THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1944 THE M1CHIG A N DAILY PAGE FIVE Sonny Dunham To Play for Informal Dance May 13 Jobs Offered' In Accounting Seniors Will Be Interviewed For Prospective Training Graduating senior women with no definite plans for a career will be given an opportunity to investigate the field of certified public account- ing when Richard Donham, repre- sentative of a Chicago firm, inter- views applicants from. 10 a.m. to noon and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow. The firm is offering a scholarship training, course, to be held from. June 26 to Sept. 8 at Northwestern Univer- sity and at Connecticut College, for 48 women from midwestern colleges and universities and guarantees the graduates positions as juniors on the firm's staff. All Expenses To Be Paid During their training, all expenses of the students, including tuition, books, room and board will be paid by the firm. In addition they will receive $10 per week for their per- sonal use. On successful completion of the course, followed by one week's vacation, graduates will report for work with the firm at a minimum salary of $145 per month. According to Mr. Donham, the coming summer graduates will prob- ably report to the New York or Detroit offices of the firm and pos- sibly to one of the other seventeen offices. "Although juniors attached to one office work out of that office alone, the national and international character ofrthe firm holds possibili- ties for future transfer if desired," he added. "In any event, auditing work will take girls into a variety of com- panies and industries and presents some chance for travel with expenses paid." No Experience Necessary Although the firm is interested in girls with accounting backgrounds, their program is primarily designed to train coeds who have not before thought of this field as holding prom- ise for them. It makes no difference what they are majoring in or what subjects they have taken. When the juniors start their work in the firm, they will be closely sup- ervised by more experienced members of the staff. Those women who show capacity and grasp of the subject will progress to higher responsibility witih subsequent increases in pay. Coeds interested in being inter- viewed should contact Mrs. Heil, sec- retary of the business administration school, for an appointment before tomorrow. Males To Crash Senior, Junior Women's Night The prospect of free entertainment will, according to rumor, lead seven pledges of a local fraternity to "be- come" graduating senior women at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 27, to gain, entrance to the first floor of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre for Sen- ior Night and Junior Girls Play. a "No man can outsmart us," Phyl Buck, '44, assistant chairman of ar- rangements, said yesterday. "We'll spot our ersatz seniors, and after we do there'll be seven more men in Ypsi." Preparations in the other camp are, in the meantime, continuing. "We have two courses of action," the fraternity president said yesterday. "Either we'll use the names of senior girls who aren't going to their old affair, or we'll slip phony names on the senior list and pass in with those. "It's not because we object to pay- ing 60c for a balcony seat," he con- tinued. "It's the principle of the thing. In this country there are no class distinctions. So where do the senior women get the idea they can sit in the orchestra and shunt the 'great unwashed' in to the balcony. Men of the campus, unite!" Miss Buck yesterday hinted a sec- ret weapon in the offing: possibly a password for senior women only. Or the "authorities" might take a tug at the hair of each "senior" to test for, validity, for the men will no doubt wear wigs. Aloof from the impending battle,C the junior coeds are holding daily. rehearsals for Junior Girls Play, Which will be given at 8:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday, April 27 and 28. Senior women will be admitted free Thursday, while balcony seats will be sold to the public, and Friday's performance will be entirely open to the public. Sorority Elections The Beta Chapter of Gamma Phi Beta announces the election of De- borah Parry, '45, president; Dorothy Steffes, '45, vice-president; Rosemary Klein, '45, corresponding secretary; Ruth MacNeal, '45, recording secre- tary; Jane Arner, '46, treasurer. Recent pledges are Marilyn Watt, '47, Betty Houk, '47, and Hazel Ruet- tinger, '45SM. 