9 ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCT. 25, 194. Interfaith Group To HoldDinner Muehl Speaks Tomorrow Before ThirdMeeting The third annual Interfaith Dinner to promote interfaith work and co- operation on campus will be held at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow in the Union. William Muehl, '43L, will speak on "The Basis and Aim of Interfaith Work." The dinner was inaugurated by the Student Religious Association three years ago in an effort to bring the religious groups on campus closer in the realization of their common in- terest in serving humanity. Representatives of Hillel Founda- tion, Newman Club and each of the Protestant Guilds will attend. Three other students, the rabbi, priest or minister, and the student workers, members of the SRA council, and the Board of Governors of the organiza- tions will be present. President and Mrs. Ruthven also plan to attend. The Social Service department of the Student Religious Association will begin its program for the semester with a meeting of the Social Service Seminar at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at Lane Hall. NAMED NELSON' S ADVISOR Donald J. Sterling, a graduate of the University who is prominent in Ann Arbor for his alumni activities, has been named full time advisor to War Production Chief Donald M. Nel- son on publishing problems of news- papers throughout the nation, it was announced today. Palmer Opens Annual Music Season Today Allied Advance Sent Through Alamein Line (Continued from Page 1) mediately and was continuing. News of the action was almost entirely from dispatclies of front line correspon- dents. Planes Raid All Night Edward Kennedy, Associated Press Correspondent at an advanced Allied air base, said pilots returning at dawn from an all-night blasting of the en- emy's air bases and concentrations saw the British forces already pour- ing through a gap they had made in the German and Italian lines. It was evident, however, that the heavy fighting between tanks and anti-tank guns had not yet been joined, for Rommel's tanks were seen rushing up to meet the attack. The eighth army, bigger and better equipped than ever before, thanks to the pouring in of American material and manpower, attacked after the heaviest artillery barrage ever seen in the desert, he said. , Americans May Be Fighting There was no definite word yet that American troops actually were par- ticipating, but American tank crews were known to have been in readiness for some time after initial combat ex- perience, and it was not likely that they would be left out of a battle in which all available strength must be made to count. The Army began its drive with the support of the strong American, Brit- ish and Allied air forces which for the past two months have waged the fier- cest and most protracted air offensive in the history of desert fighting with their day and night assaults on Rom- mel's sea and land transport and bases. What's Your King, Queen Welcome Mrs. Roosevelt Volunteers Top Sugar Beets Thirty-nine volunteers, sent out to a Milani farm yesterday by the Man-' power Mobilization Corps, hit a new high in defense farm work by har- vesting 32 tons of beets. That is the equivalent of 9,600 pounds of sugar. Sixteen men left the Michigan Union at 8 a.m. yes- terday and an additional squad of 23 left at noon. The afternoon shift was transferred from apple-picking to beet-topping because of F'riday night's heavy frost. Here are the men: Bruce Dalton, Robert King, Bob Long, Louis Zeite, Bill Permenter, Ed Gillette, Bob Wiener, Henry Freedman, Dave Kyllonen, Bill Healy, Clifford Wylie, Glen Cowing, Bob Christman, Marv Weiss, Charles McKennent and Al Weeks. Others were: Jack- Voiles, Bob Hargrove, Allen Kahn, Bob Flatt, Bob Dull, Schuster Siegel, Warren DeLand, Bob Precious, Joe O'Byrne, Abner Levkoff, Ted Morley, Art Miller, Bill Samuels, Don Epstein, Chuck Grodberg, Mervin Bristol, Tom Robinson, Len Gardinier, War- ren Watts, Bob Pierce, Keith Nichols, Stuart Fry and Bob Rosche. Nine men who were signed upto work on the same Milan farm were left stranded when a farm truck which had left at 6:30 a.m. yester- day to pick them up broke down. They were: Ralph Towley, Bill MacCornell. Dave Slepian, George Morley, "Ed Lodd, Carlos Perou, Sheldon Sinclair, Art Mond, Morris Mendeloff and Louis Gingram. LYNNE PALMERI * * k The 'current season of concerts by faculty members of the University Music School will be opened by Lynne Palmer, harpist, at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Mrs. Palmer's works will include such works as a bourree by Bach; "Sonata in C' minor" by Pescetti; "Homage to Ravel" by Forst and "En Bateau" by Debussy. Composi- tions of Gluck, Grandjany and Sal- zedo will also be presented. This concert is open to the gen- eral public with the exception of small children. King George (left) and Queen Elizabeth (right) of Great Britain