1GE S'1X THE MICHIGAN DAILY £~E SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. r Debate Teams Will Consider GradeSystem Women's Squads To Meet In Intramural Series: SponsoredBy League The women's intramural debating teams have been divided into groups of four teams each to participate in the series of round-robin debates scheduled for the spring season. They will debate the proposition, "Resolved: That the University Should Adopt the Pass-or-Fail Sys- tem of Grading." In the tournament each team will meet the others. The teams winning the most decisions will enter the elimination series. Eight teams have been registered and placed in the tournament. There is still opportunity for teams to en- ter the series, Jean Maxted, '41, in charge of the women's division, an- nounced. Sponsored by Athena and the League the debate tournament will award trophies to the winners and runners-up at the Speech Honors Banqget to be held in April. In Group A Rachel Gillette, '44, and Charlotte Papernick, '44, of Jor- dan will meet Martha Cook team composed of Margaret Jackson, '42, and Grace Volkman, '42. Betsy Trethway, '42 and Kay Glad- ding, '42 of Kappa Delta will defend the negative against Myra Cook, '44, and Betty Newmann, '43, of Jordan. In Group B Norma Crowe, '44, and Shirley Raskey, '44, of Jordan will meet Cora Hackett, '42, and Harriet Shoecraft, '41, of Zeta Tau Alpha. Jean Clare, '43, and Mildred Ward, '41, of Kappa Delta, will meet Esther Tang, '41, and Opal Shimmons, '41, of Martha Cook. Special Course Is Made Uncle Sam's.amy Possible Through Grant A grant from the Rockefeller Foun- dation to the University will establish a special eight-weeks course in Eng- lish during the Summer Session for Latin-American students who will en- roll in American universities next fall, Dr. Louis A. Hopkins as chairman of the project announced recently. The course will be offered to a j limited number of students who will' enroll in this and other Universities. The course was set up as a national plan to assist students in making; the difficult language adjustment, Dr. Hopkins pointed out. The course will also constitute a research project to determine the best materials and techniques for teach- ing English to foreign students. This} feature of the plan will also prove of scientific value in future work in this field, Dr. Hopkins cited. "English" House Proposed As a part of the project an "Eng- lish" house is proposed next summer Groups Seeky Scholarships (Continued from Page 1) in acquainting alumni groups with the urgency of the project. Mem- bers of the scholarship committee are Edward Tann, '43E, chairman; William Clark, '41, William Hurley, '42, Lee Perry, 42 and John McCune, '41. Two new amendments were passed changing the terms of office of Sena- tors. It was decided that elections should be held semi-annually in 1 April and December. At least one- or a selected group of Latin-Ameri- can students who would live with a director and assistants in order to develop further their command of English and to adjust themselves to college life. The entire project has had the support of the Division of Cultural, Relations of the State Department.) In a real sense it has been the outgrowth of the Pan-American stu- dent exchanges which the University has developed during the past few years. These excha'nges have pro- vided scholarships and fellowships for students from Latin American countries. For the past three years the Uni- versity along with many others has received an increasing number of for- eign students from South and Cen- tral American nations. Thus the ser- vice to be given by the University will benefit a large group of Spanish and Portugese speaking students. 60 Enrolled In Classes The plan has grown outof lang- uage services offered by the Inter - national Center under thedirection of Prof. Raleigh Nelson, who has been engaged in teaching English to for-' eign students for more than 20 years. This year more than 60 students are enrolled in English classes at the SCenter. Members of the committee in charge of the project are Dr. Hop- kins, director of the Summer Ses- sion as chairman, Prof. C. C. Fries of the English department, who has been director of the Linguistic Insti- tute for the past five summers; Prof. Hayward Keniston, chairman of the Department of Romance Languages, and Professor Nelson, director of the Lieut. Bergren Will Give Talli Recruiting Division Officer To Interview Applicants Lieut. Orville V. Bergren of the United States Marine Corps Re- cruiting Division will present a lec- ture on the purposes and organiza- tions of the marine corps for all students desiring commissions