WAA To Hold Soldie's Day During Summer Army To Be Given Full Privileges of Athletic Facilities "Serviceman's Day," a soldiers field day instituted last Sunday at Palmer Field by the Women's Ath- letic Association for all enlisted men, will be continued as a regular Sun- day afternoon feature during the summer months, Nancy Hattersley, '44, WAA president, said yesterday. The summer program will be com- bined for both the Army enlisted men stationed on campus and for the more than 1,300 Navy V-12 trainees who are scheduled to arrive here July 1. The tennis courts and the golf green will be open to men of both units every Sunday after- noon. Badminton, baseball and archery will also be made available under the direction of WAA sports mana- gers and teams of women organized to get games started in each sport and to play the games with the men. Until the start of the summer se- mester no regular program will be instituted, but any soldier is wel- come to use the outdoor facilities at Palmer Field providingihe s ac- companied by a woman, Miss Hat- tersley said. Rain cancelled the use of the out- door equipment Sunday, and pre- vented a large turnout. Servicemen who showed up, however, were en- tertained in the Women's Athletic Building with bridge, archery, ping- pong, bowling, and other indoor games. The field day program originated when servicemen requested the use of the WAA outdoor athletic equip- ment, particularly that of the tennis courts. Every effort will be made by the Women's Athletic Association to keep these facilities open to the serv- icemen and to encourage a large turnout during the summer months, Signal Corps To Hold Maneuvers Arboretum Is Site For Simulated War Prepared to defy Ann Arbor weath- er, rain or shine, a group, of advanced signal corps men from Michigan State will arrive Saturday morning to participate in maneuvers with the signal corps here. The group from State, which was established a year ago, is.under the direction of Lt. A. E. Esch and Lt. Robert Radkey, '42. The program will consist of ma- neuvers between the two groups in the arboretum with their combined equipment. The men will work with telephones, telegraph, radio and pigeons. "This program Is the first of its kind ever held," Major Bernard Voll- rath, Public Relations officer, said yesterday. "Combining the equip- ment of the 'two groups should be excellent training for the men. They'll be wearing their fatigue suits so that they can really get to work," he said. DA1 1 Lkt;a L+ L'C 1fTA / * TRH ll ll __1. ~ '-- - - -- §ioldie'r r.iJ id ed Day FUn _ r1 ft ~i~iu t.4~$i~i~m c,1~ '(td You just can't discuss our days on the campus as a part of Army life. Not even physical education-even to 'fracture practice' out on the ob- stacle course-can be regimented suf- ficiently to give it a military twang. But all too sudden the campus dayI ends-it must have been fun, or the coming of five o'clock would not have seemed so sudden. Then it happens all over again: "Section, fall in." Then a quick march back to barracks. Let's Go Again "Section, fall out!" Up the stairs to the room again. Well, we must have done O.K. this morning, for room 207 isn't on the gig list today. Gee, I hope I get a letter from her tonight, at mail call. Better hurry up; I want to be sure to get it when it comes. I've got to go down to see Garth in the orderly room about the ar- rangements for that formal at Stock- well tomorrow night. There's a first time for everything-including blind dates for formals. I wonder what the girls think of that idea. One thing sure, she doesn't have to worry about the color of my necktie clash- ing with the color of the ribbon in her hair. General Marshall took care of that. Girls Entertain Us Well You know, it's pretty swell thd way Ann Arbor is doing by us on the social end. The sailors may have one in every port, but here they seem to be doing their best to help us have one in every dorm. And they don't spare a thing in seeing to it that there's a (chince for everyone to have a good time. It would seem that the iris are taking quite a risk to toss invitations to parties out to such a pack of wolves, but they do it; and not only do they tame the wolves, but they mak every last one of them pur'. And the girls in the Halls aren't the only ones. I've got another invi- tation out to dinner on Sunday with a family from the church. How they do it on the provisions of a ration book, I don't know; but the folks do their utmost to brighten up that little bit of free time that comes in a week. Mail Is Welcome What's the idea, Charlie. of not bringing me any mail tonight? It's two days since I had a letter from her. Got to do something about - Daily Photo by Cadet Ed Worsham Having a riotous time keeping scores at the W.A.B. bowling alley are, from left to right, Doris Arner, '43, Carol May, '44, Cadet Ward Kelly of the 3651st Servic e Unit, and Doris West, '44, at the "Serviceman's Field Day" last Sunday. Rain cancelled the original