PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN ,DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1934 .1111 mmlmlll In I I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .,, _-+ht - MI i on is+itivie notipe to all members of the Unversity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President L- .b1 5:.v, L., .11. ott. ~ uw ity. TH'ii E;A1 Y, O..()ifBEk '4,i19:4 'VOLXLVNO, 9 Notices Former Camp Fire Girls, Girl Scouts, and Girl Reserves who are I interested in Alpha Gamma Sigma, women's organization composed of members of these groups, are invit- ed to call 21794 or 3592 and give their names and telephone numbers before Saturday evening. To the M. mbrs (f the University Ccum i: 'hc fr runeutn for the year 1 . i$ >vl be hi Id 0] ]VIon- day, Ot. 8, t 4: I, p. i, in Room 1009 /Ar %1! P::l. I Theatre and Art Committee of the LcuiS A. floftLinsil League: There will be a short meeting Secictary, Uiversity Council at 5 p. in. on 1riday, Oct. 5. Notify the chairman, Sue Calcutt at 22543, Notice to Freshmen: Those students if absence is necessary. This commit- who have not yet taken the tests tee includes the following: required for all entering freshmen Marion Anderson, Betty Ann Bar- will be expected to make up these thel, Ruth E. Boomhawer, Lucy Car- examinations on Thursday and Fri- tozian, .Helen .Compton, .Francis day, Oct. 4 and 5, in Room 1025 An- Drake, Eloise Fliteraft, Louise Florez, ~gell Hall. Louise French, Dorothy Geldhart, S H h isdteEg.he-Jean Marie Greenwald, Ardell Hardy, Those who missed the English ex- Rachel Lease, Elizabeth Long, Marie aiaock Thursdyl , Oct. 4. Thosewho Mette, Betty McOmber, Elizabeth Nic- missed the Psychological examina- ol, Virginia Randolph, Elsie Roxbor- tion should report at three o'clock ough, Mary L. Schwendt, Mildred Fiday, Octh. 5. Shapley, Helen Strand, Laura Zim- merman, Ona J. Thornton, Eleanor These tests take precedence over M. Christensen, Ruth Goutremont, all other appointments including class Catherine V. Koch, Rosanna Man- work. Be on time. chester, Janet Ruth Neaman, Frances Work will be completed in time for Odell, Elizabeth Moore, Jean Keller, students to attend the five o'clock Charlotte Whitman, Grace Gray, hygiene lectures. Marietta Martinek. Ira M. Smith, Registrar Faculty, College of Literature,, All Freshmen wishing to pledge a Science, and the Arts: Attendance re- uld exchange their Interfrmaster port cards are being distributeds .e.r through Department Offices. Instruc- Council registration receipt for a tors are requested to report absences preference slip at the office of the to my office in accordance with the f Dean of Students (Room 2 Univ. Hall) between 8:00 a. m. and 12:30 p. m. -rules printedon tse cards. Friday, Oct. 5. These preference slips W. R. Humphreys, must be filled out and returned to Assistant Dean the same room between 1:30 and 5:00 p. m. Friday, Oct. 5. Women Students Attending the piFdyO. Chicago-Michigan Football Game:) Women students wishing to attend Academic'Notices the C4iicago-Michigan football game are required to register in the Office German 1, new Section 14 (Mr. of the Dean of Women. Striedieck) will meet in Room 12 A letter of permission from parents East Hall, MTuThF at 9:00 a. m. must be received in the Dean of Women's Office not later than Thurs- day,, Oct. 11. If a student wishes to Ponselle Program: Rosa Ponselle, go otherwise than by trai'n special Soprano, assisted by Stuart Ross, permission for such mode of travel pianist, will give the following pro- must be inclded1 in the parent's let- gram in the opening Choral Union ter. Concert, Wednesday evening, Oct. 24, Aria, "Merce Dilleto Amiche" " Vespri Siciliani")....... Verdi Miss Ponselle Two Spanish Dances: Cordabo, Malaguena .............. Lecuona Mr. Ross A Memory ...........Rudolph Ganz Dedication .. ....R. Schumann To the Birds .............. G. Hue A Slumber Song of the Madonna.........Michael Head Love's in My Heart ......Woodman Miss Ponselle Other attractions to be heard in1 the Choral Union series include, Law. rence Tibbett, Nov. 1; Don Cossackj Chorus, Nov. 19; Josef Szigeti, Dec. 3; Boston Symphony Orchestra, Dec. 11; Lotte Lehmann, Jan. 25; Jose It- urbi, Feb. 12; Gordon String Quartet, Feb. 20; Artur Schnabel, March 4; and the Cleveland Symphony Orches- tra, March 28. Exhibitions A memorial exhibition of the paint- ings of Gari Melchers will be shown in the West Gallery of Alumni Me- morial Hall until Oct. 14, inclusive. This exhibition is open from * 1:30 o'clock to 5:00 p. m. every day includ- ing Sundays and is sponsored by the Ann Arbor Art Association. Events Today Applied Mechanics Colloquim: First meeting of the year in Room 445 West Engineering Building. Pro- fessor Timoshenko will speak on "Laboratories in Europe." Details of the meetings for the year will be dis- cussed at this meeting. First In Line CLASSIFIED DIRECTORI -1 [7 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with classified Advertising Department. 