4~,TIli MCRGA DAILY PAGE FIVE V-1 2 Orchestra Will Play for Navy S fAnchor Ball' Third Battalion! Will Sponsor Dance at Union Three Hurdred Tickets Are Available for Naval Personnel; Proceeds To Go to Relief Fund Stan Oviatt and the V-12 orchestra will be featured at "Anchor Ball," Third Batallion - sponsored dance which will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, June 3, in the Union Ballroom. Ticket sales, which are now open to all members of the Naval V-12 Unit, are being handled by members of the Third Battalion. Tickets were at first available for Third Battalion members only, and subsequently were put on general sale for the other members of the'unit. 300 Tickets To Be Sold Three hundred tickets only will be sold for the affair, proceeds from which will go to the Navy Relief Fund, according to Don Larson, pub- licity director for the dance. "Anchor Ball" will be the first public performance of the V-12 or- chestra, which features Don Ram- bacher and his trumpet. Most of the members of the band, which is directed by Stan Ovaitt, had pro- fessional musical experience before they joined the V-12 Unit here. Officers Invited Special invitations for the dance will be extended to officers and en- listed men of the local Navy staff. The dance is the second to be held by members of the V-12 Unit, and fol- lows "Ships Ball," which was given in January for the entire unit. The committee in charge is headed by Laurence A. Burk, general chair- man. William Wood is in charge of arrangements, and Robert Brazil is directing ticket sales. Interviewing for positions on the Panhellenic war activities, rushing, and publicity committees will con- tinue from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.. today and tomorrow in the Garden Room of the League, according to Peggy Laubengayer, '45, president of Pan- hellenic. The excellent response of women anxious to work on the. three committees caused the inter- viewing time to be extended, Miss Laubengayer said. Registration for 'Boulevard Ball' Date Bureau Will Be Held Today Registration for the date bureau, which will function for "Boulevard Ball" to be held from 9 p.m. to mid- night, Saturday, May 27, in Water- man Gymnasium, will be held for men today from 5 to 7 p.m. and will continue at the same time all week in the Union. The decorations committee for the dance, which is sponsored by Panhel- lenic and Assembly, sorority and in- dependent women's organizations, has planned to turn Waterman Gym into a park. Intermission entertain- ment has also been arranged, and a coke bar will be set up in Barbour Gym. Music by Jerry Wald Contrary to a usual rule in the rise of band leaders, Jerry Wald, whose orchestra will be featured at the dance, served no apprenticeship but started his musical career by leading a band of his own. Wald, who is rapidly becoming known as one of the finest clarinet-playing musicians in the East, will come here from an engagement at the New Yorker Hotel. Wald stepped out of high school to lead his own band when he was 19 years old and has been leading it ever '47 Corps To Begin Planting of Victory Gardens Saturday The '47 Corps, beginning Saturday, will undertake as part of their class project the planting and care of cam- pus Victory Gardens, which will be located behind the League and Jor- dan and Stockwell Halls, according to Estelle Klein, '47, chairman of the Freshman Project Committee. "Now that the freshman women have completed the major work need- ed to be done on the campus lawns, the '47 Corps will start campus Vic- tory Gardens in order to help relieve the food shortage and to cooperate with the request of the government to raise garden products," said Miss Klein. Tomatoes will be the only "crop" of the campus gardens and will be cared for by all the freshman women who wish to volunteer for the work. Each '47 worker who is interested in the Victory Garden work can sign up with her dormitory or league house leader for a certain time each week to work. since. After playing in New Jersey for a few years, he went to California where he formed a four-piece combi- nation that included Stan Kenton as pianist. From there, he and his band went to New York and have been there ever since, breaking attend- ance records. He is a Decca recording artist. Vocals by Powell, Merrick Handling the vocals will be Ginny Powell and Dick Merrick. Miss Pow- GINNY POWELL ell, although she started singing for the NBC Red Network three years ago, is only eighteen. Wald's policy is that of playing only pieces he likes. "If I don't like a song, it doesn't go into the books," he maintains. Positions Open For Child Care Interviewing for positions on the central committee of Child Care will continue in the undergraduate offices of the League from 2:30 p.m. to 61 p.m. today and from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow, according to Naomi Miller, head of Child Care Project. The five positions available are those of Girl Reserve chairman, Girl Scout chairman, proxy parent chair- man, personnel chairman and pub- licity chairman. The Girl Reserve chairman and the Girl Scout chairman will have charge of these two organizations at Willow Run. They