THE MICHIGAN DAILY TEURS DAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1941 _ __ __ } All those who hold year sub- scriptions to Gargoyle are urged to obtain copies of the November issue as soon as possible, on the second floor of the Student Pub- lications Building. I F ever miss a whisker! I Real Square Dance PlannedBy Grads A real live fiddler: a genuine caller and all the trimmings have been re- surrected by the Graduate Council and Graduate Outing Club for their old-time country square-dance which will start at 9 p.m. next Friday in the Rackham Assembly Hall. All graduate students are urged to come and dance under the expert direction of the Parker family. Lack of a date is no handicap; come single or in couples. r) : ~ i r o always good USE A 60-WATt BULB on each side of the mirror Don't let poor lighting ruin your disposition in the morn- ing. Shave in comfort with a 60-watt lamp (shaded) on each side of the bathroom mirror. You'll be surprised at the difference it makes. The Detroit Edison Company. but Especially at THANKSGIVING Nuts f ro m NUT aNIBBLE 339 South Main One. Performance Only Monday, Dec. 1st, 8:30 P.M. 8 Months in Chicago "' says Walter Winchell Lindsay Play To Be Shown o In .Ann Arbor Waram, Gillmore Appear On Local Theatre Stage In 'Life With Father' "Life With Father," the most pop- ular comedy of the past two years, will make its Ann Arbor stop in its nation-wide tour Monday and Tues- day evening at the Michigan The- atre. With a background of the "Ele- gant Eighties" in New York, the play depicts the adventur s of a real American family, tha of the late Clarence Day, from whose book of the same name the stage production has been adapted. Father, a conservative New York banker without particular prominence outside financial and social circles, has become a well-known figure among the readers and playgoers of this country. Fashionedyby Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, "Life With Father" will appear this season in cities from New York to San Francisco. Headed by Percy Waram as Father and Margalo Gillmore as Mother, the cast includes such well established players as Richard Simon, Bernard Carson, Jack Irwin, Lachland Camp- bell, Clara Joel, George LeSoir, Vir- gilia Chewe, Margaret Randall, Jean Martin, Ann Lincoln, Aubrey Hynes, Nellie Burt and Paul Martin. Hoover Says AEF Would Be 'Waste' CHICAGO, Nov. 19-(.P)-Former President Hoover tonight opposed sending American troops to Europe, contending such action would not only be a "futile waste of American life," but would also endanger eco- nomic freedom in the United States itself. At the same time the former chief executive called for a halt to what he said was an attempt to condition American minds artificially for war, asserting that propaganda agencies already were voicing a "preliminary demand" for the sending of American land forces into the European mael- strom. He spoke before the Union League Club. The address was broadcast over the Columbia system. Main Course Of ASME Roast To Be Grilled' Faculty Members m._ By CHARLES THATCHER "The man who can take it.' That's the title some engineering faculty member is going to win at the annual ASME Roast Tuesday, Dec. 9, but he'll have to prove himself more than worthy of the honor before he receives it! Grilled by members of the Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers, the six professors selected as con- testants will be put to severe tests, and all's fair in love, war and the scope of the catch questions to be put to the profs at that time. But there will be glory in it. Sur- vivor of the evening's verbal attacks -with malice aforethought-will win the famed Spoofuncup, a trophy con- structed specially for the occasion CDA Lecture On Near East Will Be Given Prof. McDowell To Talk On Caucasus Situation; Will SpeakOn Sunday An authority on the NearbEast and its turbulent politics, Prof. Robert H. McDowell will speak at 4 p.m. Sun- day in the Rackham Lecture Hall on "The Developing Battle Front in the Caucasus and Iran." The Committee To Defend Ameri- ca will sponsor Professor McDowell's address, second in its series of local and outside lectures for the Allies' cause. Jack Jones, Welsh coal miner and labor leader, inaugurated this year's program with an address Oct. 9 on British labor's position in the war. Professor McDowell's acquaintance with his subject dates back to his birth in Alexandretta, Syria. Son of American missionaries to Iran (then Persia), Professor McDowell has spent many years in this territory. Although Professor McDowell was mainly concerned with relief work during the first two years of World War I, he served as a lieutenant in the British Military Intelligence on the Caucasus front after 1916. Continuing his relief work after the