STHE M1CHVGAN DAILY Michigan Tm dition Ends as Sawyer bids Rldieu Miami Triad Formal To Be Held June 3 Traditional Annual Affair To rBe Given by Sigma Chi, Beta Theta Pi, and Phi Delta Theta Wartime conditions have failed to halt the time-honored Miami Triad, which will be held from 9 p. m. to midnight Saturday, June 3, in the League ballroom. Billy Layton's. orchestra will play for the affair, which is a traditional fornal dance given jntly by Beta Theta Pi, Phi D1elta Theta, and Sig- ma Chi fraternities. The customary, pre-war features of the evening will be observed, in- cluding a formal dinner held by each fraternity before the dance and the singing of fraternity songs at the event. 60 Couples To Attend Sixty couples will at end the dairce, which is N ing planned by a commit- tee formed by a representative of each participating fraternity. The representatives are Sherman Mas- singham, Beta "theta Pi; Fred Lay- mon, Phi Delta Theta; and Jim Sco- ville, Sigma Chi. There will be two couples as chap- erones from each group: Mr. and. Mrs. Phil McCallum and Mr. and Mrs. Millege Eti rd will represent Beta Theta Pi; Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Burns and Mr. and Mrs. Earl V. Moore, Phi Delta Theta; and Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Coxon and Mr. and Mrs. John W. Rae, Sigma Chi. Is Traditional The Miami Triad is a traditional function of the three fraternities, which were fopnded in the last cen- tury at Miami University in Miami, Ohio; Beta Theta Pi in 1839, Phi: Delta Theta in 1848, and Sigma Chi in 1855. The Triad was held soon after- wards as a joint dance, and the, idea spread to become a national annual affair, held wherever chapters of the three fraternities are located. i t F t i i i Just Plain 'Bill' Says Farewell At' Varieties' Sawyer Leaves Glee Club, League Week-End Dances To Embark on a New CareerJ (Continued from Page 1) The campus felt that it was not quite the same but Sawyer was there and it didn't make any difference. Arrangements Novel His novel arrangements of "Stormy Weather," "St. Louis Blues," and others with his good word to whirling couples by the bandstand added to the picture that was blending Mich- igan and Bill Sawyer. But things began to move faster for Bill, and a ride on the Pitch Band Wagon, performances in Detroit and around the state, leadership of the Women's Glee Club put him on the map and people began to notice this college music maestro.. His production of Mark Twain's "Tom Sawyer" which was world pre- miered here in April was a high point in his nine-year Michigan career, and then came his present opportunity with the federal government which is calling him from campus. Slated To Write Score He will be working in Chicago writ- ing the musical score for "Alaskan Stampede," a musical show sponsored by the Department of Interior which will have its world premier in Chi- cago, June 16. "Variety" has pictured Sawyer's idea-his orchestra and his place at Michigan---as one of the outstanding dance bands in the nation. We caught him yesterday after- noon between rehearsals for his last stop on the Michigan hit parade- Victory Varieties, and he commented, "I sure will remember the good times and good friends here at Michigan." We hasten to add the comment of Dean Walter B. Rea: "He has done an outstanding job and we don't like to see him leave." Lantern Night Eight Houses NIGHT Is Outgrowth J Plan Picnics, Of Cap Night Lantern Night, this year to be given at 7:30 p.m. Monday on Palmer Field is the outgrowth of several functions formerly given at the University. Prior to 1933 Lantern Night was known as Cap Night . . . when the senior women wore their caps and gowns and were serenaded by the undergraduates. The coeds wore the traditional hair bows, yellow for jun- iors, red for sophomores and green for freshmen, and in addition white dresses and heels. They were led by the Varsity Band, which gave tlem a concert after the program. Had Playday in '3 In 1935 a Playday was instituted, with representatives from each sor- ority, dormitory and league house participating in round robin events; horseshoes, tennis, bridge, archery, baseball and obstacle races. After- wards the winners were feted at a buffet dinner in the field house. Then the regular Lantern Night followed. An ice cream social was the high- light of the 1934 Lantern Night, do-! nated by the faculty of the Physical Education Department and the WAA Board. Sported Japanese Lanterns A