THE MTUTTMAN DAILY International Center Plans New Activities Luncheons, customs class and an- nual Christmas party are highlights of the International Center program for the week, Prof. Raleigh Nelson, its director announced. Foreign students will meet at noon today for the regular luncheon meet- ing in the Russian Tea Room of the League under the leadership of Mr. Klinger of the staff. At 7:30 p.m. today the last in the series of American Social Customs classes will meet at the Center under the direction of Mrs. Lucy Dykema, social director of Martha Cook dorm- itory. She will lead the discussion of the social relations of nen and wo- men. Tea will be held as usual from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday and the classes in English at 7:30 p.m. Sunday the colorful annual Chinese party will be given at the Center Perspectives Staffs Will Convene Today The members of all staffs of Per- spectives, campus literary magazine, will be expected to help with the next issue's preparation today and tomor- row, Ellen Rhea, '41, editor, an- fnounced yesterday. The magazine's desks will hold gal- leys of the material to be proofread, and staff members may use any of their free time during these next two days to pull new proofs and correct the material. Members of the publications staff in particular have been asked to be at The Daily at 4 p.m. for instruc- tion in page make-up, and regular correspondence work. ' Goodfellows - Monday Hillel Group Gives Plays The Hillel Players' traveling troupe presented two one-act plays Sunday before the Flint B'Nai B'rith "His Children" and "Suppressed Desire" were enacted by the Players, who ap- peared before 800 in Detroit last week. Graduate Study. For Engineers To Be Planned Old Controversy Flares -Anew: Alpha Phi Fetes Opera s Yale Man Michigan Dean, Faculty Sorority Decides Hoeper Members To Take Part Will Do' As Typical In Project Continuation Michigan Male Laying plans for the continuation By S. R. WALLACE of Post-Graduate Engineering Study, With knees literally shaking and prominent eng'ineering educators and eyes modestly down-cast, the Mythi- > industrial men will meet at 6:30 p.m. cal Male from Yale and his Union r today in the Union. Opera colleague went to dinner last This will be the first meeting night at the Alpha Phi's-and came since the pilot project was started in back with the official seal of ap-Y Kalama:oo, Prof. P. H. Sherlock of proval/ from 48 sorority women for . the civil engineering department, their portrayals of "ideal Michigan Pontiac Editor Will Give Tali On Journalism Second in the series of speakers sponsored by the journalism depart- ment will be Harold A. Fitzgerald, edi- tor of the Pontiac Daily Press, who will discuss some phase of newspaper work, 3 p.m. tomorrow, Room E, Hav- en Hall. The Daily Press has a circulation of 31,000 and the staff of the paper has annually for 11 years cooperat- ed with the Department of Journalism in publishing an issue of the Michi- gan Journalist. The following lecturer, to speak here Jan. 8, Wednesday, will be Phil Rich, publisher of the Midland Daily News. He will show colored pictures of newspaper publication. The opening lecture of the series was given by J S Gray, of the Mon- roe Evening News, who discussed "The Power of the Press-Its Shadow and Its Substance." Be A Goodfellow Elkin Elected President William F. Elkin was elected pres- ident of the Graduate Outing Club at its meeting in the Rackham Build- ing, Sunday. Other officers of the Club are Allan Michelson, vice-pres- ident, Florene Briscoe, secretary, and Wilfred Kelley, treasurer. Ann Arbor Here Is Today's News In Summary Because one day last week an 18- year-old Ann Arbor youth is alleged to have purchased a pint of liquor .for 83 cents at the Campus Cut-Rate drug store, 218-226 S. State St. the police asked Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp yes- terday to issue a warrant against Michl R. Kessler, the proprietor. * * * Circuit Judge George W. Sample, '01L, announced yesterday that he will seek reelection for his fifth con- secutive six-year term at the coming spring election. chairman of the University committee for the Study, announced yesterday. Dean Ivan C. Crawford, Prof. E. L. Erikscn of the engineering mechan- ics department, Prof. C. B. Gordy and Prof. R. S. Hawley of the me- chanical engineering department, Prof. L. M. Gram and Professor Sher- lock of the civil engineering depart- ment, Prof, R. L. Morrison of the transportation engineering depart-i ment, Prof. J. W. Riegel, director of industrial relations, and Dr. James D. Bruce, past vice-president of the Michigan Engineering Society will represent the University at the con- ference. The pilot project in Kalamazoo drew such response that it is expect- ed plans will be laid for the continu- ation of the course and others in several other Michigan industrial cities next semester. Other state educational institutions represented will be Michigan State Collpge, Wayne University and the University of Detroit. Be A Goodfellow Union's Travel Board Tells How To Get There "Today's announcement that there are but nine more shopping days un- til vacation behooves everyone who intends to frequent the family hearth this Chritsmas to hurry up over to the Union Travel board and shop for a ride," declared Robert Sibley, '42, yesterday, announcing