SUNDAY, JAN. 30, 1944 THE 'MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Women Marines it eagueToday To Rie.Rd Recruiti Drive Is Sponsored by Local Committee; Gives Information Concerning Reserve Corps To Interested Coeds, Townswomen Sgt.. Merry McCarraugh and Sgt. 4recruiting drive there, according to WAA To Qive Rec-Rally Saturday; Riding Clubs To Hold Joint Meeting Qames, Dancing fEquestrians To Ruth M. Lange, of the Marine Corps Women's Reserve, will interview wo- men who are interested in joining the Marines from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. today through Wednesday in the lob- by of the Michigan League. The two Marines arrived in Ann Arbor yesterday from Howell, Mich., where they have been assisting the WAA Notices Figure Skating: 3:30 p.m. Mon- day and Thursday at the Coliseum. Badminton: 8:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday at Waterman Gym. Modern Dance: 7:30p.m. Wed- nesday in the dance studio at Bar- bour Gym. Swimming: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the pool at Barbour Gym. Crop and Saddle and University Women's Riding Club: 6 p.m. Thursday in the League. Tap and Musical Comedy: 8:30 p.m. Thursday in the dance studio at Barbour Gym. Ballet: 4 p.m. Friday in the dance studio at Barbour Gym. Basketball: 7:30 p.m. tomorrow: Zone II vs. Michigan League; Stockwell III vs. Couzens II. 8:15 Newberry II vs. Chi Omega; Adelia Cheever vs. Kappa Delta. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday: Stockwell I vs. Washtenaw House; Day House vs. Gamma Phi Beta. 8:15 p.m. Tuesday: Alpha Epsilon Phi vs. Alpha Delta Pi; Newberry I vs. Zimmerman House. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday: Jordan II vs. Jordan III; Pi Beta Phi vs. Hill House. 8:15 p.m. Wednesday: Al- pha Gamma Delta vs. Delta Delta Delta; Zone V vs. Martha Cook I. 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Sorosis vs. Kappa Alpha Theta; Alpha Xi Delta vs. Zone I. 8:15 p.m. Co- operatives vs. Jordan V; Martha Cook II vs. Jordan VI. Barbour Gym will be open for practice at 5:20 p.m. Monday through Thursday and managers are requested to sign up for the desired time on a sheet which will be posted tomorrow in the Gym. Each house may register for half a court. No instruction will be given for.these meetings. Mrs. Mary T. Kopka, chairman of the local committee on Marine re- cruiting. 20-36 Age Limit The basic qualifications for Ma- must be between 20 and 36 years of age with a minimum of two years of high school or business college. They must also be in sound physical con- dition, at least five feet tall, and weigh 95 pounds. The majority of officers are select- ed from the ranks, and any enlisted member who has completed her bas- ic indoctrination may be recom- mended for Officers' Candidate School. In order to be recommended by her commanding officer, a woman must be mentally and morally qual- ified for appointment, and must dis- play individual characteristics of superior ability, initiative, intelli- gence and potential leadership. Specialized Officers Needed However, there is still the need for persons with specialized qualifica- tions to apply for officer training di- rectly from civilian life. Require- ments are that the candidate must be from 20 to 50 years of age with a college degree or two years of col- lege work, plus at least two years of acceptable business or professional experience. The physical require- ments are basically the same as those for enlisted women, but more exact- ing. SAE Initiates Pledges Today Ten pledges of Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon will be initiated into the frater- nity with a ceremony at 10:30 a.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre followed by a banquet at the Allenel Hotel, the pledge master announced. Invitations have been sent out to 200 alumni, and almost 150 are ex- pected to attend. Judge Arthur J. Tuttle from Detroit will speak at the banquet. Those who will be initated today are: Richard Bell, Borge Orberg, Robert Ruggles, Fredrick Hedinger, Robert Caspari, Edwin Hamann, By- ron Genung, John Talbot, David Henthorn and Calvin Johnson. Highlight Event It will be a repeat performance for the WAA Rec-Rally, the second such function of the semester being held from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 4, according to Barbara Fair- man, '46A, general