$ ltR.TI " l Cf1 / GRA7 N" if ruxxi, ---- -T - -- - Dance-Calling To Be Taught At Rec-Rally Grange Orchestra Will Play For Saturday's Entertainment; Campus Soldiers Are Invited At the special request of a group interested in learning to call for square dancing, Howard Liebee of the physical education department will hold a class to teach this art from. 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in the Fencing Room of Barbour Gym as part of the final Rec-Rally sched- uled for Saturday in Barbour and Waterman gyms. Ruth Pritchett, '45, will be the special hostess present at the class. Square Dancing Follows Games will be held from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and will be followed by square dancing from 9:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Badminton will be. headed by Phebe Scott, '44Ed; ping- pong will, be led by Mary Ann Eibler, '46, and Irene Turner, '45Ed, will take charge of bowling. Marie Cas- settari, '44Ed, will supervise volley ball, and those wishing to partici- pate are reminded that they must wear tennis shoes. A four-piece grange orchestra which specializes in square dance music will play for the dancing. Sol- diers are especially invited to attend the Rec-Rally and to take part in the various events. Students who seek a night of relaxation before settling down to studying for final exams will find the evening the answer to their wishes, according to Phyllis Present, '44, chairman of Rec-Rally. Hostesses Are Named General hostesses for the evening will include Pat Coulter, '45, Barbara Bathke, '45, Rita Auer, '46Ed, and Joyce Raworth, '46. Assisting Miss Present on the cen- tral committee are Phebe Scott, '44Ed, in charge of personnel;, rat Dillenbeck, '45Ed, posters; Mary Woods, '45Ed, chairman of finance; Helen Masson, '46Ed, equipment chairman, and Marjorie Hall, '45, publicity. Women May Enlist During Registration For War Activities An opportunity to register for the buildings and grounds crew, and vol- unteer hospital service will be offered to all women returning this summer, at the time of regular registration for academic courses. Pamphlets will be presented at this time, if not earlier, describing other war activities, and where stu- dents may sign up for them. Houses that have been espe- cially invited to attend the Sur- gical Dressing Unit some time be- tween 1 p.m.- and 5 p.m. today are Sorosis, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Madison House, and Martha Cook. A booth in the lobby o the eague will be open from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow for those persons wishing to place entries for the nineteenth annual Crop and Saddle Horse Show, which will be held at 3 p.m. Sat- urday at the Golfside Stables. n7t Sweet 0tl0 & Gete"ra By NANCY GROBERG So it has come to this, has it? We must pack our things and get out- those of us who won't bearound for the summer. We must discard the pig- tails and the blue jeans and the cryptic language, and begin the painful process of re-civilization. Willingly or otherwise, we must leave this neat little rut and settle down into another one. For the next five months or so we are fish out of water- Smash! Bang! Finals!- Smash! Bang! Train tickets!-and a nice bunch of disconnected memories that never sound as good when we hand them over to our friends. THEN IT WASN'T YESTERDAY, after all, that we settled down to a shiny new set of classes and professors and faces. Then it wasn't yesterday that we brought our "new life" back to this crazy town. Then it wasn't yesterday that we stormed the railroad station and crowded the taxicabs and mobbed State Street thinking, "We're back!" How long ago was it, then, that we started counting the days to Christ- mas? How long since we built the first snowman outside the dorm so that the little boys could knock it down? Not yesterday at all? When did that first group of khaki-shirted newcomers pour into theI East Quad? When did the men in the Law Quad start drilling outside Martha Cook? And how long ago was it that we resigned ourselves to the strangely feminine classroom atmosphere? HOW MANY DAYS since we stopped griping about having to come back early after Christmas when "every other college in the country . .."-? How many nights since that noisy first-New-Year's-Eve-in-Ann-Arbor? And who's been tearing pages off the calendar? What's the idea of making us take finals again when it seems that wef just came out of hibernation-and-studying for the last ones? What's the idea of serving notice about summer registration when it seems that we just finished registering for this semester? Where's the rush? It's a funny thing-We seem to have lost all perspective about time Is that part of this college business, then-losing track of the days and the hours? Is that why, when the time comes to leave, we feel as if we'd just got here? WELL, IT'S TRUE FOR US, anyway. Can't remember when they took that cover off the fountain near the League. Can't remember when everyone started to notice that the weather sometimes doesn't mix with classes. How old is that Easter egg we've been saving, anyway? And so it goes-the semester, the exams, the cokes, the lectures, the concerts, the exhibits, the funny days-With finals just around the bend it's all over but the griping. Then home it is to wherever we go-home with stories which mysteriously lack the more undesirable facts-home with the smattering of knowledge we've preseived to prove that we did learn a thing or two. And all the way back on the train, all the way through the long trip which bridges that world with this one. we wonder whether we were really here at all. Faculty 'Flashes' Qet TrouncedI On Diamond by Sturdy Students Cotton Casuals for Busy Days M .1 c. ": k [ t, _ p; ' . . _ i t / } r t. t ' .3 . 9 ? -'. ' - >i' r'SS.y. , ti f: 1 .: ,.{_ / I t 1 .> K Cm Here are two moods in informality, suited to the active life you'll be leading this suirmer. The knee-length denim breeks, worn with a loose, tie-in-front shirt in a good, loud print are fine for the great open spaces-picnics, victory gardening and the like. The gingham culotte, checked as boldly as a barroom tablecloth, will be a, valuable factor in the wardrobe of any bicycle belle. WAACs Win Army Praise For Services Women Changed from Rookies Into Military Precision Ranks Need for Recruits Is Great FORT OGLETHORPE, Ga.,-You can concoct all the funny stories you want to about the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps-they tell some of the best ones on themselves-but they challenge you to laugh off, the fact that they have turned them- selves to their part in this war with a seriousness, a verve and a method which would do credit to the tough- est of the services. here, near the historic battlefield of Chickamauga, on terrain which knew the grim business of war eighty years ago, about 6,000 WAACs, daughters, sisters, mother and even a few grandinothers, are about the task of preparing themelves to take over twenty-oe classificatons of Army Job, so that men now holding them might be released for fighting fronts throughout the world. They live and work the Army way, adapting skills they knew in civilian life and learning new ones-truck driving, welding, weather observing, clerical work, radio technique and so through a list of a hundred and a score. They work, they play; they grouse, they sing;' they move in teams or as individuals; they have their dierene but seldom argue and never fight. From lights on at dawn until bedtime at 11 p.m. they are, without known exception, see- ing to qualify themselves as soldiers behind the lines. Lag in Recruiting Decried The one great complaint of these Fort Oglethorpe WAACs, as dubtless it is with about 50,000 others. in training centers elsewere, 'is 'the bogging down of the drive for new recruiits. This particular camnp has a capacity of 10,000. but has flat had that number fo? several wekls. About 1,500 new taiees are sent here each week, but that number is also sent out. Some renain here for further technical tr inng Ii cooking and baking and motor trans- port. The present enrolled strength of the corps as a whole is slightly above 60,000 women. The dull authoried strength is 150,000, and Coli ess may be asked by the Artmy to rAise it to 350,000. Auxiliaries are accepted fron jlhe ages of 21 to 44. M4any of the ofi- cers and auxiliaies here are narHdd About half of the 350 oficers are said to haie husbands back home or in the services. A few of the autl- iaries have been Widowed by the *ar. Tlae basic training period here is four weeks. On completing this, most of the auxiliaries are sent out to the field. Others are sent to school for further technical training and some go on to the main headquarters at Des Moines to be trained as offi- cers. More than 90 per cent of the WAACs at Fort Oglethorpe haye ap- plied for foreign service. -from The New York Times Future Plans, Policies Made By Assembly "Assembly plans for this summer and next fall are taking shape," re- ports Doris Barr, president of As- sembly. During the summer the Assembly will encourage women students at- tending the summer session to make surgical dressings and to work on the Buildings and Grounds Crew. In the fall the Assembly will hold its annual fortnight program for in- coming students. Play Night, to be held October 29, will initiate the activities, 'Ad will be for all inde- pendent women on campus. From Nov. 1 to Nov. 10 members of Assem- bly and Senior Society will visit the dormitories and League houses on campus to talk to individual groups of women, informing them about League a tivities. Petitioning for the president, vice- president and the third League house representative to Assembly Board will be held from Nov. 10 to Nov. 13, and will be followed by interviewing on Nov. 16, 17 and 18. H EAT A'stroys FUR COATS! A moth-proof bag is not suf- ficient protection for your fur coat. If summer heat ene- tates your closet it will dry the pelts and cause the leather to become brittle . . . and the fur will fall out. Iogan-Hayes, Michigan's Largest Exclusive Furriers, will -store your fur coat in their scientifically protected cold fur storage Vallts at very little cost. Hogan-Hayes' thorough gas fumigation and steriliza- iOn process completely de- stroys all germs and moth eggs. Don't DelAY! Call 2-5656 right noW for bohded messenger. No charge for pick-up and deliv- ery. xPres charges paid both ways for out-of-town custo- mers. $3 for coats valued up to $10 MOGAN-HAYES 201 SOUTH MAIN E i(eddrngs CN and .,e Rumor of Food Waste in Army By MARJORIE HALL The ichigan baseball team didn't have a chance to play the Detroit Tigers the other day, but their suits were used just the same, and H. O. "Fritz" Crisler got his workout too, not that that has anything to do with baseball. Yesterday the enterprising faculty of the physical education department for women "took on" the entire phys. ed. school in a rousing baseball game which resulted in the complete anni- hilation of the favored and supposed- ly "red hot" faculty "Flashes" to the tune of 6 to 3. The "Flashes" selected for their uniforms the trim, well cleaned, and neatly pressed uniforms of the Michi- gan Varsity baseball team, and Mr. Crisler ducked fouls and the balls the oatchers missed as he umpired the masterly display of baseball abil- ity. Mr. Crisler could not be reached to comment on his recovery from the ordeal, but it is an obvious fact that the baseball suits will never be the same again. 