially due to the fact that many houses failed to turn in their reports on time. She stated that participa- tion records must be turned in by Saturday noon at the latest in order to be recorded for the week on the progress chart in the League. Reports for the past week are to be handed in by athletic managers and leaders at the next leadership meeting to be held at 4 p.m. Friday, Jan. 1, at Barbour Gym. Coeds At Michigan State Will Adjust Studies For War By The Associated Press EAST LANSING- Coeds of Michi- gan State College were asked to ad- just their college studies to learn skills which might relieve industrial manpower shortages. Dean Lloyd C. Emmons of the lib- eral arts division said the college was offering a series of specialized courses designed to "give women students the minimum amount of training we think necessary to prepare them to fill some of the jobs industry is ask- ing us to fill." Typical series were accounting- office-management-business machine use, special psychology courses for personnel managers, and chemistry for industrial laboratory work. "We are not asking young women to change their life plans," he said, "but to adjust their studies in such a way that they can fill a place in in- dustry during the emergency." Eggnogger's Delight! / AND GOOD-LOOKING,, TOO! Experts Choose Gloria Callen As Outstanding Sportswoman Newberry Women Give Annual Play Helen Newberry Residence gave its traditional Christmas play yesterdayI Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Shiel. I By The Associatted Press NEW YORK- By an overwhelm- ing, if sometimes confused vote, Glor- ia Callen, the record-smashing back- stroke swimmer from Nyack, N.Y., has been chosen as the outstanding figure in women's sports in 1942. Sports editorsparticipating in the annual Associated Press poll cast more than half their ballots for the Nyack school girl who holds 31 na- tional swimmingrecords. Sometimes they stopped after that single vote and 15 who recorded their choices on other sports subjects by-passed the task of selecting the leading sports- women. Eleven others failed to name a sec- ond choice and 25 in all didn't cast a third-place vote. Several prominent women athletes who were out of com- petition this year also were mentioned in the voting iPolls 135 Points Good looking Miss Callen, however, polled a total of 135 points from 67 sports writers who voted. Of these 38 named her for first place, eight for second and five for third. . Pauline Betz, of Los Angeles and Winter Park, Fla., National women's tennis champion, took second place by a nine-point, margin over Betty Jameson, of San Antonio, Tex., win- ner of two major golf events in a year when there was no national chain- pionship tourney. Miss Betz polled 67 points on the basis of three for first place, two for second and one for third as 21 voters made her their second choice. Miss Jameson, who drew 13 first-place votes, had a 58- point total. Only one other woman athlete even came close to the three leaders in theI scoring. Louise Brough, the Beverly Hills (Calif.) girl who compiled a brilliant string of tennis victories and who was runner-up to Miss Betz in the National championships, polled 26 points. Alice Marble Mentioned Two first-place votes apiece went to Helen Crlenkovich, of San Fran- cisco, National fancy-diving cham- pion, and Alice Marble, former ama- teur and professional tennis star whose 1942 athletic activities were limited to her work on the National physical fitness program. before an assemblage of guests in- The time - honored play, having cluding Pres. and Mrs. Alexander been given for 27 years for Newberry Ruthven, Dean Alice Lloyd, Mrs. women, is a melodrama concerning Henry Joy, Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Saint George, who killed the dragon. 3rROOK INS SHE L WISHES YOU A MERRY CH R I STMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR _ _ _ m ERR Y ClRIS'M rTUDET I' /' , Y F , ' " i A : {.' \y' "+ S~ I rt Iq Sure Is! SHOP .ound the iner on State Steet P. S. We'llI be glIad to see Army Finds Place For Recruits Who Can Neither Read Nor Write By CHARLOTTE HAAS Not only is the Army making room for such well-educated men as will be flocking from our campus in the near future, but it has also found a place for the illiterates. Up until recently the many Americans who can neither read nor write his mother tongue and the "foreign natives" who cannot speak or write English, were classified as unfit for military duty. Now, however, they are being given visual classification tests which the Army has designed to evaluate a man's common sense, rath- er than his working knowlelge of ABC's. Moreover, the results of these tests have proven that such men make excellent soldiers. Tests Determine Mentality Americans who have never learned I you back New Years .. . even i f YOU won t be! p =-- 1 AT, FIRST lirili r re A V e ryv Merry AND TO INSURE CHRISTMAS FOR YEARS TO COME . . . Ru W ar/ond J THE CAMPUS SHOP h .1mmpammmaeausettesnat the language pick up military com- mands and conversational English within a few weeks; others who speak English but can neither read nor write it, and therefore cannot pass the Army General Classification Test, often pass this new test and thus find a valuable place for themselves in the armed forces. The purpose of the tests is to ob- tain the largest proportion of men possessing sufficient mental ability to master basic military training, and so the tests are given in pantomime or instruction through facial expres- sion, gesture or signs. Gestures Used For instance, one test panel is made up of four circular objects and a square. By means of gestures, charts, pointers and the repetition of a few key words, it is explained to the men that they are to cross out the dis- similar object. There are 60 panels in all and they increase in complexity to a point where it is a sure test of a man's common sense and ability to think, even though he cannot readtor write. The results of these tests have prov- en that such men can be used to good advantage in the Army, and often need little more specific in- struction than the ordinary recruit. Wife Is Given Gate As Man Drives Off COFFEYVILLE, Kan. -(P)- Po- lice records explain it this way: A man rushed into headquarters and said his wife had been riding in his truck and she must have fall- en out-and would the police please help find her? The officers learned she'd climbed out to open a farm gate, and her husband had driven absent-minded- ly on without her. N~%UTS for your l N-- k V.'V -a LEON HENDERSON tells AP reporter Jack Bell in OPA headquarters.A SECRETARY STIMSON tells AP reporter Ed Bomar in the War Department offices. ;' . +e.d- ;; £1 Cheery Christmas Greeting .. . SECRETARY HULL tells AP reporter Wade Werner as State Department aide looks on.- DONALD NELSON tells AP reporters Sterling Green, left, and William Needham. A London newspaper calls The Associated Press' letter to Joseph Stalin, which produced one of the most important documents of the war, a stroke of "journalistic genius." Henry C. Cassidy, chief of the Moscow bureau of The AP, who wrote the, letter, would call it just plain reporting--going straight to the source as AP men are trained to do everywhere. To get dependable news AP men go to the fop, whether it's in Moscow or Washington, on important war stories or on the smallest item in the dav's resort. And news sources Vi i;?< - m I