'U' Will Hold Bomber Fund Assembly Ba I I I i I Spring Swing' 1 n Waterman Bomber Scholarship Fund Will Receive Proceeds of Function; Tickets To 3e Sold Next Week A University-sponsored informal dance, "Spring Swing," featuring Sonny Dunham and his orchestra, will be held from 9 p.m. until mid- night, Saturday, May 13, in Water- man Gym. The "Spring Swing" is another feature sponsored by the University to provide entertainment and relaxa- tion for students and servicemen. It Interviewing To 'Start Monday r Persons who would like to apply for positions on next year's Bomber Scholarship Committee who have not yet petitioned may bring petitions with them to an interview at 4 p.m. Monday in the Student Offices of the Union, according to Jean Bisdee, '44, chairman of Bomber Scholarship. Petitioning is chiefly for those in- terested in the co-chairmanship of the 1944 - 45 Bomber Scholarship Committee, which will be held by one coed and one man. However, anyone interested in other types of work, such as publicityand special events, may. also apply at the same time. Petitions may be secured from the Social Director of the League from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow and Friday and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. Applica- tions should include, in addition to the information requested on the blank, the prospective date of gradu- ation of the applicant and whether or not he or she expects to attend the summer session or term. Petitioners will be interviewed by the Bomber Scholarship Committee, which is composed of chairmen of student activities of the League and Union, and headed by Miss Bisdee. This year's work on the Bomber Scholarship Fund, which is now one- fourth of the way toward its $100,000 goal, has been accomplished by a functional committee of League and Union members. SteVens Cooperative Will Hold Tea Today Stevens Cooperative House will hold a tea for prospective Co-op members from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today at 816 Forest Street. Any student who is interested in joining the Co-ops is urged to come and ask any questions which they might have concerning Cooperatives. ICC menibers from other houses are also urged to met students who are planning on entering the Co-ops next semester. Petitions Due Today is the deadline for turning in petitions for the Assembly Ball Committee. Interviewing will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow and from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday. Petitions may be had from Miss Ethel McCormick's office at the League. Every independent woman is eligi- ble to apply for any of the eight positions. According to Doris Barr, president of Assembly, no petitions have as yet been received from wo- men of Stockwell or Mosher Hall. The eight positions on the commit- tee are those of general chairman, tickets, program, publicity, decora- tions, patrons, finance and music chairmen. Each of these committee heads will work in conjunction with women appointed by Pan Hellenic to fill the same positions. Panhellenic and Assembly have de- cided to combine their annual for - mals into one big event to be given in the very near future. Pan Hel has already selected its committee. Miss Barr has suggested that peti- tioners include in their applications ideas for a theme for the dance which will, be appropriate for both Assembly and Pan Hel. Scholarships Open to Coeds Today is the deadline for petition- ing for the Ethel McCormick scholar- ships of $100 each which will be awarded to three junior women May 2 as part of the Installation Night ceremonies. Applicants may obtain scholarship petitions in the Undergraduate Office of the League. The scholarships will be awarded on the basis of participa- tion in activities, scholastic rating, which is a minimum of 2.7, and need. Petitions, accompanied by two orig- inal letters of recommendation, are to be deposited in Monna Heath's box in the Undergraduate Office. The letters may be turned in separately, but must be in before noon Saturday. The executive council of the Wo- men's War Council will interview ap- plicants from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today. By ELLEN HILL The freshman coeds in their recent bloadcasting campaign have let the campus know that it is spring and the time when those barren plots of lawn that have been student stamp- ing grounds all winter should be al- lowed to provide themselves with a bit of grass. Jay-walking students guiltily hop- ped back on the sidewalk and took the longer way around as "The Amer- ican Frontier hasmoved westward- trail blazing is no longer necessary in the State of Michigan" boomed over the campus. "Sailor, don't drop your anchor here," startled many a man of the sea into sticking to the good ole cement sidewalks instead of the short but, thanks to the voice of the Freshman Project, more con- spicious lawn trails. The gals of '47 are really in earnest about their Class Project. Last fall they donned blue jeans, plaid skirts, armed themselves with rakes and at- tacked fallen leaves and loose paper with vigor, amidst the shrill whistles of the opposite sex. This spring has