'THE AlICHIGAIN D-4tlLY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1%$
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Housing Plans,
To Be Discussed
By Conference
Convention Meets Friday;
Will Deal With Problems
Of Industrial Community
The first Conference on the Ex-
pansion of Industrial Communities
with regard to housing and commun-
ity planning, will convene here Friday
and Saturday, to suggest planning for
present and future expansion of in-
dustrial communities.
Based on pi'oblems created by the
national defense program, the Con-
ference will deal with the great
changes in existing industrial com-
munities which is bound to result
from the increased manufacture of
defense products and will discuss
ways of preventing the extravagance
of the last war by efficient planning
now.
The conference's first day will be
devoted to the background and as-
pects of the present plqnning problem
with talks by Clarence S. Stein, F.A.
l.A. of New York, on "Community Ex-
pansion in the First World War" and
Coleman Woodburn, director of the
National Association of Housing Offi-
cials, on government activity and
current legislation.
The second day will deal with de-
tailed problems as they are related to
Michigan. Iationally prominent gov-
ernment and association officials will
outline the various topics and general
discussions will follow each talk.
Harrison Will Speak
Dr. Paul W. Harrison, missionary
and scientist from Muscat, Arabia,
will speak at 7:15 p.m. today in the
East Library of Stockwell Hall.
Ann Arbor
Michigan Fraternities To Participate
In National Conference At New York
Here Is
In
Today's
Summarv
News
"The plight of the small business
will be analyzed in a survey of local
small business men's problems being
undertaken by Don Williams, secre-
tary of the Chamber of Commerce.
Williams will submit his report to
the special congressional committee
which is studying the problems of
small business with the purpose of
recommending remedial legislation.
Ten draftees from Washtenaw
County will be among Michigan's
contingent of draft volunteers to be
inducted into the army in Detroit
tomorrow.
John S. Bugas, special agent in
charge of the Detroit office of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation will
address the Ann Arbor Rotary Club
at noon today following its weekly
luncheon.
Christmas Seal Sale
Continues Until Dec. 25
-4f
A good response is expected today
from the Christmas seals sent out by
the county branch of the Michigan
Tuberculosis Association, earlier in
the week.
Proceeds from the sale which will
gntinue until Christmas will be de-
#oted to the financing of anti-tuber-
ular work in this area. Through
educational work and clinics the
county association works to inform
-the public of the disease and to help
i the early discovery which in turn
neans an early cure. The seals sell
for one cent each and about 2,000,000
'Dave been mailed out.
Dean of Students Joseph Bursley
and Prof. Robert P. Briggs of the
economics department and School
of Business Administration will leave
tomorrow for the 32nd annual two-
day National Interfraternity Con-
ference which opens Friday in New
York City.
As representatives of the Univer-
sity, both men are in close touch with
fraternity affairs, Dean Bursley as
a member of the Interfraternity
Council's Executive Committee and
Professor Briggs, financial advisor
to fraternities.
Dean Bursley is chairman of the
Educational Advisers Committee of
the Conference and will deliver the
annual Committee report to the as-
sembled fraternity and university
representatives at the Friday morn-
ing session. His group is composed
of the deans of the University of
Akron, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Pennsylvania State drol-
lege, Georgia School of Technology,
University of Illinois, North Carolina
-1
Friday's banquet, with News Com-
mentator Lowell Thomas, a member
of Kappa Sigma, serving as toast-
m e Wendelll .rWillkie, Beta
Theta Pi. will deliver the keynote
speech at the dinner, which will be
opened by musical selections sung
by Metropolitan Opera Star Reinald
Werrenrath. Psi Upsilon. The com-
bined orchestras and glee clubs of
Cornell University and Dartmouth
College will furnish music for the
banquet.
Work of the Conference will take
up all aspects of problems confront-
ing fraternies both as national
organizations and as individual chap-
ters. Subjects to be considered in-
clude editing fraternity publications,
insignia, scholarship, finances, mem-
bership and general morale.
RoomiingHouseI
Coune Selects,
MihL ton Iade Chairman
Of Nominaitions Group
in Meeting Last Night
I
James Harrison, '41, newly elected
State College and
More than 3,000
bers will attend the
resenting 60 college
chapters in nearly
the United States.
of alumni members
the largest meeting
Ohio University.
fraternity mem-
Conference, rep-
fraternities with
every section of
This gathering
is expected to be
g of its kind in
the history of the Conference.
