TWO THE MiHTIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 18 1940 r ai...ca r .a. a v. s. a.. i ..i ci . .V t-y 1 L/ 1 """""".". °"' .+ aav " aura aru av aV .aa V F Filipinos Hold Banquet, Dance Hayden Is Guest Speaker At Fifth Anniversary Philippine students dressed in their native sarongs and butterfly dresses of pineapple cloth celebrated the fifth anniversary of the Philippine Com- monwealth with a colorful dinner and dance at the Union last night. Special guest speaker was Prof. Joseph Hayden of the political science department who addressed the group of more than 80 students and facul-] ty guests on the significance of Amer- ican and Philippine relations. He re- placed Jose Yulo, speaker of the Phil- ippine Assembly, who was retained in'Washington on official business. Governmental affairs of the Islands have been well handled by the officers of the Commonwealth, Professor Hay- den declared. No other nation, he pointed out, has a balanced budget, but the economic situation of the Commonwealth is still precariou4 If the United States gives up the Philippines, the action must be final, he maintained. America, in that in- stance, must cease all aid and control. CLAS SIFTED DIRE CTORY FOR RENT TYPEWRITER for rent. Month or semester. Cheap. 402 W. Liberty. Phone 4619. 110 LOST and FOUND LOST-Black leather billfold on Maynard near East Liberty. Re- turn to A. Bobrowsky, 520 E. Wil- liam. Reward. 111 TRANSPORTATION --21 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 5c CHRISTMAS CARDS-The . largest selection. in town. All imprinted with your name. From 50 for $1.00 up. Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. lic MISCELLANEOUS-20 ALTERATIONS and dressmaking - Reasonable. Mrs. G. Sturgis, 1508 Geddes. Phone 2-4296. 109 GRACE POWERS' Nursery School- Ages 1% to 4. 315 E. William St. Phone,8293. 25 MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 So. State. 19c USED CLOTHING-bought and sold. Caude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2756.117c TYPING-18 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 ANTIQUES in, a Colonial setting; specializing in furniture, old jewel- ry, prints and books. Colonial An- tique Shop, 303 N. Division. Phone 2-3425. 120c HELP WANTED WANTED-Young men for business office work with 60-year-old con- cern. Applicants must have col- lege education and not be over 26 years of age. These positions of- fer steady employment and very good chances for advancement. 321 E. Washington, Room No. 2. 112 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. . 3e STUDENT LAUNDRY-Special stu- dent rates. Moe Laundry, .226 South First St. Phone 3916. 10c STUDENT BUNDLES-3 shirts, 3 pairs of sox, 6 handkerchiefs fin- ished; 2 suits underwear, 2 bath towels, 1 pajama suit fluffed - 99c. Ace Hand Laundry, 1114 S. Uni- versity. 15c Price List (All articles washed and ironed) SILVER LAUNDRY 607 Hoover Phonp 5594 Free pickups and delivehes Campus Shudders As Ghost Doin Cossacks Police Face Serious Traffic Problems At Football Games, Invasion Strikes Arboretum To Sing Here - . By DAVID LACHENBRUCH { Most college students are too so- phisticated to believe in ghosts. That was the general belief in and about Ann Arbor until very recently. But lately there have been numerous reports of apparitions seen in local haunts. It was only last night that Milton Charnowitz, Grad., reported via tele- phone to the Daily office that he had seen a banshee-mat's what hecall- ed it-while walking in the Arbor- etum with an acquaintance. He re- ported that the ghost said nothing -just pointed to a sign engraved on an old sheet he happened to be wear- ing, which read, "Coffin Capers." Another report of supernatural do- ings around town was evidenced when Henry Bleege, '42E (Don't bother to logk it up; his name was. withheld from the directory), was confronted by a lean, pale gentleman, upon leav- ing the owl show at a local theater at 2 a.m. Tuesday. The lanky one tapped Bleege squarely upon the shoulder blade and whispered confidentially, "Would you like to see my appari- tion?" Bleege consented and was ushered into an alley where he was intro- duced to a rather short, transparent skeleton. Bleege maintaining his pres- ence of mind, asked the apparition to state his business and be gone. The skeleton, whose name was Sam, clank- ed his tibia upon his fibula (perhaps) and tapped out a message in inter- national code, which, freely translat- ed, reads: "I'm here for the great ghosts' convention at Congress' an- nual Congressional Fling. December 6-Friday night.'' Immediately the office of Congress, Independent Men's Association, was called to verify the facts. Yes, it's true-Congress is holding a big creepy dance in the Union on the sixth- Monday Night Favorite Songs To Mark Twentieth Anniversary Of Russian Choristers "Coffin