195 TtE MCIGN D -J Soph Music Bar Will Provide Detroit Orchestra for Dancing. I. * * * Revival of Traditional Event Will Highlight Various Forms Of Entertainment, Activities The "blue rain" of Ann Arbor will become a thing of the past at Soph Music Bar from 7:30 p.m. to mid- night EWT Saturday in the League, when Jimmy Strauss and his Detroit orchestra will be a highlight of the evening. Strauss and his popular orchestra will reign from 9 p.m. to nidnight EWT in the League ballroom and will provide rhythmic music for the Cabaret dancers. Decorations for the ballroom are to be carried out in well known song titles. 'Swing's the Thing' Will Be Staged The coed stage show "Swing's the Thing" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. EWT in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- ater and will be followed by the technicolor movie "A Star Is Born", which stars Janet Gaynor and Fred- eric March. The stage show will fea- ture dancing, singing and dialogue. Jean Hole, Ruth McMorris and Nina Goehring will present a spe- cialty tap dance, interpreting zoot suit jive. "I Surrender, Dear" will be sung by blues singer Phyllis Knight. Also featured in the show will be the ballet dancing of Joan Schlee. Miniature Golf Will Be Played The Hussey Room will be devoted to the game of miniature golf, which will be sponsored by WAA. A nine- hole course complete with sand traps, water holes and hills will be available to all golfers regardless of skill. Scores will be kept and a prize awar- ded to the star player. The room is under the direction of Jane Archer, vice-president, and Barbara Osborne, president of WAA. A Parisian sidewalk cafe will be the setting for the refreshments which will be served ,in the Grand Navy Starts Drive For More WAVES V-E Day didn't mean a* thing to the Navy, which started an ambi- tious recruiting drive for WAVES as the news of the German surrender was celebrated, aimed at signing up 2,000 new recruits a month. Most of the WAVES will be trained as hospital corpsmen to release as many as possible from the 120,000 bluejackets now on that job for other duties. Officer candidates are being accepted from women doctors, den- tists, and occupational and physical therapists. WAVES have been authorized for overseas service in Hawaii, Alaska, Bermuda and the Panama Canal Zone. Information concerning en- listment may be obtained at recruit- ing centers in Jackson and Detroit. JIMMY STRAUSS and his popu- lar Detroit orchestra will furnish the music for dancers at the Soph Music Bar, Saturday in the League. The function will be presented for the first time since the beginning of the war. Rapids Room. Wine, women and song will be represented by cokes, coeds and choruses, but all else will be according to French customs. Tickets will go on sale tomorrow at the League, Main Library and Union. The campus sale will con- tinue until Saturday morning. Proceeds from Soph Music Bar will be contributed to the Seeing Eye for specially trained dogs for the blind in the United States. May Garden Party To Honor Provost The governors, directors and resi- dents of Martha Cook Building will give their annual May garden party Saturday, in their garden. This year the party is given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. James P. Adams. Mr. Adams is the newly appointed provost. The members of the receiving line will be Mrs. Gerr-it J.,Diekema, social director and Miss Sara Rowe, house director, and the officers of Martha Cook: Ann Terbrueggen, president; Bethine Clark, vice-president; Joan Kintzing, secretary; Alicent Epps, treasurer; and Dorothy Klopfenstine and Martha Bradshaw, Junior and Senior representatives. Guests will be shown around the gardens and the main rooms of Mar- tha Cook, and tea will be served in the garden. Coeds To Solicit For Fresh Air Camp Friday Project Maintained To Give Guided Development to Boys; Students Will Be Counselors Tag Day, which will raise funds for the University Fresh Air Camp at Patterson Lake, will be held Friday and members of women's residences will solicit funds at designated posts on campus and in the business dis- trict. The camp is maintained to give boys between the ages of nine and 13 a chance for guided physical and mental development in healthy sur- roundings. Recreation is supervis- ed by competent counselors,, both graduate and undergraduate stu- dents. The camp will be open for an eight week period. Campus posts will be manned from 7:45 a. m. to 4 p. m. EWT, and downtown stations from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. EWT, according to Jean Gaff- ney, chairman of the Tag Day com- mittee. Posts