PAGE TWO rrirV M~1uirf'1A xT "A*er,% _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ U. L 112 1 Y 1 jI j y r j I) A l L I F R I - -- (DAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1940 Alumrn Group Plans Annual 'Dean's Night' Alumni will have an opportunity to renew old acquaintances and re- fresh contacts with the University at the third annual Deans' Night of the Flint University of Michigan Club Wednesday, November 27, in Flint. Nearly 300 graduates are expected to attend the meeting, under the sponsorship of the University's larg- est alumni group, boasting 456 mem- bers. Ten men will represent the Uni- versity at the evening session, T. Hawley Tapping, general alumni secretary; Dean of Students Joseph Bursley, Dean Russell W. Bunting of the Dental School, Summer Session Director Louis A. Hopkins, Dean Samuel T. Dana of the forestry school, Dean James B. Edmonson of the education school, Dean Albert C. Furstenberg of the Medical School. Singers To Be Dinner Guests Of Glee Club The Don Cossack Chorus has ac- cepted the Varsity Men's Glee Club invitation to an informal supper and reception to be held Monday after the Chorus' performance here, it was learned yesterday. Charles Brown, '41, president of the Glee Club, has received affirma- tion from Serge Jaroff, conductor of the Cossacks, that his group will ap- pear as they have done the five times in the past that they visited Ann Arbor. Final plans for the reception will be made at the Glee Club rehearsal 4:30 p.m. Sunday in the Union. At- tendance at the affair is being lim- ited to Varsity members, Prof. David Mattern, of the School of Music, Herbert Watkins, secretary of the University, Stanley Waltz, manager of the Union, and Charles A. Sink, president of the Musical Society. - -W - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Carr Suggests Local Councils To Preserve Critical Freedom _..__ ----. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING TRANSPORTATION -21 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 5c PERSONAL STATIONERY - 100 sheets, 100 envelopes, printed with your name and address-$1.00. Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. 12c MISCELLANEOUS 20 MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 So. State. 19c USED CLOTHING-bought and sold. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2756. 17c FRATERNITY and SORORITY pro- grams and mailings; mimeograph- ing. Edwards Letter Shop, 711 N. University. Phone 2-2846. 6e M IC HIGAN HEER HIM AGAIN SThe man who .gave America its greatest thrills! ยข; NUEPAT O'BRIEN GALE PAGE RONALD REAGAN I ,,,,dby 4JOYO BACON A WARNER BRO Firs NatlPictuft Original Screen Plany by Robert 1Buckner " Based upon the private papers of Mrs Ruckne, and ieeprt of Rnckne'a intimate ancata and frends -Sunday- MYRNA LOY and MELVIN DOUGLAS in "Third Finger, Left Hand" TYPING--1S TYPING-Experienced. 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 SLIGHTLY USED 1940 Zenith Cab- inet radio combination, automatic control, 16 records. Will sell at half price with hundred latest rec- ords. Jimmy Bennett, clo Joe's Snappy Service, 334 S. Main St., Phone 3903. 107 HELP WANTED BOY for substitute dishwasher or waiter in return for meals. Answer immediately to Box 1, Michigan Daily. 108 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. 10c 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 1 Handkerchiefs ..............02 Bath Towels ............... .03 All Work Guaranteeda Also special prices on Coeds' laundries. All bundles done sep,- arately. No markings. Silks, woi'- are our specialty. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1940 VOL. LI. No. 41 Pulibcation in the Daiy official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices Forestry Assembly: There will be an assembly of the School of Fores- try and Cnservation at 10:00 a.m. today in the amphitheatre of the Racham Building, at which Mr. Jay H. Price, Regional Forester in charge of U.S. Forest Service activities in the Lake States and Central States re- gions, will speak. All students in the School of Forestry and Conservation are expected to attend, and all others interetsed are cordially invited. Members of the Faculty and Cleri- cal Staff of the School of Education: The details of the proposed surgical care insurance plan will be presented by a representative of the Michigan Health Service at a meeting in the UniversitymHigh School Library today at 4:30 p.m. College of Architecture, School of Education, School of Forestry and Conservation, School of Music: Mid- semester reports indicating students enrolled in these units doing unsatis- factory work in any unit of the Uni- versity are due in the office of the school or college on Saturday. No- vember 23, at noon. Report blanks for this purpose may be secured from the office of the school or from Room 4, University Hall. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar Women Students Wishing to At- tend the Ohio State-Michigan foot- ball game are required to register in the Office of the Dean of Women. A letter of permission from parents must be in this office not later than Wednesday, November 20. If the student does not go by train, special permission for another mode of travel must be included in the parent's let- ter. Graduate women are invited to register in this office. Byrl Fox Bacher. Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Midsemester re- ports are duernot later than Satur- day, November 23. Report cards are being distribut- ed to all departmental offices. This year for the frist time special green cards are being provided for fresh- men reports. Green cards should be returned to the office of the Academic Counselors, 108 Mason Hall; white cards (reporting sophomores, jun-~ iors, and seniors) to my office 1220 Angell Hall. Midsemester reports should name those students, freshmen and upper- class, whose standing at midsemester time is D or E, not merely those who received D or E in so-called midsemes- ter examinations. Students electing our courses, but registered in other schools or col- leges of the University, should be reported to the school or college in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had att my office, 1220 Angell Hall.1 E. A. Walter, Assitant Dean Choral Union Members: Pass ticketst will be given out for the Don Cossack Concert to all members of the chorus whose records are clear, and who call1 in person, at the offices of the Univer-l sity Musical Society, Burton MemorialI Tower, on the day of the concert, be-1 tween the hours of 9 and 12 and 1 and 4. After 4 o'clock no tickets will be given out. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion has received notice of the fol- lowing Civil Service Examinations. Last date for filing application is noted in each case. United States Civil Service Principal Translator, salary $2,600, December 9, 1940. Chief Laboratory Mechanic, sal- ary $2,600, December 9, 1940. Inspector of Miscellaneous Sup- plies, salary $1,800-$2.000. until fur- ther notice. Michigan Civil Service Vocational Counselor I. salary range, $150 to $190, November 30, 1940. Job Analyst A, salary range $130. to $150, November 30, 1940. Job Analyst I, salary range $150 to $190, November 30, 1940. Graphic Presentation Designer I, salary range $150 to $190, November 30, 1940. Telephone Operator C, salary range, $80 to $100, November 30,1 1940. Complete information on file at the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. The Union Travel Board is now open for those offering or desiring rides over Thanksgiving week-end. Inquire at the Union Student Offices. ChoalConcerts Choral Union Concert: The Don Cossack Russian Chorus, Serge Jar- off, Conductor, will give the third concert in the Choral Union Series, Monday, November 18, at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. The program will consist of folk songs, religious num- bers, and Cossack military songs. (Continued on Page 4) Hackett, Kollen To. Give Recital By CHESTER BRADLEY Local leadership councils would be a desirable and effective means of preserving free criticism in the United States during the critical days ahead, Lowell J. Carr, of the sociology de- partment and a member of the Mich- igan Defense Council asserted in an interview yesterday. Tnese councils, composed of rep- resentatives from all the voluntary. organizations in a community, would be concerned primarily with the na- tional defense program, especially as a forum for organized discussion of that program, he said. Labor Union Council "For example, the representative of a labor union on the council might decide that his particular factory, manufacturing defense materials, was not meeting the requirements of the Wagner Act. He would take his specific complaint before his local leadership Council, and there the problem wohld be thoroughly dis- cussed and perhaps a satisfactory solution could be worked out at that time," Professor Carr pointed out. "A person who believed that civil liberties had been violated in a com- munity would also have an oppor- tunity to place his grievance before a public forum," he added. Professor Carr stressed the im- portance of the press in "making or breaking" the local leadership coun- cils. 