outdoor entertainment planned by the Women's Athletic As- sociation, but a good time was had by all with the W.A.B. indoor facilities, judging by Cadet Kelly's grin as he shakes his pencil at Doris West, who seems to be winning. from her expression. AIR CORPS NABS PRIZE: HeroTellsofYank Victory 83 DAYS ON A RAFT: Barnacles, Shark Meat Formi Diet of Shipwrecked Crew that. Maybe I ought to ask the CO to extend my letter-writing time. Say, that reminds me of what I have to do during study period tonight. Better fill my pen right now. "Chow." There it goes again. Sup- pers around this place sure are swell. I swear it couldn't be like this in the. Army. Sure, the camps serve fish on Fridays, and occasionally it is as, good as this; but where did you ever get homemade lemon pie to top it off? Let's Study! What are you going to study to-. night, Gus? Me too; if I don't get going on physics, I'll find myself' back as a yardbird. Well, there, it goes, fellows. Field jackets again tonight. There's that dope playing around again. Some people seem to get by without studying. "At ease!" What is this, a barn dance? I wish Jones would cut it out on those trig assign- ments and let me work a physics problemi or two. Goad, if I don't do better in the next quiz, the boys will be pledging me to PBK-over-2. Let's see, now, Sigma Fl equals I alpha. . . and... O.K. fellows, let's go. Ten o'clock, Let's get down the line to Miller's f or a sundae. We may get there ahead of the mob tonight. Aw, let's get a pint of ice cream anda couple' of spoons and go back to the roomns with it., Lights Out Come on, you birds, crawl in. Ten- thirty, lights out. What a day, wha~t, a day. Ten minutes of shut-eye, and that darned whistle again: Shut up. Teri-forty-five, and I. don't want to hear another peep out of you tonightt The DO's checking up himself, and you'll lose your week-ends for a month if there's as much noise aS there was last night. For Mother Remember her with a new Oat, Cos- tume jewelry or som~e floweredbou- tonnieres. We'll be glad to hlp you pick a gift that will most delight 6 her. - THE HAT WOX 719 N. University - I 4r- Cairo, (AP) -When Capt. Jim Curl of Columbus, 0., first flier to present an eyewitness account of a recent great American air vic- tory in North Africa, looked over the nose of his Warhawk and saw a flight of more than 100 enemy transports heading out to sea, he couldn't believe it was going to be as easy as it looked. So he told his mates over the radio: "Look around and take it easy, boys. It may be booby." (A trap.) But when he was convinced there was nothing fake about that great fleet of enemy aircraft, loaded with troops and protected by a heavy cover of enemy fight- ers, Curl said: "Juicy, juicy, juicy! Let's go get 'em boys." And the boys got 'em. Sev- enty-four of 'em. They went in to slaughter the enemy aircraft in the greatest aerial combat show ever record- ed in three years of fighting in North Africa-the Fighting 57th Group living up to the name it earned in campaigning with the British Eighth Army to drive Marshal Rommel off the conti- nent. It was 5:30 p. m. Sunday when the American planes took off from an advanced landing ground and roared toward Cape Bon in the last bridgehead held by the Axis in Tunisia. They were tipped that a prize bag might be the reward for the sweep, but none of the pi- lots could believe what he saw. It looked too good to be true to see those Junkers 52's flying in perfect formation. It was big, jui- cy, fat game. The Americans were flying in doubledeck formation - War- hawks from squadrons known as "Black Scorpions," "Fighting Cocks," "Exterminators" and "314th," with allied Spitfires giving them high altitude cover. And then they dived into the attack. Lt. Bruce Campbell of Bliss- field, Mich., who knocked down three transports and one enemy fighter in the battle, said: "Those Junkers were flying in the most beautiful formation I ever saw. Mister, it was almost a shame to break it up. They looked so precise and perfect it reminded me of a fantastic propaganda film with everything staged by a direc- tor. "After we attacked they seem- ed to be without a leader and just continued to fly straight ahead like robots. As far as we were concerned it was suicidal on their part." Lt. Richard E. Duffey of Walled Lake, Mich., bagged four Junkers and one fighter and still was dazed by the spectacular fight when he landed. "I never saw anything like it," he said. The whole show was over in less than an hour's time but for these pilots of the Fighting 57th it was the climax of their en- tire battling across Africa. Lt. Harry Stanford of Munising, Mich., shot down two transports and was diving on a third when his guns jammed. But that didn't stop this 24-year-old pilot. He continued to dive and literally drove the transport into the sea. "I was so damned mad when I didn't see those tracers jump from my guns," Stanford said, "that I probably would have rammed that plane--only the