m M ONDA, DECEMBER 15, 1941 TEMCIA AL Main Library Shows Exhibit Of Bookplates o A display of bookplates, showing a variety of designs in marks of owner- ship, is being shown in the mairy floors exhibit cases in the library. A feature of the institution since' 1920, the exhibits are changed once a month by the rare book department, and the examples on display are usu- ally taken from this section of the library. Earliest Examples Shown Some of the earliest examples on display-are the colonial and Jacobean plates and the simple coat of arms in the armorial division. Also outstand- ing is a case of valuable books, with plates showing that*they are from the collections of such famed biblio- philes as Henry B. Wheatley, Beverly Chew and A. E. Newton. Some of these examples are of leather. Another case contains plates of interest because of the association of their owners with the University, and a case is devoted to plates from the books of the different sections of the University library system. Personal Plates A number' of personal plates of noted persons may be found in the 'xhibit. Among these are the marks of ownership of Ellen Terry, Presi- dent Taft, August Frederick, Duke of Sussex and the plate of Patrick Hen-' ry, lent by Dr. R. G. Adams. Cornell, Yale and Johns Hopkins universities are among those repre- sented in the section of plates of well-known institutions. Worley To Take Trip Prof. John S. Worley of the trans- portation engineering department will leave Wednesday with Mrs. Wor- ley for a two-week auto trip through the Southern states and Mexico. Pefites Pommes de Terre Christmas is the time of Holly, plum pudding, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen, the Yule Log, and gle--:. g smiles of good cheer. Christmas is also the time when all undergraduates go home to maw and paw and all the poor kids back home who don't know how broadening a college education is and how cultured and smooth it makes one. This column is'to give you specific suggestions on the proper approach to the long trip'home on the Student Special, and on how to make yourself dearly beloved in all social circles when you get there. Te Oportuniy To Stary.. First of all, you have to realize that this is your big chance-what you've been waiting for ever since the days back i high school when you had to be a villager doing Morris dances on the green in the senior operetta while that cther big mush-face whose tenor wasn't quite as off-pitch as yours took over the lead and got, all the attention. But, happy day!-he, poor w , soul, had to go to a school in the city, and You are - ~ now the kid with the Aura of Allure. Pig Banks Replace' Stamp Collections As Local Choice Scmething new has been added to he list of collectors' possible items, something that is different and lots of fun-pig-banks. They're colorful and add a lot of personality to that blank space on your bookcase or win- dow sill. We saw one collection in a sororityj house that really caught our eye. Lined up on two shelves were the collectors' thirty-one prize pigs, rang- ng in size from ones almost life-size to some not much larger than the pennies they were designed to hold. Some are made of wood, some of netal, but the one we liked best was a medium-sized clay specimen with red and green stripes and a squashy nose. A gif-t shop favorite was a silver pig with a very curly tail, one ear! flopped forward of the other, and an expression on his face similar to that which Walt Disney give his third Little Pig. Romantic Ballad From Opera To Be Played By Glenn Miller For the first time in the history of the Michigan Union Opera, one of its smash song hits will be broad- cast over a national hookup by a band votedthe favorite throughout the country. Glenn Miller and his famous or- chestra will play "A Dream And I" by Charles Bowen, '41, and Gordon Hardy, Grad., 10 p.m. tomorrow over station WJR. By far the most popu- lar song from the 1941 Union Opera "Take A Number," "A Dream And I" has beergiven a special arrangement by Miller and will be played in honor of Michigan. Tex