-- - -w-v- -- - - -. - - --~ JL in x, 46 IPOMM . . .... ............. anhelenic, Soph Dean's Staff To Entertain Senior Women Rendering her version of "Car- men", Dean Alice Lloyd will be one of the chief attractions of Junior Stunt Night, to be held for the bene- fit of senior women at 7:30 p.m. March 24 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dean Lloyd's staff will also assist in the stunt. Dr. Margaret Bell and Miss Hart- wig will provide another unique per- formance, with Dr. Bell doing a solo dance in one part of the program. All other details will not be revealed to the seniors until the night of the show. The junior women have been given permission to hold this traditional Seniors may rent their caps and gowns for this night at Moe's Sport Shop, and are urged to ob- tain them sometime this week. Previously caps and gowns were rented at the League, but the practice - has been abolished this year. affair because it will take the shape of a benefit performance for Chi- nese relief this year. The entire downstairs of the The- atre will be reserved for senior wom- en, who will all be garbed in caps and gowns, and will have their usual hour of fun before the junior stunts. This will include skits from last year's JGP, and other traditional ceremonies. The wishing well is one conven- tion. Engaged women eat lemons, married women blow out flames of candles, and each non-engaged sen- ior will be forced to throw a penny in the wishing well for each year she has been unengaged The Ann Arbor Library Club will hold a meeting at 7:45 p.m. to- day in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Building on the topic, "South America and the Future of Libraries." Prof. Cecil J. Mc- Hale of the Department of Li- brary Sciences will preside. The board of experts are Car- men Andraca of Peru, Caroline Escalante of Mexico, Orlando Gonzales of Chile, Jose Perdomo of Colombia and Jorge Simonelli of Argentina, all University stu- dents. A committee from the Refer- ence Department of the Univer- sity Library, with Miss Mary Roll- man as chairman, is planning the social hour after the pro- gram. NEW? LOVELY! LASTING! V", t 4 / fU 4 .>.t ~ >4 (. / Hosteling Qroup Will Take Trip To Local Farm A mixed hostel trip to Saline Val- ley Farms will leave at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, from Hill Auditorium, Dor- othy Lundstrom, co-chairman of the affair announced. Anyone interested in this project is welcome to join the group, which will spend the night at the farms and then return Sunday. A small fee will be charged for meals and accommodations and each hosteler is urged to supply his own blankets for the occasion. Square dancing will be featured among the evening's entertainments. Further information can be secured by contacting either Miss Lundstrom or the other co-chairman, Dan Saul- son, '44. Alpha Epsilon Phi announces the recent installation of the following officers: Barbara Sternfels, '44, dean* Phyllis Present, '44, sub-dean; Martha Spector. '44, treasurer; Marle Gordon, '44, secretary; Bernice Ga- lansky, '44, rushing chairman, and Marjorie Wolfson, '45, social chair- man..I Women Smocks, To Fold Prc Wear Blouses Dressings ject Petitioning Twenty Positions Open to Women Starts Today Women will be permitted to leave a smock, shirt of blouse at the sur- gical dressings unit this week, which will be open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow in the game room of the League. Marjorie Storkan, '43, chairman of, the project, announced that this con- cession is bing made because some coeds still do not realize that sweaters alone cannot possibly be worn to do this type of work. Any cotton gar- ment, worn over the sweater, is per- missible, however. A head-dress is also essential. For women who do not own a regular surgical dressings hat, scarfs and ker- chiefs are recommended. The houses especially invited to attend today are: Alpha Gamma Del- ta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Helen Newberry. Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Epsilon Phi and Betsy Barbour are especially urged to attend tomorrow. Next Thursday one of the houses of this group will receive recognition as hav- ing been the best participant for the week. - /4 re/ienht W4" Ar tICS a , V "We set 'em up, and you knock 'em down" That's the latest WAA motto, and naturally we're referring to the bowling project. Yep, it may sound fantastic, but it's true that members of WAA are stepping into the shoes of pinboys in order to make it possible for women students to bowl for the old reduced price--that is one game for the price of a couple of candy bars. Alleys are located down at the WAB, of course. Best of all, however, gals, is that you can bring your boy friends along for a few lines. Non-students may bowl at the WAB also, and the alleys are always open at the following times: from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. and ' p.m. to 9 p.m. every weekday. Week-end "strikers" will find the alleys available from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays. So hold your breath before saying that women can't take it, because "WAA's" are getting to be expert setter-uppers, and we dare you to make ten strikes in a row-we dare you, so take it up! If you haven't been to a "Rec-Rally" yet, well, as the old saying goes, "you don't know what you're missing." The gym upstairs and down be- comes one mad gallery, and the halls are full of screams and laughter. We guarantee that you can't possibly become bored here. Try your hand at one game, when you get tired there are many others to satisfy your moods, and loads of congenial people to play with. Due to the success of the first two rallies, and the obvious demand for something in the way of co-recreational activity, the series of "Rec-Rallies" will be continued, according to Helen Willcox. Plans are now being made for another affair in about