4 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Public Library Trustees Plan March Meeting Conference Of Foremen From Michigan, Ohio Will Be Held April 18 Institute Announced Fifty public library trustees from three Michigan counties will meet for a three-day program March 1-3 at the Union. Featuring talks and discussions concerning important library prob- lems, the Institute is sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation in cooperation with the University Ex- tension Service and the Department of Library Science. Prof. Howard McClusky of the School of Education will give the principal talk of the program. Foremen To Meet Handicapped by the fact that many experts in the field are busy work- ing on conversion of auto plants, the fourth annual Michigan-Ohio Fore- man's Conference will ,be held April 18 in Ann Arbor. Sponsored by the University Ex- tension Service in cooperation with the National Association of Foremen, and the Michigan and Ohio Fore- men's Clubs, the conference is ex- pected to draw more than 1,000 in- dustrial foremen from the two states. Institute Announced With a tentative program that in- cludes studies of many important cur- rent topics, the tenth annual Adult Education Institute will open May 11 in the Rackham Building. Sponsored by the University Ex- tension Service and the Michigan State Federation of Women's Clubs the Institute will feature daily classes in parliamentary law. Principle speakers scheduled for the conference which will be held from May 11 through May 15 include Prof. Preston S. Slosson, of the his- tory department apd Prof. Richard Fuller of the sociology department. Army, Navy Men Carry War To Japs DAILY OFFICIAL I French Club Students To Give First Opera BULLETIN The name of Lieut. Willibald C. Bianchi (right), of New Ulm, Minn., was added to the list of Congressional Medal of Hlonor winners for per- forming conspicuous gallantry in action Feb. 3 in the Philippines. General Douglas MacArthur recommended the award for Bianchi, a member of the 45th Infantry, Philippine scouts. Bianchi, who person- ally silenced a Jap machine gun nest, was wounded three times. Donald Francis Mason (left), aviation machinist's mate, first class, U.S.N., blasted a submarine with depth bombs and laconically reported to his base: "Sighted sub sank same," the Navy department announced in Washington. Dr. Carl Hartman, Physiologist, Will Present U Lecture Here High School Play To Be Performed For Second Time Laughter will reign when the members of the junior class of Ann Arbor High School present "Holi- day" at 8:15 p.m. today for its sec- ond performance in Pattengill Audi- torium. Taking the leads in Philip Barry's three-act comedy are Charles Han- son -as Johnny Case and Pat Bird and Peggy Cummings as his fiancee, Julia Seton. Eras Kussurelis will portray the role of Linda Seton and the part of Edward Seton, Julia's multi-millionaire father, will be played by Jack Fisher. Upper Fifth Avenue, New York, is the setting for this sophisticated comedy. The plot centers around the difficulties of wealthy' young Johnny Case and his relationswith the Seton family. Johnny believes that he should retire young and en- joy his fortune, and then, if neces- sary, work later on in life. The Set- ons, however, are interested only in gaining as much money as possible. Humor and fast-moving action evolve from the young millionaire's attempts to find the solution to his problems. Frank Reed, Jr., is the director of the production. The set was made by Fred Redman, who is in charge of the stage crew and properties. Illinois Professor To Talk On Primate Research In Rackham Tuesday Dr. Carl G. Hartman, professor of physiology at the University of Illi- nois, will present an illustrated Uni- versity lecture at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall on the subject "Two Decades of Primate Studies and Their Influence on Gyn- ecological Thought and Practice." The talk will be presented under the joint auspices of the Department of Anatomy and the medical school. As the title indicates, the address will contain much valuable informa- tion for those interested in the fields of Gynecology and Obstetrics. Dr. Hartman has had a varied medical career, beginning his work in Texasdwhere he made studies of the armadillo, later working in pub- lic health and serving as professor of biology at the Houston State Teachers College. In 1925 Dr. Hartman joined the staff of the Carnegie Embryological Institute at Johns Hopkins and was a member of that organization until 1940 when he went to Illinois Univer- sity. At the Carnegie Institute, Dr. Hartman, along with Drs. George Streeter, Chester Hauser, and War- ren H. Lewis, worked on the physi- ology of reproduction. Recognizing that there are gaps in present medical knowledge on hu- man reproduction, especially