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October 19, 1940 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1940-10-19

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1940

i .

Ieavy Penalty
For Evasion
Is Announced

Ann Arbor

Draft BoardI

Organizes Its Machinery
For Late Registration
With many students and residents
of Ann Arbor apparently not yet
registered for selective service, the
members of Ann Arbor's draft board
yesterday completed plans for late
registration of eligible men.
Meeting under the chairmanshipj
of Col. A. C. Peck, retired U. S. Army1
officer, the board members, Prof.
Emeritus Edward Goddard and at-
torney Harold Golds, announced that
all men who have not yet registered
must present written explanations
of their failure to Mr. Golds' office,
615 Ann Arbor Trust Building, im-
mediately.
The board will consider each ex-
planation to determine whether the
man in question may be exempt the
penalty decreed by the federal gov-
ernment for failure to register on
Wednesday with the regular record-
ing of draft information.
The board will have an office in
the Armory building, where appeals
may be made by any registrants
seeking exemption from the draft or
changes in draft classification.
Federal statute calls for a fine of
$14,000 or imprisonment of five years
or both as penalty for failure to reg-
ister for possible draft. Certificates
of registration, issued at the time of
recording data, serve as proof of reg-
istration and must be carried at all
times by registrants.
Registration information on the
3,846 students registered by the spe-
cial University draft board Wednes-
day is now in the hands of the Ann
Arbor board and will be forwarded
.to home cities by the board. In addi-
tion, the board has cards for 183
University Hospital patients regis-
tered by Assistant Director A. B.
Cooke and tenstudents registered in
the Health Service by Nurse Mada-
lene Mortensen.
Pledging Announced
Alpha Delta Pi (announces the
pledging of Nancy Bercaw, '43, of
Willamette, Ohio.

Art Cinema French
Film,'End Of Day,'j
Closes Run Today
The three-day run of "The End!
of a Day," French film with English
sub-titles, comes to a close at 8:15
p.m. today at the Lydia Mendelssohn
Theatre.
Sponsored by the Art Cinema
League, the movie is the first foreign
film offered on campus this year.
Tickets may still be obtained for to-
night's performance at the Mendels-
sphn box office for 35 cents, or reser-
vations may be made by calling 6300.
All University women have been giv-
en late permission if they attend the
showing in order to see the entire
feature.
"Don Q," the second in a series of
Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., films being
revived here by the Cinema League,
will be shown at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow
at the League. It will be accompanied
by a musical score, and selected short
subjects. Holders of seasoh tickets
to this series must bring the tickets
issued for the first film. A few seats
for the performance tomorrow may
still be obtained at the box of dice.
Tryouts Begin
On Union Staff'
Gould Says Organization,I
Method To Be Explained
All eligible sophomores and sec-
ond-semester freshmen who are in-
terested in trying out for the Union
executive staff have been invited to
drop in at the Student Offices any
day between 3 p.m. and 5, p.m:, ac-.
cording to an announcement made
yesterday by Douglas Gould, '41,1
president of the Union.
. The organizationsandtmethod ofI
promotion on the student staff will
be explained to prospects by the jun-I
ior executive in charge of the office,
and aediscussion of the experience
that staff members receive in the
fields of administration, public rela-
tions and vocational guidance will
follow.
A special meeting of all tryouts'
and junior and senior members of'
the Student Executive staff is planned
for 4:30 p.m. Monday

