- --- -~ -~ 6 THE MICHTAN DAILY ...: .r ..,.: v.sa a v s L a.i n i u i ,......-....w. .....,. .. w.xaw....wvw. w .. , ... ,. _. ..,: f Beauty Album To Be Offered By New Garg' Fcgilty Men Will Discuss World War II's Effect On Various Institutions Speaking of the fan mail received by the fairer of the weaker sex fol- 'lowing publication of their pictures in national magazines, Michigan men will find good use for stamps and dial phones wpen they have flipped once tie pages of the November issue of Gargoyle, coming out Tuesday. Occupying a prominent position in the seconds issue of Michigan's mag- azine of campus life will be a regular spread of the "Album of Beauty," which will feature each month photo- graphs of three or four of the Uni- versity's coeds. While choice of these beauties rests with the editorial staff of the magazine, far from overlooked are items of attractive looks and per- sonality, charm and talent. A double purpose will be served, ac- cording to the editors, if men take advantage of this chance to obtain personable wall decorations to replace their worn out Petty drawings. Skipping for a moment to the seri- ousness of the world situation, Gar- goyle has ,obtained three commen- taries from authorities in their re-' spective fields on the "Effects of World War I.' Prof. Norman R. F. Maier of the psychology department has applied his knowledge of the psychological aspects of war in predicting. for the future and Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science department has enumerated efects on existing politi- cal ins'titutions. In the field of letters. W. H. Auderi, prominent contemporary English poet and dramatist, visiting lecturer in English, will discuss the effects of the war on literature in general and on men of letters. Thus, both the campus and the world at large are caught by Gar- goyle in only two of the features in its November magazine. MAN Bob Lkes His Stakes Rare - and Paulette's the Bet He's After ! Independents' Tftor System .Starts Service' Tutors "by the dozen" have been signed by Congress, Independent Men's Association, to assist students who find difficulty in grasping the fundamental aspects of numerous courses given in the various schools and colleges on campus. These teachers haye been selected from the ranks of Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honorary society, Phi Kap-: pa Phi, Phi Beta Kappa and other: scholastic honor organizations. According to John Frazier, '43, chairman of the I.M.A. scholastic committee, the tutorial system is planned primarily for freshmen who have failed to get the hing of things even at this date, for students who! have missed classes due to illness, and for students who are taking cour- ses without having completed sug- gested prerequisites. Supplementary to the tutorial ser- vice, Congress is also enlarging the examination file which it started in the library a few,' years ago. Final examinations and hour blue-books are being re-typewritten in six copies so that the number of copies available! will not be restricted to a single "early-bird" as has been the case in the past. The files are being enlarged so 4 that back examinations will be avail- able for almost all courses on campus, merely the more popular literary college courses. Physics, chemistry, botany, zoology, pharmacy, forestry, and many others are being procured! by the Independent Nlen's Association for this collection. Where 12 Died In Passenger Train Wreck Dr. Eich To Talk Today At Graduate Speech Club The Graduate Study Club of the Speech Department will meet at 4 p.m. today in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Dr. L. M. Eich will speak on "The- sis Writing." NPlans for the coming year will be discussed Jean Hebrard Appointed To Architect Committee Prof. Jean Hebrard, instructor of architecture, was recently appointed to membership on the Committee on Urban and Rural Land Use of the American Institute of Architects. an- nounced the dean's office of the architecture college yesterday. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE FOR SALE-Eastman Kodak Auto- Focus enlarger, model B. Good condition. Call Mrs. Rogers, 2-3241. 118c TYPING MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. 90c VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. 6c This is the wreckage which resulted when a fast Pennsylvania passenger train hurtled# from the tracks at Dunkirk, O., and smashed into a signal controltower. In right background is the shattered remains of the tower. Twelve persons were killed and at least 40 others injured. H. E. Newcomet, railroad vice- president, said a half-ton cylinder head blown from a passing freight locomotive into the path of the passenger train caused the wreck. LOST and FOUND I GIVE UP-My coat is still missing. Also two pairs of two-thread seam- less nylons belonging to a friend. Buck Dawson. Phi Gamma Delta. 