WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1944 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE War Council Positions Revealed at Insta lation Night Groups Announce Heads, HonorariesTap (Continued from Page 1) Gaffney will be in charge of awards.I WAA Ieads NamedI The interhouse manager will be Barbar Fairman with Barbara Os-I borne as the dormitory assistant andI Jane Archer as the sorority assistant.I Jean Brown will be the league house assistant while Dona Guimaraes takes care of the publicity. Virginia Thomas was named presi- dent of the University Women's Rid-x ing Club and Emily Peters is to headl Crop and Saddle. Heading the WAAt clubs are Mary Perrone, archery; Joan Kintzing, rifle; Lee Wellman, outing; Patricia Daniels, softball; Helen Masson, basketball; and Jeant Parsons, dance. The list continues with Martha Al- len, badminton; Alene Loeser, pingI pong; Patricia Dillenbeck, fencing; Ann Barlow, golf; and Harriet Risk, tennis. Dorothy Flint will head bowl- ing while Ruthann Bales, Virginia Brady and Rita Auer wil guide hoc- key, la crosse and swimming, respec- tively.r New Judiciary Members Speaking for Judiciary Council,l the new president of Judiciary, Nat- alie Mattern, announced that Dor- othy Pugsley, Alpha Chi Omega,I and Cornelia Groefsema, Betsy Bar- bour, were the new senior members of the Council. Ruthann Bales, Delta Gamma, and Harriet Pierce were named as the junior members. Patty Spore, retiring head of the1 Women's Glee Club, named Rita1 Christian, Delta Delta Delta, vice- president, and Ruth MacNeal, Gam-t ma Phi Beta, secretary. The treas- urer and business manager will be1 Virginia Weadock, Alpha Omicron Pi, and Eleanor Stewart, also Alpha Om-t icron Pi, will be the historian. Ber- nice Hall and Dorothy Gray will ber the librarians. First Lloyd Scholarship Marge Hall, Cornelia Groefsema and Edith Jean Richards were the1 recipients of the three Ethel Mc- Cormick undergraduate scholarships1 of $100 each. Receiving the firstI Alice Crocker Lloyd fellowship for graduate students ever given, was Barbara Smith. The fellowship car- ries a stipend of $500. Senior Society tapped Bethine Clark, Ruth Edberg, Helen Newberry; Lucille Genuit, Martha Cook; Cor- nelia Groefsema, Betsey Barbour; Marge Hall, Martha Cook; Doris Pet- erson, Helen Newberry; Janet Peter- son, Betsey Barbour; and Evelyn Phillips, Adelia Cheever. Recognize Freshmen Mortar Board, national honorary for senior women, started a new tra-; dition last night, by recognizing freshmen women active in campus projects. Those recognized were Jean Hole, Elaine Greenbum, Judith Ra- do ,Ellen Vinacke, Doris Krueger, Ev- elyn Hill, Jo Simpson, Lucy Stone, Es- telle Klein, Elaine Raiss, Bobette Ringland and Marcia Mellman. Following the presentation of freshmen certificates, Mortar Board tapped 15 second semester juniors as new members of the Mortar Board chapter. Those presented with the 23 Members invitations to membership were Patri- cia Coulter, Shelby Dietrich, Harriet Fischel, Cornelia Groefsema, Marge Hall, Betty Harrison and Mary Ann Jones. The list continues with Peg Laubengayer, Jean Loree, Natalie' Mattern, Deborah Parry, Evelyn' Phillips, Marjorie Rosmarin, Ann Terbrueggan and Betty Wileman. Members of Senior Society will be seen wearing their distinctive white collar and blue bow on campus to- morrow, while Mortar Board neo- phytes will wear their mortarboards to classes. Orientation Advisors 1 Freshmen Orientation Advisors fora the '44 Fall term were announced as1 follows: Ruthann Bales, Barbara Bathke, Irma Bluestein, Jay Bronson, Mary Broson, Kathryn, Burton, Pat Burt-; on, Barbara Butler, Dorothy' Castri-; cum, Judith Chayes, Carolyn Conant, Dorothy del Siena, Marian Dunlap,1 Carol Evans, Jennie Fitch, Carol Gi-1 ordano, June Gumerson, Nancy Hoff- man, Josephine Holmes, Manry Jane7 Janiga, Joan Kintzing, Rosemaryj Klein, Joan Kistler, Jane Longstaff,I Fern MacAllister, Nora MacLaughlin, Ronnie Leitner, Glenn McDaniel; Alma Nielsen, Nancy Northrup, Ruth Mary Picard, Harriet Pierce, Jean Richards, Naomi Schur, Mar- garet Semple, Dorothy Servis, Shirley Sickels, Marjorie, Siebert, Joyce Sie- gan, Anne Stanton, Jeanne Storm, Mary Jane Thielsen, Irene Turner, Pat Tyler, Dorothy Wantz, Carol Watt, Virgina Weadock, Beverly Wit-1 tan, Georgia Wyman, Mary Ellen Zahrn, Dorma Zarbock, Betsy Perry, Frances Glennon, Lois Kivi, Betty Ann Kuchar, Gene Lane, Nancy Pot- tinger and Joyce Shapero. Those who were appointed as Transfer Orientation Advisors include Jane Archer, Elaine Bailey, Dorothy Callahan, Margaret Farmer, Jean Gaffney, Jean