New York Theological

Students

These students at the Union Theological Seminary in New York were subpoenaed after refusing to
register for selective military ser ice because they are opposed to conscription: Left to right, frost row,
William N. Lovell, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; George M. Houser, Penver; Howard E. Spragg, Maiden, Mass.; Rich-
ard J. Wichlei, Binghamton, N. Y.; back row, Donald B nedict, Adrian, Mich.; Meredith Dallas, Grosse Pointe,
Mich.; David Dellinger, Wakefield, Mass.; and James Bevilacqua, Buffalo, N. Y.
DAILY OFFICIAL BULL ETIN
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1940 school with Room 4 U.H. where it Political Science 5; make-up exam
VOL. LI. No. 18 will be transmitted. ination (Professor Preuss' section
Robert L. Williams, will be given today at 9:00 a.m. it
Publication in the Daily Official Assistant Registrar. room 2037 Angell Hall.
Bulletin is constructversnoytice to all L rus
members o the University.- L. Preuss
Students, College of Literature,
Notices Science, and the Arts: No course may Psychology 31 makeup final ex
be elected for credit after today. amination for all sections will b
Senate Reception: Since no in- __held Tuesday, October 22, from 7:0
rlcil~ niain tnhiva t~f no-n in Rnm 1121 N f

Declaring that the Nazis have met
their master in Great Britain, Mr.
Gerhart H. Seger, former member of
the German Reichstag and its Com-
mittee on Foreign Relations, ex-
plained to an audience of over 600
yesterday in the Rackham Amphi-
theatre why the "house that Hitler
will crumble.
"Hitler's weak point in the present
conflict is his air force," Mr. Seger
asserted and observed that an ex-
.eme shortage of flying personnel
and fuel has made the German air
fleet inferior to that of the British.
"As a former war pilot. I know
the need for extensive training,"
Mr. Seger stated, "Germany does not
have enough fuel to permit pilots to
obtain an adequate number of flight
hours. With the aquisition of Ru-
mania, the Nazis still lack ten mil-
lion of the 20 millions tons of gaso-
line needed annually for warfare."
He noted that in fighting an ag-
gressive war Germany loses many
, more skilled pilots in each combat
than do the British. Those Ger-
, man forced down are lost for the
duration of the war, while downed
Englishmen may return to battle im-
mediately.
Germans Disillusioned
"More important than aerial inef-
ficiency is the decline of morale in
Germany," Mr. Seger declared. "The
English population was prepared tc
expect terrific bombing, but German
civilians were told that no air raids
- could penetrate Nazi defenses. The
German people have been repeated-
n ly disillusioned by successful British
attacks," he said.
Mr. Seger referred to the plead-
ing tone of articles in recent German
- newspapers begging the German peo-
e ple to show more enthusiasm for the
0 war. Hitler must constantly show the
people some favorable action, he
said, and cited the recent treaty with
- Japan and Italy as a plan to bolster
German morale.
5 "One must remember that it is
easier for aggressors to conquer than
to rule," Mr. Seger observed. "Hitler's
aggressive military force is weakenec
by the huge armies needed to police
Czechoslovakia, Norway, Poland, Ru-
mania and France," he stated.

Oppose

Conscription,

German Air Force Is Inferior,
Former Nazi Official Declares

R{eact The

Daily Classifieds

E .. ._.__. ....______._..._. ........,..._._.

Emphasizing the importance of in-
dividual initiative in progress. Mr.
Seger noted that totalitarian powers
completely destroy their citizens' per-
sonality, and create a subservient
mass dependent on a limited few.
"Time is fighting against Hitler."
the former Reichstag member said,
"Time weakens his air force and mili-
tary machine. Time undermines the
morale of the German people. The
longer Great Britain stalls the war,
the nearer Hitler is approaching col-

D)OM .). I)ASCOLA
Sttden/ Barber at Michigaw
Union Fron 1932-1939
Welcome Grads!
May you all find your old haunts
and former associates enjoyable
and pleasant. I, too, invite my
old friends and you to a typically
Michigan environment of dis-
tinctness, smartness and progres-
siveness. Our six barbers special-
ize in scalp treatmens. Personal-
ity Hair Styling - facial --
electric shaves. No waiting.
The DASCOLA
BARBERS
"Keep A-Head of Your Hair"
Between State and Mich. Theatre