war, Professor McDowell was also in business in Iraq and Turkey from 1921 to 1928. and made of a funnel, a cup and two spoons for handles, to be presented by last year's winner (?) Prof. Ben Dushnik of the mathematics depart- ment. Directing operations for the eve- ning will be a seventh faculty member acting as Roastmaster, but even this position has its faults, as the Roast- master often takes a worse roasting than the roastees. Applause Meter The final decision will be aided and abetted by an applause meter, con- structed by the ASME for special use at the annual Roast banquet. Ex- tra precautions will be taken against the use of "stock" faculty jokes, ASME president John Templer, '42E, has warned. ASME members met in secret ses- sion last night and it is expected that the names of those engineering fac- ulty men who will soon have that haunted look on their faces will be released within the next few days. Since the founding of the Roast tradition in 1934, seven. professors have been through the mill and have had their names duly placed on the coveted trophy, the original winner being John Grennan of the metal processing department. Winners Listed Subsequent martyrs were Prof. Walter C. Lay, Prof. Axel Marin, the late Prof. J. E. Emswiler and Prof. H. L. Kohler, all of the mechanical engineering department; the late Dean Henry C. Anderson and last year's title-holder Professor Dushnik. The "loving cup" itself' was con- structed in 1934 by W. E. Hawthorn, an employe in the engineering me- chanics laboratory, and was proposed as an apt trophy for the annual Roast by L. V. Colwell of the Department of Metal Processing.-, CLASk~SIFIED DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (Increase of 10c for each additional 5 words.)I $1.00 per 15-word insertion for 3 or more days. (Increase of $.25 for each additional 5 words.)i Contract Rates on Request Our Want-Ad Department will be happy to assist you in composing your ad. Stop at the Michigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard St. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. LET'S TALK TURKEY! Thanksgiving dinner 'prepar- ed and served is really a rare treat! Nowhere are finer foods more tastefully and ap- petizingly presented - and the atmosphere along with Income payments to individuals are estimated by the Department of Commerce at 90 billion dollars for . this year. Ii satisfying wines make the feast experience. or beer will a delightful Careful work at low price. 2c MICHIGAN I Year in New York -- "A HONEY OF A S1U A SEATS: $2.75, $2.20 $1.65, $1.10, 55c Mail Orders Now -- Box Office Sale Nov. 23 Leslie White WritesI Nov. 24 and 25 MICHIGAN MONDAY and TUESDAY Oscar Serlin presents Clarence Day ' ATHER Made into a play by HOWARD LINDSAY and RUSSEL CROUSE USRCY WARAM m MARGALO GJLLMORE MAIL ORDERS a DrectkdLyBRE7A/6A/FW/NVUST NOW Se ting &Cost umesy .5 7egWART CIIAAIA' Excellent Seats Available at $1.10, $1.65, $2.20, $2.75 Seats for Both Performances Now Selling On Of Pueblan Culture T ana*yan Indian HELP WANTED BOY to work for board, Mrs. Slade, 1223 Hill. 2-2276. 129c FOR SALE ENGLISH BIKE for sale-girl's mod- el-excellent condition-call Fran, 2-1017, around 6:00 p.m. 128c 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. 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 HOMECOOKED PLATE LUNCH on SatiVday for students and guests, beginning at eleven o'clock. CorrISTIAN CHURCH Corner of Hill and Tappan We don't cook our Food. We PREPARE it. The Flautz Ca fe 122 W. Wash. Ph. 7070 - on the corner - L The University Musical Society announces the following concerts CHICAGO S YMPRONY FREDERICK STOCK, Con0uCtOr Sun., Nov. 30, 3:00 P.M. Ancient and colorful, the culture of the Pueblo of Tamaya, New Mex- ico, is described in Dr. Leslie A. White's book, which is ready for pub- lication. Dr. White, acting head of the an- thropology department, has concen- trated his study mainly on the social organization and religious ceremonies of the Tamaya. One of the many in- teresting ceremonial objects collected during this last summer is a quartz crystal which is used by medicine men to diagnose ailments caused by witches or evil spirits. The book is to be well illustrated, largely by ketches instead of photographs, as photography is prohibited within the pueblo. _ _ ., , i Shows Continuous 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Turkey 'Day m Treat I SHOWS TODAY at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. ;i I I Frederick Stock B , o $;T 0 N- SYMPHON'Y SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor Wed., Dec. 10, 8:30 P.M. I. Serge Koussevitzky MESSIAH CONCERT Chorus - Orchestra - Soloists TTiOR JOHNSON, Conductor Sun., Dec. 14, 4:15 P.M. I N I WifE MEW - I 'I ~&'J7~V ~ IAhiu. ~ 3' f MUMCR 1~ all rL-- , '