WW~UKsIk&r, wev~ 4, 143 TH-E MICUTLCAN -fl~t. ____________________________________________________________________________________________ - -.~' -~ ~ .LP't~J.L4J. I -- R'z1(zwJ. wi,5 JGP Sets Goal Of $30,000 'PistoL-Packing 'Policewoman I n War Bonds Junior Women May Sign Up For Committees Next Week At League Registration Booth "Junior women will attempt to help pave the road to victory by selling $30,000 in war stamps and bonds dur- ing 1943-44," 'Deborah Parry, '45,. chairman of Junior Girls Project an- nounced yesterday. "We are planning to reach our goal' by selling at least $1 worth of stamps each month to every Michigan wom,- an," she continued. Sales in dormi- tories and sorority houses will be ,di- rected by house presidents. Salesmen will be appcinted to canvass regularly a specified number of girls. The. stamp dinners which were originated during the summer term will be held every month in all. women's resi- dences. Uamnpus Canipali Planned "Booths 'will be set up at strategict places on the campus," Miss Parry added. "A skits and songs *omittee. will also be active In boosting sales." Junior women interested In serv- iug on .a JGp committee are >asked to sign up from 8 a. m.. to 12 a. ,m. any. day next week at a booth which will be set up in the League. Committees Need Workers Women are needed on the pubk' licity, skits and songs, and booth 1 committees. Those who signed for committee work at the nass meeting held last spring are asked to sign again at- the booth. aFormerly JGP was.anelaborate evening's entertainment. With the conversion cf{ all class activities to war work, .however; Junior women undertook their present task of sell-- in war stamps and bonds. During the summer term JGP was headed by Marcia Shaxpe,-'44. A camnpus car- ijiv alwhich attracted thousands of civilian students and servicemen was the largest undertaking of the sumr mer. Glee Club To WHAT THEY NEVER TOLD US: 1Holdg:$ ryouts First Week of Classes Reveals i S A lditbonrtfor Freshman I r a e Snares ' Ye O ld Women To Be Held at League -Spe-I a freshman tryouts will By NANCY GROBERG Imorose mass of "mayb be held for freshian women inter- Now that most well-behaved class to-be-too-heavy-a-pro ested in singing with the Women's I cards are pretty much set in their ail"-ers -- a startlin Glee Club fom 4 p. n. to p. ways, and have decided to remain "sprint - with -me-over y in te a where they were put-now that the demic - counselor's - of eayu e Kn h concentration advisers are breathing drop - a - few - subject League,"Patt Spore, '43, president their collective sigh of relief - now classes! Al glorious1 of the club, annowyced, 3esterday. that the general student body has could we ever have kn Club, plais for the year center disbovered the intricate truths which! around an opera to be presented in jthe catalogue does not mention in its! And in the classes t "description of the course"- a dis- sorts of distracting i the Spring, the Christnas concert in ease called "extensive reflection" sets suddenly produced-by Hill Auditorium, and, frequent ap- in, and the Michigan campus takes to strong male wrist-the pearances at campus flynctions and 1woncering.en masse, whether it tion of an attractive benefit shows. Weekly broadcasts might'not''be a good idea to make a the fascinating view fro from WJR will be ma during the few "programatic" changes after all. of the lecture hall. The Spx R et i , (This catalogue did not tell g.(This is just a fancy way of saying tg herded into classesl- The Glee Club is directed by Wilson that people begin to find out that sdd inocses-I Sawyer who is especially interested ' "pipe" courses often involve outside sadly misinformed-un in using original music and in devis- reading. the little twists ande ing new arrangeients. Members of classroom - unarmed the club are encouraged to. work on Thus the first week of classes be- slings and arrows of o arrangeedcts of their own ard are mes a horrible hubub--a chaotic signments. given opportunities to conduct. = collection of course- droppers -- a Not that the other1 o Qiv n o ortu i ed .class ever make it easie Toq 1iYge. r .killusioned.sThe studen "Tom Sawyer," the opera which is 'Wounded Can't Wa it takes notes-the freshr to be given in the spring, was written Given More Meaning been reading Plato on by Wilson .Sawyer especiafl for the "I've - had - this -guy-b Women's Glee Club. It will be the By European Battles never-bclts" species - first opera the club has, ever pre- Iwho foresees for everyo sented. -"With the invasion of Europe, the halfway between a D a "Singtime," the outstanding con- casualties are mounting rapidly, and -all of them, plotting cert given by the club last year, was as a result the need for surgical dress- cnce confident filler - presented in Hill Auditorium and at ings has increased tremendously, cards, are part of the the Masonic 'i'emple in Detroit for Jean Whittemore, 44 chairman of classes. the University cdf Michigan Club. the Surgical Dressing Unit, stated re- A Officers To Conduct Tryouts cently. And the professors! rs nThe quota of dressings to be made professors-all kinds a Offces o te lubwil cndctin Washtenaw County has been we here -- everythirn the, tryouts. Miss Spore, Jean Gilman, doubled and much of this load will "Ahem - hrumph - you, t' 4,vice-president; secretary Pat fall on the shoulders of the campus I'm - fussy - but-I'm-n Tr,4 6; tresuer Phyllis Cra.ford, unit. The unit will be open from 1 do - insist - that - you- '45SM; business' manager, Carol p. m. to 5 p. in. today and every cut" variety, to the "Ax C oth'an, '44; and publicity chairman, Wednesday and Thursday in the week - of - the - semnesti Barbara Jean White, '44Spec, belong game room of he League, have - a - slight - quiz - to the central committee which gov- Members of all classes, including notes - in -outside-rea erns the organization, freshmen, are asked to donate at least Whatever became of 117 Members of the club feel that two hours of