Glass, Naomi Green- berger, Jean Harkness, Dorothy Har- vey, Priscilla Hodges, Dorothy Hof- mann, Marilyn Lyon, Natalie Ma- guire, Jean Murray; Diane Perry, Jean Pines, Joan Pullum, Nancy Re- ber, Shirley Robin, Elizabeth Rosa, Beaty Rosenblum, Betty Louise Schloss, Ann Schummacher, Jane Strauss. Nancy Tait, Florence Under- wood, Betty Vaughn and Pat White. Also Frances Danin, Betty Jones. Dorothy Kittredge, Claire Macauly, Jean MacKaye, Elizabeth Ann Tay- lor and Nancy Townsend were ap- pointed. The following will be Orientation Advisors for the coming Summer term: Janet Gray, Annie Hainsworth, Elizabeth Hendel, Jean Hotchkin. Elizabeth Jones, Joyce Livermore, Mary Ann Olsen, Joan Shuchowsky and Marjorie Weiss. Mary Ann Jones and Betty Smith will advise incoming Architecture and Design School students. Helen Masson will be the Orientation Ad- visor for the Physical Education School, and Roberta Booth, Eleanor Brown and Jean Morgan will be ad- visors for the Music School. Student Qroup Re-Opens Coed Chairmanship Interviewing for the position of co- ed co-chairman of the 1944-45 Bomb- er Scholarship Committee will be' held from 3:15 to 5:15 p.m. Monday in the League, Jean Bisdee, '44, chair- man of Bomber Scholarship, said yes- terday in announcing the re-opening of petitioning for women interested in working on Bomber Scholarship. The coed selected for the position will jointly hold the chairmanship of the new committee with a member of the Union, and the rest of the com- mittee will also be made up jointly of League and Union members. Sophomores, Juniors May Apply Petitioning is open to sophomore and junior women; who must bring applications with them to the inter- view. Petitions, which may be ob- tained from the League social direc- tor from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 5 p.m. today through Friday, must include plans for the position, previous experience in extra-curricu- lar activities, the date the applicant expects to be graduated, and whether or not she will attend summer school. The purpose of Bomber Scholarship is to raise a fund of $100,000 which will purchase a bomber now and sub- sequently provide special scholarships for returning servicemen. Work to- ward this goal has included sponsor- ing dances, a concert, a carnival and various other functions which have brought this year's committee one- fourth of the way toward its goal. Plans Must Be Stated in Petition Applicants for the new committee should state plans for the possiblel continuation of these functions, and for potential new projects for the raising of money, which is put into war bonds. Applicants for the co-chairmanship should also formulate plans for the composition of the rest of the com- WAC OfficerE To Interview Lt. Rogers-Will Be Stationed In League for Indefinite Period Opportunity to obtain first-hand information on the Women's Army Corps has been brought closer to campus coeds, as Lt. Barbara Bethel Rogers will be stationed in the League for an indefinite period beginning today. Lt. Rogers' office hours are from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily, and from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday. Women may be interviewed in the evenings by appointment. Appointments, for which Lt. Rog-1 ers suggests at least one hour be allotted, may be made by calling her at extension 7 at the League. Establishment of the recruiting of- fice on campus is, according to Lt. Rogers, for the benefit of those wo- men interested in assignment here and abroad in the WAC, in which many interesting fields are now open, she said. Information may be ob- tained from Lt. Rogers on the Army service forces, Army ground forces, and Army air forces, in particular the air transport command, whose head- quarters are at Romulus Air Base., Tickets are being sold for the University - sponsored "Spring Swing" to be held from 8:30 p.m. to1 midnight Saturday, May 13, with Sonny Dunham's orchestra. Tick- ets may be bought at Waterman Gymnasium, at the Union and League desks and in local book- stores. mittee, according to Miss Bisdee. Other Bomber Scholarship positions will be decided by the new chairmen. Persons interested in other phases of work may petition and interview, and recommendation will be made by the interviewing committee to the new chairmen. Union Finishes' Dance Plans Announcing the final plans for the annual Union Spring Formal, Don Larson, publicity chairman, yester- day stated that the decorations would be simple but in keeping with the spring theme with white, green and yellow streamers adorning the band- stand and