Feature of the meeting will
be
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
MISCELLANEOUS-20
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State. 19c
WHY RUN HOME when you can
run a Daily classified for a ride
home. 124
'OSED CLOTHING-bought and sold.,'
Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main .St.
Phone 2-2756. 17o
DRESSMAKING and TAILORING-
your entire wardrobe reconditioned.
All work guaranteed. Phone 3468.
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HELP WANTED
TUTORING can bring retu rns by
using classified advertising. Rea-
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LOST -- Fur-lined brown leather
gloves November 16th between or
in Jordan and League. Call 7236.
134
TYPING-18
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408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935'or
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typist, also mimeographing. Notary
public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland.
LAUNDERING --9
LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low price. 3c
ST'UDENT LAUNDRY-Special stu-
dent rates. Moe Laundry, 226
South First 2St. Phone 3916. 10c
TRANSPORTATION -21
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL -
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Killins Gravel Company. Phone
'7112. 5c
FOR SALE
PERSONAL STATIONERY - 100
sheets, 100 envelopes, printed with
your name and address-$1.00.
Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. 12c
Center To Hold
Musical Night
Week's Program Features
Discussions, Recreation
A special musical program, recrea-
tion night and discussions on world
affairs will be the highlights of the
week's program at the International
Center, Prof. Raleigh Nelson, direc-
tor, announced.
Ldonna Baisch, '42SM, and Helen
Westlin, '41SM, will present the
weekly musical program at the Cen-
ter. Accompanying each other at
the piano, Miss Baisch will sing sev-
eral contralto solos and Miss West-
lin will play the violin at 7:30 p.m.
today.
Tea will be served to foreign stu-
dents and their guests from 4 to 6
p.m. tomorrow in the lounges of the
Center by the staff and council. Rec-
reation night will be held Friday
with a meeting of the Spanish table,
the Camera Club, and Hobby Club.,
Prof. Haywood Keniston, chairman
of the romance languages depart-
ment, will address the regular Sun-
day evening supper group on "Cul-
tural Relations With Hispanic Amer-
ica" at 7 p.m. Sunday.
Discount Cards Sell
Rapidly Opening Day
"The first day's sale of Congress'
discount cards have greatly exceed-
ed our expectations," David Margold,
'42E, chairman of the Student Wel-
fare Committee of Congress, Inde-
pendent Men's Association, reported
yesterday.
The discount cards, which sell for
25 cents each at Congress Offices,
Room 306 in the Union, entitle the
bearer to a 25 per cent discount on
all dollar cleaning and pressing and
a discount of 10 per cent on all
laundry, shoe repair and 59 cent
cleaning and pressing.
The sale of cards will continue
throughout the week, Margold ex-
plained.
Stephenson Is Selected
To Edit On Dictionary
Preparations for the first com-
plete dictionary on technical expres-
sions used by educators are now be-
ing made by Phi Delta Kappa, na-'
tional educational society, it was dis-
closed yesterday by Prof. Orlando
Stephenson, head of the social studies
department in the University High
School.
Professor Stephenson has been se-
lected to edit the portion of the work
devoted to social studies. The com-
plete dictionary is expected to in-
clude 15,000 to 20,000 words.
The Rooming House Council of
Congress, Independent Men's Asso-
ciation, held its second meeting last
night and selected an elections com-
mittee to make nominations for
Council officers.
John Middleton. '43, was made
chairman of the committee and Milas
Wesley, '43E, and Elmer Hitt, '42,
were also selected to serve on the
committee. Dick Shuey, '42E, chair-
man of Congress' Organization Com-
mittee, presided.
Recommendations for candidacy,
it was decided, are to be submitted
to the Rooming House Council at
its meeting 4:30 p.m. Friday in Room
306 of the Union.
Petitions for nomination for pres-
ident and secretary are to be sub-
mitted to the elections committee,
Room 306 in the Union, by noon,
Wednesday, Dec. 4. The positions are
open to all independents. The peti-
tions, according to Shuey, should in-
clude past experience, qualifications
and future plans, and are to be re-
viewed by the elections committee.
Naval Society
Initiates Nine
New Members
Amid the general melee of creat-
ing nautical (wet) atmosphere on
the concrete diagonal, _Quarterdeck,
honorary naval architectural and ma-
X'ine engineering society, initiated
nine new members Monday after-
noon.
