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October 25, 1940 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1940-10-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1940

Ann Arbor Draft Board Officials List
Local Registration Numbers, 217-500

Names of the men who have the
numbers 217-500 in the shuffle-num-
bering of cards for Ann Arbor was
announced yesterday.
Students living outside of Ann Ar-
bor must obtain their numbers at
their home districts.
This list is not the order that the
men will be chosen for service. They
are only the numbers that have been
assigned for the lottery that will be
held in Washington next Tuesday
when Secretary of War Stimson will
select the numbers out of a huge
bowl. The order in which he picks
these registration numbers will be
the order that men will be called
for active duty unless they can prove
grounds for deferment.
Succeeding list of the names will
be published in The Daily during the
rest of the week. Because of the lim-
ited times they have to number and
file the approximately 4,000 cards
for the city, no information on num-
bers can be given out at the board
headquarters, Harold F. Golds, sec-
retary of the city draft board, de-
clared.
The list continues:

217,
218,
219,
220,
221,
222,
223,
224,
225,
226,
227,
228,
229,
230,
231,
232,
233,
234,
235,
23.6,
237,
238,
239,
240,
241,
242,
243,
244,
245,
246,
247,
248,
249,
250,
251,
252,
253,
254,
255,
256,
257,
258,
259,
260,
261,
262,
263,
264,
265,
266,
267.
268.
269.
270.
271.
272.
273.
274.
275.
276.
277.
278.
279.
280.
281.
282.
283.
284.
285.
286.
287.
288.
289.
290.
291.
292.
293.
294.
295.
296.
297.

Lawrence E. Williams
Stephen Farkas, jr.
John W. Andress
Emerson F. Ehnis
Jacob F. Voelker
Woodrow W. Malloy
Dee E. Mason
Donald W} Angell
Robert H. Laubengayer
Harry A. Wilson, jr.
Raymond J. Quigley
John C. Dieterle
Francis J. Lamirand
Albert V. Benzinger
Edwin S. Rice
Walter J. Bareis
John L. Morton
Harold E. Matthews
Olin E. Oeschger
Frederick A. Zemke
Erwin W. Graham
George E. Pallas
Walter R. Musson
Homer L. Allen
Robert D. Balhoff
Claude B. Mayer
Alvin C. Stauch
Jacob S. Richter
George W. Hagerman
Miles O. Pfaus
Karl R. Ulrich
Patrick A. Donnelly
Carl G. Hanselman
Walter L. Galson
George J. Simmons
Elwin F. Tag
Adrian C. Bixby
William L. Odbert
Robert W. Ward
Arthur D. Corkins
Samuel Eilenberg
Kenneth W. Dow
Harold M. Schlegel
Walter F. Frey
Douglas M. King
Thomas J. Watson
Charles M. Johnson
Richard A. Kuhn
George F. Kemery
Clyde D. Fleming
Carl H. Scherdt
Richard C. Boys
Alvin J. Deye
Ivo H. Brewer
Robert J. Kimbler
Dean M. Miller
Earl O. Blaess
Fred J. Metzner
Roscoe D. Pratt
Raymond F. Clark-
Vernie M. Hendricks
Roy S. Demaree
Charles E. Stilson, jr.
Demer E. Madsen
Robert M. Tilford
Irvin Miller
Henry D. Brown
Theodore C. Espejo
Palmer L, Beebe
Awbery Whitfield
Ernest R. Fraser
Robert E. Serebeck
George R. Anderson
Charles H. Cole, jr.
George W. Stickradt
Walter D. Butler
George L. Stauch
Henry H. Schneider
Bernard Sarut
Donald L. Hanna
Nicholas J. Prakken

