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/ I /' ,- /' e arslty ews Phones Varsity News ............ UN. 2-6000 Mon., After 9 p.m ... : :pN. 2-6005 Tues., After 2 p.m .... : .. CA. 2100 Wednesday, November 29, -1944 · ofDetrdit ,: " ', ' . f " :" ,"". . - ;. , ', \" Detroit, Michigan -. i ," . Assemblies See bulletin boards for as- semblies. Vol. 27-No. 10 " -- - - ' , , U 0 PLAYERS PRESENT .JANE EYRE' Sadie Shuffle Ends Leap Year O'Brien .Stars in Play's TItle Role .. ':' :- '- . League Sets Up - Date Bureau for Coy Coeds Burgwin Heads Huge Supporting Cast . As Group Gives Puhlic Production Leap ushered out when the Women' _ s Saturday night at 8:30 p. m., the Players will raise the cur-, - League holds the "Sadie- Shuffle" at 9 p. m. Friday, December tain on a special, private m:em1;lers'preview of Eyre." 29, in the Florence Ryan Auditorium. _ The dance is strictly , limited to the students of the -University and the coeds must ask The public premiere is scheduled for 2:30 p. 11); Sunday at the men. Only 200 couples will be , accepted for the dance. a matinee performance, marking the first public production in - Set Up Date Burea1l the Little Theater since 1942. Subsequent performances will De To insure the Leap Year style and at 8:30 p. m. Sunday ' night; the following weekend, Friday, Sat- _ D O -. '0,_ / -' " 'ra .h' /es ' to limit the attendance to students, uJ;'day and Sunday night performances and a Sunday matinee. £ I _ I a Date Bureau will be set up in - . Price of Tickets "" Chemistry 107 for one week, 'Novem- G ' T '-, I I' Tickets for the premiere perform- I ,1 U ' · ber 30 through December 7; open eo _ wem ow ance sell for 9? cents, including n ' '- n' I, 0 n from 10:30 a. m. to 8 p. m. Tomor- e , tax . SIxty cents WIll be charged for I row it will be oPE!n at 12:3Q. ' -• subsequent performances. Tickets C d ' u. S. Mail Plays Cupid P - Ch· an may be obtained in the Union -Room, Jan e Coed goes to the Bureau and rom c_ - alrm 'I the Little Thea tre, and the Varsity -- 0' I tells the clerk that she wants to ask I News Office. They will also be sold . Joe College. The clerk after Check-I R b t D l. at the door on the night of the per- Pool tabl es in the Umon Room ing. his name off in the University 0 er $, onollue formance. were Monday; was 1 files, sends him a formal bid signed ,Act as IIla .. J _ erator.'S Sell-Out Predicted a weeks a ter t e ma- by Jane . Joe returns the enclosed , UI Students who desire to see the tenals had , been purchased, I postcard ' stating his acceptance or d t d tons h ' ' George Twemlow, Night Com- play should make their reservations ue 0 war con 1 1 . I denial. If he accepts, e IS se!lt _a as soon as possible as a se U-out is Adopt St:dcter Rule ' special' admission t oken without merce pre-senior, has been ap- - t d h' f th 1944 J predicted by members of the busi- During the summer all of the which he cannot be admitted to the pom e c 0 e _ - ness staff. , woodwork, furniture, etc. of the dance. Jane will pay the admission I Prom. The appomtment was made , Union Room was either painted or pi-ice of he sends the Monday at a Faculty Board meeting The play , based on the novel by f Sh h and released today by the Rev, Ed-I Charlotte Bronte, will be staged in varnished" and various-' repairs - were notice 0 acci!ptarice. ' e pays t e h m -ade. The Union Board is now re- Bureau a fee of 10-cents. ward O'Connor, crean of men. I The Little Theatre, located on t e - . Ilower concourse of the Chemistry questing that - the students do their Coeds are free to ask students O'Brien" Arts sophomore, studies her script in preparation . was selected m con- Building, opposite the Student Union Part by keeping the Union Room whom they have never - met, since Junchon wlth M. oderator Enos Rob- Room. ' Aud1'ences are 11 ' m1 ' ted ' to 75 for the Players' private performance at 8 p.m. Saturday night. Miss clean. are provided for easy their date is supposed to meet them erts, .and ASlstant-moderator . Dr. I because of the lim1-ted capacity of h d - O'Brien has the lead role in. "Jane Eyre." F D h disposal' of rubbish. , at t e ance. ranC1S ono ue. " The Little Theatre. LI 's 't , Board Members Name Garver Chairman C 'tt I ted by omm1 eemen were se ec "Jane Eyre" is expected - to be General chairman of the ' affair is T I th d t d .' In _ an .effort to the sthu- Mary Helen Garver. ', In charge of ' F ' 0- ntana WI-II M -- ' ake Mus-Ie wem, ow, e two mo era ors. particularly successful because of dentS wlth the Umon Board, t e th D t B . J Z' h- , \ Fr . 0 Connor. They . are: MarJorre the publicity accruing to it from . . ' f ' . e a e ureau IS ean Ie r, as- B k . nd Charles Beau Varsity News prmts -a hst 0 Its . t d b C thO L Er b th D roo s, semor, a - the recent movie and stage produc- _ merribers: _ - -- -._ - -; .. " . _ "s .. ., .. ';-'-,- -. - --" __ - ..I det, j unior, Art s; Willii\m Funke tions ; .... . 'f th For · Basketball ' Darices- sopho- : h T ary u lVan IS c aIrman 0 e McMillan, Mechanical engineering Joseph Smit ..... .............. .. ..... reasurer bl"t 'tt'd d b M . ,_ .e>------------------- more, will star in the title role;, William' Odette., .. ... ... .. .... ... . ... Secretary IPu 01C?C Y commA 1 ee, a A l lb e t y P a t r;- B ANNE ALBERTS pre-senior; Robert Brang, Day law she will be supported by Richard . -. yn onnor, nne er s, a n- Y - S tl 1 0 'J 0 junior; Francis Hughes, Night Law. . L RIchard Burgwm......... .. .. ..... .... t' cia Chapman, Marguerite O'Brien. New's Editor 0 a tty to Oln ' . . R b t W th' . N' ht Burgwm, Arts semor; Betty ou .. .......... : .. . : .. .. . Arts representa. 1ve Entertainment will be handled by Jumor, 0 er · e,r e1mer d , plg I Schneider, Arts sophomore ; Ruthe Howard Penmngton... ............... .. A H h b f h Mike Fontana's orchestra will pro- commerce an au I Compton, Arts J'unior', a nd Edward t t · nne ug es; mem ers 0 er com- GO. R B t h D t t Commerce repr -esen a 1ve 'd th mus1'c for the basketball u c er , en IS ry JunIOr. Ch I'k A t f "-- W'th the ' .. .. ........ mittee are Anne Marie Laird and VI e e n IOln a one I es I , r s resIlman. 1 Joseph Pulte: ......... : ...... .. ............... '-" \ ' Noreen Greenway. dances this term, announced Lloyd , (:) I' The Prom .will be held. Friday, I exception of Cheslik, who is an ap- Sec. B Engmeenng representatIve Joan Purcell will of the ' Brazil, director and coach of (V o. I G. L January 12, m the Fountam Ball- I prentice this year, the featured Joseph ... :..... .. .... ... .... .. .. . decorations, assisted by Betty Re' the basketball team. The first dance 1ft room of th e Masonic Temple . 1 players listed were Acting Award Sec. A Engmeermg representatIve . k' L' R b' K th I'" I Winners last year Anthony Corrola L ·· ·· ·· .. ·· ·· .. ···· .. ·· ·· .. t t' and a this term will begin at 9:30 p . m. Joining the sodalists throughout AI e Off- I Rassette Staff .... .. ............. .. . aw represen a Ive F Friday night following the game with "t I mnl Ice I h . f P I B t Pi ' erry. the world in arranging a SpUl ua U I Heading · t e productIOn sta far e au u c er .. .... .. ... .. ... ... .... ........ , ... . i "' Music for dancing will be pro- Fort Way'ne, which st arts at 8 p.m. bouquet for His Holiness, Pope Pius : J ea nette Rassette, Art s sopho ... .... .............. Dent<ll representatIve I 'd d b t ' Union Board elections are held VI e y an as ye unnamed 01'- Dances are both informal and s.tag' j as a Ch ristmas gift, the so- e H : mor e a nd assis tant-direct or ; John annually in the spring te rm. Any chestra . Students may purchase combma- i dahsts on ca.mpus are asked to sup- I Lists ' eroes I Linahan , Arts freshm an and tech- . vacancies occurring during the term tion tickets for the games and 1 port the ?nduum: .! nical director; Cherie Eberha rdt ,- are filled by appointments made by C dE. dances at the reduced rate of 60 : The Tnduum WIll be held m the I Arts fres hman and property corll'- the Board. - oe -- -' venlng IUniv ersity student chapel Monday l Over 2500 Alums mittee chai r man. "Men s tudents are free at any ,t hrough Wednesday in preparation I Eu gene Garbarino, Art s frpshman time to bring suggestions or ideas - . N . ' for the Feast of the Immaculate S V U. S. F. rces a nd publicity chairman ; and Anne to any member of the Board" st ated Torno ' rrow Nlete otlCe Conception. The Triduum will con- er e In 0 0 0 , i Alb erts, C.o m mer c e sophomor e, h . . h' sist of daily attendance at Mass and I . . _ , I Ushers chaIrman. Brang, w 0 IS now servmg IS sec- All students aI'e invited to at- H 1 C . E 't ' f th SIxty-one alumm have glven theIr The play was a dapted and di- ond term as pr esident. I II 0 Y ommunlOn. XpOSl IOn 0 e , h . . h d f tend the pre-game pep ra y to Bl d S t ' 11 t k I j liVeS fig tmg m t e arme orces rected by Burgwin R t . . I esse acramen WI a e pace. . eserva tOnS In be held at 12:30 p.m. tomol'l'OW in from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday, of _ our ' country, It was i Problem of Drink rllTOLl' thc Chemistry Arena. Eugene December 7, in the chapel. At the today b{ dR:ev . Bernard Red y" A k U ' rn H l Dean's or Vi, II ice Garbarino, Arts freshman, will close of the Exposition ther e will be I S. J. , a umm 1rector. j' S ' .u ne p D d b rosary and Benediction. ' For - past several months - . :, __ ' , .'SC 'USS ' e - Y Coeds only have today and to' act as M.C. in leading the cheers . St d t . t t d . . g i Alumm office has been gathenng I l S' . . . I Th hid 'n be intro- u en s meres e m prepann ' . . f ' morrow to make reser,:atIons e c eel' ea ers WI the chapel for the Triduum are I data on . all men m serVIce rom n erVlcemen Soda I. 'sts for the Get-Acquamted Evenmg to duced to the stwlents: 1 k d t t t th S d l't Office I the Umvers1ty. There are more . th as e 0 s op a e 0 a 1 y h 2 500 I . . . th be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow mel . - I in the lower consourse of th e Chem- ,t an, a , umm servmg m e G p . e t I main lounge of the Downtown ' . t B 'ld ' thO k t _ a rmed forces m all theatres of oper- 1 Tftree . Y - b b' th . dv ance IS ry Ul mg IS wee , or 0 con , '1./ By BETTY REPICK Y.W.C.A. . cents y uymg . em m a I tact Corinne Schmidt, Art s junior atlOns. , Drink a Predominant Evil i Reservations may be made for 75 either at th e Athletic Office or from and chairman of the Eucharistic GOLD STAR NAMES Co-operation and help is being College Students?" wa,s the I cents in the. office of dean of a uthorized salesmen. The price of Committee of the Sodality. The gold stars in the servic e flag as ked of University- students in the topic of last week's Sodality meet- women or m the VarSIty News d .. t the door is 85 cents. A 11 f '11 b t k t of the University represent Pfc _ "Santa for -Servicemen" _ program, i ng Since the subject is of grow- Office. '. a mlSSlOn a t d WI a f enflu P a I Charles Anhu t; S/Sgt. James Bailey; whi ch is co-sponsored by t he Amer- ing' importance to the average col- ' I The program has been planned by F:,ontana a Student fO atyhs °lt a 1 Yf mthee m h g °lr owers S/ Sgt . Leon Be' rger; Lt. Ger ald ican Legion and the Detroit Times. , h . - L tt Ch bAts or e a ar 0 e cape. lege student of today, a very i:leated aJrmen ore a y a, r Fontana's six-piece combination ' , . Berner; Capt. Robert Blackwell ; The aim of the program is to pro- discussion was carried on. It was I graduate, and Anne Hughes , Arts made such a hit with the students . The total of Masses Com:n un - En s. Louis Bonkowski; Cpl. William vide gifts for all servicemen in hos- finally agreed upon by the majority junior. . \ IOns offered by the Sodahsts WIll be Borden; Lt_ Com_ Harold Buckman ; pit als and camps in Detroit or its of the students that ' no decided ' al- The purpose of the evenmg IS to that he was especially requested to to the office I Lt. James By ers ; Pfc. William Col- vicinity. Included among the hos- coholic problem was evident among acquaint t he coeds with one another play for the basketball dances. the National of. umb o; Lt. Frank Costello; Gerald pitals are the Percy - Jones Hospital college students. The discussion and with the extra-curricular activ- Fontana is a in the Arts C?lIe g e Students St. LoUls, whIch Cuddy ; Lt. Jack Davies; Pvt. David and its Fort Custer Annex, the Ma- . t hen turned to the vices and virtues ities on campus which are open to College. WIll send a cablegram to Emmer; AIC Thomas Fitzgibbons; _ rine _ Hospital, and the Veterans' of alcohol. Some Sodalists stressed them. Games and community sing- . . the Pope on Chnstmas Day. Lt. Charles Frogner; Lt. Edmund Hospitals in Battle Creek, De troit, -the detriment of liquor -to health. ing will follow short talks presented The second game and dance IS ! " Gamble; Edward Garvey; Bernard etc_ Today's Sodality meeting will be by of various stu- scheduled for Monday night at L:- :br --' ary LI·'g' ht Hanses; Pvt. James Hayes; MM 11c This is a farge project. Aid from divided, t he male students assemb- dent activities. Hackett when the Titan cager:'; meet William Heglin; P y,t. Joseph -Henze; everyone is requited. The sponsors ling in - Commerce 104, while the All coeds, - .ineludin? afternoon , Drake University. Hayden Hill; John I-Iolloran; Lt. ask either gift boxes (price not to' w omen students · will meet , in the night school and part-hme students, Hackett Field House will be the B"a ' ff-I'e Q . ', ., St ' af-f Emil Horkavi; Joseph Howard; Lt. exceed $2.00) or $2.00 donations in Florence Ryan auditorium as usual. are invited to attend, or . Michael Bric; Lt. John Keefe; Capt .. cash. The purpose of this is to enable not they have. e:r er in site for all the home games, which Robert Kacy ; Lt. Thomas Kelly; "U of D Day" will be held by the , both male and women students to any school actlVlty. will be arranged for either a Friday When one of the University's pro- Capt. John Kerr; Lt. Thomas Kiem- regular "Santa For Servicemen' : discuss openly and frankly the 1 _ or Saturday whenever pos- 1 fess ors ventured into the magazine ski ; Lt. Fred Knauf; Lt. Richard program, broadcast over CKLW greatest faults they find in the op- P ThO d sible. . I section of the library in the Eng- Knoll; Edward Kramer; William from 2 to 2:15 p.m. Friday afternoon, ___ Rosite sex. next Wednesday resent lr Brang_WiIl M._C. . I ineering _ Building, he found the Kuisel; Major Charles McCabe ; Lt. S j;ll9.ents from __ _ the Sodality will again meet as a L ' T ' d R b t ' B U ' 'd nt semi-dark unsuitable for reading Fred McFawn; Lt.-_ Joseph McIner- will be interviewed as to what we ct 0 ay 0 er rang mon preSl e " . whole and representatives of both e UJ.' . . '. .1 purposes. Gropmg about for a ney; Capt. -Benjamin Martin; Lt. can do to help are Robert Biang, groups will put forth their con- WIll act master of ceremomes for light switch, he found none. He James Meehan; Lt. Alfred , Megus; Law junior and president of the elusions. Third R' ed Cross lecture in a series the d,ances. The rrogram will called for .aid. A libra ri an entered. Joseph Miller; Lt. George Monda; Student Union; Joseph Pul te, Me- The - meeting promises to be in- will be presented tod ay at 3 p.m. in probably include several mixer She couldn't find the light-switch Pvt. William Natzke ; Sgt. John chani cal engineering pre-senior and teresting. Science 108. The lecture program dances. _ either. Aid was . called for again, Norman; Lt. Douglas Norris; Lt. re presentative on the Union Board; The Hev. Martin Carrabine, S. J., has a two-fold purpose. First, it . "Basketball dances I a s t year this time in a duet. Soon the en- I Bonnie O'Brien ; Sgt. Harold O'Don- and Anne Alberts, Commerce sopho-' ' Regional Secreta ry and Sodality familiarizes women students wi th tire library staff was searching for mell; Lt. Joseph Paddock; Pfc. Har- more and news editor on the Varsity' Secretariate 'of the Chicago Prov- Red Cross services so they - can make proved a popular ' and . successful the recal citrant light-switch. They old Phillips; Lt. Paul Prater; Lt. News. ince, attended the Sodality's first an intelligent choice of Red Cross ' substitute for the traditional foot- couldn't find it either. Norton Schlacter; Robert Schwen- The broadcast will originate fr0m' night meeting yesterday evening. classes to enroll.for at the ball dances, which have disappeared Four days later, four days of boot': ter; Sgt . Ward Simpson; Sgt. Cam- Campus Martius at 2 p .m. Friday Fr. Carrabine is making a tour of of the second Second, it along - with the sport," added Brazil. less searching, a janitor discovered eron Smith; Capt. Casimir Stefan- and all University students a re re- sodalities the Midwest instructs the Uruverslty Red Cross " - . ', the light-switch ' lurking behind a Dorothy Stretch; Sgt. Jack quested to attend. Their enthusiasm in order to , gain information as to officers and board members how to - The way the schedule IS arranged pile of books. No comment was Taggert; Lt. John Toomey; Lt. will help to make - the cause -a suc- how the 'sodalities are the same and, organize and manage a college unit I now, there will probably be a dance made by the library staff or by the Henry Weber Jr.; Raymond Whea- cess. Times staff photographers in what respects they differ. of the Red Cross. , every week." - - , .. professor. ton; and Ens. Carl Ziehr. will also he present.