feature of the previous Lantern Nights has been the carrying of Jap- anese lanterns by the seniors and colored hoops by the juniors. At the end of the ceremonies, the seniors passed their lanterns down to the juniors, who in turn gave their hoops to the sophomores. No record is given of what the freshmen received. This year, due to the war shortage, only the two seniors leading the line of March will carry lanterns, and the juniors will dispense with their hoops,, but all of the undergraduate women will wear their hair ribbons in their class colors. These ribbons will be sold by the JGP committee. Hold Dances Eight local houses have planned picnics, formal and informal dances for today. A formal dance will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight in Martha Cook Building. Mrs. Leona Diekema and Miss Sarah Rowe will chaperone. "Cy" Adams House has planned an afternoon and evening of festivities from 4:30 p.m. to midnight. During the afternoon there will be a picnic at the Island followed by an informal record dance at the house. The affair will be chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Ohlsen and Mrs. Woolsley Hunt. An informal record dance will be held from 8 p.m. to midnight at Washtenaw House. The dance will be chaperoned by Mrs. J. S. Williams and Mrs. Ames. The chapter house of Chi Omega sorority will hold a formal dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight. Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Coxon and Prof. and Mrs. J. W. Bradshaw will act as chaperons for the affair. Alpha Delta Pi sorority will hold an informal record dance from 9 p.m. to midniight at the chaptte~ r hol-e Chaperons will be Mrs. Nan Riggs and Dr. William Brace. Plans have been completed by Phi Delta Theta fraternity for an infor- mal dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight at 1437 Washtenaw. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Burns and Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Leibee will chaperon. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Cannon and Mr. and Mrs. L. Wikel will chaperon a radio dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight by Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Robert Owen Co-operative will be the scene of an informal record dance to be held from 8:30 p.m. to mid- night. Chaperons for the affair will be Warren R. Good and Saul J. Cohen. an Df4Y To satisfy your desire for that "Back-Home" cooking, drop in at THE UNIVERSITY GRILL. We serve full-course dinners daily and Sunday. We are open every noon. S.. "Over hill, over dale, We'll ride away for a day of pleasure." THE CAMPUS BIKE SHOP rents bicycles and tandems by the hour, day or month. WHIRLING SPINNERS (shown above) will be one of the six profes- sional vaudeville acts to perform for a Victory Varieties audience of students, townspeople and servicemen at 8 p.m. today on the stage of -Hill Auditorium. They will come to Ann Arbor fresh from an appear- ance at the Strand Theatre in New York. Reorganize House Presidents' Meeting into Separate Groups WAVES Find Varied Roles in Navy Branches Dy MARIAN SPIES "Hey Mac, toss me a wrench", shrill high feminine voices from Na- val Stations throughout the- country. There was a time, and not so longs age at that, when the term "grease monkey" was very much masculine. But war has changed many things. That's the way it is in the Navy. There are more than 47,000 women -enough to man 12 battleships- wearing the uniform of the Navy. Wemen's Reserve. They are doing 246 different jobs at shore stations, air bases, and Navy hospitals throughout the United States. One- fourth of the WAVES are in the aviation branch. WAVES Wield Wrenches WAVES wield the wrenches, in- struct officers and cadets in aerial gunnery operate Link Trainer ma- chines, test the weather, are the "Traffic Cops of the Air," and, in short, do every job there is except fly -the planes. Although they don't pilot the planes, they fly in them. For if a "grease monkey" is to know her job thoroughly she must know how a plane will act in the air, as well as on the ground. Many women who have been wear- ing the Navy blue for less than a year have more than 50 hops to their credit. WAVE aerographers fly with pilots every morning to make their observations and compile data as to weather velocity, ceiling and lo- cation of various auxiliary fields. Know Flying Principles When through with the Aviation Machinist's Mate course, often given at a Naval Air Base, the "grease monkeys" know all the. principles of flying and can make a sick place well in short order. Almost every woman in the avia- tion branch expects to continue with her aviation work after the war. The Navy has an "earn-while-yOu-learn" policy for all personnel, giving a val- uable trade to continue after they have been mustered out of the serv- ice. Co. Y and X of the USO Junior Hc stess Corps. will held an. in- formal dance from eight p. n. to manight tdlay. Attendance is compulsory, and hostesses attend- ing Victory Varieties will be iernitted to arrive as late as ten k Men. wishing to bring wo- men who are not junior hostesses must obtain guest cards for them; two hours prior to the dance. House president's meetings haveI been reorganized to provide for sep- arate weekly meetings of sorority house presidents, dormitory and aux- iliary dormitory presidents, and league house and cooperative house heads, according to Natalie Mattern, '45, president of Judiciary. The dissolving of the joint meeting l of the groups and the reorganization, has been effected with the purposes of integrating and bringing the activ- ities of Panhellenic Association and Assembly into closer contact with sorority and independent women," Miss Mattern said. To Discuss Problems Each group will discuss and be responsible for the particular prob- lems of their houses, and the groups will meet jointly when information of universal interest is to be relayed to campus women or when common problems arise. Dormitory and auxiliary dormitory presidents will meet together, and dormitory corridor captains will sup- plant the presidents of dormitories in "bringing Assembly to the coeds and bringing the coeds to Assembly." The Assembly vice-president in charge of dormitories will direct this group. League houses and cooperative houses will be re-zoned with a prob- able maximum of five houses in a zone. The houses in each zone will elect a zone president, and these Boulevard Ball Will Offer Doc Fielding, Student Performer Doc Fielding, who has quickly be- come the campus' most popular stu- dent performer, will highlight the intermission entertainment at "Bou- levard Ball," which will be held from 8:30 p.m. to midnight Saturday in Waterman Gymnasium. The dance, which will feature Jerry Wald and his orchestra, will! offer several songs written recently, by local composers. The Co. D quar- tet will sing "We Hope They're Beau- tiful" in a preview of the forthcoming musical comedy, "Rumor Has It." and two of the most popular of the Junior Girls Play songs, "Soldier of Mine," and the "Michigan Stomp" will also be performed. "Boulevard Ball" combines the efforts of Assembly Association and Panhellenic Council for the first time. The dance is the only major coed- bid affair of the year. The decorations will transform the gymnasium into a "park," from which street signs denoting all the campus' women's residences will ra- diate, and the entertainment and programs will carry out the theme. zone presidents will meet together weekly as the Board in Charge of League Houses with league house presidents working under their direc- tion. These meetings will be presided over by the vice-president of Assem- bly in charge of league houses. No Mixed Houses It is expected there will be no mixed houses next year, Florene Wil- kins, '44, president of Assembly, an- nounced. Active sorority women will not be permitted to live in indepen- dent houses, and all independent women will live in independent hous- es, she said. Sorority house presidents' meetings will be under the direction of Pan- hellenic Council. They will meet periodically to discuss house prob- lems. Peg Laubengayer, '45, president of Panhellenic Board, announced that heads of the various houses will take part in drawing up the new rushing rules. She said that it is probable that each meeting will be devoted to a particular problem. FRANKLIN preached thrift, for he found from his oXwi ex- perience that it hIped smooth the road of life! 'T'ay, lhe threat of inflation hovers over our nation once again. We can avoid this disaster by regular savings. INQUIRE ABOUL OUR SAVINGS PLAN NOW! Member Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. ICI .:.. C 0 E FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. William P. Lemon, D.D., James Van Pernis, Ministers E. Gertrude Campbell, Director of Religious Education 9:30 A.M.: Church School, Junior, Intermediate and Senior departments. Young Married People's Class and Men's Class. 