w a SAE TWO T''E MICHIGAN DAtIly SUNDAY, OcT. 25, 1942 IF _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _I- I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,. . , CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING -.,,. wi i i __ _._ __ _ 4 a4 . i CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two *daya (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) $1.00 per 15-word insertion for 3 or more days. (Increase of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Reques. Our Want-Ad Department will be happy to assist you in composing your ad. Stop at the Michigan Daily Business Of- fice, 420 Maynard Street. FOR SALE PERSONAL STATIONERY. - 100 sheets and envelopes, $1.00. Printed with your name and address- The Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. FOR RENT SINGLE ROOM in approved, quiet home. 308 E. Madison. 2-2447. FOR RENT: Half of large front suite to girl student. One-half block from campus. Mrs. Wood, 725 Haven Ave., phone 5938. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY-2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. ALTERATIONS STOCKWELL & MOSHER-JORDAN residents-Alterations on women's garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. MISCELLANEOVS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 'S. State. MAKE MONEY-on your used cloth- ing by phoning Claude H. Brown, 2-2736, 512 S. Main. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112. LOST and FOUND FOUNTAIN PEN-Brown Schaeffer imprinted with M. E. Decker. Call 2-1405. Reward. LOST.- Wallet, black. Containing cash and checks. Substantial re- ward. Finder return to Margaret Warren, Mosher Hall. HELP WANTED DISHWASHERS WANTED. Meals and compensation. Sorority. 407 N. Ingalls. 2-3119. TYPIST. Male or Female. Accurate with fair degree of speed. High School or Commercial College trained preferred. Permanent full or part time position with long established State Street Store, An- swer fully. Box 38 Michigan Daily. War Personnel Course Given For Detroit Area The fourth round table discussion of the University of Michigan's course in war industry personnel manage- ment will get under way at 4 p. M.. tomorrow at the Rackham Educa- tional Memorial in Detroit. To date, fifty representatives of war industries in the Detroit area have signed up for the course, spon- sored by the School of Business Ad- ministration. Professor John W. Riegel, Director of the Bureau of Industrial Relations and a member of the faculty of the School of Business Administration, is in charge of the course. Big Campus Scrap Drive All Set To Gop (Continued from Page 1) tory of the University of Michigan-- is expected to pile up more than 40 tons" of scrap whch wil, be' turned into the bullets, guns and tanks so important to Uncle Sam in this war. Drive Divided Into Sections The voluntary scra p cllectors will be divided into seven sections. They will include fraternities, sororities, rooming houses, Leage houses, men's dorms, women's dorms and co-op houses. Each house-within-a-section will compete for a special "excellency" pennant which will be awarded be- tween the halves of the Michigan vs. Harvard football game on Nov. 7 to the house collecting the most scrap in the one week period. It's a no-holds-barred campaign where anything goes. ile Srapt#In Frnt Of House The cou tiy needs scrap and if you have to pillage your neighbor's cellar for junk, you'll be helping your house win a special pennant and your coun- try win a special war. After you dig up all the scrap you can find, pile it in front of your house whether it's' Helen Newberry or a rooming house on Packard Street. Make the scrap-pile go higherthan an elm tree'stopthe sky'sthe li'iit. If 'you havetrouble fidin'srp call either Bob Preiske or Bob aon tho at The Daily, telephone 2-4-1. Or you can call Al Anders atUni- versity extension 21-9. Totals To e Per Capita Call 'thee felows up and say: "Where can I find more scrap?" They'll tip ou off to hidden loot be- cause they've had their fingertips in this scrap pile from the word "go." This is strictly a per capita affair. If you come from a rooming house with ten male roomers and you col- lect more scrap per head than the fellows in the biggest rooming house on campus, the pennant is yours. The Manpower Corps, Mary Bor- man says, will come around in trucks and pick up the scrap from your frnt door-step. It will be collected and weighed on or before Tuesday, Nov. 3. To Award Arm Bands Manpower Corps members who turn in a minimum of ten hours' work for Uncle Sam will be given special work- distiffction arm-bands. HERE'S ANOTHER ANGLE YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT. Every organization on campus is going to be given special salvage pro- jects to do. For example, the Union may be assigned to load up trucks with the millions of tin cans scattered around the University dump. For another example, the IFC might be directed to spend an after- noon cleaning up all the metal in the Engine Building. #AILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, OCT. 25, 1942 . VOL. tIll No. 19 All notices for the Daily Official Bul- letin are to be sent to the Office of the President in typewritten form by 3:30 p.m. of the 'day preceding its publica- tion, except on Saturday when the no- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m.' Notices Faculty, School of Education, meet- ing will be held on Monday, October 26, in the University Elementary (Continued on Page 4) SWARTMOUT Has everything- Voice, beauty, brains and Fdusfry." Caiillon Recital Today (ttures Vocal Forms I I I Featuring a series of vocal art forms, Prof. Percival Price will pre- sent his weekly Sunday recital at 7:15 p. m. today from Burton Tower. 