THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCT. 16, Rushing Ends A t Sororities; S2 45_Pledged Silent Period To Last Until 3 P.M. Tomorrow; 34 Fewer Listed This Year June Pollan, '41, Detroit; Mary Roger, '41, Winnetka, Ill.; Elaine Sandt, '41, Pleasant Ridge; Virginia Sapping- ton, '41, Niagara Falls, N.Y.; and Ann Wills, '41, Niagara Falls, N.Y. Delta Gamma Margaret Bradin, '41, Grosse Point; Belle Calkins, '41, Detroit; Elizabeth Conn, '40, Detroit; Allison Curtis, '41, Ann Arbor; Katherine Forberg, '41, Desplains, Ill.; Phyllis Gallagher, '41, Duluth, Minn.; Rachel Johnson, '41, Cleveland; Edna Kearney, '41, De- troit. Jane Krousa, '41, Keilworth, Ill.; Vir- ginia Kielholtz, '41, Dayton, 0.; Dor- othy Lavan, '41, Grand Rapids; Gwenyth Lemon, '39, Ann Arbor; Mary McConkey, '41, South Bend, nd.; Jean Morrall, '41, Youngstown, 0.; Margaret Whittemore, '41, Ann Arbor; Joan Outhwaite, '41, Ben- nington, Vt.; and Ruth Margaretl Voigt, '39, Detroit. Gamma Phi Beta Edith Alcorn, '39, Ravenna, 0.; Peg Allen, '39, Birmingham; Mary Helen Davis, '41, Ann Arbor; Harriet De- Girl's Co-op Sadly . :Discovers Favor Has To Be Repaid Concealed beneath this missive; you will find the necessary impedi- menta for your labor of love"-that phrase begins a letter from the menI in the Rochdale Student Cooperative to the Girls' Co-op.t "Impedimenta' 'in this case refers to 25 yards of new ecru marquisettel destined to be converted by the girls into curtains for the boys at Oxford! Road. But when the author, inspired to couch his letter in poetic terms, men-t tions "labor of love," he errs, fort the girls' motives are not purely al-j truistic. The curtain-making is the fulfill- I ment of an obligation or, as the Rochdale boys would put it, the re-f paying of a favor incurred at thes beginning of the semester. At that time the Girls' Cooperativet Complete Records Of Alumni ~-~ ~~~ On File In School Catalog Office Classified Directory (Continued from Page 1) Janet Burns, '40, Grosse Point; Jean- ette Cranmer, '41, Steubenville, O.; Margery Everett, '41, Sault Ste. Ma- rie; Marilyn Gittins, '41, Detroit; Suzanne Hopkins, '41, Detroit; Ma- rion Hubbard, '41, Detroit; Jean Kaufman, '41, Grosse Point; Virginia List, '41, Bloomfield Hills; Dorothy' McKinnon, '41, Plymouth; Elizabeth Meier, '41, Toledo; Annabel Van Winkle, '41, Howell; Jane Peterson, '41, Adrian; Margaret Schiller, '40, Lansing; Mary Anne Starr, '39, Gary, Ind.; Margaret Jackson, '39, Flint; Phyllis Ludke, '39, Detroit; Jose- phine King, '40, Detroit and Mary McKinnon, '40, Plymouth. Alpha Xi Delta Genevieve Haner, '40, Ann Arbor; Rose Mary Lehman, '41, Fort Wayne, Ind.; and Mary Sommers, '40, Canan- daigua, N.Y. Chi Omega Jane Anderson ,'40, Detroit; Esther Baker, '40, Detroit; Betty Bibber, '40, Mt. Lebenon, Pa.; Mary Call, '39, Jackson; Eleanor Christenson, '39, Ninona, Minn.; Ruth Davis, '41, De- troit; Catherine DeVine, '39, Ann Arbor; Mable Douglas, '40, Detroit; Rhea Jane Easton, '40, Detroit; Bar- bara Guest, '40, Detroit. Shirley Hicks, '41, Toledo; Mar- jorie High, '39, Flint; Jean Kinsey, 441, Grand Rapids; Jean McCormick, '40, Detroit; Susanne Morgan, '41, Washington, D.C.; Louisa Pullen, '39, Detroit; Frieda Scheffler, '41, Chi- cago; Ellen St. John, '41, Miami, Fla.; Betty Jane Swift, '41, Middleville; Helen Tucker, '39, Detroit; Jane Ann Visscher, '41, Holland; Doris Vogel, '39, Jackson; Yvonne Westrate, '41, Holland; and Mary Ann Young, '41, Detroit. CGllegiate Sorosis Beverly Bracken, Traverse City; Ann Bremion, Detroit; Carolyn Col-I ler, Ann Arbor; Martha Dailey, '41, Sagina4v; Jean Donaldson, '41, Pon- tiac; George Ann Gilkey, Kalamazoo; Louise Haskell, State, Wash.; Eileen Hayward, Grosse Point; Elizabeth Hegge, Marthville; Margaret Hub- bard, Pontiac; Edith