THE MICHIGAN ILY Will Hold First Affair Tonigh Great Unseen Organization Makes Union's Efficient Service Possible DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN t tion II, WE MM..; Sectic in 407 M.H. (CO sI = 1,800 Activities And Many tending dances know as the coat room, serves as the varsity football .Departments Op erat e raining table during the season, and Within Student Center at other times as a special private dining room. In addition to these -4 WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1939 VOL. L. No. 9 [eeting Of International Students Will Replace 'President's Reception' The International Center's first pen House of the season, an infor- al get-together of old and new stu- nts, willhbe held from 8 to 11 p.m. day at the Center. The Open House, at which Prof. J. aleigh Nelson, director, and Mrs. ilson will be at home to internation- students and their friends, takes e place of the "President's Recep- 111 to Foreign Students" of other ars. All students born outside the ilted States are included in the neral invitation, which takes in nadian students and Amercian udents from Puerto Rico and Ha-' aii. Professor and Mrs. Nelson will be sisted by advisers to foreign stu- nts in the various departments of e University enrolling foreign stu- nts. In the receiving line will be hIuded Prof. and Mrs. W. C. Rufus, of. Edwin C. Goddard, Dr. and Mrs. . H. Soule, Prof. and Mrs. Dudley . Phelps, Prof. and Mrs. Walter V. arshall, Prof. and Mrs. Arno L. ader and Prof. and Mrs. Clifton 0.1 arey. lealth Service StaffChanged verett And Lindquist Join Student Medical Center Due to the resignation of a num- r -of doctors at the Health Service, ranges have'been made in class ad- sers and two new physicians have aen appointed to the staff, according Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, head of ie Health Service. Dr. Max Durfee has gone to Teach- s College in Cedar Falls, Ia., Dr. ida Gordon is now on the bureau of aternal and Child Health at Lan- ng, find Dr. George Agate, former- eshman adviser is at Mason City psital in Washington, it was an- aunced. Dr. Meldon Everett and Dr. Paul A. idquist, who started working at the ealth Service this Summer are the ewest additions to the staff, taking e places of Dr. Gordon and the po- tion of freshman adviser respective- Dr. Thomas. Fitzgerald will take Zarge of the sophomores, Dr. Harvey essler will be the junior adviser, Dr. elson Smith will serve as senior ad- ser and Dr. William Brace will re- ain in charge of the graduate and ofessional students for the coming The Michigan Union, for 35 years1 an organization active in the affairs of University men, familiar to all who have known the Michigan campus since its inception, is yet capable de- spite this familiarity, to astound whoever may investigate its ramifi- cations. From its three kitchens wherein such things as the formulation and cooking of huge vats of chocolate sy- rup for use in its own soda bar, to the luxurious living quarters avail- able to visitors and residents alike, the Union is complete. It is the boast of its staff that 1800 activities, meet- ings, dinners, and gatherings of all sorts take place in the Union during the year and that at least 5,000 men, pass through its doors every day. To support such activity the organization has built itself to extremely compe- tent proportions, both mechanically and in its personnel. A trip through the building re- veals facilities unsuspected even be- hind the busy lobbies and rooms open to the general student body. In ad-, dition to dwelling quarters furnished with a complete hotel service, the Union operates a series of dining rooms and kitchens which cover the building. Foremost among these is the first floor dining room, with its adjacent yet separate terrace. A third room, that which women at- ASME Will Hold SmokerTonight The local student branch of the American Society of Mechanical En- gineers will open its year's activities with a smbker tonight at 7:30 in the Michigan Union. Engineers of all departments are cordially invited. The program for the coming year will be discussed and plans of special interest to engineers other than mechanical will be pre- sented. Last year's society was the second largest student branch in the country; this year it is hoped it will be the largest. Hillel Photography Club To Hold First Meeting The Hillel Photography Club will hold its first meeting at 7:30 p.m. to- day at the Foundation according to .Jean Goldstick, '42, last year's presi- dent. Elections will be held at the meet- ing for the coming year and future plans will be discussed. All Hillel members interested in photography are urged to join the club. Members are entitled to use of the dark room and of certain pieces of photographic equipment at the Foundation. there are other eating places through- out the building. The Union. is serviced in almost allj of its departmentsrby complete shops., Among these are the bakery shop, the carpentry shop, equipped for all sorts of repair work, the butcher shop and the extensive store rooms located in the building's double basement. A complete water-filtering system far superseded Ann Arbor's new plant, making the Union the only place where pure water could be easily ob- tained in town until last year. In the field of entertainment of al- most every conceivable type the Union is well equipped to benefit student and faculty-member alike. The swim- ming