TIHE MICHIIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OC TOBER 30. 1934 Tau Beta Pi: Dinner meeting, fol- lowed by the election of new members, at the Union, 6:00 p.m. Varsity Glee Club: Rehearsal and meeting at 7:30, Glee Club Rooms. Will all members of the Varsity Glee Club please take notice: The Wait- ing List Club will not meet this week. Christian Science Organization: There will be a meeting of this Or- ganization tonight at 8 o'clock in the Chapel of the Women's League Build- ing. Students, alumni, and faculty members of the University are cor- dially invited to attend. Vanguard Club meets in Room. 304 in the Union. Professor Shepard, of the Psychology Department, will ad- dress the meeting on "The American Dream." All interested are invited. Children's Theatre Committee: There will be a meeting in the League at 5 p.m. for the following people. Those who are absent will' be dropped from the list: Marion Anderson, Mary Alice Baxter, Camela Bowman, Janet Brackett, Phyllis Brumm, Florence Carpenter, Betty L. Chamberlain, Elizabeth Chapman, Madelyn Coe, Janer Durham, Saxon French, Edith Forsythe, Josephine Gibson, Dorothy Groff, Jean Gourlay, Jeannette Grune, Martha J. Howard, Mary T. s Jaycox, Suzanne Johnson, Mary L. Johns, Ruth Ann Jernegan, Harriet z Kesselman, Jane Kretschner, Eliza- beth Miller, Mary A. McQuillan, Alice Morgan, Marjorie Morrison, Mary Potter, Ruth Rich, Lillian Ros- , en, Jean Royce, Ruth Sonnanstine, Nancy Sheppard, Miriam Stark, Olive Webb, Charlotte Rueger, Rowena' Goldstein, Mildred Goldberg, Anna G. Lamb, Mary L. Miller, Josephine Wilcox, Katherine Alexander, Cath- erine Peck, Elizabeth Butzel, Mary J. Clark, Margaret Ballard, Grace Bart- ling, Josephine Scott, Virginia Spray. Hillel Players: Meeting for all those who wish to try out for acting or technical positions on the three-act 11 play to be produced by the Hillel Players, at 7:30 p.m., at the Hillel Foundation. If you cannot be pres- i ent, leave your name and telephone number at the Foundation. Sea Scouts, Eagle Scouts: All Sea Scouts and Eagle Scouts are invited to meet in Room 302, Michigan Un- ion at 7:30 p.m. Faculty Woman's Club, Tuesday Afternoon Play Reading Section: The first meeting will be held today at 2:15 in the Alumnae Room of the Michigan League. Elective Tap Dancing: The elective tap dancing class meets on Tuesday g evenings at 8:00 in Barbour Gym- nasium. This class is open to anyone m interested. 4y y Coming Events Students in Hygiene and Public Health and Others Interested: Three moving picture reels, entitled "Per- sonal Hygiene for Young Men," "Per- - sonal Hygiene for Young Women," and "General Hygiene," have been obtained from the United States 11 Public Health Service. These films will be shown in ,the West Amphi- theatre of the West Medical Build- s ing from 5:00 to 6:00, Oct. 31. Electrical Engineers: Meeting of the student branch of the A.I.E.E. k Thursday, Room 246 W. Eng., 7:30 y p.m. All Electricals including fresh- men are urged to attend. Refresh- ments. r Alphia Nu will hear tryout speeches by those applying for membership, at 7:00 p.m. in the Alpha Nu Room, 4th s floor Angell Hall, Wednesday, Oct. n 31. Following the tryouts, at 7:30, a pledge debate will be held on the e proposition - Resolved, That all state s and local judges should be appointed by the governor. An open forum dis- d cussion of this topic will be held fol- e lowing the debate. LaFollette Arrays Progressives For Election CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY STUDENT LAUNDRY. Good soft CLASS IFIEI)water. Will call fo and deliver. Telephone 4863. 3x AD)VERTISING; STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rca.- Place advertisements with Classified sonable. Free delivery, Phone 3006 Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. 9x The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion._ Box numbers may be secured at no PERSONAL laundry service. We take e tra charge, individual interest in the landry cash in advance-lie per reading line idvda neeti h anr as(on basis of five average words to problems of our customers. Girls' line) for one or two insertions. silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- oreeseing line for three or anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594 Telephone rate -15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 611 E. Hoover. 2x 14c perreading line for three or - __ more insertions. WNE 10% discount if paid within ten days WANTED from the date of last insertion. -- Minimum three lines per insertion. OLDER STUDENT experienced ir By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one care of furnace to work for 1o month \....... .. ................e .aeo uncet okfrro 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months.......3c Address, Box 25B, Michigan Daily. 