other pilot saved me the trouble by plunging the ship right into the sea." The first American fighter pilot to land from the mission was Lt. R. J. (Rocky) Byrne, of St. Louis. An intelligence officer was in- credulous when Byrne made his report and exclaimed: "I got three Messerschmitts, but that isn't anything. Wait until you hear the rest of the gang and hear about the whole show. I had a ringside seat for the whole thing. My flight was in the top section under the Spits and all I could see were those big transports going into the ocean or crashing on the beach in flames. And Capt. Roy E. Whittaker, of Knoxville, Tenn., added: "It was a pilot's dream. I was afraid someone would wake me up." Col. Arthur Salisbury, of Se- dalia, Mo., who heads the Fighting 57th, exclaimed: "I've been telling everyone the Fighting 57th is the greatest bunch of flyers in the desert, but now I won't have to make that spiel. Everyone knows they are the greatest. Boy, am I happy." (Editor's Note: These two Neth- erlands merchant sailors spent 83 days on a life raft between the time their ship was torpedoed early in November in the South Atlantic and their rescue Jan. 25. They drifted 2,200 miles from a point 200 miles off South America, below the equator, to the northern tip of that continent, where they were picked up. MIAMI, Fla.-There were five of us on the raft, but two of us were to die. The first, Franklin Beasley, of Hannibal, Mo., began to go blind, then moaned through the nights, and on Jan. 25 breath- ed his last. Lieut. James Maddox of the United States Navy was still alive. He said a prayer over Beasley's body. The rest of us each said a prayer, too, and we put his body overboard. That left the two of us, and Lieut. Maddox and Basil D. Izzi, 20, of Southbury, Mass. When we first got on the life- raft after our ship was sunk, we took inventory of our food and water. We had nine cans of con- densed milk, two pounds of Aus- tralian chocolate, and 10 or 12 gal- lons of water. The food lasted 16 days, the water 23. The day after our water gave out it rained for the first time, a good heavy rain that let us catch about six gallons and fun- nel it into our water cask. With our food gone, we made a noose out of some rope and put it over the side, then hung our feet in the water and wiggled our toes to attract some sharks swim- ming nearby. One swam through the noose at our toes, and we caught him. We ate his heart and liver and- a bit of meat. Barnacles began to develop on the bottom of the raft. We pried some loose, ate the larger ones and used small ones as bait, holding them between our fingers to at- tract small black fish. We grabbed the fish as they nibbled at the barnacles, and caught about 20 that way. But that wasn't enough. We caught a couple of five foot sharks with our bare hands and ate them entirely up, gnawing the bones. We went through a five day storm that sent waves washing completely over us. But it also caused some black birds to alight on our raft, and we caught several and ate them. Their entrails we used to attract fish, which we caught with our hands. We had one knife on board, but on the 22nd day adrift it was ac- cidentally dropped overboard. We took the lens from our flashlight and broke it in half to use for cleaning fish and what few birds we caught. Sometimes we joked about what we would eat if we could have anything we wanted. Bacon and eggs and pie were the favorites. Then came the day of our res- cue. We could hardly believe our eyes when a ship steamed to us and picked us up. We forgot a- bout bacon and eggs and asked for peaches, and ate two bowls full. We asked for a third, but a doctor told us to take it easy. The doctor tried to give us hy- podermics to put us to sleep but our skin was so leathery that his needle broke and he gave it up Hoogendam, 17, and a seaman since he was 12, weighed 80 runds when picked up, having lost 65 pounds during the long days adrift. Vanderslot, 37, lost exactly half his weight, dropping 85 pounds and weighing 85 when rescued.' "r: 4 1k 'II 4 C 4 P " a TO MOTHER W th 01/v. .I. fR i __._ A NEW BAG is a beautiful and lasting gift which any mother will cherish. We have a large selection in leather and fabric bags for spring or summer. Remember Mother's Day is May 9; we'll be glad to 1-p you select a gift that will most delight her. Give Her Jewelry The gifts closest to a wo- man's heart - necklaces, bracelets, lockets, rings .. . even sterling silver occa- sional pieces. We have them all!! eflC From the kids on up everyone is thinking of her. Personalize HER day by giving a gift that is senti- mental and individual. She'll have that pampered feeling if you choose a feminine gift of cologne or perfume. YARDLEY'S LAVENDER COLOGNE CHANEL'S FOUR FRAGRANCES SCHIAPERELLI'S SHOCKING OR SALUTE D'ORSAY'S MYSTERE HOUBIGANT'S CHANTILLY CIRO'S NEW HORIZONS AND REFLEXIONS WORTH'S JE REVIENS Or, why not select a compact, sachet, or boxof ,aih onwdrI? 11 II I I "I - I I