THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Criticize DAiLY OFFI-CIAL BU--LLETIN Furfey'sTalk- 1 Continue SRA Series f Religious Forums; rient To Be Discussed rtinuing the Student Religious dation's series of forums on the tence and Nature of God," Prof.x Durfee of the Law School will ss The Rev. Fr. Paul H. Furfey's re on this subject at 8 p.m. to- n Lane Hall.F her Furfey defended the Cath- riewpoint on religion in his talk Saturday, and Professor Durfee leal with the stand taken and nswer the questions of those at- ngt. 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, the second e SkA's series on oriental reli- will be presented by Kamala mbi on Buddhism. These semi- are being given at Lane Hall for benefit of those students and by members who are not able ke regular courses given in the ersity in this subject. Miss Kos- is a graduate of Mysore Uni- yy, Mysore, India. nger Announces 0 Still Remains Football Coffers rold Singer, '41, of the Union tive staff made the interesting very and subsequent announce- that approximately $70 from fll's Union Football Ticket Ex- ge is left in that organization's rs. "Either a great many people think much about the Union's abilityor,"they don't care much he more crass aspects of life," r said, "but I wish that receipt rs would take the money off our anine, Rackham Euilding, at 7:30 ing will be open for discussion. 29 at 9:15 p.m. at the Michigan Union i.m: on Thursday, Feb 29 Lt. COL L. A. x 111 aidress the Men'5 Physical Eduicati n Cib A.AIJW Drama group: Wednesda: eup op "raduteL i r in Preven- meeting for all students and f.cilty feb. 28 8 pm., at the hompe of Mi m Ivedicine asr which rhe mcc of Department on Thiirsday. Fet iii-3 iddie 938 Dewey Avenue CLASSIFIED ADVERISINGI (Continued from Page 41 day, February 29, at 4:15 p.m., room 103, Romance Language Bldg. Tickets for the series of lectures and play may be procured at the door at the time of the lecture. Science Demonstration Lecture: Dr. Phillips, Thomas, Research Engineer' of 1 the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, will give a lecture and demonstration of scienti- fic developments in Rackham Audi- torium, Friday, March 1, at 8 p.m. Slosson Lecture: Professor Preston W. Slosson of the history department will review the current world situa- tion in a lecture on "This Mad World" under the auspices of Pi Lambda Theta, Thursday, Feb. 29, at 8:00 p.m. in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building, third floor. The public is invited. Todays Events Romance Language Journal Club meeting today at 4:15, in Room 408 RL. Papers by: Alfredo T. Morales, Grad: "A Review of a Brief History of Philippine Literature (T. del Cas- tillo)." James C. O'Neill: "Albert Thibau.- det, A Bergsonian theory of art." Graduate students in Romance languages are invited. Engineering Mechanies Colloqui-, um: Mr. William H. Harvey will talk on "Calculations of Slopes snd De- flections of Beams with Transverse, and Axial Loads Utilizing the Method of S iperposition," in Room 314 West Engineering Annex today at 4:00 p.m. Refresments will precede the meeting. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet in Room 319 West Medical Building, at 7:30 tonight. Subject: "Some Phases of the Metabolism of Iron and Copper." Botanical Journal Club will meet tonight at 7:30 in Room 1139 N.S. Reports by: Harriet Smith, "Inter- specific hybridization and seceltion in Tragopogon." Betty Robertson, "Expansion of taxonomy with respect to the sperm- atophytes." Donald O'Brien, "Chromosomal chimeras in plants." Erich Steiner, "Physiology of popu- lations." Association Forum: Professor Dur- fee, of the Law School, will lead a dis- cussion of the lectures on "The Ex- istence and Nature of Religion" by Dr. Carlson and Dr. Furfey, Lane Hall, 8:00 tonight. Society of Automotive Engineers meeting will be held tonight at 7:30 in the Michigan Union. Mr. N. L. Blume of the Oldsmobile Engineering Executive Office will give a slide pre- sentation of the new Oldsmobile auto- matic transmission. Tau Beta Pi. Dinner meeting to- night at 6:00 Michigan Union. Prof. R. A. Sawyer will talk on "Industrial Spectographic Analysis." Please be on time. Ann Arbor Independents meeting this afternoon at 4:15 in the League. Sun Valley Ski Movies tonight at 7:30 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Public Health Nurses are invited to attend an informal "get-acquaint- er" hour today from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. at the Women's Athletic Building. Refreshments. JGP usher's meeting today at 5:00 p.m. at the League. Attendance compulsory. Publicity Committee Meeting for JGP at 5:00 p.m. today in the League. Bring your eligibility cards. Anyone who cannot attend, call Lee Hardy at 2-2569. Regular Weekly Bridge Tourna- ment tonight at 7:30 at the Union. Christian Science Organization will meet tonight at 8:15 