chairman. Badminton, volleyball, ping pong, bowling, deck tennis, shuffleboard and darts will start off the evening at 8 p.m. and will continue as long as there are participants. Square dan- cing, accompanied by a grange or- chestra with the steps being called out by Howard Leibee of the Physical Education Department for Men, will begin at 9:30 p.m. to continue until 11 p.m. Assisting Miss Fairman on the committee are Ruth Edberg, '45, per- sonnel; Phyllis Present, '44, finance; Shelby Dietrich, '45, equipment; Mar- cia Sharpe, '44A, and Janet Peterson, '45, posters, and Marjorie Hall, '45, publicity. All servicemen and students are cordially invited to attend, and it is possible to come either singly or with dates. A small admission charge to cover the cost of equipment will be made. USO Bridge Contest Today Duplicate bridge will be played at a tournament at 2 p.m. today in the ballroom of the USO Club. All servicemen, students and townspeople are cordially invited to attend with or without partners. Junior Hostesses may also come. A small fee will be charged. Names of the winners in the Sun- day afternoon bridge tournaments will be published in the Tuesday edi- tion of The Daily. Active Members of Riding Club Named Kit Hammond, '45, president of the University Women's Riding Club, an- nounced recently that the following coeds are members in good standing: Dona Guimaraes, Barbara Osborne, Julie McEvans, Betty Mae Becker, Joy Low, Marie Clancy, Gloria Kish- paugh, Martha Kirkpatrick, Ginny Weadock, Mary Lou Hollway, Mary Fitzgibbon, Justine Traverse, and Ruth Dworman. BUY WAR BONDS! Dine at League Crop and Saddle and the Universi- ty Women's Riding Club will hold a joint supper meeting, for the purposej of discussing various phases of riding and horsemanship, at 6 p.m. Thurs- day in the Russian Tea Room at the; League.; All members of each club are in- vited to attend this supper meeting which will be given in lieu of the regular riding sessions for the week. Coeds may bring their notebooks, clippings or books dealing with hors- es to use in the discussion following the meal. Pat Coulter, '45, president of Crop and Saddle, and Kit Hammond, '45, UWRC president, will officiate at the meeting proposed in order to help the members of the club become bet- ter acquainted with the principles of horsemanship. With the coming of the spring sea- son, outdoor rides will be held in ad- dition to ring work. Tryouts for both clubs will take place at the beginning of the next. semester. Coed's Men Mix In North Africa We all know it's a small world, but Virginia Barr,- of Martha Cook, is thoroughly convinced it's 'way too small. A lieutenant and a warrant officer living in a hut somewhere in North Africa were surprised to find they both wrote to a Ginny Barr at Mar- tha Cook, U.S.A., though they were not as surprised as Ginny herself. But the pay-off came when she discovered that the lieutenant is the company'; chief censor. "And there's so much room in North Africa!" said Ginny, who now writes a letter as carefully as though it were her last will and testament. Houses Plan Booths, Stunts For Carnival 'Michibomber' Central Group Receives Ideas from Thirteen Sororities, Dorms, Companies Thirteen is not an unlucky number for Dorothy Darnall, '44, and the "Michibomber" central committee when it refers to the number of hous- es that have to date turned in plans for stunts at Bomber Scholarship's all-campus carnival to be held from 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday, March 11, in Waterman Gymnasium. Returns are coming in every day from dormitories, sororities, and ser- vicemen's units, and plans for the af- fair will be completed in short order, according to Miss Darnall. Sand- wiches and soft drinks will be an ex- tra added attraction. Repeat Performance There will be two repeat perform- ances from last summer's JGP July Jamboree, an outdoor carnival. Pi Beta Phi sorority will have custom- ers pitch pennies onto a flag for prizes, as they did at the Jamboree. Company A will give a skit as it did at the summer carnival. Gamma Phi Beta will have another type of penny-pitching, while Mosh- er Hall will run a roulette game and Zeta Tau Alpha a bingo booth. Alpha Delta Pi will have patrons putting out lighted candles with a squirt gun. Three Alpha Gamma Delta girls will stick their heads through a sheet