THE MICHIGAN DAILY Chinese Will Celebrate Double Ten' Day Fete University Chinese students will celebrate Double Ten Day, the Chi- nese Fourth of July, commemorating the 30th anniversary of the Republic with the first formal dance of the year at 9 p.m. Friday, Oct. 10, at the League. A fashion show depicting Chinese fashions of the 14th, 17th, 19th, and 20th centuries will be directed by Miss Lynn-Lee Shew of the Interna- tional House in Chicago. --- CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY TYPING VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal' typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. lc LAUNDERING LAUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c SILVER LAUNDRY-Free pickups and deliveries. Special prices on coeds' laundries. Guaranteed satis- factory. No markings. 607 Hoover. Phone 5594. '11c TAILORING & SEWING STOCKWELL and Mosher-Jordan residents-Alterations on women's garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. 3c TAILORED suits and coats, custom- made. Day time, evening gowns made and remodeled. Phone 3468. 4c WANTED TO BUY MAKE MONEY--on your used cloth- ing by phoning Claude H. Brown, 2-2736. 512 S. Main. 5c MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. 6c WASHED SAND AND' GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c MIMEOGRAPHING and multi- graphing-illustrated and typed work for fraternities and other student organizations. 1 cent post- age on alumni mailings. The Ed- wards Letter Shop, 711 N. Univer- sity.. Phone 2-2846. 8c PERSONALS INFANT DAY NURSERY. Reason- able rates by day or week. Ap- proved. Phone 3948. 9c WANTED NON-SMOKING roommate wanted for student at 431 Thompson. Phohe 9431. 10c FOR SALE 907 LINCOLN AVE.-11 rooms, 2 baths, porter's room in basement, large dormitory, large lot, 2-car garage, steam heat. Ideal for fra- ternity or sorority. Possession at once. For sale or rent. Brooks- Newton Realty, Inc. Office tele- phone 2-2571. Eve. 6125 or 8605. 12c Medical Group Plains Reunion Here Oct. 2-4 Renown Alumni, Faculty Members Will Address Three Day Convention Alumni of the Medical School, for- mer staff members and former in- ternes of the University Hospital willj return to Ann Arbor October 2, 3 and 4 for the second triennial reunion for medical alumni. Prominent members of the Medical School faculty will supplement a list of distinguished medical authorities,i all alumni of the University, as speak-{ ers on the tree-day program. Solidarity and mutual interests that can be achieved in no better way than by an assembly of alumni in Ann Arbor, according to Dean Albert C. Furstenberg of the Medical School, are called for by thg role of medicine in national defense and the part theI 1Medical School and its former stu- dents must play in this program. Topics covering many phases of medicine in the world today will be discussed during the reunion sessions by leading authorities. Guest speak- ers will include Dr. William L. Bene- dict, Ophthalmologist at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.; Dr. Joseph R. Darnall, Lieutenant Colonel, Med- ical Corps, United States Army; Dr. Perrin H. Long, Professor of Preven- tive Medicine, John Hopkins Univer- sity School of Medicine; and Dr. Charles L. Brown, Professor of Medi- cine, Temple University School of Medicine Honors Program In Lib To Begin Third Year A Modeled on the tutorial programs year to juniors in the program. Prof. of Harvard, Oxford and Swarthmore, Mischa Titiev of the anthropology Michigan's Degree Program for Hon-h department will conduct a junior ors in Liberal Arts in the literary group on the general theme "The De- college will begin its third year of velopment of Modern Social Theory existence on this campus. in Sociology. Cultural Anthropology, Begun as an experiment, the pro- } and Social Psychology." gram has met with such enthusiasm Prof. Howard B. Calderwood of the on the part of the students partici- political science department will head pating that it has become a perman- aseminar on "The Transition from ent feature. Approximately 15 jun- Feudal Individualism to Capitalism iors ard'15 seniors, chosen through and the Trend Toward Collectivism." 