117c FOR RENT FOR RENT--Nicely furnished, well heated rooms for boys. Near cam- pus. 1021 Church. 115c WANTED TO BUY A USED Physics 71 syllabus. Call Bill Gooley. 2-1817, after 7:30 p.m. 119c Last Day Crawford - Taylor "WHEN LADIES MEET" Starts Thursday! 'S{ i Rtegents .Board Approves Gifts For November (Continued from Page 1) l t 1i r 4' i "I cannot tell a lie it's funnier than 'Caught in the Draft!"' Hopwood Note s Each month Prof. Roy W. Cowden selects several books just off the press for the library in the Hopwood Room. The b'ooks of his choice are by au- thors whom he believes are competi- tors of today's literary aspirants; they do not include the works of Shake- speare and Milton, but those of con- temporaries. For October, Professor Cowden selected "Destiny Has Eight Eyes," by Willard Hanna, and Vivian Par- son's "Not Without Honor." Both authors were Hopwood contestants. Ten books have been chosen for November: Edward Weeks' "Great Short Novels"; Mark Van Doren's "The Mayfield Deer"; Seldon Rod- man's "The Poetry of Flight"; Hop-. wood winner Mildred Walker's "Unless the Wind Turns"; and A. J. Cronin's "The Keys of th King- dom." The list cotinues with Edmund Wilson's "The Wound and the Bow"; obinson Jeffer's "Be Angry at the Sun"; Lew Sarett's "Collec- ted Poems"; and Frederick Bren- an's Broadway hit, "The Wookey." "The Intent of the Critic," by Wil- son, Forrstet", Ransom, anal the University's own W. H. Auden, con- cludes the list. Chairmen Announced For J-Hop, Soph Prom Committee heads for the J-Hop and Soph Prom were announced yes- terday by Ted Sharp, '43E, general J-Hop chairman, and Charles Dot- terrer, '44E, Prom chairman. J-Hop committee heads are: Rob- ert Burstein, publicity; Robert Begle, tickets; Bruce Renaud and James Snodgrass, booths; Robert Bartlow, music; Rose Mary Mann and Leo- fora Grossman, patrons Thomas Poyser,' buildings; Mary Lou Knapp, secretary and Mildred Christa, decor- ations. Students heading the Soph Prom committees are Stanley Glassman, decorations; Jack Hooper and Rich- ard Emery, music; Ralph Beuhi'er, finance; Harold Cooper, publicity; Martin Feferman, tickets; Phyllis Present, programs, and Nancy Hat- tersley, patrons. t 1P V I I- /I 1111 Indians in Chile during the same period. Dr. Richard C. Armstrong of the Department of Ophthalmology was permitted to spend November 17 to March 21 in the study of clinicalr procedures at the' Johns Hopkins Hospital. Prof. Arthur B. Moehlman of the School of -Education was granted a month's leave in February to take part in educational conferences in the West. Prof. George G. Ross of the College of Architecture was granted leave for the year beginning Nov. 1 to accept the directorship of the Michigan State Planning Com- mission. Miss Bertha L. Shaw of the University Library was given three months leave on account of illness. Prof. Dudley M. Phelps of the School of Business Administration was named chairman of the division of the social sciences for a term of three years. Library Council Appointments Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the Col- lege of Engineering, Prof. Haywood Keniston, chairman of the depart- ment of Romance Languages, Dr. Carl E. Guthe, director of the Uni- versity Museums and Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education were appointed members of the gen- eral council of the University Library, in accordance with the new bylaws. Dr. Norman E. Hartweg of the De- partment of Zoology was appointed a member of the executive committee of the Museum of Zoology for a three-year term. Prof. John Sundwall of the Depart- ment of Hygiene, Clark Tibbitts, di- rector of the Institute for Human Adjustment and Dr. Richard C. Fuller of the Department of Sociology were given appointments as lecturers in ,the social work curriculum of the Institute of Public and Social Admin- istration for the present semester. Sabbatical Leaves Given Sabbatical leaves for the second semester of the current year were granted to Prof. Norman H. Anning, mathemags; Prof. Roy W. Cowden, English; Prof. Arthur L. Dunham, history; Prof. Robert S. Ford, eco- nomics; Prof. Thomas A. Knott, Eng- lish; Prof. Norman R. F. Maier, psy- chology; Prof. Norman E. Nelson, English; Prof. James A. Nyswander, mathematics; Prof. Walter A. Reich- art, German; Prof. S. Morley Scott, history; and Prof. Maurice W. Sen- stius, geology. Leaves were also granted to Prof. Carl E. W. L. Dahlstrom, engineering, Prof. George B. Brigham, Jr., archi- tecture; and Prof. John Sundwall, public health. As a means of eliminating con- fusion, the faculty of the School of Dentistry recommended that all titles in the school be simply professor- ships, assistant professorships, and other ,positions, in dentistry. MICHIGAN MON., TUES., NOV. 24-25 "'PUBLIC ENTETAIMENT NO.1" -Walter Winchell Oscar Serlin prs..Clarence Day's FATHERH A 8 Made into a poy by 1FM Rf) t K flCAv.. 