ETGTT THE MICITTIA N tiAtTY SUNDAY, NOVE MER 24. 1940 - .- - I - - - -.I--- - f -- . - Housing Parley To Meet Here; j To Study Community Planning Opera Chairman Silcott Hands Authors $100 Check For Script Public officials, architects and realtors from all parts of the country will gather here for first Conference on the Expansion of Industrial Com- munities with regard to housing and community planning, to be held here Nov. 29 and 30. "The purpose of the conference is to suggest planning of sound value for the present and of some perman- ent value in the future," Dean Wells Bennett of the architecture college de- clared in an interview yesterday. Explaining. how the conference is based on problems created by the na- tional defense program, Dean Wells compared the present situation to that of 1918. He observed that great changes in existing industrial com- munities are bound to result from the increased manufacture of de- fense produce, and pointed out that the extravagance of the last war can be prevented by efficient planning, now. The cornference's first day will be devoted to the background and as- pects of the present planning prob- lem and the second day will deal with the problems as theyare related to Michigan. Nationally prominent speakers will open the various sub- jects and general discussions will fol- low each talk. Conscientious Objectors' Civilian Work Planned WASHINGTON. Nov. 23-(/)-A comprehensive civilian work program for cnscientious objectors to mili- tary training is being worked out, national draft headquarters said to- day. Although details have not been completed, it is contemplated employ- ing such persons in soil conservation cr forestry work under the direction of federal experts. Divers Claim Collision Sank It's Time toOrder Two Vessels;Your Report Asserts Freighters Collided During Nov. 11 D" Storm Off Pentwater y[ SARNIA, Ont., Nov. 23. --j- A diver's report lent substance today to G reeting C ards a theory that the freighters Anna C. Minch and William M. Davock foun- dered in the Armistice Day storm off It will soon be time to send out your Pentwater, as a result of a collision. Officials of Sarnia Steamships, I holiday greetings. Our sample books Ltd., operators of the grain carrier are ready-more attractive and rea- Minch, said a diver sent down to in-e vestigate the hulk of the vessel re- sonably priced. Order nouw! ported it bore a 23-foot vertical gash in its left side which may have been made by the prow of another vessel. The plates of the craft were bent in- ward, officials said, and indicated a collision. Both the Minchhand the Davock STATE STREET MAIN STREET were lost with all hands, believed to total 57 seamen. Bodies of 18 crew , members-five from the Minch and 13 from the Davock-washed ashore ---_ _ __ on the beach near Pentwater and Be Satisfied With A MICHIGAN DAILY Classified nearby Ludington. r -Courtesy Ann Arbor News Jack Silcott, Grad., left, general chairman of the 1940 Union Opera, is shown hsre with Charles Zolla, '42, and Aleck Block, '40, co-authors of this year's Mimes script, "Take a Number." CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING MISCELLANEOUS -20 MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 So. State. 19ec WHY RUN HOME when you can run a Daily classified for a ride home. 124 MAKER of gowns, suits and coats. Remodeling a specialty. All work guaranteed. Phone 3468. 18c USED CLOTHING-bought and sold. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2756. 17c ANTIQUES in a Colonial setting;, specializing in furniture, old jewel- ry, prints and books. Colonial An- tique Shop, 303 N. Division. Phone 2-3425. 20c HELP WANTED TUTORING can bring returns by using classified advertising. Rea- sonable rates. Call at The Mich-. igan Daily. 125 TYPING- 18 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1419. 14c VIOLA STEIN - Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. 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 TRANSPORTATION -21 LOST and FOUND WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 5c FOR SALE MANDARIN COAT-Good condition; two red rubbings, 15 inches wide, 1%1 yards long. Phone evenings- 8244. 130 PERSONAL STATIONERY - 100 sheets, 100 envelopes, printed with your name and address-$1.00. Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. 12c By S. R. WALLACE They spent six weeks in all-night coke binges, hair-tearingsiand corny joke orgies-and came out of it with this year's Union Opera "Take a Number." In return, the Mimes opera com- mittee presented them Friday with a $100 check for services rendered. But Charles Zolla, '42, and Aleck Block, '40, the collaborating authors who were informed this summer that they had won the opera script contest, have already spent their prize money 'taking numbers'-feminine ones-to Detroit's more expensive night spots. Where the usual campus bull-ses- sions result only in perhaps more ef- fective dating techniques, Block and Zolla's six week session, they revealed gleefully, finally backed them with the wherewithal "to get the dates to use the -techniques!" However, the student audiences at Debaters Beat 1 Badger Team In First Match Michigan's varsity men's debate squad won the first of the Western1 Conference matches of the season! from a University of