Johnston, Grand Haven; Norah Kennedy, '40, Palo Alto, Cal.; Betsy Robinson, '41, Grosse Point; Emily Sanduson, Madison, N. J.; Suzanne Sibley, Grad, Grosse Point; Betty Thompson, '40, Detroit; Ann Vedder, '41,yDetroit; BarbaraI Wheat, '41,'Bay City; and Mary Ellen Wheeler, '41, Ann Arbor. Delta Delta Delta Bunty Bain, '39, Gary, Ind.; Con- stance.Berry, '41, Ann Arbor; Helen Bohnsack, '41, Porte Ridge, Ill.; Helen Brady, '40, Howell; Betty Clark, '41, Niagara Falls, N.Y.; Ruth Dillman, 40, Chicago; Janet Everest, '39, Grand Rapids; Suzanne Flannigan, '41, Indianapolis, Ind. Jane Griswold, '41, Detroit; Francis Haigh, '41, Chicago; Marion Harris, '41, Newark, N.J.; Lorraine Hoskin, '41, Detroit; Evelyn Kalb, '41, Spring- field, Ill.; Ellen Rhea, '41, Holland; t t t I i By CARL W. PETERSEN spondence, newspaper clippings andI Biographical material of 110,827 an alphabetical card file of full names, degrees, years of attendance alumni. graduates and non-graduates, if no degree was received and the living and dead, complete from the latest address of all living alumni. class of 1845 to the last in 1937 is A special file of 275 University kept permanently on file in the alumni and students who lost their Alumni Catalog Office, Alumni Me- lives in the World War, as well as a! morial Hall. complete and detailed list of Mich-' igan men and women who served in The work of this office, of which Mexican, Civil, Spanish and World, Mrs. Lunette Hadley has been direc- Wars is included. tor since 1925, is done by seven reg- The equipment of the office in-t ularly employed workers and two NYA cludes two addressograph machines, students on a yearly budget of about;which make address plates of all liv- y10,000. ing alumni and one electric graph- The function of the catalog office, otype which embosses the stencil used according to Mrs. Hadley, is to keep in the addressograph. for University officials certain official Of the 110,827 alumni of the Uni- records, and to maintain a directory versity, 23,515 are known to be de-I to serve alumni. ceased and their biographical ma- In addition to official records of aerial is filled in the necrology file i NOTICES TYPING-Carefully and accurately_ done. L. M. Heywood. 803 E. King-i Ssley St. Phone 6344. 106#- TYPING, neatly and accurately done. Mrs. Howard, 613 Hill St. Phone 5244. 3x WANTED CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY: Anyf old and new suits, overcoats, at $3, $8, $25. Ladies fur coats, typewrit- ers, old gold and musical instru- ments. Ready cash waiting for you.i Phone Sam. 6304. 2x LAUNDRY IAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. LOST ANDFOUND LOST: Parker fountain pen on cam- pus near Angell Hall Dial 5534. 99 LOST: Elgin wrist watch. Gold case, brown leather strap. Call 6856, ask for Tom. 105 FOR SALE CORONA portable typewriter like new. Silent. Original price $72.00. 20 per cent off. Price for sale $57.60. Phone 2-1536. 108 ,1 EXPERIENCED laundress doing dent laundry. Will call for deliver. 4863. St a lx I NEW KODAK (retina) with the at- tu- tachments. Original price $72.50. nd 20% off. Sale price $58.00. Call x 2-1536. 107 6mm 'Weese, '39, Kent, O.; Ruth Fitzpat- found they needed some furniture. the University such as copies of all rick, '41, Muskegon; Barbara Grif- Cooperation proved more than a annual catalogues and copies of Re- fin, '40, Oyster Bay; Virginia Lee ;word, for the boys lent them a bit gents' proceedings, the office also has Hardy, '41, Midland; Mary Hender- of theirs with the provision, "you can a file of 87,512 folders of biographical son, '41, Ann Arbor; Dana Hennigar, do something for us sometime." material registration cards, corre- '41, Oscoda; Katherine King, '41; And so it came to pass that the Jackson; Betty Meyer, '40, Grosse