'F1hc ne 2-1214. The classified columns cio., -,t five o'clock previous to day of 'iiiertion. Box numbers may b3 securd at!no extra charge. Cash in advance-11c per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertiuns. lOc per reading line for three or more insertions. Mi~nlinun r lines per insertion. Telephone rate -15c plr reatng ine$ for one or two insre'tidns :. ,4c per read::,iline , .-t:r e o0 more insertions. 10mi discount if paid in tii(laya from the date of: i;, rtxi Minimum three lines per Iiertion. By contract, per ine- 2 li1(; dally, one mlonth.......................8c; 4 lines E.O.D.. 2 mon ths . . c 2 lines daily. colleg e yemr........7c 4 lines E.Q.D., collegre year ........7c 100 lines used as deired..........9c 300 lines used as desired........Be 1.000 lines used as desired ........7c 2,000 lines used is desired ........6c The above rates are per reading ine. based on eight reading line; lerin cili. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 6c per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to abode lfor bold face, upper and lower case. Add 1e per line to above rates; for hold faceI capital letters. The above rates are for 71 point type. FOR RENT - HOUSES FQR RENT: Small house near cam- pus and downtown. Furnished or unfurnished. 1412 Geddes. Phone 5316. FOR RENT - ROOMS DOUBLE ROOM: Clean and cheerful.! Reasonable. 802 Oakland. Phone 7686. SINGLE room for woman in Apt. 1. 238 S. Thayer, west of Hill Audi- torium. Phone 3839.1 FOR RENT - APARTMENTS TWO-ROOM apartment. Excellent1 location. 1115 S. University. FOR RENT: Apartment with private- bath and shower for 3 or 4 men. Law student desires roommate. 422 E. Washington. Phone 8544, also front double room at 426 E. Wash- ington. 3-ROOM furnished apartment. Pri- vate bath. No other roomers. Suit- able for student and wife. 525 S. Division. TWO-ROOM APARTMENT., private bath, prefer married couple. 727 F. Kinsley. LAUNDRY STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006 9x REASONABLE prices for student laundry. Hand work. Soft water. Call for and deliver. Phone 5288. LOST AND FOUND LOST.,: Small red fountaiuNpen,. Be- tween U. High and Washtenaw. Call 3556.- LOST: A pair of silver rimmed ghasses ins a3soft baklahr(S5.Ls Saturday b etwen League and 820 Hill St. Return to 820 Hill or ihone 8907. LOST: White, black-eared female pup. Three months old. has green collar. Call 2-2481. LOST: Gold bar pin. Black cameo. Reward. Call Mary E. Davy, 396 Jordan Hall. LOST: Gamma Phi BEda pin. Sunday morning on S. University or Wil- liam Sts. or on diagonal. Phone Marie Murphy, 2-2217. Reward. HELP WANTED WANTED: Student registered phar- macist, Alterniate evenings and Sundays. Campus Drug Co. Ypsi- lanti, Mich. Phone 1708. PROFESSIONAL SERVICES FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES Call the Kempf Music Studios for artistic piano tuning. Terms rea- sonable. Phone 6328. lx STUDENTS wanted to have their pic- tures taken. Reduced prices: one 8x10 portrait in frame, only $2.00. Campus Studio, 311 S. State St., second floor. A.S.C.E.: There will1 at the Union at 7:30. be a meetingI J,.~ 3 t f 1 Graduate women are invited to register in the office. Byrl Fox Bacher, Assistant Dean of Women Cheral Union Ushers: Sign up at Hill Auditorium Box office Thursday or Friday between 4:30 and 5:30 p. m. R.O.T.C.: Measurements will be taken for basic and advanced course uniforms today between the hours 8:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. at 8:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium: Aria, "Divintes du Styx" ("Alceste") Miss Ponselle . ... Christoph Gluck, Chi Vuol Comprar' La Bella Calandrina .....Niccolo Jommelli A L'Aime............. Fontenailles Guitares et Mandolines . Saint-Saens Der Erlkoenig...........Schubert Miss Ponselle Theme and Varia- tions ........ Corelli-Tartini-Ross Etude in A Major .......... Chopin Etude in C Minor .......... Chopin Mr. Ross A. 1. Ch. E.: First meeting, 7:30 in the Seminar room (3201), East En- gineering Bldg. Prof. G. G. Brown1 will speak on a topic of interest to Chemical Engineers. A special elec- tion will also be held. All interested, includiing freshmen, are cordially in- vited to attend. Refreshments. Varsity Glee Club: Regular re- hearsal of the Varsity Glee Club at 7:30 p. mn. at the Glee Club rooms in the Union. All old and new men are expected to be present and on time. Vanguard Club meeting at the Michigan Union at 7:30 p. m. Mr. Milsie in conjunction with several local relief workers will lead a dis- cussion on the local relief strike which occurred this summer. Visitors are cordially invited to attend. Michigan Dames: The Art Group of of the Michigan Dames will meet at the home of Mrs. G. Carl Huber, 1330 Hill Street, this evening, at eight o'clock. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to all Dames interested in this group. As this is the first meet- ing, a large attendance is urged. Open Field Hockey for all interest- ed at 4:15, Palmer Field. A team from the players who have been prac- ticing will play the Ann Arbor Hockey Club. Coming Events Cosmopolitan Club will meet for the first time Saturday, Oct. 6, 8:00 p. m., Lane Hall. President Alexander G. Ruthven will deliver an address of welcome to the new foreign stu- dents on the campus. These students as well as other foreign students and any Americans interested in the ideals' of cosmopolitanism are cordially in- vited to attend. Plans for further or- ganization of the club will be dikcuss- ed at this meeting. Program and refreshments. Hillel Players: Those wishing to tryout for roles in the two one-act plays to be presented by the Hillel Players on Oct. 21, must be at the Hillel Foundation, Friday afternoon at five o'clock for a short meeting. Tryouts for technical work, acting, business staff, and directing must be present. All members, and all stu- dents eligible to engage in outside :activities may try out. Congregational Dance in the church parlors, Friday, Oct. 5. Con- gregational students and their friends invited. Ping-pong, bridge. Hike and Canoeing for Graduate Students: The Graduate Outing Club, -Associated Press Photo George Harle, to make certain he would get a good World Series seat, parked himself outside a gate at Sportsman's park in St. Louis five full days before the Cards and the Detroit Tigers move to St. Louis after the first two games in Detroit- Kelsey Takes Position At Cranbrook School Hubert Kelsey, former secretary to Prof. George R. LaRue of the zoo]pgy department, has left the University to take a position as secretary of the Cranbrook institute of science at Bloomfield, Michigan. Mr. Kelsey entered the Medical School here in 1924 but transferred to the literary college. For several years after graduation he did gradu- ate work in the English department. He served as secretary to Professor LaRue for the past nine years in con- nection with the work of the Univer- sity biological station. EXTRADITION DELAYED JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Oct. 3- u?) --Extradition of H. Henry Bloom from Kansas to Alpena County, Mich., was again delayed Tuesday when the Missouri Supreme Court opened the way for his attorneys to take his case to the United States Supreme Court. which is an informal campus organi- zation, is sponsoring a combined hike and canoe trip for all graduate stu- 'dents who care to attend. The group will meet on the steps of Angell Hall Sunday afternoon at 3:00 and will return about seven or eight after sup- per near the river. It will be possible to hike out and back and pay 25c for supper, or to canoe half the time and hike half at a cost of 50c with supper included, or for 75c to canoe all the way, supper included. Those ,who are going should sign one of the G. O. C. notices, indicating at the same time which of these three arrangements they wish to make. Sign not later than 6:00 Saturday on one of the following bulletin boards: 'Library, Angell Hall basement, Main Engineering near Engineering Libra- ry, west door of Natural Science Audi- torium. WUERTH TODAY ONLY ---DOUBLE FEATURE BOLES in---- JOHN "WILD GOLD" tnd RAMON NOVARRO in "LAUGHING BOY" --- TOMORROW HAL LEROY in "HAROLD TEEN" and WARREN WILLIAM in 'yUPPER WORLD" Continuous Daily 2 to 11 15cto 6 P.M. 25c after 6 PERSONAL laundry service. We take I individual interest in the laundry STwenty Years go problems of our customers. Girls silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- From 4h Daily files of anteed. Men's shir4y our specialty Call for and deliver. Phone 5594. 611 E. Hoover. 