MONDAY, DEC. 18, 1944 DAILY "WAwmwMMNwN 'U' Students To Usher In New Year at Qala Union DanceD ec. 30 18 Sororities Newberry To Union Invites All Campus to Christmas . Plans are now being made for a gala New Year's dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Dec. 30 in the Rainbow Room of the Union, Joe Milillo, chairman an- nounced yesterday. Jimmy Strauss and his band, now playing at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit, will furnish music for the dance, Strauss has promised to play "Auld Lang Syne" as it has never been played before. Strauss made three appearances in Ann Arbor last year. He is well known to Detroitf society as he has served contracts with the Graystone and Vanity Ball- rooms. and with the Book-Cadillac and Statler Hotels. Tickets for the dance will go or sale tomorrow at 8 a.m. at the Union Travel Desk. All tickets will be put on sale at one time and will remair at the desk until all are sold. No attempt will be made to stagger the hours of selling. The dance is ope:. to Union members only. Membership cards must be exhibited at the time of the purchase. Favors of noisemakers; paper hats. confetti and streamers will be dis-f tributed by the Union Council at intermission time. "There will bel ple ty of everything for everyone." WAA Booklet Reprinted for Many Requests "Since we have had so many re- quests from coeds for additional cop- ies of the Physical Fitness Booklet we have had more copies printed which will be ready Monday at Bar-- bour Gym and the League Under--! graduate Office," said Shelby Die-: trich, '45, president of WAA. The booklet was written and pre- pared by the past WAA Board, and contains direction for various pos- ture-improving, waist-whittling andI flexibility exercises. In addition, there are directions for group exercise work, as well as individual sugges- tions. Presented for the first time last spring at the WAA Fashion Show. the booklet was shown and distribu- ted to the freshman women agair this fall. But because there are som( upperclassmen who have not yet seen the leaflet, the re-print ha, been made. "While there is no compulsory exercise program for this year, wE are hoping that the women will feel] the necessity for doing exercises 'onr their own' at their dorms, sororities or league houses, and for this reason we feel that the booklet will be a helr to the houses," Miss Dietrich con- tinued. Milillo said, "We hope this will be the noisiest and gayest welcome a New Year in Ann Arbor has ever had." Other committee members for the dance include Byron Kebb Jr. and ;Paul John. A University ruling that no dances be held on Sunday necessi- tates an early celebration of New Year's Eve. "Auld Lang Syne" will be played at 11 p.m. This year will be the third wartime New Year's Eve that University stu- dents have spent in Ann Arbor. Informal dances were, presented at Waterman Gym in previous years. Milillo urged all Union members to support the dance. "We will make up in enthusiasm what we lack in time at this. New Year's celebration," he said. Awards To Be presented for Best Bond Sales All Bond Belle records must be turned in to the League by 5 p.m. today, as the books for the Sixth l War Loan Drive will be officially closed at that time. Eight awards will be presented to the individuals and the teams with the best records at the informal get- together of all Bond Belle captains and their team members at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Refreshments will be served in the grill room afterward. Two awards will be given to the team and the coed with the best percentage of sales eased on the ratio of the number of faculty members for which they were responsible to the number of bonds actually sold. Other awards will be presented on the basis of the lowest percentage of refusals, the greatest numoer oi, bonds sold,! and the greatest value of bonds sold. Hospitals Request Coed Volunteers Coeds for Soph Project's hospital volunteer service are still needed at University Hospital on Monday and Friday mornings, Saturday after- noon, and all day Sunday, and at St. Joseph's Hospital on week-day after- noons and all day Sunday. Those interested in work at Uni- versity Hospital may register with Miss Beardslee in the third floor vol- unteer office, while those wishing to work at St. Joseph's Hospital may sign with Miss Wanzig whose office Hold Dinners Exchange dinners among twelve of Panhellenic's eighteen houses were held last week, the second in a series of dinners which will continue throughout the year.j According to Peg Laubengayer, president of Panhellenic, the dinners will be held just as often as the houses decide they wish to have them. -resent ay -n r - made *one other formal appearance Kings Have Journeyed" by Peter this semester at an -International Residents of Helen Newberry dor- Cornelius and "Glory to God in the Center program. mitory will present the traditional Highest" by Pergolesi. Featured so- Paul John, chairman of the Christ- Christ Dragon abouthei Chrste loists will be Ruth MacNeal, Jean mas Party, urged all students and Gilman. and Arlene Peugeot. faculty members to attend. "This party this evening. The Navy Chorus will sing tradi- will be everyone's party," he said. The play, originally a miracle play tional Christmas songs which they "It will be a revival of the old- given by mummers in England, is will also