either should have been members themselves or have knowledge concerning the groups. Proxy parent chairmen will have two assistants and will be responsible for taking care of children in Ann Arbor itself. Personnel chairman will be in charge of volunteers at Willow Run and will keep records and list of substitutes. She will also have a crew of captains under her. Publicity chairman will take care of public relations and will make plans for the mass meetings. Appli- cants for these positions should bring their plans to the interview. JGP To Sell Hair Ribbons Bows for Lantern Night Will Be Distributed to All Houses Hair ribbons in class colors with a war stamp attached will be sold by the JGP committee to the under- graduatenwomentefortthe Lantern Night Song Contest to be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Palmer Field. All dormitory and league house war stamp representatives are asked to be sure to pick up ribbons which will sell at 15c and 30c for their houses when they get their war stamps Thursday and Friday at the League. Ribbons for sorority women will be distributed directly to each house. A JGP representative will also be sta- tioned on the Diagonal Monday for the purpose of selling the ribbons. Part of the tradition of Lantern Night is that the undergraduate wo- men wear ribbons denoting their classes at the function. Yellow is the color for juniors, red for sophomores and green for freshmen. In the Line of March, which will form at 6:45 p.m. at the Library, the seniors in their caps and gowns and the rest of the coeds with their identifying hair bows will make the usual color- ful parade on the campus. Patrons for the Lantern Night Sing announced by Jean Brown, '46, pa- tron chairman, will be: Regent Vera Bates, Regent Alfred Connable, Pres- ident and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruth- ven, Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Smith, Dean and Mrs. Clarence S. Yoakum, Dean and Mrs. Edward S. Kraus, Dr. and Mrs. James D. Bruce, Dean and Mrs. James B. Edmonson, Prof. and Mrs. A. D. Moore, and Dean and Mrs. Wells Bennett. Judges for the contest will be Miss Thelma Lewis, Prof. Arthur Hackett, Prof.Hardin Van Dursen and visiting Prof. Carl Lindegren of the School of Music and Dr. Margaret Bell of the Physical Education Department for Women. USOG To Hold Taffy Party Although some of the participants may emerge with sticky fingers, a good time should be had by all at the Taffy and Dancing Party to be held from 7:30 to 11 p.m. today at the USO Club, according to Ruth Edberg, '45, coed chairman of the USO. As the second in the series of "Kan- dyk Parties" at the USO, all Junior Hostesses andservicemen are invited to attend. Informal dancing will take place in the Tavern Room for those who prefer a less arduous sport, while the taffy pulling will be done in the USO kitchen. Every week on Wed- nesday, the USO plans to hold a "Kandy Party" for the servicemen stationed on campus "to make it more like home." Another new feature of the USO is the free crayon portraits being drawn of the servicemen at the USO Club from 1 to 5 p.m. every Friday. Mrs. John Bradfield is the artist and men wishing to have their portrait drawn should call the USO Club at 26571 to mke appointments. No drawings will be made unless there is an appointment. * * All members of Junior Hostess Regiment Y are requested to attend a meeting 7:30 p.m. Thursday, at the USO Club. According to Helen Alpert, Co. Y's new commander, the meeting will be compulsory. There is still an opportunity for sophomores to sign up for work on the various committees for JGP all this week at the stamp booth in the League, Committees Announce New Appointments Surgical Dressings Appointments to the central com- mittee of the League Surgical Dress- ings Unit were announced yesterday by Harriet Fischel, chairman of the unit. Claire Macaulay has been appoint- ed the new receiver. Billie Jones, Rose Law, and Olive Chernow will act as head packer and assistant packers. Equipment will be handled by Nancy McDurmitt and publicity by Frances Goldberg. Dormitory chairman is Dorothy Flint. Muriel Aaron and Betty Duwe are chairmen of League Houses and. Sororities. Dale Moses and Irma Bluestein are in charge of attend- ance. The unit is open from 1 to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Friday. "In- creased attendance is necessary to make up for the recent period when the unit was closed," Miss Fischel said. "University women have so far maintained a splendid record which must not be allowed to go down," she added. Houses are asked to contribute a specific number of hours each week. Additional workers are needed to fill the quota, however. Workers are urged to contribute two consecutive hours and are reminded to wear cot- ton dresses, blouses or smocks and headscarfs. Nail polish is prohibited as no foreign particles such as woolen lint or chips of polish must be al- lowed to enter the bandages. Orientation-Tutorial Appointments to the newly com- bined Orientation-Tutorial Commit- tee have been announced by Betty Willemin, '45, chairman. Heading the transfer advisors will be Joan Shuchowsky, '45, and the social committee will be