WEJ~NE~DAY, FEB. i4, 19'E5 - -.--.~ *..~,....a t~aA~~ .ar.Laaa.aa PAGE FivE THE MTCHJt~7AN DATTY U PARE FW~ Tryouts Will Begin For JO Play Cast March 7 in Lau Ac ting, Sing ing, Dancing Pa rts A re Ava ilable In AnnualI Event Which Will H onor Seniors; Sign-Up Sheets To Be in Underg rod Of fice Men's Dorms Purchase $1 ,23 Irn Bond Dri'e I Al Intra-Mural Heads To H old Mass Meeting Tryouts for the cast for Junior Girls' Play will be held from 3 p. m. to 5 p. m. Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, March 7, 8, and 9 in the League, Carol McCormick, director of the play announced yesterday. Any junior woman is eligible to try out for the play, interest and enthu- siasm being the main requirements. Sign-up sheets will be placed in the Undergraduate Office of the League Monday, March 6, for juniors to in- dicate the time of the tryout. The play will be a musical, so many of the parts may require acting, sing- ing, and dancing, while others may just require one of them. The .try- outs will be judged by Miss McCor- mick; Jayne Gourley, dance chair- man; and Masaka Ono and Anne Crossley, co-chairman of the music Annual Event Actual work on the play will begin immediately after the cast has been selected. The play will be given early in spring. JG play is an annual event, which junior women give to honor graduating seniors. The theme of the play, which' is origihial, is kept secret until the evening of the open- ing performance. The script committee under the co-chairmanship of Marcia Weilman and Marl an Johnson is writing the play now, so that descriptions of the various parts in the play will be available at the time of tryouts. The script committee consists of Mary Bronson, Carleen Gormsen, Rhea Christian, Doris Heidgen, and Betty Kamens. Deadline for Volunteers The deadline for volunteering to work on the various committees has been set for Monday, March 1. The committees which need volunteers are properties, stage force, scenery, costumes, make-up, programs, tick- ets, publicity, and ushers. Women may sign for committees on the slips Use Lemon for Hair For the gal with long "flowing" locks, castile soap makes a perfect suds, and followed by a lemon rinse, that mane will really glisten. But don't throw the lemon rind away aft- er using it for the rinse, because you can use it to whiten and soften your elbows and hands. Yes, by simply rubbing the lemon rind over those wirnter rough elbows, they'll become white and soft . . . course don't for- get to wash them about a minute after the massage. provided in the Undergraduate Of- ~*:. According to Fran Goldberg, chair- man of the play, the first central committee meeting will be held at 5 p. m. Monday, March 1, in the JGO play office in the League. Feeat eage .WOMAN OF T HE YEAR--Bouquets go to Mrs. William G. Hamm in Atlanta, Georgia who Coeds interested in participating in life more pleasant and worthwhile for many handi capped youngsters. Here she shows how sh( rushing must register at the Panhel- deaf and mute children in the Atlanta Junior League Speech School. Doing work of this kind lenic Booth in the League between patience, understanding, and genuine interest on the '3art of the teacher. Monday, March 5 and Wednesday, -- ------------ - ----------- _ Men's dormitories have bogt Alitamrlsrtmngesf $1,231 worth of stamps and bonds dormitories, league houses, and sor- since the house sales began two orities must attend a mass meeting months ago, Jane Strauss. whlo isi at 5 p. in., Wednesday, March 7 in the charge of the sales, announced yester- WAB, Barbara Osborne, intra-mural day manager, announced yesterday. *<~ enley House, under the chair- ln for the coming semester will mnanship of Dick Bajihe, is leading the be announced in talks by Shelby competitions among houses, having Dietrich, president of WAA, and Miss sold $775 worth of bonds andl $228 Osborne. Alene Loeser, ping pong worth of stamps. The house is con- Imanager, will explain the ping pong templating buying and dedicating a tournament which .is scheduled to jeep with the bonds they have pur - begin early next semester. chased this semester and will pur- The compulsory meeting will break chase during next semester. up into three discussion groups, led