Girls' Cooperative House will labor. Point; Barbara Newton, '41, Pontiac; But they will not labor in vain, PageToSpeak Dorthea Ortmayer, '41, Milwaukee; for, in the words of the spokesman Helen Rigterink, *'41, Grand Rapids; for the Rochdale House, "this task, On menial though it may see, will be the June Roberts, '41,Detroit; Emilie instrument whereby the cooperative! Turnbull, '41, Dear'born; Margaret girls will be given an opportunity to R elg o as,'1 vntn l. al o.H r Walsh. '41, Evanston, Ill.; Sally Lou demonstrate their little known, but Weidlein, '41, Cleveland, O. nevertheless,- superb capabilities." Kappa Alpha Theta j Frances Bourke, '41. Detroit; Mary ! I-M SPEEDBALL RESULTS Kirby Page, author, editor and re- Gretchen Connine, '41, Grayling; In the only game of the day in the ligious interpreter, will give two leo- Cornelai Davidson, '41, Port Huron; I-M speedball preliminaries, Phi Sig- Jeanne Davis, '41, Indianapolis; Ellen ma Delta defeated Theta Delta Chiral Science Douglas, '41, Londonville, N.Y.; Jean yesterday by the convincing score of Auditorium, it was announced yester-I Forsythe, '41, Standish; Jane Grove, 9-3. Manny Slavin, basketball let- day by Kenneth W. Morgan, director # '41, Milwaukee; Maryanna Jamison, terman, starred for the winners with of the Student Religious Association. '41, Ann Arbor; Phyllis Kennedy, '41, five points, all passes into the end Mr. Page will speak on The World Detroit; Edith Lynch, '41, Grosse zone.M Point; Frances McLaughlin, '40, De- Situation-Some Religious Implica- troit; Anna Caroline Martin, '39, Bay CLASS OFFICERS ELECTED tions." City; Kathleen Mead, '41, Birming- The following officers were elected He was editor of the World Tomor- ham; Margaret Mulcahy, '39, Bay yesterday by the senior class of the row from 1926 to 1934, a position once. City; Mary Newcomb, '41, Ann Arbor; School of Education: Edward Slezak, held by Norman Thomas, and is a Betty Shick, '41, Jackson, O.; Pa- president, Ruth Carr, vice-president, contributing editor of the Christian tricia Williams, '41,, Kendalville, Ill. Eloise Frost, treasurer, and Olin Mur- Century. His books have been trans- Kappa Delta dick, secretary. lated into 10 languages. One of his Ruth Barber, '40, Detroit; Margaret orks, "Living Creatively" was re- Carr, '40, Detroit; Elizabeth Ems- Ann Arbor; Doris Marschner, '40, cently given first place in a list of; wiler, '41, Ann Arbor; Helen May Detroit; Mary Alice McAndrew, '39, 436 books on religion chosen by the Gasser, '41, Ann Arbor; Winifred Ypsilanti; Doris Merker, '41, Detroit; Hazen Foundation, an endowed or- Gasser, '41, Ann Arbor; Shirley Hep- Nancy Murray, '41, Birmingham; ganization for the furthering of re-I ler, '41, Ann Arbor; Margaret Wood- Betty Nichols, '41, Oak Park, Ill.; Bar- ligious education in colleges._ ruff, '41, Memphis. bara Rodgers, '41, Pontiac: Marjorie Much of Mr. Page's lifetime has Kappa Kappa Gamma Strand, '41, Detroit. been spent in travelling around the Doris Atkinson ,'40, Detroit; Dor- Zeta Tau Alpha world and in studying its religious othy Boyer, '41, Detroit; Mary Jane Jane Zapp, '41, Cleveland; Ragna and social problems ,according to Mr. Fry, '39, Detroit; Louis Gordon, '41, Sue Randolph, '40, Elkhart, Ind.; Morgan. Another of Mr. Page's books, Sewickley, Pa.; Dorothy Gillian, '41, Jean Pheneger, '41, Cleveland; Beat- "War: Its Causes, Consequences and Royal Oak; Jane Hart, '40, Gary, rice Dobson, '41, Wilkensburg, Pa.; Cure" was published serially in Young Ind.; Marian Iddings, '39, Lansing; Josephine Kist, '40, Pittsburgh, Pa.; India by Mahatma Gandhi. Mr. Marjorie McCrae, '41, Grosse Pointe; Maybelle Harsyla, '41, Calumet; Betty Page has been an outstanding worker May McCreedy, '41, Scarsdale, N.Y.; Boothby, '40, Woodbury, N.J. for