10:30 A.M.: Junior Choir Rehearsal. 10:45 A.M.: Nirsery, Beginner and Primary de- partments. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. "The World on Tiptoe," subject of sermon by Dr. Lemon. 5:00 P.M.:. Westminster Student Guild discus- sion will be led by the Rev. Edward H. Red- mon. Supper will follow at 6:00 P.M. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. Sunday lesson sermon: "Soul and Body," at 10:30 A.M. Sunday School at 11:45 A.M. Wednesday evening testimonial meeting at 8:00. This church maintains a free Reading Room at 106 E. Washington St., which is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Saturdays until 9:00 P.M. Here the Bible and Christian Science literature including all of Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy's works may be read, borrowed or purchased. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 E. Huron St. C. H. Loucks, Minister ROGER WILLIAMS GUILD HOUSE 502 E. Huron St. 10:00 A.M.: Roger Williams Class meets in the Guild House. 11:00 A.M.: Morning worship. Topic is: "They Depend on Us." Minister, C. H. Loucks. 5:00 P.M.: Because of annual planning con- ference at Camp Birkett, the Roger Williams Guild will not meet. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION Sponsored jointly by the Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches Zion Lutheran Church E. Washington at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Service. Sermon by the Rev. E. C. Stellhorn. Trinity Lutheran Church E. William at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Service. Sermon by the Rev. Henry O. Yoder Lutheran Student Association Zion Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington 5:30 P.M.: Fellowship hour. 6:00 P.M.: Supper and program following. Miss Bonnie Jellema will speak on "An Inter- pretation of Church Symbols and Colors." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCHf 306 North Division St. The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector The Rev. Robert M. Muir, Jr., Student Chaplain Maxine J. Westphal, Counsellor for Women Students Philip Malpas, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon by Dr. Lewis. 11:00 A.M. Junior Church. 2:00 P.M. Hi-Square Bike-Hike. 6:00 -p.m. Canterbury Club( for students and servicemen). Picnic supper followed b'y guest speaker, Mr. Hugh White, who will speak on "My Experiences Overseas in the American Field Service." Mr. White has just returned from overseas. THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN ANN ARBOR //.-' / t ( t c s 1 r o 0 x o - fF C pN H 'M Study class in theosophy. Topic to be dis- cussed, "Is Theosophy Practical?" conducted by Dr. B. Jimenez. Sunday, May 21st, 8 p.m. Michigan League. Public cordially invited. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and Williams Streets Minister: Rev. Leonard A. Parr, D.D. Director of Student Guild: Rev. H. L. Pickerill Church School-Junior and Intermediate Depts., 9:25 A.M. Primary and Kindergarten, 10:45 A.M. Public worship at 10:45 A.M. Cermon by Dr, Parr on "For Such a Time as This:" The Student Guild will have outdoor meeting at Riverside Park, from 4 to 7 P.M. Games, picnic supper, Vesper service. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and Ralph G. Dunlop Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director Mary McCall Stubbins, organist 9:30 A.M.: Class for University students. Wes- leyan Foundation Lounge, Prof. Kenneth G. Hance, leader. 10:40 A.M.: Church School for nursery begin- ners and primary departments where young children may be left during worship service. 10:40 A.M.: Worship Service. Dr. Brashares preaching: "His Disciples Today." 5:00 P.M.: Wesleyan Guild meeting for Uni- versity students and college-age young peo- ple. Religious Music. Mrs. Martha Went- worth, School of Music, speaker. Election of Officers. 7:00 P.M.: Young Married People's discussion group. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH State and Huron Streets Be social with a friend or two in gay surroundings at ALEX- ANDER'S DRUG STORE. En- joy our fountain specialties. * It's time to tee off again. The greens are beckoning. Play at the MUNICIPAL GOLF COURSE. Enjoy Delicious Sandwiches, Homemade Pastries at THE LITTLE SHOP. This weekend, take a canter along our cool, shaded, wooded bridle paths. We offer you the t Ir For INDIVIDUALIZED I 'NITU I STUDENT EVANGELICAL CHAPELI ill i I I I