THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2,1938 Navy Aviator's Topic Today Is FlyingCareer To Discuss Opportunities In Naval Reserve Cadet Corps For College Men Lieut. C. F. Greber, commandant of the Grosse Ile Naval Reserve Avia- tion Base, comes to Ann Arbor today to speak to all students interested in an aviation,. career with the cadet corps of the United States Naval Re- serve. His'lecture will start at 7:30 p.m. in Room 348, West Engineering Building. Attentiokhas been drawn to the op- portiunities the Cadet Reserve offers aeronautical engineering graduates in the 1,000 hours of solo flying it gives, in the $1,500 bonus at the end of the four years training period, and in the attractive salary paid the Cadet throughout his training period. An applicant, before embarking on the regular training courses at Pensa- cola, is put through a month's test period at the Grosse Isle Base, to de- termine his aptitude for flying. Fol- lowing graduation from the Pensacola school the cadet is designated a naval aviator and ordered to duty with the aircraft squadrons of the United States Fleet for the remaining year of his course. Ben East, Explorer Union Now Has "Squad Room' To Provide For Visiting Athletes Lt. Col. Roosevelt Opponents Able To Relax hi Special, Third-Floor Quarters For 16 Guests Visiting athletic teams, weary from their exertions against a Michigan aggregation, no longer have to put up with Ann Arbor's somewhat trying, room arrangements since the com- pletion of the "squad room" in the new addition to the Union. The room, located on the third floor in the addition and designed primarily to give visiting teams cheap and comfortable accommodations, can accommodate 16 men on individ- ual spring beds equipped with inner spring mattresses. Ample wardrobe space is supplied by built-in cabinets containing chests of drawers and! room for hanging suits of clothes. The windows of the room 'are set about five feet off the floor, affording its occupants a great degree of pri- vacy and are so placed as to provide cross ventilation to fan the brow of the weary athletes. Assuming that the athletes will not always have ex- erted themselves to the point of ex- haustion, the designers of the room placed the lights flush. to the ceiling so that they cannot be broken by, as Stanley G. Waltz, manager of the Union puts it, "pillow fights and _... rooms, each modeled on the one now existing. In past years, visiting teams had to put up with cots set up in the third floor meeting rooms of the Union, or try a catch-as-catch-can arrange- ment for rooms in local boarding houses or hotels. "That system," re- membered Mr. Waltz, "was as hard I on us as it was on the boys, because moving the cots in and out of the rooms was hard on the woodwork and floors." British Professor Spea ks o moPOW (Continued irom Page 1) Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, is in the United States at the present time to give a series of lectures at the Met- ropolitan Museum of Art in New York. He is also lecturing at New York Uni- versity and conducting a lecture tour throughout the country. This sum- mer he will return to Paris to take charge of the exhibitions in connec- tion with the International Congress Df Persian Art to be held there. He has been connected with the' French embassy in Persia and has tcen director of the French Institute of Musulman Art and Archaeology in 3 ing P any on at Sci Bot chc "RF gar at Sd mc Cl not "V IM the Se off Co r ho ti Mc Professors Will Address Meetinos Here, Three professors will address meet- s here today. Prof. William C. Steere of the bot- y department will deliver a paper "The Mosses of Arctic America" 4:30 p.m. in Room 1139 Natural ence. Building at a meeting of the tanical Seminar. Prof. Edward B. Greene of the psy- ology department will speak on ecent Approaches to Mental Or- nization Through Factor Analysis" 7:30 p.m. in Room 3126 Natural ience Building at the ai-weekly etia of the PsychologicaI Journal ub. Prof. William Haber of the eco-" 7mics department will speak on en and Machines" at 10 a.m. at e second Ann Arbor Social Service1 minar, which will be held at the bce of the Hoover Ball & Bearing; ., 326 E. Hoover St. OUrnal iC i .o To Hld Mathematics [)iSclISSiOU The Mathematics Journal Club will ld its weekly meeting at 3 p.m. to-- oirow in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Donat K. Kazarinoff, and Doctors orris L. Kales and Merrill E. Shanks, the mathematics department, will cuss some leading articles of in- rest recently published in mathe- atical journals. Concert Band Plays At Ypsilanti Tonight The University Concert Band will play a concert tonight in Pease Audi- torium, Ypsilanti, under the sponsor- ship of the combined business clubs of the city,according to Prof. Wil- liamn D. Revelli, director. Proceeds of the concert are to be used to purchase new uniforms for the Ypsilanti Girls' Drum and Bugle corps. The program to be presented will range from the works of old mas- ters to such modern American works as "The Mardi Gras" from Ferde Grofe's "Mississippi Suite." In addition to playing concerts, the band