the first 10 days after fertilization, Dr. Hart- man has aided in experimentation with primates in an attempt to dis- cover the information which would Badge Purchases Urged As Priority Goes On Material fill out the scientific picture of re- production. After establishing a monkey col- ony at the Institute, Dr. Hartman was active in research, supplying in- formation on what can be expected from female monkeys, and on sex physiology and the influence of the sex hormones. This "team" of doctors has pub- lished much information on the cy- clic changes in female monkeys and the early stages of the embryo, of which there had previously been no information. Dr. Hartman is the author of sev- eral books dealing with public health, the human body, human physiology, embryology and reproduction in ani- mals, and the anatomy of monkeys. Polio Returns Reach_$3,500 Drive's Results Fall Short Of Last Year's Mark Returns from the 1942 Infantile Paralysis Drive for the Ann Arbor vicinity total $3,500, $500 shy of last year's mark, but final count may show an increase. Under the leadership of Dr. Charles F. McKhann, professor of pediatrics and communicable diseases, the local polio committee convened to tally results.: Sources contributing the most in the campaign were the "wishing well" collection boxes in theatres, producing $1,100; March of Dimes, $600; special gifts, $600. Ben- efit parties, musicales, concession re- ceipts and dormitory donations swelled the total. Fifty percent of the intake will be sent to the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, to be expended on research work. An additional ten percent goes to the Michigan State Chapter, where it will be pooled with a similar percentage from other SMichigan cities, and will be utilized to alleviate pressure in the instanc of state epidemics. The balance wil be used by the local chapter t supplement individual resources fo medical examination, treatment and for tutoring of polio victims unable to attend public school. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1942 VOL. LII. No. 106 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices0 Alien (Enemy) Registration: The Office of the Counselor to Foreigni Students has received the regulations as to alien enemies pertaining to registration as follows:c All German, Italian, and Japanese e nationals (persons born in thesev countries or in Austria who haves not received FINAL papers of citizenship and have not yet takent the oath of allegiance to the UnitedF States before a Federal Judge) aret required to file application for at Certificate of Identification at thet Ann Arbor General Postoffice up toi February 28. Failure to comply with1 the new regulations may be punished1 by severe punishments including possible internment of the enemy alien for the duration of the war. The alien enemy must furnish the following documents and informationi at the time of the application: 1) the alien enemy must present his Alien Registration Card. All persons who have not as yet received their cardsi should report to the Counselor's Of- fice at once for information con- cerning obtaining his card; 2) the alien enemy must present three photographs which are 2x2 inches in size and which have been taken within 30 days of the date they are submitted. They must be on thin paper, unmounted, and unretouched, and must have light background. They must show the alien without a hat and full front view. Snapshots and group or full-length photograph will not be accepted; 3) the alien enemy must be prepared to fill in a questionnaire concerning himself. The Counselor and the Assistant Counselor will be glad to help the persons concerned in the above regu- lations with regard to any questions or problems arising out of the regis- tration or application. War Inspectors: The Inspection Board of the United Kingdom and Canada requires the services of young men with some metallurgical train- ing for duties as inspectors on war materials. Applicants must be of British or Canadian nationality and have some knowledge of the testing of metallic materials, composition of alloys and reading micrometers and gages. Any qualified students, graduate or undergraduate, who may be interest- ed should communicate with Mr. R. H. B. Butler, Room 604, 360 N. Michi- gan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after today. E. A. Walter Public Health Students: Dr. Henry F. Vaughan, Dean of the School of Public Health, will meet with all (Continued on Page 4) 'To Present Prof._Job in Persistence of the feeling for Prench language, culture and tradi- tions in Canada will be the subject of a talk in French by Prof. Antoine Jobin of the romance languages de- partment at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. In his talk, 'L'epopee francais de' 'Amerique dansla litterature