Spx THE Mrcnrc~A1~J TATTV - ------ ~.-.-- ~ A~L~ 57JU~. U-.d Z- ++__________________________-F__1._a____1_i____OI 144Z TIM Trainees Start E Three Months Of hIstruetion First Contingent Of 100 Men To Take Courses In Ordnance Inspection (Continued from Page 1) partment, while Prof. M. J. Orbeck of the engineering drawing depart- ment will take charge of instruction in blueprint reading. Supervising the lecture sections in materials of industry will be Prof. R. Schneidewind of the chemical engi- neering department, and Prof. F. L. Everett of the engineering mechanics department will control the labora- tory work in that subject. Prof. W. W. Gilbert of the metal processing department will admin- ister the work in manufacturing processes, and instruction in machine tool operation and plant and labora- tory visits will be directly under Pro- fessor Boston. Inspection practice classes will be supervised by Prof. L. V. Colwell of the metal processing department, while A. F. Parker of the same de- partment will be in charge of the last section in inspection laboratory. To ease the strain on engineering faculty men who will take the vari- ous . sections, a number of student assistants will be named to assist in instruction, Colonel Miller revealed. Like the 32 other courses opened in this vicinity last week under the ESMDT program, this course is spon- sored by the U. S. Office of Educa- tion, working through the University Extension Service. Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the engineering college is the University's representative, While Prof. R. H. Sherlock of the civil engineering department is co- ordinating the courses. Vlastos Says Ability To Act Ldies In Faith Final Skepticism Lecture Delivered Here Sunday By VisitingDoctor By HARRY LEVINE "There is more ground for hope now than there ever was." With these words, Dr. Gregory Vlastos, professor of philosophy at Queen's University, Kingston, On- tario, concluded the final talk of the series, "The Failure of Skepticism?" Sunday in Rackham Lecture Hall, under the joint auspices of the New- man Club, Hillel Foundation and In-' ter-Guild. After referring to the dictionary definition of skepticism, '. . . doubt of and unbelief in formal religious faith," Dr. Vlastos declared that this was not the skepticism with which he was concerned. "The most sinister form," he said, "is the skepticism which is not explicit in its skepti- cism." Vlastos spoke of people who, though "they believe an axiom, dis- believe it in action." He referred to the Chamberlains and the Lavals as statesmen who were representatives of a people who' had no faith in their ideal, demo- cracy. They were afraid to act, stated Dr. Vlastos, because they had no faith. They thought only of them- selves, and in their egocentricity lost the proper perspective. "Ability to act in face of danger rests in faith; faith, not as a substi- tute for reason, but as a preserver of reason," declared Vlastos. Hopwood Notes The Hopwood judges are sharpen- ing up their literary decisions for the Jan. 27 deadline of the forthcoming freshman contest. For the eleventh consecutive year since Avery Hopwood, '05, play- wright-author, bequeathed one-fifth of his estate to the University for the encouraging of creative work in writ- ing, the freshman contest has offered prizes to eligible literary hopefuls. According to the terms of the 1922 will, the Regents are empow- ered "to use the income . . . as prizes to be known as the 'Avery Hopwood and Jule Hopyvood Prizes,' to be awarded annually to students in the Department of Rhetoric (later including all students en- rolled in English composition courses) . .. who perform the best creative work in the fields of dra- matic writing, fiction, poetry, and the essay." Hopwood further stressed "that the new, the unusual, and the radical shall be especially encouraged." Harold Fishman To Play In Student Piano Recital Presenting the first student solo rnial of h eaoe% TTr-M ra I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN p.m. at the home of Mrs. H. B. Mer- rick, 928 Church St. I rm. -Ulm . .. . - -- I ...r ..,. ..... .. I Yra~ (?ritiiiim~' Plifti ltj.) f of the Department of Romance Lan- guages (Room 112, Romance Lan- guage Building) or at the door at the time of the lecture for a small sum. Holders of these tickets are entitled to admission to all lectures, a small additional charge being made for the annual play. These lectures art, open to the g,7en(:ial piihiie. Eivents Today Graduate History Club will meet tonight at 8:00 in the East Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Build- ing. Dean Yoakum will speak on "The Effect of the War on Graduate Study." All graduate students in his- tory are invited. Tau Beta Pi will have a dinner meeting today at 6:15 p.m. in the Union. Some football movies of Michigan games will be shown. Sigma Rho Tau will hold its last meeting of the current semester at 7:30 tonight in the Union. Mr. R. H. Upson of Detroit will talk on "The Use of Blimps in Modern War- fare." Also, the Alpha chapter will meet the delegation from D.I.T. in a conference debate. All members are requested to attend. Pi Lambda Theta will have a sup- per and business meeting in the Rus- sian Tea Room of the Michigan League tonight. R.O.T.C.: All Freshmen, R.O.T.C., will report at 7:30 tonight at the! auditorium in the