'Professor Price will open his pro- gram with two ariettas, a type of song which marked the introduction of modern singing. These will be fol- lowed by two madrigals which are a combination of independent melodies sung together. Three other ,groups of songs will conclude the recital. Two of these, the ie'der and the chanson, are the Ger- man and French adaptations of the seventeenth century arietta form. Two-part songs, "Cofe Follow Me"' by Henry Bishop and Brahms "Lullaby", will complete the program. Ii Prize Picture In First Garg With this month's issue of the Gar- goyle, the photographic work of Miss Nancy Hays, '45' will be shown for, the first time as the campus humor magazine prints her picture of a cam- pus scene. Miss Hays' 'photo of the month' was chosen by th' Garg editors as the best picture submitted for this month. Anyone interested in entering, the contest for next month's cover photo should have his entry in by November 11. Inside the Garg in, its first issue1 this fall will be features and candid photos centering around the football theme. Gridiron favorites will be on display in three pages of pictures, and Captain George Ceithaml's 'In- side Football' will give the news on what goes on behind the scenes. A special shelf of recent books on, the war has been made available to1 students for home use, Prof. Warner' G. Rice of the University library an- nounced yesterday. Dealing with almost every phase of1 the war effort, most of the books have been published since Pearl Harbor. However, many older books that have special significance at this time are included in the selection. At present almost 150 volumes are on the shelf and the library expects to continue purchasing new books of interest as they come, out, Prof. Rice said. The case is located at the head of the stairway on the second floor near the circulation desk. Among the books represented are biographies of Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur, Sir Stafford Cripps, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Winston Chur- chill and Generalissimo Chiang Ka- Shek. Volumes dealing with all the branches of the service are there ih- cluding Col. William A. Ganoe's "His- tory of the United States Army." There are many editions dealing with the place of women in the war. Library Sets U p New War Case Y MOIEPREV IE WS. :^ At The State . . Two famous laugh-producing teams combine in "Here We Go Again," the new picture which opens at the State Theatre today, to follow up their previous comedy with moire of the same. Edgar Bergen and Charlie Mc- Carthy vie with Fibber McGee and Molly for the most laughs in this picture that takes place in the neigh- borhood of, a swank mountainresort somewhere in the West. The story involves most of the characters of McGee's radio pro- gram,e including the great Gilder-' sleeve, Mrs. Uppington and Wimple. The wealthy Bergen. who is search- ing: for a rare American moth, be- comes 'mixed up with Fibber when he buys some synthetic gasoline that later turns out to be fake. Fibber himself was fooled and he spents most of his time trying to get Ber- gen's money back for him. Ginny Simms shares romantic hon- ors with Bergen in the picture and Ray Noble and his orchestra furn- ish the musical setting. Mort Greene and Harry Revel com- posed the two, songs of the film, "Till I Live Again" and "Delicious Delir- ium." At The Michigan .. . With a cast that seems to include almost every actor and actress of note in the cinema capital. "Tales of Manhattan" opens at the Michi- gan Theatre today. A partial list of the stars in this picture reads like a casting director's dream. Charles Boyer. Rita Hay- worth, Ginger Rogers. Henry Fonda, Charles Laughton, Edward G. Rob- inson, Paul Robeson, Rochester, Thomas Mitchell and Cesar Romero all play parts in a story that traces the life of a full dress suit from Park Avenue to Hell's Kitchen. Ten well-known writers combined ito write this biography of a coat. It starts out on the handsome shoul- ders of Boyer and ends up as a scarecrow on sharecropper Paul Robeson's farm. But' to get there, the coat has to hang in a hock shop, rip on the back of Charles Laugh- ton directing a concert in Carnegie Hall and play a vital role in a crime plot. Many stars in the picture had a chance to interpret, and in some cas- es, revise their own part, an unprece- dented privilege granted by director Julien Duvivier. To Soldiers and Sailors Overseas .... THIS IS WHAT YOU D0:1 Use official "VMail"form only. MAKES THE Don't mark your regular mail "V Mail" as it won't get you t this service. 2 Seal letter and address in usual manner. ' 3 Put on same amount of postage as on regular domestic letters. 4 Drop in any mail box or post office. . THISIS WHAT HAPPENS:1"VMail"getspreferenceover all other classes of overseas mail. 2 Government photo. graphs your "V Mail" letter at their expense. (No one i else sees it.) 3 Film is flown overseas or goes. by fastest avaiable means of transportation. 4leter is delivered in a fraction of the time usually required. means ofieTiee n~ i A SHOWS CONT INUOUS FROM 1 P.M. WARFBONDS ISSUED WHILE YOU WAIT! 322 NORTH STATE v THURSDAY, OCT. 29, 8:30 P.M. WTT T A T TThT'T n D TT T]tA' s~ll I'~~ 'U II I 11 I 1!, ^: