11; 1943 TRW ~-MiCHJGAN- DAIY Only 60 Attend Soph Project Mass Mee ting Students Interested in Working At Hospital May Sign Up Late; May Petition for Committee In marked contrast to last semes- ter's turnout of 200 sophomores for hospital volunteer work, were the 60 women students who were present at the mass meeting of the sophomore project held at 4:15 p.m. yesterday at the League. Students of any class who wish to sign up late for this work may do so from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today, tomorrow, or Monday in the lobby of the League. Petitions Distributed The two vacancies on the central committee of the project were not an- nounced at the meeting, but instead petitions were distributed to those interested in filling the positions. Pe- titions may still be obtained at the League by any student who worked last semester, and will be due Monday. Interviewing will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednes- day of next week. Miss Scratch, of the University Hospital, spoke to those women stu- dents present and emphasized the need of volunteer workers. "The nurs- es are waiting patiently for your as- sistance, and asking each day when you will return," Miss Scratch said. Shortage Is Acute She also pointed out that thej American Red Cross Nurses' Service has raised the quota of nurses needed for military service from 1,000 to 3,000 a month, and therefore the shortage in hospitals all over the country is becoming increasingly acute. Thus, she claimed, that not only were vol- unteers needed now, but that there was also a great need for well trained women to take up nursing as a pro- fession. Miss Walsh, who is in charge of all the volunteers at the hospital, and Miss Dahlberg, of the hospital nurs- ing staff, also spoke and commended the students on the splendid job that had been done last semester. Leader in Africa MICHIGAN IS GREAT: Margaret Bourke-White Lauds Experience Gained at Michigan Monroe Smith Table Tennis Matches To B( Capt. Frances Marquis (above) is the commander of the Army aux- iliary unit in North Africa. Her husband is harry Marquis, New York businessman. Frosh 'Swam P' Rushing Booth. "Literally swamped" were the words used to describe the rushing booth in the League lobby yesterday as the freshmen turned out to register, ac- cording to the rushing secretary in charge. Not only that-the registrants pro- duced their report cards, as instruc- ted, with marks averaging well above the minimum requirement of all C s. '.. If yesterday's turnout is any ind- cation, rushing will be a big event this semester, and today should see as large, or even larger, a crowd at the booth between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. in the lobby. The next step in the rushing cere- mony will be for the registrants to go back to the booth between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. tomorrow and between 9 a.m. and noon Saturday to pick up their open-house invitations. 'These get-to- gethers will take place at the sorority houses from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday. and Sunday. Information on the rushing party schedule for the remainder of the week can be obtained at the rushing booth.. Wanted - One Shoe LOWELL, Mass.- (')- A one-leg- ged man has put this question to the local rationing board: "Do I get one or two shoes with my coupon? I wear out one shoe in half the time a two-legged man wears out a pair. Can I use the coupon twice, or do I get two shoes at one time?" The board is looking toward Wash- ington for an answer. By BEA BOUCHARD "I can say that I owe quite a debt of gratitude to the University of Michigan for two reasons," Margaret Bourke-White stated yesterday, "be- cause of the invaluable photographic experience I gained from the Michi- gan Ensian as an undergraduate here, and because of the fact that I studied science." Arriving here her sophomore year from Columbia University, Miss Bourke-White, having had little for- mer practice in photography, found the Ensian workers sympathetic and helpful for a beginner and found in the University campus fine subject material for her work. In the 1923 Ensian, several of her photographs of campus scenes appear in the front pages. Science Is Beneficial Her benefit from scientific study was chiefly that she learned to at- tack a job with zeal and do it thor- oughly. "Above all else, I admire thoroughness and rationality in a person," Miss Bourke-White emphat- ically stated. "A common messenger boy can be admired when he does his work conscientiously and with precise thought." She added that in order to study science, nothing can be accomplished unless it is done thoroughly. Since results are either all right or all wrong, the individual can be kept in constant check with his progress. Michigan Is Ideal That too, she believes, applies to photography, as well as all other