The copper-sulfate waters of the
naval tank, unchanged for ten years,
were the main scene of action, how-
ever, as the initiates, blessed with
sea-going names (Bulkhead Bill,
Port Hole Ike, Steam Trap Stan)
held a thrilling race. By force of
sheer lung power, the aquatic con-
testants blew small sailboats, located
in front of their noses, up the three-
hundred-foot stretch of tank with
what energy they didn't consume in
swimming all the while. And to
the winner of this murky contest,
Bilge Water Barney, i.e., Horace Dun-
can, '42E, went the reward of not
joining his eight fellows in a delight-
ful game of water polo played in the
green fluid.
Previous to this main event, diag-
onal spectators were entertained with
a unique version of "Popeye the Sailor
Man". produced by combining eight
chilly masculine voices with one fem-
inine falsetto and one dose of cold
weather. A rowboat and sailboat on
wheels were also used in the diagonal
Portion of the affair.
This year's initiates are: Carl F.
Binder, '41E; Norman H. Lauter-
bach, '41E; William Mitchell, '41E;
Jesus J. Battad, '41E; Frank J. Dama,
'41E; Arthur W. Clifford, '42E; Philip
Mandel, '42E; Horace C. Duncan,
'42E, and Stanley Seniska, '42E. The
initiation program was in charge of
Raymond Belsley, '41E.
president of the Interfraternity
Council, will be the Council's repre-
sentative at the National Under-
graduate Conference Friday and Sat-
urday in New York City.
The Conference will meet at the
same time as the National Interfra-
ternity Conference, and the two
meetings will hold joint sessions.
Feature of these will be addressed
by Hugh Clegg, J. Edgar Hoover's
chief assistant, who will discuss
'Fifth Column Activities as They
Affect Colleges and Fraternities."
Topics to be considered by the un-
dergraduate meeting include "Rush-
ing," "Regional Fraternity Confer-
ences," "Fraternity Schools and In-
struction Courses" and "Conference
Reorganization." Keynote speaker
before the undergraduate group will
be Frederick J. Stecker, assistant
dean of men of Ohio State Univer-
sity, discussing programs for local
interfraternity councils.
The local Council is expected to
gain a great deal of valuable assist-
ance in solving campus fraternity
problems from the discussion ses-
sions and addresses of the Conference.
Zeta Phi Eta
Plans Debate
Group To Meet Alpha Nu
Ori 'Slavery To Fashion'
Zeta Phi Eta, women's honorary
society, will meet Alpha Nu, men's
forensic group in the first of the sea-
son's traditional contests at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow in Room 25, Angell Hall.
The women will be represented by
Adelaide Carter, '42, Mildred Ward,
'41, and Alvira Sata, '41. They will
uphold the negative of the question,
"Resolved; That Michigan women
are more slaves to fashion than the
men."
Their rivals will be Merle Webb,
'42, Gerry Schaflander, '42, and
George Manikoff, '41. The men will
support the affirmative of the propo-
sition in the humorous debate.
Judges for the debate include Mrs.
Richard Hadley and Prof. Henry
Moser of the speech department.
The meeting of the two groups has
been traditional since their-estab-
lishment. Both were among the first
organizations for speech activities
created on Mid-Western and Wes-
tern Conference schools. Novel prizes
and awards have been the custom of
the yearly meetings and competitions
between men and women speakers.
Chemists To Attend
Informal Reception
Members of the faculty of the
chemistry department and graduate
students in pure and applied chem-
istry will attend an informal recep-
tion from 8 to 10 p.m. today in the
Rackham Building.
The first reception for members of
the department is sponsored by Al-
pha Chi Sigma, Iota Sigma Pi, Phi
Lambda Upsilon and Rho Chi, hon-
orary and professional chemistry fra-
ternities. Members of Iota Sigma Pi
will act as hostesses for the evening
DAI LY at 2-4-7-9 P.M.
-Today & Wednesday -
First Records
Of Convention
Are Published
Miehigan-Life Conference
Proceedings Described
In Recent Publication
First organized publication of the
results of the "Michigan-Life Con-
ference on New Technologies in
Transportation" appeared yesterday,
covering the proceedings of the meet-
ings which were held here last No-
vember under University-Life Maga-
zine sponsorship.
