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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 30, 1940 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1940-11-30

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

TTW MTCTAN lTT

't1 T 1 1'7' _ 'Sal' 'l4t "! y'f nn y n a.ti

Dr. Imre Ferenezi
To SpeakOn War
Dr. Imre Ferenezi, of Geneva,
Switzerland, noted specialist on mi-
gration and population problems.
will discuss "War and Man Power"
in a University lecture Thursday.
Dec. 5, in the Rackham Lecture Hall.
Formerly lecturer on social policy
at the University of Budapest and
for many years technical adviser to
the municipality of Budapest, Dr.
Ferenczi has lectured at the Grad-
uate Institute of International Stud-
ies and at numerous other European
institutions.
II - ---- ---- --.- --. I

- a al ra a .Z asL 1 5~,~ ~~~. XLT F'7 , t1 aY °.XnA , NOS ERJ 30aA -

I

Commander Lf British Mid-Eastern Forces Lands In (reece

I

CLASSIFIED

MISCELLANEOUS-20
PMEOGRAPHING-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. 170
BEN THE TAILOR-More money for
your clothes-good clothes for sale.
122 E. Washington. 1C
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 Micht
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-year-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. onnable "7605" (911 Olivia).
138
TRANSPORTATION -21
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL -
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Kil yns GravelCompany. Phone
7112. 5c
LOST and FOUND
LOST-Engineer's slide rule, with
case, marked J. F. Bourquin-Re-
ward. Phone 9524. 135
LOST-Alpha Chi Omega pin on
green sweater at Michigan League.
Reward. Call Virginia Stover, 3718.
141
SUITABLE REWARD OFFERED for
return of Gray Algortex overcoat
taken at Pendleton Library Thurs-
day evening. Call Earl Gilmar,
403. 142
REWARD for return of two note-
books and a slide rule lost Wednes-
day afternoon on Washtenaw be-
tween Oxford and N. University..
Call 8974-Bishop. 143
TYPING-18
TYPING-L. M. Heywood, 414 May-
nard St., phone 5689. 9c
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

General Sir Archibald P. Wavell (center, dark tunic), commander of British forces in the Middle East,
is welcomed as he lands somewhere in Greece to lend his aid in the battle against Italy. This photo was sent
from London to New York by radio.

Class Of '43
Unparalleled
In Enrollment
Total Of 1944 Freshmen
Is 11,952 Compared
With Record Of 12,098
The Class of 1943 stands unpara-
lleled. in record enrollment in the
history of the 'University, according
to figures released recently by the
Statistical Division of the Registrar's
Office.
Falling short of the all-time Uni-
versity enrollment of 12,098 students
set by the Class of 1943, the figures
accumulative through Nov. 1 list the
enrollment of the Class of 1944 at
11,952 students. This latter figure
is 1.2 percent short of the record
mark.
According to an article in the
weekly "Michigan Alumnus", this
slight depreciation after a steady in-
crease in enrollment through the
later years of, the depression is due
not only to the rise in tuition fees,
but also to the fact that increased
jobs are being offered high school
graduates in industries which have
received contracts "for rearmament.
An increase in the number of en-
rollees was recorded in the College
of Literature, Science, and the Arts;
the Law School; the School of Archi-
tecture and Design; the School of
Nursing, and the Music School.
The only school to sustain a marked
loss in enrollment wasthe College
cf Engineering. However, the loss
for the engineering college offset the
gain, in other schools.
The enrollment figures for this
year surpass those of any year ex-
cept for the 1939-40 session, the fig-
ures revealed.
The Extension Service also felt a
decline in enrollment amounting to
a percentage decline of 11.4. Corre-
spondence courses, significantly, took
an upswing.
The total record set for enroll-
ment by the session 1939-40 totalled
19,596 students, which included the
regular session, the summer session,
the extension courses, and the cor-
respondence courses.
Discount Cards On Sale
Discount cards are now on sale
for 25 cents each at the offices of
Congress, Independent Men's Asso-
ciation in Room 306 of the Union.
These cards entitle the bearer to sub-
stantial reductions of laundry, dry
cleaning, shoe repairing and laundry.

Varsity Band
Plans Banquet
To Close Year
The 135 members of the University
Marching Band will hold their an-
nual wind-up banquet of the year
6 p.m. tomorrow at the Union, in
celebration of the successful football
season to which they have contrib-
uted.
Prof. John Brumm, of the journal-
ism department, is to act as toast-
master, and Herbert G. Watkins,
faculty manager of the band, will
address the group at the smoker
which will follow the dinner. Also
scheduled to speak will be Lt. Col.
Robert M. Kunz, drillmaster, and
Prof. William D. Revelli, conductor
of the band.
Earnest B. McCoy, assistant foot-
ball coach, will show movies of the
Ohio State-Michigan football game
and provide a commentary. Pictures
of the band's formations at other
football games during the season will
also be shown.