present in caroling tours of fashioned type of grade school always performed by new students at the campus earlier in the week. Fea- Christmas party when pupils and Helen Newberry Residence. tured soloist of the Choir is Eugene teachers set aside a December after- Guests will include the board of Malitz. A-S USNR. The accompan- I noon for a community celebration," patronesses. ist is Eric Beu, A-S USNR. The Choirhe added. Dean Joseph E. Bursley asked all private parties be postponed after the all-campus party. Bu also expressed his approval of idea. "This is one University a in which everyone can take p he said. Thomas Bliska, president of Union, also invited everyone tc tend the party. "The student, fa Christmas Party will help ever start the holiday vacation with ty of Yuletide enthusiasm," he 'n , ni __..*..:.,____- - -* is located on the hospital. first floor of the Fashion Center Busy at Work ,: : . 'r ' ' .;, .*1 osrVlubl T'eddings c.and &Egagemen ts The engagement of Betty Ann Koffman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo L. Koffman of Detroit, to Julius David Schetzer, son of Mrs. Rose Schetzer also of Detroit, was recently announced. Miss Kofiman is attending the University and a former Daily edi- torial director. Mr. Schetzer is a member of the faculty of the engi- neering college at- the University. Announcement was made of the engagement of Evelyn Farquhar daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Farquhar of Detroit, to Officer Can- didate Donald S. Brubaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton S. Brubakei of Los Angeles, Calif. Miss Farquhar is attending the University and is a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. * * The marriage of Joan Dancer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dan- cer of Stockbridge, to Joseph Gold- stein, son of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Goldstein of Los Angeles, was an- nounced recently. The bride is a junior at the Uni-j versity. Mr. Goldstein graduated from Stanford University and is now in the Army stationed on the campus. The engagement of Jean Glass to Lt. Kenneth Pearlstein has been an- nounced by her mother, Mrs. Samuel H. Glass of Calumet. Miss Glass has served as an orien- tation advisor, and is a member of Sigma Delta Tau. She is a junior in the University. Lt. Pearlstein is the son of Mr. and Mrs,. M. B. Pearlstein of Boston,t Mass. and attended Harvard Univer- sity for two years prior to his enlist- ment in the Air Corps. He is at present stationed overseas as a co- nil~ -nf, na 1-4 On Ptayclothes Despite icy winter winds, summer is already here in the fashion sector of Manhattan, the middle Forties, where designers are busy with clothes for the Florida and Southern Cali- fornia resort seasons. The clothes they are fashioning today are those Miss America will be enjoying eight months from now. Here are some of the style points in fabric prints and textures to expect in next season's clothes, as glimpsed in Wesley Simpson's fabric collection now being made up by scores of playclothes designers. Prints that tell a story or have ome central theme are the most popular. Horses are particularly numerous in prints this coming sea- son. Wesley Simpson's Persian pon- ies, black prancing horses wearing colorful headgear, are printed on white shantung, for one of the most! striking of the new designs. His Jungle Fantasy is another intriguing! one, with a slinky black leopard in tropical surroundings of flowers and leaves. Black and dark colors have pushed pastels into the background as far as play and resort clothes are con- cerned. It's either black. printed in dark greens, turquoises, corals, or cinnamon shades, or bright white, printed in the deep colors, which make for the subtlety in the newI fabrics. Fabrics themselves are either of the shantung type which washes so well and stays fresh for a long time, or of the crisp linen-type weave,1 such as Wesley Simpson's famous "North Shore." This fabric, 35% cotton and 65% rayon, is frequently tebelized for crease-resistance. Designer trend is toward whole' series of play clothes developed from coordinated fabrics and colors in prints and plain materials. Thus in matching sets one can find kneeI pants and shirt, bra and shorts, a tie-on skirt that can double as a cape, plus a short jacket. Chris tmas ;,: < r'te : ! ;Y ". 4, 1 i ift Certificate In Our S tore! We're mighty familiar with gift certificates. Thousands have been bought from us each Christmas, by countless persons with lengthy shopping lists. And everyone's been happy, all around! This year, we're offefing, not one, but two kinds of Christmas gift certificates. One is our own. The other-is a War Bond! Take it from us, a War Bond is the ideal gift certificate. You see, a War Bond is the only certificate that can buy the things every American wants-freedoni, security, a share in this coun- try's glorious future. A War Bond is the only certificate that can buy innumerable, merrier, merry Christmases to come. A War Bond is the only certificate that can buy an earlier Victoryl So, buy a War Bond for every important name on your Christ- mas list. They come in all denominations, just as our own cer- tificates do. And, of course a War Bond is the only gift that's worth more than i-ts price. T hat's why we call it the most valu- 1G <. ble gift certificate in our store!