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Phones Varsity News ............ UN. 2-6000 Mon., After 9 p.m ... ::pN. 2-6005 Tues., After 2 p.m .... : .. CA. 2100

Wednesday, November 29, -1944

Universit~ ·ofDetrdit ,: " ', ' . f " :" ,"". . - ~ ; . ,

',\ "

Detroit, Michigan -. i

," ~ ;. .

Assemblies See bulletin boards for as­

semblies.

Vol. 27-No. 10

" -- - - ' , ,

U 0 PLAYERS PRESENT .JANE EYRE' Sadie Shuffle Ends Leap Year O'Brien .Stars in

Play's TItle Role . . ':' :- '- . -~.-~.--.-

League Sets Up -Date Bureau for Coy Coeds Burgwin Heads Huge Supporting Cast .

As Group Gives Puhlic Production Leap Yea~willbe ' offiCially ushered out when the Women'_s Saturday night at 8:30 p . m., the Players will raise the cur-,

-League holds the "Sadie- Shuffle" at 9 p. m. Friday, December tain on a special, private m:em1;lers'preview of ' ~Jane- Eyre." 29, in the Florence Ryan Auditorium. _ The dance is strictly , limited to the students of the-University and the coeds must ask The public premiere is scheduled for 2:30 p. 11); Sunday at the men. Only 200 couples will be , accepted for the dance. a matinee performance, marking the first public production in ~-------=---------+. -Set Up Date Burea1l the Little Theater since 1942. Subsequent performances will De

To insure the Leap Year style and at 8:30 p . m. Sunday 'night; the following weekend, Friday, Sat-

_ DO-. '0,_/ -'" 'ra.h'/es' to limit the attendance to students, uJ;'day and Sunday night performances and a Sunday matinee. £ I _ I ~ a Date Bureau will be set up in - . Price of Tickets "" Chemistry 107 for one week, 'Novem- G' T' -, I I' Tickets for the premiere perform-

I , 1 U ' · ber 30 through December 7; open eo _ wem ow ance ~ill sell for 9? cents, including n' '- n' I , 0 n from 10:30 a. m. to 8 p. m. Tomor- e , tax. SIxty cents WIll be charged for

I row it will be oPE!n at 12:3Q. ' - • subsequent performances. Tickets

C d ' u. S. Mail Plays Cupid P - Ch· an may be obtained in the Union -Room,

ve~n Jane Coed goes to the Bureau and rom c_ -alrm 'I the Little Theatre, and the Varsity -- 0 ' I ~ , tells the clerk that she wants to ask I News Office. They will also be sold . Joe College. The clerk after Check-I R b t D l. at the door on the night of the per-

Pool tables in the Umon Room ing. his name off in the University 0 er $, onollue formance.

were re-covere'~ Monday; The~e was 1 files, sends him a formal bid signed ,Act as IIla .. J_ erator.'S Sell-Out Predicted a s~veral weeks dela~ a ter t e ma- by Jane. Joe returns the enclosed , l'l~ UI Students who desire to see the tenals had , alrea~~ been purchased, I postcard 'stating his acceptance or d t d tons h ' ' George Twemlow, Night Com- play should make their reservations ue 0 war con 1 1 . I denial. If he accepts, e IS se!lt _a as soon as possible as a seU-out is

Adopt St:dcter Rule ' special' admission token without merce pre-senior, has been ap-- t d h' f th 1944 J predicted by members of the busi-During the summer all of the which he cannot be admitted to the pom e c all-ma~ 0 e _ - ness staff. ,

woodwork, furniture, etc. of the dance. Jane will pay the admission I Prom. The appomtment was made , Union Room was either painted or pi-ice of $1.1~ .when he sends the Monday at a Faculty Board meeting The p lay, based on the novel by

f Sh h and released today by the Rev, Ed-I Charlotte Bronte, will be staged in varnished" and various-' repairs -were notice 0 acci!ptarice. ' e pays t e h m-ade. The Union Board is now re- Bureau a fee of 10-cents. ward O'Connor, crean of men. I The Little Theatre, located on t e

