F. SUNDAY, JULY 4, 1943 THIE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG. v Y. MUSS MeetingOf f411 U Coed S To Be eld Tuesda v Dr. L. Vincent, . CPsychologist, To Be Speaker Attendance of Undergraduates To Be Required; Dean Lloyd Urges Grad Students To Come Dr. Lee Vincent of the Merrill Palmer School, Detroit, will speak at a mass meeting of all women on cam- pus to be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Building. Attendance is required of all un- dergraduate women and graduate students are urged to come if they are interested. Dean Alice Lloyd has requested that all coeds attend the lecture as there will be many impor- tant announcements made and the meeting will be of real importance to the women on campus. "Dr. Vincent is psychologist at the Merrill Palmer School and has an unusual understanding of women and their particular problems at this time," Dean Lloyd said yesterday. At the close of the lecture students will be permitted to ask Dr. Vincent ques- tions. The meeting will also provide an opportunity to inform all of the wom- en on campus of the various fields of volunteer work that are open. This is the first time a mass meet- ing for all coeds has ever been held during a summer session. This meet- ing is necessitated by the large num- ber of women that have returned for the eight and sixteen week periods. Dressing Unit Story Of WAFS To Hit Screen Up Tuesday To Adopt New Headdresses "New headdresses are being fea- tured at the surgical dressing unit" Jean Whittemore, chairman of the unit, announced yesterday. The headdresses were recently changed by the Red Cross and are now made of organdy in all white in- stead of the former blue and white. The hair is almost entirely covered by the new headdresses which are nevertheless very attractive, Miss Whittemore said. The new type are much cooler for summer weather, easy to keep clean and neat and are less expensive than the former type, costing only 25 cents. They are made by Nancy Pot- tinger, equipment chairman and re- ceiver of the unit, and are now on sale to instructors. The dressing unit will be open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m: every Wednesday and Thursday and every woman on campus is requested to give at least two hours of her time every week. Graduate students are especially asked to attend. There is no required uniform al- though the women are requested to wear white blouses or all white dress- es. Ordinary cotton dresses are ac- ceptable, however. No sweaters are permitted. Any student who has worked at the unit at least six hours*is eligible to become an instructor upon the recommendation of the Red Cross supervisor. During the first two weeks, the unit will attempt to pass enough instructors to carry on for the remainder of the summer, Miss Whittemore stated. Coed Ground-Cr Coeds interested in joining the "Michigan Land Army" of ground crew workers may sign up Tuesday in the undergraduate offices of the League, or at the sub-station in back of Waterman Gymnasium where the work assignments'are made. Workers are required to work two consecutive hours and 'il be paid sixty cents an hour"for their labor. Pay checks will bc issued' on the first and fifteenth of every month. The hours during which the stu..- dents may work.re fr'm 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on ;weelkdays, [rom. 8 a.m. to noon or from1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Sat ew Workers To Sign urdays, or from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sundays. Marion Baskette, '44, chairman of the project, said that no exceptions could be made to the rule requiring the women to wear blue jeans and shirts while working. Anyone appear- ing in' slacks, shorts or a skirt will not be allowed to work. The project was started last year to aid the manpower stortage on campus and proved so successful that it was incorporated into the regular Michigan Building and Grounds crew. The coeds are npw given credit by the League Personnel Administra- tion for their work. Miss Baskette stated that the ser- vices of many workers are urgently and immediately needed to do mow- ing, raking, weeding and other sim- ilar jobs. "Working on the ground crew will give women who are inter- ested an opportunity to maintain the appearance of the campus, and to obtain healthful outdoor exercise." WASHINGTON, July 3.- (P)- Senators received notice tonight that they will enjoy no holiday Monday- a delayed-fuse Independence Day for millions of others. .. . 