TMIVlM ~w"Prm'A,:1943 TfHi?' iICHIGJAN"'DAITLY a i JGP Publishes Total Bonds, Stamps Sold Sorority, Dormitory, League House Juniors Net $17,000 From Booths, Skits, Dances The results of the sale of war stamps and bonds by the junior wom- en last semester totaled approxi- mately $17,000, plus a $7,000 bond purchased by WAA, it was announced yesterday by Marcia Zimmerman, '44, chairman of the project. Sororities contributed $8,155 to this amount, women's dormitories $3,300, and league houses $600. Collegiate Sorosis led all other houses with a total of $6,000 worth of stamps and bonds taken by them. Alpha Gamma Delta placed second among the sororities with a total of $375, while Delta Delta Delta's pur- chase amounting to $200 gave them third place. Houses failing to turn in the serial numbers of the bonds they purchased were not given credit for them. Thirteen junior women made up the central committee for this proj- ect and approximately 135 coeds worked under them. Their work started early in the fall and continued until finals. Defense stamp corsages made by the corsage committee were sold at football games, concerts, and dormi- tory dances. Booths were set up in the library, University Hall, and the League, and stamps were sold from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.-five days a week. Twenty junior women made up the skit and dance committee which per- formed before the Eagles' Club and sold a total of $3,500 worth of bonds and stamps. In addition to singing and dancing, a skit was given which depicted bombing of Pearl Harbor. This work will be continued again this semester and junior women are urged by the central committee to watch The Daily for an announce- ment of a mass meeting which will be held in the near future. All persons interested in taking part in League activities can have their eligibility cards signed from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. every day this week and next week in the League. Marines in Uniform Ensign To Tell I About WAVES Women To Substitute for MenB In the s In Performing Navy Tasks of Americ An opportunity to gain first hand up their c information about the WAVES will States in w be made available to all interested already m students from 10 a.m. to noon and it be in W from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and to- American morrow at the War Information Cen- corps, Mic ter in the League, when Ensign Helen fulfilling t Shea, WAVE recruiting officer from Ensign Detroit, will be on hand to answer i receivedl questions. Ifrom Smi The WAVES were organized to en- Mass., last able Navy men to go on active duty been repo at sea, by replacing those men with coast. Pro trained women who will take over while in c positions in radio and communica- of Collegia tions activities and mechanical work Phi Kapp in addition to acting as storekeepers, tlhe League link trainer instructors and other she contin general aides. nel work Any woman who can meet the Navy Mass. physical requirements, is between the ages of 20 and 50 and has had four Her sor years of college or two years of col- riet Heam lege and an equivalent amount of uate of th business or technical training is eli- ing schoo gible for an officer's commission. coast to r Unlike a WAAC, a WAVE may mar- active dul ry after she has completed her basic her sorori training, provided that she does not Board, Ju marry a man in her branch of the ern. service. Women who are already mar- ried may enlist provided that they Jean So do not have any dependents under 18 School of years of age. graduation WAVES receive the same base a degree monthly pay as naval officers of cor- last year h+ responding rank, and in addition are man of Thi given a $200 uniform allotment. The with Delt Navy also provides medical and dental care. Quarters and subsistence are On nursi provided unless the WAVE is living land is Lie off the post, whereupon she receives ing spent1 an allowance for living expenses. sity Hospi Life in the WAVES is not all drill seph T. R and classroom work. Ample oppor- Lieut. B tunity is provided for sports and rec- Benningto reation. WAVES may have dates in and compl their free time, and week-ends are work in7 allowed occasionally at the discretion took a thr of the commanding officer. Bent Brigi Plan To Move H 1'lc Ian vvomen on 1/e am i1 Coedls Is Denied st By ALICE FRETZ teadily increasing numbers an women who have given areers to serve the United var, University alumnae are aking their place. Whether AAC. WAVES, SPARS, the Red Cross or the nursing