TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY Contest Named For Ohio Game Band Displays Winner Will Be Awarded Prize Of Ten Dollars For Best Formations Students interested in the forma- tions presented by the University Marching Band may turn their inter- ests into cash through a contest to be sponsored by the band in connec- tion with the annual Varsity Night show to be given Tuesday, Oct. 28. During the course of the show a cash prize of ten dollars will be awarded to the student who has turned in the best set of formations for the band's use at the Ohio State game this fall. The entries, band business mana- ger Stuart Park, '42, pointed out, must be a series of formations such as the national defense series last Saturday or the World Series theme at the Iowa game, not merely indi- vidual formations. Other contest rules stipulate that' the formations submitted become the property of the band, that the band's formations committee will be sole judges and that in case of atie dupli- cate prizes will be awarded. 'Ballot boxes will be placed at var- ious points about the campus within the next few days, Park announced, and students wishing to submit for- mations are asked to drop them into any one of the boxes. Featured artist on the Varsity Night program this year will be Mor- ton Gould, nationally known com- poser and performer. Also scheduled to make its campus debut for the semester that night is the University Concert Band, under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli. "Perspectives' Sets Deadline For Material Students who wish their work to be considered for publication in the first issue of Perspectives, to be re- leased the latter part of this month, should submit writings this week to one of the places specified. They may be handed in person to one of the staff members, or may be brought to the Student Publications Building and left in the Perspectives desk on the second 'floor. There are also boxes for this purpose in both the English and engineering English department offices. With selection of this material for publication, there are also opened up further opportunities for the stu- dent, since the Perspectives staff is maintaining communication with na- tional contests of various types and1 ith'compilers of anthologies. Commendable writings will be en- tered by the editors in these con- tests, with the value and profits of such experience belonging to the stu- dent himself., Inability of German mills to fur- nish required steel plates has ad- versely affected Sweden's shipbuild-giduty Regents Board Acknowledges Gifts, Grants Absence Leave (Continued from ?age 1) S fish the Edwin J. Marshall Student Aid Fund. The Regents also accepted gifts from Walter A. Eversman of $200 for the Henry M. Bates Award; from the West Quadrangle Student Council, $150, for a scholarship for John T. Van Aken, '44, for 1941-42; and from the Michigan Real Estate Associa- tion, $150, for the J. G. Lloyd Alex-. ander Fellowship in Real Estate. The University of Michigan Club of Grand Rapids gave $130 to es- tablish a freshmen scholarship in the club's name. The Ann Arbor Business and Professional Women's Club gave $90.24 for the Club's Loan Fund, and the Rockford, Mich., High School, gave $60 for a scholarship. Two gifts of art work, one an edi- tion of Chinese prints and one a photo-print of a Chinese manuscript, I were accepted from the Chinese gov- ernment. The Children's Fund of Michigan gave a portrait of the late Senator James Couzens, donor of Couzens Hall, to be hung in the living room of the Hall. Prof. Verner W. Crane of the his- tory department and Prof. James E. Dunlap of the classical languages department were appointed to the Westminster Guild Party To Feature Box Suppers An old fashioned box social will be given by the members of the West- minster Guild at 8:30 p.m. tomor- row in the Presbyterian Social Hall, John Dean, '43, announced. Any women who cannot prepare their boxes elsewhere may use the facilities of the church kitchens, and the men may bid for them up to 50 cents. Chaperons of the affair will be Mr. and Mrs. Don .Norton, and Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Praaken. Executive Committed of the literary college. Prof. Jean Hebrard of the College of Architecture and Design was named to the Executive Commit- tee of that college. Mabel L. Gardner was named to the Executive Committee of the School of Nursing to fill an unexpired term ending March, 1943. Prof. Warner G. Rice was named a member of the Committee on Man- agement of the Transportation Li-! brary. Two leaves of absence were granted by the Regents. Prof. Walter G. Sad- ler- of the civil engineering depart- ment was granted a one-year leave to serve as an engineering major in the Seventh Corps Area of the United States Army. James M. Plummer of the Department of Far Eastern Art was granted a leave for the second semester. 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