peace, Mr. Morgan said. Betty Mandel, '41, Detroit; Patricia I Nahser, '41, Chicago; Virginia Os- Good, '40, Ann Arbor; Jean Van 25c ALL DAY 20c to 5 P.M. Raalte, '40, Holland. SNA TODAY li 1 Beta Phi SUNDAY Ruth Allen, '41, Ietroit; Mary Ash- NOW PLAYING! TODAY AND SUNDAY! ley, '41, Detroit; Camilla Ayres, '41, Detroit; Harriet Babcock, '41, Birm- Gosh, I wish I want ingham; Johanna Beem, '40, Chicago; such a purty feIIer Phyllis Kavanaugh, '41, Midland; * V Betty Ann Chaufty, '41, Ann Arbor; Betty Dickmeyer, '40, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Frances Griffin, '41, Ann Ar- bor; Mary Martha Hobrock, '41, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Janet Homer, '39, De- trait; Betsy Honhart, '39, Detroit; b y anr kAnt. tharP v Prmanprrtl r The record of the prospective alum- nus begins as soon as he registers as a freshman. His registration card is sent to the catalog where it is filed. When the student graduates, his di- ploma fee card is sent to the office which uses it as a basis for the master card file, the addressograph plates. It also goes into the bio- graphical folder along with the regis- tration cards which constitute the first bits of biographical material. Bondurant Elected Law Club President Keith Bondurant, '38L, was elected president of the Lawyers' Club at the election held Thursday. Other offi- cers are Gerald Stoetzer, '38L, vice- president, William Stephens, '38L, secretary and John Thomson, '38L, treasurer. Robert Keck, '39L, was chosen jun- ior member of the board of governors. Men elected for the Council were Ed- ward Schramm, '38L, Robert Bur- hans, '39L, Joel Newman, '38L, Wil- liam Stephens, '38L, Edward Zowns, '39L, Robert Feldman, '38L, Edward Ransom, '38L, Irving Achtenberg; '38L, Douglas Welch, '38L, John Welch, '38L, John Hoyt, '38L, Robert Dudley, '38L, Hugh Kuder, '38L, Dan- iel Morrison, '38L, Hubert Allens- worth, '38L, and John Thomson, '38L. A n ys of 0I1d - The Pretzel Bell ... .. q - So It is Today 0 -- n . . Y >S i. U MICH Banners Pennants Memnor~ Elizabet Huldin, '40, Grand Rapids; Helen J'an, '41, Detroit; Kathleen Liebold, '41, Detroit; Janet Fisher, '41, { , } ". <,John yaH IGAN CARTOON. KEEPER SPORTLIGHT Song Books OF THE LIONS" "DEXTERITY" View Books__ - TODAY 2:00 - 4:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. 'Books 4 DAYS! STARTING TO )OKSTORE tate Street Hatinees 25c Nights 35c 2:00-3:50 7:00-9:00 She Cselets.$ a Blonde i. SERVANT OF THE PEOPLE" DAY' JShe Sings '.SEVNT. NTE PEOLE FOUR PLACES in your home that should- be .ei?/d Ge"zda"o#d W31AH RoSu 3 16 South S w y's I Bedside lighting, bathroom lighting, kitchen lighting, and lighting for a child's study table ... these should receive careful consideration, because these are the places where eyes are used constantly on tasks that require close visual application. These are the places where abuse of the eyes through poor lighting may result in permanent injury. These are places in your home that should be LIGHT CONDITIONED. Compare the recommended lamp wattage with the lamp sizes at these four locations in your home. Sizes are total: There may be one lamp bulb or several. Good lighting at the bedside can help to prevent eyestrain caused by reading in bed. Good lighting on either side of the bathroom mirror will greatly facilitate shaving and primping. Good lighting in the kitchen makes cooking, dishwashing, and other kitchen tasks easier. And most important of all, good lighting at the study desk will help to protect your child's eyes against eyestrain. Phone for a survey of your lighting today. There is no charge for this service. Measure your light with the Sight Meter and see for yourself whether you have enough light in these four important places to assure lrnffl-. c~ nr "I