R 14, 1941 TIlE MICHGAN. DAILY In The Goodfellow DVer's Seat INSTRUCTIONS TO GOODFELLOW SALESMEN: 1. The salesmen scheduled to sell at 7:45 a.m. are to report to The Daily office at 7:30 a.m. for buckets, papers and instroietions. Those not preceded by anyone at their post should likewise report to the Student Publications Building to obtain materials. 2. Any questions or difficulties should be reported imrmediately to the Goodfellow Editor, 2-3241. Salesmen scheduled for 12:00 posts on the diagonal, in the engineering arch, in the League and on the Union steps are to turn over their materials to faculty salesmen and stand by ready to take over whenever the faculty wish to leave.. 4. Post should not be left until a successor appears; materials may be turned over to him. Last salesman at each post should turn inhis material to The Daily office. 5. Those directed to downtown posts will come to The Daily first. If possible they will be given transporta- tion. The following will report to The Daily at the agreed times for downtown work assignments: Dorothy Briddon, Dorothy Arthur, Jack Muehl, Norman pSchwartz, Ruth Fritz, LeRoy Brooks, Irving Jaffe, Ted King, Prieskel, Audrey Herschel, Leon Gordenker, Herbert Edelhertz, Beryl Shoenfield, Audrey Rubenstein, Ann Anielewski, Betty Awry, Kay Ruddy, Morton Mintz. BEHIND MAIN LIBRARY 7:45- Ed Perlberg Fred Ginsberg Bunny Bunnell 9:00- Marion Ford Sue Stevenson Jo Murray 10:00- Al' Owens Doris Allen Ruth Thomas 11:00- Norm-Gall Jack Flagler Earle Harris Connie Tabor 12:00- Hilda Slautterback Paul Keenan 1:00- Hal Wilson Gus Sharemet D. Burton Jean Brodie 2:00- Richard Shuey Edmund Grossberg 3:00- Paul Goldsmith Bob Buell 4:00- Jean Caldwell Mary Virginia Mitchell ALUMNI MEMORIAL HALL STEPS 7:45- Sally Stroh 9:00- Harriet Horowitz 10:00- Lou C'onc, Art Nikkel Gerald Hewitt 11:00- Ken Kardon 12:00- John Zimmerman 1:00- Millie Bernsteih Betty Leibson 2:00- Dave Lynch Jack Emory ~3:00- Barbara Sternfels Margaret Emery 4:00- t Marilyn Katz ARCADE at STATE 7:4 5- Stella Zatocky Nel Fead 9:00- Barb Jenswold George Sallade 10:00- 'Eugene Mandeber'g Jean Gilmer 11:00- Gloria Nishon Dick Simon 12:00--- Myron Dann Will Sapp Alvin Dann 1:00- May June Hostreiter Dan Behrman 2:00- Homer Swander Bob Killins 3:00- Harry Levine Bill MacLeod 4:00-- Dave Pollock Thelma Hauer CENTER of LAW QUAD 7:45- R. E. Cope Richard Kebbler 9:00-- :0Herb McCord A. Westerman D. Longworth 10:00- D. Schoel J. Linker 11:00- R. E. Cope J. R. Lind Bob Eich - 12:00- Paul Keenan Bill Clark Bill Muehl Sue Stevenson 1:00- C. Grimerwald. Will Coulter Bill Watkins 2:00- D, Shoel Bob Eich Buck Dawson 3:00- 0 Lettie Gavin Charlotte Conover 4:00- Herb McCord Ken Mollhageii NORTH ENTRANCE TO ANGELL HALL 7:45- Cunningham Bill Hurley, 9:00- Bob Porter Bob King John Kautz 10:00- Bob Shgdd Jim Collins 11:00- Wayne Stille Bob Titus John Sharemet 12:00- Dave Nelson Allen Mundt 1:00- Dick Schirling John Leidy 2:00- Bill Melzow Bill Dobson 3:00- Bud Chamberlain John Gillis 4:00- Bill Todd UNION STEPS 7:45- , Bob Shott Bob Burstein Andy Skaug 9:00- Herb Heavenrich 10:00- Bob Shott Elizabeth Mahlman 11:0:0-Y Jack Grady Bob Shott 12:00- Bob Sibley 1:00- Dick Ford Bob Schwin Tracy Freeman 2:00- Herb Heavenrich George Roney Bud Brandt Bill Schoedinger Herb Heavenrich Dick Ford Orrie Barr 4:00- Marvin Borman ANGELL HALL STEPS 7:45- Lee Doyle Dave McCalmont 9:00- Wayne Christenson Ben Douglas 10:00- John Wise Jack Ogle 11:00- Mel Camien Ben Smith Bud Hendel 12:00- Sherry Shreve Emile Gele Janet Hiatt 1:00- John Fletcher Bob Matthews Bill Cochran: Wally Rosenbaum 2:00 Bob Ufer Frank McCarthy Pete Wingate 3:00- Jim Skinner 4:00- Clarence Brimmer ENGINEERING ARCH 7:45- Mercedes Mathews Martha McMillan John Fletcher 9:00- Frances Ferguson Virginia Bordman 10:00- Sally Loughhead Barbara Amsbury Jane Baits 11:00- Marjorie Teller Jeanne Crump 12:00- Marjorie Lovejoy Alice Haas 1:00- Helen Garrels Sybel Hansen Barbara Newman 2 :00- Marnie Gardner Louise Higberg Lorraine Judson 3:00- Viola Modlin Betty Sachs Harriet Heames 4:00- Charlotte Riggen Marjorie Killens Margaret Halbert CENTER of DIAGONAL 7:45-1 Betty Altman Shirley Risburg Hugh Ayres John White 9:00- Rosebud Scott Rhoda Leshine Brad Higbie 10:00- Dorothy Anderson Jean Krise Warren Westrate 11:00- Emile Root Jean Hubbard Bob Judson 12:00- Janet Grace Martha Opsion Suzanne Scheffer Jack Hooper 1:00- Doris Cuthbert Elizabeth Luckham Don Stevenson 2:00- Pearl Brown Donna Baisch Paul Jones 3:00- Shirley Risberg Marion Chown 4:00- Mildred Curtis Betty Partenfelder FRONT of LEAGUE 7:45- George Gotschall Lawton Hammett 9:00- Burr French Bob Porter 10:00- Verne Kennedy Bob Schulze 11:00- Henry Fielding Jack Browman 12:00- Alex Wilkie Tom Gamon 1:00- Stan Allen Bob Summerhays 2:00- Bob Collins, Bill Ackerman 3:00- Lawton Hammett 4:00- Stan Hartman CORNER NORTH UNIVERSITY AND EAST UNIVERSITY 7:45-. Frances Aaronson Carla Meyerson 9:00- Peggy Sanford, Jake Fahrner 10:00- Rosebud Scott Veitch Purdom 11:00- Virginia Durry 12:00- Helen Rockoff 1:00- Virginia Appleton Grant Hagen Doris Hendricks 2:00- Peg Polumbaum Anna Williams 3:00- Grace Miller Phyllis Lovejoy National Head Of Engimeers To Speak Here Kirkpatrick Will Address AIChE-AIME Banquet in Union Tomorrow The importance of magnesium in war production will be given due at- tention at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow when 5.. D. Kirkpatrick, national president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, addresses a joint AIChE- AIME banquet on the subject "Mag- nesium, the Cinderella Metal" in the Union. Editor-in-chief of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering magazine, in addition to being AIChE president, Mr. Kirkpatrick will find more than usual interest in the. University stu- dent chapters, as . Michigan's own Dow Chemical Co. has pioneered in the production of magnesium. Also scheduled - for the evening's program, according to AIChE chair- man Bill Collamore,''42E, is the an- nouncement of the name of the junior AIChE member with the highest scholastic average. An award will be presented as part of the banquet pro- gram. Adding additional interest to his talk, Mr. Kirkpatrickwill show movies illustrating important points in his talk, and will also bring along samples to be passed around among the stu- dents. Particularly vital in the manufac- ture of airplanes, magnesium is play- ing an important role in war produc- tion because of its lightness and strengthening qualities, and is even being substituted for aluminum in some cases,. Tickets for the banquet may be ob- tained tomorrow in Room 2028 of the East Engineering Building, or may be. purchased from officers and mem- bers of either society. - Buy a Goodfellow Edition - (Continued from Page 1) News Of The Dorms:StUdent lothing Christmas Celebrations To B He111d IstFintshin The student clothing di "" " ""ia CloVng Weea O Scho l the conclusion of thefi its campaign yesterday _ Adelia Cheever will hold a formal given to the Christmas Bureau. To- to collect warm clothil Christmas dinner tomorrow with morrow after dinner the Glee Club needy, as collection toc Dean Alice Lloyd, Miss Jeanette will also entertai Mr. and Mrs. Fred- League Houses, Coopei Ferry, Mrs. Byri Bacher, Mr. and erick B. Jordian with the singing of rooming houses. Mrs. Edward Bragg, Mrs. Clifford Christmas carols. A spokesman for the Woody and Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Every member of the faculty has nounced that the respc Smith numbered among the guests. been invited to the West Quad's drive was very strong a Betsy Barbour danced to the music super deluxe faculty reception that hoped the fraternities, of Tom Snyder and his orchestra at will be held there tomorrow and sororities would be the traditional Christmas Formal held Jordan will hear a pixilated version as well, as the group w there Friday. of Dickens' "Christmas Carol" at on them for the bulk of Jordan Hall's Glee Club will en- 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. It was written by tions. Students of the tertain after dinner today. The girls Jane Farrant and Nancy Northrup organizations and donr are all supposed to bring stockings and Jane will also take the role of dents have until Wedne to dinner with them. These will be Bob Cratchet in the presentation. their contributions in. I You'll sing" OW DRY I AM in these Rubber - cause' "the world has never known anything approximating the cost in- volved in this world-wide struggle." Testifying as the committee began hearings on the new draft bill,' Her- shey urged a "calm, cool" approach and said that there was no thought of "hysterical rushing to classify every- body." "The time is not here, but prob- ably is approaching when additional men must be ready," he said. "We must not take every man regardless of his physical condition or no matter how many dependents he may have. "The question is whether you are going to have a manpower bill that will meet any emergency. Hershey, wto supervised the first draft registration last year, expressed the opinion that the next registra- tion probably would not be before July' 1, 1942; that he would first ex- haust the estimated x,000,00( men still eligible for training under the present law; and that he probably would want to explore next the avail- ablity of men above 35: The World At WarToday (By The Associated Press) U.S. announces Japanese invad- ers wiped out of Lingayen on west coast of Luzon, P.I. Japanese bombers kill at least 75, wound 300 in war's worst rain on Manila. War, Department announces 20 Japanese bombers shot down in initial dawn attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.last Sunday. Dutch announce their submar- ines sink four Japanese trans- ports carrying 4,000 men off Thai- Iland. British announce three Italian cruisers destroyed by British and Dutch destroyers in, Mediterran- ean: say trapped Axis forces at- tacked in I1ibyan desert. Russians report they are press- ing their advantage against 51 beaten and retreating German divisions around Moscow. Chinese announce capture of town north of Hongkong. -Washington -concedes probable loss of Guam. Japanese say Hongkong is doomed with alleged capture of Kowloon Peninsula; one Japan- ese ambassador even says Hong- kong captured. Japanese announce U.S. battle- ship Arizona sunk. Cavalry-styling in a Sock- Hi Boot with Non-Skid Soles! RED! BROWN! WHITE! ., .."MICHIGAN M111ILTARY MEN '... JRy The Guntier J On, December 12, at another ACAFS at Brooks Field Texas, Wendell E. Lenz, of Sheboygan, Wis., also received the silver wings and gold bars of an Air Corps sec- ond lieutenant. And at a second Texas airfield, the original "West Point of the Air," two other Uni- versity men, Frank E. Werneken, Jr., and William A. Prentice com- pleted the basic course. They are now ready for the advanced train- ing given at Victoria and Brooks Field. * * Only news from the Old Army comes from the Cavalry Replacement Training Center at Ft. Riley, Kansas.- When the Centaurs. the CRTC'sj football representatives in the Army's gridiron battles, marched off the field following the end of the Kansas All- Star tilt, many former collegiate stars wrote finis to theiw first year of Army competition. Among this group was Pvt. Fred Trosko, hard-hitting fullbaclk and for-4 mer Flint High School. and Univer- isty of Michigan athlete. Trooper Trosko, having completed his basic training period, will remain attached to. the cavalry center to assist in the recreation division. * * * Back in the flyieg personnel, but in the sea-going service, Edward G. Bull, of Ann Arbor, completed his advanced flight training at Pensa- cola, Fla., and was commissioned with the rank of Ensign in the Navy Air Corps. Army Forms For Weekends FORT CUSTER, Dec. 13-(N)- Army officials today announced de- tails to -govern arrangements for visi- tors as Fort Custer faced its first war-j time weekend. Col. Hammond D., Birks, command- ing officer of the reception center, and Col. Robert T. Phinney, Fort Cus- ter commander, emphasized that the arrangements were apt to be cancelled or changed without notice. All soldiers in the fifth division were allowed visitors Saturday and Sunday and those in the reception center, where selectees are quartered when they first arrive at the camp, may receive visitors at any time. Vistors must drivL to the Fort on the. Dickman Road and stop at the entrance ,to the east gate where they will be confronted by sentries. They must inform the sentries the purpose of their call. ._.---- i DAILY OFFiCIAL BULL - I i' (Continued from Page 4) will be no meeting of Ariston League on account of thedMessiah concert.) 7:15 p.m. Student Fellowship will entertain a group of under-privi- leged boys at a Christmas party in the church parlor. Features of the evening will be a Christmas tree, 7:30 p.m.-Christmas Program. Disciples Guild: 6:30 p.m. Tea and a social half hour at the church. At 7:00 o'clock the students will sing carols in front of the church in pre- paration for the Christmas program of music, pageantry and drama; which begins at 7:30 p.m. The pub- lic is invited. I I 11Ir"J;' 'f ; ''"