Sales to men's dormitories is under by Mar'y Baker, dorms; Jean Brown, the direction of JOP and was started league houses; and Jane Archer, sor- two months ago. The chairmen of orities. Managers will be encouraged each of the 'four houses, Wenley to present the problems they have House, Cy Adams House, Allen encountered in their houses. Meth- Rumsey, and Fletcher Hall, that are ods of stimulating participation in included in the plan, pick up their intra-mural sports and exercise stamps at the League from 4 p. mn. to{ groups will also be included 5 p. m. eve y Tuesday. Then the fol- lowing Tuesday they return the A m a e rtr money and pick up more stamps. s making hIn commentingaonssheisucces snf0 W ill Leav Today e teaches Girls Project certainly wishes to requires thank the men in these houses for T te dM eig their cooperation in this plan. Sales ______have exceeded expectations and we Mrs. Lucille Conger, secretary of ,hope for even better things next the Alumnae Council, is leaving today dsemester on a trip which will take her to two ds -_ _ Alumnae meetings. 'A V ESiI' for Today, Mrs. Conger will attend a Fun, meeingoftheChicago"Alumnae club March 7. A fee of $1.50 and a report card showing 15 hours of 'C' or better must be presented at the time lof regis- tration, Peg Laubengayer, president of Panhell enm Association, explai-n ed. Meeting To Be Held A meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p. in., Tuesday, March 6 in the Rack- ham Auditorium to explain rushing procedures and system to prospect- ive rushees. Any Questions not answered in the booklet furnished at the time of registration may be asked at the meeting. Formal rushing will extend from Friday, March 9, through Wednesday, March 28. Each house will give three open houses, beginning Friday, March 9 through Sunday, March 11. No invitations will be issued for these open houses, and rushees are expected to visit all houses of their denomina-. tion. Scries of Parties Open houses will be followed by a series of parties in each house. Final desserts and pledging will take place April 2. All pre-arranged meetings between sorority women and those eligible for rushing will be banned during the rushing period. No invitations except those for scheduled rushing parties will be allowed. The silence period will extend frbm 9:45 p. mn., Wednese- day, March 28 until S p. m. Saturday, March 31. Unaffiliated women may obtain in- formation concerning sororities from the Office of the Dean of Women. Mary Jane Kellam, '46, was install- ed last Monday night as president of Alpha Chi Omega. The retiring pres- ident is Dorothy Pugsley, '45. ' .Letters to Folks at H ome Of ten 'Neglected by H arr ied Students By ELLEN HILL ofabligludycs.Ceru Much has been said and done about lete a ungs anwsy cs.Chef keeping servicemen supplied with lte n onwy! mail from home. But has much ef. We forget that Mom and Dad fort been expended by students to live their lives over again through keep letters flowing to those at home? us-our hopes are their hopes, our Theanser geeralyspeaking, is grief their grief, our fun their in the negative. Aside from the type fn rt h acydtis of letter writer who should be writ- of your daily life to the fam- ing this rather than reading it, there ijy. Live little happenings and rethree types of home letter wrt experiences over again with ae j them, thus becoming to those ers.h Fore Co Molly Hunter, Mary June Hastreit- er, Martha Opsion, and Margaret Whipple, all June graduates, are now serving in the WAVES. Miss Hunter and Miss Opsion have been commissioned as ensigns and are stationed in Communications in Washington, D. C. Miss Hastreiter is also an ensign and is stationed in Washington on the board. of billet- ing enlisted WAVES. Miss Whipple w.ill receive her commission soon. All four women are members of Delta Gamma sorority. Miss Hast- reiter was also active on Frosh Pro- ject, and Bomber Scholarship Com- mittee. She was president of~ Pan- hellenic Council last year. Miss Opsion was vice-president of Delta Gamma. She was Daily Con- Ex-Studenti A dvises "If you want loads of fun-Join I the WAVES!! !" writes Phyllis Car- lisle who is attending the Aerogra- I pher's Mate School at Lakewvood, New Jersey. Miss