two weeks, so watch for the announcement of the date. Now a few bits of gossip from our notebook: Contestants in the table tennis and badminton tournaments, here's an ultimatum to play off your matches by the end of this week absolutely, positively!! Concluding the season, the Figure Skating Club has been invited to skate with the Ann Arbor Senior Club Sunday. Officers for next year will be elected at the regular meeting Friday. Winning over the wires sounds like Mandrake the Magician's activities, but this time it was Rifle Club, which won from Wheaton and Drexel Insti- tute. Sadder news to compensate for the "gladder" is that Michigan's team lost to Penn States. Mid-semester calling-so long. Junior Panhellenic Delegates Will Interview for Council Wednesday Through Friday Five positions on the Panhellenic Council will be open for petitioning beginning today and continuing through Tuesday, Virginia Morse, '43, president of Panhellenic, an- nounced. Petitioning is open to any junior delegate to Panhellenic who has had at least four months' experience in the association as a delegate from her sorority. Interviewing for the offices will take place Wednesday through Friday in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Five Positions Are Open Positions that are open are: presi- dent, vice-president, recording secre- tary, rushing secretary, and treasurer. The duties of the president, as are the usual duties of the head of an organization, are concerned with act- ing as general overseer and leader. The recording secretary takes min- utes at the meetings and is responsi- ble for all correspondence. The rush- ing secretary is obliged to keep com- plete records of pledgings and initia- tions. The treasurer of the organi- zation is. responsible for collecting dues from the sorority houses on campus, for paying bills, and for keeping an expense account of all money spent by Panhellenic. Fin- ally, the vice-president will preside in the absence of the president and will serve in an advisory capacity for all Panhellenic activities. Two Annual Functions During the year, the activities of the organization are numerous. Two of its major functions are the annual Banquet and Ball, the former for wel- coming the new pledges to Panhel- lenic, the latter a formal dance given by all sorority women on campus. This past year, Panhellenic has been concerned with active support on its part to defense projects and drives. This semester, the organiza- tion has redoubled the all-out-for- defense policy with its curtailment of needless expenses at sorority-house dances, with the elimination of dec- orations and programs for the Ball, scheduled March 27, and with its re- cent sponsorship of the Blod Bank drive for donations from women on campus. Installations of the five officers will be announced at the annual In- stallation function, according to Miss Morse. ArmyHospitals May Be Calling -Nurse's Aides According to an announcement re- cently made by George S. Van Schiick, volunteer nurse's.aides may now be assigned to Army hospitals, under an agreement reached by the Office of Civilian Defense, the Ameri- can Red Cross and the Army. Major Gen. James C. Magee, sur- geon general of the Army, has re- quested the services of volunteer nur- ses' aides in Army general and station hospitals, said Mr. Van Schaick. The nurses' aides will continue to receive their training in civilian hospitals and only upon the request of the com- manding officer of the institution Will they be assigned to an Army hos- pital. In order to be assigned to a mili- tary institution, a nurse's aide must be a citizen of the United States or of another of the United Nations, and must have completed the re- quired training and 150 hours of pledged service. They must also be willing to give a "sufficient number of hours each week to make their service worthwhile" added Mr. Van Schaick. Restaurants Notice Rationing Changes A great change will be noticed by many people as an outcome of food rationing in this country, according to Ray Fling, executive secretary of the Michigan Restaurant and Cater- er's Association, which represents over five hundred restaurants in Michigan. Restaurant eaters have already no- ticed the omission of tomato juice and canned peas from their accus- tomed places on menues, and the foodstuff supply of restaurants has been cut down 50%, says Mr. Fling. Six hundred eating places had col- lapsed in Michigan before rationing started because of the labor shortage, Freshman Support Is Asked For Important League Work As Volunteer Hospital Helpers, Petitioning for positions on the central committee of sophomore pro- ject will be held from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today through Tuesday, it was an- nounced yesterday by Natalie Mat- tern, '45, general chairman. Interviewing will be held from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. next week by the Judiciary Council. Only second sem- ester freshmen are eligible, and fif- teen positions in all will be open. A general chairman and 14 committee memberscare needed to replace the Present committee in guiding the student hospital volunteer services next year. Dependable Coeds Wanted Dependable, hard-working women. are needed, to, organize and plan the project for the .coming year, Miss Mattern stated.Captains will be chosen for each day, of the week and will work under Miss Walsh, head of the volunteer service at University .Hospital. The new committee is being chosen early so that it can gain experience by working with the old committee the rest of the semester. The women will become familiar with the organi- zation, of t ie volunteer service, and will be able to take over the project next year with as little inconvenience as possible. Positions Are Responsible The central committee will be re- sponsible for getting women inter- ested in working at the hospital, and for seeing that all the