Plans Include Mass Exercises As the chief event of the "Fun, Fitness Field Day" planned to cul- minate the women's physical fitness program, five mass exercises by all sororities, league house zones and dormitories and two individual ex- ercises by each group will be pre- sented at 4 p.m. Saturday at the WAB and Palmer Field. After the judges have announced the daily exercise winners in the campus - wide drive for increased sports activity, mass relays, dodge ball and other games will be held. The last event on Palmer Field will be a lengthy snake dance in which everyone will participate. Representatives from the Ann Ar- bor high schools will attend the Field Day.a 17 Dressings Unit Invites Houses' Houses that have been especially invited to attend the Surgical Dress- ing Unit sometime between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. today include Alpha Omi- cron Pi, Delta Gamma, Alpha Xi Delta, Jordan Hall, and Alumnae House. Special guests for tomorrow are Theta Phi Alpha, Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Delta Pi, Martha Cook, and Adelia Cheever. Special instruction will be given to those students who have not rolled bandages previously. Cotton blous- es or smocks are required for this work, and students have also been requested not to wear chipped nail polish. The unit will probably be closed before finals. ----, r i f Sweet/ 6 Cetera By NANCY GROBERG There wasn't any question when we left the dorm this morning about the fact that this time spring meant business. The man who served us our coffee looked as if he were going to take a running jump out into the air any minute, and we sat there and prayed that he'd give us our breakfast before he did. Our philosophy class had that faraway look in its collective eye, and when we got to history lecture our professor was sitting on a table, staring at the ceiling. All of which goes to show you that the fact that spring is probably here poses a very definite set of problems. We do not propose to solve them-only to list them-cautiously. In the first place, how many courses are there that mix with this sort of weather? Only two that we can think of--philosophy and Eng- lish-and they don't mix very well. For example, who wants to slave over a test tube in a building that smells like a refuge for mummies, when he could be out smelling the crocuses? Who wants to identify bones in a laboratory? Who wants to trace a historical trend when he could be out making history himself in the sweet spring air? It's a case of Back to Nature vs. Back to Books. Then there's the matter of study halls. They've lost that "please- conform-to-the-academic-atmosphere" sort of thing. The chances are that tonight the noise on the first floor of the library will sound like a train coming into a station. The rustle of spring is getting so loud you can't even hear yourself think. And you know what Chaucer always says-"Whanne that Aprille,. the droughte of March hat perced to the roote . . . thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages . . ." He probably has the right idea-come spring and people want to go on pilgrimages all over the place. For in- stance, we know some people who make daily pilgrimages all during April and May-to the Arboretum. And take our case-we'd like to make an immediate pilgrimage to New York City. No doubt there are people like that all over campus-dying to go on pilgrimages to some place or other. And why not? A little trip is a good thing once in a while. In the face, of all this, we are obviously quite helpless. These are try- ing times, and any genuine impulse to commune with the green grass and blue sky should not be smothered. The ethical aspect of it, however-i.e., to cut or not to cut, to study or not to study-is up to the individual. If you think you know your work and can get much more out of a solitary walk, then sacrifice the class and get down to the real job of understanding na- ture. If, on the other hand, you're way behind and are naturally not going to catch up via a mere sixty-minute session, you'd be a fool to wilt in a classroom when you could be outside, studying in the fresh air. These con- siderations leave you quite a wide choice as to what to do. We do not, of course, set ourselves up as an authority in this. Indi- vidual cases must differ with the individual professor and the indi- vidual course. It's just that we got to thinking about the problem and decided that it was something we'd all have to think out. Maybe a fresh air seminar would be nice-then we could all work on it together. 15,000Now On Active Duty I n Reserves -rdo $Dear Editor, It was recently announced by the IHOPE The Daily and a certain Third Naval District Headquarters private too cowardly to reveal his that fifteen thousand women are name, are proud of themselves. If now on active duty in the Women's you set out to arouse the anger and Reserves of the Navy, Coast Guard absolute disgust of several hundredE and Marines, coeds, you certainly succeeded. The Navy pointed out that less These coeds worked hard and than a year ago the Waves alone spent a lot of money to show the were planned with a complement of soldiers a good time, and the ma- 11,000 and they now have 14,000 in jority of soldiers enthusiastically training or doing Navy jobs, with agreed that they did a darn good others awaiting orders. The Marine job of it. And the soldiers are Corps Women's Reserve has sworn still coming back. What better in 1,100 women in its first month, sign of approval? and the SPARS number 1,750. The Naval Training School for B UT you pick a private, the chronic The avalTraiing choo for complainer, and, attempting to Women's Reserves in the Bronx, tak-beovelandractattentin la en over from Hunter College, is the be navel and attract attention, play primary indoctrination center for enlisted WAVES, SPARS and Marine Reserves. The number of special training schools to relieve men for sea duty has risen to nineteen. Recruits