cana- dienne," Professor Jobin will cite examples from Canadian literature which serve to illustrate this per- sistence on the American continent. Maintenance of the French tradi- tion on this side of the ocean, asserts Professor Jobin, is especially impor- tant at the present time because of the state of eclipse France has en- tered. For this reason concentration in French-born colonies in America has turned to preserving both the history and the literary traditions of the mother nation. Professor Jobin's lecture will be the sixth in the series sponsored annually by the Cercle Francais. It is open to all members of the Uni- versity upon presentation of a sea- son ticket, which may be purchased from the secretary of the Depart- ment of Romance Languages. TYPING MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. WANTED TO BUY CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c MEN'S AND LADIES' CLOTHING, suits, overcoats, typewriters, musi- cal instruments, ladies' furs, Per- sian lamb, mink, watches, dia- monds. Pay from $5 to $500. Phone Sam, 3627. 229 LAUNDERING - A one-act opera-the first grand opera to be presented by students on campus-and a one-act play with incidental song will be offered by the School of Music and Play Pro- duction of the Department of Speech Wednesday through Saturday, March 4-7, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The opera, Mascagni's "Cavalleria Rusticana," will follow Mozart's com- edy, "The Impresario," which will open the evening. Soloists in the operas are taken from the music school, while 70 members of the University choir un- Legislator Does His Bit DETROIT, Feb. 27. - ,AP)- State Rep. Raymond W. Snow, Flint Demo- crat, expects to be an apprentice seaman in the United States Coast Guard in about two weeks. der Ihe direction of Prof. Hardin Van Deursen will provide the choral background. The orchestration will be done by the University Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Prof. Thor Johnson. He will use about 50 pieces from the full orches- tra. The box office will open at 10 a.m. Monday and will remain open through curtain time. 8:30 p.m. Sat- urday. Patrons are urged to make their reservations early. Those with season tickets may send in their coupons anytime. CiASSIFIED ADVERTISING LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sxo Careful work at low price. 2c i , = ___ 'I I; n n CHURCH DIRECTORY it BEAUTY SHOPS PERMANENTS, $3.00-$7.00. Sham- poo and set, 65c all week Gingham Girl Beauty Shop, 302 S. State. Phone 2-4000. 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. TAILORING and SEWING tTOCKWELL and Mosher-Jordan residents-Alterations on women's garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. 3c 1 f S e r e Workers Buy Plane SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 27.-OP)- Civilian employes of the Utah ord- nance plant have donated $16,000 toward the purchase of a fighting plane for the Air Corps. The check was presented to air base officials by G. J. Budd, business agent for the Plumbers and Steamfitters Union. Principal Finds Practicing Harder ThanPreaching ALTON, Ill., Feb. 27.-(IP)-C. C. Hanna, high school principal, be- lieves in practicing what he preaches, even if he breaks a leg. Hanna has been advocating that his pupils and teachers walk to school to save tires and gasoline. While walking to school himself, he slipped and fell, fracturing an ankle. All honor societies, fraternities and sororities who will need badges this year are strongly urged to order them as soon as possible, because within a month priorities and defense work will take the place of society jewelry. After April 1, all badges will be made only of solid gold and sterling, probably necessitating a rise inprice. Also, the merchandise ordered now must either be delivered before April 1, or be almost completed at the place of manufacture, so early orders will have the edge over last minute ones. The large jewelers will be engaged in defense and war manufacturing after the first of April, and all their alloys, from which badges are usually made, will be used for defense work. MICHIGAN Shows Continuous Daily 2-11:30 P.M. 25c until 5:00, 40c to closing EVANGELICAL STUDENTS' LEAGUE Rev. Leonard Verduin, Pastor. Michigan League Chapel Sunday, March 1, 1942. 10:30 A.M. "Such Contradiction of Sinners"- (Hebrews 12:3) 7:30 P.M. "Now Is This World's Crisis"-(John 12:31). In both these services Rev. Verduin will go into an aspect of the Passion story, and of the Passion theology as held by historic Chris- tianity. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. Wednesday evening services at 7:30. Sunday morning service at 10:30; subject: "Christ Jesus". Sunday School at 11:45. Free public Reading Room at 106 East Washing- ton Street, open every day except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. until 5 p.m., Saturdays until 9 p.