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April 28, 1942 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1942-04-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

FACE TWOG

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

-_ .TU]FS D-,! F; IyTRIIJ 28, 1942

THE MICHIGAN iI~AILY TUESDAY, APRIL ~8 194~

Daily Posts
Go To Hendel
And deFries
James Daniels Appointed
To Fill Newly Created
Sale Analyst Post
(Continued from Page 1)
business staff are Eileen Bradley, '44,
Mary Jean Czysz, '44, Rosalie Frank,
'44, Audrey Hampton, '44, June Kar-
ker, '44, and Marjorie Lovejoy, '44.
Six members of The Daily businessI
staff were selected as junior depart-
mental itanagers. They are Howard
Baumgarten, '44, local advertising
manager; Richard Cole, '44, contracts
manager; Edgar Orr, '44, service
manager; William Berns, '44, na-
tional advertising manager; Herbert
Osterman, '44, circulation and classi-
fied advertising; and Marjorie Green,
'43, accounts manager.
Junior Appointees
Junior appointees to the 'Ensian
are Carson Grunewald, '44, organi-
zation; Mel Engelhardt, '44, Robert
Schulze, '44, and Suzanne Sims, '44,
schools and colleges; Betty Ann Kra-
nich, '44, house groups; Jean Whitte-
more, '44, woman's activities; Grif-
fith Young, '44A, layout editor; and
A. A. Agree, '44A, sports editor.
Positions on the 'Ensian junior
business staff were awarded to Basil
Dalton, '43, Richard Bieneman, '44E,
and Martin Feferman, '44. Junior
women are Dorothy Bales, '44, Lois
Fromm, '44, June Gustafson, '44,
Eleanor Howe, '44, and Mary Kep-
pel, '44.
Holders of junior posts on the Gar-
goyle are Helen Curdes, '44, Al Cohen,
'44, Bernice Galansky, '44, Pat High,
'43, and William Kehoe, '44.
Kenneth Kardon, '44, was selected
advertising manager of the Gargoyle
business staff, and serving under him
are Barbara Sternfels, '44, promotion
and publication manager; Jean Mis-
ner, '43A, and Louis Cohen, '44, cir-
culation and publicity managers.

Preliminaries
For Fraternity
SingTo Begin
Ten Fraternities To Reach
Final Contest; Actress
Will Present Four Cups
Eliminations for the seventh an-
nual Interfraternity Sing will be held
in the Union and the League begin-
ning at 7 p.m. Thursday.
Following is the schedule in which
the fraternities are asked to appear:
In Room 316 of the Union: Acacia,
7 p.m.: Alpha Sigma Phi, 7:10 p.m.;
Beta Theta Pi, 7:20 p.m.; Kappa
Sigma, 7:30 p.m.; Phi Delta Theta,
7:40 p.m.; Sigma Phi, 7:50 p.m.; Phi
Gamma Delta, 8 p.m.; Pi Lambda
Phi, 8:10 p.m.; Sigma Alpha Epsi-
lon, 8:20 p.m.; Theta Xi, 8:30 p.m.
and Sigma Upsilon, 8:40 p.m.
In Grand Rapids Room at the
League: Lambda Chi Alpha, 7 p.m.;
Alpha Delta Phi, 7:10 p.m.; Alpha
Tau Omega, 7:20 p.m.; Chi Psi, 7:30
p.m.; Phi Kappa Psi, 7:40 p.m.; Phi
Sigma Kappa, 7:50 p.m.; Psi Upsilon,
8 p.m.; Sigma Chi, 8:10 p.m.; Sigma
Phi Epsilon, 8:20 p.m.; Zeta Beta
Tau, 8:30 p.m. and Phi Sigma Delta,
8:40 p.m.
Out of the 21 contestants, 10 will
be selected to sing in the finals at
7:15 p.m. Monday, May 4. Judges
for the Sing will be Prof. Wil-
liam D. Revelli, Mr. Clyde Vroman
and Dean Alice Lloyd.
Contestants will be competing for
four cups, each receiving a perman-
ent award and the winner getting in
addition a rotating cup. Miss Edith
Atwater, female lead in the cast of
"The Man Who Came to Dinner,"
will present cups to the winners.
Audience and participants alike
will join in group singing with Gordon
Hardy accompanying the singing.
Junior committee heads of the IFC
include Jack Hooper, general chair-
man; Properties, Dick Rawdon;
Judges, John Crabb; Programs, Dick
Winters; Publicity, James Weinstein;
Seating, Howard Snyder; Elimina-
tions, at the Union, Jack Weise, and
at the League, Jack Hadley.