01 ' nozr lwrN aines Publishes Guest Organist Book' of Personal Will Perform Outdoor Adventuree Of interest to readers in general Recital Here is the recent publication by Farrar & Rinehart of "Luck in All Weathers," Hugh Porter Will Feature a volume of "personal adventures in hunting and fishing" by Donal Ham- Works Of Bach, Franck ilton Haines. Of special interest to In Musical Program the Michigan campus is the fact that the author is also Professor Haines Hugh Porter, whom the Chicago of the Department of Journalism. DuhlyoNers h o e Chichgo An enthusiastic outdoorsman, Pr Dailyl News has called "one of the fessor Haines describes "Luck in All imost brilliant of the younger organ- Weathers" as the result of a -"long ists" will appear as guest organist desire to write about my hunting and in a recital at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill fishing experiences, adventures which Auditorium. never grow stale." Presenting a program featuring the According to Professor Haines, too works of Bach, Caesar Franck, Hin- many people measure their satisfac- demith and Weitz, Porter will play tion in sports of this kind in terms of music representative of all periods amount and ease. His book, conse- including "Lebhaft, from Sonata II" quently, is written from the stand- by the contemporary German com- point of the sheer joy of recreation; poser, Paul Hindemith. Hindemith, it is an attempt-as the author points known for his "utility music" was out in the introduction- "to give an forced to leave Germany in 1934 outling of how to preserve the splen- when his symphony from the opera, did adventurousness of hunting and IMathias der Maler' met with polit- fishing . . . and so keep them an uni cal "opposition." failing source of joy." Porter is organist and choirmaster Originally designed as an outdoor at the Collegiate Church of St. Nich- book for boys, "Luck in All Wea- olas, New York, besides being a mem- thers," according to dealers' reports, ber of the faculty of the Juillard has 'met with favor among adult Summer School and Union Theologi- readers. cal Seminary School of Sacred Music. He has given recitals in various wrra m lClscities throughout the country, hav- ing played in New York, Chicago and Series On Religion Washington. Admission is free to the general public. Kenneth Morgan, director of the Student Religious Association, willI Americans Are Assured conclude the series of seminars in O- Of Brazilian Aid In War ental Religions today, with a lecture_____ on "Hinduim" The lecture, which will be given at PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil, Nov. 11- 7:30 p.m. in Lane Hall, will be based (P)-Foreign Minister Oswaldo Aran- on Morgan's experiences with thisd ha was quoted today by the news- particular modern religious sect while paper Folha Da Tarde as saying Bra- inaIniuamHerentreligthus serewhur-zil would not remain neutral if an in India. He spent a year there, dun- American nation became ,involved in ing six months of which he resided the war. in a "Hindu" monastery. '"We are and wish to be Pan- . Following Morgan's talk there Americanists," he said, according to will be a discussion period dealing the newspaper. "We follow the Amer- with various aspects of all Oriental ican way, we go along with Ameri- religions. The Student Religious ca's fortunes.. We will not be neutral Association invites all those inter- if there is any participation by one ested to attend. American nation in the war." 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 stu- dent organizations. 1 cent postage on alumni mailings. The Edwards Letter Shop, 711 N. University, Phone 2-2846. 8c LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. "Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c INDIVIDUALIZED LAUNDRY SERVICE Each bundle done separately, by hand ,No Markings Silks, Wools, and Coeds' Laundry Our Specialty All our work is guaranteed Free pick-ups and deliveries SILVER LAUNDRY 607 E. HOOVER 5594 Extra Glimpses Washington State Pups and Jan Puzzles Garber Cartoon - News - Coming Sunday - "WEEKEND IN HAVANA" III ti I flewv s1~te, JZ4-it at t W/./ B U I N "Varsdty Town" CLOTHE S f t 5 .ed r '~ 1 E ~ --- ''-- f.,. m ANN ARBOR MEN KNOW the TRUTH about the high quality and style predom- inance of custom tailored clothes bearing the label of Wild & Company. Varsity Town clothes meet the demands of VARSITY MEN in college or in business. They're versatile and invariably right for all men of good taste . . . for all Men Who Care about the clothes they wear. to 45-.00 .. i CASUAL .. . Vital fabrics that lend themselves to the easy yet perfectly groomed appear- ance of the man who wears them . casual clothes of VARSITY TOWN dis- tinction. oo,4 la~e,%made better' CONSERVATIVE ... The clothes that give a man-about- town that air of swift-moving irmport- ance . . . handsome materials in the patterns that Esquire acclaims for the correctly appareled business man. I I s x