follow: center of the diagonal, Kappa Alpha Theta; Engi- neering Arch, Kappa Kappa Gamma; behind the library, Chi Omega; in front of the Romance Language building, Sorosis; Alumnae Hall, Kap- pa Delta; Union steps, Gamma Phi Beta. Other stations are: State St. en- trance to the Arcade, Newberry; north end of Angell Hall, Delta Gam- ma; front 4teps of Angell Hall, Ged- des House; corner of North Univer- sity and State, Day House; corner of East University and South Univer- sity, Alpha Phi; north side of WAB, Stockwell; south side of Waterman Gym, Stockwell; University Hospital, Mosher; in front of the League, Washtenaw House, center of Law Quad, Martha Cook. Assignments continue with: north door of West Quad, Alpha Omicron Pi; East Quad, Alpha Gamma Delta; corner of State and E. Liberty, Bar- bour'; Couzens Hall, Jordan; be- tween Clements Library and Presi- dent's home, Deltw Delta Delta; be- tween University High School and the Art School, Alpha Delta Pi; northeast corner of Main and Wil- liams, Alpha Xi Delta; southwest corner of Main and Williams, Alpha Chi Omega. The northeast corner of Main and Liberty will be manned by Sigma Delta Tau; southwest corner of Main and Liberty, Zeta Tau Alpha; north- east corner of Main and Washington, Pi Beta Phi; northwest corner of Main and Washington, Alpha Epsilon Pi; and downtown stores, Chicago Lodge. Play Petitions Due Saturday WAC Reaches Third Birthday 'Good Soldiers' Hold 239 War Jobs on Fighting Fronts Born the WAAC on May 14, 1942, the Women's Army Corps celebrated its third i birthday Monday, and members are now performing 239 important war jobs at Army posts throughout the country and wher- ever else there are American troops- England, France, Italy, Egypt, India, Australia, New Guinea and Hawaii. WACs don't shoot guns, but they do check the equipment fighters use. They don't fly planes, but they do gide airmen home by radio landing instructions. They ton't risk their lives in the front lines, but they do keep the world- wide network of Allied communi- cations open. They are soldiers, not only technically as when the "A" for Auxiliary was dropped in September, 1943, but actually be- cause they have proved themselves invaluable in jcbs that are indis- pensable to a modern-warfare vic- tory. "Good soldiers", is what Ar- my men say when they speak of members of the WAC. Nearly 18 per cent of the WAC is serving overseas; some of them land- ed on Normandy beaches only a little more than a month after D- Day, others arrived on Leyte a month and seven days after the first inva- sion force hit the beach, and an incredibly short time after American fighting men had won the bitter fight at Anzio, WACs were manning a mobile switchboard set up in a truck on the beach. Many WACs wear the Purple Heart for injuries received in bombing attacks. Eight have been awarded the Legion of Merit; 26 have earned the Bronze Star; five rate the Soldier's Medal for per- sonal heroism, and Col. Oveta Culp Hebby, director of the WAC, holds the Distinguished Service Medal, third highest Army decoration. TheWomen's Army Corps is still accepting recruits, especially women interested in serving as medical tech- nicians. Senior women who can fin- ish their college training in 120 days may enlist now and be deferred until the end ;f their college career, pro- vided they can meet general enlist- ment requirements. Sopl Musie Bar All members of the stageshow for Soph Music Bar will meet for rehear- sals from 7 p. m. to 10 p. m. EWT today at Barbour Gymnasium. A rehearsal will also be held at the same time and place tomorrow for the entire cast. The dress rehearsal for the stage- show will be held 3 p. m. to 5 p. . EWT today in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre of the League. All the cast must arrive on time. The central committee of the Cab- aret will hold a compulsory meeting at 3 p. m. EWT today in the League. The room will be posted. * ** Members of the ticket committee will meet at 3:30 p. m. EWT today in the League. The room will be posted on the League bulletin. The decorations committee will be at work in the basement of the League from 1 p. m. to 6 p. m. and from 7 p. m. to 10 p. m. EWT every day through Friday. Members are asked to work as often as possible by Barbara Everett, assistant chair- man of decorations. All Sororities Hold Exchange Dinners All sororities on campus have par- ticipated in six exchange dinners since last fall, according to Carol Evans, new secretary .f Panhelleic Association. Iiouses draw names to determin,, their Exchange partner for these in- format Thursday dinners, and ap- proximately 15 girls are "exchanged" between the two houses. Exchange dinners are intended to better acquaint the members of sor- orities v, th the girls and the houses of other Greek letter groups on the campus . Party To Be Given For All Servicemen All servicemen and veterans on campussare invitedtoan open house to be held from 2 to 5 p. m. Satur- day, at Stockwell Hall. There will be dancing on the ter- race or in the recreation room de- pending on the weather. Card tables will be set up for bridge and other card games. Croup- singing, ping-pong, and refreshments are also on the program. Senior women will be honored at WAA's Lantern Night to be present- ed at 7:30 p. m. EWT Monday at Palmer Field with a line of march forming at 6:45 p. m. EWT in front of the library steps. The line will be proceeded by members of the Ann Arbor High School Band and led by past presi- dents of key women's activities on campus. Seniors, carrying lanterns, will don caps and gowns and they will form a double line flanked on either side by an underclasswoman. Denoting their classes, juniors will wear yellow hair bows, sophomores will be designated by red ribbons and freshmen women will be recognized by their green bows. Route of March The line of mar.ch will proceed from the center of the diagonal, past the Natural Science Building, down North University to WAB, up the north walk of WAB to the cinder path, to the end of the tennis courts. Arriving at the field, the parade will form an "M" at which time "The Star Spangled Banner" and "Hail to the Colors" will be sung, led by Jean Gilman, past president of the Women's Glee Club. Judges for the song contest in- clude Miss Thelma Lewis, Mr. Ar- thur Hackett, Mr. Hardin Van Deur- sen and Dr. Margaret Bell. Thirty Former ''Student Receives Promotion A bright silver bar now adorns each shoulder of the green uniform of Marine First Lieutenant Claire Lucile Chamberlin, who has been promoted from second lIeutenant at the Marine Corps Air station at Cherry Point, N.C. Lieutenant Chamberlin's job is to check incoming and outgoing mes- sages as watch officer in the com- niuncations traffic centerUt -this largest Marine Air Base. She also decodes secret messages handled by the center. She received her bachelor- of arts degree from Western Michigan Col- lege in 1938 and her master of arts degree from the University of Michi- gan in 1940. Sworn in the Marines as an officer candidate in May, 1943, she won her commission as a second lieutenant by Octcber. She attended the Naval Communications School at Mount Holyoke College and upon gradua- tion was assigned to Cherry Point. houses will participate in the contest and no solo voices will be allowed. A song cup will be awarded to the dor- mitory, leaguehhouse or sorority which displays the most outstanding harmony and blending in their song. Dr. Bell To Award Cup The sing cup will be awarded by Dr. Bell. Kappa Kappa Gamma won the cup at the 1944 Lantern Night which was held in Rackham Lecture Hall Amphitheatre. Barbara Os- borne, president of WAA, will pres- ent the WAA participation cup to the house which has had the most participation points in WAA activi- ties. In case of rain the program will be held in Rackham Auditorium at 7:30 p. m. EWT. Ann Arbor Gives Over Fifty Tons To Clothing Drive Over 50 tons of serviceable cloth- ing, or an average of three pounds per person, was contributed by Ann Arbor and University residents to the recent drive sponsored by the Unit- ed National Clothing Collection, ac- cording to George Gabler, chair- man of the drive. The amount collected exceeded the quota set for Ann Arbor by two pounds per person. "The response was absolutely wonderful, and I cer- tainly wish to thank all contributors for their generous cooperation," Mr. Gabler said. According to a statement released by Henry J. Kaiser, national chair- man of the drive, 91,398,846 pounds of clothing has been reported col- lected by approximately 57 per cent of the communities in the United States, and reports are still coming in. Michigan at present leads the re- gion and the nation in total amount collected, with. 128 communities re- porting that they have gathered 9,354,866 pounds, making an aver- age of 2.1 pounds per person. Re- ports are yet to be filed by 79 local chairman. All kinds of paper except waxed paper, rags, and mattresses will be picked up by city trucks Thursday in conjunction with the paper salvage drive, Mr. Gabler announced.' Uni- versity residences are particularly urged to place their contributions on the curb in front of their houses. WAA's Traditional Lantern Night To Honor Senior Women Monday More Workers Are Requested For Red