in the' reserve at 4 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium. Procurement officer for the Re- cruiting Division in Detroit, Lieuten- ant Bergren will offer individual in- formation concerning entrance in the Marine Corps Reserve from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow and Mon- day at the offices of the local NROTC unit in North Hall. All candidates for commissions will be required to take three months of basic training at the Marine Bar- racks at Quantico, Va. Successful candidates will be appointed second lieutenants in the Reserve and will be given three additional months of training at Marine Corps Schools. Following this second instruction per- iod, officers will be called to active duty for the duration of the na- tional emergency., Prof. Hackett To lBe Concert 'Soloist Monday The University Symphony Orches- tra, under the baton of Prof. Thor Johnson of the School of Music, will present its next concert at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditcrlum with Prof. Arthur Hackett, tenor, as guest soloist. Selections which will be heard on the program include the Overture to the Interlude "The Secret of Su- zanne" by Wolf-Ferrari, which will open the performance, Schubert's "Symphony No. 4 in C minor" and Moussorgsky's "Pictures at an Ex- hibition." Professor Hackett, chairman of the voice department of the School of Music, will sing three selections by Duparc, "Invitation au voyage," "Phydile" and "Le manoir- de Rose- monde." Well known for his many concert appearances both here and, abroad, Professor Hackett ,has been soloist with many leading American orches- tras including the New York Phil- harmonic, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Detroit, Los Angeles, San Francisco, St. ,Louis and Boston Symphonies. He made 23 appearances with the Boston Orchestra. Sidney Kingsley (left)., Broadway playwright, and Ed Oliver (right), meet each other for the first time after receiving their new uniferms. Oliver, who is from Wilmington, Del., went up to Fort Dix, N. J., from Florida to report for duty. Poll:Reveals Daily Rates Third As Campus NVTewspaper Choice f' F_ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING By ROBERT SPECKkARD The Michigan Daily is third in campus preference among newspap-! ers behind the New York Times andi Detroit Free Press, a Bureau of Stu- dent Opinion Poll reveals. Students prefer The Daily ahead of the Detroit News, Detroit Times, Ann Arbor News, and the Chicago papers, magazines students read fiction and non-fiction about equally the poll shows. However, 22 per cent of the sample questioned said they had nev- er read fiction while at Michigan and 21 per cent said tie same about non-j fiction exclusive of magazines and newspapers. TYPING -18 9 Hisl Gi (f torical Files yen Papers f Comstock Michigan Historical Collections added to their files the f former Governor William A.j The M recently papers o half of the offices are to be filled at u ----------------,h International Center. however, the poll indicates. ter Concerts are first and general lec- each election. Terms of office are to papers mentioned repeatedly by stu- tures second among the be for one year. dents were the New York Herald Tri-extra-curric- Thes other amendment provides Call National Guards n bune, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Boston ular activities of the campus, the that any member who may have to Globe, Christin Science Monitor. ipoll shows. Lectures and discussions drop out of the organization,. may be E LANSING, March 6--G'-The last on religion and art exhibitions are permitted to select his successor if of Michigan's National Guard units Thirty-five per cent e per attended least, the results indicate. he has served one semester. If he were ordered today by the War D- cet 581 stt ecton The poll reveals that 79 per cent of has not served that long, the Senate partment into active service April questitoned rn the poll voted for the the Protestant student body has never must ratify his choice. 