M. Herskovits
To Speak Here
Anthropologist To Discuss
Negro In New World
Adaptations of the Negro in the
New World willibe the subject of a
University lecture to be given by Mel-
ville J. Herskovits, chairman of the
anthropology department of North-
western University, Friday, Dec. 6,
in the Rtcklham Amphitheatre.
Professor Herskovits wrote a book
entitled "The Economic Life of Prim-
itive Peoples" while in London on
a Guggenheim Fellowship, and has
since published several books and
numerous articles in the American
Anthropologist, the Human Biologist,
and many other scientific journals.
He has made extensive studies of
the Dahomeans of West Africa, the
bush Negroes of Dutch Guiana, and
the United States Negro to discover
all the aspects of their background
and the conditions of their introduc-
tion into America.

I Extra
Cartoon "GALLOPIN GALS" 0 WORLD NEWS
Coming Friday! "NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE" j
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
Ann Arbor, Michigan
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO ATTEND A
Free Lecture on Christian Science
Entitled:
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: THE SCIENCE OF CHRIST
by
DR. H EN DRIK J. de LANGE, C.S.B.
OF NEW YORK CITY
Member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
MASONIC TEMPLE: SOUTH FQURTH AVENUE
SUNDAY AFTERNOON, DEC. 1, 1940, AT 3:30

Starting
TODAY!I

MICHZ AN

p $.4dE GLORY!
S. i...teIe sowGs

Shows Today at
2-4-7-9 o'clock

Does Nazi Germany allow a margin for error
"Margin For Error"
A SATIRICAL ANTI-NAZI MELODRAMA
by CLARE BOOTHE (Author of "The Women")
THE CRITICS SAID.
Richard Lockridge: "Sheer glee . .. chuckles . . . Excitement .. .
tension . . . Laughter.
John Anderson: "The most satisfying likeness of official German
ferocity that we have yet had on the stage."
Burns Mantle: taut . . . tricky and entertaining."
John Mason Brown:" . . . delightful mastery of the wisecrack."
Brooks Atkinson: ". . . ludicrous situations . . . hilarious satire lines."
Walter Winchell: "My favorite show . . . skillful murder mystery
..By all means go."
PLAY PRODUCTION
of the Speech Deportment
WEDNESDAY through Saturday, Dec. 4, 5, 6, 7.
Box Office open Monday (Phone 6300)
Prices: 75c, 50c, 35c Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre

LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox dar
Careful work at low price.
STUDENT LAUNDRY-Specialf
dent rates. Moe Laundry,
South First St. Phone 3916.
STUDENT BUNDLES--3 shirts
pairs of sox, 6 handkerchiefs
ished, 2 suits underwear, 2 b
towels, 1 pajama suit fluffed-
Ace Hand Laundry,,1114 S. U
versity.
FOR SALE
FRESH SWEET CIDER-Eating;
cooking apples. Friday deliv
Ph. 3926. 1003 Brooks St.
CHRISTMAS CARDS-The lar
selection in town. All imprin
with your name. From 50 for $
up. Craft Press, 305 Maynard
FIELD GLASS-Bausch & L
Prism Sterio, 6 Power. 30 n
aperture. Cost $70.00. Perfect c

ned.
st:-
226 Bus Fares Cut for
fin- CHRISTMAS VACATION TRIPS
ath
99c.
Jni- These round trip fares are for persons in parties of 15 or more.
15c
ALBANY, N.Y. . . . . . . $12.75 ROCHESTER, N.Y. ......8.40
and BUFFALO, N.Y.. . . . . . 6.90 SPRINGFIELD, MASS. . . . . 15.55
ery.
137 BOSTON, MASS. . . -. . . 17.20 SCRANTON, PA. . . . . . 12.85
gest CHICAGO, ILL. . . . . . . 5.40 BINGHAMTON, N.Y.. . . . 11.40
ied CLEYELAND, OHIO . . . . 4.50 S
1;t. ST. LOU IS, MO. .. . . . . 9.75
NEW YORK, N.Y. . . . . . 15.55
)mc NIL SYRACUSE, N.Y. . . . . . 9.85
NILS, MICH. . . 3.55
omb UIA .. 13
mm. PHILADELPHIA, PA. . . . . 14.80 UTICA, N.Y.. . . . . . . 11.35
on- W ....

U *

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