298. Harold B. Kerr
299. David M. Baker
300. William H. Bates
301. David J. Hall
302' Robert F. Schumacher
303. Joe L. Davis
304. Burcell R. Demaline
305. Walter A. Sellers
306. Harold A. Horning
307. Lyle L. Stalker
308. Harold C. Baldner
309. Leon W. Hirth
310. Egbert N. Stanger
311. James Jim Gagalis
312. Edward Hoppe
313. Henry D. Arkison
314 Victor W. Peterson
315. Fred P. Foster
316. Merle W. Wenk
317. Peter A. Raft
318. George Morgan
319. Thomas W. Murray
320. Sim P. Dimitroff
321. Cecil L. Warden
322. Carl W. Pfeiflle
323. Frank C. Skodak
324. Henry Bikin
325. Warren E. McConnell
326. John Zugich
327. George L. Phillips
328. Dr. William C. Scott
329. Samuel C. Little
330. Lyle E. Brown
331. Richard H. Mosher
332. Dr. Henry J. Lange
333. Dr. Ezra V. Bridge
334. Dr. Alvin J. Ingram
335. Richard G. Thompson
336. John C. Wolgamot
337. Lawrence G. Mann
338. Myron J. VanLeeuwen
339. Christoe Georgopoulos
340. Cecil J. Nesbitt
341. Walter W. Hanselmann
342. John B. Serracino
343. John W. Harmon
344. John L. Murrel
345. Leslie K. Mundt
346. Stephen J. Filipiak
347. Martin H. Wittenborg
348. Kenneth N. Campbell
349. Christian H. Olsen
350. John W. Simonds
351. John R. Williams
352. Virgil W. Boyd
353. John R. McMullen
354. Carl W. Huesman
355. Raymond T. Warren
356. Raymond H. Miller
357. Ledru E. Davis
358. Richard J. Magoon
359. Herman D. Rufus
360. Ben J. Burkhart
361. Smith Lacy
362. Harold J. Elliott
363. Paul Leneberg
364. Mi'chael J. Kowalt
365. Jessie T. Ferguson
366. Kenneth R. Kelly
367. Charles C. Mitchell
368. William W. Ranson
369. Gerald R. Reynolds
370. Lee Melrose
371. John F. Weng, jr.
372. Ira W. Biddle
373. Donald R. Fitzsimons
374. Francis Villany
375. Earl J. Monroe
376. Macon C. Lewis
377. William H. Parry
378. W. Arnold Goulder
379. Gordon J. Fleming
380. Charles M. Shaw
381. Nelson O. Cushing
382. John P. Seehaver
383. Dean F. Polsdorfer
384. John A. Hatto
385. Lester V. Colwell
386. Lloyd J. Wakefield
387. Clifford H. Simmons
388. Everett T. Jorpey
389. Frederick L. Arnet
390. George C. Hanselman
391. Paul F. Icerman
392. Clarence E. Pratt
393. Francis O. Bryant
LEAHN to: 0
S RHUMBi
0 +TANGO
+ FOX TROT
+CONGA

Sylvia Studio of Dance
603 East Liberty Phone 8066
V ;n <;;;yo o o ;;<

394. Alfred J. Mummery
395. Harry C. Krumrei
396. Vincent C. Wolf
397. Wilfred T. Dempster
398. Jack L. Pelton
399. James Kelly
400. Herman M. Finkbeiner
401. Willard R. Klunzinger
402. Ward W. Boettger
403. Brooks V. Rice
404. Norman L. Langthorne
405. Emory C. Butler
406. Harold L. McAllister
407. Casper M. Enwemann
408. Calvin W. Hooker
409. Tony Rupas
410. George C. Allshouse
411. Abe C. Muchnick
412. Owen L. Torrey
413. Donald W. Hariacher
414. Emil W. Hoppe
415. William T. Price
416. A. Willis Player
417. Meredith V. Gillan
418. Neil Martini
419. John G. Zill
420. Earl E. Layton
421. Wilson A. Rogers
422. Edwin A. A. Graf
423. A. Dwight Donlap
424. Andrew D. Sezton
425. Dwight P. Danyew
426. Earl L. Holister
427. George L. Glisson
428. William Cheyne
429. Glenn E. Ivory
430. Lynwood C. Cristopher
431. Wendell G. Anderson
432. Thomas N. Hubbard
433. Norman L. Grob
434. Emil A. Shetler
435. Sterling Seyfried
436. Benjamin F. Frayer
437. Arthur E. Secord
438. Delton G. Seymour
439. Robert S. Allen
440. M. Duane Farmer
441. Henry V. S. Ogben
442. Wilbur B. McLaren
443. Harry M. King
444. Warwick L. Sutton
445. Nicholas M. Lazar
446. Karl G. Kessler
447. James W. Hyde
448. John S. Dobson
449. Frederick H. Test
450. Robert M. Shier
451. Malcolm J. Hume
452. Robert G. Dailey
453. Hermann Marcuse
454. Donald B. Walsworth
455. Herbert B. Huehl
456. David L. Clague
457. Lester D. Hargan
458. Laurie A. Hautola
459. John N. Trytten
460. Frederick G. Engle
461. Claude W. Woolaver
462. Meredith C. Steele
463. Benjamin S. Weisswasser
464. Guy D. Hermann
465. Darwin L. Heine
466. John T. Baldwin, jr.
467. Kenyon A. Brigham
468. Edward C. Varnum
469. WalterBR. Darling, Jr.
470. Orrin B. Godfrey
471. Robert A. Olson
472. William O. Rekewitz
473. John H. Seeley
474. Erwin M. Kapp
475. Francis J. Kruidenier
476. Robert R. Rose
477. Charles S. Rayment
478. H. Pearson Beebe
479. Paul R. Schoenhals
480. Lester D. Working
481. William H. Kinsey
482. John T. Fuller
483. Gerald G. Tinholt
484. Gerald L. Young
485. Luther S. Bauer
486. Herbert J. Bloom