p.m. in the Chapel of the Michigan League. The class in Conversational Hebrew will meet at the Foundation tonight at 7:00. The Bibliophile Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet at the home of Mrs. F. R. Finch, 1619 South University today at 2:30 p.m. The Bookshelf and Stage Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet today at 2:45 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ralph H. Upson, 1116 Ferdon road. Coming Events Geological Journal Club will meet 'in Room 3065, N.S., at 7:30 on Wed- sneday, Feb. 28. Program: Profes- sor Eardley will give a review of the recent literature on "Submarine Can- yons." The Graduate History Club will on Wednesday, Feb. 28, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Historical Collections, Room .160,. Rackham. Professor L. G. VanderVelde will speak on "Oppor- tunities for Research in the Collec- tions." Exhibit. Refreshments. The wives or husbands of members are invited to attend. Psychology Journal Club will meet Wednesday, Feb. 28, at 7:30 p.m. in the East Lecture Room of the Rack- ham Bldg. Professor John F. Shep- ard will speak on "A Theory of Selec- tion in Trial-and-error Learning." Chemistry Colloquium : Dr. Adolf Stern of the Michigan' Children's Fund Research Laboratory will speak on "Chlorophyll" on Wednesday, Feb. 28, at 4:15 p.m. in Room'303 Chemis- try Building. All interested are in- vited. Seminar in Oriental Religions: Buddhism will be discussed by Miss Kamala Kosambi at the second meet- ing of the Seminar, Lane Hall, 7:30 Wednesday evening. All interested students are welcome. Association Book Group: Professor John L. Brumm will review "A Chris- tion Looks at the Jewish Question" by Jacques Maritain, and "Suffer- ance Is the Badge," by, A. L. Sachar, at Lane Hall Library, Thursday, 4:15 p.m. Presidents of the women's dormi- tories will meet at the League on Wednesday, Feb. 28, at 4:15 p.m. (see bulletin board for room). .,Phi Sigma: Mr. Walter Smith of Pontiac will show a series of colored motion pictures of African Big Game, Wednesday, Feb. 28, 8:00 p.m., West Lecture Room, Rackham Building. Michigan Dames: Music group meets Wednesday, Feb. 28, at 8:00 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Sidney J. Salzman, 333 Packard. Beta Chapter of Iota Alpha meet- ing in the West Lecture Room, Mez- THE MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Effective as of February 14, 1939 12c per reading line (in basis of five average words to line) for one 3r two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or nore insertions. Minimum of 3 lines per inser- These low rates are on the basis of cash payment before the ad is inserted. If it is inconvenient for you to call at our offices to make payments a messenger will be sent to pick up your ad at a slight extra charge of 15c. For further information call 23-24-1, or stop at 420 Maynard Street. MISCELLANEOUS-20 SPECIAL-$5.50 Machineless Per- manent $2.50; $3 oil cocona $1.50; end permanent $1. Shampoo and fingerwave 35c. Phone 8100, 117 Main. 36 TYPING -18' TYPTN h--Experlenced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist and notary public, excellent work, 706 Oakland, phone 6427. 20 LAUNDERING--9 ACE HAND LAUNDRY-Wants only one trial to prove we launder your shirts best. Let our work help you look neat today. 1114 S. Univer- sity. 19 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 TRANSPORTATION -?,1 WASHED t SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 WANTED -TO BUY-4 HIGHEST CASH PRICE paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 ARTICLES FOR SALE-3 L. C. SMITH office typewriter. Good condition-$10.00. Call Lawyers' Club--Room L-41. 299 FOR RENT ROOM. Downstairs front. Private bath and entrance. Cooking facil- ities available. Between University / and hospital. 6833. 291 ROOM: Inner-spring mattress, three showers, ping pong. Rate $3. Phone 4844. Miss Lombard. 807 S. State. 286 FOR SALE: Red cocker puppies. Lit- ter registered. Two males, one fe- male. Phone 6367. 292 STRAYED, LOST, FOUND - 1 LOST-Hamilton wristwatch, leather strap. Finder please call S. D. Mar- riner at the Law Club. 298 LOST - Abercrombie-Fitch wrist- watch near Allenel or League. Re- ward. Call Paul Smith, 4917. 296 LOST: Men's Hamilton Wristwatch at Field House. Yellow gold, initials R.F.A. Bob Acker, 2-1170. 