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November 28, 1940 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1940-11-28

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

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IDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1940

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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

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MISCELLANEOUS-20
MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding.
Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 So.
State. 19c
WHY RUN HOME when you can
run a Daily classified for a ride
home. 124
USED CLOTHING-bought and sold.
Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St.
Phone 2-2756. 17v
BEN THE TAILOR-More money for
your clothes-good clothes for sale.
122 E. Washington. 1c
EXPERT HOSIERY and garment re-
pair. Reasonable rates. Weave-Bac
Shop--Upstairs in Nickels Arcade.
13c
HELP WANTED
TUTORING can bring returns by
using classified advertising. Rea-
sonable rates. Call at The Mich-
igan Daily. 125
WANTED-Student with initiative
for secretarial work. Private home
including short-hand and typing.
Hours to suit student's convenience.
Telephone 7605. 139
WANTED-Student to work with
six-yeay-old boy on kindergarten
and first grade level for two hours
daily until Christmas vacation
mornings or afternoons after 2:00.
Student must have had whooping
cough because child is contagious
although not ill. Please telephone
Mrs. Connable "7605" (911 Olivia).
138
TRANSPORTATION -21
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL -,
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Killins Gravel Company. Phone
7112. 5c

LOST and FOUND
LOST-Engineer's slide rule, with
case, marked J. F. Bourquin-Re-
ward. Phone 9524. 135
LOST - Fur-lined brown leather
gloves November 16th between or
in Jordan and League. Call 7236.
134
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,
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
STUDENT BUNDLES--3 shirts, 3
pairs of sox, 6 handkerchiefs fin-
ishe d,2 suits underwear, 2 bath
towels, 1 pajama suit fluffed-99c.
Ace Hand Laundry, 1114 S. Uni-
versity. 15c
FOR SALE
FRESH SWEET CIDER-Eating and
cooking apples. Friday delivery.
Ph. 3926. 1003 Brooks St. 137
CHRISTMAS CARDS-The largest
selection in town. All imprinted
wih your name. From 50 for $1.00
up. Craft Press, 305 Maynard St.
lic
FIELD GLASS-Bausch & Lomb
Prism Sterio, 6 Power. 30 mm.
aperture. Cost $70.00. Perfect con-
dition, no signs of wear. Will sell
or trade for old coins. Ph. 3926.
136

City Planning
Symposium
To Open Here
Conference Will Discuss
Community Problems
Of Defense Program
Based on problems created by the
national defense program, the first
Conference on the Expansion of In-
dustrial Communties with regard to
housing and community planning will
open here tomorrow through Satur-
day.
Architects, public officials, com-
munity planners and realtors from
all parts of the state will hear nation-
ally prominent specialists discuss the
background and problems of current
community expansion.
Tomorrow's talks will include a
background outline on "Community
Expansion in the First World War"
given by Clarence S. Stein, F.A.I.A.
of New York, and an explanation of
the economic background of the cur-
rent problem by Prof. Edgar M.
Hoover, jr., of the economics depart-
ment.
Other topics for the first day will
be government activity and current
legislation to be discussed by Cole-
man Woodbury, director of the Na-
tional Association of Housing Of-
ficials, "The Present Planning Prob-
lem" by Walter Blucher, executive
director of the National Association
of Planning Officials, and "The Place
of Private Enterprise in the Expan-
sion of Industrial Communities"
presented by Ernest Fisher, of the
American Bankers Association.
Saturday's topics will include in-
dustry, architecture and the build-
ing industry, and public agencies.
sociology Society
Elects 11 Student
Alpha Kappa Delta, national hon-
orary sociology society, has recently
elected eleven students to member-
ship. Those elected are Phyllis Weis-
man, '41, Mrs. Marjorie Eisinger, '41,
Harry Goodman, '42, James Norton,
Grad, Alvin Schinderle, '42, Nathan
Pitts, Grad, Douglas Calkins, '42L,
Margaret Hulbert, '42, Sylvia For-
man, '42, Janet Sibley, and Lois Sha-
piro, '42.
DA I LY at 2-4-7-9 P.M.
- Last Times Today -