pool, finished in 1925 and for a time the rendezvous of the varsity swimming team, is of regulation size and is provided with the most modern violet ray filtration system in the country, according to the staff's boast. Billiard and. ping-pong rooms, newly constructed bowling alleys, lounges and tap rooms provide many various types of amusements. Extensive quarters in the Union tower provide space for senior so-' cieties and top off the other benefits of the building with a splendid view of Ann Arbor and surrounding coun- tryside. Notices Senate Reception: Since no indi- vidual invitations are being sent, this is a cordial invitation to all members of the teaching staff and their wives to be present at the Senate Reception to new members of the faculties on Tuesday evening, Nov. 7, in the ball- room of the. Michigan Union at 8:30 p.m. The reception will take place from 8:30 to 10 o'clock, after which there will be dancing from 10 to 12. It is especially hoped that new teach- ing fellows and instructors may "be present and the chairmen of depart- ments are asked to. be of assistance in the bringing this about. College of Literature, Science and Photographs By Students To Be Used In 'Alumnus' Student photographers can turn in interesting shots of campus and cam- pus activities, to be used in "The Michigan Alumnus," T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Al- umni Association, announced yester- day. "The Alumnus," f official alumni magazine, is offering as a new fea- ture this year a full picture page of campus activities. the Arts, School of Music, and School of Education: Students who received marks of I or X at the close of their. last term of attendance (viz., semes, ter or summer session, will receive a grade of E in the course unless this, work is made up and reported to this office by Oct. 25. Students wishing an extension of time should file a petition addressed to the appropriate official in their school with Room 4 U.H. where it will be transmitted. Robert L. Williams, Asst. Registrar. Abbey, Helen Anthony, Ralph Frank Barrett, George Knapp Cheever, Dwight Martin Domashevitsky, Joshua Goold, Robert C. Hartley, Donald Tomlins Jenness, Beverly Jeanne Jensen, Thomas Arden Leder, Arnold E. Mills, Charles M. Norton, Lige Salomonson, Herman LaMar Stickels, Jeannette Helen Wezelman, Sol Meyer Wilner, Samuel Winston, Howard Harold Biological Chemistry Seminar. The seminar in Biological Chemistry will meet in Room 319, West Medical Building at 7 p.m. tonight. The subject to , be discussed is "Phosphoric Acid Esters of Car- bohydrates and Carbohydrate Deriv- atives-Some Recent Studies." All interested axe invited to attend. 1i College Graduates' Matrimonial Chances Best, Survey Reveals .1 Contrary to popular belief, college graduates are more successful in mar- riage than grammar and high school graduates, according to Dr. Leonard S. Cottrell, Jr., of Cornell Universi- ty and Prof. Ernest W. Burgess of the University of Chicago. This conclusion was reached after one of the most thorough statistical surveys on marriage ever conducted in the United States. Using 526 couples as examples, the survey took seven years to complete. It was also found that longer court- ships favored better harmony and adjustment after marriage. Where the courtship lasted less than a year, there was incomplete adjustment. The best term of wooing seems to be be- tweenathree and five years, the in- vestigators discovered. Wivesswho worked before their marriage make any necessary adjust- ments more easily than those who had never worked, with school teach- ers ranking highest in adjustment. Professional men make the best hus- bands, and of these chemical engi- neers and ministers ranked highest. Both men and women who are active in at least two or three organizations before marriage also are rated high. The amount of family income' seems to bear little relationship to happiness. However small the in- come, it should be. saved or spent in any way agreeable to both parties, the investigators asserted. "Mother-in-law trouble" is most likely to develop if the mother of either is a widow. Husbands and wives who love their parents are likely to love each other. Those who Mrs. Roosevelt To Speak Here Column Is Said To Hint New Deal's Course Veteran newspaper men say that many hints as to the future course of the New Deal can be found in the column, "My Day," by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. The First Lady has been credited (or blamed, depending on one's po- litical views) more than once with having a hand in the policies of her husband's Administration. In her travels, it is said, Mrs. Roosevelt serves as the official White House public relations counsel as well as housekeeping expert, inspector of CCC camps and dramatic critic. Versatile Mrs. Roosevelt will take time off from her many chores this fall to speak here in the University Oratorical Association series. come from unhappy homes find it more difficult to make their own homes happy. Dr. Cottrell and Professor Burgess claim that the results of their ex- haustive survey have been suffi- cient to show that the prediction of marriage adjustment is feasible, at least within certain limits, and that an expectancy table of probabil- ities of success and failure in mar- riage can be devised. 