Parent Group
Will Discuss
Citizenship
Functions Of The Parents
In Developing Citizens
Theme Of Conference
For the 11th consecutive year the
Parent Education Institute, sponsored
by the University Extension Service
and the Michigan Congress of Par-
ents and Teachers, will convene Oct.
30, 31 and Nov. 1 at the Rackham
Building.
Lectures, panels, discussions and
conferences on the general theme
"Citizenship" will deal with the func-
tions of the parent, the teacher and
the school in developing better citi-
zenship in children.
"Citizenship in the School" will be
the first day's topic with a class in
parent education and talks on "Can
the Schools Train Citizens for Dem-
ocracy" and "The Schools and the
National Emergency" scheduled for
the morning session.
The remainder of the first day will
be apportioned among a panel with
nine participants, a talk on corres-
pondence courses as a part of the
high school curriculum, and a ban-
quet discussion with 17 University stu-
dents taking part.
The succeeding days will offer pan-
el discussions and conferences on
"Citizenship in the Home" and "Citi-
zenship in the Community." Features
of the sessions will be the showing
of several films in the Human Re-
lation series of the Progressive Edu-
cation Association and community
demonstrations in which nine speak-
ers will describe local projects.
Zahn Praises
Insurance Plan
Fire Chief Urges Students
To Obtain Protection
Fire Chief Benjamin Zahn yes-
terday praised the new 50-cent stu-
dent fire insurance plan made pos-
sible by Congress, Independent Men's
Association.
The head of the Ann Arbor Fire
Department explained that "it's tra-
gic when students haven't the fore-
sight to protect their personal belong-
ings agains the ravages of fire, es-
pecially when it costs little more
than a movie."
Under Congress' new plan, anyl
student may obtain $100 worth of
protection for 50 cents. This offer
was originally extended only to in-
dependent students, but, because of
popular demand, the plan is now open
to all students. Policies may be pur-
chased in Congress office, Room 306,
at the Union, every day between 3
p.m. and 5 p.m.

Bill Sawyer
To Inaugjurate
tYrP .J;- vi.;t)e

Clothing Clinic
Hears Banker
Merchants' Association

i

h" / " Holds Trade Meeting
Music from the Michigan Union Charles Saffell of Saffell and Bush,
Ballroom takes to the air this Fri-
day night when radio station WJR general chairman of the Michigan Re-
inaugarates a series of nocturnal tail Clothiers and Furnishers Associ-
broadcasts featuring the sweet rythm ation, welcomed local and state mer-
of Bill Sawyer and his Orchestra. chants to the fourth Fall Clothing
Beginning today and continuing Clinic held here Tuesday.
each Friday night the Detroit sta- The meeting, which was held in the
tion will broadcast Sawyer's dancei
music from midnight until 12:30 Union, featured as its main speaker
p. m. Herbert V. Prochnow, assistant vice-
Sawyer has been on the ether president of the First National Bank
waves another series of times prev- of Chicago, who discussed "Problems
iously. The orchestra led off the of Business Management."
Fitch Band Wagon Program this In spite of the opinions of those
summer over a national hook-up and who think advertising is foolish, he
received a great deal of favorable stated, it represents an attempt on
comment. the part of the merchantt tet a
Every member of Sawyer's organ- portion of the consumer's dollar
ization is a student. Some of the men directed his way. If he succeeds,
are majoring in the School of Music, economic organization progresses.
although a number of the musicians Business without alert manage-
are earning their way through to- ment fails, he said, a fact which
ward degrees in medicine and law. was evidenced by the disappearance
This will be the first broadcast by of 400,000 businesses in each year
the Michigan Union Orchestra during of the period between 1932 and 1938.
regular membership dances, especial- The four main elements in good man-
ly arranged musical programs will be agement, Mr. Prochnow concluded,
planned for each Friday night based are knowledge of costs, openmind-
largely on the type of dance music edness with regard to progressive
and the songs that, are most popu- methods, a specific yearly objective
lar with the students at Michigan. with ret-rd to nrofite andrl wnr

Big Ten
Highlights...

At Ohio State two days of festiv-
ities were planned for the first for-
mal inauguration of a president in
its sixty-seven year history. Dr.
Howard S. Bevis who took over the
presidency last February, will be for-
mally inducted into office in a cere-
mony that started yesterday and
continues today. Representatives
from many colleges and universities
will be there for the occasion.
At Wisconsin students were startled
by an election scandal. Five candi-
dates for class offices were found
guilty by a student court of using
money to secure votes. They were
disbarred from the election and forced
to pay the court costs.
In a poll of 700 students on the
Badger Campus it was found that
each student had an average of 42
leisure hours. Physical recreation
was ranked first among the leisure
interests but took only one-eighth
of the total free time. Loafing, bull
sessions and radio listening, common
to 75 per cent of the student and
rated second, third and fourth of 28
leisure pursuits, however, took one-
third. Eighty-five per cent of the
number polled spent one-fifth of
their leisure time reading and going
to the movies. Cultural pursuits
such as lectures and concerts were
practically nil.
FOR YOU at your loveliest!