G-Man Censures Dies Committee
For Interference With FBI Case,

Appropriations
For New Bases
Are Announced

By ALVIN DANN
Criticizing the activities of the Dies
Committee, John S. Bugas, head of
the Detroit office of the Federal Bur-
eau of Investigation charged that this
congressional body investigating sub-
versive activivties had already spoiled
one important case the G-men were
tracing by giving premature publici-
ty to the newspapers.
In an interview following a talk
before the Ann Arbor Rotary Club
yesterday, Bugas asserted that the
FBI was not engaged in a competi-
tion with the congressional commit-
tee in giving their activities publicity.
He maintained that Dies had no
grounds for accusing his organization
of inadequate detection of subversive
agents because that Congressman had
no way of knowing what cases the
FBI were investigating.
In his talk Bugas pointed out that
the work of the G-men was kept se-
Bier man Says
Was Certain
Of Gopher Win
ST. PAUL, Nov. 27.-()-Without
having known Tommy Harmon was
at that moment telling reporters in
New York how Michigan should have
beaten Minnesota by three touch-
downs-Bernie Bierman today de-
scribed the high state of his own
confidence during the Gopher-Wol-
verine game.
"I was confident all along that the
Gophers had enough to win," Coach
Bierman told 492 members of the
St. Paul Athletic Club at their an-
nual football dinner here. "In fact
when we were leading 7-6 and Mich-
igan was storming our goal, I half
wished they would score again so
our boys would get busy and get an-
other touchdown."
"My one real worry was Michigan
would score too late in the game so
there wouldn't be time enough left
for our boys to get it back."
Dr. Mickelson To Talk
At Graduate Luncheon
"The Role of Micro-Organisms in
Industry," will be the subject of an
address to be given by Dr. Milo N.
Mickelson at the Graduate luncheon
for Chemical and Metallurgical En-
gineers at 12 p.m. today in Room
3021 E. Engineering Building.
All graduates enrolled in these
branches of engineering are invited
to attend. There will be a small
charge for the luncheon.

cret so that their efforts would not
be hampered by premature publicity.
He also stressed the purpose of pre-
venting hysteria.
Discussing the sensational explos-
ions recently in vital defense fac-
tories, the slim, auburn-haired Fed-
eral officer said "no material acts
of sabotage or espionage has been
proven or known to have occurred
within the last year."
He asked his listeners to be skep-
tical about newspaper reports of such
accidents until ,adequate evidence is
produced.
Bugas admitted that his organiza-
tion had received a number of com-
plaints of espionage and sabotage.
It was explained that detecting this
type of activity was a technical job
for experts and that it should not
be undertaken by vigilante groups.
He urged, however, that any suspic-
ions should be reported to law en-
forcement officers.
He related how the FBI had been
given the task by a presidential de-
cr'ee in 1939 of coordinating all es-
pionage and sabotage by law enforce-
ment agencies in this country. The
extensive efforts made to protect im-
portant plants in defense industries
was described.
Charges thatrthe FBI was similar
to the OGPU or the Gestapo and its
conduct was attributed to a smear
campaign. "Real Communitsts and
Fascists are dangerous to the security
of America. There is no more ef-
fectiveesabotage than disparaging
law enforcement agencies," Bugas
stated.
International Center
To GiveWeekly Tea
Foreign students will meet from 4
to 6 p.m. for their regular weekly
tea at the International Center, Prof.
Raleigh Nelson announced.
Tomorrow the Center will feature
English classes at 7:30 p.m. and a
varied program from 8 to 12 p.m.
Saturday foreign students will gather
for their regular round table on cur-
rent world affairs. Students will pre-
sent the viewpoints of their home-
lands.
Prof. Haywood Keniston of the Ro-
mance Languages department will
speak to the Sunday night supper
group at 7 p.m. on "Our Cultural Re-
lations with Latin America."

War Secretary
Naval, Marine
May Be Called

Discloses
Reserves
To Duty

WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.--)- A
$50,000,000 allotment to provide oil
and other storage facilities and ship
and plane anchorages at the defense
bases recently acquired from Great
Britain was announced today by Sec-
retary Knox.
At the same time, he disclosed that
an additional 31,908 Naval and Ma-
rine Reserves might be called to ac-
tive duty at any moment and had
been so advised. He said in addition
that reserves from New York and
New Jersey had been called to service
with destroyers operating in the Pan-
ama Canal area.
The Cabinet officer's announce-
ment of plans for beginning the de-
velopment of the bases followed
closely upon word that agreement
with British authorities on the sites
for development hadnbeen reached
in all cases except one - Trinidad.
Approval in that case is only a for-
mality. The base sites, stretching
fromyNew Foundland to the South
Americantmainland,nwhere acquired
from Great Britain in exchange for a
flotilla of 50 American destroyers.
While the Secretary was making
these announcements at a press con-
ference, the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee postponed the considera-
tion of all important legislative pro-
posals - including modification of
the Johnson Act and an investigation
of British financial resources here -
until the regular session beginning in
January.
Senator George (Dem.), the new
chairman of the Committee, said
there was no doubt that proposals for
additional help would be raised in the
new Congress.
The day brought from the Army an
announcement that cannon mounted
on its "Aircobra" pursuit plane had
shown "great accuracy of fire from
long ranges" in intensive tests just
concluded.