fields. If photographic work is not done thoroughly, the results are me- giocre. This, she believes, is the es- sential distinction between a good and an ordinary picture. Equally im- portant, she added, is an exact under- standing of the subject. Because Miss Bourke-White at- tended not only Michigan and Colum- bia but was a graduate of Cornell, Houses Are Invited To Make Surgical Dressings at League An announcement of the house group showing the greatest participa- tion in the surgical dressing unit will be made each week, it was disclosed yesterday by the committee. . The unit will reopen at 1 p.m. today and remain open until 5 p.m. at the League. It will also be open tomorrow during these same hours, and all wo- men students are invited to devote at least two hours to this work either of these days. Up to the present time the house that has had the greatest represen- tation is Alpha Chi Omega with the Kappa Delta house running a close second. The houses that are especially in- vited to' be present today are Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, Zeta Tau Alpha, Betsy Barbour, and zones 3, 4 and 5. she felt qualified to express her opin- ion that Michigan was the ideal uni- versity. Not only is the Midwest more typically American and a definitely desirable environment for a college, but the University is a perfect size for a well-rounded education. Praises WAACs One can have contacts with many types of people and at the same time find size to be no handicap in picking, special friends. She believes life at Michigan is broadening and the Uni-' versity as a whole is an entity. When the conversation switched to the subject of women in the armed services, Miss Bourke-White viewed the hope that more women of Univer- sity calibre would realize the oppor- tunities open to them in the WAAC and the WAVES. The work she has seen performed by these women is not only invaluable to the war effort but is extremely interesting and stim- ulating from the individual point of view. Nurse's, A ides To Aid Army Nurse's aides have a new job to do -work in Army general and station hospitals. Mrs. Walter Lippmann, national di- rector of the Volunteer Nurse's Aide Corps, has announced that the service of Red Cross volunteer nurse's aides will be extended to many general and station hospitals at the request of Major Gen. James C. Magee, Army Surgeon General. The request, marking the second Red Cross Volunteer Service Corps to enter Army hospitals-the first were the Gray Ladies of the Hospital and Recreation Corps who have served since the first World War-came as a result of the highly satisfactory ac- complishments of these volunteer workers in civilian and Veterans Ad- ministration hospitals. The new plan, Mrs. Lippmann em- phasized, will not interfere in any way with the nurse's aide program in civilian hospitals, where the vol- unteers have and will continue to re- ceive the greater part of their train- ing. Only aides who have completed 150 hours of pledged service in addi- tion to the eighty hours of required training will be assigned to Army hos- pitals. At this time last year, six months after the nurse's aide program was started, 6,000 women had enrolled in classes and had trained in 500 hospi- tals. That Victorian Touch RENO, Nev.- (A)- There's no more red tape connected with Reno divor- ces. It's because of the war, County Clerk Elwood Beemer explains. Scarlet dyes are needed elsewhere, so decrees now are bound with tape colored with a dash of faint lavender, W ill Lect ur-Questions pertaining to the House ps omews tournaent. I' ectu and all-campus table tennis tourna- Those, who have been unable t ments, to be held this month and play due to lack of a ping-pong table O n ostelinnext, will be answered at a mass may begin to practice and play o: meeting at 4:15 p.m. today in the their matches at the WAB or at Bar Students and townspeople inter- Fencing Room of Barbour gym, ac- bour gym, where two tables are avail ested in the Youth Hosteling Move- Icording to Marcia Sharpe, '45, chair- able. Equipment is free at both o man of the WAA event. these places. ment are invited to hear Monroe Anyone interested in the sport is Smith, national director of the move- invited to attend; and dormitories, A meeting will be held at 4 p.m. ment, at 8 p.m. today in the Lounge league houses and sororities are es- Friday at the Student Publications of the Women's Athletic Building. pecially asked to send a representa- Building for all eligible freshmen Mr. Smith will lecture and show tive. These houses may begin immedi- and upperclassmen interested in movies of different phases of the ately to play off their inter-house joining the Women's Editorial movement and of his travels. On a matches, in order to determine a win- Staff of The Daily. tour of the Great Lakes region, he ner to represent them in the all-cam- will be accompanied