THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Plans fre Completed for Tue Installation Night cit Rackh am sde Airline Hostess To Interview Pitch and Putt Club Invites Lillian Mikula, Jane Servais Head March Laundry Honor Roll Coeds To Join Coed Applicants Council Heads To Be Named; Honorary Societies Will Tap Installation Night, presided over by the newly announced president of the Women's War Council, Marge Hall, '45, will be. held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Auditorium, with Mine. Betty Barzin, 'efugee author, speak- ing on "America Through Belgian Eyes." In accordance with tradition, the new Women's War Council will be installed by the retiring council, aft- er which the new council will preside over the assemblage for the rest of the program. Judiciary Council Installation In the ,same fashion, the 1944-45 Judiciary Co4ncil, of which Natalie Mattern, '45, has already been named president, will be installed, and in ad- dition the new Assembly Board and PanhellenicnCouncil will take office. New chairmen and committee members of the various class projects --surgical dressings, sale of war stamps and bonds; hospital volun- teers, and '47 Corps-will be formally recognized. ,Included in the ceremonies will be the awarding of the three Ethel Mc- Cormick scholarships of $100 each and the Alice Lloyd scholarships to outstanding women on campus. Honor Societies To Tap The ceremony, which ; annually honors office holders of all the major women's organizations, will be cli- maxed by the tapping of outstanding independent junior women by, Senior Society; to be followed by Mortar- board's tapping of both affiliated and independent women, Mortarboard be- ing the' top national senior women's honorary society in the country. Mme. Barzin, guest speaker for the evening, has written articles for Life magazine, Time and Fortune, and has many experiences to relate about her home country which she left shortly before it fell under Nazi con- trol. Frosh Project Sends Parade Around Campus Jan Savitt Brings Top-Hatters To, Slide-Rule Formal Friday JAN SAVITT Honor Society Setting the mood for the annual Slide-Rule Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday in the Union! Ballroom, the strains of "It's a Won- derful World" will for the second successive year bring Jan Savitt 'and his Top-Hatters to the students, serv- icemen and their guests on the Mich- igan campus. Two years ago the orchestra played for a swing concert held in the Sta- dium. Savitt's sweet swing is na- tionally known through his record- ings, broadcasts over the major net- works and his many personal ap- pearances in colleges and hotels throughout the country. Savitt Began CareertEarly The originality and danceable tempo of the , orchestra's arrange- ments are the result of Savitt's clas- sical background. Born in Russia, Jan Savitt was brought to the United States and began his musical career at the age of four when he coaxed the strains of Tschaikowsky from a toy violin. He later played the violin with the r Philadelphia Orchestra and then or- ganized the Savitt String Quartet which won th'e New York Philhar- v monic Society's Gold Medal in 1934. a The quartet joined CBS, later mov- ing to NBC, and Savitt started a rearranging the instrumentation of the station orchestra to give it more . originality. a "Sweet Swing" Is Savitt Specialty y Believing "sweet swing" to be the American music, Savitt has attempt- . ed to correlate his experience in the - field of classical music with modern jazz. In his rendition of Raymond Scott's "In an Eighteenth Century Drawing Room," Savitt drew on the , sensitive and delicate themes of the - Mozart original and carried it through , with his violin. Chief Hostess for Pennsylvania- Central Airlines, Miss Nellie Kemm, will arrive in Detroit Tuesday to in- terview womep from this area who are interested in becoming air host- esses.' The interviews will be conducted on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Book-CadillaC Hotel. It is no longer necessary to be a registered nurse to apply for this training, Miss Kempn announced, adding that applicants must be at- tractive, between 21 and 26 -years of age, and have two years of college work plus two years of business train- ing. Trimness is essential, she said, and the applicant must be five feet, five inches tall, and have a miximum weight of 120 pounds. Has Initiation Pi Lambda Theta, national honor society for women in education, held initiation, ceremonies foil twenty new members'in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League. The new'members are: Mrs. Wilma Becknell, Ashland, Ky.; Carolyn E /E Bock, Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Cecili C. Conrath, Terre Haute, Ind.; Mercy Cornelius, Vellore, India; Doris L Davenport, Baltimore, Md.; Elsie M Erkfitz, Dearborn, Mich.; Alma Jack son, Englewood, N.J.; Cynthia M. Jones, Otsego, Mich. Also initiated were Marian Luhrs Unionport, N.Y.; Ruth Anderson Mc Neal, New York, N.Y.; Mary P. Moore Iron aRiver, Mich.; Margaret C. Mor gan, Grosse Pointe, Mich.; Margare E. Nix, Winnipeg, Canada; Jean