Student Finds
Original Dish,
Eats Bluebook
Most people don't care much for
bluebooks, but evidently Ben Thor-
ward, '42, does: he ate one, or at
least part 'of one, for lunch yester-
day noon at the Sigma Chi house.
One of the boys in the house wrote
the bluebook the other day and pre-
dicted he would flunk it. Ben, with
admirable confidence in his brother's
ability, vowed, "If you get an E in
that bluebook, I'll eat it."
The rest of the story tells itself.
The bluebook was served a-la-some-
thing-or-other with a pear and a
date on top and a leaf of lettuce un-
derneath.
Before his appetite for bluebooks
left him completely, Ben was quite
diligent in his efforts to stick the
fare with his fork, the better to cut
it with his knife. Both operations
proving unsuccessful, he was forced
to excuse himself and pick up the-
morsel in his hands for intensive
gnawing until his tormentors relent-
ed.
IMICHIGANI

Read And Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads

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Does Germany
allow any
MARGIN OF ERROR?
Watch this paper.

Robert CUMMINGS Mischa AVER
Henry Stephenson S. Z. Sakall
Allyn Joslyn Franklin Pangborn
BUTCH and BUDDY

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---.

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!IN

PRSNT rH
GAT
KNVEE LEN'TH
h $1 50
(With Slide 1astener Front
X C w11.50)
According to our style
'scouts this is the "hottest"
N fashion of the school year.
Alligator designed it for
t wyou-and taiored it in the
new Stormwind cloth, an-
other Alligator exclusive.
Dependably water repel-
lent-wind and dust proof,
too. Heavy stitching at
bottom and cuffs adds

i

that final touch of distine-
tion. Better dash over to
your favorite store now
and get yours for rain or
shine wear.
SOMETHING ULTRA FOR
THE "ULTRA"...
SAMTHUR SPECIAL FINISH
Same style. Tailored in Alli-
gator's suede-like finish water
repellent fabric. Another out-
standing value.
$1375
(With Slide fastener i/ront,
$14.7j)

- Starts Friday-
THE EXCITING, ROMANTIC
NOVEL IS EVEN MORE
EXCITING ON THE SCREEN!
At last ... its heroic characters'
spring, to thrilling life .., in a
neverto-be-forgotten, star-
studdted entertainment!

~t
Sunshine, Inc.
SOPH CABARET
Nov. 29-30
8:00
REIDNORVO
$1.50 per couple includes
" DANCING
* BAZAAR
* SHOW
MATINEE DANCE
Saturday 2:30-5:30
GORDON HARDY
AND HIS ORCHESTRA
25e per person

Other Alligator Raincoats
$5.75 to $26.50

lv i P
SAFFELL & BUSH
Is Always
Appreciated
We've anticipated your gift problems before
they've had time to arise. Take our tips .
give smart masculine accessories . .. and you'll
know the tremendous satisfaction of seeing a
man pleased with your selection.

r

Lives there a man who
A complete selection of ( wouldn't appreciate a
smart stripe and fig-. Saffell and Bush shirt
ured Foulards. $1 to $2 n Xmas morning.
Smart new coller styles
$2 and $2.50
. i.
S There is not enough space to
adequately explain all about
Plain and Colored hand-
Imported Argyle Sox our gloves. You are welcome
kerchiefs -with initials. to come in and see this dis-
colors galore 25c to $1 play. - Oh yes, we match the
z scarf and gloves.
a SAFFELL &BUSH
The perfect Robe for the man
whose taste you suspect is
-ry. conservative in pattern and dea
E~ic, snewor xrkmaQnship.

AT BETTER DEALERS
THE ALLIGATOR CO., St. Louis,

EVERYWHERE
Los Angeles, New York

I

(1

We recommend the new Alligator
Knee Length coats as ideal for school use.

., .:";;:

11

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