PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. 4)(70131"It 251 19,10 THkICIA fAL FRIDAY, OCTOBER Z5, 194G Men's Dorms Announce New House Officers Michigan, Allen-Rumsey Lloyd, Williams Plan Final Election Monday Results of the West Quadrangle elections Monday were made public last night +by Mr. Charles Peake, chief resident adviser. Four houses conducted final elections and four halls held primaries. . Erwin Coveny, '44, was elected president of Adams House; Wes Pe- ters, '42E, was chosen vice-president; Charles Booth, '44, secretary; Bob Lapp, '43E, treasurer; Clinton Rus- sell, judiciary council; Bob Kemp, 43E, social chairman, and Ray Wise, '41, athletic chairman. Chicago House officers are Dave Matthews, '41Ed, president; Earl Ar- kiss, '42, vice-president; Lewis Saks, '44, secretary; Bob Judson, '44, trea- surer; Bruce Forbes, '42, judiciary council; Paul Franklin, '43, social chairman; Carl McNicholas, '44, scholarship chairman, and Randall Bostwick, '44, athletic chairman. In Wenley House, Bill Van Gieson, '43E, was chosen as president; Art Geib, '44, vice-president; Jim Sum- ner, '43, secretary-treasurer; Bob Ehrler, '44, judiciary council; Phil Heuber, '44, social chairman; Ted Goslewiske, '44, athletic chairman, and Jack Dorr, '44, scholarship chairman. Winchell House selected Doug Da- vis, '44, president; Bud Brimmer, '44, vice-president; Finley Moser, '43, secretary; Fred Hoffman, '44, trea- surer; Allen Axelrod, '43, judiciary council; Jack Brackett, '44, social chairman; George Jaquillard, '43, athletic director, and John MacKin- non, '44, scholarship chairman. Final elections in Allen-Rumsey, Lloyd, Michigan and Williams houses will be held next Monday. Shortage Of Machinists Causing Bottleneck In Defense Program' As the United States begins direct- ing its economy towards the goal of a strong national defense, bottlenecks are beginning to appear that may seriously hamper both the national defense program and peace time pro- duction. Several reasons for the one of the most serious bottlenecks-the short- age of skilled machinists and tool and die workers-were disclosed yester- day in an interview with Melvin C. Peirce, manager of the local office of the Michigan Employment Serv- ice. ''Practically all men who can meet four general requirements can find employment at the present time," he declared. The four requirements he listed were good physical condition, possession of a birth certificate in many cases, or naturalization papers, and training. The pressure for skilled machinists or tool and die workers has not hit Ann Arbor yet," Peirce explained, "because there are not many skilled workers normally employed here and also there are not many factories en- gaged directly in defense work." He went on to point out, however, that the demand for this type of labor is quite great in the more in- dlustriAiz7r d ~Cnii~n+n--, real jam in the production of dies for mass production requirements. It is especially difficult to obtain new ma- chinery to produce the articles needed for national defense, it was disclosed. The present lack of skilled tool and die workers is the result of sev- eral factors, Peirce explained. First, during the last 10 years, the demand for this work was not great and con- sequently many workers went into other lines and furthermore very few new men learned the trade. Young men preferred to make higher wages on the production line rather than sacrifice a few years at the low ap- prentice pay that is necessary to learn a highly skilled trade. At the present time, it was pointed out that when the demand for skilled machinists and tool and die workers has become pressing, there are not only an insufficient number avail- able now but also there seems to be few recruits going into the trade. The biggest reason for this, Peirce said, is the competing attraction of higher wages on the production side, which attracts able-bodied men who think only of the short-run situation, away Capt. Davidson Discusses Navy ROTC U.S. Naval Expert Opens Talk Series Capt. Lyal A. Davidson, chairman of the Naval ROTC department, opened the 1940-41 series of naval lectures yesterday with his talk en- titled "The Navy: Its Past Develop- ment and Present Purxoses." Capt. Davidson traced the history of the U.S. Navy from its early be- ginnings in Revolutionary times to the present. He emphasized technical developments such as the exploding shell, armor plate, steam, the screw propeller, and finally the dread- naught type of war vessel. The maritime nation without a nav- al policy is like a ship at sea without a chart, said Captain Davidson, and he noted the disarmament trend Students View Grid Chances A gainst Penn, 0e>o<"""">o<=->o<=o<--- ro - y=; o<-- omon< oc" FAREWELL TOUR YvALE P.UPPDETEERKS IN A NEW ADULT SHOW Featuring "My Man Friday" LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE FRIDAY, SATURDAY, October 25, 26 8:30 p.M. All Seats Reserved-75c and 50c Box office open October 23 Mail Orders Now Tel 6300 V a4;;;;0 ;;;;> 4;;;;o o ;;;;y ;;;> TYPING- 18 TYPING-L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., phone 5689. 9c TYPING-Experience. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave., phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 14c VIOLA STEIN - Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. FOR SALE UY PERSONAL STATIONERY - 100 sheets, 100 envelopes, printed with your name and address-$1.00. Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. 12c MISCELLANEOUS -20 WE ARE EAGER to help sororities and fraternities with their mail- ings and programs. Edwards Let- ter Shop, 711 N. University. Phone 2-2846. 6c LOST and FOUND COST-Green alligator purse. Wed. evening. Reward. Return to Uni- versity Lost and Found. 82 LOST-Pair of pastel green long hair Angora gloves Tuesday near Kres- ge's. Reward. Call Miss Steinke, 2-1594. 83 LOST-Ladies' gold Hamilton wrist watch. Initials F. A. on back. Call Frances Aaronson, 2-3119. Reward. 84 TRANSPORTATION -21 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 5c LAUNDERING -9. LAUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 3c STUDENT LAUNDRY-Special stu- dent rates. Moe Laundry, 226 South First St. Phone 3916. loc Price List (All articles washed and ironed) SILVER LAUNDRY 607 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. TODAY THE COMEDY THAT TOOK NEW YORK BY STORM! I o CollE lATE! -down at dear old Pottawatomie University! First Michigan Showing! 4I The "Middle-Weight" . ,° Jack et Champion Wholly new idea in indoor-outdoor coats. Originated by Manhattan, and selected in a poll by upper class- men: "We like it, weight, colors, saddle stitching and all." Wool suede, $8.95. At your favorite store, along with those other Manhattan hits, the wool-and-rayon gabardine shirt ($5), and the plaid cotton flannel high- tone Hillbilly shirt ($2). t ; The Manhattan Shirt Company, 444 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. -- 11 1i. Maines25cI Now! MICHIGAN Mn Nights 040cI Helpless Henry one minute... Hurricane Hank the r next! And all because of one kiss! From timid soul to holy terror... it's riotous romance! I ncl. I F'CTV~iP. I t II e Col eo o fWa Never Menhe 1 ' Produced and ..' N ero mje '0"h ,, Cuse directed by sIpI19a 0d Span oke 1A.0. F( R F AIR CnTT ~SP's eGO{ I. \NN1w/of=kl . .m,~k 1 a I .-- -