THE MICHIGAN DAILY ®. .. Comic Characters To Parade In cMySister Eileen' Monday Art Treasure Found At College uoinmerce and tUe AA u will meet Assemble on one stage an explosive t 7 p.m. tomorrow night at the landlord with esthetic leanings, a rnion to discuss plans for community professional football player, a schem- estimonial dinner honoring Bob ing newspaper man, a drug store man- Vestfall. ager, a magazine editor, assorted The date for the dinner, which was drunks and street drifters, plus a uggested by Police Chief Sherman representative section of the Brazilian 4ortenson, had been set tentatively navy. or December 10. The result would probably resemble Saunders and Mayfield said also very closely the type of action to be hat all Ann Arbor residents who wish viewed by Ann Arbor's playgoers o pay their respects to the "local Monday night when "My Sister Ei- oy who made good" are invited to leen" comes to the Michigan Thea- ttend the banquet. ter. CLASSIFIEp ADVERTSING __________________________________________________________________ LOST and FOUND LOST-Package photographs, sta- dium, Saturday, Section 28. Call Alger, 7902 or turn in Room 1, Uni- versity Hall. RED LEATHER WALLET containing pilot's license and identification card. Lost in Le'ague. Peggy Pounds, 2-4561. 147c SCHAEFFER "Commodore" (brown- gold sunburst) fountain pen. Lost Wednesday night. Reward. June McKee-Martha Cook. 145c MISSING since early October: a tall, dark engineer wearing blue suit, and answering to name of "Gooch." Last seen near Tri Delt house. For reward; see R. E. Vantine. 144c LOST at Ohio State game-Section 21, near Press Box: black sole leather case for field glasses. Re- ward. Chas., G.Ward, 234 Eighth St., Phone .2,2196. 243c THEY STOOD as one raccoon to cheer the' fleeting lalfback, and there I was frozen like a frigid midget without my reversible. Buck Dawson. 142c FOR SALE PAIR OF WOMEN'S FIGURE ICE- SKATES, size 6. Used only 3 times. Phone 2-2591, Betty Gilmore. 140c 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 TYPING~ TYPING: L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., phone 5689. 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. HELP WANTED MAN STUDENT to assist in care of invalid man, afternoons and nights. Call at Room 106, Chemistry Bldg. TRANSPORTATION WANTED-PASSENGERS TO NEW YORK! Passengers to Chicago. Ride to Buffalo. Ride to Pitts- burgh. These are typical wants of students during the pre-holiday period. Why.not advertise in The IDaily for passengers or cars going your way? We reach everyone you're trying to reach! Coming directly from a successful run at the Cass Theatre, Detroit, the cast includes Philip Loeb, Marcy Westcott, Effie Afton, Guy Robert- son and Edith Gresham. Based on a series of biographical Articles by Ruth McKenney, the play was written by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov and is produced by Max Gordon. Hardly more than a series of epi- sodes with little continuity, "My Sis- ter Eileen" depends upon the incon- grous for its comic effects. It is the story of two sisters who come from Columbia, Ohio; to New York's famed Greenwich Village to make their for-: tunes. Into their dwelling place, a base- ment apartment, troop the amazing assortment of characters from the opening curtain to the finish, remind- ing the audience of the ludicrous sit- uations produced in a similar way in "You Can't Take It With You." The production has been running for a year on Bro'adway, and among other achievements was an eight- month stay in Chicago. Local Looting Still Harasses rEntire Campsis Robberies Have Continued Unabated Since Opening Of Present School Year (Continued from Page 1)I Police were unable to discover any clues. Three days later, the first rooming house burglary brought the series of thefts to ten in three weeks. The bur- glar-police called him "particular" because he ignored smgll change, watches and jewelry-entered a house at 608 Monroe through the unlocked front door, searched the rooms of: several students while they were asleep in the dormitory and emptied pockets and wallets. On this occasion, Richard Ney- mark, '44E, lost $12, Harold Klinert, '43, missed $8, Mort Nyman, '44E, re- ported he was $3 poorer and Earl Richardson, '43, found an empty pocket which once contained $4. To- tal profit for the burglar was esti- mated at $26 by the police. A $45 suit, suspenders valued at $1.50 and cash amounting to $48.30- this was the total loss reported byi Kappa Nu fraternity when rooms were entered by a sneak thief Nov. 10. The theft of two clarinets valued at $350 from Burton Memorial Tower Nov. 13 brings the burglaries up to date. The instruments were stolen from student lockers in the basement of the tower. They were the property of-Mary Laughlin and Phyllis Gu- gino, both music students. In an attempt to combat this spreading series of burglaries, Chief of Police Sherman H. Mortenson is ask- ing that all sororities, fraternities and rooming houses be locked at night-doors and windows. "Lock all doors and windows and keep 'em locked until morning," he warns. Mortenson also suggests that fra- ternities report the presence of any loiterers so that police can investi- gate. i Hillel To Hear Address Today Prof. Newcomb To Speak On 'Changing Attitudes' Discussing the difference of stu- dents' ideas in the transition from high school 'to college, Prof. Theo- dore M. Newcomb of the sociology de- partment will talk on "Changing Stu- dent Attitudes" at 8:15 p.m. today in Hillel Foundation's Fireside Dis- cussion Group. Professor Newcomb, formerly of Bennington College, will tell of the results of seven years' study, as yet unpublished, on the attitudes of stu- dents as they go from high school to college. Forum discussion of the talk 4 will follow. The program is part of the series called "Adjustment in the Changing World" in which student problems