THE MICHIGAN DAILY Christmas Show Will Be Staged For Thu Students Annual All-Campus Review To Feature 'U' Talent Wednesday in Hill Auditorium University Encoura-ges Junior Coeds To Paw',Dues WAA Bowling Tournament Will End Wednesdy Jan R I 4'l (Continued from Page 1) an original composition in boogie- woogiepiano style entitled, "Win- ter Boogie." Townsend Will Play Supplementing the campus tal- ent is to be Allan Townsend and his 11-piece orchestra. Townsend will feature the "Symphonaires" in "How Can I," an original num- ber he has composed and arranged especially for the Christmas show. Townsend is featured weekly at the Campus Casbah. The band members, all veterans, are stu- dents at the University. The second halL of the Christ- .mas Review, sponsored by several campus organizations, is to be handled by the Men's and Wo- men's Glee Clubs, featuring Bill McGowan at the organ. Glee Clubs To Sing Choral effects, solos, single and mixed group singing will be fea- tured with a dience participation invited. The glee clubs are to sing jointly as well as singu- larly. Christmas carols mixed with "White Christmas," old English Student Tutoring Will End Friday # The Merit-Tutorial Committee of the League announces that tu- toring for this semester will end Friday. Tutors are available for almost every course and all students are1 eligible to be tutored.1 yule songs and novelty singing will be included. The Christmas show is held an- nually to initiate the holiday sea- son. The entertainment will take approximately two hours. As is the custom for the all-campus yuletide programs, no admission is being charged. Expenses will be met by the sponsoring organiza- tions. Veterans' Wives Have Social Club. With the return of the veteran and his wife to the Michigan cam- pus, a new organization, the Ball and Chain Club, has been formed. This organization was previous- ly called the Veterans' Wives As- sociation. The name was changed, .according to Mrs. Haskell Coplin, president, to better portray the social nature of the club. It is purely a social organization which aims to give the wives of the stu- dent veterans something to do while their husbands are, in eve- ning classes. Meetings are held on the second and fourth Mondays of every month in .the League. The time has been changd from 7 to 7:45 p.m. for the convenience of those who have children. Among the many programs planned for this year are inter- pretive readings, travelogues and book reviews. These are followed by a social hour. CHARTER-Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, World War I ace, auto- graphs the charter of a group of Jacksonville, Fla., Girl Scouts named the Rickenbacker Flight. Their pilot, Betty Gena Blanton, holds the charter. B unyar To-Be, Honor Quest At Annual Informal Formal' I LAST-MINUTE RU$HING r Then rush to buy: MARTEX KITCHEN TOWELS -- BATH MATS GIFT SETS OF MARTEX BATH TOWELS RUGS AND TOILET SEAT COVERS PASTEL RAYON SHOWER CURTAINS -formerly $6.50, now $4.50 at the GAGE LIEN SHOP "~Always Reasonably Priced" 11 NICKELS ARCADE Word was recently received by the forestry school via carrier pigeon that Paul Bunyan, famed woodsman of the north, is plan- ning to make his annual visit to the Michigan campus Jan. 11. As a result of this message, the Paul Bunyan Formal committee has been in a veritable tizzy, making arrangements to welcome their hero at a dance given in Waterman Gym in his honor. In a sub-basement sewer, allot- ted to members of the committee by the Swamp Water and Marsh Gas Company of lower Huron St. (adv.), there is excitement and frenzied activity exceeded only by the rush of a Michigan student to get to the local saloon on a Friday afternoon-or any other afternoon-or morning. If the committee member's gas masks hold out, plans will soon Leagque To Hold Christmas Party The annual Christmas party for Michigan League employes will be held at 8:45 p.m. tomorrow on the second floor of the League. Carl Buss is in charge of the program, which will include skits presented by staff departments. George Austin will act as master of ceremonies. The Soda Bar will be closed to enable all employes to attend the party. j <" 04-=><"""=><="< Diamonds and Wedding v ti Rings R v 717 North University Ave. v o<;;;o ;;;;y <;;;;o;;;;;0 ;;;;> 3 be completed for the "most in- formal formal of the year." The dance will feature Bob Strong's orchestra and woodsy decorations. Tickets for the dance will go on sale this week. [WAA NOTICES WAA Club meetings will be held this week as follows: Archery Club: Practice meetings at 5 p.m. Monday and 4:45 p.m. Thursday at the WAB. Badminton Club: Meeting at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in Waterman Gym. Members are asked to pay racket fee at Room 15, Barbour Gym, before the meeting. Fencing Club: Meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday at the WAB. Those interested in fencing activities may call Jeannette Collins, man- ager, at 2-1870. Rifle Club: No instruction for beginners will be held this week, but advanced shooters will prac- tice from 5 to 6 p.m. Thursday at the ROTC Range. Table Tennis: Coeds partici- pating in the jhouse tournaments may play from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the WAB and from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at Barbour Gym. Those having questions about the tournament may call Dot Gop- pelt, manager, at 2-2569. The basketball games for this week will be played according to the following schedule: Monday: Kappa Alpha Theta I vs. Brown House, Ann Arbor Girls vs. Alpha Delta Pi I at 5:10 p.m.; Couzens I vs. James