positions are filled. Elections Announced The following elections were re- cently announced. Alpha Epsilon Phi announces the recent installation of the following officers: Barbara Sternfels, '44, dean; Phyllis Present, '44, sub-dean; Mar- tha Spector, '44, treasurer-; Marle Gordon, '44, secretary; Bernice Ga- lansky, '44, rushing chairman, and Marjorie Wolfson, '45, social chair- man. Alpha Omega elected their new of- ficers. Raymond B. Robins was elected president; Samuel Krohn, '44D, vice-president; Alex L. Wein- berg, '44D, secretary; Philip Hertz, '44D, treasurer; Harold Rosen, '44, and Kenneth B. Small, '44D, Stew- ards; Burton Simon, '44D, house manager, and Morton Lesser, '44D, sergeant-at-arms. Alpha Xi Delta has elected Anne Maloney, '45P, president; Pat Kam, merer, '45Ed, vice-president; Virginia Dodd, '45, secretary, and Dorothy Callahan, '45, treasurer. Donald B. Howell, '44, president; Carl F.,Reed, '44,.vice-president; and Lloyd A. Rojgine, '46, are the recently elected officers of Trigon. Many Women Disturbed BY QUESTION OF POST-WAR JOBS "If I join some branch of the women's reserves now, what will my chances be after the war of stepping into the career I am preparing for in college?" This is a question disturbing a great many women who are toying with the idea of joining the WAACs, the WAVES, the SPARs or the Wom- en's Reserves of the Marine Corps. It is only natural to think about the problem, and one cannot be blamed for worrying about jobs in the future. But the main thing to think about now is that the armed forces need women so that men may be released for active duty all over the world. The need at this very moment is great: there is a job to do, and women must not shirk their responsibilities. At a time of so-called "crisis" it seems selfish to concern one's self only with thoughts about jobs after the war is won. However, many employers have already expressed their willingness to accept women who have served their country well in time of need. What's more, the training received in the armed forces will be carried over into private industry, opening up fields for special service in many types of work. The fields of work in which uniformed women are now employed are expanding fields-many of them the results of wartime'needs-but still fields which will remain wide open for years to come. New industries have cropped up as the result of war, and after they are converted to peacetime requirements, as so many of them will be. these same industries will con- tinue to be serviced by the women who were the original workers. - No implication that one should throw her college education out the window to join the WAACs or the WAVES is meant. Education, too, is vitally needed, and women must get all they can. But when college days are over they must also realize that they can be of the greatest service to their country by taking their places on the war fronts. - Marjorie Hall cc.eddrngs ~.and Ilgagements Dr. and Mrs. Luther T. Purdom an- nounce the marriage of their daugh- ter, Veitch, '42, and Corp. Robert Staley Reinhart, '38Grad, of Camp Edwards, Mass. Mrs. Reinhart is a member of Col- legiate Sorosis, and Mortar Board and Zeta Phi Eta, honorary sorori- ties. She worked on The Daily staff and with the Michigan Repertory Players, Play Production, Children's Theatre, Junior Girls' play commit- tee and the- League's theatre arts committee. She was on the makeup staff for a Michigan Union opera. Corp. Reinhart received his bache- lor's degree from the University in 1937 and a master's degree in speech the following year. He is a member of Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity and participated in Play Production. * * * Mrs. Gleima Richards of Ann Arbor has announced the engage- ment of her daughter, Dorothea, to Henry W. Malec, '40, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Malec of Am- sterdam, N.Y. The wedding will be In June.- Miss Richards is a graduate of Ann Arbor High School and Michi- gan State Normal College in Ypsi- Ianti. Mr. Malec is at present in his junior year at the medical school of Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wis. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Clad W. Wood of -carsdale, N.Y., announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Nancy Hunter, '43, to Dr. James A. Johnson, '43M, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson, of Empire, Mich. Miss Wood, who is completing her senior year at the University, is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Dr. Johnson is a graduate of Notre Dame, and of the University of Mich- igan medical school, where he is af- filiated with Nu Sigma Nu, medical fraternity. He is now in the depart- ment of surgery at the University Hospital. The wedding will take place in the fall. Comm. and Mrs. John C. Thom of New Orleans, La., have an- nounced the recent marriage of their daughter, Margot, '42, to Ens. Alfred H. Piel, USN, '42, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Piel of Indianapolis, ]nd. Miss Thom is affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Ens. Piel was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity where he served as presi- dent in 1942. He was a member of the varsity squad of the football team and Michigamua, honorary society. The Piels are now living at the U.S. Naval Air Station at Jacksonville, Fla. - ___ - - ------ ----------------------.--------- ,4 4iuit f"tae Ca)opu4(L10 'p614ticate4i JAP .k4lv / ii 76 suit that satisfies the modern, young sophisticate Patterned with a stripe in a choice of colors and trimmed with tricky button- holes, buttons, and pockets. Sizes 9 to 17. \ AF Dixie S 0 P S, -I co 224 South Main Street We Invite You to Use Our Charge Account Facilities PAY CHECKS CASHED FREE a p Amu +-i* rat ro-n I C)STLJUAA You'll love the fit and flattery of dainty SONORA hosiery. 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