French Play
To Be Given
Tomorrow
Simulating an accent, in addition
to speaking in a foreign tongue and
with characteristic gestures, is forte
of habit now with Marion Batchelor,
'44, and John Baker, '44, who will
portray natives of southern provices
in the annual French play to be
given tomorrow.
Since rehearsals for "La Belle
Aventure" began weeks ago, Prof.
Charles E. Koella, director of the
play, has been coaching these two
in the southern provincial accent
that goes with the characters of
Jeantine and Guston.
Thoroughly Drilled
Now if their respective French
teachers find them sometimes sound-
ing mute e's, trilling r's on the tongue
or dragging out the nasal sounds, it
is only to be expected, for these cor-
ruptions have by this time been thor-
oughly drilled into the actors.
But professors would find nothing
wrong with the French of Constance
Taber, '44, Hoe Seltzer, '42, Jack
Vaughn, '43, Shirley Robin, '45, and
Henry Barringer, '42. Even though
none of these students has been in
France, Professor Koella claims they
speak like natives.
Play Production Veteran
And Sally Levy, '43, strings it off
like a veteran, though her training
has been only slight. Sally is a pro-
duct of Play Production and carries
one of the leads in the play, that of
the Comtesse d'Eguzon, aunt of the
bride-to-be around whom the story
centers.
The curtain will go up at 8:30 p.m.
tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn
Theatre, and tickets will be on sale
at the boxoffice from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
today and from 10 a.m. to play time
tomorrow.
C"arver Plans~
Al* Reservist
Math Tr1ainiiig
(Continued from Page 1)
Forces Enlisted Reserves hi planning
their academic programs. Under the
Enlisted Reserve plan students may
continue in college until graduation,
provided they maintain a satisfactory
scholastic standing. Reservists are
recommended sertain courses in
mathematics and science which will
be of value to them when they enter
into active training.
At Kelly Field Professor Carver
lived in the regular cadets' barracks,
although offered officer's quarters.
In his opinion the air corps cadets are
the "cream of the crop, both physic-
ally and mentally, of American col-
leges and universities." fe further
described them as the finest group
of young men he had ever associated
with. The teachers in the school,
Professor Carver said, are of the same
high caliber. They are selected from
the graduating classes because of the
rapid expansion of the school. The
commanding officers of Kelly Field
and Mather Field in California,
which Carver visited, were ranked as
"the two finest gentlemen and offic-
ers of my acquaintance."
Head Of Medical RO(C
Receives Rank of Major
Major Dan J. Bulmer, head of the
University's Medical Corps ROTC
Unit, received his promotion from
the grade of captain last week.
Stationed here since his assign-
ment to active duty, the Major re-

ceived the degrees of A.B., M.D., and
M.S. in surgery from the University.
He served as intern in surgery at the
University Hospital from 1935 to
1936, as assistant resident in surgery
from 1936 to 1937, as resident in sur-
gery from 1937 to 1938 and as in-
structor in surgery from 1938 to
1940, when he went on active duty.
SHOWS DAILY at
1-3-5-- 7-9 P. M.
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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

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
LAUNDERING
LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low price. 2c
STUDENTS' BUNDLES WANTED-
6c per lb., rough dry. Shirts extra
10c each. Handkerchiefs, 1c each.
Phone 25-8441. 295c
SMICHIGAN

WANTED TO BUY
CLOTHES BOUGHT AND SOLD-
Ben the Tailor, 122 East Washing-
ton. Phone after 6 o'clock, 5387.
CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY--
Pay $5 to $500 for Suits, Overcoats,
Typewriters, Saxophone, Fur Coats
(Minks and Persian Lambs),
Watches, and Diamonds. Phone
Sam, 5300.
TYPING
L. M. HEYWOOD, experienced typist,
414 Maynard Street, phone 5689.
MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist.
408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935.
VIOLA STEIN - Experienced legal
typist, also mimeographing. Notary
public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland.
FARMS FOR SALE
20 ACRES-4 miles, good road. Nice
building spot. Some old material,
$12,500. Terms-Farley, 2-2475.
TRANSPORTATION
ALLIED VAN LINES, INC. Long
distance moving. Call Godfrey's.
6927. 410 N. Fifth Ave. 350c
FOR RENT
RACKHAM BLDG (opposite). Small
furnished apartment and single
room-both newly decorated. Busi-
ness, professional, or graduate
women preferred. Phone 3741.
305c
LOST and FOUND
LOST-Spiral notebook containing
history notes. Very important! If
found call 2-2963. 353c
ROSE GOLD Girard Perregaux La-
dies' Wrist Watch. Lost near 825
Tappan, Saturday evening. Re-
ward. Rose Potter, 425 Ann St.,
East Lansing, Mich. 352c
TUTORING
PLEASE RETURN the French book
on Middle Ages to Library imme-
diately. It's due. Phone 3590.

O NE THING a fellow today expects from his girl

above all is the

quality

of freshness.

The ability to look calm and cool, no matter

what the situation, is one of the modern college girls' most charmhing
fea to res.
And, therefore, it is not surprising that they look for the same
thing in the men they date. If your shirt is clean, and your other linen
immaculate, you're all set. Make sure you keep your washables this way
by sending them to the laundries where quality, economy, and service
count most, the Independent Ann Arbor Laundries. Check your costs

against the

sample student bundle shown below.

SAMPLE BUNDLE

3
3
6
1
2

Shirts
Pairs of Sox
Handkerchiefs

r
S

Finished;
Mended and
Button
.replaced.
Returned,
:Dried -an
ufdnot Ironed.

Suits of Underwear
Pajama Suit
Both Towels5

Today and Wednesday

-- -

- -- - ---- ------
i

MICHIGAN

One Niaht
SATURDAY

(Sr f V
1,

T

OF-

MAY :2

Approx. Cost. $120

MAIL ORDERS NOW Make Checks payable
To Michigan Theatre
and Kindly Enclow Slamped, Self-Addressed Enl cope.

l

6119I'4J

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I

THE AT-e CU I LDPLAYW~iGHS'COMPAN~Y
HE.LEN

JOHN SHEFFIELD N-
REGINALD OWEN
BARRY FITZGERALD
TOM CONWAY
PHILIP DORN

oncl Dry Cleaning Company
P hon 1

WIVIITE SWAN LAUNDRY
and Dry Cleaning Company
Plhoe'1117,

I

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