- . Ilower concourse of the Chemistry questing that- the students do their Coeds are free to ask students M~rgiIerite O'Brien" Arts sophomore, studies her script in preparation . Tw~mlo~ was selected m con- Building, opposite the Student Union Part by keeping the Union Room whom they have never- met, since Junchon wlth M. oderator Enos Rob- Room. ' Aud1'ences are 11'm1'ted' to 75 for the Players' private performance at 8 p.m. Saturday night. Miss clean. Bo~es are provided for easy their date is supposed to meet them erts, .and ASlstant-moderator. Dr. I because of the lim1-ted capacity of

h d - O'Brien has the lead role in. "Jane Eyre." F D h disposal' of rubbish. , at t e ance. ranC1S ono ue. " The Little Theatre. LI's't ,Board Members Name Garver Chairman C 'tt I ted by

omm1 eemen were se ec "Jane Eyre" is expected - to be General chairman of the ' affair is T I th d t d . ' In_ an .effort to ac~uaint the sthu- Mary Helen Garver. ', In charge of ' F' 0-ntana WI-II M--' ake Mus-Ie wem, ow, e two mo era ors. a~ particularly successful because of dentS wlth the Umon Board, t e th D t B . J Z' h- , \ Fr. 0 Connor. They . are: MarJorre the publicity accruing to it from . . ' f ' . e a e ureau IS ean Ie r, as- B k . nd Charles Beau Varsity News prmts - a hst 0 Its . t d b C thO L Er b th D roo s, semor, a - the recent movie and stage produc-

_merribers: _ - -- -._ i~~o~ia --:du:C~ile:~'-lVi:~~~is:ey '- a~d - -; .. ~ " . _"s .. ~. ~·_ -#,-" ,, - ., .. ';-'-,- - . - --" __ -..I det, j unior, Arts; Willii\m Funke tions;

~~:~~ ~::~~:::::::·.· ..... : :·.vi~~~~~::~~:~~ ChMarlottesHlliathe~inghto~. - 'f th For ·Basketball ' Darices- ' j~io~~th;~~:;hD;~~:~re~n~O~~a~~: Margu::~: ~;;ie~',B~:~ sopho-: h T ary u lVan IS c aIrman 0 e McMillan, Mechanical engineering

Joseph Smit ..................... ..... reasurer bl"t 'tt'd d b M . ,_ .e>------------------- more, will star in the title role ;, William' Odette., .. ... ... ......... . ~ ... Secretary IPu 01C?CY commA

1 ee, aAl lbe t y P at r;- B ANNE ALBERTS pre-senior; Robert Brang, Day law she will be supported by Richard

. - . yn onnor, nne er s, a n- Y - S tl 10 ' J 0 junior; Francis Hughes, Night Law. . L RIchard Burgwm......... .. .. ......... t' cia Chapman, Marguerite O'Brien. New's Editor 0 a tty to Oln ' . . R b t W th' . N' ht Burgwm, Arts semor; Betty ou

............ : .. . : .. .. . Arts representa. 1ve Entertainment will be handled by Jumor, 0 er · e,r e1merd, plg I Schneider, Ar ts sophomore; Ruthe

Howard Penmngton.................... A H h b f h Mike Fontana's orchestra will pro- commerce p~e-semor ; _ an au I Compton, Arts J'unior', and Edward t t · nne ug es; mem ers 0 er com- ~ GO. R B t h D t t Commerce repr-esen a 1ve 'd th mus1'c for the basketball u c er, en IS ry JunIOr. Ch I'k A t f "-- W'th the ' .... ........ mittee are Anne Marie Laird and VI e e n IOlna one I es I , r s resIlman. 1

Joseph Pulte: ......... : ...... .. ............... '-" \' Noreen Greenway. dances this term, announced Lloyd , (:) I' The Prom .will be held. Friday, I exception of Cheslik, who is an ap-Sec. B Engmeenng representatIve Joan Purcell will take~are of the ' Brazil, athleti~ director and coach of (V o. I G. L January 12, m the Fountam Ball- I prentice this year, the featured

Joseph Car:n~eau ... :....... .... ... .... .. .. . decorations, assisted by Betty Re' the basketball team. The first dance ~"'rltl1a 1ft room of the Masonic Temple. 1 players listed were Acting Award Sec. A Engmeermg representatIve . k' L' R b' K th I'" I Winners last year

Anthony CorrolaL·· ·· ·· .. ·· ·· .. ···· .. ·· ·· .. t t' ~;Il~: Pa~~~cia ;:::~~' and a R~~ this term will begin at 9:30 p.m. Joining the sodalists throughout AI e Off- I Rassette ~eads Staff .... .. ............... . aw represen a Ive F Friday night following the game with "t I mnl Ice I h . f

P I B t Pi ' erry. the world in arranging a SpUl ua U I Heading · t e productIOn sta fare au u c er .. .... .. ... .. ... ... ............ ,... . i "' Music for dancing will be pro- Fort Way'ne, which starts at 8 p.m. bouquet for His Holiness, Pope Pius : J eanette Rassette, Art s sopho ... .................. Dent<ll representatIve I 'd d b t ' Union Board elections are held VI e y an as ye unnamed 01'- Dances are both informal and s.tag' j XI~, as a Christmas gift, the so- e H : more and assistant-director ; John

annually in the spring term. Any chestra . Students may purchase combma- i dahsts on ca.mpus are asked to sup- I Lists ' eroes I Linahan , Arts freshman and tech-. vacancies occurring during the term tion tickets for the games and 1 port the ?nduum: .! nical director; Cherie Eberhardt,-are filled by appointments made by C dE. dances at the reduced rate of 60 : The Tnduum WIll be held m the I Arts freshman and property corll'-the Board. - oe-- - 'venlng IUniversity student chapel Monday l Over 2500 Alums mittee chairman.

"Men students are free at any , through Wednesday in preparation I Eugene Gar barino, Arts frpshman time to bring suggestions or ideas - . N . ' for the Feast of the Immaculate S V • U. S. F. rces and publicity chairman ; and Anne to any member of the Board" stated Torno' rrow Nlete otlCe Conception. The Triduum will con- er e In 0 0 0 , i Alberts, C.o m mer c e sophomore,

h . . h' sist of daily attendance at Mass and I . . _ , I Ushers chaIrman. Brang, w 0 IS now servmg IS sec- All students aI'e invited to at- H 1 C . E 't ' f th SIxty-one alumm have glven theIr The play was adapted and di-ond term as president. I II 0 Y ommunlOn. XpOSl IOn 0 e , h . . h d f

tend the pre-game pep ra y to Bl d S t ' 11 t k I j liVeS fig tmg m t e arme orces rected by Burgwin R t . . I esse acramen WI a e pace. . eserva tOnS In be held at 12:30 p.m. tomol'l'OW in from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday, of _our ' country, It was announ~ed i

Problem of Drink rllTOLl' thc Chemistry Arena. Eugene December 7, in the chapel. At the today b{ th~ dR:ev. Bernard Red y" A k U'rn H l Dean's or Vi, II ice Garbarino, Arts freshman, will close of the Exposition there will be IS. J., a umm 1rector. j' S ' .u ne p D d b rosary and Benediction. ' For ~he -past several months ~he - . : , __ '

, .'SC'USS' e -Y Coeds only have today and to' act as M.C. in leading the cheers. St d t . t t d . . g i Alumm office has been gathenng I l S' . . . I Th hid 'n be intro- u en s meres e m prepann ' . . f ' morrow to make ~hell' reser,:atIons e c eel' ea ers WI the chapel for the Triduum are I data on. all ~he men m serVIce rom n erVlcemen

Soda I.'sts for the Get-Acquamted Evenmg to duced to the stwlents: 1 k d t t t th S d l't Office I the Umvers1ty. There are more . th as e 0 s op a e 0 a 1 y h 2 500 I . . . th

be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow mel . - I in the lower consourse of the Chem- , t an, a ,umm servmg m e G "~t p . e t I main lounge of the Downtown ' . t B 'ld ' thO k t _ armed forces m all theatres of oper- 1 Tftree .

Y - b b' th . dvance IS ry Ul mg IS wee , or 0 con , '1./ By BETTY REPICK Y.W.C.A. . cents y uymg . em m a I tact Corinne Schmidt, Arts junior atlOns. ,

'~Is Drink a Predominant Evil i Reservations may be made for 75 either at the Athletic Office or from and chairman of the Eucharistic GOLD STAR NAMES Co-operation and help is being am~ng College Students?" wa,s the I cents in the. office of th~ dean of authorized salesmen. The price of Committee of the Sodality. The gold stars in the service flag asked of University- students in the topic of last week's Sodality meet- women or m the VarSIty News d .. t the door is 85 cents. A 11 f '11 b t k t of the University represent Pfc_ "Santa for -Servicemen" _program, ing Since the subject is of grow- Office. '. a mlSSlOn a t d ~o ;Cd1~r:t WI t~ af enfluP a I Charles Anhut; S/ Sgt. James Bailey; which is co-sponsored by the Amer-ing' importance to the average col- 'I The program has been planned by F:,ontana a Student fO atyhs °lt a 1 Yf mthee m

hg °lr owers S / Sgt. Leon Be'rger; Lt. Gerald ican Legion and the Detroit Times.

, h . - L tt Ch bAts or e a ar 0 e cape. lege student of today, a very i:leated co~c aJrmen ore a y a, r Fontana's six-piece combination ' , . Berner; Capt. Robert Blackwell ; The aim of the program is to pro-discussion was carried on. It was I graduate, and Anne Hughes, Arts made such a hit with the students . The total of Masses an~ Com:nun- Ens. Louis Bonkowski; Cpl. William vide gifts for all servicemen in hos­finally agreed upon by the majority junior. . \ IOns offered by the Sodahsts WIll be Borden; Lt_ Com_ Harold Buckman; pitals and camps in Detroit or its of the students that ' no decided ' al- The purpose of the evenmg IS to that he was especially requested to forward~d to the c~ntral office ~f I Lt. James Byers; Pfc. William Col- vicinity. Included among the hos­coholic problem was evident among acquaint the coeds with one another play for the basketball dances. the National Fed~ratlOn of. Cath~hc umbo; Lt. Frank Costello; Gerald pitals are the Percy -Jones Hospital college students. The discussion and with the extra-curricular activ- Fontana is a ~ophomore in the Arts C?lIege Students l~ St. LoUls, whIch Cuddy ; Lt. Jack Davies; Pvt. David and its Fort Custer Annex, the Ma-

. then turned to the vices and virtues ities on campus which are open to College. WIll send a spe~lal cablegram to Emmer; A I C Thomas Fitzgibbons; _ rine _ Hospital, and the Veterans' of alcohol. Some Sodalists stressed them. Games and community sing- . . the Pope on Chnstmas Day. Lt. Charles Frogner; Lt. Edmund Hospitals in Battle Creek, Detroit, -the detriment of liquor -to health. ing will follow short talks presented The second game and dance IS ! " Gamble; Edward Garvey; Bernard etc_

Today's Sodality meeting will be by repr~sentatives of various stu- scheduled for Monday night at L:-l·:br--' ary LI·'g'ht Hanses; Pvt. James Hayes; MM 11c This is a farge project. Aid from divi ded, the male students assemb- dent activities. Hackett when the Titan cager:'; meet William Heglin; P y,t. Joseph -Henze; everyone is requited. The sponsors ling in - Commerce 104, while the All coeds, -.ineludin? afternoon, Drake University. Hayden Hill; John I-Iolloran; Lt. ask either gift boxes (price not to'

women students· will meet, in the night school and part-hme students, Hackett Field House will be the B"a' ff-I'eQ.',. , St' af-f Emil Horkavi; Joseph Howard; Lt. exceed $2.00) or $2.00 donations in Florence Ryan auditorium as usual. are invited to attend, ,,:,~ether or . ~\ Michael Bric; Lt. John Keefe; Capt .. cash. The purpose of this is to enable not they have. e:rer part~c1pated in site for all the home games, which Robert Kacy; Lt. Thomas Kelly; "U of D Day" will be held by the

