THEt MICn1AN T1AItL AT U' FOR 6 YEARS: Prof. Bacon To jfoini Faculty At Northwester Next Fall Prof. Wallace A. Bacon, of the English department, will leave the University after this semester to Join the faculty of the school of speech at Northwestern next fall. Prof. Bacon will be assistant professor of speech and English and chairman of the department of interpretation in the speech school. He will also teach a com- plete Shakespeare course, contem- porary English and American poetry, and direct graduate work in interpretation. Prof. Bacon came here in 1941 from Albion. During his stay here, he has taught short-story writing, playwriting, Shakespeare a n d freshman composition, in addition to carrying duties as an academic counsellor. He won the first Bishop Shiel Award for creative writing last -year for "Savonrola," produced in Chicago last September. He was also awarded a Rockefeller Fellow- ship in Humanities last year and plans to use it to study Japanese classical drama in Japan a year from June. In 1940 he was awarded the Al- fred H. Lloyd post-doctoral fellow- ship and was a major Hopwood winner in 1936. Keep Buying Bonds! Coeds Plait Field Day At ChanceDancwe The Willow Run Chapter -of American Veterans Committee has hit upon a new method for a girlj to have a multitude of dates all in the same evening. The "method" is "Chance Dance," to be presented from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in Ma- sonic Auditorium. Johnny Barnes and his orchestra will supply the music. To attend the dance, a girl signs her name on a list posted in the large women's dormitories. The names will then be placed in pro- grams, to be distributed among the men attending the dance. The name in the program is the man's date for the dance, "date" in this case meaning he will call for her and dance the first dance with her. At the dance all women's names will be placed in a large bowl, from which the men will draw for part- ners for individual dances. The women will be escorted home by the man with whom they have the last dance. Women students who wish to at- tend "Chance Dance" must sign their names on the lists in the dormitories by Saturday. Men may purchase tickets for the dance from AVC members. To B 41 ij 1) J Of IiCIs4I An analysis, of the Huhins re- port on "reedo of the press and the implications of that will be given by Robert Murh~ , , president of the Sigma D lta Chi ,journalism fraternity, today at 8 p:m. in the West Lodge. The report will come as part of a regular Willow Rin AVC meeting. Included on the meeting's agen- da will be the nominal ion of three delegates to the national conven- tion in Milwaukee next month. and a report on the recently con- cluded membership drive which resulted in 27 additions to the chapter over a six-week pericd. Chapter membership now stands at 78 or three above the necessary minimum required for three con- vention delegates. 'Dues Reflucste(Ifrom Literary (2Iats Seniors All graduating seniors in the literary college are requested to send their senior class dues, amounting to $1. to Barbara Ray- mer, finance chairman, at 407 North Ingalls. The dues are paid by each grad- uating class to provide funds for the traditional senior class gift and to cover expenses of the class of 1947 reunion. AP P ir11 1, IFA iNEWS O L Y M P I A N - This hat,. fashioned with plastic paint, was created for Adele Jergens for a movie about life among Greek gods. G I R L S A T W 0 R K - Lawana Ryan, June Morris and Jackie Greenleese (1. to r.) do this as part of their jobs at the Goodrich plant in Akron, 0. They're testing new rubber life rafts. PROF. WALLACE A. BACON Filiinhg Trip T~i(ckets Tickets for the Union sponsored fishing trip, May 9, are on sale at the Union Travel desk from 3 to 5 p.m. daily. The two-day fishing trip will get underway at midnight Friday and is open to any Union member. Tickets for the trip to the Pere Marquette River are $15. FLIES 640 MPH-Lt. Col. John C. Herbst (above) flew a P-80 jet plane at an average speed of 640 miles per hour on a flight from Los Angeles to San Diego, Calif. L I T T L E S T R A N G E R--The father (right) in a family of Bactrian camels in Chicago's Brookfield zoo kneels to get a better look at his new-born offspring, weight about 45 pounds. Mother stands at the left. B A N D M A N -.Members of an American Legion post in Raleigh, N. C., are backing a new orchestra to be led by Saxie Dowell (above), who served in the Navy during the war and is a survivor of the ill-fated car- rier USS Franklin. C H A I N P A I N T E R - An Italian workman paints the anchor chain of the 35,000-ton battleship, Vittorio Veneto, tied up in the harbor of Augusta, Sicily., R I D I N G L E S S 0 N - Jack Dempsey, former heavy- weight boxing champion who now lives in Hollywood, Calif., pre- pares to give some riding instructions to his daughters, Joan 12, (left) and Barbara, 10 at Palm Springs. LUCKY F I5 H ER M A N -A Arthur Peabody, New York angler, comes up with a nice haul in a tableau at the National Fisheries Institute convention in Manhattan. Mermaids are Jac- queline Joyce (left) and Paula Sharpe.- T O Y J E E P S F OR I A P S-Japanese children visiting a Tokyo department store try out toy jeeps bearing slogans attesting that U. S. soldiers have been in the area.