1 , JL fa _ .R rwl , L ., ..lw, s 'T~flt~ftW~ TT . . ........ . ..... .. ....... . ...... 15 Members Of One House Work at Unit Alpha Gamma Delta walked off with honors at the Surgical Dressing Unit last week when fifteen members of their house turned out to make di'essings. This is the kbest repre- sentation any house has had for some time, according to Jean Whitte- more, '44, chairman of the unit. Houses that have been especially invited to attend the unit tomorrow are Sorosis, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Madison House, and Martha Cook. Special guests for Friday include Chi Omega, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Delta Delta Delta, University House, and the Ann Arbor coeds. Mary, Jane Theilan, '45, publicity chairman, pointed out-that this was the last opportunity for women to work at the unit this semester. She also stated that the dressings made now would have to make up the quota for the month when the unit will be closed. Panhellenic has taken as its proj- ect for the remainder of the year the backing of the Surgical Dressing Unit. Their recently adopted goal is to have every sorority woman de- vote at'least one hour to this project before the semester is over. Jie7,Pitrons Of Horse Show Are Selected With Capt. Leonard W. Peterson leadin the way as ring-master, the 19th Annual Crop and Saddle Horse Show will take place according to schedule, rain or shine, at 3 p.m. Saturday, at the Golfside Riding Sta- bles, Pat Coulter, '45, president of the club, has announced. Dr. Fred L. Arner of Bellvue has also been chosen to judge the show which will display the talents of riders of diversified ability. Nine events are scheduled to be run, in- cluding classes for high school stu- dents, inexperienced riders, Crop and Saddle members only, in addition to open events. Heading the list of patrons are Pres. and. Mrs. Alexander G. Ruth- ven, Dean and Mrs. Albert Fursten- berg, Dean and Mrs. Lloyd Wood- burn, Major and Mrs. Thomas Grahm, Dr. and Mrs. JamesdD. Bruce, Dr. and Mrs. Carl E. Bledgely, Dr. and Mrs. Max Peet, and Dr. Margaret Bell. Entries for the show are still being accepted, and a booth will be open from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today, tomor- row, and Friday in the League lobby where entrants may obtain their blanks. They're Raking in the Profits NOW ONY L % .f x r DE-DORORTTCREAM j REG #1.p1drr r DE sicyOrReAsyCREAM yj .4 Wise ff.B7Ay todayI1...savj 77 q t7' a$Vsume. tosouhr-trte r,;Git$1 SIZE t % das.Sfe/7r.No 1 t at al sickyor geas. Cramy % -'i ~ mothsondisapeas:-N ned / t rns ff Byhalf.icespeil r spirton ev oydollr arprprtol 324moothshonadisappeaS outheeat Appreciative whistles greet the new gardeners on the Michigan campus. These rakers, Janet Robb, '44, and Clarisse Finkbeiner, '45, are working under the new "Womanpower Corps" that pays college women 60c an hour for yard work. Music-Lovers': A Misnomer The recent May Festival not only presented famous singers and orches- tras, varied and difficult numbers, but it also furnished a cross-section of typical concert-goers. From the $2.75 main floor seats to the back stairs of the second balcony, one had the opportunity to observe "mu- sic-lovers" at a premium. Unsuspecting but obvious were those ladies who invariably knit upon afghans during the concerts. Near-sighted, middle-aged gentle- men twiddled with their opera glas- ses. And students attending the pro- grams usually wrote home to the folks, prepared English themes, or' translated German, French, or Span- ish assignments. Then there were the people who, clutching ticket stubs triumphantly, spent the evening in fruitless search for their seats. No less obvious were those who looked longingly at their cigarette cases during the first part of the program, fidgeting to dash out for a quick drag at intermission. However, to end these annoyances, the following solutions have been offered. A corner of Hill Auditorium will be partitioned off for the knit- ters-call it the Knit Wit Koncert Knook. Study halls will be set up in the corridors for the students. An- other part would be a perpetual maze, in which the seat numbers and the ticket stubs would not co-incide. Here the searchers would be turned loose, t6 wander around to their hearts' content. But these solutions may be disas- trous, for it might leave the cele- brated performers playing to an empty auditorium. Columbia Qads Publish Papers For Experience Bent upon making a success of their newspaper careers, fifty stu- dents in the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia are being "farmed out" to try their hand at publishing the daily papers boasted by eight nearby towns. Dean Ackerman of the Graduate School of Journalism, says, "Through the cooperation of eight publishers and their new staffs, our students have had one of the finest laboratory experiences in the thirty-year history of the school." One week before they are to take over the newspaper, the students visit the town and become acquaint- ed with the community and the paper in general. The next week they re- turn and give it "the works." For one day they do all the reporting, re- writing, editing, headlining, and make-up for the publication. This is invaluable as experience and as practical application of the theories they learn in the classroom. This project is also a test of their versatility. On April 30 a sports page, which had been reported, edit- ed, and laid out by a staff made ip exclusively of women, was published. Its success was a good indication of the worth of the experiment. Music Honor Society Presents Musicale Mu Phi Epsilon, national music honor society, held a formal musi- cale yesterday at the home of Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven. Students in the School of Music rendered piano and carinet, solos for the occasion, and a woodwind quar- tet played a feature composition of Early American music which was dedicated to the society. Another feature of the evening was the initiation of Mrs. Joseph N. Sinclair as a patroness for the so- ciety. All League houses who still have stamps or money for stamps from JGP are asked to settle up