WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6, 1539; THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ; WEDN1~SDAY, DEC. 6, 19S~ PAGE Tnk~I Cas Hisore Expose Need Goodfellow Drive Starts In Charitable Cause (Continued from Page 1) was, for her, a courageous, successful effort. But suddenly she collapsed at work. A doctor's analysis revealed that she. was suffering from a chronci condi- tion of which she was completely un- aware and which science is unable to predict. She Was advised to follow a program of complete rest and strict diet, and forced to rely upon state's "mothers' aid." Now, however, the doctor claims that she can once again go to work- if that work is not to strenuous-that she can once more be self-reliant. But she needs some assistance, some aid to bolster her courage and her de- termination. She needs a few ar- ticles of clothing, some pocked money, some small necessities. Above all, she needs expensive serum, for treat- mets for her crippled child. It is to the funds derived from the sales of the Goodfellow Daily that she looks for this assistance. -- Goodfellows-Monday - Play Production's Tenement Drama Opens Here Today (Continued from Page 1) applicable to almost any community. In fact, Ann Arbor angles have been specially devised for this presenta- tion. Playwright Arent makes no attempt to tell a story, Professor Halstead ob- served, and whatever dramatic plot enters the play is merely to help put the problem aeross. The director also pointed out modern ironic humor as a salient feature of the play, explaining that humor is obtained from a serious problem without losing sight of that problem. . . . one-third of a nation . . . will be Play Production's second pre- sentation of the present college year. The organization produces plays once a month throughout the year. - Goodfellos -Monday - Educator To Talk On Sociology Today "What Sociology for Education?" will be the topic of the discussion led by Dr. Claude Eggertson of the School of Education and Prof. Richard C. Fuller of the department of sociology at the meeting of the Graduate Edu- cation Club at 4 p.m. in the graduate reading room in the Elementary School today. Dr. 'Eggertson, long a teacher of sociology, is a new member of the education faculty this year. Profes- sor Fuller will present different as- pects of the problem at the meeting. All gi'aduate students in education in- terested in this informal discussion are urged to attend, Mrs. Van Billard, chairman of the executive committee, said. Victor C. Vaughan House DAILY OF[CIAL 1 BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Dec. 15. Auspices of Ann Arbor Art Association. Exhibitions, College of Architecture and Design: Student work of member colleges of the Association of Colle- giate Schools of Architecture. Dec. 1 to 9. Photographs of tools, processes, and products representative of the Department of Industrial Design at Pratt Institute. Dec. 1 through 14. Open daily, except Sunday, 9 to 5, in Third Floor Exhibition Room, Architectural Building. Open to the public. The Ann Arbor Camera Club'sl Third Annual Exhibit of photog- raphy is being held in the Exhibit Galleries on the Mezzanine floor of the Rackham Building. Open daily, except Sunday, from 2 to 10 p.m. un- til Dec. 9. Lectures University Lecture: Frank A. Waugh, Professor Emerius of Hor- ticulture and Landscape Gardening of Massachusetts State College, will lecture on "Humanity Out of Doors," under the auspices of the School of Forestry, at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, i aII Dec. 7, in the Rackham Amphithe- atre. The public is cordially invited. WildLand Utilization. Dr. Frank A. Waugh, Professor Emeritus of Land- cape Architecture, Massachusetts State College, will give the following talks -in the amphitheatre of the Rack- ham Building at the times indicated: Dec. 6, 11 a.m., "Lines of approach to an understanding of natural ele- ments in wild lands." Dec. 8, 9 a.m., "Administrative problems to be considered in the management of wild lands for hu- man use." These talks are intended primarily for students in the School of Forestry and Conservation, who are expected to attend, but all others interested are also cordially invited. University Lecture: Dr. Martin P. Nilsson, Professor of Classical Ar- chaeology and Ancient History, and formerly rector, University of Lund, Sweden, will lecture on "Rural Cus- toms and Festivals in Greek Reli- gion" (illustrated with slides) under the auspices of the Department of Greek at 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 12, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The public is cordially invited. The Rev. W. P. Lemon, of the First Presbyterian Church, will give the ninth lecture in the serif on "I Be- lieve," which is sponsored by the Stu- dent Religious Association, in the Rackham Amphitheatre, tonight at 8 o'clock. Today's Events Chem. and Met. Eng. Seminar today at 4 o'clock in Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. Speaker: Mr. J. H. Wiegand on "Fluid Friction and the Reynold's Number." Seminar in Phyical Chem4stry will (Continued on Page 4) IL JT New Medical Residence Hall Has Ideal Group Living Design New Dormitories Follow Architectural - P a t t e r n Of University Hospital Patterned after the design of the University Hospital, the Victor C.1 Vaughan House, new residence hall for medical students, approaches more closely the latest conception of a structure created for group living than do any other new buildings re- cently constructed on the campus. Though there is room to accom- modate 139 men in 19 single rooms, 10 double rooms and 50 