so you can hit them with wet sponges to win a prize. Alpha Epsilon Phi will let customers take it easy in a swivel chair while throwing darts at a map. Duck-Hunters Haven If you've always yearned to go duck-hunting, the girls of Collegiate Sbrosis will help you out ... by let- ting you throw rings around ducks in a bathtub. Company B will suspend bags of water over several boys. Cus- tomers with sadistic tendencies may enjoy hitting the bag, bursting it, thereby drenching the boy. Look Into the Future Madame Bethine Clark, Martha Cook seer, will tell fortunes while palmists Jean and Glen Hedler, also of Martha Cook, will employ their Independents To Seek Positions On Committee Petitioning for six positions on the central committee for Assembly Asso- ciation's Recognition Night which will be held sometime in March will begin tomorrow and continue through Wednesday, according to Doris Barr, '44, president of Assembly Council. Plans will be made next semester. Petitions may be obtained in the undergraduate office of the League and women may sign up for inter- views when they go for their petition. Interviewing will be held from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday and Fri- day and from 9 a.m. until noon on Saturday. Petitions will be reviewed by the Assembly Council itself. Sophomore, junior and senior in- dependent women may petition for general chairman of the affair. All non-sorority women, including fresh- men, are eligible for the other five positions which are: assistant to gen- eral chairman, publicity chairman, arrangements chairman, tickets chairman and program chairman. The Association's Recognition Night will take the place of the tra- ditional Assembly Banquet which has been the big get-together affair of all independent women in past years. The affair will be held at the League and dessert will be served. The program will consist of a speaker, whose name will be revealed at a later date, and in the presenta- tion of plaques and awards to the persons and houses with the highest scholastic averages and the highest extra-curricular participation. Formal Dance Held Chi Omega sorority held a formal dance last night at the chapter house, preceded by dinner at the Hotel Allenel. powers. Or if you go in for psycho- analysis, some Alpha Phi's will tell you "your place in this screwball world." Since it's an old adage to believe only half of what you see, don't take Alpha Chi Omega's caricature artist seriously. Remember, it's all for Bomber Scholarship. *- a Iq Q I While shopping around State Street, we dropped into the CAMPUS SHOP and saw an attractive display of sweaters and skirts. The sweaters in- cluded those popular pastel shades such as: aqua, laven- der, pink, yellow, green and copper tan. They also have very lovely two- and three-piece suits. AvIf am, - i V Monday Store Hours: Noon to 8:30 P.M. a a a a a K a a a t .t i a ,. . a :eg,,....:.,' t . .} :. :". n*:.. s3 .,4- . <. Ir IIl e* ji3t IA e .~. .:...a '? Looking for a bargain, as us- ual, in the MADEMOISELLE SHOP, we found some beauti- ful all-wool plaid skirts at 30% off. They are having a sale on blouses and dresses which were formerly priced at $22.50 and can now be bought for half their former cost. Don't miss this one! We found another bargain at CALKINS - FLETCHER'S in Dorothy Gray's Blistery Weath- er Lotion, which is on sale now at half price. Boys! For the Valentine gift your girl will love, they have beautiful ster- ling silver compacts. Alofor Valentine's Day, EIBLER'S have just received a new supply of bracelets and pins. There are some especially attractive sets in combined yel- low and green gold that really catch the eye. Those tenderly soft kitten's ear cashmeres in cardigans and slip overs. They're just in, and the shades are mel lon, pink, maize, air force blue and your own lines sculptured in fabric This maker of trends, this master of detail-this Handmacher gives you a suit that's you. The easy fit of the jacket, the smooth line of the Super Kashmella, amazingly soft and luxurious, exclusive with Handmacher. All wool. 39.95 .C black. .. , ;:; 14.95 Shop Monday lapel, the die-straight skirt make a Handmacher suit your very own from the first moment you slip into it. 29.95 to 45.00 .'; ,. 'til 8:30 Bonds on sale all day Despite the war you can still listen and dance to Glenn Mill- er by records and the RECORD