7 for a year's training. New York Tl , 22 per cent for attended a guild meeting, 22 per cent ______________________Free Press, and 18 per cent said they oftede -uidmein,2 prcn ,idof the Jewish student body has never' ),ref erred The Dally, attended Hillel, and 41 per cent of Students Prefer"Tme the Catholic student body has never Michigan Men Are Preferred I (thi~ijas''d c Among magazinesstudent prefer- attended Newman Club. B Leneiss-centeNeedchieflr in the eum- Although the Student Religious Life in that order, the poll indicates. Association is now three and one half STwenty-five per cent voted for Time, Iyears old, the poll indicates that 28 By ROBERT MANTHO for us!" reverberated from every 16 per cent for the Digest and 14 per Ie of e campus isitil un Michigan men are preferred at East nook and corner of the campus as the awcentaforLiie.awre of the kind of activities cen- Lansing. infuriated males showed their dis- cn frLt.tered in Lane Hall, the headquarters .r mPreferences among men and wo- of the Association. "The sparkling humor and ready pleasure at the insinuating slurs cast men differ considerably the poll re- wit" of -the Michigan male species against them by the disdainful fe- veals. Men place Time first, women rate them the nod over the local East males. Lansing escorts in the eyes of th However the threatened trip was ,refer The Readers Digest as first i postponed due to the approach of ahong wm Nut ok is th Michigan State coed, according to finals and the increasing amount of among women, but only places sixth R A D IO statements made by Virginia Suchin work thrown upon the "wood-chop.. among the men; five per cent of the and Mary Jane Cleaver, two of the pers" and "teeth-pullers" by uncom- women prefer Harpers Bazaar which By FRANCES MENDELSON lovelier apparitions that infest the promising professors. There cane a registers zero among the men; on the East Lansing campus. nflull in hostilities which lasted until other hand one per cent of the women - Eas Lnsng amuI select Esquire, which places fourth Professor Abbot, between writing This statement comes in the midst recently. ._._.. .,.. . -, ..Send Scouting Party on the lists of campus men. his new book and imbibing the Florida TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen,4 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 orI 2-14le 14c JIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. TYPING and duplicating service. Dorothy Testa, M.A., 625 East Lib- erty (at State), Rm. 1. 2-1835. Re- ports, theses, dissertations, briefs. 22c FOR SALE LOOKING FOR SECURITY? 2 ACRES.NAttractive 7-room house, 2-car garage, fruit, flowers, on main highway, short distance east of Ann Arbor. Near school in fine neighborhood. $7,500, terms. 120 ACRES. 7-room house, furnace, bath, electricity, phone. Good barn, new silo. Woods, young orchard, 15 miles out. Will sell or trade for Ann Arbor property. 219 ACRES--$5,900 with $1,450 down. 7-room house. I 180 ACRES with lake frontage. House, barn, woods, $8,000, terms. ORIL FERGUSON, 928 Forest, Phone 2-2839. 26c MISCELLANEOUS-20 THESIS BINDING-Mimeographing. Brumfield & Brumfield, 308 S. State. 19c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 5c LOST and FOUND LOST-Brown leather tobhcco pouch, and comoy pipe at Michigan The- atre-Reward--call Copley,, 2-3297. 298 HELP WANTED 130 GRAD, STUDENTS working 'on master's thesis or doctor's disserta- tion. Thesis consultant service in exchange for student problems of thesis writing. Phone 2-1835 for details. 300 Comstock. These include such items: as correspondence and account booksI from his years of business and pub- lic service. Comstock before his term as gov- ernor was a student of the University of Michigan, from which he was' graduated in 1899. While here he was a member of Zeta Psi fraternity, to which his son,. William, '42, now be- longs. He . also served during 1909- 10 as presidcnt of Zeta Psi of North' America. Following graduation he was en- 4 v1U111 r~auaPLJ1 11GW~ c1-of a typical male-female feud on the gaged in- banking, construction, oil Michigan campus begun when a poll promotion, real estate and manufac- taken last semester revealed that turing. Son of an early lumber op- the dentists and foresters were con- erator in Alpena, he held public of- sidered by the Ann Arbor coed to be fices in that city. the "least liked dates on campus." Governor W. N. Ferris appointed On the other hand, the "lit" stu- him Regent of the University for a dents and engineers rated one-two term extending through 1913 and on the coed hit parade, although the 1914, and during 1933-34 he was gov- engineers finished a bad second. ernor of the state of Michigan, a Foresters Sever Relations fact notable because of Comstock's Immediately after the results of democratic affiliations. the poll were announced, the den- The papers will be closed to the tists and foresters went on record public for some years, after which as saying they had severed diplo- time they are expected to be inval- matic relations with ' the Michigan uable in the compilation of histories coed and they vowed an en masse of the state. pilgrimage to Ypsilanti. "It's Ypsi l i f y . l i i i; Then it happened! Striking with the rapidity of a Nazi mechanized unit on a quick foray, the Alpha Chi' Sigma crew of masculine experiment- ers. a professional chemical frater- nity, sent several of its members on ' a scouting party to East Lansing by way of conducting a novel experi- ment. The scouting party came back ap- parently more than satisfied by their treatment at the hands of "those Michigan State angels." Glowing re- ports of the "East Lansing side of heaven" soon circulated around cam-I pus wherever males gathered, until various "exploring parties" soon found their way northward over the weekends. 