suites, all of which contain comfortable chairs, lamps, low, modern beds and soft carpets-there are only 106 residents and five staff executives living there now. These men moved in under adverse conditions before the build- .ing was entirely completed, but since then they've managed to get along with completing details and are now making plans for additions to the facilities they now have. Not to be hindered by these conditions the boys have already held an exchange dinner with Mosher Hall and have appointed Keats K. Vining, '43M, as social chairman to make sure they have good times together. Located about the same distance between the University Hospital and the campus, students find the dorm- itory within easy walking distance of their labs and classes. Lobbies and rooms are furnished with the latestI modernistic furnishings and fixtures, including low, colored-leather chairs and divans, glass-topped coffee ta- bles, round, polished-wood reading tables and metal lamps, all designed to increase the comfort of residents. A fine library on the first floor offers ample study facilities although all the books which are expected for the library have not yet been placed in the shelves. Throughout the buildings are card rooms and lounges in which the students can spend their leisure time. Space for asdark room for camera "fans" has been provided, but has not yet been com- pleted. For exercise the men can go to a small, well-equipped gymnasium or take sun baths on the fourth-floor solarium. The kitchen and dining hall oc- cupy the ground floor rear of the building and meals are served from the cafeteria except in the evening, when student waiters serve. Vaughan House has its own dietician, Miss Jean M. Carruthers, who supervises the preparing of the menus and the purchasing, preparing and serving of the food. The Residence hall staff is headed by the resident advisor, Dr. Henry Emerson. His three assistants are graduates of the University Medical School; Dr. Ralph Cooper, Resident in Internal Medicine; Dr. Roy Craig, Resident in the Neuropsychiatric In- stitute; and Dr. Hiram T. Langston, Resident ip Surgery. - Made of a new vari-colored brick it forms a striking contrast to the faded brick and ancient lines o1 the Michigan Alumnus Photo A. Penn Game Movie To Be Shown Here Motion pictures of the Pennsyl- vania-Michigan football game will be at 8 p.m. today in Room 316 of the1 played guard on last year's basket- Union. Edward Thomas, Grad, who ball team, Vill act as commentator. The film showing has been ar- ranged through the courtesy of the University of Michigan Athletic As- sociation. Members of Hiawatha Club may attend without charge. Taking the form of a smoker, the meeting has also been called to make final plans for a Christmas mixer Dec. 13. The program committee consists of William Jackson, '41, Ed- win Giombolini; '42, and Donald Counihan, '41. 0 Mae an ORIENTAL RUG Drink More Milk - - . fr . . . Year-Round . : to A Lasting Christmas gift your family and friend. Health r * Large selection of small and large scatters. Room size or over. Persian prints, jugo slippers, etc. All reasonably priced. N. L. Mangouni 334 S. 4th Ave. - Phone 6878 * Expert Repairing, Cleaning. Milk Dealers of Ann Arbor 1 , - ______________________________I WHYPOSN)L{A IRIINE PILOT WRTEA NOVEL ABOFIT FLYING? r f i' =1 ;i i ., . , , old University Hospital which stands nearby. 4. kk Can you FIND YOUR STORE from a block away? If you can't, neither can your customers . . and you may be losing possible sales. That is why an electric sign is a paying investment. Bright signs and bright windows attract crowds. Look down the street after nightfall in any shopping center: Successful stores, theaters and progressive places of business mark their location with a brilliant flood of light. Names in lights are names noticed. * * * If your store has a transom built over the door and window, it can easily be converted into an attractive silhouette sign. These fascia signs are thoroughly modern and do a very effective job at a minimum expense. Detroit Edison engineers will gladly give you com- plete information about different kinds of lighting for your store. Call your Detroit Edison office. The Detroit Edison Company. _ . "TOO YELLOW TO PLAY FOOTBALL?" He was on the sidelines now. He was the guy who had broken Billy Cooper's leg. The guy 85,000 people were waiting to boo. And today was Game Day. A short story by Paul O'Neil on page 22 of this week's Post. THE PLAIN PEOPLE FACE THE WAR. The writer, John W. Vandercook, recently talked with French shopkeepers, peasants, heard their stories; then motored into Germany and spent hours with Nazi small-town leaders. New insight on how the common people of two countries are taking it. HOLLYWOOD HUSBANDS HAVE SO-0-0 MANY PROBLEMS! Reuben Rosen, Hollywood's Boy Wonder, was a wow at changing scripts into happy endings. But could he kill his W WILD COYOTES BREAKFASTED WITH US! Snowed in eight months of the year, seven thousand feet up in the High Sierras, the author of this unusual nature article and her husband actually taught wild'coyotes "table manners"! Read The Coyotes Come. MARRY FOR LOVE-REPENT AT LEISURE. A boy of nineteen marrying a woman of thirty-one? It won't last, people were saying. But the wife, desperately in love, had the courage to find out. Read Please Let Me Come Home, by Helen Deutsch. IT WAS SMART TO BE RED. Eugene Lyons gives you a Who's Who of Communism's elite... how they line up unsuspecting professors, naive clergymen, writers, and "society" folk as a front for their propaganda. AND ... Short stories by Maurice Walsh and David Lamson; articles,