Wisconsin team at Madison Friday. William Muehl, '41, and Joe Schro- eder, '43, took the first debate of the1 season from a Wisconsin team com-J posed of Howard Runkel and Melvin Ecke. Judged by Dr. J. H. McBurney of Northwestern University, the de-1 bate was awarded to the University squad which upheld the negative of the resolution, "Resolved: That the Power of the Federal Government Should Be Increased." Accompanied by Mr. Arthur Secord of the speech department and direc- tor of the activity, the team also trav- eled to Chicago yesterday to partici- pate in the forum sponsored by the, John Marshall Law School of Chica- go. They participated in a discussion of the question, "Should the President- Elect Form a Coalition Cabinet?"I over radio station WJJD at 11:30 a.m. yesterday. The second varsity debate will be7 with Purdue University there on Dec. 7, Mr. Secord announced. These two1 debates will comprise the University's activity in the Western Conference championship race. The team which1 will represent the University will be announced early this week. I "Take A Number" on Dec. 11, 12, 13 and 14 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre will havethe opportunity to see the more literary results of the authors' collaboration. Their script will be supplemented, of course, with the contributions of other campus composers who have provided more than eight songs, and with the dance creations of Helen Ellis, the dance director who is working, desperately, with 180 pounders for a chorus line. Block, who is now working in De- troit, made a special trip in this weekend to collect his half of the $100 check, and to catch a glimpse of what Richard Hadley, the director, and the opera cast is doing to his brainchild. After reviewing various rehearsals Block commented, "We didn't think it would be this good!" Zolla, who is still on campus, modestly added, "It looks great." Although revisions had to be made in the original script, since the Uni- versity censor would not pass on cer- tain political and coeducational sa- tires, their comedy, they revealed, still contains enough Broadway-style cracks and situations to be labeled "daring." The play, if the Mimes committee approves, will also be entered in the American Society of Composers And Producers' contest for college shows this year. ASCAP offers an annual prize for the best campus production of the year. Many of the songs, also, will be given a chance at national popularity and commercial success if the play should be selected. It would have to compete with the Harvard Hasty Pudding show, Pennsylvania's Mask And Wig musical, and Prince- ton's Triangles production. f I, i unexcelled food and Th~e AttedHotel Steak, seafood, and special dinners Banquet rooms for private parties Favorite Rendezvous where service 126 East Huron Street Phone 4241 prevail Accommodations for guests LOST-A.T.O. fraternity badge last Saturday. Reward. Call John Clark, 2-2918. 128 ri - LOST-Near Stadium, silver bracelet. "Mimi" inscribed. Wayne Shapiro--2-4401. name Call 131 fil I 111111 11IN ,Ill., SIX BRAND NEW NECKTIES For Only C Emmons Will Visit Asphalt Meeting In Central Texas Prof. W. J. Enmons of the civil engineering department will attend the 13th Annual National Asphalt Conference Dec. 9 through 13 in Dal- las, Tex. On his way to the Conference, Pro- fessor Emmons will stop in Prescott, Ark., for an inspection and study of the oil fields and refineries of the Barry Asphalt Company, continuing the work he has been conducting in the field of highway construction and building materials. After the meeting in Dallas, he will travel through Mexico, visiting the national university and the highway department. THE UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY Presents in the 11 CHORAL UNION SERIES The New York Philharmonic Orchestra 'Directecd by JOHN BARBIROLLI (SPECIAL for Novepnber) Your ties will look like new when they've been MICRO- CLEANED and HAND- PRESSED at . .. CIIRISTMAS ROOKS FICTION THIiE BrEvLOVE) R.TURNs -Mann . . . . . . . $2.50 FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS -Heningway . $2.75 FOUNDATION STONE - Warren...........$3.00 HOw GREEN WAS MY VALLEY - Lewlly. . . $2.75 MRS. MINIVER - Struther . . . . . . . . . $2.00 TiE STONE OF CHASTITY - Sharp . . . $2.50 YOU CANT GO HOME AGAIN - Wolfe .. . . $3.00 OLIVER WISWEL.L -RJoberts ......... ......$3.00 ' . '' I , . i ' as Sunday Afternoon, November 24 3:00 P.M. SHARP (PROGRAM TO BE BROADCAST BY CBS) SUNDAY AFTERNOON, this ninety-nine year old organization will return to Ann Arbor under its young conductor, John Barbirolli. The New York Pihlharmonic was the first symphony in America and has continued at the top for nearly a century. A LIMITED NUMBER OF TICKETS are available at the offices of the University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower, address Charles A. Sink, president, or at the Hill Auditorium after 2:00 P.M. on the afternoon of the concert. McrocleBM N UNDER THE MICROSCOPE Ann Arbor, Michigan GENERAL TrI-E BEST PLAYS OF 1939-40 - Mantle . . . I MARRIED ADVENTURE - Johnson...... NEw ENGLAND: INDIAN SUMMER -Brooks A TREASURY OF THE WORLD's GREAT LETTERS - Schuster . . . . . . . . . . TRELAWNY - Armisroug.. . . . . . . $3.00 $3.50 $3.75 $3.75 $3.00 11111 111111 11 i