II s .tia.. ". LV1 1 L 11 1 4 H6 IN )(.)I .6% A L Y x: U~.+I ttxi Vi 14 - * s IN. I /\4"!.^ , 1 - r F6IlI Program To End Term For Child Care Motor Corps To Furnish Rides To Willow Run for Workers; Need Coeds To Lead Activities The Child Care Committee will terminate its activities for the sem- ester with a full program of diversi- fied activities this week, according to Lucy Chase Wright, '44, chairman of the committee. Transportation to and from Willow Run will be furnished free of charge by the Red Cross Motor Corps, but the corps will not nake the trip unless four women are to be taken to the project each afternoon. Enough. women have registered to work from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday this week, but women are still needed to direct children's play activities tomorrow and Friday. Meeting at, the side door of the Union, the Motor Corps will pick up women at 1 p.m. and will bring them back to the same place at 5 p.m. Women who assist at Willow Run in the evening will be taken to their homes at the end of their work. Youth Club Needs Leaders Women are needed to work with the Youth Club from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday. The Youth Club is an organization of teen-agers who want to put on plays, have community ;inging, learn to square dance, and iave parties, the youths themselves having originated the idea of forming the club. An open house for boys only will be held from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thurs- day at which time all sorts of games will be taught. Women with profi- ciency in this type of work are urged to help out with the game night. Next semester °a similar night has been planned for girls only, the chil- dren being between the ages of eight and sixteen, Registration for Next Semester Coeds are also needed to take care of the children of Willow Run work- ers tomorrow, Wednesday and Thurs- day from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. and from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. Friday and Satur- day. All women interested in helping out at Willow Run are asked to get apgilication blanks from Mrs. Doro- tZiy Legg in the undergraduate office pfthe League on which to place their major interests in child care work. One ot X wing and's' Greatest ... JGP To Boost Campus Stamp Sales with 'Bow Day' Tuesday The Fourth War Loan Drive will, bow out Tuesday with bows, which l fot, in piaricular JGP's $30,000 cam- receive on paign for the year. each campus coed will rcieo Bows and stamps must be called "Bow Day" with the purchase of a for by agents before 8 a.m. Tuesday war stamp from a Junior Girls Proj- at the League, and all money, stamp:;, ect agent, according to Marcia Net- end bows are to be returned to the tin, '5, f he GP entalcom- s am~e place after 4 p.m. ting, '45, of the JGP central m Women's houses have been assigned mittee. to sell stamps and hand out bows at Although this is not the termin- campus posts as follows: ation of the Fourth War Loan, it is Diagonal center, Collegiate Soro- the last all-campus project to be sis and Alpha Phi; Romance Lan- held by JGP during the drive. "Bow guage Building, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Day" is a new coed interpretation of Epsilon Phi, Chi Omega and Alpha the traditional campus "tag days," Xi Delta; between University Hall and will operate on the same order. and Angell Hall, Kappa Kappa Gam- Tuesday a ribbon in a coed's hair will ma and Gamma Phi Beta; Barbour be not only decoration . . . it will also Gymnasium, Pi Beta Phi and Kappa show she is supporting the war ef- Alpha Theta. .~- - -League Lobby, Delta Gamma and Kappa Delta; Engineering' Arch, Al- 4 O dpha Omicron Pi, Sigma Delta Tau, Raffle War Bonds Zeta Tau Alpha and Alpha Gamma Delta; Natural Science Building, Del- Martha Cook coeds held a wartime ta Delta Delta and Alpha Phi Ome- version of a raffle, and Lucile Barnes, ga. '45, and Mary Anderson, '46, came Women's dormitories-Mosher and out of it with a $25 war bond each. Jordan Halls, Stockwell Hall, Martha Catherine Sauer, '46, won third Cook Building, Betsy Barbour House place, $5 in war stamps. and Helen Newberry Residence-will The raffle, for which each girl have stamps sold and bows issued bought at least two chances at 15c in the buildings throughout the day. I Thursday To Be