1their records of the first two years AgerastdofheIlinR - and by examination, will participate A general study of the Italian Ren- in eight seminars. -- - Preference Given Fl i o r e Students in the program are given wide latitude and individual prefer- ence in the selection of coursesfor Are Available the junior and senior years. Pro- grams are worked out with the tutors,A.n e i following the special interests of each At Universit student, and courses are chosen ac-. cording to what is believed will bring cut the best efforts of the student. Civilian Pilot Training Plan During his senior year each student Offers Flight, Ground in the program must write an essay r on a subject selected by him in con- Work To College Men, sultation with his tutor. The essay will be judged by the Board of Tutors and other members of the faculty' University students who wish to which the Board may invite. The fly a plane need no longer confine student will also write a comprehen- their aspirations to watching from sive final examination in his field of the ground.-Flying lessons are now study and in related fields. Those available to any student enrolling in who have shown superior ability in the Civilian Pilots Training program., their study will be recommended for It isn't quite as simple as all that, honors at graduation. of course. But it remains that physi- Woodburne Is Adviser cally fit students who can meet the Aother qualifications for enrollment Assistant Dean Lloyd S. Wood- may receivea, in addition to 72 hours burne of the literary college serves as of ground school, 35 hours of actual general adviser for the program, flying instruction, all for approxi which offers five hours credit each mately $40r semester.$.F.ehr this Admnistered by the Civil Aero- Fivesemiars- ie nautics Administration, the CPT is now accepting 30 students a semes- Calhoon, Porter Conduct for for elementary instruction and erai Arts 4 University aissance period will be made by the group under Prof. Palmer A. Throop of the history department. Another junior seminar will make "An Intensive Study of Some of the Classical Authors," under the guid- ance of Prof. Stanley D. Dodge of the geography department. To Study Comedy The fifth group, led oy Dr. John Arthos of the English department, will make a general study of comedy. Three senior seminars will be of- fered this year. Prof. Richard C. Fuller of the sociology department will again lead a study on the devel- opment of the labor movement. Dr. Otto Graf of the German de- partment will conduct a survey on the forms of literature. "The Development of the Scientific Attitude" will be studied by the third senior group, conducted by Prof. Bur- ton D. Thuma of the psychology de- partment. flying for approximately the same cost. Headed by Prof. Emerson W. Con- lon of the aeronautical engineering department, both . elementary and advanced courses are offered each semester. The flight and ground training are carried on simul- taneously. Included in the value received for the tuition fee in addition to the flight and ground instruction is the initial medical examination and transportationsto and fromthe air- port during the year. Apply Early In the past few years the number of applicants for enrollment has ex- ceeded the quota, and prospective enrolleesaare advised to make appli- cation early, as the classes will be filled by priority. Although not directly connected with either the Army or Navy air arms, thePT does require a pledge upon application that the student will enter either service in the event that he is needed. Kohier, Nickelsen Do 'Defense Work J Governmental Research zv mo c to rceive seconduary train- ing. For Niivy, Army Granted a leave of absence from the University, Prof. H. L. Kohler ofI the mechanical engineering depart- ment will spend the coming year working in the Bureau of Aeronautics of the Navy Department, in Wash- ington. Prof. J. M. Nickelsen of the me- chanical engineering department. spent a month earlier in the summer at Camp Holabird, Md., outlining a course in army transport instruction. Later Professor Nickelsen -acted as consulting engineer for various in- dustries. Manufacturers' inventories totaled about 13 billion dollars at the end of July, the Department of Com- merce reported. Qualifications Listed Government research took up the; Qualifications for enrollment are time of Prof. S. M.. Calhoon and R.' citizen ship, parental permission if C. Porter of the mechanical engin- the applicant is under 21, and at eering department during the sum- least one year of college enrollment. mer, the former working in Norfolk, No advance flight training is neces- Va., in connection with mechanical sary. equipment in large buildings for gov- Students successfully completing ernment use, while the latter aided the elementary course may subse- Prof. R. A. Dodge of the engineering quently enroll in the secondary mechanics department in calibrat- course, which offers 108 hours of ing meters for government service. ground instruction and 40 hours of Read And Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads F-OLLETTS STUDENT SUPPLIES AN IDENTIFICATION K Fff~ E. 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