their accounts this week in the Under- graduate Office of the League or call Ruth Mary Picard, 2-1156. Union Will Present Pan-American Fiesta At Friday's Dance The Friday dance at the Union this week-end will have a touch of South America and its characteristic rhumba music when it features the "Pan-American Fiesta." The presentation will star a Chil- ean quartet who are singing and playing authorities on rhumba and samba music. The quartet has ap- peared previously at West Quad functions and their appearance this week-end at the Union dance results from popular request. Bill Sawyer and the Union Orches- tra will be on hand also. Alpha Delta Pi announces the re- cent initiation of the following girls: Margaret Anderson, '44, Port Huron; Marie Cassettari, '44, Chicago; Mary Ann Grothwohl, '45, Niles; Joan Hoch, '44, Oak.Park, Ill.; Dorine Lar- mee, '44. Ann Arbor; Joyce Notting- ham, '44, Ann Arbor and Shirley Sloat, '44, Port Huron. the League at 12:45 p.m. following the meeting. Reservations must be made by Thursday afternoon, May 13. Call League, 2-3251. A Graduate Coffee Hour, sponsored by the Graduate Student Council, will be held . Thursday evening in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building, 7:00- 8:00 p.m. An hour of classical recorded music will follow. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Program in the Men's Lounge of the Rack- ham Building at 8:00 p.m. will be as fol- lows : Brahms: Concerto No. 2 in B flat Major for Piano and Orchestra; Haydn: Symphony No. 101 in D Major (Clock); Handel: Concerto in B Minor for Viola and Chamber Orchestra; Beethoven: Symphony No. 6 (Pastoral). By MARGE HALL Camp jobs are literally" a dime a dozen" these days, according to re- ports coming out of the Bureau of Appointments and Barbour Gym- nasium. Camps of all sizes are badly in need of counselors, even those with a minimum of experience, and oppor- tunities for employment in camps exist at every corner. A prospective counselor or water- front director can practically pick the camp she wants according to location, length of the camping peri- od, and salary. The latter element varies according to experience, of course. Applications for camp positions, either for counselors, unit leaders, or waterfront directors, will be accepted at the Bureau of Appointments or at Room 15 of Barbour Gymnasium, and all women interested in this type of activity are urged to apply at once. . * * * The Outing Club has planned an- other hike or bike trip to Saline Val- ley over the week-end, and the group will leave Hill Auditorium at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, weather permit- ting. Everyone interested in a final week-end of relaxation before exam- inations is invited to accompany the club members. Returning Sunday in time for the noon meal, 24 hours of swimming, 1, WAA NOTICES Ii Solve Your Problem wit h a 2 pc. Butchier Linen G . eating, sleeping, eating, and eating will be utilized to the fullest extent, according to the Outing Club's co- chairmen, Barbara Fairman, '46, and Dan Saulson, '44. There will be a slight charge for food. For further information, call Miss Fairman at Jordan Hall or Mr. Saulson at Lloyd House. * * * Ann Arbor weather has interfered with a number of activities this se- mester, and not the least of these is golf. Barbara Wallace, '45Ed, golf manager, has extended the time for the eighteen-hole qualifying round necessary for membership in Pitch and Putt Club and places on the women's golf team, because of the bad playing conditions. The deadline for the eighteen-hole reports is Monday, and the scores must be turned in at the WAB. The Dance Club will entertain sev- eral members from Ann Arbor High School at their club meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in the Barbour Dance Studio. Theta Phi Alpha announces the recent initiation of Eleanore Keefe, '45, of Detroit, and the pledging of Mary Louise McHugh, '46, of Shelby, Ohio. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Fourteenth Annual Exhibition of Sculp- ture, Michigan League Building. Open daily. Events Today Botanical Journal Club will meet today at 4:00 p.m. in Room N.S. 1139. Reports by: Helen Sieg, "Book review-violets of North America"; N. I. Klein, "Papers on Genetics"; Jean Hendrix, "Book review- The Badianus Manuscript, an Aztec her- ////.:. \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ A\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\V \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\V \ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\\\\\ \\ i , bal written in 1552 and found recently in the Vatican Library." Michigan Alumnae Club of Ann Arbor: Annual meeting and tea at the home of Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven today at 3:00 p.m. Dues for next year may be paid at this meeting. Everyone is urged to attend. Junior members especially invited. All Electrical Engineers are invited to attend the AIEE spring banquet to be held at the Michigan Union tonight at 6:15. Professor Dow Baxter of the Forestry School will present motion pictures of a recent trip to Alaska. Tickets ray be obtained from any of the AIEE officers or at the Electrical Engineering Office. "The Wishful Taw," a new play with original music, by Elizabeth Wilson, will be presented by Play Production of the Department of Speech tonight through Saturday at 8:30 in the Mendelssohn The- atre. Miss Wilson is a graduate student in the University and wrote the play while a member of Professor Rowe's class in playwriting. Tickets are on sale daily at the theatre box office in the Michigan League. Comin Events The Annual Meeting of the American Association of University Women, the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti Branch, will be held at 11 o'clock on Saturday morning, May 15, at the Michigan League. A revision of the Constitution and Bylaws to bring them in line with national procedure will be presented for approval and adoption. A full attendance is desired. The Annual Luncheon will be held at ,\ N White . .. Black . Luggage Sizes .10 to 20 $Oli.95 i . 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