Capers" - featuring scary The Don Cossack Chorus, 34 sing- music by Bill Sawyer's orchestra. ing giants from Russia, will make There was a real gnost at Con- their fifth appearance here under gress office, too. All he did was con- the baton of Serge Jaroff when they stantly mutter-"Coffin Capers costs offer the third Choral Union Con- only a buck and a quarter-Coffin cert 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Audi- Capers costs only a buck and a quart- torium. Ar." fMarking their 20th anniversary as As we left him muttering, it seem- a famous chorus, the group will be ed to prove just one thing-that a singing a. "round-up" of all the songs ghost's best friend is his mutter. for which they have been most ac- claimed in the past, including Rus- sian folk and Cossack songs, religious rfee Sh w Plan e numbers and several classical airs. For Cinema PatThe diminutive Serge Jaroff or- aP rons ganized the choristers in a prison camp during the World War. Most By WILLIAM H. NEWTON To the average University student, football games may be synonymous with long, thrilling runs, voices hoarse from cheering, pretty girls in fur coats adorned by giant chrysanthemums- that may be the student's idea. but members of Ann Arbor's police force find that a game day brings them only a great deal of extra work. When crowds whose numbers reach the fifty and sixty thousands pour into the city, the police force must focus its attention on the problem of traffic direction. Twenty-eight local policemen are on traffic detail on football game days, 26 directing the flow of cars on foot, two in a squad car and one on a motorcycle leading the bands. Even this force, however, is insuffi- cient when Ann Arbor's population doubles or triples. The local officers are reinforced by nearly 30 State Tropers, six Pontiac policemen and four from Flint, all of whom work on foot unsnarling traffic tangles and preventing them wherever possible. Airplanes, often used to spot bottle- necks and traffic jams near city limits, then to radio directions for rerouting to ground officers, have been unnecessary during the current home season. The man in charge of the traffic work by the Ann Arbor police force is Sgt. Sherman Mortenson. He is well satisfied with the way his men have handled their work this year, feeling that this has been the best football season in many years, from a traffic director's standpoint. "I haven't had any serious head- aches resulting from game day wor- ries," he commented recently. "The boys are all doing their jobs well and are finding that motorists, realizing that the officer knows the quickest route through town, seem very will- ing to cooperate with the men whoI are in charge of keeping the streams moving." One reward for the officers' extra work comes during the actual play- ing time, when they are permitted to watch the game. Early in the first quarter, when traffic has thinned MEASURE YOUR LIGHT as easy as measuring a QUART OF MILKI Safeguard your family's eyesight: MEASURE the lighting in your home with a Light Meter. Find out exactly how much light is needed for safe seeing. No charge - phone your Detroit Edison office. out, each officer enters the Stadium, where he has been assigned an aisle. ie keeps one eye on the play and the other on the spectators, watchful for obnoxious "drunks" in the crowd. These self-appointed cheer leaders -and sometimes recruits for one of the teams-are removed from the Stadium by the officers and refused readmittance. Until today, none of the "drunks" have been in a con- dition that necessitated taking them to the police station. - MICHIGAN LAST.DAY! 'Knute Rockine, AllAmerican' Pat O'Brien SUNDAY Faaaiathan"Ilove Youain"a " 411yD 1fI&GER, eft flAND NA LOL RMOND WALBORN EEDW DONITA sRANVILLE FELX ESSART onWILL OSBORNE ORCHESTRA On the Stage Holders of series tickets to the Art Cinema League's Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., pictures will be admitted free of charge to either of two performances of "The Cobbler Captain of Kope- nick," a German film to be shown Sunday Nov. 24 in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. The picture will be shown both at 3:30 and 8:30 p.m. Admission will bej of them had come from the crack cavalry regiments of the Czar, and at first sang simply for pleasure around a camp-fire. Jaroff, however, utilizing his training as a former choirmaster, made the men into a chorus of professional calibre, and their world tours started immediately after the war's end. Most renown of the songs in their repertoire is the popular "Vol cra granted with the presentation of the Boat Song," which, although it is Fairbanks series ticket at the door, or not included in their program, will for 35 cents to non-ticket holders. probably be a "must" as an encore. Students attending the Fairbanks Having