by Justine Cline, tc't ) >) t----- - -= -=-t regional director of this division of the national organization. The Youth Hosteling Movement, which is especially popular among the college students, is well-known throughout England and America. The philosophy of the movement has been to learn more about the coun- V try. "Members of a group generally travel by foot or on bicycles. Sponsored by the departments of * .. Physical Education for both men and FOR MY the Men's Outing Club and Dorothy Lundstrom, '45, chairman of the WAA Outing Group, are planning for the V meeting. Representatives of the Graduate Outing Club, and towns- I people interested in recreational ac- tivities are especially invited to at- tend. Tickets for the informal tradi- STERLING SILVER JEWELRY, hand made tional Pay-Off Dance, given by o 0 HANKIES Mortar Board, are on sale from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today, and 0 PEARL BEADS from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow in * NECKWEAR the main lobby of the League. They are also available from any .0 LINGERIE, matching sets member of Mortar Board. 0 TUBBIES, bedroom slippers Lieut. Eleanor Morrison, WAAC - recruiting officer for the Detroit 0 PRINCE MATCHABELLI SETS area, and volunteers from the local 0 GLOVES OCD will give information about the requirements for joining the WAAC's from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. BUY BONDS today and tomorrow in the League. Mona Heath, '44, chairman of the booth committee for the u- ior Girls' Project, will hold a meet- ing at 4:15 p.m. today at the rU I League for all women who were on her committee last semester and 218 South Statc Open Monday 'til 8:30 are interested in being on it this 2emestpr.d( : semester.tt} 'Ma} Where Are My Shoes?' Is Plea of Coeds By MARJORIE HALL Now is the perfect time to rejuve-, nate those dirty, dilapidated, and dis- tinctly ancient saddle shoes that your mother made you put down in the cel- lar a year ago. As shoes join the coffee and sugar ranks, your thoughts fly to a mental note-taking of the shoes on hand in your closet. Don't stop there-go through your shoe wardrobe and dig out any and all footgear that could be repaired, and whisk it off to a re- liable repair store immediately. If you have any shoes left after sending your old ones out for repair, be sure to keep shoe trees in them to preserve their shape. Watch out for them when they're wet, for you'd be surprised how easily they catch fire if left near heat. Here's something new! If your suedes become soiled fmtm wearing them under galoshes, they should be sandpapered. But it is best to have a dependable shoe repair store perform this operation. Oil for Comfort Another helpful hint to shoe upkeep on the home front is to soak the sole in an oil for leather overnight. The longer wear and greater foot conuAort achieved by this protective care is worth the very small expense and effort entailed. Sprinkling powder in your shoes in the morning or at nighttime helps to dry perspiration. Dampness will curl the inner sole uncomfortably. By all means don't neglect the polish can, for active use in that field is one of the first and most important rules of conscientious shoe upkeep. With the shoes you have on hand kept in good repair, you should feel no "pinch" from the unexpected ra- tioning. Kappa Alpha Theta To Have Victory Garden in Spring Starting this spring, members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will be found hoeing and weeding in that po tionof their backyard which they are now planning on turning into an extensive victory garden. Each member of the sorority has volunteered to give one hour a week 10 working in the garden, and the project will get under way as soon as weather permits. A scientific study will be made, for, according to presi- dent Virginia Morse, '43, the project is no idle whim. Outside help will be needed for nlnuingn n nt r pav wrk-but E i I I i 'I Ti ; , , ') - THOROUGHBRED CLASICS . as featured in MADEMOISELLE, HARPER'S BAZAAR, TOWN & COUNTRY, VOGUE i" ,... .;;.. .r . . : " :'\ ' r ;ii:>. : y+ x3''t i:'~ ;,: _' ''o,}" Bermuda Knit Sweat:ers, 100 wool, new Spring colors. digans. Slipovers and Car- Plaid and plaii skirts, gabardine and men's wear flannel. Many ( 00%> wool. Consistently classic styling and thorough- bred character of Sportleigh Classic Coats give you everything-extra quality, longer service and perennial smartness. So choose a Sportleigh classic-made for "duration durability" . . . always ready. for-action-anywhere, anytime. Left: The Balmacaan in natural wool and camel's hair only, 22.95 Above: The Roamer Casual in 100% wool downy Spring Har- rod tweed, 25.00 Tailored and dressy blouses, long or short sleeves, crepes, jerseys and rayons. I STORE HOURS: Monday 12 noon to 8:30 - Tues. thru Sat. 9:30 to 6:00 I I ff : AV "Y U CCVP 111"d 44144;elv C; "c