_t
~u~ij~.NO. ,THlE MICHIGAN DALLY -
PAGE FMW
Now It's the 'Weather Man'
Dance Qroup
Will Meet
Tuesday Night
Instead of the traditional Dance
Club in which all types of dancing
are combined, the organization will
be divided into three parts this year
-into ballet, modern and tap clubs,
Rae Larson, '44, chairman of the
WAA Dance Club has announced,
and the;first meeting for all women
interested in any of these types of
dancing will be held, at. 7:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, in the dance studio at Bar-
bour Gym.
After the organization meeting,
the clubs will work separately in or-
der to perfect the particular dance
routines, with a monthly meeting
scheduled for the three divisions. One,
club will act as hostesses at the
monthly gatherings and will present
demonstrations of the dance.
There is a need for dancers to pre-
sent numbers from musical comedy
and stage shows for such organiza-
tions as Junior Girls' Project and to
assist with entertainment at various
functions, with particular emphasis
placed on tap dancing.
To Select Club Chairmen
Individual club chairmen will be
chosen to direct each of the three
divisions ' after the club functions
have gotten underway, and Miss Lar-
son will vork with all three.
As a. Dancing Master of America,
Miss Larsbni is qualifiedntoteach the
various types of dance and do them
in the'same manner that any other
dance teacher who is a member of
this foremost organization of danc-
ing masters would. Consequently, if
prospective members of the clubs
have had dancing before from a
teacher associated with the Dancing
Masters of America, the routine
movements would be the same, and
old hands at dancing would not be
thrown out of step.
Members Arrange Routines ,
Miss Josephine Yantis, a member
of the University teaching staff, is
the club adviser and will assist in
the development of coed dancers,
whether they are conformists to tap,
ballet, or modern dance routines.
Opportunities will also be given to
club members to arrange and exhibit
their own routines, with a possibility
of their being used in. JGP skits and
entertairnents.
'Dead' Ration Books
Wil-$ Recoverjed
I lO Noy. 6.-)-Un-
de ' vt aie agreed, to help the.
Office 6f Pice Adiinistration re-,
cover the ration books of deceased
persopa, .n OPA spokesman reported
today.
Fi a4oiiations of funeral direc-
tors; hich together cover the coun-{
Sixty-Five,
Accepted in ("lce Clb;
President, Patty Spore, A'1 ces
OFFICIAL U. S. NAVY PHOTOGPAPH'
These girls are training to be aerographer's mates-the "weather
girls" of the WAVES. After a week's course, during which they receive
instruction in the operations of weather observation, such as the use of
meteorology instruments, charts, weather codes, etc., they'll wear the
rating badge shown in the inset. The girl at the right is adjusting a
theodolite to check rate of ascension and drift of the balloon which the
other WAVE is about to release. These are among the many interesting
win-the-war jobs open to American girls from 20 to 36.
Women Assume Dominance
By MARJORIE HALL4
Overwhelmed by women anxious to
sing in the Women's Glee Club, Pat-
ty Spore, '45, president of the singing
organization, has announced that 65
women have been accepted for club
membership and that a sizeable wait-
ing list has been compiled to fill any
vacancies that may arise.
With plans intact to hold the first
reheasal at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the
Kalamazoo Room of the League, the
Glee Club can now call the Kalama-
zoo Room its own, as the room has
been officially handed over to the
club by the League for its specific use.
The Detroit Alumni Association,
has arranged to furnish the room
with Glee Club pictures, bulletin'
boards and a new music cabinet, and'
the room will compare favorably with
that in the Union used by the Men's
Glee Club for several years.
Through the efforts of Bill Sawyer,
director of the organization, the Glee
Club has compiled one of the most
complete libraries of music for wo-
men's voices in the country, and more
will be added very shortly.
