C i I CC-- Gladys Swarthout, Mezzo-Soprano, Will Appear In Concert Thursday Renoxwied Operaiitic jStar Praised For Beatity, Brains,_Industry Gladys Swarthout, mezzo-soprano for the Metropolitan Opera Company, will sing the second concert of the current Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. Star of screen, radio and opera as well as an outstanding concert artist, Miss Swarthout is praised universally for her beauty, brains and industry. Miss Swarthout is noted for a com- mand over many operatic roles which has enabled her to go to work in emergencies and perform roles for which she has made no immediate preparation. A completely American product, Miss Swarthout has participated in leading roles in most of the major 1 operas performed by the Metro- politan. Numbered among her favor- ites are parts in "Carmen," "Mignon," "Peter Ibbetson," "Tales of Hoff- man," and "La Gioconda." "Two Songs of the Auvergne," which Miss Swarthout will present in her program Thursday, were obtained by considerable work. The songs were available only on records, but Miss Swarthout called in an arranger and within a week had transcribed them into musical scores from which she could present them for concert audi- ences. Perhaps the height of Miss Swarth- out's career was reached on the oc- casion of the 150th anniversary of the founding of the United States Congress when she was asked to sing before the entire Congress, the Su- preme Court and the President. GLADYS SWARTHOUT i Annual Press Club Sessions Nation-Wide Coffee Rationing Will Go Into Effect On Nov. 29 _____________ v Open Nov. 5 State Newsmen Will Hold Three-Day Conference; Plan Varied Program Newspaper men from every part of the state will attend the 25th annual meeting of the University Press Club of Michigan, which will open its three-day session here Thursday, Nov. 5, at the Union. A varied program is planned for the three-day conference, including talks by many prominent speakers, a play written expressly for the oc- casion, and the Michigan-Harvard football game. Opening the session on Thursday, Elmo Scott, Watson, editor of the Publisher's Auxiliary, will address the assembled pressmen. Mr. Watson will speak on "'The Country Press Goes to -War." Following the after- noon session, Harvey Merker, direc- tor of manufacturing of Parke, Davis & Co., will be the guest speaker atf the Club banquet, after which the members will be guests at the Jay Allen and Louis Fischer Oratorical lecture at Hill Auditorium. Friday activities include a talk by director of the planning division of the Federal Security Administration, Prof. William Haber, who is on leave* from the University at the present time. Prof. Haber will speak on "Manpower and the War."" Other speakers for the day will be J. S. Bugas of the Detroit FBI and Col. W. A. Garoe, head of the military science staff. Speakers at the Friday afternoon session will include Joseph P. Junoza, Prof. Esson M. Gale and Wolfgang J. Kraus. At a dinner at the League the newsmen will hear Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven and Dr. James D. Bruce. Following the evening addresses a play written by Prof. John L. Brumm will be presented. STATE ORDINANCE UNIT LANSING, Oct. 26.- P)- The State Highway Department disclosed today it had begun recruiting enlisted personnel for a Michigan Ordnance company, a unit of heavy equipment operators and repairmen to aid the U.S. Army. By WILLIAM R. SPEAR Associated Press Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 26, - Coffee rationing starts Nov. 29, the government announced today, but it will be more liberal than the buga- boo which has frightened housewives in many cities into hoarding and over-buying. One pound every five weeks will be allowed for every person who was 15 or older when sugar rationing started last May. This works out to slightly more than one cup a day, and in households where children 15 or older do not drink coffee, the grownups can have the children's share as well as their own. Moreover, it will still be possible to get a cup of coffee in a restaurant regardless of how much is used at home. Details of the rationing for restaurants are still to be announced but it probably will follow that of' sugar, restricting commercial users to a certain percentage of their former consumption. And those who care .to substitute tea, cocoa or other beverages for cof- f fee at certain meals can drink all they wish. No rationing of these New Cam pus Hillel Center Dedication Set The new Michigan Hillel Founda- tion at the corner of Haven and Hill Streets will be formally dedicated in an all-day program to be presented Sunday. Dr. Abram Sachar, national direc- tor of B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations, will deliver the principal address at the dedication. Dean Alice C. Lloyd will be there to extend greetings. The day's program will start at 1 p. m. with an open house. The. dedi- cation will start at 3:00. Following the dedication, guests will be taken on a tour of the campus. A student program will be given at 7:30 p. m., followed by a social hour. The new Hillel Foundation was ac- quired under the auspices of the Michigan B'nai B'rith Council and furnished by the Women's District, Grand Lodge No. 6. drinks is being imposed, at least for' the present. The sugar ration book will be used for coffee and no new registration will be necessary. The last 10 stamps in the book will be used for coffee. The sugar ration books were issued for everyone from babies to grownups. BAt only books where the age of the user appears as 15 or older can be used %o get coffee. The day also brought this other news of interest to consumers: 1. The War Production Board re- ported that Christmas buying would just about use up all the nylon stock- ings for the duration of the war but said that the stores should have enough for the Christmas trade. 