'Early American' TitleReawarded By New Volume Mayflower descendants, take care! A list of people with prior claim to the title of early Americans" has re- cently been published by the William L. Clements Library, under the title of The Muster Roll of Coronado." Coronado's expedition came to the North American continent in 1540, eighty years before the arrival of the Mayflower at Plymouth. The de- scendants of these three hundred Spainiards, therefore, can trace their pedigrees back to the sixteenth cen- tury as Americans. The territory explored by Coronado and his men was the southern part of the United States up to Kansas and as far as Arizona and New Mexi- co. These states are celebrating the four-hundredth anniversary of his travels next year. The booklet was published, however, not for this, but for a meeting in Ann Arbor this sum- mer of the Institute of Latin-Anheri- can Studies. Women Get More Official Positions Women whose organizations are the chief supporters of civil service reform obtained more government jobs under the merit system last year, but lost in the patronage field ac- cording to a report by the Civil Serv- ice Commission. ; An increase of 7,660 women in classified civil service positions shows, an increase between June 30, 1938 and June 1939, but a decrease of 1,- 104 in unclassified posts. Men em- ployes increased in both classified and unclassified positions, the report points out. The percentage of men and women; in the Government Service was re- ported to have changed little during the year. Of the 920,310 civil em- ployes in the Executive Branch of the Federal Government on June 30, 81.2 per cent were men and 18.8 per cent were women. Special Student Tiqkets, Lecture Course: The supply of these special tickets is limited. Students intend- ing to purchase two dollar season passes to the second balcony are urged to do so immediately. The Hill Audi- torium box office is open daily from 10 to 1 and 2 to 4. Department of Secretaries please submit a request for the desired num- ber of Faculty Directories this week, Call Mr. Bergman, University Busi- ness Office (Extension 81), Students, College of Engineering: Sophomore, junior and senior stu- dents who are working for degrees in any of the following departments are requested to report at, the Secretary's Office, 263 West Engineering Build- ing, if they have not previously done so. Five-year programs combined wth industry; Combinations of any two programs; Mathematics, or combinationsof mathematical and technical pro- grams; Physics, or combinations; Astronomy, or combinations; Engineering-Law program; Engineering-Business Administra- tion program; Engineering-Forestry program; Metallurgical Engineering pro- gram. A. H. Lovell, Secretary. Business Administration-Tabulat- ing Practice I: This course will be held at 2, 3, and 4 o'clock. The sec- tions are divided as follows: Section 2 at 2 o'clock. Ashburn, J .Anderson Bennett, Phyllis Kennedy Dieckmann, Otto K. Downs, Benjamin Stickney Fink, Raymond Van Green, Louis Abraham Johnson, Robert Latham Lakini, Delbridge Russell Lifschutz, Mollie Moran, H4. S. Monroe, Ernest Gerald Sun, Hou Jan Teitelbaum, Howard Shuirman Toombs, Louise Section 3 at 3 o'clock. Arthur, Marian George Bartholomew, Arthur Peck, Jr. Brockway, Robert Clinton Claypoole, Robert Holton Davidson, Sidney DeWitt, Erma Gribble, James Joseph A. Juliber, Gustave Scheker Knight, William Donald Leopold, Benjamin Lynn, Jean Audrey Martin, J. R. McKinnon, Margaret E. Sharpe, George M. Waggoner, D. E. Section 4 at 4 o'clock. PRESE NT I NG with JANINE CHARRAT English 33 will meet in-Room 212 Angell Hall, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 2 p.m. A. L. Bader. Philosophy 34. Section meetings will be held as follows: Section I, / Touch With Home by' Telephone It costs surprisingly little, For rates to points not shown below, see page 5 in the telephone dial "0" directory, or "Wise Quack Cartoon Thursday "FOUR FEATHERS" Shows Continuous Starting 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 RATES FOR 3-MINUTE STATION-TO-STATION CALLS WED NEiSDAV Keep In LUNCHEON SPECIAL : STUFFED PEPPERS, Yellow Corn, Boiled Potatoes, Bread, Butter, and Choice of any 5c Drink. . . 30c FRANKFURTERS, Sauer Kraut, Boiled Potatoes, Bread, Butter, and Choice of any 5c Drink ,.25c Grilled Ham Sandwich and Malted Milk .. 19c MITCHELL CUTEDRUG NOW SHOWING! THE NEW SEASON'S SCREEN SENSATION! See them with their hair down and their claws out1 135 of them biting, kickin~g, scratching and kissing in the most hilarious battle over men ever screened who have meni women who wantmen tWomen hosnatch men i Written by a woman k about otherwomen. lj it tef,* and tolls RI p and tells. 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Ashley St. 'Phone 7101 Depot Office: Mich. Central R. R. 'Phone 5714 Ann Arbor, Mich. BARGAINS in USED BOOKS "A Film of Tenderness, Beauty and Dramatic Strength ... One to see and Remember For a Long Time!" -F. Nugent, N.Y. Times "A Rare and Rewarding Cine- matic Experience!" '-Herald Tribune "Distinguished in every Way!" -Stage LYDIA MEN DELSSOHN THEATRE Thursday, Friday, Saturday Oct. 5,.6, 7 at 813 Saginaw... New York City. Petoskey. Port Huron.... .65 .35 Sault Ste. Marie .80" 'Traverse City .60 1.00 .35 * or NEW if you prefer STUDENT SUPPLIES for All Departments A federal tax applies on calls for which the charge is 50c or more with MARY SOLAND PAULETTE GODDARD PHYLLIS POVAH " JOAN FONTAINF VIRGINIA- WEIDLER retry. LUCILE WATSON S1839... A Century of Service... 1839 RvAILWAY