the Travel Board's existence once again for the mutual benefit of those who have or wish transportation. men." Pat Hoeper, '42, who plays the "Take A Number" conception of the Alph Phi Yale man, Bryant Dunshea, '42, who has the role of a member of this sorority in the opera, were invited yesterday to dine with women they are about to satirize in the Mimes production, The hostess sorority, it seems, re- ceived notorious publicity last year because of their alleged statemient that they preferred Yale undergrad- uates to University men here. And so, in order to see whether or not Hoeper typified their preference, Dunshee and he gritted their teeth and put themselves on display. The consensus of Alph Phi opinion this year, however, voiced by their -presi- dent Jeanne Kaufmann, '41, was that "the only reason we approve of the opera's mythical Yale man is his resemblance to Michigan men-and, we 'like THEM."sr The women also want it understood1 A RE E ASY T O G ET T O BY Tlegraph CHARGES FOR TELEGRAMS 'PHONED IN APPEAR ON YOUR TELEPHONE BILL. i And here's the Opera's Alpha Phi with two of her cronies: Paul Wheeler, Bryant Dunshee - the Alpha Phi girl, and Charles Holton. that they were the victims of mis- quoting last year, and that they merely "joked" about Yale men. The repercussions of that misunderstand- ing still echo in their dating calen- dars, they claim, since their position on compus has been much like the I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN - ~ (Continued from Page 4) 4 -4i/ahi-f(Vlate010iRY vU/ Singing unaccompanied 250 VOICES CHRISTMASMUI Final Concert of CHRISTMAS MUSIC40 be sung in Ypsilanti under the direction of FREDERICK ALEXANDER PEASE AUDITORIUM, Ypsilanti No Reserved Seats Thursday, December 12, 8:00 P.M. Admission 25c 14 F J.G.P. Publicity Committee will meet today at 5:00 p.m. in the Wo- men's League. Room notice will be posted on the bulletin board. Bringg eligibility cards. J.G.P. Music Committee will have tryouts today at 5:00 p.m. in the Kalamazoo Room of the Women's League for pianists interested in ac- companying at rehearsals. Christian Science Organization will meet at 8:15 tonight in the chapel of the Michigan League. The Informal Group of the Music Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet with Mrs. E. M. Hoover, 920 Lircoln, at 8:00 tonight. The Bibliophiles Section of Facul- ty Women's Club will meet today at 2:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Frank R. Finch, 1619 S. University Ave. Michigan Dames: Regular meeting tonight at the Rackham Building at 8:00 p.m. Bridge Group in charge of the program. International Center: 1. Social Customs Class. At 7:30 this evening Mrs. Leona Diekema, Social Director of Martha Cook, will conduct the final discussion on American Social Customs. 2. Ypsilanti Choir Christmas Pro- gram. If a sufficient number sign up by 5 p.m. Wed., a special bus will be chartered to take our students to the concert at Ypsilanti Thursday evening, December 12. The bus will; leave the Center at 7:15 and will re- turn immediately after the concert. Reservations must be paid for by 5 o'clock Wednesday. j Hillel Institute of Jewish Studies: The Jewish Ethics class, which for- merly met onl Monday nights, will meet tonight and in the future on Tuesday at 8:00 p.m. Hillel Institute of Jewish Studies: Classes which meet today at the Hill- el Foundation are: Dramatic Mo- ments in Jewish History at 4:30 p.m., Advanced -Hebrew at 8:00 p.m., Bible Translation at 8:00 p.m. Coming Events Phi Tau Alpha will meet in the home of Prof. and Mrs. Hopkins on Thursday, December 12 at 7:30. Those desiring transportation be at the Rackham Building at 7:00 p.m. sharp. Seminar in Social Minorties meets Wednesday, 4:15 p.m. in Lane Hall. Seminar in Devotional Literature meets Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at Lane Hall. Seminar in Theology will meet Wednesday at Lane Hall at 4:30 p.m. Faculty Women's Club: On Wed- nesday, Dec. 11, at 3:00 p.m., Prof. Jean Paul Slusser will give agallery talk on the Art Exhibit from the 1939 Golden Gate Exposition in the Mez- zanine Galleries of the Rackham Building. punch line of an old sorority song that finishes with-"They call us old maids, but gosh we're respected!" The point is, the Alpha Phi's want Michigan respect and don't give a hang about the reaction of Yale. Dunshee, they announced, after carefully looking him over, was cer- tainly their idea of a true Alpha Phi. Dunshee politely refused the initia- tion they offered, however, and both Dunshee and Hoeper left the sorority house feeling slightly guilty about the ribbing that the Alph Phi's are going to take in "Take A Numfer"-for the girls are all right. Be A Goodfellow Ryan To Discuss SafetyGlass Here "Automotive Safety Glass" will be the subject of a talk by Dr. Joseph D. Ryan, noted research worker in glass, at an engineering society meeting at 6:15 p.m. today in the Union. The meeting is, a joint affair spon- sored by the University student chap- ters of the .American Institute of Chemical Engineers and the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgi- cal Engineers. Also featured on the program will be the announcement of the junior member'of the AIChE who has the highest scholastic average. Don't miss the December GARGOYLE! 0 On Sale This Thurs., December 12 featuring fm op~hI I S - A'