directed by Lee Chaice, '46, Mavis Kennedy, '45, will be in charge of information booths, with Georgianna Leslie act- ing as secretary of Orientation. Carol Rosenblatt, '45, will head the Tu- torial Committee for Spring. The committee will meet today with Dean of Students Joseph A. Bursley to make plans for the fall orientation week. WAA Boards Wash Walls at Lunch Frolic Coeds who frequent the WAB may have noticed the newly washed walls in the main lounge and the entrance hall. This clean-up job is the work of the newly installed WAA fBoard, working with the retiring members, at their annual wall-washing day On this occasion the coeds gather in the morning, work, with the lunch furnished by Dr. Bell and the faculty of the Physical Education Depart- ment for Women. Every year a different part of the WAB is scrubbed by the blue-jean clad board members . . . but the women don't seem to complain about the hard work, it being the one time of the year, they say, in which they can release their inhibitions and can throw sponges at each other. Hillel Foundation's Surgical Dressings Unit, closed for a week because of lack of material, will open at 1 p.m. tomorrow, remain- ing open until 5 p.m. New ship- ments of material have been re- ceived at the unit, and work will continue until the shipment is ex- hausted. Foreign-Post Officers Plead: 'MORE WAGS QVERSEAS "SEND MORE WACs overseas" was the plea of commanding officers speak- ing from foreign posts on the WAC anniversary radio programs over the week-end. Tales of women's heroism during bombings and battles were given as proof by these high ranking officials that women are capable and necessary in offices and communications centers in offensive and defensive areas. THAT MORE WACs are needed seemed to be the obvious conclusion to gather from all reports. But where are more WACs to come from? How can overseas positions be filled when every Army airfield and base in the United States has Lt. Barbara Rogers, WAC, will be stationed at the League to interview women interested in securing information about the Women's Army Corps from 10 a.m. to noon and 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. today. vacancies in their personnel that MUST be filled? The women who took the Romulus Air Base tour learned that every job they saw being done by the few WACs available needed dozens more workers. TO MEET this increasing demand for womanpower, the War Department has arranged WAC enlistment, so that a woman may register for par- ticular bases and Theatre of Operations when she first signs her name. Every Army post needs more WACs, so every woman may choose her own! University women are offered the 120-Day Plan, in which they register now for service, but stipulate how much time they desire, up to 120 days, before being actively called. All examinations but the medical are taken now to permit women to be certain of their ability to pass. AFTER JOINING THE WAC, specialized training is offered, to prepare the members for wartime occupations and for post-war jobs. Practical experience in aeronautics, photography, radio, and 236 other jobs is given. gN THIS INVASION SPRING, the War Department is asking for every woman between the ages of 20 and 50 to consider if she is waiting for victory or working for it. The Women's Army Corps is in the front ranks working. League A new and radical policy is being ample, shoes, suits, dresses, will be endorsed by Marge Hall, '45, presi- acceptable in any condition, and dent of the Women's War Council, should be brought to the Undergrad- who would like to see the Undergrad- uate Office of the League not later uate Office of the League turned into than May 31." a "dry goods store." __________ The policy does not aim to pro- e -tGroup TO Meet vide Michigan students with a new Merit To Meet shop from which to choose their There will be a meeting for all wardrobes, but to give them an op- women interested in working on the portunity to put their cast-off clothes Merit Committee at 4:30 p.m. today to good use-clothing the people of in the Undergraduate Office of the conquered Norway. League, according to Joan Pullam, "So far," said Miss Hall, "response Merit Committee Chairman. All wo- to the Norwegian Clothes Drive has men who have worked on the com- been good, but more clothes will be mittee in past semesters are also appreciated. Any clothing, for ex- urged to attend, Miss Pullam stressed. I 79 t ! . (A ,. t 1 mwiL -'I,- a by goliy Checked, by heck! It's a gay, wonderful, American idea to adopt this sturdy fabric for you wartime wardrobe. It's a Carlye idea to fashion it in a dress buttoned up the back and down the front.. , a dress whose two parts swim through the suds... smooth over the ironing board in no time at all! Junior Shop 16.95 / / 6 J t"', sr \... jr: . f1 l-, IWonder toen does wonders for hair on legs and arms! Wonderstoen Dry Method Hair Eraser is the smart woman's "must" for smooth; glamorous, hair-free legs. ) It's an easy, pleasant way to remove leg and arm hairu Nothing to spill or y prepare. Odorless. Simple. Safe. One Wonderstoen lasts all season. $3 I I I S vI % if . ': . i,: . 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