their time each week to But enough of thisc music is an important means of rolling dressings. After a coed has or later each one of us maintaining morale during war-time. worked six hours at the unit, she is niche. Long after each Their new slogan is "Downbeats to eligible to become an instructor by adviser has been track help the :morale," 1 passing the Red Cross Test. attacked-long after th Qrind' be-it's-going- gram - after- g swarm of r-to-my-aca- fice-while-I- s" - ers. Ah grind! How .wn'? hemselves all nfluences are the flick of a prestidigita- professor-or m the window ese things the us. We were alas, alack - prepared for quirks of the against the utrageous as- people in the er for the dis- Lt who never man who has the side-the efore-and-he- the prophet ine something and a C minus g against the in - of - class - first week of Ah yes, the nd sizes have ng from the -may-think- ot-even-if-I- never-never- nid-the-fifth- er - we -will- on-the-foot-- ding" brand. Kr. Chips? drivel. Sooner will find his concentration ed down and ie supplement Enlisted Men Invited to USO All enlisted men and officers at- tending the University are invited to attend the USO dances to be held to- morrow and Saturday in the Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo rooms of the League. Both of the dances will begin at 7:30 p. m.and will end at 9:45 tomor- row and at midnight Saturday, it was announced yesterday by Ruthann Bales. "For the dances this week no USO pass will be required," she ' stated, "and we want all of the coeds to feel free to come." Dancing to the tunes of a juke box will be the feature attraction of the Grand Rapids room, while bridge, chebkers, and other informal games will be held in the Kalamazoo room. Women who have signed up to work for the USO are also reminded to hand their two letters of reference in to Mrs. Robert Burton in the League Social Director's Office as soon as possible, since all future admittance to USO dances will require presenta- tion of USO hostess cards which will not be issued until reference letters are collected. There will be a meeting for all Wyvern members at 4:00 p. in. today in the League. The WAA Board will meet at 5 p. m. today at the WAB. All memi- bers are requested to be present. Representatives to Pan Hellenie will hold a meeting at 4:30 p. m. to- mrorrcw in the League, the room number to be posted, Mary Jime Hastrieter, '44, has announced. It is imperative that each sorority have at least one representative at the meeting. to the supplement has turned yellow and crumbled on the shelf-maybe in a week or so-class lists will become stable, and the stu dgnt body will set- tle down at last, resigned to a new academic fate. Now it is women policemen at the Sutherland Paper Co mpany, Kalamazoo, in the latest wartime move to release men for heavier jobs inside the plant. "Of course we would shoot if the occasion demanded," say the trio of uniformed plant guards, believed to be the first women to fill such jobs in Kalamazoo. - Courtesy of the Kalamazoo Gazette. Flbosital eedsJudiciary Petitions, Ho itl Needs' no Are Due Saturday ?oed 'V olunteers All junior and first semester senior womeninterested in obtaining posi- tions on Judiciary Committee must "The Hospital Volunteer Service return their petitions to the Under ponsored by sophomore women is graduate Office by noon Saturday, appealing to all University coeds to Ann MacMillan, chairman of the aid in alleviating the staff shortage at committee, announced recently. University Hospital," Carol Evans, Petitions may be obtained from the j P Twoa Key Posts Open Positions are open on the central commttee of JGP for two Junior women, Deborah Parry, '45, commit- tee chairman, announced yesterday. Committee women are needed to take charge of war stamp and bond sales in dormitories and sorority 'houses. Petitions must be turned in ,o the indergraduate office in the - League "by Saturday. They , may be placed In Deborah Parry's box. Interviews will be held between 3 p. 'm. and 5 p. m. on Monday and Tuesday. The names of the women receiving appointments will be posted n the LeagUe. S a a t '46, committee chairman said yester- day. "Women interested in volunteering may sign up today through Nov. 12 at the League," Miss Evans an- nounced. New students who volun- teer for duty will be called to the hos- pital to be interviewed and given thej required X-ray and blood test. j Former volunteers may go to the hospital and be assigned to posts be- ginning Monday, Nov. 15. Undergraduate Office in the League teday and tomorrow. Interviewing will take place from 4 p. m. to 5 p. m. Monday and Tuesday of next week. Selecting potential leaders to fill prominent campus positions from among many applicants is only one of the duties of the council. It is also responsible for enforcing the Univer- sity rules and regulations for women and for punishing violators. To in- form coeds of the rulis the council puts out a booklet explaining the reg- ulations in detail. r I I',' ... 4I * a IT 'S ON TONIGHT I OPENChOSE with fourteen lovely coeds to help you in your Clothes probleins .., PAT ARNALL DORIS BARR BETTE CARPENTER D. J. COLEMAN I I RYUS. THE MICHIGAN DAILY offers you interesting work of various kinds. Here is your chance to develop your particular talents. Practical Experi- ence is the keynote of The Michigan Daily. We invite you to come up any time of the day and there will be someone to show you around in the particular department which interests you. You will be given individual attention and a training period during which you can learn the ropes. We will be happy to see lots of you here. BUSINESS STAFF MEETING, FRIDAY at 4:00 EDITORIAL STAFF MEETING, FRIDAY at 3:00 JUNE GUSTAFSON Advertising Layout and Design Salesmanship Business Management Office Work Editorial Writing Reporting Sports Writing Feature Writing - RUTH HAMMERSTROM JERRY HERMAN MARY ANN JONES BARBARA MASON EVELYN OTIS JUDY REUTENIK Ihr IIirhIuanraila III III