'The active support of the press is absolutely necessary for the ultimate success of this plan, and the significance of its role in initiating this program cannot be over-esti- mated," he stated. Local Leadership Councils "The local leadership councils should be closely allied to the county defense councils, whose function would be to serve as liaison bodies between governmental agencies such as the army and the civilian popula- tion within state boundaries," he continued. In the opinion of Professor Carr Health Service Plans Prove To lie Success Michigan Hospital Service, the non- profit hospital service plan sponsored by state hospitals, has repaid all loans advanced to it by institutions and private citizens, it was announced yesterday. The success of the plan in this state is indicated by the fact that a $28,000 debt was repaid in the past five months. This sum 'of money was borrowed as initial working cap- ital in the form of loans from public spirited citizens, helped a non-profit corporation without capital stock, John R. Mannix, director of the plan, revealed. One hundred and eighteen Michi- gan hospitals representing more than 99 per cent of the available general hospital beds in the state have coop- erated to make their services avail- able on a pre-payment basis through the Service for as little as two cents a day for a single person and five cents a day for an entire family. Hos- pitals care of subscribers is guaran- teed by participating hospitals them- selves. -~ ~ ~ --- ~- - - - - - - - STARTING TODAY! e F, I 'T-tT: 7=, . M"'' these voluntary groups would main- tain the vitality of an actual form of free association and would at the ame time strengthen the national defense program. "No comparable vohuary groups exist in the totalitarian nations in Europe, and it is perfectly obviousl that the rights of free association have been continuously threatened. The loca iberdersiip councils would e a splendid antidote to the spread- ing of this tendency in the United States." Nova Scotia Co-op Will Be Subject Of MovieSunday "The Lord Helps Those" a motion picture dealing with a cooperative village of Nova Scotia fishermen, will be shown at 3 p.m. Sunday in Rcom 319 of the Union as the first in a series of films sponsored by the education committee of the Inter- Cooperative Council. Admission to the motion picture will be free and all those interested in lear'ning about cooperatives are urged to attend. This and other films in the series were supplied by the Cooperative League of the United States. Shows Daily at 2-4-7-9 P.M. It Music Next Professors Head Faculty Concert { 1 i Extra SPORTLIGHT "INFORMATION PLEASE" "SHARK "SNEAK, SNOOP and SNITCH" HUNTING" NEWS OF THE DAY Prof. Arthur Hackett, tenor, and John Kollen, pianist, of the School of Music, will present the second in a series of Faculuty Concerts at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. The program will be opened and closed by Mr. Kollen, who will play Mozart's "Sonata in C major, K. V. 330," Chopin's "Barcarolle (Op.. 60)" and "Les collines d'Anacapri," "Re- flets dans l'eau" and "Feux d'arti- fice" by Debussy. Accompanied by Prof. Joseph Brinkman, pianist, of the School of Music, Professor Hackett will sing Giulia Recli's "Cardellina" and "Lit- tle Lovely One" and four evening songs by Santoliquido, "The Horned Owl Sings," "The Rising Moon Over the Wood," "Evening Sadness" and "The Meeting." The University Little Symphony, under the direction of Prof. Thor Johnson, will present a recital Tues- day afternoon, Prof. Palmer Chris- tian will offer an organ' concert Wednesday afternoon and Professor Brinkman will give a piano recital Wednesday evening COMING THANKSGIVI NG! ANN SOUTHERN " ULCY" g " / I From Arrow Shirts to Arrow Shorts, here's your chance to sign up for the best coordin- ated line of men's wear in the country. Arrow Shirts, with the smart- est patterns you've seen in many seasons. $2, up. Arrow Ties, designed specifi- cally to harmonize with your Arrow Shirts and your suit fabrics. $1 and $1.50. Arrow Handkerchiefs, also planned for your Arrow Shirts and Ties. 25c, up. 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