The volume features an address by
Charles F. Kettering, motor car
manufacturing conpany research;
director, dealing with transportation
changes likely to be expected in the
future, and continues with presenta-
tions of technical papers by trans-
portation facility manufacturing firm
executives and members of the Col-
lege of Engineering faculty.
Scientific developments applicable
to the field of transportation are
considered in the sections on "Sam-
ples of Science," "Boundary-Layer
Phenomena in Transportation" and
"Motor Fuels of the Present and
Future." Highway problems are dis-
cussed in "Delineating Highways at
Night." by Donald Kennedy of the
State Highway Department, while
railroad problems are taken up in
"Cause of Failure of Railroad Rails,"
by Prof. H. F. Moore of the University
of Illinois.
The 231-page book closes with a
"Symposium: Performance Limits of
Transportation; Range, Speed and
Capacity,"
Hillel To Present
Marriage Lectures
The Hillel Institute of Jewish
Studies will present the first in a
series of lectures on "Marriage and
Family Relations" at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Foundation.
Elaine Fisher, '42, chairman of
the classes committee, announced
that Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen, dl-
rector of the Foundation, will de-
liver the introductory lecture.
The Marriage and Family Rela-
tions lectures will be open to the
public. Registration in the other
courses offered by the Institute is
still possible, Miss Fisher added.
Prof. Arthur Wood of the sociology
department, Prof. Ralph M. Patter-
son of the psychiatry department,
Dr. Claire E. Healey of the University
Health Service, and Richard R.
Meyers of the sociology department
will also appear on the marriage
trelations series.
Speech Group
Chooses Four
To Make Tri
Four wonen chosen to represent
the University in the Western Con-
ference forensic association will travel
to Madison, Wis., to meet teams from
Conference schools tomorrow.
Jean Maxted, '41, Mary Martha
Taylor. '41, Elizabeth Lightner, '41,
and Elizabeth Shaw have been se-
lected to participate in the round-
table discussions on the question,
"Resolved: That Western Conference
schools should limit their enroll-
ment."
Accompanied by Mr. Arthur Se-
cord of the speech department the
group will leave Ann Arbor at 1:35
p m. tomorrow. Following registra-
tion Friday will be an open meeting
in which their existing situation will
be presented.
Miss Lightner will represent the
University team's findings at this
meeting. After a noon luncheon, all
of the students and faculty members
will meet in five round-table groups.
A conducted tour of the University
of Wisconsin campus will follow at
4 p.m.
A banquet for all of the partici-
pants will be held in the evening at
which Miss Shaw will speak. Satur-
day will begin with a general meet-
ingi with Miss Mlaxted as general
chairman for all of the Conference
t cams. Following the concluding
luncheon meeting, Miss Taylor will
t.ake part in a radio discussion over
station WHA.
MICHIGAN
Robert CUMMINGS Misda AVER
Henry Stephenson S. Z. Sakall
Allyn Joslyn Franklin Pangborn
BUTCH and BUDDY I'
THE SOCIEDAD HISPANICA
presents
'ROBERT E. FRIERS
The Vagabond Reporter
in a lecture (in English) with moving pictures in color.
"Overland to South America"
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre - November 27, 8:30 P.M.
Tickets 35 cents at Book Stores and Theatre
THE PERFECT COLLEGE COMEDY!
STUDENTS:
You'll feel right at home on the campus of Midwest University, and
you'll love all the excitment of a hQmncoming game, and its attendant
fun. There's romance, too, as typical-as your own.
FACULTY
You'll sympathize with Tommy Turner, the meek young professor
who believes in academic freedom and fights for his rights.
ALUMNI:
You'll roar when you see the ex-football hero returning after ten years
for the big homecoming game, and you'll wonder if you've changed
as little as did Joe Ferguson.
It's All In The New Hilarity Stage Hit
~0 MAE' AkMA,
e LL/O TT AVUG' N'ag1A' JA44FS 7-/U12?E7Z
ELLIOTT NUGENT ELNAESLOVE
EVES., $1.10 to $2.75; MATS., WED. & SAT., $1.10 to $2.20
Am AftDays
CASS 6 Oy Beg. MON., DEC. 2
SEI ORS.i
Only a few more days remain for you to get
your 'Ensian photograph. Make your appoint-
ment now and be assured of a truly
superior photograph.
II ,
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STOP HERE
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GOOD Hf4IRCUT
Let these photographs do double duty for
you; use theni for Christmas gifts.
M/T(''N4(2AT ITNTfl
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