2x FROM THE DAILY FILES OF OCTOBER, 4, 1914 STUDENT SPECIAL: Rough dry 8c OCllinguptOelargpound. Shirts, beautiful hand fin- Rolling up the largest total that a ish, 10c extra. Home Hand Laun- Michigan team has ever scored in the dry. 520 E. Liberty, 628 Packard. eighteen games against the Cleve- Phone 8894. 5x landers, the Varsity ran wild on Case -- yesterday afternoon in a 69 to 0 game. STUDENT LAUNDRY. Good soft * water. Will call for and deliver. Freshmen and sophomores will Telephone 4863. 3x settle class grudges under the auspices LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sax darned. of the Student Council and with the Careful work at low price. 4x sanction of the University authorities Carefu _ ___k______pric. _4_ on Ferry Field at 9:30 o'clock, next WANTED Saturday morning. * * * WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW' All contributions in the contest for suits. Will play 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- writing the music of the 1915 Union lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- opera must be submitted by October cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 30 at the Union. North Main. 7x Four hundred seventy-three Uni- READ THE versity women arenow members of CLASSI FI ED ADS the omens Legue ta" . ..,... ,y _ . Theatregoers of this city may pre- pare themselves for the pictorial treat of a lifetime when Annette Kellerman, "The Diving Venus with Form Di- vine," appears here October 14 in the film masterpiece of the world, "Nep- tune's Daughter." * . When the new reinforced concrete football stand is thrown open to the public for occupancy at the Vander- bilt game, the first unit of the most perfectly designed concrete stadiumk in America will be finished. Fountain Pens - Typewriters -EXPERT SERVICE-- 302 SOUTH STATE STREET ' MAJESTIC INSTRUCTIONS Every form of dancing. Open 10 to 10. Terrace Garden Studio. Wuerth Theatre Bldg. Ph. 9695 Ii Ai 15c to 6 25c after 6 -T---'CODA Y-FRIDAY--- JACK HOLT FAY WRAY MOON"" - and- CONWAY TEARLE NOEL FRANCIS F IF TEEN - EXTRA NOW ON SCREEN First ord Series Game: DETROIT vs. CARDINALS CHORAL UNION 56th Annual Series OCTOBER 24- ROSA PONSELLE Renowned prima donna of the Metropolitan and- other operas. NOVEMBER 1- LAWRENCE TI BBETT Distinguished in opera, con- cert, the radio, and the movies. NOVEMBER 19- DON COSSACK RUSSIAN CHORUS SERGE JAROFF, Conductor The "Singing Horsemen of the Steppes." Thirty-six ex- patriated former officers of the Imperial Russian Army. DiECEMBER 3- JOSEF SZIGETI Hungarian violin virtuoso. A favorite throughout Europe and America. DECEMBER 11- BOSTON SYMP HONY ORCH ESTRA SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor. 110 players in the fourth con- secutive annual An Arbor concert. JANUARY 25- LOTTE LEHMANN World renowned prima don- na in her first Ann Arbor concert. FEBRUARY 12- JOSE ITURBI Eminent Spanish pianist and conductor in recital. FEBRUARY 20- GORDON QUARTET JACQUES GORDON, First Violinist RALPH SILVERMAN, Second Violinist PAUL ROBYN, Viola NAOUM BENDITZKY, 'Cellist MARCH 4- ARTUR SCHNABEL Recognized world exponent of Beethoven music in an "all Beethoven" program. MARCH 28- .,CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA ARTUR RODZINSKI, Conductor A forefront orchestra under a dynamic leader in an Ann Arbor debut. SEASON TICKETS (with $3.00 May Festival cou- 0 r' "POOR CINDERELLA" - Amazing Cartoon in Color - WORLD SERIES PICTURES I We advertise in order that the public may better understand what the Bell System is doing, and why it does it. In this way we keep customers and prospective customers informed of our aims, policies and progress. We advertise in order to aid the telephone customer in making the best possible use of his service. As our advertising influences one person after another to use the telephone more effectively, the service rendered every other user is correspondingly improved. We advertise because we have a varied service to sell and by selling more of it we increase its value to each user. Because of the nature of the telephone business, it is our duty to inform the public contin- uously of the character and varied kind of service we provide. In line with this broad plan, we find real opportunity in addressing messages to college and university peo- ple in their, own publications, just as we also vary our S--- Saturday -- JOAN CRAWFORD CLARK GABLE in "CHAINED" Il r IT, 1 e w. . ., .w ,, ,. ,: A.r _ ..: _ t. _. . . ._ ._ MICHIGAN ANOTHER BIG SHOW On Stage and Screen! -"R-mmm-91 P HILO VANCE TACKLES I ---ON STAGE A Brilliant Diversified Program - starring t4 m- CI V I I'"'fiV f"IDI C" I I I I 1111 1111