welcome Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the President of the United States, on her arrival in England after a semi-secret flight across the Atlantic to visit U.S. forces in Britain and study British women's war endeavors. This picture was sent by radio from London to New York. Citizens To Tighten Belts: Michigan Defense Council Asks Observance Of Meatless Days Sunday at the Wolverine 209 SOUTH STATE Special Chicken Dinner from 12:15 to 2:00 ,o'clock (GUESTS INVITED) Price 65c Soup, Chicken a la Rien or Choice of Tomato Juice, Grapefruit juice, Apple Juice Appetizers; Sweet Pickles, Dill Pickles, Ripe Olives, Stuffed Olives, Heart of Celery Entrees FRIED CHICKEN, Southern Style Mashed Potatoes GRILLED BEEF TENDERLOIN French Fried Potatoes Salads, Head of Lettuce, Russian Dressing Fruit Salad, Hollandaise Dressing Vegetables; Fresh Green Peas, Buttered Cauliflower Hot Rolls Assorted Bread Dessert Ice Cream r1 h. ~Ei AD A , 508 EAST WILLIAMS Formerly: University Music House War Score? RECORDS for your Hallowe'en Party Want to know what kind of a war personality you have? Try answering the questions below. If you register a score of 100 per cent, you're all-out for democ- racy and have plenty of war savvy.: But if your score falls below 50 per cent, something's wrong. The same "patrio - telligent" test will be posted all over Mosher Hall tomorrow, where the girls will begin a campaign to make the whole dorm come up with a 100 per cent war personality. Here are the questions: 1. Are you buying at least one 25-cent defense stamp each week? 2. Are you watching your health by eating proper foods and get- ting the required number of hours sleep? 3. Have you decided on your war minor? 4. Are you devoting at least three hours per week to the war effort? 5. Have you donated a pint of blood to the Red Cross? 6. Are you taking a defense course such as first aid or nurse's aid? 7. Are you giving serious atten- tion to school work? 8. Are you careful to take just as much food as you want and do you have an appetite at meals? 9. Are you helping Army mor- ale by writing to those, in the service? 10. Do you honestly feel you are contributing your all to the war effort? EAST LANSING, Mich., Oct. 24.- (P)- The Michigan Defense Council today called on citizens of the state to observe a "meatless" day each week, and jogged the federal govern- ment's elbow to institute rationing of coffee and tea. On the motion of President John A. Hannah of Michigan State College, a council member, the Council in- structed its staff to ask Governor Van Wagoner to order a "meatless" day and for the staff to work out details of such a program. Hannah said such a meat conserva- tion move was suggested by Arthur H. Sarvis, State Rationing Administra- tor, and was supported by M. S. C. agricultural experts. The Council, accepting the sugges- tion of Mrs. Ida A. Kleinman of De- troit, chairman of its consumer advi- sory committee, asked federal officials "how soon" rationing of tea and cof- fee can be expected and asserted that if a survey showed rationing were needed and that federal action were unnecessarily delayed the state then should institute its own rationing under order of the governor. Prof. George A. Brown, head of the M. S. C. animal husbandry depart- ment, told the Council that United] States meat stocks were at their high- est point in history but that excessive demands of the armed forces, lend lease and well stuffed American pock- etbooks were creating a shortage. Brown warned that any "meatless" day program must make it clear to the farmers that there would actually be no less demand for meat and that they should not become frightened into reducing production. There is far more demand than the farmers now can meet, he said. Lt. Col. Harold A. Furlong, Council administrator, said details of the meat conservation move would not be set up until two of his advisors returned from a national meeting in St. Louis, Mo., where similar problems were be- ing discussed. Furlong said the Food Require- ments Committee of the War Produc- tion Board had ordered Michigan's new "neighborhood war club" system into action starting Nov. 23 to preach the need for meat conservation. "Block leaders" will be trained the week of Nov. 16, he said. Fuller Will Speak At Avukah Meeting Prof. Richard Fuller of the sociol- ogy department will speak on "Anti- Semitism and Fascism" at 8 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. The lecture is sponsored by Avu- kah, student Zionist organization. It will be followed by an informal question and discussion period. The meeting will be open to the public and there will be no admis- sion charge. Refreshments will be served. MILL TO ADDRESS CLUB Edward W. Mill of the Dolitical sci- ence department wiji address a meet- ing of the Naval*Affairs Club on "The American Fleet Today" at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in Room 231 