Date of WAA Da ance Programn jAn Informal Dance Program con- sisting of numbers by the various dance classes and clubs will be given from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thurs- day in Barbolr Gymnasium Dance Studio. Rae Larsen, '44, manager of the WAA Dance Club, will direct the Tap and Ballet Clubs, while the elemen- tary and intermediate dance classes will be under the direction of Jose- phine Yantis, assistant superinten- dent of the physical education de- partment, and Elizabeth Prange, graduate assistant. The numbers by the American country and modern dance classes will be unrehearsed as far as actual activities are concerned. The class will do all the steps which have been learned, but the figures will be called by the teacher. These numbers will be the culmination of six weeks' work. The modern dance classes and club will do warm-up exercises, consisting of stretching, flexion and extension, abdominal strength, swinging and body control and back fall routines. I -t", * * * *F*H*B Earl 'Father' Hines Has Been At last! WILD'S have them- those gray navy gloves that you have been looking for all over town. Fur lined ones too! We discovered them while we were looking at the beautiful white sweaters they have, girls. In Show World T Orchestra Leader To Appear In Campus Program Feb. 1 3 One of the nation's foremost jazz musicians, swing pianist and leader of a hot dance band, Earl Hines has been known as "Father" to showfolk for more than. 20 years. Born in Duquesne, Pa., in 1903, of a musical family, Hines began his piano lessons at the age of five. He began to improvise early because his boyish urge to play with his pals, in- stead of practicing, found him. often unprepared when his teacher arrived. After high school days, during which he played in church and at concerts, young Hines joined a dance band in Pittsburgh. Then in 1923, he went to Chicago, played piano in small clubs, was en- When filled out, the blanks are to be placed in Miss Wiright's box in the undergraduate office. Further information about any -phase of the- work may be had by calling Miss Wright at 4464. went Years gaged by Carroll Dickerson for the old Sunset Cafe band, where Cab Calloway later made his professional debul. Six years later Hines formed his own band and opened at a new club in Chicago, becoming practical- ly a fixture and a periodic headliner there for the past 12 years. "Father" Hines developed his in- terest in the jazz medium in ione of the most unorthodox manners known to shown business-from improvisa- tions on church hymns. He is re- garded professionally as one of the originators and developers of swing music, persisting as one of popular music's "all time greats." Louis Armstrong, with whom he played in Chicago, exerted marked influence on Hines, inspiring Hines' creation of what he calls a "trumpet style" on the piano. Earl Hines will bring his entire or- ganization here for the "Symphony and Swing" program to be 'given Sunday, Feb. 13, in Hill Auditorium. Special ticket sales in the East Quad and West Quad will be held at meal times tomorrow, Wednesday and Fri- day. Tutorial Committee Will Close During Last Weeks of Term I each, was held. last week, and the drawing was done in the diniur room. One of the winners, Lucile Barnes, could say, "I told you so" when her number was drawn, for she had been telling those near her all through dinner that she was going to win the raffle. But no one believed her. Alpha Delta Pi sorority riecently elected the following officers: Bette Soper, '45, president; Jane Shute, '44, vice-president; Nancy Frank, '45, treasurer; Betty King, '45, recording secretary; Helen Mont- gomery, '44, corresponding secretary; Beatrice Linnig, '45, rushing chair- man, and Jean Blomquist, '44, house manager. i - e .r_..._. . .. ... _ _ _.n _. _ -_ - WORK! PLAY! RELAX! And buy them at Moes! We can ive you a varicty f icrials, styles ~iidl colors, All pi 'sall iz s. Moe Sport Shops 71 1 North University 902 South State St. VALENTINE FASCINATORS Wool and rayon lacy fascinators for that very particular person. For that .extra warmth buy her a scarf - flattering and colorful A "plus" assortment! Always Reasonably Priced GAGE LINEN SHOP] 10 NICKELS ARCADE C )_ t:S)tC.m o o ; ;;;;;;Yt)G < ;;;;;;. > U O ;;;> ": ° Junior and Misses Sizes ,- C)(.95 F . 1 w I _ ,_ .I