1, f r / 1 Hand-Pointed Luncheon and Bridge Sets of fine linen or spun rayon. Ideal for your own table or for gifts for the bride-to-be. PLAN WADS FILM-'t--Mrs. Nancy Love, head of the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron confers with a Hollywood executive about a forthcoming WAFAS film. LETTERS TO EDITOR- Lt. Bethell Praises Ann Arbor WAC Recruiting Efforts BECAUSE of a cancellation in orders I regret that I must discontinue my stay in Ann Arbor before the scheduled closing date of our WAC recruit- ing drive. I wish to express my deep appreciation to the League, the Office of Civilian Defense, the University, the press and in general to all Ann Arbor residents for their splendid cooperation with us. YOU SHOULD BE AS PROUD as I am, that your city and mine now leads by a 50Cc margin all other Michigan cities in both the number of applicants and the number of acceptances in the corps. Because the WAC is playing a most active p~art toward ultimate victory, your enthusiastn' and interest in the corps is merely one other indication of your willingness and imnortance in the total war effort.' I REGRET that I, personally, can no longer be available to give information to all who are interested. However, information may be obtained on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday at the Armory and on all other days at the Federal Building in Detroit. I wish to extend hy sincere hope that all who have joined and vwill join our ranks from Ann Arbor will find the hap- piness and satisfaction that the WAC has given me. SUMMER STORE HOURS: Monday 12:00 to 8:30 P.M. Tuesday through Friday 9:00 to 5:30 Saturday 9:00 to 12:00 ~~~~.......... . ... GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NKELS ARCADE Always Reasonably Priced, - Lt. Barbara Bethell '.J1 Y 0ou Can SaWj to an EVENTFUL SUMMER with just the right clothes for school, play, for receptions, and teas, for theatre-going, for dancing, for dashing about the cam- pus. See our bright new col- lection soon. In junior sizes C(.noeing in boucik and skirt en thc Huron sweitcr 300 5.00. 5. Y. t F, t k y - . 's :. ' +. ,r 4 h300 Soldiers, Coeds Pronounce League Dance Successful Over 300 soldiers and coeds attend- ed the dance which was given for the soldiers in the League Friday, and Miss McCormick, League social di- rector, said the affair "was quite a success."' The guests danced to the tunes of a "juke box" in the Grand Rapids room and played bridge and bingo in the Kalamazoo room. Before the eve- ning drew to a close, the attendance had grown so large that the commit- t.ee ope:ned the Ethel Fountain Hus- Ssr for dancing also. The music was provided by Mrs. Ruth Vtan Natter: In-addition to the scheduled en- I erainmnt-many of the soldiers provided impromptu entertainment of their own. Similar dances will be held in the future although plans are as yet indefinite. Army Nurses Set New Speed Record WASHINGTON.(/P)-The weaker ::ex? Listen to Major Nola Forrest, training director of Army nurses in desert maneuvers under simulated battle conditions: A nurse established a speed record for crawling over a barbed wire course under wire. Nurses were so proficient at gas mask drill some were assigned to teach the men. Astonished generals and abashed :soldiers on desert maneuvers discov- ered that the Army nurses outdid the rank and file in combat training, Major Forest, asserted at a press conference shared with Maj. Edna Mahar, director of nurses in the south Pacific theatre who told how they kept right on taking it overseas. Nurses under Maj.Forrest are. the first to undergo the five-months des- ert training, including one month of the "infiltration course" devised to simulate the. hazards and hardships of acutal warfare. .Crawling under machinegun fire leveled at 36 inches above the ground and scrambling through barbed wire and. over obstacles takes a hardy Let Freeom Ring 0 0 * Freedom and liberty are- more than just phrases . . . they are the doctrines that created a nation . .. the prayer that men have forever carried in their hearts the dream for which men have fought and died. Again today, men are struggling in far-away places thmu t[he butch er I irir 9-17, sizes misses 10-44, and women's 161/2-26 V2. *r *s suit. to keep these principles alive. It is up to us at home to actively support them in a cause that concerns us all. Let us make this our vow for Independence Day . to do whatever'we can, by work, by sacri- fice, by saving . . that we may help them to bring the day of Victory sooner. Slacks front 4.00 Slack Suits from A- Play Suits from 7.95 "Shorties" coats of corduroy or twill at 14)rJ Cotton dress and jumpers from 6.00 Better dresses to 29.95 Rain or shine coats of cotton gabardine from 795 Blouses, sweaters, culottes, skirts Accessories for every costume k *r * *r *r *t GOODYEARS