are needed by the WAVES, SPARS, and Marines, said the Third Naval District, as the success of wo- men in shore jobs has led to the ex- tension of their duties in various fields. The nineteen training schools in- elude one in Detroit where the wo- men learn gunnery for instruction duty in this field by the use of "syn- thetic devices." They learn to oper- ate Link trainers which are used in instructing aviators in instrument flying at the Naval Air Station in Atlanta._ up his opinion. You have the nerve to give the impression that his opin- ion is a representative one. Our dorm has given two huge par- ties, and for every soldier you can find that didn't have a good time, I can find you ten that did. Besides infuriating the coeds, you have also annoyed the many soldiers who did have fun at our parties, and whom you represented in your one private as not only being ungrateful, impo- lite, but hypocritical. In closing, may I say that I hope your soldier gets KP for the rest of his life. He'll probably get along much better with the potatoes than with anyone else. -Anne Kelsey Singer Letters to the Editor tS sugear n Spice' Slucks Set-up 7,95 For work or play . * * smooth rayon gabar- dine "in-or-out" shirt plus trim-fitting slacks ... exceptionally well-tailored .. misses' sizes . . . have it in Brown Green Navy There will be an important Panhellenic meeting at 4:00 p.m. today in the League. It is im- perative that the meeting be well represented because rushing plans for next fall will be discussed and adopted. Also, there will be a dis- cussion of plans for next year's Panhellenic War Program. Sophomore orientation advisers for next year who missed yester- day's meeting are to meet at 4:45 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the League, *5 * * All sorority house presidents are asked to bring the World Stu- dent Service Fond worldi banks to the meeting today. Be sure that the name of each house is in- cluded so that results can be tal- lied. Women students who would be interested in taking care of chil- dren in private homes during afternoons and evenings, at a nominal rate, should contact Sue Sims, '44, head of child care, at 2-5618. lI nr. ti A mercerized two-piece print with a dashingly bold plaid pattern in tones of red and blue. Sizes 9-15 . . . $4.95 Other dresses in glazed chintz, chambray, and linen. Sizes 9-15, 10-20, and 14'/2-22f2. Students of 'Lost Days of '33' On Usual Saturday Night Date { It is a Saturday night in Ann Ar- bor, annum 1933, and Bill is waiting for Molly, his best girl, to come down for their date. There's nothing very remarkable about Bill. - He wears gray flannel trousers, cut rather full, wing-tip brogues and a tweed jacket and he smokes a briar. Here comes Molly now! She's real- ly dressed to the nines in her new spring outfit. She's wearing a hat, (honestD, a neat little number in pastel felt shallow crown and a brim which dips sharply over her fore- head, putting one of her eyes out of active service. Her new swagger coat has big leg-of-mutton sleeves and beneath it her slender silk skirt hangs just nine inches above the soles of her pointed-toe, T-strap, snakeskin slippers. She's a little nervous about her G OODYCfRR'S STATE STREET DOWNTOWN 1' "vD AVWTVD\v nails, which she has painted Dark instead of the usual Medium. Bill may not like this innovation and will tease her about "hanging around the slaughter house." For it is 1933 . . . ten years ago. Molly and Bill will talk about the. movies . . . "King Kong," "Caval- cade," "Rasputin and the Empress." And Molly, typically a clothes-con- scious coed, discusses the possibility of designers following Schiaparelli's lead to bring back the short skirt. Schiaparelli's models this season are twelve inches from the floor! Molly thinks that this is just a passing fad, though. Bars To Let Down Bill is very happy that beer is go- ing to be sold in town within the next few days-real 3.2. And Molly feels triumphant that smoking privi- leges are to be extended to three more women's dormitories: Helen Newberry, Martha Cook and Betsy Barbour, in spite of a State Repre- sentative's protest that the dormi- tories will become "smoking dens of cigarette-sucking coeds at our state- supported -university." Molly and Bill may spend their evening dancing at the Union or the League to "Three Little Words," "Stardust," or the insouciant "Happy Days Are Here Again." It is improb- able that they will spend much time discussing the recent visit to the campus of a Japanese League of Na- tions delegate. He told a lecture audience that "War between the United States and Japan would be an act of madness," and just about everybody agreed with him. Quasi "Hell Week" Probably too they won't be overly upset about the news from Germany where the students of the University of Berlin have just burned several hundred books as being "un-German or Marxian," with the excuse, "When a Jew writes German he lies." This seems an adolescent gesture to Molly and Bill; rather like Hell Week which is falling into disfavor or being toned down all over campus. The recent statement of a Univer- sity professor that "Hitler is a wild man" doesn't overly perturb them. "It's the Communists we've got to look out for," says Bill, and Molly remarks that each country should mind its own business. But April means that politics won't be the topic of conversation for long. It is 1933. 5533 GC7& -' w Ja 1 a~ "OW" Jso H. COUSINS 218 South State .. . to give you an infinite variety of costumes . . . to give you a dressed- for-action air to give you a lot for a little Corduroy, wool, or gabar- dine SLACKS--nicely tai- lored in pastel and dark colors. 5up 100% wool SWEATERS in everything imaginable - cardigans and slipovers. 03-93u A large selection of wool sport SKIRTS in checks, plaids, and solid colors. 9 51I ~4hI INIV for Gibbs Secretaries during the past year! Many employers specified college girls for imnortant nositions in a wide 1 I1 I