, both male and women students to any school actlVlty. will be arranged for either a Friday When one of the University's pro- Capt. John Kerr; Lt. Thomas Kiem- regular "Santa For Servicemen': discuss openly and frankly the 1 _ or Saturday ~night whenever pos- 1 fessors ventured into the magazine ski; Lt. Fred Knauf; Lt. Richard program, broadcast over CKLW greatest faults they find in the op- P ThO d sible. . I section of the library in the Eng- Knoll; Edward Kramer; William from 2 to 2:15 p.m. Friday afternoon,

___ Rosite sex. Th~n next Wednesday resent lr Brang_WiIl M._C. . I ineering _ Building, he found the Kuisel; Major Charles McCabe; Lt. Sj;ll9.ents from th_e_Universit~~..-'w'-"h~o"--__ _ the Sodality will again meet as a L ' T ' d R b t ' B U ' 'd nt semi-dark unsuitable for r eading Fred McFawn; Lt.-_ Joseph McIner- will be interviewed as to what we ct ~e 0 ay 0 er rang mon preSl e " . whole and representatives of both e UJ.' . . '. . 1 purposes. Gropmg about for a ney; Capt. -Benjamin Martin; Lt. can do to help are Robert Biang, groups will put forth their con- WIll act ~s master of ceremomes for light switch, he found none. He James Meehan; Lt. Alfred , Megus; Law junior and president of the elusions. Third R'ed Cross lecture in a series the d,ances. The rrogram will called for .aid. A librarian entered. Joseph Miller; Lt. George Monda; Student Union; Joseph Pulte, Me-

The -meeting promises to be in- will be presented today at 3 p.m. in probably include several mixer She couldn't find the light-switch Pvt. William Natzke; Sgt. John chanical engineering pre-senior and teresting. Science 108. The lecture program dances. _ either. Aid was . called for again, Norman; Lt. Douglas Norris; Lt. representative on the Union Board;

The Hev. Martin Carrabine, S. J., has a two-fold purpose. First, it . "Basketball dances I a s t year this time in a duet. Soon the en- I Bonnie O'Brien; Sgt. Harold O'Don- and Anne Alberts, Commerce sopho-' ' Regional Secretary and Sodality familiarizes women students with tire library staff was searching for mell; Lt. Joseph Paddock; Pfc. Har- more and news editor on the Varsity' Secretariate 'of the Chicago Prov- Red Cross services so they -can make proved a popular ' and . successful the recalcitrant light-switch. They old Phillips; Lt. Paul Prater; Lt. News. ince, attended the Sodality's first an intelligent choice of Red Cross 'substitute for the traditional foot- couldn't find it either. Norton Schlacter; Robert Schwen- The broadcast will originate fr0m' night meeting yesterday evening. classes to enroll.for at the b~ginning ball dances, which have disappeared Four days later, four days of boot': ter; Sgt. Ward Simpson; Sgt. Cam- Campus Martius at 2 p .m. Friday Fr. Carrabine is making a tour of of the second se~est:r. Second, it along -with the sport," added Brazil. less searching, a janitor discovered eron Smith; Capt. Casimir Stefan- and all University students are re­sodalities through~ut the Midwest instructs the Uruverslty Red Cross " - . ', the light-switch ' lurking behind a sk~; Dorothy Stretch; Sgt. Jack quested to attend. Their enthusiasm in order to , gain information as to officers and board members how to - The way the schedule IS arranged pile of books. No comment was Taggert; Lt. John Toomey; Lt. will help to make -the cause -a suc­how the 'sodalities are the same and, organize and manage a college unit I now, there will probably be a dance made by the library staff or by the Henry Weber Jr.; Raymond Whea- cess. Times staff photographers in what respects they differ. of the Red Cross. , every week." - - , .. professor. ton; and Ens. Carl Ziehr. will also he present.

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The Varsity News · is~'publiShed every Wednesda-y for s.t~dent~ o,f the Univer,sity of Detroit from editorial 'offices in Commerce 1. \.

e. ', !' • __ . ...:. •. ___ ~ __ ~ ________ -,--_

HOWARD PENNINGTON .............. .. .. .. ............... .... : ..... ............... .......... .. ......... .. ............ , .............. EDITOR Anne Alberts ........... ..................... , ............... ........ ..................... ... , ...... ....................... ........... , ..... News Editor

- .William Clancy ..... ................. .. .... .................... ...... .. .. .. .. .. ....... ... ..... ... ...................... .. ...... : ... Feature Editor Virginia Crane .. ........ ......... .............................. .................... : ... " .................... " ........... .. .. , ... :.qampus , Edi~~r Jer.ry Grobbel... ............ ". ..... .. .. .............. .. .. .............. .... .. ............ .... .......... ... : .. , ................... : .... Sports Edit~r

. . , '. EQII:Of!.IAL. ASSISTANTS ~ . John Egan, LOis Burke, Lee Foley, Dot . McDonald, Bett y Repicky.

FEATURE WRITERS Rosemary -Linahan, Patricia' Chapman . .

R,Ep.oRTE!tS James Hayes. Bea Potts. Margaret Mary Loftus. Paul Beyer, .Mary Finlay, Boba Lee

Holm~~ , Jerry Racette, Bob ' Schne\der. . "',,"---. ---------~-----

. CIRCULATION DEPT. Jeannette Rassette .. ; .................... .. ........... .. :,' ...... .. ......... ... : .. .. .. .............. ......................................... Manager

: ' JEFFERSON CAMPUS BUREAU " . Arlowyn Natche ........ ............... .... ............. .. .. ........... .. ...... ......... ....... : ...... : ..... ............ : .... : ..... : ........ Night C&F William Gibbs ..... ....... ........ .. ... .... .................................................. .. .. ............... ..... , ... .......................... , .... Dental

PHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT Frapk Cla,uss, William Minando.

BUSINESS DEPART~IENT , -------'----

Ruthe Compton .... ....................................... .. .......... ..................... ........................ .. .. .............. Business Mgr. Dolly Ba user Callinan ........... .. ..... ........... ............ ...... .. . : ...... .... .. ... ............... .. .... .. : ................ ~ ... · .. Adv. Sales Eva El.w.es ........... .. .. ... .. .............................................. .. .......... ......... ~ ............... : ............................... Adv. Sale's Subscription Rates ........ : .......................... .. .......... ... ........ .. ....................... .................... ......... ~1.00 per year

Adve'rtising r a tes may be 'obtained on application to' the business manager. The VarSity News is represented for natlonal a dvertising by Nattonal Advertising Service, Inc.! 420 Madison Avenue, New Yo~k.' N. Y. ':,

The Editor's Corner

UD Comes Back to Life

' . ,. C"--

THE V A R S 'I T Y NEW S . W~dnesday, :Novetnhef, 29, 1944 '" -----_._._--,,--"---- ~ ' !'l . ,.~. , . ~,:,."",,- -. '-,

Wuntchatameet . • . .. . • . StQdent [email protected] . _ To the Editor: are any serious grammatical errors

Last Friday at ' the Arts and Sci- in the comp;sition, a member of ence freshman assembly, the pros the staff will surely find it and' cor­and 'cons of The Varsity News ·~ere rect it ' without losing the original discussed in a rather heated . mim:- idea the writer attempted to convey. nero Gene Garbarino, Arts fresh- If more of the students who are ' meri, opened the' ,discussion by 5tat-' complaining and bickering over the ing that a few pros from the stil- comparative tperits of -The Varsity dent body would be greatly 'appre- News wQu.Jd - offer their ' sel'vices to

Indeed, the pros were few; saig....paper, most · of the. arguments and the cons many. :would ' be eliminated. What The ' ' . I sincerely believe that the . Var.-::' Varsity News really needs is a little sity News staff is doing ? w6naerful . cooperation lrom the entire student jol:?, ~ons~dering its p1eager sources body: It's our paper and 'we can of mate!,ial an4 · its all too small contribute to ' its pages as much as treasury; , ;..£ .. J 'ohn Egan so ,hotly we . like: If 'everyone would cooper­sfated,;,;" You can't expect to have ate with the staff, we would have a every thing in a /college paper when much finer paper . .. it has ' f~,o . endowment fund." Some . An interested freshman, day., maybe, some kind person or ALICE COUVREUR, organization will start a fund for (Commerce and Finance). the furthering of The Varsity News. To the Editor: ~n ,the meantime, I. ' be!ieve tha~' we Last Friday a group of freshmen h~ve ~e~ns of expressmg o~r. VIews held a discussion at their assembly and OpmI?nS through the medIUm of concerning· The Varsity' News . . The . VarSIty New~. This innocent bystander is in-

An argument.atIv'e freshman re- .clined to believe that the instigators call.ed to our mmds tha.t there :vere were in large · part not constructive entIrely too many artIcles wntten critics who have any interest in real by the same people. If ~ore of . t~e improvements 9f the .policies, form , st~d~nt body wou~d, con.tnbute theIr or content of the Varsity News-­OpInIOnS, and t~eIr arti:les to the but rather a group with a chip- on­paper, 1m certam that It :",ould be the-shoulder compl~x. more· th~n greatly apprecIated. A I have had proof that some stu .. stu.de,nt .. may sa~, "~ell, gee!.r can't dents manage to find fault. no mat­WrIte a good arhcl~. ~o one has to tel' what are the policies of The worry abo1;lt that SItuatIon. If there Varsity News; yet I cannot think

of one of them who has ever done

BETTER days are on the way for/students of the University . . ' . '.. .... . ' Ticket S. tu.b "\porapWerO.Uld do anything to help the of Detroit, at least in the all absorBing .if. not all important ' Th' .' "p.. . . '~"M' ,',' .. ' . !. '~,- "- '0' . . :~. . ..... W'- ':. ' 11' '.-

" , , I At one time these students wailed field of extra-curricular activities. This issue-and .. the preceed-e :oor . an ~s , rson e es By William Clancy ! bitterly because too many of the

ing Varsity News carry announcements of revived activity in "T~at r~minds meof a s~ory/' the I no~,J b~tI';'ll t'l:\key~ffi..' n';ine . Where HELEN Hayes has brought sev- \ feature articles were "intellectual several fields; sports, social, dram~tic, possibly journalistic and little man said. ,_~ DID you go ov~r tB.e).weeke~ci?') I' eral great ladies of History to an~ had no collegiate appeal.~' , In Dthers. The "other" or unlisted activities are those which are "What does;" we asked. "No, no. I seek no fame for my-. on' the American stage. Two of theIr usual effort. to belid over back-

. t t d f bI' . V· fl ' "What you just said, of course." . self.. I am here merely in the in- her h~~o.ines gained part of their wards a~ the request ~, of students, no. ye re~ y or ~u lC announcement. ymg or top pace m "But I didn't say anything-you terests of my client. --'1 ~,rp. but a stature. by the acci.cj.~.nt of their regal the VarSIty. ~ews staff .fut out many last week s headlmes were the announcements of the return spoke' first.'" . lowly public relations man." birth. . Mon9-ay right _ Mi~s " Hayes of these al hC;,es and I~clude~, such of the J-Prom this term and the revival of intercolligiate foot- . "I know," he replied.- "That's "Oh. Carryon. Who is your . . to the Cass her interpreta- features as Wuntcha~ameet and

tion of '~ ' woman :Wilb lacked the "Cubby-Hole." Now the rebellious ball after a two-year suspension. The J -Prom won the battle what rorminded . me . . It's the story client?" . . " I' th t th . t

of the ."'three farmerS. who ,wouldn't . "For the, present I shall refer to glamor of courts and intrigue, a . ones" com~ ~m "a ~re. IS .no as . it will be held sooner, but the announpement of football is talk : anq the boy~carrying the ' urpl~ bim by his"'- professional cognomen, woman whom many Americans now en~ugh. w~!t~ng h ~epresentatI~~ of t·

one that every active student has been waiHng 'for since it was 'bathtub.'" ':Js '\ ' . '" Rochester." I \\ tend 'to dismiss as a mere senti_UnIVersIty. , UC eatures as ~nt-d .. 1 .chatameet" are now labeled as pomt-

first discontinued. "How does it go?" we 'asked, try- ·."Gee, you mean that real funny mental reformer an sensatIOna l ' d -f T ' t h . ip.,!£ .mor.e' to qe pSlite t?an . an:Y~J:. ing · <;.()~, i;!d'ia'n '.:on ... Jac.k, Benny's .. show.'?" crusader. · It is an added . proof. of . e~s an al mg 0 serve t ~Ir pUl:-

The only ones sitting in the stands as students next ·year who ~at there before and cheered as students will be seniors. They yvill be f~w in number, but they will be entrusted with the task of-showing juniors, sophomores and freshmen how Titan rooters use·d. to whoop it up for the Red arid White.