already seen the freshman women coming to the aid of suffering lawns and grounds. Refuse containers for cigarettes and loose papers have been placed around the campus by the '47 coeds to help alleviate the severe shortage of men workers. The fresh- man women realize that although their work may not be as glamorous as other war work, it is just as es- sential. So make way, Michigan men and women, for the new troop of workers who are determined to realize their slogan, "Campus Beautiful"-the '47 Corps. USO Lists To Close All coeds who have not completed their registration for the USO Junior Hostess Corps must do so by Monday, May 1, or their names will be with- drawn from the lists. Letters of rec- ommendation, one from a minister and one from a family friend, must be in by that date. Freshman Coeds Point the Finger At Quilty CampusLawn-Walkers SONNY DUNHAM has already presented "Victory Varie- ties" in an effort to give more enjoy- ment to the men and women attend- ing the University. Orchestra Played for Soph Prom Sonny Dunham has appeared here previously at Soph Prom in 1941. H-:s success as a bandleader was preceded by solo stardom when still a young- ster. In less. than ten years after he first played the trumpet, Dunham was voted "First among the 'Hot' Trumpeters." Before organizing his own band, Dunham played with Glen Gray and his Casa Loma orchestra. He is now bracketed by the trade reviewers of Tin Pan Alley with the nation's top- flight bands, on the basis of appear- auces at theatres, nightclubs and radio. Decorations at Minimum Decorations for the dance will be kept to a minimum. However, the committee has planned for unusual door prizes to be presented in a novel mannrer. Ticket sales will be held next week. Location of ticket booths will be an- nIounced at a later date. Proceeds from the affair will go to the Bomber S,,'bolarship and other University- picked funds. Inter-Guild To Give Carnival-Cabaret THE PRIDE OF HER LIFE! DIAMOND RINGS FIRST IN HER HEART-FIRST IN QUALITY Giving "her" a diamond combination is an all- important event . . so why not make your selec- tion The Pride of Her life . . make it a Lady crosby ensemble such as the scintillating, artfully - ^crafted duette pictured. 20% Federal Tax Included SE4FRIE JEtWELRS 304 Sovitlh Mai All members of the Junior Girls Project publicity conmittee, and anyone who has signed up to work on junior play and has not yet reported to the chairman, must at- 'tend a meeting at 4 p.mn. toaday in the League Undergraduate Office. Anyone who is unable to attend is urged to contact the JGP publicity chairman, Peg Weiss, at 2-3225 at noon today.g This week has been designated as Diamond Week by the jewelers of $1 0 America. The purpose of the event is to set aside a week during which dia- monds will be made more familiar and understandable to consumers. ALL DIAMONDS WERE o NOT CREATED EQUAL That's why you should make your diamond selection from a Registered Jeweler. He purchases diamonds the modern scientific way, and passe~s the benefits along to you at no added cost. You profit by his proven scientific knowl- edge and his internationally recognized integrity. His title assures you of better value; regardless of price r0 Jewelers and Silversmiths 208 S. Main ' 4I 11 Entertainment by students from the International Center vill high- light the Inter-Guild carnival-cab- aret, whichbwill be held at 8:15 p.m. Saturday, April 29, in Lane Hall, ac- cording to Marjorie Cavins, '44, pres- ident of Inter-Guild. Carnival booths, refreshments and dancing will also be included in the event, which is being planned by a committee of students from Ann Ar- bor Protestant church groups, head- ed by Fred McKinney, '44P. Recently-elected officers of Kappa Kappa Gamma are Dorothy Castri- cum, '45, president; Natalie Mattern, '45, Standards; Jean Campbell, '45, pledge captain; Shirley Sickels, '46, rusl 'ng chairman; Beth King, '45, sociM chairman; Carol Miller, '45, scholarship; Phyllis Crawford, '45SM, treasurer; Marcia Netting, '45, mar- shal; Marcia Sharpe, '45A, recording secretary; Pat Heil, '45, correspond- ing secretary, and Shelby Dietrich, '45, deputy. CLOCK CL00KXI N T O T HE D IA MO ND , st }. t -" .: t { k tg } f' S .. 4. ty }S 'ti;. ; V f. ; \v 6 i., _ EP .E S'ocl t.4 ', . fa i IS M~ai K7VVa rs E I CZ< ~±&my~ ~ 1 ilC L ? GIFT /A« f , ,-.. ti . . . .. .,., / 4ry > :. ,r I off-hours a sparklnj msmod OUR FORTY YEARS of service assures you of fine quality diamonds -- exceptionally fine design combined with superb cutting and color. There are still a few available in platinum settings - why not drop in to see us today? :, s dates Your all-of-the-tiene everywhere .. . an in- dispensable short coat that you toss on over slacks, playclothes, day or night-tim- classes A { r$.ers or wrap 'round your date frills . . in I 11