2. The Office of Price Administra- tion said that dealers could raise their prices sufficiently to pass on to consumers the higher taxes on liquor, wines and beer which take effect Nov. 1 ad that bars likewise could raise their prices on drinks of straight liquor and on bottled beer but not draft beer. 3. The OPA announced a quota of 1,090,206 recapped tires or recapping serices for the nation in November, which compared with the October quota of 939,940. Quotas for grade 2 tires available to war workers also were increased but reductions were made in;quotas of new tires available for drivers on list A and on passenger car inner tubes. Garg Answers Students' Cry Campus Scenes Fill Pages Of Season's First Issue "We want more photos-of campus scenes, of the people we know here and the things they are doing," has been University students' demand of their only picture magazine, and this month's Gargoyle answers their cry. When the first issue of this year's Garg appears on campus Friday. Edi- tor Olga Gruzhit promises pictures enough to fill anyone's scrapbook. Biggest single photo feature will be of Mary Borman, '43, head of the University's newly-developed Man- power Commission. Borman is the first to appear in a regular feature of 'the outstanding person of the month.' "New Faces of 1946" reestablishes a Garg tradition by presenting some of the attractive freshmen and trans- fer women students. With them will be two pages showing activities that start off a new semester-orientation whirl and rushing parties. Tying in with this issue's football theme will be three pages of the grid- iron sport in which Garg cameras pick up spectator activities in the grandstand as well as highlights on the field. Throughout the new Garg will be cartoons and candid photos that cover all phases of University life. Watch for it on the stands and campus cor- ners Friday. Grad Club To Hold First Fall Meeting Here Tomorrow The Graduate Study Club will hold their first fall meeting at 4 p. m. to- morrow in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Evelyn Kenesson, Donald Hargis and Hugh Norton, graduate students in the speech department will discuss important findings they have made in research for their doctoral theses. These reports will also include a dis- cussion of each student's problems. The Study Club was organized last year to provide opportunity for dis- cussion of problems pertaining to re- search in speech education. 1,000 Enrolled In U ESMWT .War Prograr 200 Ann Arbor Students Take Three Courses; 29 Courses Are Given Electronics Popular Prof. R. H. Sherlock, co-ordinator of Michigan's Engineering Science and Management War Training pro- gram, announced yesterday that more than 1,000 people have enrolled in the 29 ESMWT courses which began last week. These courses were started in five Michigan cities, Detroit, Flint, Jack- son, Grand Rapids and Ann Arbor. The courses are offered by the Uni- versity under the sponsorship of the U.S. Office of Education. Professor Sherlock pointed out that out of the total enrollment Ann Arbor has 200 students signed up for three ESMWT courses. These courses are in mechanical drawing, radio cir- cuits, and ultra-high frequency tech- niques, the only ESMWT course given for University credit. Of the 29 courses in the program an industrial electronics course given in Detroit had the highest enrollment; 109 persons began this training. Pro- fessor Sherlock, in commenting upon enrollment figures, mentioned that in July this course's probable enrQlU- ment hid been estimated at only 50. He attributed the popularity of this course, which is being taught by Prof. W. G. Dow of the electrical engineer- ing department, to the newness of this field. But general enrollment estimates were also too low, the program's co- ordinator said, for the figures are 25% larger than expected. The percentage of college graduates in these ESMWT courses is about 50% to 55% of the enrollees. Most of the men come from Michigan industries and are taking the courses to increase their technical ability in their own field, or to transfer into a war indus- try. Professor Sherlock emphasized that the most unique feature of the local program -is - that the University has kept the courses almost entirely on a graduate level. This, he explains, is the type of service Michigan industry expects from the University. There .is yet another first to be mentioned about this fall series, be- cause it. is the first.to contain man- agement 'courses., Courses are being given, in. industrial accounting, per- sonnel selection and .psychological factors of productionr supervision. The three are under the supervision of Prof. Robert Dixon -f the School of Business Administration. Enrollment in the personnel supervision course was so large, Professor Sherlock said, that two sections had to be created. Conservation Experts Plan Meeting Here Conservation of strategic forests and timberlands will be discussed at a Land Utilization Conference Friday and Saturday at the Union. The -first session of the conference sponsored by the School of Forestry and Conservation will begin at 9:30 a. i. Friday with an address by Prof. D. M..Mathews of forestry school on WPB studies of transportation of pulpwcod. George Kiss of the geography de- partment will speak at a luncheon meeting Friday on "Geopolitics as a World Force." Dean E. Blythe Stason of the law school will preside at the luncheon. Friday afternoon s session will be on conservation of critical materials. WPB representative H. Leroy Whit- ney will outline principles of saving four critical materials-metals, plas- tics, rubber and wood. School Of Ede Bulletin_ Issued Looking ahead to the problems of education that will arise during war- time, Dean J. B. Edmonson has pre- sented a proposal to school officials, teachers and parents to help them remedy problems and look ahead to their solution. In the current issue of the School of Education Bulletin, which appears today, Dean Edmonson, head of the education school, lists a number of 'dark prospects' and 'bright prospects' which can be used as a guide in de- termining educational policies. "Any great catastrophe such as war creates many new situations, some of which are extremely dis- couraging," says Dean Edmonson." Other changes created by a war pro- vide new opportunities for individuals and institutions. Never was there a time when educational workers faced heavier rponnnnihility for canitalizingr ASSOCIATED P DC T URENEWS- PRESS YANKS LEARN NEW T R I C K S IN B R I T A I1N-In protective masks andpadding these Yanks grapple as they learn fine points of hand-to-hand fighting at, an American Army station in Britain. The technique, devised by Maj. William Cunningham of Atlanta, Ga:, combines the best points of fencing and boxing. Blunted bayonets are used. "Yes siree..." JUST TESTING- on a "sound thermometer" Conrad Thibault, concert baritone, finds his vocal volume registers 'way up around the riveter or the aeroplane. SO M E P U M P K I N S-A pretty reminder that Hallowe'en is coming soon is Movie Actress Ann Savage of Columbia, S. C., as she holds two pumpkins. The studio where she recently made her movie debut says she's green-eyed, "Ice-cold Coca-Cola is more than thirst- quenching. Yes siree. It's refreshing. There's 5ear. . ' . }: ''