Carlisle received her boot training at Hunter College, New York. She attended the University last year and lived in Helen Newberry Resi- dence. which will be in the form of a dinner held in the Chicago Club. Miss Vera Baits of Grosse Point, a regent of the University, will accompany her and will be the speaker at the dinner. Her subject will be "The University Faces 1945." From Chicago, Mrs. Conger will go to Pittsburgh for the Alumnae meet- ing to be held in the University Club. She will show the film "Michigan on the March" at this meeting. heading the parade is the teje- graph-telephone correspondent who I as a "send collect-reverse the charge" out-look on the whole sub- ject. A stamp and a piece of stationery are benpath his dignity,' Besides a long distance call every month or so gives the family some excitement, especially since they haven't heard a word from him during that time. -Next in line is Penny Postcard Pete. He scrawls the student's equivalent of the tourist's having-a-wonderful-, time-wish -you-were-here message! and lets it go at that. Finally there is the third group, where A'nost of us could stand up and take a bow. It is true that our week- ly letter home is written on station- ery and contained in an envelope, but there the resemblance to a real letter ends. We write dull facts and happenings in short snatches of sentences, mentioning the need of financial reimbursement and telling mother to be expecting the arrival a~ i~J dme I rea1 Ieso herUI e at Michigan, and not merely a beloved name tacked on the end of a dull letter. Letter writing becomes easier and more natural the oftener it is done. Daily doings diminish in importance and seem too trivial to write about IZ D OF U ON DON when we wait too long before writ- tracts Manager during her junior ing. As a result uninteresting let- year and Daily Associate Business ters find their way through the mail. Manager last year. Miss Whipple Write often and make those letters was a Nurse's Aide and participated really talk. in Child Care. ?lledclinqi ad 6n~at>emenf U Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Aronberg of Chicago announced the marriage of their daughter, Phyllis, to CpL Myron L. Greenberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Greenberg of Detroit. The mar- riage was solemnized in Chicago. .Miss Aronberg is a senior in the University. Cpl. Greenberg graduat- ed from the University' in 1944 in electrical engineering, He is now in the Signal Corps, Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. Anouncement has been made of the marriage of Jean Priscilla Gas- kell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. War- ren Gaskell of Adrian, to Officer Candidate Jack Allan Trump US- MCR, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allan D. Trump of Battle Creek. The marriage was solemnized at a candle-light ceremony in the Marine Memorial Chapel at Quan- tico, Virginia. The former Miss Gaskell gradu- ated from the University in 1944. She is affiliated with Chi Omego sorority. Officer Candidate Trump attended Kalamazoo college where he was a member of Sigma Rho Sigma fraternity. He attended the University while stationed here In the V-12~ program. S* Mr. and Mrs. Philip Carroll of MapewodNew Jersey, have an- nuced the engagement of their daughter, Margaret, to Pfc. Lucien ~Terry Finch, son of Prof. and Mrs. Frank R. Finch of Ann Arbor. Miss Carroll is a junior at the Uni- versity and a member of Kappa Kap- pa Gamma. She is vice-president of Sigma Rho Tau, honorary engineer- ing speech society, and a member of the Michiganensian business staff. Pfc. Finch attended the University engineering college before his enlist-. ment in 1943. He is now stationed at the army airfield in Yuma, Arizona, ew~. Once Again You Can H ave Pa jamas WithoutPns In velvety soft Vellura, Windsor's wonderful new cotton and Aralac fabric that's deliciously warm and super-durable. Red or blue plaid. Sizes 32 to 38. $495 'I/ K., N!>.,., 'I Great ease. .xGreat elegacee Pockets fuli oif pae-and~ a suit full of charm from our new izod Collection. For good trayv elling and good living in town or country you'll want thbs style. In gray and brown men's wear flannel. The coat handsome with