72ie 1, ,F . 2~f4, - j~' . . M AAF is Open WAC, WAVES SPAR For Enlistment perform Vital Part in Of Air WACs M L Directing Plane Traffic Is One Of 237 -Possible Air Base Jobs; Regular Basic Training Given Under the new enlistment regula- tions, a woman enlisting in the Wo- men's Army Corps can choose the Ar- my Air Forces as the branch in which she will serve. Recruits in the Air WAC receive their basic training along with the recruits in the regular WAC. They have tne same drill and go to the sane classes foi five weeks; but upon graduation they are sent to an air base. There are 237 jobs for women to do at an air base. They can direct plane traffic at air fields, maintain flight logs and weather records, repair pre- cision instruments and airplane elec- trical curcuits, handle photographic film, and plot maps. They may serve as laboratory tech- nicians and testers of plane radios. Some of them are Link Trainer in- structors, who taech pilots how to fly by instruments. There also are of- fice positions of all types. All officer candidates are now se- lected from the ranks, and every qualified WAC has an opportunity to compete for selection. Women with college backgrounds make up a high proportion of WAC officers, and for- mer college students who have ac- quired leadership qualities make good material for Officers' Candidate School. Approximately one-fourth of the WACs have attended college. WACs Go Overseas WACs, the first feminine AEF, are stationed overseas wherever there are units of the regular. Army, from Australia and Africa to England. The duties of the WACs serving with the Army Air Forces in England include the greasing of airplane mo- tors, the plotting of weather maps and the operation of switchboards. In addition the women have brought along their own cooks, bakers and laundresses. SANDWICHES EVERY NIGHT-- 8-12 Dinners-Sundays 2-8 Weekdays 5-8 Luncheon--11:30-1:30 Weekdays University Grill William Street Upstairs Third Door from State Wearers of Navy Blue Release 'Shore' Men for Active Duty Enlistment in the WAVES or SPARS is performing a definite ser- vice in winning the war, because for each WAVE or SPAR who takes over naval shore duty another sailor or coastguardsman is released for active service. , By enlisting, a woman may feel she is no longer an idle part of the na- tion, but is playing a role as import- ant as that of a man in the armed forces. Mr. Frank Knox, Secretary of the Navy, has said, "This is total war -a war in which every woman as well as every man must play a part. There are important service jobs that must be carried on .At home-man- size, full-time jobs which you, the women of America, can fill-jobs in which you can serve your country and release the men to fight at sea." Indoctrination for WAVES and SPARS is at several of the nation's finest colleges, from which women are sent to active duty or to other schools for specialized training in any one of a variety of fields. In service, WAVES and SPARS fill some of the same shore positions formerly held by men, win the same ratings on the basis of merit and service, and re- ceive the same pay. Women with college degrees or two years of college and two years of ac- ceptable business or professional work are eligible to apply directly for officer training, provided they fulfill the physical requirements of enlisted women. Minimum age for enlistment is 20 and enlistmeht is for the dura- tion of the war plus six months, Nursing Corps Reveals Pl ans Studenthnurses are being prepared through .the U.S., Cadet. Nurse corps to replace °:experienced nurses sent overseas with the armed forces; the slogan of the Cadet Corps is, "Get free training with pay, in .the world's proudest profession." On graduation from the Corps a woman is ,eligible.to become a regis- tered nurse, and must engage in es- sential nursing for °the duration of the war. Any high school graduate between the ages of 17. and 35 may apply for the Corps at any school of nursing, and on acceptance she'automatically becomes-a member of the Corps.