2 lines daily, college year .....:..7c 4 lines E.O.D., college year........7c 100 lines used as desired .........9c WANTED: Two girls to share small 300 lines used as desired........Be apartment with third party, on 1,OQO lines used as desired.......7c 2,000 lines used as desired ......6c half block from campus. Expenses The above rates are per reading line, exceedingly low. Call Lillian Brazil based on eight reading lines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 220 South Thayer. 6c per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10cd per line to above rates for bold face suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 dol- capital letters. lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- The above rates are for 71, point lr.PoeAnAbr40.Ci type. cago Buyers. Temporary office, 201 North Main. 7x NOTICE _PROFESSIONAL SERVICES THE ENGLISH-AMERICAN tailoring company, one of the oldest and larg- FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES est concerns in the United States, artistic piano tuning. Terms ra announces a line of made to meas- ure suits priced as low as $21 up. sonable. Phone 6328. lx Liberal allowance made on your old VOCAL STUDIO: Grace Johnson suit. The Fair. 200 N. Main St. 7xa Konold, former instructor in Uni versity School of Music, announce FINANCE CO. offers bargamns in re- the opening of her 'vocal studio fo possessed and repurchased cars. beginners and advanced student Many 1934 cars with low mileage 1908 Austin Ave. Phone 4855. 8x included. We will trade and extend 198AsiAv.Poe45. x convenient terms. Open evenings. WATCH REPAIR SERVICE: Backe 311 W. Huron. Ph..2-3267. lox by our own factory facilities. Burr LAUNDRY Patterson & Auld Co. Manufactur ing Fraternity Jewelers and Sta STUDENT SPECIAL: Rough dry 8c tioners, 603 Church St. pound. Shirts, beautiful hand fin- - ish, 10c extra. Home Hand Laun- FOR RENT - APARTMENTS dry. 520 E. Liberty, 628 Packard. Phon 889. 5x APARTMENT with private bath ant Phone 8894. 5x shower. Law student desires room LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. mate. Dial 8544. 422 E. Washingtoi Careful work at low price. 4x ---- ---- ---- --- -______--LOST AND FOUND tion to the general public here for the first time. LOST: Blue R.O.T.C. manual, voluni t i tfour, in Room 2231 Angell Ha Intramural Director Rowe will add Monday morning. Will finder pleas another sport to his already large a 2. program for minor athletes in the LOST: Rhinestone bracelet. Finde University, a rifle team this time be- please phone 7118. ing the subject of his endeavor. x *FOR SALE Frank Springer, celebrated author- - -I t- 1ity on fossils of the natural museum MAN'S COONSKIN coat large size ty nfsiso h aua uem $25. Phone 5254. 613 Hill St. at Washington, has sent the geology $ P _ne department a collection of 300 species of fossil crinoids in exchange for CAMPUS CIGAR STORE material given by the University museum. Meeting Place For Socia ble Fellows Arrangements are being made for the annual floral exhibition given Full line of Pipes, Tobacco, under the auspices of the Botanical Candy, and Soft Drinks. department on the main floor of 521 EAST LIBERTY ST. Memorial Hall., _____ _ _ _ -associated Press Photo The peculiar political lineup behind Sen. Robert M. La Follette, Jr., (upper right) in the Wisconsin off-year election promises to make the latter one of the most interesting of a number of significant ballot battles to be decided November 6. La Follette, heading a "Progressive" ticket, has received support both from administration and Republican sources, while Wisconsin voters have heard the administration does not favor the Democratic nominee, John M. Callahan (upper left). John B. Chapple (lower right) is the regular Republican candidate. MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY fantasia section. MABEL ROSS RHEAD - A Review Quia respexit .. . Jean Titelouze Deposuit Potentes The University Symphony Orches- (Alter Ver).........1563-1633 tra opened its series of Sunday after- Gloria Patri et Filio noon concerts in Hill auditorium this While the registration of these Latin week with Earl V. Moore conducting hymns will no doubt sound strange to the Overture to Rosamunde, the Schu- modern ears, it should be noted that thI vruet osmne h cu the pieces themselves wer e wr itten for mann First Symphony, and the Saint- the Praetorius organ and in the six- Saens Second Concerto with Mabel teenth century. Ross Rhead at the piano. First Chorale in E Major .Franck It is one thing