doorway. The dance will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union Ballroom which will once again be open for the traditional Union af- fair. Bill Sawyer and his orchestra will be back at their old post to pro- vide the music with Judy Ward and Billy Layton on the lyrics. The list of patrons for the formal include Prof. and Mrs. Robert Robert L. Dixon, Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Boys, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kuenzel, Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Meyers, Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Olson and Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Wixon. Either spring or summer formals will be in keeping with the occasion, the committee announced. Grops Invited To Rut hven Tea President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven will entertain members of the student body, and especially men of Company A and D of the ASTP, residents of Stockwell Hall, members of Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Theta Delta Chi and League Houses of Zones VII and VIII at a tea from 4 to 6 p.m. today in their home. 'Rumor Has It' the Waltz Is Back But Revival Is Only Temporary By PEG WEISS, That favorite of Mrs. Kickem's, dancing class, the waltz, is coming back . . . but its second life won't be its longest. Digging the 19th century's "hot" style out of its grave in the "Side- walks of New York" is the Co. D show, "Rumor Has It." Rumor has it that the musical comedy features a beautiful song in waltz time called "So Much in Love," complete with whirling dancers and a five-part chorus. The Co. D version of the waltz is a mixture of the old and the new. The melody and tempo are of the best romantic tradition. But the harmony will make Strauss stir in his grave ... and in the process he'll probably sit up and take notice. And no doubt he'll wish he had thought of it first. Waltz Revival Inevitable According to early previewers, the catchy tune will probably catch Ann Arbor as soon as the song is per- formed, and the lyrics chime well with spring, the Arboretum, and the side of campus we don't see in the daytime. So it all adds up to . . . yes, a waltz revival. But dancing the waltz in the League ballroom is another matter. Several problems will arise. First of all, few Michigan men know how to waltz. Some think they are "divine dancers," and they still dance the waltz the wrong way. "So Much in Love" is written in the quick tempo of the old waltz, ignoring the modern trend to slow down the dance. This tempo must be followed correctly or not followed at all. Takes Too Much Space Secondly, the waltz takes space. Those few who can really waltz need the IM building to themselves, and the League with several hundred couples is no place for "So Much in Love." Third, waltzers twirl around in a circle interminably, and it takes a ballerina to waltz for even a short while without finding the room up- side-down. By the time the typical Michigan couple reach the League on a Saturday night, they are in no condition to be made dizzier. Position Important But the payoff comes when we con- sider the position in which the waltz, the real, 19th-century waltz, is exe- cuted. And it is this position which will execute the waltz. The couple should be at arm's length from each other, and this presents the alterna- tive of two problems. First, suppose you're with a dud. When you're dan- cing several feet from him or her, you have to look at his or her face. And they say four out of five, etc. Second, suppose he or she is not a dud. There's no reason why we should have better imagination than the reader, so we will go on to an- other point. Which is that the waltz will never replace the two-step in Ann Arbor. "So Much in Love" is a song which, observers predict, will be a sensation. But it cannot permanently, revolu- tionize Michigan dancing. After a short splurge, the waltz will settle back in the attic and pick up the dust of several more decades. "Let's dance" . . . but it will be to four-four time. v i .! ,/ Here s Your 3.95 HAT I I I i yt ni j 1 .. All-Weather Friend! s.oo I I I I . :1 1--' Foul weather or fair, you're slick as can be in this dashing military, styled raincoat of cot- ton gabardine. 12.95 Of par -a-twill at $22.95 ..and / j, ff fi ; :: a' " .{ "4" ;c.: :$ 4 ' t e~u ....r.>. 3.95 °I hey ln 't Iing arc unJ veI ry lng these cute little hats you love! DuICh cap S Other styles Classic g-abar. l iii Summer's the time to make romantic matches between skirts and blouses. 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