sung it more than 4,000 times picture "Robin Hood" tomorrow are during the last 20 years, the Cos- urged not to throw away their tick- sacks popularized the folk-song from ets. Singapore to Sioux City. r~l 1 I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, VOL. LI No. 42 19401 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin isconstructive notice to all members of the University. Notices Women Students Wishifig 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. Choral Union Members: Pass tickets will be given out for the Don Cossack Concert to all members of the chorus whose records pare clear, and who call in person at the offices of the Univer- sity Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower, on the day of the concert, be- tween the hours of 9 and 12 and 1 and 4. After 4 o'clock no tickets will be given out. Academic Notices History 11, 'Lecture II: Examina- tion at 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, Novem- ber 19. Mr. Slosson's and Mr. Bjork's sections will meet in 231 A.H. All others in Natural Science Auditorium. Preston W. Slosson Actuarial Lecture at 8 p.m., on Mon- day, November 18, in the East Con- ference Room, Rackham Building. Mr. A. G. Gabriel of the Michigan Actuarial Society will discuss "Mu- nicipal Pension Plans." The lecture is open to all students interested in the subject. Concerts Choral Union Concert: The Don Cossack Russian Chorus, Serge Jar- off, Conductor, will give the third concert inthe 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. Faculty Concert: Arthur Hackett,' Tenor, and John Kollen, Pianist, will present the second Faculty Concert of the semester at 4:15 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 17, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Prof. Joseph Brinkman will accompany Professor Hackett. This concert will be open to the general public, free of charge. The University of Michigan Little Symphony, Thor Johnson, Conductor, will present its first 1940-41 concert at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday, November 19, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The general public is invited to at- tend. Exhibitions The Annual Exhibit of Photography by the Ann Arbor Camera Club will be held in the Mezzanine Galleries of the Rackham Building until November 18. The Exhibit is open daily from 10:00 a.m. until 10:00 p.m. Exhibition: Paintings by Ozenfant and drawings by William Littlefield are now showing in Alumni Memorial Hall, afternoons 2:00-5:00 until Nov. 22. This is under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art Association. Members and students are admitted free. Events Today Saturday Luncheon Group meets today at Lane Hall. Open house will be held at the Hillel Foundation this afternoon fol- lowing the football game and tonight from 9:00 to 12:00. All Hillel mem- bers and their guests are cordially in- vited. "The Bat," a mystery melodrama by Mary Roberts Rinehart and Avery Hopwood, will be presented at the Mendelssohn Theatre tonight. Seats may be reserved by calling 6300 be- tween 10:00 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. Coming Events Union Opera: Short meeting of entire cast and dance lines Sunday, Nov. 17, at 5:00 p.m. Important changes of cast and dance schedules worked out. Fraternity Presidents: The annual Interfraternity Pledge Formal Ban- quet will be held in the main ball- room of the Michigan Union on Tues- day, Nov. 19, at 6:15 p.m. The presi- dent, pledgemaster, and pledges of each house are invited to attend. Any house which has not yet made its reservations must do so immediately through the I.F.C. office. Phi Eta Sigma will meet Sunday at 5:00 p.m. in Room 302 of the Mich- igan Union. All active members (pres- ent sophomores) are invited. German Club will meet Tuesday, Nov. 19, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 304 of the Michigan Union. Professor Walter A. Reichart of the German Depart- ment will talk on "Im Hause Ger- hart Hauptmanns". Pictures and papers from Professor Reichart's col- lection will be shown. (Continued on Page 4) I .,..... shoul+ Abuse o poor hg light,, with theI your Del Ai LIGHT FOR be "'tested" too oung eyes is often due to g. Give your child "tested" ve your lighting measured ht Meter No charge. Phone Edison office, d f yo hting ha, Ligh roit E 14L SHOWS DAILY at 2-4-7--9 P.M. I TIME OUT!O I I ,i 0 Call 2-1717 7066 6721 3552 Ask... I JUST want to remind you that we are folks to the TAVERN after the game. delicious home cooking and that friendly taking our With that college at- mosphere, we'll make it a perfect day. Remember ... i"AVEN a eperia SPECIAL LUNCHEONS and DINNERS I Lunch 30c and 35c Dinner 45c and 50c Open from 1 1 to 1 :30 and 5:00 to 7:30 Sundays 1:30 to 2:30 -5:00 to 7:30 "3 .r...., II I III I I ALAM we& A , A= ww