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister Mrs. Geil Orcutt, Associate Student Counselor 10:15 A.M. The Church at Study. Undergradu- ate class with Mr. Loucks in the Guild House, 503 East Huron Street. Graduate class with Professor Charles Brassfield in thelchurch. 11:00 A.M. The Church at Worship. Sermon: "The Springs of Life." 6:30 P.M. Roger Williams Guild meeting at the Guild House. Geil Orcutt will speak on "Be- coming Believers". LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION sponsored jointly by Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches Zion Lutheran Church, E. Washington St. at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church Worship. Sermon: "Jesus, Our Captain," by Rev. Ernest C. Stellhorn. Trinity Lutheran Church, E. William St. at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church Worship. Sermon: "The Church-A Loving Family," by Dr. Rees Ed- gar Tulloss. Ph.D., President of Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio. Lutheran Student Association. Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington 4:30 P.M. Student A Cappella Choir rehearsal. 5:30 P.M. Lutheran Student Association meet- ing. 6:45 P.M. The Forum Hour with Dr. Rees Edgar Tulloss, Ph.D., speaker. The theme will be "The Higher Freedom." FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Washtenaw William P. Lemon, D.D., Minister Mark W. Bills, Director of Music Franklin Mitchell, Organist 9:30 A.M. Church School, Classes for all age groups. Mr. and Mrs. Class meets in Piggott Parlor. 10:45 A.M. Morning Worship. "The Great Mys- tery" Lenten sermon by Dr. Lemon. BETHLEHEM CHURCH (Evangelical and Reformed) 423 South Fourth Avenue, Theodore Schmale, Pastor. 9 A.M. Service in the German language. 9:30 A.M. Church School. 10:30 A.M. Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "The Cities of Refuge". 3:00 P.M. Washtenaw County Youth Rally. Supper will be served at 5:30 P.M. Price: 35 cents. 7:30 P.M. Closing Service of Youth Rally.. Mr. Janis Laupmonts, a former atheist, will speak. 6:00 P.M. Student Guild. CHURCH OF CH4RIST Place of meeting: Second floor, Y.M.C.A. Building, 110 N. Fourth Ave. 10:00 A.M. Scripture study. Lesson topic: "The Parables by the Sea." 11:00 A.M. Morning worship. The sermon en- titled God-His Power, Holiness, and Per- fection" will conclude the series on the gen- eral theme "Imitators of God." 7:30 P.M. Evening Preaching service. Garvin M. Toms will preach on the subject: "The Sentence That Does Not Linger". Wednesday, March 4, 7:30 P.M. Midweek Bible study. Lesson text: Matthew 7. Everyone is cordially invited to all services. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH State Street between Washington and Huron Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and J. Edward Lantz Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director Mary Porter Gwinn, organist 10:40 A.M. Church School for nursery, begin- ners and primary departments. Young chil- dren may be left in these departments dur- ing worship service. 10:40 A.M. Worship Service. Dr. Brashares' sub- ject is "Christ's Way of Life." 6:00 P.M. Wesleyan Guild Meeting for Univer- sity students and their friends. The Rev. Chester Loucks of the Baptist Church will speak on "Take Your Medicine." Graduate group discussion at the same time in the Rec- reation Room. Fellowship hour and supper at 7 p.m. 7:30 P.M. Newly-Weds meet in the Parlors. Esther McLellan will lead the discussion on Tie Duties of a Wife." Refreshments will be served following the discussion. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division at Catherine The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector. The Rev. Frederick W. Leech, Student Chaplain The Rev. John G. Dahl, Curate George Faxon, Organist and Choirmaster. 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M. Parish Communion Breakfast, Harris Hall. 10:00 A.M. High School Class. 11:00 A.M. Kindergarten, Harris Hall. 11:00 A.M. Junior Church. 11:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Sermon by Dr. Lewis. 4:00 P.M. Parent-Teacher Tea, Harris Hall. 5:00 P.M. Confirmation Class. ! r 3 f r i r, i I i i I Lst Day SHE'S A BIG IRL NOW AND TWICE AS APP w3 NERBERT "ORNE MARSHALL DAY ""'ttt irected by Hrald & Boue1 Pwod, ed by G o Me-Hdigt Sunday! 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Sirloin Steaks \ Y Whether the occasion is worthy of celebration or if you just have a hankering for really good food, let our es- pecially prepared food bring you satisfaction. The quiet atmosphere and the pleasant surroundings are sure to add to your pleasure. I /I Tomorrow! GREAT P TRE ! ORP] amuelllxl. ue... rsents i Samuel Goldwyn Pr We don't cook 11 11 I 1 !1 1 1 I ~ X'X31" I Cli I