TMhMSAY, OCT. 13, 1942 T.-HE -- MICIIGA-N ,DAILY. a .: : , .. d ASME Will Hold Opening Meeting Tomorrow Night Eligible freshmen and transfer stu- dents are especially invited to the opening meeting of the American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers at 7:30 p. m., tomorrow at the Michigan Un- ion. Dedicated to explaining the activi- ties ofthe student branch of the Soci- ety and the advantages of member- ship, the meeting will bring talks by three engineering school professors, two. movies and refreshments. Talks by Professors R. C. Porter, F. L. Schwarty and by P. S. Hawley will precede the motion pictures, "To New Horizons," depicting the General Motors Futurama Exhibit at the World's Fair, and "Diesel, The Mod- ern Power." Prof. R. C. Porter of the mechani- cal engineering department is honor- ary chairman of the Michigan branch of the Society this year. Mosher To Hold:Defense Stamp Drive In response to a plea for more con- crete participation in the war effort by students, a committee of seven headed by Florence Turin, '44Ed., have selected Wednesday as Defense Day in order to sell defense stamps in Mosher Hall. Each girl has already pledged to buy at least a 25c stamp on this par- ticular day, and the committee has organized a definite system of collec- tion. Believing that this plan would meet with success, Dean Walter Rea ad- vanced the necessary funds to the committee for the purchase of the stamps. Both Dean Rea and Miss Ethel McCormick of the Michigan League are closely watching this drive. If the Mosher Hall campaign lives up to expectations, a further drive will be extended to all the stu- dent houses on campus. Ruthven Thanks Advisers President Alexander G. Ruthven yesterday gave official recognition to excellence of the orientation advisers' work and thanked them for acclimat- ing 2700 new students to the Uni- versity. the officers of the University are fully aware of the valuable ser- vice performed in aiding the newcom- ers," he declared. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING rshalI's seals DR GRABOW PIPES 235 South State St. IVI AMERICA'S FAVORITE Radio News Expert t Lenned WANTED HAVE ROOM for 9 girls for dinners six nights a week for 1st semester. Theta Annex. If interested call Miss O'Connor, 2-4143. STUDENTS, fraternities, sororities wanted to sell Christmas cards. Good proposition for making money. See Dick Ritzenheim at 431 Cross or call 2-2666. ALTERATIONS STOCKWELL & MOSHER-JORDAN residents-Alterations on women's garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. SITUATIONS WANTED COLOhED CHEF wishes position in fraternity house; good buying ex- perience; can furhish references. Box 38. FOR SALE FOR FULLER BRUSHES - Phone 6835. FOR SALE: New 1922 touring car. Perfect condition. 25-30 miles per gallon. Jim Daniels, 446 Michi- gan House. PERSONAL STATIONERY. - 100 sheets and envelopes, $1.00. Printed with' your name and address- The Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. HELP WANTED-FEMALE STENOGRAPHER AND TYPIST-' PART TIME OR FULL TIME PO- SITION. PLEASANT SURROUND- INGS. APPLY IN PERSON. MAD- EMOISELLE SHOP, 1108 S. UNI- VERSITY. STUDEN'T HELP WANTED. Kitchen and dining room work. Meals and compensation. 407 N. Ingalls. WOMAN STUDENT, part or full time. Prefer someone who knows music. Apply Radio & Record, 715 N. University. YOUNG LADY to work spare time and all day Saturday. Must have ready-to-wear selling experience. Top hourly rates. Dixie Shop, 224 S. Main. 9686. YOUNG LADY FOR PART TIME SELLING IN LADY SPECIALTY SHOP. APPLY IN PERSON. MAD- EMOISELLE SHOP. 1108 S. UNI- VERSITY. SHOWS CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P.M. ,IN 5 RNEYES>"NEArJf a d crssed-up u and issed p The 'only correct way to break in a pipe is to smoke it. Linkman's mechan. ical smoking ma- chine /e-Sohes every DR. GRABOW with fine tobacco. N1 $2 MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112. HELP WANTED STUDENT for fountain work and clerk in drug store. Gratton Drug, State and Packard. TWO STUDENTS for part-time work -The Beer Vault, 303 N. Fifth Ave., Phone 8200. ROOM and BATH in fine home for student willing to work 11/2 hours a day. Call 2-2102. ROOM and BREAKFAST in ex- change for services. Walking dis- tance to campus. 12 Geddes Hgts. 2-2473. STUDENT for office work. ,7 a.m.- 8 a.m. 4 p.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 4 p.m.-7 p.m. Good pay. Varsity Laundry. Fifth at Liberty. STUDENTS-For part-time work. Residence enumeration for Ann Arbor city directory. Please apply at R. L. Polk & Co. office-104 W. Huron, Room 27. HELP WANTED-MALE WAITERS WANTED-Pretzel Bell. BOY to help in kitchen for board. Hours are short, work is easy. Call 2-1682. LAW STUDENT for part-time em- ployment. F. A. Stivers, Attorney. Phone 7411. STUDENT HELP WANTED-Kitch- en and dining room work. Meals and compensation. 407 N. Ingalls- sorority. HIGH SCHOOL or college student for morning paper route. Apply Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard. YOUNG MAN to work in spare time and all day Saturday. Must have clothing selling experience. Top hourly rates. Dixie Shop, 224 S. Main. 9686. LOST and FOUND LOST-Silver pin in shape of bird. Reward 1320 Olivia. Phone 2-2357. LOST-sun glasses in Ford Hospi- tal case on Sat., Oct. 3. 6674, John Scoville. LOST-Brown gabardine overcoat. Red semi-lining. Reward. Call L. S. Bisbee, 2-3187. LOST: Chi Omega Sorority Pin. Finder return to Dorothy Tread- well. 1503 Washtenaw, 2-3159. Reward. FOUND: Brown tweed coat on Sun- day at Kappa Alpha Theta House. Owner, by mistake, must have taken grey tweed coat belonging to Marion Curtis, Mosher-Jordan. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. PERSONALS WARREN: Please return my hat. That Friday at the Bell. Remem- ber? Bob Lutz, 2-4401. League Dance Chairmanship Post Is Vacant Interviewing Of Qualified Women Will Be Done By JudiciaryCommittee Petitioning for the position of chairman of the dance committee on this year's League Council will begin today and continue until 5 p. m. Thursday. Interviewing will be from 4 until 5:30 p. m. Friday. Any eligible senior woman may hand in a petition for this position. The single vacancy on the League Council resulted when Mary Lou Ew- ing, appointed dance committee chairman last fall, did not return to school. Dance committee sponsors the dancing classes offered weekly at the League. Its chairman will be appoint- ed some time next week when peti- tioning and interviewing by the mem- bers of Judiciary Committee is over. Present members of the League Council are: Charlotte Thompson, '43, president; Lorraine Judson, '43, judiciary president; Margaret Ihling, '43, war activities board chairman; Barbara McLaughlin, '43, secretary; and Eleanor Rakestraw, '43, treas- urer. Committee heads include: Barbara Alcorn, '43, tutorial; Peggy Brown, '43, social; Marjorie Mahon. '43, can- dy booth; Marallyn MacRitchie, '43, merit system; Catherine Jones, '43, house; and Marjorie Storkan, '43, Theater-arts. Graduate Students Take Examinations One hundred and fifty newly en- rolled graduate students will scratch their heads for answers in the fields of science, mathematics, literature and art at 7 p.m. today as the 1942 Graduate Record Examination gets under way in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Given in two parts of approxi- mately four hours each, this record examination is taken at the begin- ning of each school year by graduate students entering the University. The first part will be given this evening and the second part tomorrow eve- ning at the same time. The purpose of the examination is to provide each student with a record of his general intelligence and is not restricted to his field of concentra- tion. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) staffs of the Department of Zoology, Museum of Zoology, Laboratory of Vertebrate Biology, School of For- estry and Conservation, Institute for Fisheries Research, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and graduate stu- dents, in zoology are invited. Wives are likewise invited. The American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers, Student Branch, will meet on Wednesday, October 14, at 7:30 p. m. in the Michigan Union. Freshmen and transfer students are especially invited. Movies on "Diesel, The Modern Power" will be shown. Refreshments. Women Students: The Archery Club will meet at 4:15 p. m. on Wed- nesday in the small lounge of the Women's Athletic Building. All stu- dents interested are invited. A mass meeting for sophomore wo- men is to be held on Thursday, Octo- ber 15, at 4:00 p. m. in the Michigan League Ballroom. Volunteer Hospital Services will be explained and regis- trations taken. All presidents of women's houses are requested to attend a meeting in the Michigan League on Wednesday, October 14, at 4:30 p. m. Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of Holy Communion Wednesday morning at 7:30 in Bishop Williams Chapel, Harris Hall. Break- Posters, Part Exhibits To Be Of Program French Comedy Will Be First Art Cinema League Program (Continued from Page 1) will consist of a miniature set drawn to scale which has been made by Miss Catherine Heller and Prof. Donald B. Gooch of the School of Architecture. Furniture has been obtained for the exhibit from the University Elemen- tary School through Mrs. Floyd Fire- stone, and child models have been provided by Goodyear's. Fischer's hardware store has loaned other fur- nishings. Behind the tables will be large posters showing the need for a balanced diet for children, and rib- bons will run from the posters to the corresponding food on the table. A window display called the "Yard- stick of Nutrition" has been prepared by Miss Elizabeth Slack, another member of the City Nutrition com- mittee and will be on display from Thursday through Saturday in an empty store at 303 S. Main St. Real foods and a table showing the decora- tive beauty of vegetables made into flowers will provide a novel way of showing the nutritive values of var- ious foods. New Young in Furs Camel Hair Praised by both American and foreign movie critics, the French' comedy "Carnival in Flanders" will be presented at 8:15 p.m. Oct. 15-17 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by the Art Cinema League as its first program in the 1942-43 season. In order that the audience may not miss understanding any details of the picture, English titles have been added to the film. Tickets for "Carnival in Flanders" are priced at 40c and are on sale at the box office of the Mendelssohn Theatre. Rivaling one of Cecil B. DeMille's productions, this film employs a cast of more than five thousand players and was seven months in produc- tion. The picture upon release was found to have such high standards of production and popular appeal that the producers . were awarded the Grand Prix du Cinema Fran- cais and the Gold Medal of the Film Academy of Venice. Carnival Of Flanders "Carnival of Flanders" portrays a legendary story of an episode in the Flemish village of Boom following Nutr iion Drive In Full Swmg Dlyed- the invasion of the Spanish under King Phillip. The Burgomaster warned of the approach of 'the in- vaders,: pretends that he is dead, hoping that the village will not be disturbed while in the midst of mourning. Not approving of this strategy, the wives of Boom decide that escape can be achieved by en- tertaining the Spanish. Produced by the Film Sonores To- bis at its studios in Paris, "Carni- val in Flanders" duplicated the Flem- ish structures with such authenticity that after the completion of the film the entire set was left standing for the benefit of tourists. Silent Pictures "The Art Cinema League feels cer- tain," declared Stewart Rewoldt, '44BAd., manager of the organiza- tion, "that this film will be ac- cepted as one of the finest of the many foreign pictures which have been brought to the campus." Carrying out its policy of also presenting some of the outstanding American films, the Art Cinema League will show a group of early silent pictures in a series of four Sunday programs. This presenta- tion will constitute a survey of pic- tures, beginning in 1895 and con- tinuing through to 1928. As has been the custom in past years, tickets, priced at $1.10, are being sold for the entire four per- formances rather than single admis- sions. These tickets can now be purchased at the League and Union desks. The first group of pictures, cover- ing the period from 1896 to 1912, will be shown Sunday, Oct. 18, and two performances will be, offered, one at 7 p.m. and the other at 9 p.m. MADE BY M. LINKMAN & CO. ®+ GRABOW TRU-GRAI " ; ,$350 MICHIGAN Now Showing!t - NOTICES - Eligibility cards will be signed by the Merit committee of the League from 3 p, m. to 5 p. m. beginning today and continuing this week and all through next week in the social director's office. All women must have their cards signed with- in that period, as they will not be signed at any other time during the entire semester. Peg Ihling, '43, announces a meeting of all the chairmen on the War Activities Committee for Wo- men at 4 p. m. today in the Social Director's office at the League. CORRECTION All volleyball games in the inter- house tournament are to be played at Barbour gymnasium, instead of at. Palmer Field as previously an- nounced. The Union Coke Bar announced for today has been postponed. fast will be served following the ser- vices. Anyone interested in working in the University Hall Candy Booth, please meet in the Kalamazoo Room in the League on Wednesday, Oct. 14, at 4p.m. 150-00 LAPIN Specially Priced r IT'S A WIFE'S-EYE VIEW OF THE BOYS WHO PLAY THE NATION'S LOVE SONGS! Be as casual as you like in your- pet boy's oat or tie-belt wrap- around! Warm and sturdy for campus and dress-up done in this soft, young fur. An excellent choice for young wardrobes . . and especially at this price! (Sub-I ject to 06% Federal Excise Tax.) OOTDTYCEf4R STATE STREET I. a a m I George Montgomery Ann Rutherford withGLENN MILLER AND HIS BAND in .00 BARGAINS, IN USED TEXT Student Supplies for all Departments Or NEW if You Prefer Kay FRANCIS John BOLES Andy DEVINE a I i II -- - -- U