are analyzed and discussed. Preceding the Fireside Group will be regular conservative religious ser- vices conducted by Jack Lewin-Ep- stein, '43, and David Crohn, '43. I Class Games Will Feature Pillow Battle Frosh, Sophs Will Tangle Ii Organized Teamls At TNMBuilding Tomorrow is the day when all good men come to the aid of their class, when the war drums boom in earnest on the Michigan campus and when all paths lead to the ITtramural Sports Building for the annual Frosh- Soph Class Games. With captains elected, ultimatums issued and pillows poised the classes of '44 and '45 are more than raring to get this "legal mayhem" started at 1:30 p.m. Led by Merv Pregulman, husky varsity guard, the sophomores expect to have no trouble in winning the feature battle of the afternoon-that terrific, fight-to-the-finish pillow war between the 12 captains of each side. Other games include tug-of-war, mass water polo, graveyard, Chinese soccer and giant volley ball. Al- though there will be none of the vio- lence .which has usually accompanied Black Fridays, games like %raveyard and water polo are not symbolic of an afternoon tea sort of affair. All contestants are required to wear long trousers and tennis shoes. Those who wish to take part in the swimming and water polo events must also bring their bathing suits with them. RECORDS In ALBUMS for CHRISTMAS Strauss \ValIti Kostclancrz Orch. . $3.67 Roumanian Rhapsody No. 1 Philadelphia Orch. . $2.62 Les PrCludes London Philharionic . $2.62 Symphonic Variations Giceking, London Phil. $2.62 Lieut. Smith To Present Second Of Talks Today Lieut. Paul A. Smith of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey will speak at 1:30 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Amphitheater. Lieutenant Smith, who is speaking in Ann Arbor under the sponsorship of the civil engineering department will lecture today on the topic "Prep- aration of Aeronautical Maps." Today's lecture will be the second which Lieutenant Smith has given during his visit to Ann Arbor. He spoke yesterday at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Building. t RADIO F Discovery at St. Mary's College, South Bend, Ind., of this wood panel painting of St. Francis of Assisi was disclosed by the Rev. Greg- ory Gerrer, curator of the Wightman Art Galleries at the University of Notre Dame. Father Gregory said that the find, described by critics as the most important in this country in two decades, had been iden- tified as the work of Giotto De Bondone, 13th'century master. Dr. Maurice Goldbtatt, Chicago art expert, fixed the value at possibly $500,000. I y GoRA Ntheador s J By GLORIA NISHION and BOB MANTHO SHO ZECORD ry rrsity Ave. 715 N. Unive II-~ - I; Ir, . , i -4 I- SHOWS at 2- 4-7-9 P.M: I I Now Showing! 'Mosher Hall held a tea yesterday, for residents of that house and of Jordan. Miss Esther Coulton and Miss Heiser of Jordan presided over the tea table. The Red Cross drive is really un- der way in the dorms. Stockwellj announces that $140 has been col- lected already in the first week of the drive. Betsy Barbour had its second and last exchange dinner of te semes- ter with Adams and Winchell Houses of the West Quad Wednesday. That just about closes the season for the popular dinners. Something new in the line ofI football entertainment was inaug- urated at the recent game between Williams and Prescott Houses of, the West and East Quad respec-! tively. A band was organized to play for the game but it isn't the band that's important, it's the sidelights, name- ly: the musicians were organized by Joe Robertson, who went into the Health Service to recuperate from his strenuous activities; and secondly, the conductor, Lyn Stedman, one of the drum majors of the Michigan band, introduced a new type of batbn-a plunger. - The plunger was used in directing the music that accompanied the novel (?) formations, a block P for one dorm and a block W for the other. Inasmuch as the bandsmen were of insufficient proportions to complete the letters, spectators gra- ciously consented to help the boys fill them out. That's the good ole Michigan spirit we like to see! M eh 1, Schroeder To Debate At OSU John Muehl, '44, and Joe Schroeder, '43, of the men's varsity debate squad will represent Michigan in a decision debate with Ohio State University tomorrow at Columbus, Ohio. The University team, coached by Arthur Secord, will take the negative side of the question. This proposition, which is the 1941-42 high school ques- tion, is concerned ,with the lowering of the draft age. The debate will be judged by Prof. Hayes Yeager of George Washington University at Washington, D. C. Pro- fessor Yeager is the present president of the National Association of Teach- ers of Speech. Approximately 400 high school de- baters and their coaches are expected to attend this contest which will serve as a clinic for them. As for the Prescott football men themselves, they were evidently a stalwart crew, led by such greats as "Bullet" Altese, '44, star passer; "Knifing" Dornblaser, '44E, star lineman; "Poker Face" Russ Brown, '44E, star end; Bill Schmidt, '44, star blocker; "Little Fred" Baker, '45E, star freshman (inexperienced but good), and Bob Russell, '43;for- mer waterboy and now star line- man. Dazzling array of talent, isn't it? The Stockwell Ticker, a bi-month- ly publication under the editorship of Anne Stafford, '45, will make its second bow next Monday. The new- est dlorm, by the way, entertained Deans Lloyd, Perry and Bacher at dinner yesterday. After the meal the girls gathered in the lounge to sing Michigan songs for their guests. 6L GHT RR .ywvr Po w eir Now 303 N. 5th Ave. Prompt Delivery Service Added! ' BREVITY -- SPORT - NEWS Coming Sunday "SMILIN' TIRU" w'th JEANETTE MacDONALD MONNO O Ut2 SM{ A TQ l~e MAN WHO FIND HIS WIF2EMrLN~r 1WTTENISH) A. G M. 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