Cross Five hundred domestic and 300 overseas Red Cross workers are need- ed immediately because of the in- creasing responsibility placed on Am- erican Red Cross pesonnel by the Army and Navy. All branches afe in need of addi- tional workers. Case workers for the Social Service Staff are especially needed, and women between the ages of 25 and 45 are qttualified. Staff Aides to help in domestic hospitals are also in demand, and the age limit is 23 to 45. Foreign positions as staff assistants in Clubs, Clubmobiles, and Recreation Centers are open to wo- men in the 23 to 25 age group. Case Workers Need College Training Graduation from an accredited col- lege or university plus other pre- scribed training is required of appli- cants for Case' Worker positions. Recreation workers must have had training or experience in directing recreation or physical education, or knowledge of music, drama, and arts and crafts. A college degree is preferable and now almost essential for Hospital Staff Aides, and extensive study in sociology and psychology is desirable. Staff assistants in overseas positions must have a college education, with special emphasis on physical educa- tion, music, drama, arts and crafts, or a similar course. Outstanding ex- perience may be considered in place of college training. Age Requirements Strictly Observed Age requirements will be strictly observed in, selecting personnel, and all epplicants will be required to pass careful physical examinations. A statement of their availability will also be required. Applications and inquiries should be directed to Personnel Service, K\id- western Area, American Red Cross, 1709 Washington Ave., St. Louis 3, Mo. If you are suffering from that mid- week let down feeling, try the USO for dancing and refreshments to- night. Hungry? CHATTERBOX 800 SOUTH STATE ...of Summer togs... for work or piay.. . at home or away! SLACKS for "diggin' "or for smart casual wear (in cotton, gabardine, and flannels)... tan jeans, too . . . and to go with them . . . cotton blouses and T shirts - in plain colors and bright prints or stripes. ISHORTS - Good looking shorts, ador- able playsuits, clever little cotton dresses . . are all in the curriculum of what is to be worn. 5 _ -J 1 Group of Odds and Ends in Slacks of denim and rayons . . . at 2.00. 1 Group of Slack Suits and zelan processed poplin jackets at 5.00. 2 Groups of Ankle Sox at 29c and 39c. Petitions Girls' Play, during the for next year's Junior which will be presented first month of the 1946 spring semester, should be turned in at the League Undergraduate Office by noon, Saturday. Interviewing will be from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. EWT on May 22, 23, and 25 (Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday). Positions Listed Positions to be filled are chairman, assistant chairman, director, secre- tary-treasurer, stage managers, a music committee consisting of a composer, a lyrics writer, a choral director, and an arranger. Chairman for the script, dance, ticket, make- up, costume, scenery, properties, pub- licity, ushering, and program com- mittees will also be selected. All petitions should embody sound, specific ideas. They must contain complete plans of the organization, and also a criticism of this year's play. Women petitio-ing for the music, dance, and script committees, and for the position of director, should have had previous experience in those fields. Examples of writing and a specific outline for the play should be presented by those peti- tioning for the script committee. Pe- titioners must be prepared to discuss their complete plans when they are interviewed Women Urged To Petition All first and second semester soph- omore women are urged to petition for the other positions regardless of previous experience or lack of par- ticipation in class project work. "All those v ho have petili ned in the past &re urged to submit petitions again," Ruth Ann Bales, President of Judiciary Council, said. International Studies Scholarship Given Emalana Mason, a student at the University, has recently been award- ed a scholarship for the purpose of doing graduate work in the field of international affairs at the School of Advanced International Studies for the year 1945-1946.E IABARDIN1-E LA~hS This outfit is fast becoming the number-one celebrity of the year! Because of its great versatility! Wear the suit! Wear the jacket with the slacks! Wear the skirt or slacks with sweaters and blouses. Brilliantly tailored of a beautiful pure wool gabardine. In black, navy,: red, brown, Sizes 12 to 1 8. h7 e S.1-1. * * 39.95i 14.951 saC/i ANN AIWI( THE CASUAL SHO P