higan women can be found heir duties. Janet Allington, '38, who! her WAVES commission th College, Northampton, November, is one who has rted on duty on the west minent in campus affairs college, she was a member te Sorosis, Phi Beta Kappa, a Phi, Mortar Board and e Council. After graduation, ued her studies in person- at Radcliff, Cambridge, rority sister, Ensign Har- res, '42, a February grad- ;he WAVES officer's train- I, has been sent to the east eplace a soldier headed for ity. She was president of rity, a member of Mortar udiciary Council and Wyv- allett, '42, entered the Yale Nursing last fall, upon n from the University with in psychology. During her here, she was scenery chair- heatre Arts. She is affiliated a Delta Delta. ing duty somewhere in Eng- ut. Anne Bursley, after hav- last summer with a Univer- tal Base Unit at Camp Jo- lobinson, Ark. Bursley attended school in n College, Vt., for two years eted a year of social service Boston. She subsequently' ee-year course at the Peter ham Hospital, and finished Lieut. Louise Stewart of the Ma- rine Corps Women's Reserve mod- els in Washington the uniform, de- signed for wear by women officers of the corps. The special houses that are in- vited to attend the surgical dress- ing unit from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the League are Alumnae House, Adelia Cheever, Collegiate Sorosis, and Pi Beta Phi. The dormitory committee of Junior Project will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the League, the room number to be posted. The meeting is important as the sale of war stamps and bonds in the dormi- tories is to be surveyed. All com- muittee members are urged to be present. it off with a course in public health at Ann Arbor. Mrs. Maryanna Chockley Contole, '37, a graduate in sociology, re- signed her position as polce woman in Detroit to become regional di- rector of the Red Cross in Texas. A Delta Gamma, she served as president of Judiciary Committee and Mortar Board during her Uni- versity career, and was a member of Wyvern. Mary Hayden, '42, according to re- ports is also somewhere in England serving with 4he Trainee Service to Armed Forces, a branch of the Ameri- can Red Cross. She works 12 to 15 hours a day in one of the canteens set up for American soldiers on leave. Her duties include serving cokes and American meals at a nominal price, as well as listening to the troubles of homesick doubhboys and entertaining them. She was assigned to this job chief- ly because of her experience in teach- ing the men in the Union Opera to dance, and her participation in other extra-curricular activities such as JGP, Wyvern and Scroll. She was a member of Alpha Phi and for two years president of Crop and Saddle. Daily Creates 'Rosie Riveter' From Charlotte By BETTY WOODWARD "Rosie, the Riveter," has revealed the fact that an article in The Daily was responsible for her application for work in a local war plant, along with those other patriotic coeds who are now doing semi-skilled defense work for the King Seely Corporation. This particular "Rosie" is Charlotte Papernick, '44Ed, who is working the 4:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. swing shift in this local defense plant. She began, "The work is hard, but it's lots of fun." Of the forty coeds at the plant, twenty work together in a group which includes Peg Bartley, '43, Lil- lian Bates, '44Ed, and Miss Papernick. "We usually walk down to the plant together," said Miss Papernick, "it only takes about 20 minutes. Our shift really starts at 4:40 p.m., and, al- though we haven't received our first ceck yet, we are getting very good pay for part-time work." When asked if she found it hard to keep up her school work and spend four hours a day in the factory, Miss Papernick replied, "I haven't had any trouble as yet, but school has just started. However, I don't think it will be too hard; it's really just a case of learning to use every minute wisely. Several of the girls are carrying extra heavy programs, with lab courses and everything." Woman Is in Charge Of N. Y. Manpower Anna Marie Rosenberg is director of manpower in New York State; a woman is in charge of the employ- ment and labor life of 2,800 persons. Anna, a small brunette who loves to wisecrack, has enormous power. She decides how many women shall take what kind of training, where they shall take it, and when. She fits workers into their places in the great puzzle of war industry with the assur- ance and accuracy of a veteran. Glare Boothe Luce Spars Verbally With William