Race Track Farce
Holds Sixth PlaceI
In All-Time Hits
'Three Men On A Horse," the farce,
Play Production will offer Wednes-
day through Saturday, Oct. 30 to
Nov. 2, holds sixth place in the list
of all-time hits in the legitimate
theatre.
The comedy also is the most pop-
ular of the rollicking farces written
and produced by George Abbot. The
835 performances include those given
by the New York cast and two road
companies.
The first 10 in the list of long run
plays are "Tobacco Road," run un-
completed; "Abie's Irish Rose," 2532;
"Lightnin'," 1291; "The Bat," 867;
"You Can't Take It With You," 837;
"Three Men on a Horse"; "The Lad-
der," 789; "The First Year," 760;
"Seventh Heaven," 704, and "Hellza-
poppin'," which has run longer than
several of these, but whose place can-
not be set because its run is uncom-
pleted.
The race track comedy is the in-
itial effort of the year for Play Pro-
duction, oldest campus dramatic
group, and will be played in the Lydia
Mendelssohn.

by everybody, even the bosses.
Other speakers of the day were
Prof. John L. Brumm of the depart-
ment of journalism, who spoke on
the "Psychology of Store Layout,"
Richard Kositchek, of Kositcheck
and Bro., Lansing, who discussed
"Organized Selling" and Prof. E. H.
Gault, of the school of business ad-
ministration.
The clinic ended with a general
discussion of such problems as the
effect of the draft on credit and the
spring business outlook.
Madame
Pompadour
is here-
as only Groom well
operators can do it.
0 PERMANLNTs-- $3.50( up
Grooinwell
BEAUTY SALON
1205 S. University Phone 4818
*)Z;;xx>)Z>)-=(G?4=*

Exquisite copies of exotic
antiques, reminiscent of old-
world sovereignty. Gold
finished metal set with simu-
lated rare jewels of Empire.
1In tempo with the rich col-
s the flattering fa~mions
of the season.
Ear~rings $1 Bracelet $2 Pin Clip $1
C'It~ce of Anmethyst. Ruby,
Emerald, Topaz or Sapphire
carefully. Dept. Al
"failanti phne orders fulled
76TH AND BROADWAY, N. Y.
Wrie far' "The C "rlouaook * l.et
about the newest in Novelty Jewelry.

s

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487. Delmer D. Baker
488. James O. Brown
489. Johnny W. Morgan
450. Samuel J. Jahnke
491. Harold L. McCrumb
492. Charles E. Freeman
453. Malcolm P. Roberson
494. Livio G. DeBonis
495. Edgar B. Burns
496. Warner J. Hakala
497. Floyd G. Wakefield
498. Glen N. Alexander
499. Walter J. Weid
500. Wilfred M. Sensemann

m
4 '

_ _....._ --- _ .r__ .. .

({e((de ru(es
$et any befrer
we wontneed
F:mPrt*Pe

Tonight is the Night
All-Campus
I-allowe'en
Dance
at the League
9:30 -1:00
Maix Crosmcin' s Orchestra
$1.010 per Couple
Favrors!

Let's Showa
that Michigan
Spirit!

Michigan Pennants
Michigan Stickers .

I Oc, 25c, 49c, 89c
2 for5c,1Oc&15c
(Assortments)

DON HEROLD WOULDN'T FOOL YOU... READ HIS
FASCINATING BOOK
"How to Choose
a Slide Rule"
jAQ IDon Herold, the champion explaine. of all times,
has taken the mystery out of Slide Rules forever.
This new booklet tells you how to choose the
kind of Slide Rule that will help you most, before
you can bat an eye. It is profusely illustrated in
two dazzling colors and more fun to read than
anything. Don't even buy a laundry case until
you get this new book!
"How to Choose a Slide Rule" is free-if you
ask for it nicely. See your campus K & E dealer
IT'S HUMOROUS . atonce.
EST~. 167
IT'S HELPFUL.. KEUFFEL & ESSER CO.
NEW YORK- HOBOKEN, N. J.
IT S .FR E E'AA SAN FRANCISCO -"LOS ANGELES DETROIT'- MONTREAL

Michigan Pillows
Michigan Mascot Animals -
Special
"Squeaky" Michigan Scottie 97c
In Yellow and Blue... . 9

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