[CLASSIFIED ADVEJRTISING
LU

ARTICLES FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS CARDS-The largest
selection in town. All imprinted
with your name. From 50 for $1.00
up. Craft Press, 305 Maynard St.
11c
FOR 'SALE-Cottage, Portage Lake.
Excellent location immediately on
Dexter-Pinckney Road. R. 1A. Bu-
sick, 1659 Glynn Court, Detroit.
Phone Townsend 6-4855. 71
moo

MISCELLANEOUS -20
BEN THE TAILOR-More money for
your clothes. 122 E. Washington
St. 1c
RIDING HORSE to let until June 15
for his board. For one or two riders.
Phone 7265. 74
TYPING-18
TYPING-L. M. Heywood, 414 May-
nard St., phone 5689. 9c
VIOLA STEIN- Experienced legal
typist, also mimeographing. Notary
public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland.
LAUNDERING -9

dividuai invitations are beng sent,
this is a cordial invitation to all mem-1
bers of the teaching staff and their
wives to be present at the Senate Re-
ception to new members of the facul-
ties on Tuesday evening, October 22,
in the ballroom of the Michigan
Union at 8:30 p.m. The reception
will take place from 8:30 to 10:00
o'clock, after which there will be
dancing from 1b0:00 to 12:00. It is
especially hoped that new teaching
fellows and instructors may be pres-
ent and the chairmen of departments
are asked to be of assistance in bring-
ing this about.
School of Education Students: No'
course may be elected for credit after
today. Students must report all
changes of elections at the Regis-
trar's Office, Room 4, University
Hall. Membership in a class does not
cease nor begin until all changes have
been thus officially registered. Ar-
rangements with the instructors are
I not official changes.
Phillips' Scholarships: Freshman
students who presented four units
of Latin, with or without Greek, for
admission to the University, and who
are continuing the study of either
language, may compete for the Phil-
lips' Classical Scholarships. Awards
will be based on the results of an
examination covering the preparatory
work in Latin or in both Latin and
Greek, as described in the bulletin
on scholarships, which may be ob-
tained in Room 1, University Hall.
The examination will be held this'
year in Room 2014 Angell Hall on
Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 4:00 p.m. In-
terested students may leave their
names with O. M. Pearl or R. A. Pack,
2030 A.H.
College of Literature, Science, and
the Arts, Schools of Music, Educa-
tion, and Forestry: Students who re-
ceived marks of I or X at the close of
their last semester or summer session
of attendance will receive a grade of
E in the course unless this work is
made up by October 30. Students
wishing an extension of time beyond
this date in order to make up this
work should file a petition addressed
to the appropriate official in their

i Student Organizationstdesiring of-
ficial recognition for the College
Year 1940-41 should file a list of
officers with the Dean of Students
in Room 2, University Hall on or be-
fore November 1. This information
should be made out on forms to be
obtained at the Office of the Dean
of Students and should include the
name, address and class of each offi-
cer. Early in November a list of all
organizations which have been given
official recognition for the year will
be published in the Michigan Daily.
Wanted: Approximately 50 men
and 50 women students for the Mich-
igan Sports Service at the Stadium
on the following dates: October 19,
26, and November 16, from 11:00 a.m.
to 6:00 p.m. Pay on hourly basis.
See Miss McKinnon any morning
after 9:00 o'clock in her office under
Section 4.
Student Employment Bureau
Room 2, University Hall
Academic otices
Bacteriology Seminar, Monday,
October 21, at 8:00 p.m., Room 1564
East Medical Building. Reports on
meetings of the American Public
Health Association recently held in
Detroit. All interested are invited.
Botany 1 Make-Up Examination
will be given Wednesday, October
23, from 7-10 p.m. in Room 2033
N.S. Only students with excused ab-
sences from the June final examina-
tion will be permitted to take the
make-up exam.
Geology Make-up Final Examina-
tions for geology courses given the
second semester of last year will be
held on Monday, October 21, at 2:00
p.m. in Room 2054 Natural Science
Building.
Economics 71 Examination on Mon-
day, October 21, at 1:00 p.m., as fol-
lows:
A--G in Room 25 Angell Hall.
H-O in Room 1025 Angell Hall.
P-Z in Room 348 West Engineer-
ing Bldg.
Bring bluebook 8%"xll".

to 9:0 p.m. m. 1in oomlii .[ .
. Psychology 34 and 42 makeup ex
aminations will be held on Monday
October 21, at 2 p.m. in Room 212
Natural Science Bldg.
Concerts
Musical Art Quartet: The Univer
sity Musical Society announces tha
supplementary to the Choral Unio
series, the Musical Art Quartet o
New York City. will give a series o
three Chamber Music concerts o
Friday evening, Saturday afternoo
and evening, January 24 and 25, 194
The Quartet is made up of four dis
tinguished artists as follows: Sasch
Jacobsen, first violin; Paul Bernar
second violin; William Hymansor
viola and Marie Roemaet-Rosanof
violoncello.
The concerts will be given in th
main auditorium of the Rackhan
Building. Information concernin
tickets, programs, etc., will be an
nounced at a later date.
Exhibitions
College of Architecture and De
sign: Christmas greeting cards, de
signed by well-known artists, are be
ing shown in the ground floor cor
(Continued on Page 4)
Alumni Club Organized;
Secretary Plans Tow

it
n
J
A
A
n
in
1.
5-
a
d,
1,
e
m
g
-
1-
r

Liet's, Show
that Michigan
Spirit! ,,_

Michigan Pennants
Michigan Stickers

. Oc, 25c, 49c, 89c
. for 51c & 15c
(Assortments)

Michigan Pillows

Michigan

Mascot Animals

ALL NEW thrills of
romance, drama,
laughs and excite-
ment!
- ----r .
110641
Also Walt Disney's
"WINDOW CLEANERS"
"'Bowling For Strikes"
MICH. vs. HARVARD
NEWS
Matineea Night
25c Incv. Tax 40c

Special
"Squeaky" Michigan Scottie 97
In Yellowand Blue. . .
THIS WEEK-END ONLY
STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY

II

Price List
(All articles washed and ironed)
SILVER LAUNDRY
64~7 hoover Phone 5594
Free pickups and deliveries
Shirts ..................... .14
Undershirts ................ .04
Shorts ..................... .04
Pajama Suits .............. .10
Socks, pair...................03
Handkerchiefs ..............02
Bath Towels ............... .03
All Work Guaranteed
Also special prices on Coeds'
laundries. All bundles done sep.-
ar.tely. No markings. Silks,
wools are our specialty.

Mr. T. Hawley

Tapping, general

secretary of the Alumni Association,
will be in River Rouge Tuesday night
together with Ed Frutig, of the Wol-
verine Eleven to organize a local unit
of the University of Michigan Alumni
Club.

Ii.

SHOWS TO-DAY at 2-4-7-9 P.M.
NOW PLAYING! uuuu

MATS. 25c EVEN INGS 40c
(including All Tax)ILo
THE HIT THAT WAS MADE FOR HAPPINESS!

I"

LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low price. 3c

_~~ Sunday' v
GINGER ROGERS
RONALD COLMAN
in "LUCKY PARTNERS"

I

STUDENT LAUNDRY-Special stu-
dent rates. Moe Laundry, 226
South First St. Phone 3916. 10c
TRANSPORTATION -21
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL -
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Killins Gravel Company. Phone
7112. 5c
MICHIGANI

_ ,

ii

F

FLAVOR
Tells the
Story

-J-u ,-J1.
. /-

Monday,Oc. 21
ONE NIGHT ONLY

PUBLIC HIT NO. 1
Rocking The Nation With Laughter
SAM H. HARRIS Presents
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Authors of "YOU CAN'T TAME IT WITH YOU"

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