Angell Hall. We Buy. Rent and Service all Makes and Models of Office and Portable Typewriters. '0 Do "" * * * *"" **t - 314 S. Stpte St. (Near North University Ave.) TYPEWRITERS, STATIONERY, FOUNTAIN PENS, STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 1'iY° an ak S ~ Songs of George M. Cohan - Mordy Baumn and Ray Bloch Orchestra. You're a Grand Old Flag; Over There; Give My Regards to Broad- way; Yankee Doodle Boy; Little Nellie Kelly; You Remind Me of My Mother; Harrigan; Mary's a Grand Old Name. Album C-89 ............... $2.67 "This is the Army" from Irving Ber- lin's All-Soldier Show. This is the' Army, Mr. Jones; I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Can- teen; The Army's Made a Man Out of Me; I'm Getting Tired So I Can Sleep; American Eagles; What the Well-Dressed Man in Harlem Will Wear; How About a Cheer for the' Navy; Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning. Album No. 340 ............$2.62 Since 1908 If You Write, We Have It Phone 6615 Idaho; It Isn't a Dream Any More .'inmo Key Orchestra 11331......................37 Dance Macabre Stokowski and Philadelphia Orch. 14162....................$1.05 Kalamazoo; Serenade in Blue Benny Goodman Orch. 36622......................53 My Devotion; I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen Chas. Spivak S 36620.................. .53 i * THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION 4 VOL. I, No. 11 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN OCTOBER 25, 1942 .- .,-; ?U0 / vdwnwk 'S a. . V. ' ulo spoke in same Hill Au- ditorium for the first of the 1942-43 Oratorical As- sociation Lectures. Warns Audience Romulo, who was aide- de-camp and personal rep- resentative to General MacArthur described the last heroic days in Bataan before American surren- der . . . He also warned America to heed the lesson of the Philippines, telling his audience that the bat- tle was lost "not when we surrendered in Bataan, but after the First World War when we refused to join the League of Na- tions . ." THE STUDENT MAN- POWER MOBILIZATION CORPS rumbled along this week keeping all of its promises in good order . . . Friday, twelve Mobil- ization Corps volunteers hauled away eight tons of scrap in two hours ... The haul was the largest yet for the Mobilization Corps . . Still another group of volunteers picked 300 bush- els of apples . . . A third group of 50 under the Mo- hiioinPrc ia~~n Serge Jarofff 1 Press, and International News Service. Even though he graduated as recently as 1938, Conger has seen much service since he left THE DAILY editorial of- fices . . . Prior to this ap- pointment he was a cor- respondent in Germany, where he was thrown into a concentration camp with other American newspa- permen when war came . . . . Last June he returned home on an exchange vessel. THE LOCAL CIVILIAN DEFENSE VOLUNTEER OFFICE has announced that University students ds well as townspeople are giving their services to handle applications and compute allocations for fuel oil registration ... Fig- uring prominently in the set-up will be students from the School of Busi- ness Administration and the Architecture School ... Although no names have been given out as yet, the CDVO has stated that two graduates of the School of Business Administration will hold prominent posi- H,-nc, in, the t, ainnYivnc of- tion ... The rest of it deals with aerodynamics ... At present fourteen students are enrolled in the class .. . Three are girls. THE DEATH TUESDAY OF DR. FREDERICK A. STOCK, director of the Chicago Symphony Or- chestra, closed a chapter in, the musical history of the University of Michigan Dr. Stock, known as the "dean of American music," conducted May Festivals at Ann Arbor from 1905 to 1935 . . . Although it was not generally known, he was to have conducted the Philadelphia Orchestra at the Golden Jubilee May Festival this coming spring. Long associated with the University, Dr. Stock was given the honorary degree of Doctor of Music here in 1924. He would have been 70 next month. UNDER THE DIREC- TION OF THE MAN- POWER MOBILIZATION CORPS, (see above) a new scrap drive was undertaken yesterday . . . The drive, which is the largest to date, has set 400 tons of scrap - U& ~,f $9.95 H vH FOOTSAE All the comfort your heart desires, but not for a minute will you feel clumsy or clodhopperish in Skuffies! Here's one walking shoe that snuggles to your heel and instep like a stocking. . . and stays snuggled. Credit goes to Foot Saver's Shortback* shaping that gives you stock- ing fit in shoes! Black and brown bucko and calf combinations. alluring fragrance of a thousand flowers Elizabeth Arden's newest and one of her loveliest perfumes .. delicate, enchanting. MILLE FLEURS Perfume .............. 5.00 to 23.50 Eau de Toilette. .. ...........7.50 Dusting Powder ................. 2.00 Make-up Box (lipstick, rouge, nail polish) . 4.50 .. :: -. .. .. ._.."r c...._. . ,. ....__ .. .