Beneke, Miller's first tenor man who has gained national popularity as a novelty singer, will be featured on the vccal. This is one of Beneke's few attempts at singig the more ro- mantic type of ballad. This is not actually the first time that Hardy's tunes have received' a performance by Miller's orchestra; last year's Senior Ball patrons'heard the same number when Miller fea- r I p ' So start your campaign from the very begin- ning and begin your preparation even unto the packing for the trip home. Don't take any for- mal clothes, because "it's such a lot of trouble to go formal anywhere, don't you think?" And be- sides, you get so much more attention at a formal dance when you're attired in a striped sports coat and saddle shoes (or even a reversible, if your collegiate inclinations run to reversibles.) But even more important, don't fail to include any particular clothes fad that happens to be popular on the campus. This is so when people ask you what this article is or comment on it, you will be able to say with an airy gesture designed to endear you to all and a pardonable blush, "Oh, everybody ('meaning everybody important) wears them back in Ann Arbor!" The triphome is just about as fine a training as you can get anywhere for the holiday season and for hardening yourself to the spine-bending cracks on the back and the joyous good-hearted clean fun which character- izes the holiday season. r The Student Speci.al . To get home you will take a train which is called, laughingly, the Student Special. If the w'ord student connotes to you the word study and you think In The Good fellow river'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 7:34 a.m. for buckets, papers and instructions. 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 immediately to the Goodfellow Editor, 2-3241. 3. Salesmen scheduled for 12:00 posts on diagonal,jn 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 appehrs; materials may be turned over to him. Last salesman at each post should turn in his material to The Daily office. 5. Those directed to downtown posts will come to The Daily firgt. 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 Schwartz, Ruth Fritz, Le Roy Brooks, Irving Jaffe, Ted" King, Prieskel, Audrey Herschl, Leon Gordenker, Herbert Edelhert a, Beryl Shoenfield, Audrey Rubenstein, Ann Anielewski, Betty Awry,,Kay Ruddy, Morton Mintz. that here, in an atmosphere of scholarly quiet, you can get a little of your final exam preparation done, adjust your opinion. This is-not the case. We would advise that your equipment include not a set of textbooks, but a sturdy pair of brass knuckles, a course in Charles Atlas' "Dynamic Tension" method, and a small portable buzz saw. But supposing that you safely make the trip home. Your airplane lug- gage has only six or seven inch-deep scratches on its surface, and you your- self, with the exception of a severe charley horse in your right hand (thatt your shootin' hand) are fairly healthy. And here is where the real action begins. First, keep your ears open for any slip in grammar which any of your family makes. Correct him firmly; it is fo his own good. Whenever your mother or father venture an opinion on some current problem, say, with a lifted eyebrow, and gazing in a far-off manner at tlie ceil- ing: "Well, certainly any intelligent person realizes . . . -completing it with your opinion. Keep telling your father at every opportunity for god's sake stop buttoning the bottom button on your coat instead of the top button; do you want to look like a jerk? If your mother takes you downtown to buy you a new formal for New Year's Eve, don't just say, "Aw gee, mom, no!" when she whips right over to the "girlish nets." Egad, no-don't let it go at that; this is your chance to get in what most of us are fond of calling a telling blow. Sigh deeply, and murmur in your smart set voice, "Please, Mother, don't be stuffy." Bourgeois is another good alternate word to use in this sentence The Truth Dawns. This will probably take care of your family and make them realize what a big shot you have