*

I N THE journalistic field there is some hope that enterprizing seniors will be able to put out a modified form of year book

once again. The Varsity New sincerely hopes that the senior class will get the green light and it will back the venture in every way possible. One of the most cherished possessions of gradu­ates, t:r:.easured .eve~ more than the diploma, is the old high school or college year book. Whenever a bit of nostalgia hits, it is always a great pleasure to drag out the dusty volume and look at the pictures of old friends. The year book often serves a very practical purpose. How often have we bumped into some old school chum on the street, exchanged hearty greetings and then dash~d ho~e to look up his or her name in the annual.

· More than one friendship ' has been saved from the rocks by the old reliable "Siwash Annual."

* *

FIRST imP?:I;tant news of the year to ~ome out of the Little Theater is the announcement of the new open house pro-

· duction, "Jane ~yre." It is by far the biggest thing attempted · by Jhe group in quite a while. We cannot at this point vouch for the quality of the production as we have not yet seen· it, hut we do know that i( the time and effort spent on it mean anything, it should be well worth viewing.

Saga of Broadway Rose

, J' . k .~ .B k 1" I k M" H ' " f . d' d d ' pose. Someone even suggested that else, although ,»,e were curious .as to' .as ea Lo~~ , ur e eag~:r, y. . lIe ISS .ayes genIus, ' 1 any, a e . ' 1 b ' h d . why a boy : would carry- a purple him. ' Can ' "you get his ' proof be needed, that the Harriet thIS co umn e c ange to a senous bathtub~ ' Persb~ally, we willn~vcr f6,r 'me?" . , .-.. .. ,; , . B~echer Stowe she interprets in character sketch. Su~h types . of carry anythirig b\.ii a lavender jag. ' ''My client is no black Bob "Harriet" is ; ;i ' very vital person sketches have been tned before-. . • ' .. ".1.... __ ., . .... ' and proved unsuccessful because

"I don'tkri~VJt ~e ,shrugged: "Pe~:, I the. little ' i'?.a.~ ,:~cl.a\med in a ll:r?~:d, af

;vomtahn whose't'hgreaftnhess they "were dull and lacked humor." sonally, I thmk the ' whole Joke ·IS stuffy manner. .. ,. sprmgs ' rom e warm ' ' 0 er A "d ' ., d th t pretty' stupid." '. . "Of course not," we"~obthe(L~'Y.ou character, ~ the ' depth of her prin-" en dSO thProcee. s . • .ei : argumenjl , ., " . , ., - 'f ' . . .. aroun e grIpe-CIrc e on a . 'Look!" we . bellowed, taking a represen .... t ,he ' JunioJ . Ch.<:!mber ' '0 . ~nd ,the mtel,lI~en?e of her through the night! firm grip on our temper ' (and his Commerce"of ' Rochester, New ,York, applIcatIon of these prmcIples. M R d h 1 b h

.. ... . d' '.. .',' . th" ' . "H ' " . b ' '-, I d emo- an oms as a ways een t roat at the same time) . . "I hav;e. an you want us to gIVe _ 'e CIty .arrIet. Is.a IOgrapNca ram a,. a favorite with our revolting little work to do. This is Monday night. propel' recogn'rtion. An edit~daT on all:d: an hl~t9rICal. one too, ·bec~1;I,~e friends. iAt one' time they complain­I'in busy. There'· are hundreds. of the fine" weather " or .the prevailing 1h~ .,care~r of ,Harr!rt ~~ec~e~ :Stowe ed ·because .. "it ·was . just a list of stories to be writt~n: ' 'Big; fat, bla,ck, absenc!,!, of Japanese beetles In :'that z:n~rrors the, . . great passIons . anq. names without . any real details in­screaming banner headlines miist' be I vicinity, rio doubt." ) . ':) ~huggles v:hrch swept our country ·clucles}." When l 'more writing was composed. Go away.' Don't bothe~ i H~ " wiped a ·tear from his eye. m the 1850s. . .', .. .. put ' ip.to ·, the \coh~mn and -,fewer .me. I must· put ·out The Varsity "Oh,. how '1 suffer for m~ client 'rhe Ha~es . per~o~mal'lee - IS supeI'b,. 'names " ~riclude'a, : someone - always News.". ).. (ana; of course, the usual 'ten .pel' and certamly she could no. t . hav. e protested b~cause he was being

"Why?" ,. cent) . Here "'is'" a picture bf my b t d b t t een suppor e . y a more In eres - i left' ·out. Now that the writer of The entire Varsity News staff clieift . . You may print it.'.' ing clan th~n the Beeche"s "Har . 1 , ." ..'" ., . • : ~ Memo-Random's ', includes " as many

stopped in its tracks and stared at (ErrITOR'S NOTE: We did.) He net wIll lun at the C'!s.s, f~r h,:,o events and names 'as possible, still the heretic. "Did you say why?" is Richard ' Burgwin, currently ap:.. w~eks, and those who n:ISS It wjJI there are those Who complain-and

"Yes, I said why: Well, I'm wait- pearirig in "Jane Eyre." Incident - miSS a first ,rate theatrIcal exper- always they are the ones who would ing." ' ally, he wrote ' the play. Did you . lence. never thihk of reP9rting a social

ox a re IS wee 'event. Since. most society .writers There followe'd ten mI'nutes of know that?" AT THE F the t thO k dead silence, broken only by the ' "No. I always thought Charlotte starting Friday, Charles Boyer, do not work on the mental telepathy ~entle I sound of brows being fur- Bronte wrote it." ~ .. ' . d Ch C b ~ Irene Dunne, an aries 0 urn system, does this not seem unfair? rowed and creased as everyone from. "It wa.s written by Richard Burg- t . "T th' A . " h' h . s ar In oge er gam, w IC IS Some say that the feature editor cub reporter to editor tried to think 'l win: I h~v~ proo~: Here is a cop;r advertised as "the merriest mix-up w~ites too much. I have often won­of one good reason why The Var- of the offIcIal' scrIpt. What does It in years." The second feature is as dered .if it has ever occurred to sity News should be put out... I say on the first lin~, pres~mi~g you yet unanpounced. them that when there are no student

The silence was at last broken can read, you low JournalIst? Th M' h' d U . d A t' t . e IC Igan an , mte l' IS S contributions that are printable (and by a rather nasty laugh coming from "It says 'Jane Eyre'." both hold over their bills, which usually there are none- printable or the throat of the little man. "I've "And on the second·?" . h "K' t'" . h R Id means t at Isme, WIt ona otherwise), someone must write. 01' got you, haven't I? . Can't think ' of "It says, 'By Richard Burgw) n.' Colman and Marlene Dietrich plus would they prefer a blank page en-a good reason, can you ? But I'm Well, whatdaya · know?" "D f Glo "ta at th £0 . I d "s d t C 'b' 'I" ays 0 ry s ys ermer, tIt e tu en ontn ubons. big hearted. I'll t.ell you. It's -,so. "You have my permission to de- d "F h ' C k " 'th . an renc man s ree , WI Since I am not a member of the you can print news about people." vote · two or three thousand words Joan' Fontaine and Arturo de Cor- Varsity News staff-only one who

As we reached for a .. pencil our to the play this week," he announced d . t th I Th ova remams a e atter. e admires its untiring and unappre-sigh was half relief and half con.- in a lordly manner as he swept out Palms-State gets "The Conspirators" ciated efforts to produce a paper tempt at · the lowly way he had of the office. Weakly, the entire starring Hedy Lemarr and Paul representative of the \.lniversity the 'chosen to achieve his end. "The staff returned to their jobs. That's Henreid, and another feature which reader may be curious as to what girl who writes Memos isn't in right why we stay in the newspaper bus- has not been announced. member of the staff is sitting on my

iness. You meet such interesting At the 'neighborhood United De- head so that I will write this.

Leftovers people. troit theatres, (R 0 y a 1, Riviera, (EDITOR'S NOTE: Since this let-HGP Fisher, Madison, and Cinderella) ter was w7'itten Miss Ch'apman has

rugo .back to New York someday, thing and Miss "Broadway Rose." but with commonplace nostalgia, lOne of the two .had to be paid off, must admit that I won't be going and this time it would be Rose.

_ . The Broadway great and the "TODAY, Rollo, is Thanksgiving, checks, so they had tough sleddin' back to the New York I once knew. Broadway near-great were lI'sied d . h d an Just to see t at your e u-;- (and if you say it was because there

Betty Grable and Joe E. Brown 'star been made a Va7'sity News feature in "Pin~Up Girl." "Betwe~n Two w7'ite7' fo?' he?' many fine cont?'ibu­Worlds," with John Garfield, Faye tions, as has Rosemary Linahan. ) Emerson, and ·Paul Henreid, is the I write this letter freely; as a companion feature. All of these pic- challenge to · those so-called "re­tures start on Friday, except'· the' formers"-whose proposed reforms ones at the United Artist, which are purely a theoretical measure.