has initiated a weekly broad- cast over radio station WMBC, De- troit. It goeson the air every Fri- day at 4:45 p.m. According to Pro- fessor Revelli, one of the required selections for the State Music Fes- tival is included every week so that bands and conductors throughout t1 ie state may be aided in preparing numbers with their own organiza- tions. thletes' Job: ,Dependent On R ulhveB, W c-_ett Says (Continued from Page 7 "There is no secret about th2 fact that Michigan, boys work at Ford',." he continued. "So do students of other colleges. That these boys are in many cases athletes is not unusual. The nature of industry requires the young and strong, and there are no sinecures in it." Ben East, explorer and outdoor writer for the Ann Arbor News, will speak here tonight an experiences in a haunting and scientific trip he took to nortbern Canada last awn- mer- McCALLISTER TALK OFF Ralph McCallister, (tirector of the Chicago Adult Education Council, scheduled to speak here yesterday be- cause of a misunderstanding did not appear. The Student Religious As- sociation gave no indication that he would spealr in the near future. In the uniforw of a lieutenant colonel of the marines, James Raoevelt, eldest son and secretary of the President, is shown as he took off from Washington to join maneuvers in Cuba. assi ied Direetory FOR SALE NOTICES THE BAKED GOODS Exchange holds LEAVING for St. Petersburg, Florida a sale of home-baked foods every this week. Room for four in Pack- Thursday at Harris Hall from 10-4. ard 12. Phone 5139. 418 Eclairs - individual pies - cookies cakes - fried chicken. 420 VIOLA STEIN. 706 Oakland. Phone LARGE RESIDENTIAL lot on Vine- 6327. Experienced typist. Reason- wood Boulevard. Exclusive and re-_ablerates._ 2_ 2 stricted section. Cash. Phone 8544. CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY: Any 416 old and new suits, overcoats, at $3, $8, $25. Ladies fur coats, typewrit- FANCY APPLES, popcorn, fresh sweet ers, old gold and musical instru- cider. No preservatives. Will deliver inents. Ready cash waiting for you. Phone 3926. 1003 Brooks. 417 Phone Sam. 6304. OAK WOOD, best grade, for fireplace, LOST AND FOUND or furnace. Delivered. 106 Barker Road, Whitmore Lake. Phone 57 LOST: Alpha Delta Pi pin lost Feb- or 2-1964 mornings. 392 ruary 19 on campus. Julia Upson. WASHED SAND and Gravel. Drive- Phone 5611. 421 way Gravel. Killins Gravel Co. LOST: Fountain pen, Parkette, mot- Phone 7112. 7x tled red, between 718 Tappan and LAUNDRY _ Natural Science. Reward. Call Davy 2-3203. '422 'STUDENT LAUNDRY. Shirts 12c. LOST: Pair of camel's hair gloves Call for and deliver. Phone 4863 for with pigskin palms, near 201 Nat. other prices. 360 Sci. Bldg. Please call 5847 if found. LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. ,Reward. Warren Breidenbach. Ph. Careful work at low prices. 5847. tCam us CUTRATE Drugs 218 S. State - - NEXT TO GOLDMAN'S S Phone 9392 such-like rumpus." Damascus, Syria. Here he discovered Place Tomb Figures of Absolute privacy is guaranteed the the famous mosaics of the Omayyad dis occupants of the dormitory, which is I Mosque and restored the Palais Azam. vreIten completely shut off from the hall He has also written extensively on his I m by double doors, and has complete sj be'ct. . I - lavatory facilities within itsconfines---- The Museum of Classical Archeology There are four showers, four sinks PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLtJR has placed on exhibit a series of an-i and complete appointments for er- A meeting of the Physical Educa- cieint ECypti:mfn tomb figures, orna- fecting the male toilette. tion Club was held last night. The inents, mummy masks, and other Since its completion, the squad program consisted of a presentation objects dating as early as the third room has, according to Mr. Waltz, of pictures of the last Olympic Games dynasty of the pre-Greco-Roman been used by visiting teams at least by Prof. Elmer D. Mitchell, a black- period, (3,000 B.C.). Most of the ar- three times a month. board charting of "Custer's Last ticles on exhibition were purchased When the Union wing out to Madi- Stand," by Fielding H. Yost and pic- in Egypt and were originally un- son Avenue is completed, Mr. Waltz tures on golf with Bobby Jones, which covered in Egyptian government ex- said, there are to be two more squad Randolh T. Webster gave. cavations at Saqqara. MA RSH ALL Cut-Rate Dru 231 SOUTH STATE - Phone 9242 -- 8 Doors North of Kresge's TED'S DAILY DOUBLE - EFFECTIVE TODAY Reg. 25c Size New 50c ALLEN'S TWO-DROP IODENT HAND LOTION TOOTH POWDER 9c3c Modern Complete Different TODAY ONLY 1C SHOE LACES White, Black and Brown 3 for c WE DELIVER Phone 9392 - Carton 50 BOOK MATCHES 6; Fresh Stock PENNSYLVANIA Tennis Balls Reg. $1.50 $1.29 Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads. DAILY at 2:0 - 4:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. ,V I "SOAK THE POOR" EXTRA - "BSUG. "GIRLS CARNIVAL" AHOY" WORLD NEWS i COMING s SATURDAY! 'STAGE DOOR"' HEPBURN ROGERS 25e until :30 3"c° to Close SHOWS CONTINUOUS DAILY 2 to 11:30 o'clock story of the pirate who saved - ON SALE ON CAMPUS