become, but don't neglect'the outside world, They, too, should be broiI ht to the understanding of how at last you have found a broad enough field for your talents-in college--and that at last you are blooming, as it were. Go to every dance given in the town during the glad holidays, and for heaven's sake, don't dance any more than about two turns. Instead, just stand against the walls, leaning as nonchalantly as possible without falling; make just a suspicion of a bulge appear in your left cheek to show them how sophisticated you have become; and absent-mindedly, at five minute inter- vals, finger your fraternity or sorority pin. A pledge pin is an acceptable substitute in this procedure. Keeping The Good Friends. . And one more thing-when friends come up to ask heartily how you are and how you are enjoying yourself, say in a far-away voice, "Nice little party. Yes sir, very nice indeed." Make no comments after this, however; they would spoil the effect of suaveness which you will have produced. This is a rather rough outline of suggestions for the holiday vacation, but we feel sure that you can fill in those phases which have been overlooked. Finally, don't forget the college sophisticates slogan: "Some gqt it. Some ain't got it. I got it!" A slit throat, we mean. Hardy's songs have been promient in - rampus musical productions for several, years, ever since his compo- sition "Love on a Bicycle" which ap- peared in, 1939's Soph Cabaret took the students by storm and secured him a campus-wide ieputation. Be a GOODFELLOW this Chrimas, Shop early.. Buy Gifts of LOVELY LINGERIE at 8 Nickels Arcade Lovely Linens a 'make gifts any home- maker will welcome. Gage Linen Shop 10 NicKEls ApcADE Aliways Reasonably Pricad BEHIND MAIN LIBRARY 7:45- Ed Perlberg Fred Ginsberg Bunny Bunnell 9:00- Marion Ford Sue Stevenson Jo Murray 10:00- Al Ow'ens Doris#,Allen Ruth Thomas 11:00- Norm Call 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 Caidwel Mary Virginia Mitchell ALUMNI MEMORIAL HALLI STEPS 7:45- Sally Stroh 9:00- Harriet Horowitz 10:00- Lou Cohen Art Nikkel Gerald Hewitt 11:00- Ken Kardon 12:00- John Zimmerman 1:00- Millie Bernstein Betty Leibson 2:00- Dave Lynch Jack Emory Bill MacLeod 4:00- Dave Pollock Thelma Hauer CENTER of LAW QUAD 7:45- R. E. Cope Richard Kebbler 9:00- Herb McCord R. Westerman D. Longworth 10:00- D. Schoel J. Linker 11:00- R. E. Cope 1 J. R. Lind Bob Eich 12:00- Paul Keenan Bill Clark Bill Muehl Sue Stevenson 1:00- C. Grimerwaiq Will Coulter Bill Watkins 2:00- D. Shoeli Bob Eich Buck Dawson 3:00- Lettie Gavin Charlotte Conover 4:00- Herb McCord Ken Mollhagen NORTH ENTRANCE TO ANG1LL HALL 7:45- Cunningham Bill Hurley 9:00- Bob Porter Bob King John Kautz 10:00- Bob Shedd Jim Collins 11:00- Wayne Stille Bob Titus John Sharemet 12:00- Dive Nelson Allen Mundt 1:00- Dick Schirling John Leidy 2:00- Bill Melzow Bill Dobson 3:00- Bud Chamberlain John Glls 4:00- Bill Todd UNION STEPS 7:45- Bob Shott Bob Burstein Andy Skaug Bob Schwin Tracy Freeman 2:00- Herb Heavenrich George Roney Bud Brandt 2:00- Bill Schoedinger Herb Heavenrich ' Dick Ford Orrie Barr 4:00- Marvin Borman ANGELL HALL STEPS 745- Lee Doyle Dave McCalmont 9:00- Wayne Christenson Ben Douglas 10:00- John Wise Jack Ogle 11:00- Mel Camien Ben Smith Bud Heudel 12:00- Sherry hreve Emile Gels 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 %Loughpead Barbara Amsbury Jane Baits - 11:00- Marjorie Teller Jeanne Crump 12:00- Marjorie Lovkjoy Alice Haas 1:00- Helen Garrels Sybel Hansen Barbara Newman 2:00- Marnie Gardner Louise Higberg Lorraine Judson 3:00- 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 Elizaleth 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 r a L6~~4and Wht i . a N g. 3 4wI 3:00- t Barbara Sternfels Margaret Emery 4:00- Marilyn Katz ARCADE at STATE 7:45- Stella Zatocky Nel Fead 9:00- Barb Jenswohl George Sallade :1 =$'%qlML i 5,63 at i1 i I Eugene Mandeberg Jean Gilmer 11:00- Gloria Nishon 7"i .. i mn *,J lw Always in good taste - dresses from Jacobson's to see you through the Holidays and all your life. 12,95 to 22.95