Broadway won't be Broadway- among her rouges-gallery of loves. cation ain't neglected, I'm going ' to was no snow I'll coronate you with Shubert Alley will be just any 01' Once it was Olson or .Johnson-or t.ell you the story about the first a thick, quick brick). alley where cats lurk in search of both. Thanksgiving and how the whole . But one day a couple of the rats al1.d legs to purr against. You Sometimes I believe her affec- thing started." younger generation, who were strict­see, ' the main stem was bent when tions were really sincere. I recall S. Quentin Ragnasy deftly flicked Iy in a mush mood after listening Manhatten lost the fragrance of the night that the stage manager of the ashes off his three for a nickel to The Voice, were out hand-in .. "Broadway Rose." Rose, you see, the Much-Male Company of 'The "Corona ' Groana," burped a tribute handing through the park when they had gone to Bellevue. Student Prince" hurled a bucket to the dear departed turkey and comes on an old Indian who was

Where ' ever do we start about of water on top of Rose and oniy proceeded ·to pass his vast store of very bitter. It seems that Cleve'­Rose? Songs have been sung, stories two nights later she returned to ignorance on to his off-base off- iand had dropped his option because have been told and when my kiddies keep her stage-door vigil. spring. he was only hitting .OO~%, which is crawl upon my lap, I'll tell again If t were not to mention ·Rose's "A long 'time ago, Rollo, 'way, a lousy average even for a good this · tale, but still, there may be persistent, scientific and 'esthetic na- 'way back, before Roosevelt was pitcher, which this gink wasn't. those among you on which the name ture, I might commit a grave in- President even, a gang of Pilgrims : But John Alden and Priscilla falls flat. justice. One ,night' I found her at came over ·here to this country in Schultz, these being the handles by . Rose is a woman whom only a about three ' a.m. hanging over ,1 a leaky little tub that · looked liki;! which this hug -happy couple paid mother could call "lady." She nightly steaming manhole in the middle of the admiral's flagship in theJap their income tax, talked to the old toured the Broadway beat ·in rai- Seventh···Avenue· attempting to r e- navy. (I don't know why they redskin until he was feeling fitter ment classed as "startling" even to vive a . wilted daisy, and again, I've called 'em Pilgrims, unless it was I than a Stradivarius. In return for that off times ta'steless street. 'She heard tell that once, when she had because some of 'em was pretty the fine advice they had given him wore bunny slippers, an ankle been denied a favored piece of rib- grim .pills) . They' called it the May- (they were regular fans of Mr. An­length plaid ' skirt and a purple bon used in the window display of flower, in honor of the captain's thony and knew all about human blouse and coat, both bedecked with a fashionable shoe store, she simply uncle, who ran a coffee shop by that relations), the old coot agreed to fix junk jewelry. She balanced a pair hurled a b:t:ick through the glass name. . ' them up with a fat turkey for of horned-rimmed glasses on her and· marched off with the thing. These char'acters fi,rst landed in: Thursday dinner. (In exchange for

. long nose and her greasy hair 'hung . Several weeks ago, an article, New York City, but there was no this John Alden was to fix the In~ low over her boney shoulders. No, clipped from a New York tabloid, place to stay as the hotels were aU dian up ~ith a chicken for Saturday tnere was no mistaking Rose. was sent to me by 'an old friend. filled up and they didn't have res- night, but this part never makes the

Professionally, the courts had Rose had been picked up by the ervations '(except one of them, wh:) history books.)

changes on Thursday. PATRICIA CHAPMAN.

THE CUBBY· HOLE II II By John Egan

A hhh. At last.' For the terpsicho-rean divertisement of the stu­

dents' at the University, the Wo~en's League has decided to usher out the leap year with the Sadie Shuffle. Let us look into the etymology of this title to see what i~ in 'the offing for the males.

"Sadie" 4ndoubtedly refers tp the Sadie of "Sadie Hawkins," that luckless female who finally resorted to assault and battery in order to get her man. Thus, metaphorically speaking, a "Sadie" means a gal out to get her man at any price. -. Now "shuffle,' ~ according to Web­

ster, means a "hesitating,' evasive or tricky course of behavior; artifice." "Sadie,'" plus "Shuffle" equals a gal prepared to use every form of sub-

lectt~d from Bona Venture: Well dressed man, cigar in hand,

falling through the air from an airplane: "Gad, that wasn't the washroom after all."

* * * Over at Wayne U. a number of

"mastadons of masculine pulchri­tude" staged a revue of The Dance to show that men can do anything women can do "and · better." A number of the boys, consequently, formed a chorus line, complete with ~ace panties and the rest of the trimmings, to entertain the students .during the college's annual Winter'­mart; a few Saturdays ago. The beefy choreographers were assisted by a couple of comedians a la Joe booked her more than once as a Gendarms at Broadway and 51st happened . to be an Indian). So they So all the Pilgrims sat down and

;"""-"""--,c_ommpn panharrdler:" --A: a- safe- -Stre:et- a about--2:0o- :m :--She- was shoved- off-from New York and tooU- had distance, I dare call her I "pan- sitting in,'the front seat of somebody's a gander at Brooklyn, but you kno\~ we just knocked off (kindly pass handler." Eut hardly "common" in sedan, with the door open nearest what Brooklyn is, so they kepi oli another toothpick while you're up, the . literative sense--for Rose was the sidewalk, pressing on the horn going until one day they· were sail- Rollo) and everyone was so full of the queen pest of them all. When button every 'time a ' prospective ing along and they saw a big neon gobbler and good cheer that they you'll r ecall that Fredrick March, stickei' hovered in sight. She was sign that said, "Plymouth Rock,. decided to give thanks for being m "For luck" had presented her with ·committed to the Bellevue Asylum Dine and Dance, We Pay the Fed- America, which they did, and which a hundred dollar bill on the ope;'- 'for a mental check-up. Her last era 1 Tax," so they landed and set people · have been . doing ever sincl'!, ing night of "The Skin pf Our printable words were--"I'm a good up light housekeeping in an old and not just' on one Thursday, either.

to get a male. We all know how "subterfugey" women are. (To coin a phrase.) Oh, well, perhaps it's best to assume the stoical attitude of The Kentuck Kernel that ·simply states in a few choice lines:

Teeth," you might easier grasp what girl- gimme a break, deary!" lighthouse. . But just remember one thin~ ,... I . mean. Her tactics were simple. Mental case? Ask the Department The fir.st year times 'was tough, about Thanksgiving, Rollo. It's the

. Sh~ stalkea out her prey and was of Internal Revenue. A 'diligent Kid, times was tough. Not being only time of the year when any,: paid 'off to ."lay off." After all, it agent listing her as "a peddler" had citizens they couldn't get ·a job in body can give an American the bird was mortifying fo~ a 'name star to quoted .. Rose's net · income for '43 a defense plant and their A card wit40ut getting. his snoot' ,smashed. be seen outside the Stor:k Club in as a cool ten grand. . gas wasn't enough to get them down "Happy indigestion!'.' the company of some mink-swathed ' JAMES CROWNER J to the welfare to pick up thei'G HOWARD PENNINGTON

Lil' 'Abner, today am your last, Wax ·yo' shoes 'n run 'em fast, The ga~s is out, de '(Iie is cast.

After those bitter lines, .it would serve me right if I get lost . in the shuffle.

* * ::: Here's the gag of the week, se-

*' * * Here, for the benefit of the more

erudite of the readers, is a short story of love and marriage:

Admiration Fascination Syncopation Osculation Amalgation Vexation Frush'ation

. Separation Starvation

Page 3: I /' e arslty ews

~.

Wednesday, November 29, 194.4 THE V A R sii T Y NEW S Page 3

JEFF CA-MPUS HOLDS 2 DANDES SAT. 'I - :A{emo-Gl1andoms I - ~~ight -· C &F, :. By Joanie Purcell . Dental Frat M ETHINKS I'll make the dent school the high .man on the ' iH I'd' H · ".

totem pole this gay and glorious week. Cliff Chadwick I I. 0 . Op S had a big ole coming out party Sunday night. He's a MAN_now . .

Delta Sigma at J(c, C ~ F on Ca.mpus; Both Are Informal

By VIRINGIA CRANE 'Campus Editor

kids .. Well anyway, it was a swell party and a big surprise too. .Keeping mum about the whole job were Liz :pox. and Jack Rynerson, Bob Roeser and 'Jack Hamilton. (Gee; they had a lovely time together), Bea Potts and Jack Raftrey, Marc Doelker and Ace Byerline, Peggy Tokar and Bernie Grey, Betty Kern and Rear-Admiral Bill Crawford, Barbara James and Fred Stoye, Norma Reid and Dick Keller, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Schwalm, Grace Quinn and S. A. Lolltman, Viola Monte and Wayne Robeson. As yes! Pat Tanguay was helpin' Cliff open

:presents and stuff. There will be two dances spon-I hope you don't mind my going ethereal on you all. of a sored by the members <Jf the Jeffer- .:' ' .

. sudden but a pretty wonderful ' thing happened at the dance son Campus this Saturday.,pig\lt. ·'·· that I'll never forget. Lt.-Col. Neil Devine is back from the The Sophomore, Pre-j~oi"":and wars full of ribbons and stars out he lost one of his l~gs in Junior classes of ,~~~W;··:·downtovin

Commerce and FiI).aflC'~ 'school will . France. When the band swung out in full style and Neil put have an informal dance in St. Cath-away his crutches and hopped that polka with Katie Drennan, erine's Hall across from Dinan Hall J never heard so much cheering in my life. And it isn't the on the Jefferson campus from 9 to ;cheering I'll remember. i ·a.m. Co-chairmen of the affair

Going from the serious ~o the ridiculous, there was a Span- are Howard ' Henry, Commerce ish puppet show last week down at the Rackham Building. We ,~sop~omc:re,.~~. Bob D~:m, Com-saw Julio Escobar (our boy from Cuba) · interpreting for Jim merce pre-Juruor." ·' > , • '.

Bassett, Kay Kelly, Lois Robinson and Grace Coonen. The dance promotion committee . And then of course there was the Varsity Ball last Friday. is headed by' John Damian, sopho-

. more, and Terry Natche, pr,e'-ifu1fo~. Lots 'n lots of people were there and I can't give 'em all but : The tickets and publicity ax:e~nder here's tryin' . . . Alice Couvreur and Jack Malone, Ruth Ferry the direction of Russ rf~stings, and ' Bob Bates, Gerry Santell and Sgt. Johnny Curran, Ginny sophomore, and Gloriette Galloway; Maher and Chuck McMillan, Fran Watts and Bob Ott, Char- pre-junior. Bob Gress, sophomore, lotte LaBelle and Bob Graham, Pat Halley and Eddie Scharr, and Rahl Tardiff, sophomore, will Gini Crane and Jim Hayes, Lee Foley and Bob Brang, D olores take charge of the entertainment -Photo by ciauss. Joziak and John McChonk, ", . I ," committee~ Dick ~Ul:gwin' as Rochester admires hi~ fiancee, BlanChe In~ram, played by Ruthe Compton. Betty Lou

Oh my, think-think! Buzz buzz buzz bu'zz (thE!y sWoon ' Schneiaer, ena.cting- ·.tli.e role of Mrs. Fairfax,· tells lVbrguerit!J' O'Bden, Jane Eyre. in the play, the history Admission is $2.00 a couple plus when Frankie Sinatra says that). '. qh' yes, Lillia.n Partl?n was ' of Th.ornfield: James Haye's, Ed. Cheslik and Gene Garbarino decidin~ Jane's fate. tax, and all students of the Univer-with Cliff Voss, Lea Sullivan and ' Lt. Bernard ~cfr~¥artz, Helen sity are invited.