The system of admitting women to
membership was undertaken as a re-
sult of the increased enthusiasm for
the club, and those women who have
been placed on the waiting list will
be notified of vacancies as soon as
they occur. Vacancies will be brought
about by the failure of women now
enrolled to attend the rehearsals
which take place three times weekly,
at 4 p.m. Mondays and Fridays, and
7:30 p.m. Wednesdays.
Women who have not already been
notified of their status in the club
may expect to receive a post card
tomorrow informing them of their
standing. Members were chosen on
the basis of their voice quality, their
attendance at rehearsals last year
(if upper classmen), and the number
of women singing the various parts.
Club activities for the year will in-
clude the presentation of an opera,
"Tom Sawyer," written especially for
the Glee Club by Bill Sawyer, broad-
casts over WJR, and appearances at
various campus and out of town
functions. Opportunities will also be
given members to arrange music of
their own choosing for use by the
Club and to direct the organization
in musical numbers.
Heading the club this year ..are
Miss Spore, president; Jean Gilman,
'45, vice president; Pat Tyler, '46,
secretary; Phyllis Crawford, '45,
treasurer; Carol Cothran, '44, busi-
ness manager;' and Barbara Jean
White, '44 Spec., publicity -chairman.
The Michigan Dajniegjr* l hold'
a general. meeting 'at .i8 15 p.m. '-
Tuesday in the Michigan League
at which time Dr.. W.Carl Rufus,
director of the; Bzrbouw: Scholar-..
ship, will speak. The subject of
his talk will be "Michigan's Orient-
al Women."
Mrs. Howard Barnes of East Uni-
versity will be in charge of refresh-
ments.
Ditched at Marraige
Fqhiiect? Kentucky
.Gr111 Worts To Know
EVANSVILLE, INDIANA Nov. 6-
P)--Circuit Judge Nat H. Young-
blood, Justice of the Peace Ernest Eb-
meier, Army intelligence officer, and
a nineteen-year-old prospective bride
from Benton, Ky., are wondering
whether they have been left at the
local Marriage License Bureau by a
soldier in Australia.
The girl, accompanied by her fa-
ther and mother, appeared recently
to apply for a license to wed the sil-
N dier by proxy. The Kentucky girl and
her absentia bridegroom were prac-
tically wed until Ebmeier brought up
the question of whether the man was
tll alive.
* After consultation with Wll the a-
bdve n'amed, it was deeided to send a
cablegram -to the soldier. No reply
.has been received as yet.
BUY WAR BONDS
/
PATTY SPORE
F,.~'
rS
Mademoiselle features fashions as seen in
*t
e .,
"Moen
t y . 4
S3preme
I
n Revised Advertising Picture
By MARJORIE ROSMARIN
With the depletion of men in the
advertising field, it is now the turn
of the female of the species to arti-
culate on "how to win a job and be
a success in advertising."
Probably advertising is one of the
chief branches of the business world
where women have walked in and
taken possession. Time was when the
male contingent indulged in the mys-
teries and statistics of market re-
search. The housewife used to be
try, have agreed to obtain addressed
envelopes, from local ration boards
and leave one with the family of each
deceased person. The undertaker will
ask the family to put the ration book
in the envelope and mail it to the
local board.
Under rationing regulations all un-
used books must be turned in.
able to answer her doorbell and find
the Fuller Brush Man, now it's the
Fuller Brush Woman, or one of Mr.
Gallup's favorite daughters.
Advertising Is Thriving
Strangely enough, in spite of the
curtailment of production of many
familiar commodities, the manufac-
turers and advertising men and wo-
men fully realize the necessity of
keeping John Q. Public well aware
that Sam's Cough Drops have gone
to war and Sam is manufacturing ar-
tillery for the: duration. Now, more
than ever before, advertising is the
thriving business in America. For
this reason, the opportunities in ad-
vertising are infinite for women.