42 Magazines Mentioned The aggregate results point to a new era on the Michigan campus. No longer, the males assert, will wom- an rule be effective as far as they are concerned. In the future, when- ever the Michigan coed gets out of hand, male eyes will turn northward -to East Lansing and vicinity. Said Nicholas Jenesel, '41, whose name is now intimately being con- nected with .that of Virginia Suchin of the Michigan State campus: "Take it from me. If you're feeling out of sorts with the world, travel on to East Lansing, where an angel waits for you." The only comment made by Philip C. DeLong upon his recent return from the friendly haven to the north was: "Go north, brother! Go north!" A PORTABLEI RE TYPEWRITER Although the Gargoyle has had three sell-outs this year it is tied with Technic, The Literary Digest and Good Housekeeping for 31st on the list of campus magazine preferences. New Era On Campus A total of 42 differeni magazines were mentioned as preferences by the students questioned in the poll, sta- tistics show. Outside of newspapers and current Arch School Presents Exhibition Of Designs The exhibition of drawings in De- sign from the Pratt Institute of Fine and Applied Arts, Brooklyn, New York, now being shown in the ex- hibition room, third floor of the Architecture Building, will continue through March 10. A group of designs by last semes- ter's classes in Design is also being shown. The two exhibitions are open to the public daily from nine to 5 p.m. sun, took time off last week to ap- pear as a contestant on the "Prof. Quiz" show. He won second prize for an unheard of definition of deci- bels. It seems he can take it, as well as dish it out . . Ted Grace returned to Ann Arbor recently for a few days. He had his tonsils out, and now he's.back on WJR, new voice and all . . . Dick Slade, one of the most recent radio alumni, is announcer on W45D, new frequency modulation station for the Detroit News. Mort Jampel, also newly graduated, is away up in Sault Ste. Marie, on Station WSOO. He is an announcer- continuity writer. Maggy Soenksen, along with WJLB (the former WMBC) has moved into new studios in the Eaton Towers, Detroit. She's head of continuity for the station. Steve Fillipiak, WIBM, Jackson, drops into the studio occasionally. He's living here in town . . . Mike Wallace is announcing two coast-to- coast shows over WXYZ. The "Green Hornet" is one of them. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY-2-1044. Sox Careful work at low price. STUDENT LAUNDRY-Special dent rates. Moe Laundry, South First St. Phone 3916. stu- 226 10c 4 /, / ./i 'f j/ j: TAILORING & PRESSING-12 DRESSMAKING and alterations. Coats relined. Also sewing of all kinds. Call Mrs. Ream, 8653. 23c FOR RENT FOR RENT-Well located suite, $2.75 for one, $2.25 each for two-904 So. State. Phone. 4685. 299 __ ------_-____._ _._ ._____ ,d Film WdEDICO Money Filtered Smoking in Can Buy FRANK MEDICO Pipes, Cigarette or Cigar GENILNE Holders is bringing FI.TERS MEDICO extra joy to armies of PACKED smokers. It's the wisest ONLY IN doar-pn THIS RED e _____ BO.X BAFFE SCREEN INTEROR "CELLOPHANE" EXTERIOR darned, 3c 117 V j P il1 %: bluses :10; blouses % rites . are for Spring in elsl Skirts in lids, All Sizes. ram $2.95 ters from $1.95 1111 A camera fan is our Bill, Who snaps perfect pictures at will; Found a swell camera "buy" In a Classified reply There's no need a Classified won't fill! --0 1.1+ III yiapY40. Year I Everything for the Record Collector III BUY IT IF YOU LIKE ITI ~ Rental Payments wilt be deducted from purchase price. ALL MAKES SOLD, RENTED, REPAIRED * RCA Victor, Stromberg-Carlson and Ansley Radio Phono- graph combinations. . Columbia and Decca table-model and portable phonographs. * Victor, Columbia, Bluebird, Decca, Okeh Records. * Record Cabinets. * Albums. * Needles 0*Needle Sharpeners. * Books on music and records. Pocket scores, 9 Record racks and carrying cases. SOUND-PROOFED AIR CONDITIONED BOOTHS MUSICALLY-TRAINED PERSONNEL I11 All r Skirts, yea sweaters 'n' ar-around favo blossoming out yummy past plaids, so Skirts fr Blouses, Swea 0., D. Morrill I'' I sill IlII I