Oak leaf, Allegheny, N.Y.; Mary Ann Olson, Ann Arbor; Bertha I. Park hurst, Scottsdale, Ariz; Mrs. Barbara Podrabsky, Royal Oak, Mich.; Lu cretia A. Saunders, Indianapolis, Ind. Loraine Shepard, Detroit, and- Fran ces E. Zyn. Women interested in becoming members of Pitch and Putt Club, the WAA golf association, must play nine holes of golf at the University Golf Club and turn in their scores .to the WAB on or before May 15, according to Barbara Wallace, '45Ed, retiring manager of the club. On the basis of the scores turned in, members of the University Wo- men's Golf Club will be selected, the four women with the lowest scores constituting the team with the next four low scorers becoming alternates. All eight women will be accorded free play at the University Golf Course for the remainder of the golfing season. Further information may be had by calling Miss Wallace at 24514 until the new golf manager is announced. Lillian Mikula, '45, and Jane Ser- vais, '47, led the March University Laundry honor roll with 38 hours and 37 hours respectively ,according to Gerry Stadleman, '44, personnel di- rector of undergraduate women. "The March report of laundry workers indicates that University coeds are continuing their splendid response to a plea for workers to re- lieve the manpower shortage," Miss Stadlman said. "A total of 103 coeds worked 1,180 hours in March," she continued. "This is a great improve- ment over February, when only 758 hours were contributed." Also on the honor roll are Walda Stahmer, '46, and Elizabeth Messom, '46, with 32 hours each, Ruth H. Smith, '45, with 30 hours, and Jo- sephine Wierzbowska, '46Ed., with 28 hours. According to Miss Stadleman, some students who signed for work have not yet checked in at the laundry. She urged these land others who are interested in working to start as soon as possible. Additional coeds are needed on week-day mornings, and some can' still be used in the afternoon for the laundry work for which workers are paid 56 cents per hour. New workers may obtain information about the work by calling Miss Stadleman at 2-3159. ti XXX FAVORITE of Thousands This Front-Laci ngCorset Thousands of women, everywhere, order Gossard's famous 523B, again and again! Superior figure correction features and exceptional comfort are responsible for its widespread popw larity. The heavier women find new youth and slenderizing grace in this firm brocade corset . i VAN BURENS 8 Nickels Arcade t e a . . '4 Tickets are being sold for the University sponsored "Spring Swing" to be held from 8:30 p.m. to midnight, Saturday, May 13, in Waterman Gym, at the Union and League desks and in local book- stores. Only a limited number of tickets will be made available. ______________________________________________________________ 7 By ELLEN, HILL A number of freshman coeds re- cently reminded students of the work of the '47 Corps by parading across campus with raised banners which bore such messages as "Keep- the Grass Clean" and "Give the Grass a Chance." Students;pouring forth from cam- pus buildings stopped, stared and stayed as the marching '47 column, melodiously chanting the aims and regulations of t Campus Clean-Up Week, passed by. Starting from the substation be- hind Waterman Gymnasium, the pa- rade me de its way to the Library, where one of the campaigners, losing her poster-slogan, was forced to re- trieve it by trespassing on the lawn amidst good-natured jeers from the sidelines to "keep off the grass." After touring the campus the clean-up corps disbanded in favor of lunch. The freshman women are not merely giving parades in recognition of Clean-Up Week. They are in ear- nest about going to work with rakes and baskets. Last week on the days the weather permitted, the women of '47 could be seen energetically raking some section of the campus and col- lecting unsightly loose papers. A few of-the freshman women are so in earnest about their clean-up jobs that they jealously guard those parts of the campus which they have already cleaned. Recently a careless coed was loudly notified by shrieks of dismay from some nearby '47 workers that she was walking on sacred ground-ground that they had raked only the day before. With such spirit and ambition the freshman women will soon realize their Project's aim-a campus that the University can be proud of. Dressings Unit Will Re-Open The League Surgical Dressings Unit will re-open as soon as the Ann Arbor Red Cross Unit receives a sufficient supply of gauze to supply both units, according to Harriet Fishel, '45, chairman of the Unit. Because of manufacturing and transportation difficulties the League Unit has been forced to close until new material can be obtained. Miss Fishel also announced that the quota will be raised, as University coeds have demdnstrated that they are capable of doing a greater amount of work. The system of having houses send a specified number of workers will be o X ,i~ ~ the Abx As apS rs tot 7ri otv) '°c t T, gaeT\ ~l\ w a , a s 1 a' ec ° t 1 c e , it es *a a r g ' S e etcoO x a oa et sl rb ay eS _h XXO 11oca Oc 'Q .WOO ioj z . > ' ~ '_,r .Al 'I