House, Inter- zone vs. Markley at 7:30 p.m.; Martha Cook vs. Kappa Delta II at 8:10 p.m. Tuesdiay: Jordan II vs. Alpha Phi III, Pi Beta Phi I vs. Alpha Coed Doctors By SHIRLEE RICH "The University has fully rec- ognized women in the capacity of medical students, which is in keeping with the world-wide trend' toward a greater percentage of women physicians," says Dr. Al- bert C. Furstenberg, Dean of the School of Medicine. The 67 wo- men now enrolled in the School of Medicine give ample proof of this statement. The requirements for entrance into medical school are the same for coeds as for men. The pre- professional program for admis- sion requires the completion of 90 semester hours in an approved college or university following graduation from an approved high school or its equivalent. However, the completion of these hours does not assure ad- mission. The applicant 'must present an average of one and one-half honor points for each semester completed, and an average grade of one and one-third honor points for all science work. Beginning with the first sem- ester of the second year, the stu- dent spends four hours a week at University Hospital observing pa- tients from the Neuropsychiatric Institute. The second semester sophomore has the added duty of studying patients in the general wards. Junior and senior medical students do actual clinical work. Contrary to popular opinion, the coed is treated equally by both her male fellow-students and her professors. "Stories about men ridiculing the coeds by putting cadavers' ears in the pockets of their uniforms are rumors," says Elizabeth Walker, class of '49. Perhaps the reason that the women are treated as equals is that they seldom lag behind the men in scholastic achievement. On speaking of the women med students' school records, Dr. Fur- stenberg states that "their work in general is satisfactory and com- parable to that of male students." Upon completion of four years of intensive training, the gradu- ate medical student must intern for at least a year in a rec- ognized hospital. "In years gone by," says Dr. Furstenberg, "there was considerable diffi- culty in getting internships for women, but in the past seven or eight years, women have been offered opportunities in many of the best hospitals in the country.'' It is not generally true that wo- men doctors seldom practice, or give up their career upon getting married. According to Dr. Fur- stenberg, "Approximately 70% of women graduates in medicine continue to give their services even though many are married and are mothers." Phi I at 5:10 p.m.; Jordan III vs. Zone 10-A, Zone I vs. Barbour I at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday: Kappa Alpha The- ta III vs. Alpha Xi Delta I, Lin- den House vs. Cheever at 5:10 p.m.; Mosher II vs. Jordan VII at 7:30 p.m. The basketball schedule for the week following Christmas vaca- tion will be posted later this week, according to Jerry Gaffney, bas- ketball manager. rt ,,{ Exquisite gift sets top lady on your li the feminine scen FRANCES DENNE' favorites year afte ... J JL- r t _D-, ),z for the Ii ist . . . in all ts by Y that are r year - , l 1Whirlwind Life ft set ing over" 7.50 I I. .% w 1 The collection of junior class The WAA bowling tournament dues, to finance Junior Girls Play, will be completed Jan. 8, and will continue tomorrow. Tuesday awards will be presented at a and Wednesday. general meeting on Wednesday, Members of the JG Play finance Jan. 15. committee will collect the dues in Ten leading bowlers' scores for women's houses. Juniors who have the beginning of the season were not been contacted may pay their sent in recently to the national dues from noon to 2 p.m. Thurs- intercollegiate women's bowling day in the Undergraduate Office tournament. These ten winners in the League, according to Jo included: Pat Brenzer, Beverly Osgood, JG Play finance chair- Hadden, Joanie Bocock, Beverly man. Gough, Gerrie Wolf, Dona Schnei- I 7.!y Night "bubbi der, Paula Kemmer, Niola. Cape and Ann Griffen. Scores are sen in to the intercollegiate tourna ment four times a year, and in clude results from most larg universities and colleges. Mixed doubles bowling tourna ments are included in the club' activities for the year. All stu dents interested in bowling ar asked to call Pat Brenzer a 12-4516 for further information. All prices plus 20% Fed. Tax Whirlwind dusting powder 2.00 ' "a %; + I i 1a i' ,;, r; ; v i " ') ' 't , , } r 5i'- , 'r1 ' / , a ., ' . l_ y/4 Night Life perfume. 3.50 and 7.50 Santa' Vi*jjlamrcour \ - You are invited i Night Life cologne essence 3.56 to open a Jacobson charge account. N 1 , ..>:: s >> 1 .. . f r F: ,F ,t F 'Y: . ";. ;, {. . ; '" . : f; : . _ { s ~'K. ;~~'~' ~ A . C I __ f Two-tone red and blue lamb's woof shearling. A New Looking A C CE S S ORY ......; Aor dAe C/ian 9ea ie ' r. .:? ,: >< " , ' "; ?1: 1 . " r . 3.95 $5 ,0 *29.95 NEW ARRIVALS DAILY... TAFFETA -- JERSEY - CREPE - NET and NET COMBINATIONS Sizes from 9 up-- .Priced from $16.95 to $45.00 She'll find an umbrella a useful gift and a mighty nice fashion note too! Choose the fashionable Tukaway foot-euddling slippers gay as Christmas... luxuriously warm, soft, food-cuddling slippers of genuine lamb's wool shearling .. . in bright Holiday hues. Mouton lamb . . . red or blue with beige vamp. 4,95 . . Pocket (collapsible) style or her fav- orite umbrella in plastic with plaid trim, rayon with brocade trim, gay colored taffeta as well as black, navy, brown, wine, green or white. EVENING WRAPS $16.95 and up WEDDING GOWNS BRIDESMAID GOWNS }:. t I } ,c s :.x. } _ .. .. .. ;.. .s .