Fulbright in House C rr I -7 C [ -r [ C C E [ s r -- S fadlfPAiER :DE LISQ C [ In tune with youth and Spring C . .. DeLiso Debs sing a ,gayC song. of 1943 fashians, withGus variations. See our new ship- k E Block Antelope, C r ment of navy blues ... they'll Black Patent or Blue Calf. . . $8.95 C set you humming "it's fun to be first with the new!" C $_9C 108 East Washington Phone 2-2685 C f s4 WT V UUU fLUiUuruu uLF Guide to Beauty Time for a new permanent Price from $6.50. GROOMWELL BEAUTY SALON 1205 S. University Ph. 4818 Keep up the morale. look your prettiest always. GENEVIEVE BEAUTY SHOP 611 E. University WASHINGTON- (P)- To the vot- ers of Fairfield County, Conn.: Your Congresswoman, Clare Boothe Luce, had another big day in Wash- ington. She: 1) Got into a debate in the House and heard herself accused of imper- ialism. 2) Testified in behalf of Lend- Lease. 3) Got a rise out of the White House. J. William Fulbright, a Democrat who at 37 has been president of the University of Arkansas and holds four college degrees, touched off the de- bate. He ripped into Republican Mrs. Luce's freshman speech of last week, when she said the United States must Eastern, Central War Times Battle In County OfficeI Mrs. Luella M. Smith is in a most receptive mood for the donation of a clock for her county clerk's office. That would give her two clocks- one labeled "court time" and giving the hour in Eastern War Time; and the other with a placard reading "clerk's time" and giving the hour in Central War Time. The trouble is that Mrs. Smith serves the county in two capacities, and must operate on a different time for each. As county clerk she is on "slow" time. As clerk to the circuit court she is on "fast" time. That's because Prosecutor George Meader has ruled that Washtenaw county and the county offices must! operate on Central War Time, but Judge George W. Sample is continu- ing to hold court on Ann Arbor's East- ern War Time. As a. result, Mrs. Smith's office1 opens at 8:30 "fast" time and closes at 5 o'clock "slow" time, or 6 o'clock Ann Arbor time. That makes a nine and a half-hour day, an hour more than before time became so involved. give immediate attention to post-war aviation, with emphasis on what Brit- ain is doing about it and what we should start doing. The First Round Fulbright said Mrs. Luce advocated a "narrow, imperialistic policy of grab" which would be "probably the most effective method imaginable of bringing on a third World War." Rep. Luce tried twice to interrupt, but the gentleman from Arkansas wouldn't yield, as they say in Con- gress. When he had concluded his re- marks, he and the gentlewoman from Connecticut manned twin micro- phones. Inference vs. Implication Mrs. Luce: The young and very, able gentleman from Arkansas (Mrs. Luce is two years his senior) has spok- en rather loosely of what he called my freedom of the air policy. By his definition of what he calls a proper policy, does he intend for this country to control its own skies and airports after the war? Fulbright: I would say not any more than we now control our ports r:nder the traditional policy of free- don of the seas. Mrs. Luce: I would like to ask the gentleman another question. In his speech he said I "inferred" this- or that. I inferred nothing. I implied, and the gentleman from Arkansas did ithe inferring. I ask the gentleman to give a precise passage, a precise quote from the text of my speech in Which Kttmor 2 epartincen 1: ANIM f/ II I said America must ereignty of the skies tion. The Winner? Fulbright: I don't said exactly that. Mrs. Luce: Give control the sov- of any other na- think I said you one passage in Sri is Oil its WAy!# which I implied, inferred or stated specifically that this country should acquire air sovereignty in any other nation without the consent of that nation. Fulbright: Would like me to read your speech again to this House? laughter). That is implicit through- out your speech, as I see it. Mrs. Luce: You are inferring. Our Sturdy Denim Efficiency Expert 6.50 Entrance of Spring in print and plaid taffeta with eyelet trim on col~ lar and on the three- quarter length sleeves. j l i s~ii; t H.5 I Wear it for housework, painting or pottering, Victory gardening, war work. Designed by Claire McCardell, it slips right over the clothes you want to protect, or stands on its own merits as a com- plete costume. Quilted catch-all pocket, pot- holder mitt that swings from the waistband on a tape. Blu4 navy and white, muted multicolor plaids and checks. Sizes 10 to 20. I I it I