- e- tailed information may be obtained from the Nursing Office at University. Hospital. SM arines To Victory Drive Col. Hobby Lists Many Jobs For Khaki-Clad Army Women In order to bring victory closer by strengthening the armed forces at the front, American women are con- stantly being urged to join the Wo- men's Army Corps by Col. Oveta Gulp Hobby, commanding officer of the WAC. "Because every member of the WAC adds new strength to our armi- ies as surely as any soldier, hundreds of thousands of women are needed in the WAC at once," Col. Hobby said recently. "The call is urgent, and is a challenge which American women should feel proud to answer now." Among the 155 vital Army jobs now . partially filled by WACs are radio { operations, control-tower work, radio repair, parachute maintenance, pho- tography, map-making, weather, la- boratory work, hospital jobs, ord- nance, communications, moving pic- tures, supply, finance, motor trans- port, food, secretarial work, person- nel, and public relations. -ch -/- aft War.. t Women'sServices Note Growth WVunfin , :service rg ?Lani'/,lati '1 1.11 WAVES wc) le year WVAG, WAVES, SPARS and Marinehiodl~ uy3. nDc 1 92 fae rowni with thte war effort. there re500 oe in this ser- T1heU.S. Marine Corps Women's vice, O- neyrlxa(yfthe number had lfserve is the youngest of these risen to 47,00. and their sister oi gamzaions. A year ago this month SPARS have kept up with them. an Act of Congress established the On July 2. 1941, President Roose- Women's Reserve as a part of tWe Ilt, signed a bil makin the WAC a United States Marine Corps. part of te Army. Jean Stafford Jeffrey has recently been commissioned Second Lieeuten- ant in the Marine Corps and is now 1 stationed at the Marine Air Base. Cherry Point, N.C. Lieutenant Jeff- rey is a member of Gamma Phi Beta, Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority, and was president of Mortar Board Society. She was active on many League committees including the merit sys- tem and social committee, and was music chairman for the 1942 Pan- hellenic Ball. As a freshman she was president of Jordan Hall and on the central committee of Freshman Pro- ject. Lieutenant Jeffrey also played the flute in the University Concert Band and toured with the Little Symphony in 1941. * * , Dr! Poe-eng Yu, a former Barbour Scholar from China, has recently been commissioned a Captain in the Army. She holds the honor of being the first non-citizen Chinese woman in the U.S. Army and also the first Chinese woman doctor to receive a commission. Captain Yu received her commission at Michigan in 1939. i %W. #PC ---- ---- ---- Nt r Although they can't serve "from the halls of Montezuma to the{ shores of Tripoli," but are limited to serving within the boundaries of the United States, Women Ma- rines are "proud to bear the title of -United States Marines ..." and to wear the uniform of the Corps as shown above. College seniors with certain specifications may enter directly into officer training, and free a Marine to fight at the front. servicewomen 'Tops' on Duty, Men Concede By MAVIS KENNEDY Servicemen agree that life in the WAVES, WACs SPARS, Marines is no picnic but that women who are willing to sacrifice their personal am- bitions and comforts to serve their country in this way deserve all the tribute their countrymen can pos- sibly give them. Sarah Hanby, '44SM, recently re- ^eived a letter from a serviceman which spared none of the unpleasant side of life in the armed forces, but concluded that any woman who can deny herself peace-time luxuries and pleasures and go into a life which she knows will be plenty tough is to be greatly admired. Must Realize Hardships Miss Hanby's friend thinks that women should realize the hardships of military life before going into it. People who sign up for something and then discover they don't like it cause much needless trouble. "The orientation period right after induction is the most difficult time for both men and women," he said. "Here the abrupt change from com- paratively soft existence into huge impersonal outfits is made. Everyone seems to be against you and living conditions are made as tough as pos- sible. You have no rights and few privileges to speak of. Social life is practically nil; letter-writing, and book-reading get tiresome." Men Proud of Servicewomen "Work, hard work with no glory, is what being a WAVE, WAC, SPAR or Marine means, but it also means that some American women share the same love of country with their bro- thers, sweethearts, and friends," Miss Hanby's serviceman friend declared. "And don't forget," he added, "there's something-about-a-uniform' for women as well as men." "Women are proud of their men in the service and men are proud of servicewomen," he concluded. Though ineligible for sea duty, WAVES quartered in Coronado, Cal- if., set sail every morning to reach the Naval Air Station in San Diego. Their ship is the UWS WAVE, a fifty-foot converted motor launch which operates between their quar- ters,.and their duty stations. By NANCY GROBERG 0jh "frabjous" day! The frail, feathery female of other years has become a myth. The modern wife divides