Natural Science Building for a lecture on "Sanitation and First Aid." Chrisiani Science Grgan"2-ation will meet tonight at 81 5in the chapel of the Michigan League. CominT4g Events ArIiy .V Odie nct, Association will meet in the Kellogg Auditorium of the Dental School at 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday. Col. William A. Ganoe will speak on "Industrial Relation- ships." Bring membership dues. All engineers and Advance Corps R.O.T.C. students are welcome. Pre-Medical Society Meeting: Dr. Marvin H. Pollard, Secretary of the Medical School, will address the Pre- Medical Society on Wednesday, Jan- uary 21, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union. His topic is "Pre-Medical Education." All pre-meds are in- vited. Theta Sigma Phi will meet in the Journalism Department, Haven Hall, Wednesday at 5:00 p.m. All members must attend unless excused by the President, Louise Keller. At the Phi Delta Kappa coffee hour at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, Janu- ary 20, in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building, Professor Leslie A. White of the Anthropology Department will lead the discussion. III, I I Mimes will hold a meeting evening in the Union at 7:30. Ensian picture will be taken. the bulletin board for room. this The See The Tuesday evening concert of recorded music in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building at 8:00 will be as follows: Symphony No. 3i by Roy Harris, Ballet Music from "Faust" by Gounod, Schelomo, He- brew Rhapsodie for 'Cello and Or- chestra by3Ernest Bloch, and Sym- phony No. 3 in A Minor by Mendels- sohn. Dr. Walter Horton Luncheon: Dr. Walter Horton of the faculty of the Oberlin Theological Seminary will speak on some phase of the general subject of religion and war at a luncheon at Lane Hall on Wednesday, January 21, at 12:05. The luncheon is open to any interested students. Reservations should be called in to Lane Hall by Tuesday evening. (Small charge.) Interviewing for Assembly Ball positions will take place today and Wednesday of this week from 3:30- 5:00 p.m. Be sure to bring your eli- gibility cards. JGP Central Committee meeting today at 4:30 p.m. in the League. Michigan Dames Swimming Group will meet tonight at 8:00 in the Michigan Union. Bibliophiles Section of Women's Faculty Club will meet today at 2:30 La Sociedad Hispanica will present a lecture on Guatemala (in English) with colored movies, by Robert Grif- fin on Wed., Jan. 21, at 8:15 p.m. in Natural Science Auditorium. There will be no meeting of La Sociedad until the second semester. ]Program of Recorded Music: On Wednesday, Januaryr21, at 7:30, the International Center offers the fol- lowing program of recorded music: Haydn: Quartet in D Major (No. 5, Op. 76) Roth String Quartet. Dohnanyi: Quartet No. 2 in D Flat Major; Roth String Quartet. Mozart: Quintet in C Major; Al- fred Hooday and Pro Arte Quartet. Theatre-Arts make-up committee meeting on Wednesday at 4:00 p.m. Attendance is compulsory. Hillel Players will meet Wednes- day at 7:45 p.m. at the Foundation. Professor Halstead of the Speech De- partment will speak. Everyone in- terested is invited. Archery Tournament-Women Stu- dents: Intercollegiatekarchery meet is being held the weeks of February 8, 15 and 22. Anyone who is inter- ested in shooting during one of these weeks may sign the entry sheet post- ed on the bulletin board in Barbour Gymnasium. Practice shooting on Wednesday evening at 7:30 in Wat- erman Gymnasium. All entries must be in by January 28. The Faculty Women's Club will be given a concert by the University of Michigan Sinfonietta, with Thor Johnson as conductor, at its next meeting on Wednesday, January 21, at 3:15 p.m. at the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. The Michigan Dames are especially invited, and faculty members may bring other guests also. Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of the Holy Commun- ion at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday morning in Bishop Williams Chapel, Harris Hall. Breakfast will be served after the service. I I It Takes More YES, it takes more than a smile to have a pleasing personality. One of the most important factors in having a pleasing personality is that of having PERSONAL CLEANLI NESS. If your clothes don't have the clean look which they need, let the Ann Arbor Laundries do your laundry for you. Be certain of your personal appearance and make sure that you send your laundry to the Ann Arbor Laundries this week. Look at the sample student bundle below to see how economical it is to have your laundry done by the Ann Arbor Laundries, with their Than a Smile I I quality service. ------j k SAMPLE BUNDLE IMPORTANT SALE ! 3 3 6 2 1 2 'Shirts Pairs of.Sox Handkerchiefs 1 Finished, Mended and Button Replaced. Returned, Dried and Fluffed not Ironed. - I i ., eye-catching formals and dinner gowns just in time for NET CREPE TAFFETA SILK JERSEY Sizes 9-17, '10-18 1/4 reduced -- 3 -A4to'\ , r _. . A rS:>-, f Y e k .Y r { Y-S* - } S :t / /2 Suits of Underwear Pajama Suit Bath Towels ---- -..w.,, . 1II Ji Approx. Cost. $1.10 VARSITY LAUNDRY 23-1-23 TROJAN LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaning Company 25-200 KYER LAUNDRY 4185 WHITE SWAN LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaning Company 4117 , formerly 16.95-35.00 I II III'