'Uch and Ross Mainwaring, 'Teddy Saylor and Pvt. Jack Man- ' WJll '~h · Vi: .; .. ~, E ,Delta Sigma ·Delta, National Den:" quen, Peggy Barry and Paul Howe, Edna Sherk and' Chet Mc- , :. ' _ 0 '·S,·J '. ,~I - ,,0 ' .'z·"n· .. .. ,.' } .I ' ·. ,a" · ·n e , '~., c,.~ ... jle. tahl PD·roflessiso~al fraBternfiitY'BwlI'111 f

hold

Donnald, Ruth Buerge "and 'Don Craite,. Pauline Bownes and . ~R!jl tee ta 19ma ene t a rom h h M G h d J G bb 1 9:30 p.m, to 1:00 a.m. Site of the

Don Fles er, Dorot . y ,c , r;~t .:'In . erry r.o e. After an attempt to app'ca,se the local d(jpe empqri].lm"this, mornIng." veiling her faciai contours, is dance will be the Knights of Col-'LOTS of p~ople went- tra,;elin' aft~;, V~ too. Lessee, there I intellectual th}rst' C!f the 'higher ,el,;:- ' Dick Burgwi~ is lying prostrate. Cathie ;Lee, who will portray the umbus ' Hall. ,

was Dons Talcott and ··SpaghettI B1ll Pendergrass, Mary, ment o( the' student body of the 'bn the floor of the stage. It seems mad wife of Mr. Rochester. 1 Sweet music for dancing will be' Manion and Howard Pennington, Boba Lee Holmes and Ted 'Universlty by devoth';g the more someone had' uttered the n~me of Cast as a housekeeper, Lou · provided by Earl Perkins and, his

• Pinkelman, Gloria Dover and Chick Cunni,ngham:, :Bf m i ly ~mpor,ta~tr and e~ucational articles his id<,>l al)-d hei'o ', ~~ profanity. Schneider is attempting to convince I six-piece orchestra. Perkins' music Kacher and Dick Adams, Dot Sulla and Gene Malone. : . m .the paper to, lt~ "'('e proce~d to H~r~af!er, .~ll ~rue. fnends , of Mr. the director that . her acrobatic was featured last summer at the

Gloria Poust and Si Simon, Jean Ziehr and Jay Janick, sd~tJsfYt t~he lowtehr eplelment WAlth a Burg;-vmf ~~Oll m~ntwlonllth~ hall lowed dandcing. wouldnll't ~e amiss in the Detroit Yacht Club.

'E'l M " " . " d H h ' FI . M G d Ch 'le Isser 'a IOn on e ayers. s we name orson e es on y m ' pro uctlon, rea y It wouldn't. P rice of tickets is $2.50 including 1 een ornsseyan ug emlng ary arver an ' a1 y ; Ok ''' '' . 'k' k . 1..' '1' I I h h . . . G" C I' M I ' . l'l"d h d dB" . k ' f' .. ' . b fIt ta e a qUiC pee . ~nto bell' Itt e reverent, us ed whispers. DICk'" 1m rane, p aymg rs. ngram, tax. They may be purchased on .M1ller a as e own to oes y s or some JUlCY c0r~- ee as hole in the Che~:istry ouilding we ' Case of hero-worship is particularly the eternal matchmak!er, is engaged th t . th U' F . d . ht . " . ~ . J • ' • !' . .. ' " , ' e up own campus m e mon · n ay n1g . . ' ., ' . " . . i see them hard" at. worK, screammg. ba~L tliese days because . of the fact in marrying off her temptress I Room or f!'Om. Richard Gibbs or

There was, b1g dOII).,s at the Club Wh1te Saturday illght. at each other ,in an effort to b.e .pre~ that he fears his inability to do jus- daughter, Blanche, (Ruthie Comp- from any frat member on the down­S 2/ c Edna M'ae 'White fr.om theY Wa.ves was ,with Johnny pared for the forthcoming 'world tice to tl;l.e role; Mr. 'Rochester, .ton) to the unwilling Mr. Rochester. town campus. Prokop, Sis Maureen with ·Evo Benelli; Gini Johnson and Ned Pr~mlere o~ Sunday nex~, of their 'which Ors9n .made faniou~. Another huddle on the set con- As at the Night C & F dance the Davenport went outto painting the town 'purple and then, Garpe current production "Jane Eyre.;' , JalJles " Haye~ itl, Gene Garbarino sisting of Ginny Maher, Bill Mc- dress will be informal, but corsages back to the Ch,ib for turkey""':"'deelish . .. . . , :, .: ' . ,Th~ s~i' .of. the .sho';Y~; Margie a.nd Ewald Cheslik, who are playing Collough, Joan ~u~'cell and Jerry will be allowed, according to Delbert

Rho Gamma Zeta. threw.a surprise. boithday .. party. for. Anne <? ~r~en, . IS s~~tmg . q~letly . !~ .a c2l·-.. !~le, ~1:St . ~E,lli)te~,. th~ s,EOC;P'~g tru~!!!e_ ~!lce.~e _ ':,re .. CO~Vl.~~lr:~ .u~ _t~e . ~<lrd Burton, V -12, chairman of the event. H-· g'h St · d . "ght P' ., th t ' l th d k ere ner on the stage, a blank stare being and the mean old president of Lo- way that they Am t Gonna Gneve Edward . Sauer" completed the ' ar'-· u es a ur ay ill . mnm e ' a1 on·· e on ey w <. d f 1 j ., . • " h L d N M ' ;, S . k 'dl R th M' k Fl ' T t It M KIF . K _ emltte rom her gassy eyes. Up9I). wood Orphanage, respectively, are t e or 0 ore. 0 sorry, 1 ets,. rangements for the orchestra; Rob-

u moc , . orence ., e reau, ary · 0 ar, ranees ~s questioning her as to the · ,cam;;'! of seated together in a huddle appar- however we are unable to give fa- ert Chase is in charge of the decor-trzyk, M~ry Hu~hes, Noreen Gr~enway, R ?semary \ ~ar~m, the glassy stare, sh.e quickly hushed ently deciding the fate of the un- vorable comment on your version 'ations and the ticket committee is Eleanor Slmow~k1, Jane Przybylskl. Anne tells me she d hke us up with the exclamation: "Allow fortunate Jane. In reality,' Gara- of that fine old "U. of D." spiritual. under the direction of Wilber Craw-

· to have a birthday like that one 'every day. me to assure you that i am cOl).fident bino is giving forth with .one .0£ his The cast appears . to be working ford. Pat Chapman had a' little shindig over t' her house Friday of being better equipped to portray infamous, long, morbid, drawn-out and we appreciate their effort, and

after de dance. Bea LeFevre, brother Bob, Alice Marshall and the character "J ime Eyre," under stories. to show our deep appreciation we These dances are open to all stu­

dents on both campuses. So re- · member the Dinan Dance and 'th'e Benefit Ball this Saturday.

Dick Maguire were all havin' a fine time. the influenCE) of opium. I was for- The fiendish looking woman, with are hereby giving them a "plug." Betty Bondy and Bill 'Schroeder, members of the downtown tunate in obtaining some from my the wild, straggling hair completely "Plug" for Jane Eyre ...

Carid F campus, got themselves hitched recently at St. Martin's Church on the East Side.

Grace Darline just left to spend a couple of weeks in Mexico City. Right there to see her off were Mary Farber; Mary Kleekamp, Terry Natche and Elleonor Zywicki. '

Psi Omega had a big hay ride last Wednesday. Geee, isn't it too cold for that sort of stuff? Oh well, we should worry. There were 66 people in all who braved the winds and such. Some were Noreen Lutz and Ed Ribits, Teresa McCrocken and Dick Debinski, Irene Horodko and Mike Tropper, Pat Foley and Howard Mallen, Virginia Burke and Paul Butcher .

As you know, Sunday was D-Day for the Social Science Seminar discussion. Lots were there lookin' mighty interested includin' Ted' Schuett, Jerry O 'Keefe, Charlie Beaudet, Dick and Bill Gibbs. Girls have intellects too you know-{)r do you? Well, we saw Mary Guy, Pat Keller, Betty R epicky and Marilyn O'Connell.

Period. Now I can go home and eat ...

ST. LAWRENCE WEAR MEN'S

7412 W. McNichols UNiversity 3-4118

Gloves, Pajamas, Robes, Arrow Shirts and Ties, McGregor Sportswear, Dobbs Hats

Member of Gesu Parish -:- Westown Lions

Dial. CHerry 8800 for ' Home Del

/.

Chern Club Hol4s lAS Is Back on Campus; iJeffries Speaks Party in Union Martin Elected Chairman At Del.ta Theta December 9

The Chem Club will hold a party in the Union Room, December ' 9 at 8:30. ' "The party will be open to the entire student body, not just for members of the club," announced Mildred Sloch, chairman.

All arrangements for the social affair are under the direction of Bob Schmitt, Tom Cotter, Charlotte Wil­son, Dorothy Olemanski and Roy Craine. Music will be provided by a juke box and the pool tables will be moved out so that there will be plenty of room for dancing:

"A small admission charge will be made to help the club cover expenses," added Wanda Lamek, president of the Chem Club.

CAROL'S FLOWER SHOP

12131 Twelfth St.

TO-8S031 TO-89032

* CITY -WIDE DELIVERY

-also­OVERSEAS ORDERS

Are you

tired of

Thanksgiving

leftovers?

Come In

and

tty ours.

Peter Pan

The U of D student branch of the I This group is under the faculty Institute of Aeronautic~l Sciences I' su~ervisi?n of Mr. G. H. Tw(!ney, has reorganized after several years actmg dIrector of the. depart,?ent

. .. and registered consultant in Al~ro-of machvlty. nautical Engineering in Michi~n,

The I. A. S. is the national so- The first meeting was. conducted ciety for Hie advancement of Aero- to acquaint the newer l1w~ber~ 'of nautical ·Engineering. The student . ' .'. "'. the department with .. .,the . purpose of branch of the Institute is open to the I. A .. S: ' 'arid" :£;;1' : '~lection of men -now enrolled in the Aero- . . . nautical Department or majoring officers. Carl MartiI~, Aero senior, in l}"eronautical Engineering at the was u'nanimously chosen chairman; University. In normal times the John Prokop, senior, was elected membership is restricted to junior, Treasurer and , Ned Davenport, pre-senior and senior students, but senior, Secretary. because of present conditions, and All students of Aeronautical Eng­in order to' insure a smoothly func- ineering are invited to the next tioning organization, the member- I meeting to be held Thursday, Nov­ship is open to anyone enrolled in ember 30 in room 104 in the Eng-the Aeronautical department. i ineering building.

Joint Meeting The . three . Detroit chapters df.

Delta Theta Phi, professional la"'; fraternity, Hosmer Sena~e of the ....... ;:. , .. '-::,::,'._: U. of D., Cooley Senate of .;Detroit . • , College of Law, ~d .wa:rr\':~: Senate ;':~;Ii;/ of Wayne University, met m .il-. jOin,t', .. :.::o;-..; · Z, session in the Silver RooII). of ' t4, . ~ .!'? _"'-.. Detroit-Leland Hotel. The gu~st i)",. ':,<-:' ~~,/, honor for the evening was Mayor~. I" :.; ;' .. ;;,,: Edward Jeffries, an alumni member/\ ' 'f..;· . of the fraternity. Mayor Jeffries led. . a general group discussion on mu- ' nicipal activities in general after '/~~', . opening the meeting with some itf. , :~~ .. . troductory remarks on the place of a young lawyer in municipal gov-.ernment.

"Buy Cln Extra Bond today"

/'

With Victory comin' our way let's make

it swift and sure. Instead of letting up,

now, above all, is the time to give out­

with extra dollars, extra effort. Let's back

up our ,fighting men by keeping 'in there

pitching till the thing is cinched. Victory

takes something extra to win. Make it an

Extra War Bond ••• Today .•. Now!

Detroit Coca-Cola- Bottling Co. 3609 Gratiot

.j u U

Page 4: I /' e arslty ews

.<

Page 4 . T HE V A RS I T Y NEW S Wednesday; Nov:ember .29, 1944

Til AN:STANGLE, WI'THFT • WAYN:E, FRIDAY r=================;r+ ' . , Tol :I.~ ~ IBrazil NotS~re 01 Star~ing>Lin:e:up as Season ,Opens;

By Je"yR,eette IDrake to BrIng Strong SquaJto Play U 01 DMonJay John Corn-alias, I mean Cornelius 1 ' 1

Sokol has ·been asking the girls, I . - , ' . " . , and. only the girls, what ' bands . The Starting T earn? W'no , Knows? Power of Team to Remain Unkno'wn

Going Into First Game on Schedule;, Much to Depend on New Material

would they like to have after the " ' .,. basketball games. He also requests . that all the girls go to the game stag. What the girls would like I to know is will there be any men there, or will they be left to the i

I mercy of the *bas~etb:ll players. I Chick Cunningham, Phil Simon,

Paul ' Marcelli, and a host of other I playel'S from the Brewers, the touch- : ball tournament winners, have de-I' luged . the Sports Department with verbaL.. pro'tests, we hope they don't become physical, for ' not printing their pictures as wiriners. Well, we apologize. But' we use. as an excuse the adage ' tliat an ath,Iek is alwa~s I modest arid especially the above ones.

* * * Speaking of pictures. the Varsity

News Photographer, Frank' Clauss, has been makirig' a , fortune from th'ese : modest athletes, and not just I

. the above mentioned " ortes. Anyone who played- iIi the Frosh'-Soph Game, of which Clauss t60k pictures, has ordered ' from one' to a dozen.

. * ' * *

Large Crowd Expected to Attend Tilt Between Civilian and Soldier Teams; 8:00P. M Starting Time at Hackett

~ By JERRY GROBBEL Sports Editor

Titan cagers will be making their bid for fame on the hard'­wood floor at one minute after eight this Friday night. At that: time the 1944-45 basketball season will be under · way. The opposition for U of D's cagers that night will be Fort Wayne. With only three days to rest, the Titans will then take on Drake University -the following Monday.

. ", I. Bill' Pendergrass; one ' of . our j .

noted' athletes;' has recently been seen with an atrocious brown' ''stet­son." BlIt ask~ ' me to mention I

·tliat it's one of'Conn's super-special models. (This plug' was requested because ' Mr. Conn allowed Billy to tI'Y·;· on:' his' miner's hat-with ' the light on .and · everything.)

Just as the Titans lost their two tallest players earlier in the season and subsequently Joe Barta, so also Fort Wayne has been hit. They have lost three+--------~---"'-~-­key men within the last few weeks. The probable starters will be However, if their defeat of Phila- Pulte, O'Neill, Sokol, Malinowski, delphia, 33 to 23, is any indication and Prendergast, with the possi­of their 19S5 of power, it would have bilit'y ~f Joey Smit~ getting in if been better if they had lost a few he IS m shape. Other men oJ). the more men. The height' between the squad from which the second team teams will be almost identical but must come' are Tom Molitor, who the Ft., Wayne team will hav~ the has shown much promise, Mike edge ,in-exp'erience. Finney, .. Ed Clinton, Jack Dillon,

* * * Speaking; about · apparel, have' you

seen our newest authority· on what -the best dressed men' should year? I mean Gene Malinowski: He' is

. undoubtedly~ attemptmg to ' get a job as a clothing: salesman ' over the Christmas holiday:;; He has been recently: seen with not only · one, but two different su'its, with a white shirt and, a tie . .

When U of D meetS Drake' on i Gordon . Havey, Al Vagnetti, Jack . . ' McDonald, and Eppy Eppenbroch.

Monday mght the odds . Will be "From these men at least two top' against them. Drake is reported to rate basketball players must come'; have a team far superior to the said Brazil. ' Titans.. They ~ave ~any. letter men Difficulties have harassed practice

Lloyd Brazil, Titan basketba,11 coach, .discusses the strategy to be used 'against Fort Wayne, Friday; arid · ' returnmg, . which will . give them a very much. Brazil has at no time Dl:ake, Monday, with his veterans. From left ' to rig,itare Biazi~,Gene' Malinowski, Johnny Sokol, Bob ~ore exp:rienced .team. In addi- had more ' than 11 or 12 players at Prendergast, Danny O'Neill, and JOe Pulte: Tliese mm do ' not necessarily 'forin the first team, but they do bon to thls·,they WIll have an edge practice. And because of this he

hold precedence in experience. in height. has been unable to see a working .=============================================::.-==-=-:::=::.-======-;r::=========================~ Lloyd Brazil is . in no way sure combmation Of players, and also un-

by the return to the ' squad of J .oe I ' S·'...J I ' of the Titans startmg lineup nor able to form one. Friday night will,

R, " andom , ' eports

Smith, last year's most valuable > ',:" .~ '·aIU.'geacIA.'tey", of his five best 'men. He stated, how- be only the first or second time piayer. Smith however, will need ' ever, "Veterans will be given prefer- ' some of the cagers 'have been to-some time to get in shape and , since ence. New men must displace them, gether as a team. Brazil made he made his first appearance only as is usually the rule." A two-team the ironic statement that some of two weeks ago the clock may ru'i1 system is under serious considera- the players don't 'evert know,.'.each

By Bob Ryan out before he is ready to put ,forth ' tion by Brazil. Since very few of the other. However, this is becaiis~ of Start Inttamural With the opening game of the ' his best effort. . By'Timorless' players have sp.own anything out some of the men going to ' night basketb"all season a few days away Perhaps the greatest single reason ' Michigan, Georgia Tech, Purdue, of the

b ordinar~ it .is :ard

f to ~hoo~lel school and not because the squad S:eas:on ' Soon" ~t would be well if'we could figure why last year's season was so tJ.CLA and I all went down to de- . one a ove ano er, t ere ore :t WI lacks spirit. Accordmg to Brazil ·the

I

Just what sort of a season the team highly successful was the fact that feat last Saturday. Some of these be almost necessary to use thiS sys- team is very willing to play arid has '11 . I ' 11 b 'd d th f 11' were huml'll'atl'ng, others were clo' se tern. plenty of spirit. ',: So far tliere is only one team out WI enJoy. t WI . e consl ere a e e ows were In scrapping every

for intramural basketball. Unless highly successful year if the fellows second of every game, be they ~O and therefore made me feel a little '·-:" '1'; '·

entries are made before December finish with as high a percentage as points behind, or 50 points ahead. better about it. Out of the fifteen In the Sportlight ByJer~y Gr~.!?fier:-· 7, basketball will not start until last year's squad. I As charity covers a multitude of predictions, ten came throug win-after Chdstmas,according to Eddie In the first place this year's sChed-1 sins, so too, in the world of sports, ners with one tie, for an average of D # I d G ,..:] ,J3Clrl?t;lUr'; jptramurCll basketball di;' ule i,s mOuch more diffic1uldt tlhadn l~sht doe IS. ,cdompfetit~veksPir! cover a .714 for thfe79w5ee~'than3d5 an all~~imhe . anle ·· an .,':, :, ranulila l'ector. ' I year s. pe game is sc le u e Wlt I)TIU tltu e 0 mlsta es. "'~le men re- I average o. ,WI games rig t, , . :,' , : . ,

Four other teams were supposed Marquette, last year's toughest foe. maining from last year's team are nirte wrortg and ' one tie. On six . ·'clites, and ' hated dancmg . . . to make entries but, as yet, have In addition Rhode Island State, a few but they form the ' nucleus of of the ten games picked correctly here! Yes, it's Danny . ' he came . to' U of ,·D. failed ' to show up. ':We will have team which is reputed to be one this year's squad. The first glimmer I came within a six-point difference killer-diller of ladies, . :·'· Now Danny is by 110 means bash- .. intramural basketball if , only two of the best in the nation, has been of success must emulate from ' them. of the final score, while the others the belles of a couple of he li1i;es dates; arid is a rabid teams come out," stated Barbour, added t6the scpedule. I This question of spirit is the most were pretty far off. back,. is the athlete in ·: dancing fan. What a · ch~pge. :But "but I believe that more entries will The loss of Joe Barta (to 'che important issue that faces our boys . Well, for the last games of the light this week. This ' . something that didn't ~hailge when be made after Christmas." Anyone armed forces) is ' discouraging. Joe as they go forth on the hardwood. season to be played this Saturday~ ' of the hardwood floor is ~Danny entered U 'of D" in 1945 'Was < wishing to participate in intramural I never said much, he let ' his basket- If they meet the challenge success- First I'll take a chance on the 'his basketball ability. , Last',. Y'ei.ir, ·

, basketball should contact Barbour I ball speak for him. However, Barta's fully they shall collect a goodly Goodfellow Game between Mac- his first one her " Da: " ~ ·w·'·i;i." at the Field House. loss will be compensated for in part percentage of basketball scalps. kenzie and Rede.emer. Tino Sabucco r~gul~r on the ca~e:, ··~~~a.~>' :,\ .• ",;~,

! will lead the Stags to their ninth entire season. And 'is " ,~ · '

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straight victory, Mackenzie 19, Re- berth on ' this year's fi~~i: deemer O. Army will remgin unde- Danny !J.ttained a singti. feated by toppling the Middies; on lash year's base bit ' Army 21, Navy 7. Notre Dame fooled fact, hesh~uld be plii: me last week but I'm still down on D's HalC 6f Fame. ':'Er them, Great Lakes 13; Notre Dame only play~ron a Titail, ' ii.ll :team 7.. . ever to ~ firiish the., .~€as8n: ' witn a

Going on the less important games. 1000 batting ' a';erag~hJi~.\~gs ' UP at Georgia Tech will come back to the bat once, made one:jilt;' an:d· l:etjred winner's column this week, Tech from baseball. He th~~eby saved' his 14, Georgia 7. TCU will defeat reputation of being a perfect hitter SMU, TCU 14, SMU 7. Tulane will and made himself a veritable hero. eke out a victory over LSU, Tu- This a.thlete prides himself on lane 7, LSU 6. Rice will take. South- being ambidextrous. There, how-western, Rice 20, Southwestern 6. In ev:er, ,.~i:e : tw9 .... meanings for this other games, Texas 13, Texas A&M . : The first one is, "One who 7; VMI 7, Maryland 0; William and . both hands equally' well," the Mary 14, Richmond 0; Tulsa 40, 'other is, "A 'double-dealer; a hypo-Miami 0, in a breather; and Okla- crite." I guess Danny means the homa 27, Nebraska· O; ,·. former. I don't know whether he

In a few m6ie :g~hres . Arkansas prides himself about it but Danny will stop Arkansas . .'A&M, Arkansas is certainly not above the realm' of 7, A&M 6; Virginia 7, No: Cato- a practical joker. It seems on a trip lina 0, and in the last one of the home on the tram last year Danny day, Texas Tech 34, So. Plains woke up each and every member A.A.F. O. , " ',;," , . of the basketball team in the middle

That finishes predictions oif"foot- DANNY O'NEILL of the night "just for the heck of it." ball games for this year, ·'-:b;:,:t' l;U .It may have been a joke, but I don't take a crack at the various bowi his various episodes "With: pleasant get the practical part of it. games in a week or so. old ladies, but in coilsideration : 9£ If you wish to make a hit with this

Danny and Grandma I'll jusLover~ ambidextrous athlete ask him' about lqok them. ·.· Louise in Milwaukee. Or you might

.' ' However, I don't intend to over- ask him a.oQut the tim e he look Danny's basketball episodes., went swim~iI.1.g\without preparing His prowess in this sport was proven for it. Or you niig)1t·.even ask him when he made the high school AU- how he manages ·t2. :pl?Y such a good City Basketball Team in 1942. Visi- clean game of basket.balL And if tation High was Danny's stomping you're fool enough to ask him any ground during his high sC,hool days'l .of these. questions; Run.. . run While . there he was bashful, had like he-.

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