'Speedbadl' Johnson on Mound With the "Flashes" playing a snap- py brand of ball throughout the con- test, not even "Slugger" Thomas could get the 16 inch regulation size (?) ball out of the infield with any degree of success. The ball was half- way between the size of a balloon and a volleyball (if you can figure that out), and it "just wouldn't go any place," according to the harried dia- mond dusters. With "Speedball" Johnson on the mound and "Gabby"~IHartwig behind the plate, the "Flashes" looked to be the class of the season, but phys. ed. majors-Virginia Rebh, pitcher, and Helen Masson, catcher, plus the rest of the phys. ed. school-were too much for the retitled faculty "Flops" and nosed out the favorites in no uncertain terms during the three inning flourish. Bell Stars in Field Among the star plays that studded the game was the amazing catch of a "Skyrocket ball" by "Bosoism" Bell, who showed up to good advantage- out in left field. Mrs. Hanley made a beautiful shoestring catch at one point, that point being her elbow, and Miss Bloomer executed a perfect slide into home plate, but the uniform had to be rushed to the cleaners for re- juvenation. The only casualty of the day was chalked up at "Gabby" Hartwig's ex- pense, as that star catcher is now nursing a "baseball finger," complete with splint and rolls of gauze. "Gab- by" Hartwig will be lost to the team for the rest of the season, Health Service reports. Return Engagement Questionable As for the phys. ed. team, there were so many substitutions that no one person had a chance to star. They combined talent with muscles and ground out a victory. The lineups: Faculty "Flashes": M. Hartwig, catcher; R. Johnson, pitcher; B. Bandlow, lb; D. Miller, 2b; V. Hanley, 3b; L. Curtis, ss; M. Bell, field; J. Thomas, field; and R. Bloomer, field. Phys. Ed. Majors: everybody in the whole school. A return engagement has not been scheduled because of the lateness of the season, according to the "Flash- es," but the Phys. Ed. Majors have a different version. . . _ I) SPRING The jumper to meet your spring needs. Cool and comfortable with all sorts of blouses. Colorful felt on the pockets to give it that different look! Stop in and see the nev' selection of sumer dresses and suits. ALSO DRESSES .1 X Engagements Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Weber of Bay City have announced the engagement of their daughter, Morrow, '44, to Ensign W. Craig Rorke, USNR, '35, son of Mrs. William Rorke and the late Mr. Rorke of Saginaw. The date for the wedding has not been set. Miss Weber is affiliated with Kap- pa Alpha Theta sorority. She is chairman of the League social com- mittee and a member of Scroll and Wyvern, honorary societies. Ensign Rorke, a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, took his navy training at Cornell and is now sta- tioned in San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Long- staff of Detroit haverrecently an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Jane, '45, to Ivin Kerr, USNR, son of Mrs. Ivin E. Kerr and the late Mr. Kerr of Detroit. Miss Longstaff is affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. She has participated on the League So- cial Committee. Mr. Kerr is in training at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. Hosita Ship Is Favorite Berth O Navy Nurses WASHINGTON--Despite the mod- ern design and equipment of the new National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md., of which she is sched- uled to become chief nurse, Lieuten- ant (Junior Grade) Grace B. Lally would rather return to her hard, ex- citing work as chief nurse on the hospital ship which in five months in the South Pacific war zones cared for 4,039 patients, of whom only sev- en died. Every Navy nurse wants hospital ship duty. "But no one can ever tell her what to expect," Lieutenant Lally says. The nurse, who has served twenty years in the Navy, with duty on three hospital ships, headed the group of nurses serving in the war in the South Pacific. They treated the marines evacuat- ed from, Guadalcanal, the soldiers who reinforced them, the sailors who were wounded in transporting them and men from other South Pacific combat zones. The hospital ship ranged through the South Pacific, often picking up 500 patients, ih port and at sea, although its capacity was only 400; and unloading them at harbors "where ambulances were lined up as far as you could see," Miss Lally said. --From New York Times "0 3 to 10 clap Declared False EAST LANSING- (R)- Miss Mary. Barber, food consultant to the Secre- tary of War, told approximately 200 members of the Michigan Home Ec- onomics Association here today to discredit "those awful rumors about food waste in the Army." Conceding there was some waste in camp mess halls, mostly scraps and bones, Miss Barber declared: "If you ever see with your own eyes gross waste of food, let the Quartermaster General's office know about it and an investigation will be made within 24 hours." "If Army mess operations look aw- ful to the casual observer," Miss Bar- . ber observed in commenting on pub- lished reports in which she said, Army food waste was estimated at. 20 per cent, "remember to look in your own garbage pail and multiply it by seven or eight- million." She said that by order of the U.S. Sur- geon General, as a health measure, left-overs may not be served 36 hours after the food originally was cooked. i; f., ' Shurtleff Women To Earn-and-Learn By New War Plan ALTON, Ill.- (A')- Industry and education teamed up today in a plan to bring America's college girls into war production on an alternate work- and-school schedule. The student employment plan, de- scribed as having far-reaching earn- and-learn possibilities for peacetime, was announced by the Western Cart- ridge Co. and Shurtleff College, Alton. It will enable young women to pay for their education with earnings in the cartridge plant, attending classes ; { E3 s [ t I ; // / 1' II I