PAGE SlX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNI.3Y, AUG. 8, 1943 Co. A's Chorus Concert Is First of Kind Bill Sawyer To Direct Program on Sunday At Hill Auditorium The concert to be given by the All-Soldier Choir of Company 'A, 3651st S.U., at- 4 p.m. next Sunday in Hill Auditorium, is the first of its, kind to be planned by any army unite in the country, according to Pvt.' Milton Stanzler, chairman.- Under the direction of Bill Saw-. yer, the 50 man choir has been re-' hearsng for the concert an average of three hours a week in the men's spare time. Presenting a wide variety of selec- tions ranging from Negro spirituals to sea chanteys, the chorus will in- clude several religious numbers in their repertoire. Solos will be given by Pvt. Arthur Flynn, tenor, a veteran of Carnegie Hall, and Pvt. Joseph Running, org- anist, a former Stanford University music instructor. The last movement of a violin sonata by Brahms will'be given by Pvt. -Robert Kurka with Pvt. Otto. Graf, former University professor. of German, as accompanist. Pvt. Robert Cohn will present a reading from Shakepeare's "Richard II," accompanied by the chorus sing- ing "God Save the King." Bill Sawyer's orchestra will join the chorus for the final numbers. These are "The Drum," "A Soldier's Goodnight," hit song of "Nips inthe Bud," and "Begin the Beguine" in a special concert arrangement by Saw- yer as the grand finale. Religious songs to be featured are "Benedictus" by Carton, "Concordia Laetitia" and Tschesnikoff's "Salva- tion Is Created." . Completing -the program are "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes,.' "Gaudeamus Igitur,". and 'Song of the Plains Pulling Strings-But Not Politically Navy-Marine A Marine Who Is as Hard as Nails' I Band Formed For Driling 87 Men Are Included In New Musical Unit For V-12's Marching "That band has everything!" is the consensus of opinion among V-12 men as they reviewed the newly- formed' 87-piece Navy-Marine band for the first time yesterday. A neW spirit had joined the five V-12 battalions as they marched to customary drill at 10:30 a.m. yester- day to "South Ferry "Field. It was a rousing musical unit of five tubas, several bass drums, trumpets, clari- nets, and saxophones, led by drum major Lynn Stedman, '45, former twirler in thetUniversity Varsity Band. It was a day of double celebration for the 1300 V-12's since yesterday was the first organized march to the drill field. One battalion of ap- proximately 250 NROTC students, a battalion of 300 Marines, and three battalions of approximately 778 blue- jackets high-stepped together down Thompson, Packard and State streets to the rousing "Anchors Aweigh" and "Semper Fidelis," a salute 'to the Marines. The band, organized by Caleb Warner, senior naval architect stu- dent, has been practicing two weeks. "It's a democratic band," one of the Navy V-12 men said, "no one is actually the leader; approximately six Marines and 81 Navy men are just pulling together." -Associated Press Photo Eighteen-year-old Pvt. David Chalkley of Bethesda, Md., a mem- her of the Fourth Raider Battalion, U.S. Marines, was a student a few months ago. Today he is an expert with a number of weapons, knows many tricks of jungle warfare and, physically, is as hard as nails. QUEEN OF THE SEA: //V ormandie Rises from Murky, Muddy Bed in .Hudson River NewYork Judge Advocate Levitt To Speak Here Will Address Three Classes of JAG School On Tuesday Afternoon Col. Arthur Levitt, JAGD, Staff Judge Advocate of the New York Port of Embarkation, will speak Tuesday afternoon to the three classes of the Judge Advocate General's School now in training here. Colonel Levitt's appearance is a resumption of the guest speaker pro- gram which is designed to give prac- tical suggestions as to methods and procedures to be followed in the field. Colonel Levitt, speaking on "Em- barkation Problems of a' Staff Judge Advocate" has been on active duty since March 1941. At that time he became Assistant Staff Judge Advo- cate of the First Army, and as Staff Judge Advocate of the New York Port of Embarkation since Septem-' ber 1941. He has seen the latter organization grow from a minor installation to one of the largest court-martial jur- isdictions in the country covering many camps on the East Coast. Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., Colonel Levitt attended public schools in New York City and received his AB and LLB degrees from Columbia Univer- sity. A member of the New York Bar; he has also acted as instructor of Military Justice in grading Army Extension course examinations. w -Associated Press Photo Pulling strings is a matter of life or death now, for R. D. Griffin, seaman first class, USN, must release the parachute that will drop him to earth gradually. He has just jumped from a training plane at the Corpus Christi, Tex., naval air station, as part of his final examination. His home is in Oakland Park, Fla. 300 Marines Don GI; Civies Shipped Home Approximately 300 Marines will say goodbye to civilian clothes this week and don the khaki of enlisted men. The majority of the men have al- ready received uniforms. Compul- sory . appearance in G.I. will begin this week as "civies" are shipped home for the duration. STITCH IN TIME:j Army Moms Fix, Darn Socks, Clothes for Campus Soldiers "Oh! I forgot to bririg my socks down!" Now Pvt. Jason Horn, Company A, 3651st S.U., will have to mend his own socks and prick his own fingers unless he has enough to last until the Army Moms return to the East Quad next week. Servicemen stationed on campus don't have to struggle with knotted threads, ripped clothing or sewing machines any longer, for the Faculty Women's Club and a group from the Red Cross have taken over the job for them. Each Thursday and Friday afternoons, they sew themselves out from under the avalanche of mending that the men accumulate during the week. "Every time I bring some clothes down, they ask me for more," Pvt. ,NEW YORK, Aug. 7.-(jP)-The U.S.S. Lafayette, formerly the Nor- mandie, has begun to shudder up- right again. She's the French queen of the Seas, you remember, which burned Feb. 9, 1942, and rolled over on her port side into the Hudson River mud.i But she's righting herself so slowly that the salvage engineers have rig- ged up a huge gadget on her prome- nade deck to tell them what she's do- ing. They call it an "inclinometer." Today the device showed the vessel already had risen 11 feet-measured in degrees-out of the river mud and Navy men were pleased. As the huge liner began to rise, ob- serversnoted barnacles which looked like 12-inch icicles .on the' port side. Try to imagine what. would hap- pen if an apartment house was tip- ped over on its left side., Furniture would slide down the floor and clog doors. You'd get in by diopping through a window. The left wall of the room would become your floor, and the ceiling a side wall. That's what happened to the Nor- mandie (the Navy renamed her the S.S. Lafayettebut the public still knows her as the French Line's sea queen) she was. filled for an aver- age depth of 60 feet with oily, muddy water which made it impossible for the divers to see. The engineers first built an exact model of the big liner (she's 1,029 feet long, her promenade deck is equal to three and a half football fields, end to end) so that the divers could get an exact picture in their minds before they went down into the watery murk. r - KAYSER ANKLETS Perfect for your active life. 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"We hate to think 'of the boys trying to sew on buttons, shorten trousers and darn socks when they have so many other things to do. My husband's overseas, so I feel that I'm mending his socs by re- mote control!" she laughed. "One night we didn't finish all the socks," Mrs. Leslie Wikel said,. "so we took them as 'homework'-and from 7 p.m. to midnight Mrs. McDow- ell and I darned socks and more socks. We lost count after the 25th p4ir!" "The nicest part about working here is that every time we start to get tired sewing, someone stops in to talk awhile, or the Company A Choir decides they need a little practice. Maybe they plan it for the psychological moment, but we certainly do enjoy it," Mrs. Mc- Dowell said. "One Air Corps student caused us quite a scare the other day when he asked us if we hadn't sewed his patch on too low. We had already done about fifty the same way, and the prospect of doing them over wasn't too pleasant," Mrs. McDowell said, "but, fortunately for us, he was wrong." An average of 10 women works each Thursday and Friday in the East Quad lounge for all the Army units on campus under the Red Cross, while the Faculty Women's Club works in the West Quad for the Navy men. And what do the boys think of all this? "Well," Mrs. McDowell said with a twinkle in her eye, "we know they appreciate the mending and darning we do, but I think they enjoy talking to us just as much!" Miss Danford Will .Present Song Recital Miss Bernarda Lee Danford, so- prano, will give a recital at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Miss Danford, who is enrolled in N /*! ,r Always Reasonably Priced GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NICKELS ARCADE M ....o: u S ' i 41:t~ B well-cared-for skin for which there is no substitute. 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