Women are the ones who now get
the accounts, write the copy, make up
the layouts, and 'follow through on
the intricacies of production. Es-
pecially in the last aspect have wo-
men shown their colors. Production
was formerly an exclusively male de-
partment where such incomprehensi-
ble activities as the minute details of
typography and mechanical pheno-
menon took place.
Will Become More Important
Although advertising is not a new
field for women, in the past it has
been the men who have held the
high-salaried positions and, in gen-
eral, have won the laurels and boost-
ed the business.
Today, however, a woman with a
fairly substantial knowledge of the
fundamentals of advertising, and
with more than the average show of
Treasured moments in a Jean
Carol original. Date dresses
fashioned with delicacy . .
sheer necklines ...'n' Grecian
~. :_;
,.
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S. S t.
fl
a tt (
gathered skirts. Stunning silk
Y ,"ctepes 4i dxeiting shades of
grey, -blue,, purple, and, cloco-
'ate brow tangerine, black
1TU cocoa
'*1
is in order when you see
the bargains at CALKINS-
FLETCHER this week. Hard-
to-get shower' caps for only
50c. The big two-dollar bottle
of Dorothy Gray Dry-Skin Lo-
tion for only $1.00. And if you
want a perfect gift for a spec-
ial man, take a 'look at their
Yardley's gifts for men.
41 14
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'4 3 i 2 ,t .. i, 4 P S " P o l * W O m E
E BBB ;JAyCf4 QUB ,TTECREEK LANSING
6}i ~lL 5131i71109gSOUTH, UtIVSRSITY
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Monday Store Hours:
Noon to 8:30 P.M.
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iG . k tat ?'
ambition, can go a
field that is destined
and more important
on.
long way in a
to become more
as the years go
She knows ust
what to.we a.
'round the clock, no miatter where.
she's always well dressed 4n her
matching suit and topcoat
s7/',
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U.S. Will Have
Usual Turkey
Thanksgiving
NEW YORK, Nov. 7.--P-Ameri-
can's traditional Thanksgiving Day
feast will be about as bountiful as
last year's but the Christmas dinner
menu may be different, The Ameri-
can Institute of Food Distribution
said today.
Some shortages may occur in vari-
ous sections of the nation before
Thanksgiving due to poor distribu-
tion, the Institute said.
Christmas prospects, it indicated,
will tend to hinge on how much is
left over after Thanksgiving market-
ing, with the likelihood of more
shortages.
The turkey question was still open.
The Institute estimated turkey pro-
duction at around 485,000,000 pounds,
about the same as in 1942, with 35,-
000,000 pounds earmarked for the
armed forces. More chickens and
other fowls will be available.
Some sources predicted a general
shortage of turkeys. Whether or not
you get a turkey for the holidays,
Tailoring that wins comments,
fabrics that radiate warmth as
wel as good looks, and durability
that will stand by season in and
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of
All those books you couldn't
get anywhere last week due to
the heavy enrollment can be
had now. WAHR'S. The war
made it a bit difficult to secure
the books any sooner. But now
you can get on the beam and
get your boks at WAHR'S.
A5,
COLLEGE
. .. has changed a lot in the
past year or two. Now coeds
spend their afternoons at sur-
gical dressings instead of flit-
ting around. But surgical
dress ings call for a neat wash
blouse. ELIZABETH DILLON
SHOP has some really good'
looking shirts and skirts that
will fill the bill to a T.
DAYS
season out.
100% wool suits
and topcoats each.
Special at 49.95
a
A
airm wool Dress
For campus or dates . . . classic in cashmere
jersey (70% wool for warmth, 30% rabbit's
hair for featherlight softness). Demure Peter
Pan collar, big pearl buttons, gentle fullness
in the skirt. Wild Turkey red, Sandpiper
beige, Marsh brown, black. Misses' sizes.
Coats from 29.95
Special group of BETTER DRESSES
at 19.95
I CkAADT (rIDI c TAVI THI-IR? CHANGE'Z IN WAR STAMPS