293 I All Ways the Best Demand a genuine EBE R Watch Srip. Quality material, expert workmanship .ake this strap the popular.leadr. Good looking, smart, priced from 78 cents up. At better authorized jewelers. E R D-wB E R Fn'e r est-to-gosh bar is open- npus midst. Doug Gould, don staff announces the e Union Coke Bar, the h will be held at 4:30 d every Tuesday follow- cokes and other bever- r, Gould says, should est to strictly coke men as well as the coffee a Fitzpatrick, ,'41, will Dates will be made welcome, but he event is aimed primarily at stags. The Model Plane hobby group will hold a meeting at 8:30 p.m. Thurs- day, in the Student Offices of the nance Language Club o Hear Morales Today vo papers will be presented at the brg of the Romance Language nal Club at 4:15 p.m. today in a 408 Romance Language Build- fredo T. Morales, Grad., will give view of "A Brief History of Phil-' i Literature," by T. del Castillo; James C. O'Neill, of the romance uage department, will speak on A. Bergsonian Theory of Art." All uate students in the department nvited to attend. )r. Sinai To Lecture Nathan Sinai of the department iblic health and hygiene will pre- the last in a series of De Lamar res in hygiene today at the school giene and public health at Johns kins University. He will discuss ms of prepaymengt medical care ated' by physicians. Dom Hughes Gives Music Talk (Continued from Page 1) side the controlled text of liturgy, breaking away from the strict forms of the Gregorian chant," he said. "These composers experimented with variation forms, modality and the double choir-two choirs answer- ing one another," Dom Hughes went on. "Breaking away from controlled forms was an advance because of the forms that grew out of it, and a set- back because the old form was in- finitely beautiful. Dom Hughes disclosed that early harmony was found in the organum and that rhythm brought sonority, a new range of sounds. Another stream, he said, came from Northern Europe, either the Celtic nations or Scandi- navia, and is known as traditional music. Dom Hughes recalled his discovery of a thirteenth century mediaeval song in the Worcester Cathedral where it had been used as a parch- ment flyleaf in a rebound book. "By the fourteenth century, com- posers gained the power to say inter- esting things in music and mastered technical resources. The climax of English mediaeval music occurred in 1450, and its decline thereafter came with overly-complicated construc- tion," he concluded. After the lecture, Dom Hughes said he was greatly pleased with the "size and attentiveness of the audience." Record Sales C $ For Sibelius' FTiadi' Rise By DAVID LACHEN RUCH "We have sold as ,many records of Sibelius' 'Finlandia' during the last six weeks as we have sold in the past seven years," Miss- Margaret Ba- ker, in charge of th :record depart- ment of a ,local music store, stated yesterday. Other rerd shops claim- ed a similar upswing in the sales of the Finnish classic W an interesting sidelight of the EurIeati conflict. Students, more than. townspeople, seem to have been Infected with the recent epidemic of Sibelius fever, since a downtown music shop re- ported "a decided upswing in its sales, buta'Finlandia' is not our big- gest seller in classical records", while both campus shops reported it as ".by far our most popular classical recording at present." One campus store said sales of the Finnish com- poser's masterpiece were "in excess of five or six records a week." The sudden enthusiasm on the part of students for the Finnish work was attributed by the, clerk in one music shop to "the incessant solicit- ation of students by those selling tickets to the concert for Finnish Relief," referring to the ticket-sellers who have been combing the dorm- itories for Finnish contribtions dur- ing the past few weeks. All record shops were in agreement that students have become "striking- ly interested in classical music" within the last year. "Two years ago," commented a clerk, "I couldn't have forced a student even to look at a classical record, and nowadays they come in and buy entire sym' phonies." Many fraternities, It was noted, are establishing symphony and even opera libraries. One merchant explained that a new campus trend of giving symphonies is gifts has been started. Senibrs Urged To Pay Dues Collections 'WillContinue All Week AtAngellHall Payment of senior cues got off to a good start today with an unusually large number of students turning over their dollar paylnats, ]on Nix- on, '40, chairman of the Class of 1940 Finance Comrnittee announced yesterday. "Over 900 post cards have been 'sent to seniors all oyer the campus, Nixon said, and posters. hae been placed in many advantageous places for our annual senior drive." Dues will be collected throughout the week by members of the Finance Committee from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily in Angell Hall Lobby. The purpose of the dues is to set up a fund .to. be used by the Class during .alumni years, keeping both officers and students in touch with one another and providing for re- unions every five years. Sibley, Garrett, Shapiro To Vie For 'Mike' Honors Chesterfield's- TwinPleasures are ct~al d~ess anad .etter Tas/c I r P01 MELODY 3 CONC J4 IT - RHYTHM - HARMONY Gorgeously Costumed Dancers in Dazzling Spectacle III 11 TONIGHT * Men's Glee Club * Suomi Club Dancers I iii Women'sGlee Club * Varsity Band. uw ww - A-U -lr A~mw II I i.: ® E I I