to take a body of After an impressive introduction in finished artists and conduct a suc- which the Great and Swell organs are cessful concert, and it is quite an- effectively contrasted, the chorale other to take an aggregation of mu- proper is announced. This in turn sicians in the making, in various de- forms the basis of a number of free grees of technical and artistic de- variations culminating in a final velopment, and weld them into a satis- statement with the full organ in which factory instrument of musical expres- the manual and pedal organs answer sion. In this difficult task Dr. Moore in a similar manner to that of the succeeds to an astonishing degree. introduction using the chorale melody. The Overture to Rosamunde was Scherzo ................... Doty played with spontaneity and delight- Legende .................. Bossi ful delicacy. One of the lesser known, although The subtlety and obscurity of the fairly imposing, compositions by Schumann seemed a little ambitious Italy's leading organist of the latter for a newly assembled group of stu- nineteenth century. dent musicians but the effect was not Toccata from Fifth Organ at all that of mere ambition. The Symphony ............. Widor opening of the Larghetto especially Widor has succeeded here, as in was played with impressive clarity, several other of his eight organ sym- Mrs. Rhead was very much at home phonies, in writing music broad in the Saint-Saens Concerto. It enough in scope to effectively pre- abounds in the delicate pianissimo sent the grandeur of the organ as scale and arpeggio passages of which an instrument. The performance to- she has such mastery. The orchestra day is by request. and Mr. Moore gave her a splendid ' accompaniment. -M.L. E. William Doty, instructor in organ at the School of Music will give the following organ recital, WednesdayI afternoon at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Audi- torium, to which the general public with the exception of small children{ is invited without admission charge: Concert Overture in1 F Minor .............. Hollins j From the Daily files of November 1, 1914 When the new science building is completed, Michigan will have one of the finest herbariums in the West. Complete specimens of nearly all plants and fungi of plants and trees will be displayed and put on exhibi- I Thic nrem ncit-int vhihif-c thn camo .1 1I us coposUiiti exiiss Lilt:same Freshman Glee Club: Regular re- fine gift for melodic writing which hearsal Wednesday, Oct. 31, prompt- characterizes the Overtures in C ly at 5 p.m. in Music Rooms at the i Minor and C Major. In form it re- Union. sembles slightly a free fantasia and fughetta closing with a return of the Pi Tau Pi Sigma rushing smoker Wednesday night, 7:30, at the Union. 15c TO 6-- 25c AFTER 6 Room posted. All members urged to1 attend. Uniforms requested.I W H ITN EY e" , ,I- e _ TREE CENTURIES AGO Anthony Van Leeuwenhoek made the first microscope. For over two centuries microscopes were priceless instruments obtainabe by only a ew. Today Bausch & Lomb manufactures microscopes of unsurpassed qual- ity for every purpose at a price that makes them readily avail- able to Science, Industry and Education. Bausch $ Lomb Optical Co., 635 St. Paul Street, Rochester, New York. 10% -Baus'ch & LoMb ,_ A MICHIGAN --- ENDS TONIGHT The most charming - the most intelligent musicai picture to come out of Hollywood Yo"'1l Be LDelighted!', fStump Speakers Society of Sigma Rho Tan regular training meeting will begin Wednesday at 7130 at the Un- ion. Circle meetings will be held be- fore the Assembly, hence it is impor-, tant that all members be present on time. Any member who will be un- able to. attend his circle meeting should notify his circle leader before the meeting. A discussion on the ad- vantages and disadvantages of the slide rule will be held during the as- sembly and plans for further debate work will also be discussed. National Student League will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Room 302, Union. All interested are invited. Daily 1:30 -11 P.M. Last Day WILLIAM HAINES TED FIO RITO JUDITH ALLEN Young and Beautiful . . MATINEES 30c I MAJESTIC NIGHTS CHILD3EN ENDS 40c le s 2o JANET GAYNOR LEW AYRES "SERVANT'S ENTRANE" --Tomorrow TWO EXCELLENT FIRST-RUN FEATURES A happy-go-lucky guy whose whole life was a OFFERED joke . . on himself' H ER LIFE TO SAVE HIS! -- Tomorrow TWO FEATURES! JACK LaRUE THELMA TODD "Take the - Added WALT ISNEY Cartoon "Wise Little Hen- PETE SMITH Oddity "Stri es and Spares- GOOFY MOVIES -- NEWS r~J1JJ S;I " - AST TIMES TODAY 0 COMING THURSDAY 4 But she ran away from ,.. isc lava I I l' - ON THE STAGE II If *;-~ - ______ x,~ ~