her time between her husband and the Red Cross. Fainting is practically passe. Oh tempora, oh beautiful mores, woman has at last come into her own! For behold, Unce Sam denounces his bachelorhood and welcomes woman into the armed forces. The waist that wouldn't be wasped finds its place within the safe folds of the uniform of the WAC, the WAVE, etc. Gone is the modest maiden of the downcast eye, the soft mutterer of "this is so sudden," the owner of eyelids whicn fluttered behind the fan. Today's wo- man can hup-two-three-four with the best of them, and if John's proposal is as sudden as all that, it's just because she hasn't seen him since her last furlough. WOMAN has kicked her pedestal out from under her. She has abandoned the needlepoint, the sampler, the subtle swoon. She's a big girl now, and she can take care of herself. When she's decided which branch of the service appeals to her, she starts worrying about which branch of the service appeals to her. The desire to get a man at any cost gives 'way to other motives, and the modern mother may well sing, "I didn't raise my girl to be a civilian." Ah, but there are many who decry this new world. Woman's place, they keep muttering, is in the home. Visions of Amazons dance before their eyes, and disillusioned men go out in search of something "utterly feminine." Fashion magazines start getting worried and .caption their offerings with fragments about the place of femininity in this male world. Prophets foresee the time when women will come out into the open and-tch, tch- wear SLACKS! The social world ist torn with anxiety at the thought of a revolution in feminine apparel. Wo- men are beginning to wear jackets that BUTTON ON THE RIG T SIDE. Even ice-cream sodas are be- ginning to lose that frilly look. And people worry and worry and worry about it. TO THOSE who spend their sleep- less nights wondering what is to become of the world when woman refuses to "just sit"-to those whose feverish brains are tortured with vis- ions of a womanless universe-to those who see in this new turn of events a real threat to male domina- tion-we can only say, take heart, have hope, believe in the best that is in woman. For if she now appears to be accomplishing something which once was deemed quite out of the realm of her capabilities, she does so with justification and with tri- umph. Some day she will return to pay homage to' that timeless institution, the male ego. Some day she will faint again. Some day she will cling and rest her weary head on the broad shoulder. Some day, some day, ac- cording to her proverbial prerogative, she will change her mind! BUY WAR BON DS! 4 MONTH INTENSIVE College Students and Graduates Secretarial Course for A thorough, intensive, secretarial course - starting February, July, October. Registration now open. Regular day and evening school throughout the year. Catalog. A School of Business Preferred by College Men and Women THE GREGG COLLEGE President, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D. Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A. 6 N. Michigan Ave. Telephone STAte 1881 Chicago, 111. for war work, fox 'round-the-house for outdoors, we've The most comfortable, versatile, pla" time fashion we know. Slick-fitting, straight-cut slacksfor work, play or just e «lounging. Slashed pockets, side fasten- Sing.All the things that make slacks perfect companions. 100% grey men's wear flannel. Brown, navy, black . . . fannel and gabardine. Coverts and corduroys. From 6.00. Sizes from 10-42. tS 4 On State a the Head of North University WE DELIVER 1 ,. -------- ... . .______ il . . . in a forward-looking frock. Tailored with decisive skill to make it your prettiest} city-streets costume. In pale candle-lit colors. from $8.95 ; 11 Ski W Toboggan FOR WI'NTER FUN Y i 1-: ' .1 .. . ! and get your equipment at MOE'S * SKIS SKI HARNESSES 0 SKI WAX * TOBOGGANS * SKI PANT for Men and Women MOE SPORT SHOPS 711 North University 902 South State J utnpel' Quinlan "IRAW BERRY CREAM MASJ ntetthyl saticytal'. "I"LEEN MARY OUINLAN.yC. 0 TiyplNEW TORNTWrNi ith them. 2.50; long colors in OTM - ' .. .... ~ ,. I i MATCH the stimulating freshness of your skin with Strawberry Cream Mask to the charm and smartness of your spring wardrobe. For a limited time only, regular $2.50 jar for $1.00 TAKE TIME OUT II WHEN FINALS ARE OVER dance to te tune of BILL SAWYER SHIRTS to wear w Short sleeved from sleeved from 4.00. Sunshine bright c Spring's newest sweaters to top your skirts and slacks. DID YOU BUY THAT WAR STAMP TODAY? .. ~ Y: . .: t s < '~'z..~MvgSY*DEI.~a I I I I t -- . I