'AGE - TWO 11 E MCIA~D~N FltWAt;.OCT, 30, 042 t'AGk IWO ThZD~V- OC1~r SO, 194~ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING. Daily Manpower Goes To Work Lit Salvage Campaign !j. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (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.) .6 Contract Rates on Request 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. LAUNDERING LAtJDRY-2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. FOR SALE CANARIES, California Linnets, Zebra Finches, Parakeets, bird foods and cages. 562 S. Seventh. Phone 5330. PkRSONAL STATIONERY. - 100 sheets and envelopes, $1.00. Printed with your name and address- The Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. FOR RENT SINGLE ROOM in private home near campus for business man or grad- °uate student. Call 8708. FOR RENT: Half of large front suite to girl student One-half block from campus. Mrs. Wood, 725 'Haven Ave., phone 5938. HELP WANTED STUD'ENTS for part-time employ.b rent. Beer Vault, 303 North Fifth Avenue. Phone 8200. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S.' State. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112. LOST and FOUND LOST: Little cream-colored pup in vicinity of Phi Gamma Delta house. Please call 2-3101. REWARD OFFERED for copy Shaf- tesbury's Characteristics lost in Angell Hall. English Office, 3221. WILL PERSON who took Season Skipper- coat from ladies' lounge of Michigan League Friday evening, by mistake, please return to League Desk and take their own. HELP WANTED-FEMALE WANTED-Student waitresses for main dining room. Apply to man- ager, Michigan Union. HELP WANTED-MALE PART TIME WORK, morning or aft- ernoon. Chester Roberts Gifts, 312 S. State. $1.00 PER HOUR-Want husky stu- dent for small excavating job, Sat- urday on spare time. 2-3352. YOUNG MAN WANTED with bicycle for messenger and inside work, 6 to 10 p.m. Apply Postal Telegraph, 112 East Huron. NEWSPRINT 'FREEZE' EXPECTED WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.- (A)- Freezing at present levels of news- print and other paper production- which is expected to be the first step in a program to curtail use of paper for publishing purposes-can be ex- pected "in a few days," a War Pro- duction Board spokesman disclosed today. Engine School To Fill Council Posts Nov. 1748 Engineers Will Elect Eight Delegates; Petitions Due In Three Weeks' Time Student engineers may exercise their democratic prerogatives, this time by going to the polls Nov. 17 and 18, when the Engineering Council will hold the annual election of class rep- resentatives to this student governing body, Bud Burgess, '44E, council rep- resentative in charge of elections, an- nounced yesterday. Burgess, however, warned that the engineer - politicians should begin working on their petitions now, be- cause they are due in less than three weeks. He explained that the fresh- man .election will be held in the class assembly, Wednesday, Nov. 18, while the sophomore, junior and senior elections will take place from 8 to 12 a. in., Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 17 and 18. There will be two representative offices open to freshman candidates. The sophomores will also elect two representatives to the engineering council, one for six semesters or the rest of his college career, and one for two semesters. The sophomore receiv- ing the largest total of votes will be given the six semester position. Junior candidates who wish to run may file petition for one of two posi- tions. One representative job will be for four semesters and the other for two. Seniors will also have two class representatives who will be elected for two semesters each. MICHIGAN I * HENRN fONUN * CHNASS LAGHTON * EDW.ROB INSON * P AUL ROBESON * ETHEL WATERS" * 'ROCHESTERJ'I ALES O *RN Silhouetted against a mountain of tin cans in te University dump behind the Hospital, 10 members of The Michigan Daily staff are shown as they donat-d an: afternoon flattening tin cans for the Man- power Corps salvage and scrap campaign. The half -day assault on the dump netted more than a ton of metal, left hands stiff and sore, but hardly nicked the huge scrap pile. Other staff members scoured the camrus for scrap, smashing radiators and pianos-old ones, that is. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN a FRIDAY, OCT. 30, 1942 VOL. LIII No. 23 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 Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members. of the faculty and other townspeople Sunday, November 1, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Cars may park in the re- stricted zone on South University between 4:00 and 6:30 p.m. Senate Advisory Committee on Uni- versity Affairs will meet today at 4:30 p.m. in the Regents' Room. Arthur S. Aiton, Secretary To the Members of the Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and The Arts: The second regular meeting of the Faculty of the College of Literature. Science, and The Arts for the aca- demic session of 1942-43 will be held I' I I l i l c c I For the reading pleasure of Your man in service Wesuggst:BO O*KS LAsT TRAIN FROM BERLIN - Howard Smith . . . . . $2.75 MY WORLD AND WELCOME To IT - James Thurber 2.50 ONLY THE STARS ARE NEUTRAL - Quentin Reynolds 2.50 RUSSIANs DON'T SURRENDER - Alexander Poliakov. 2.50 THE CUP AND THE SWORD -- Alice T. Hobart . . 2.75 DRUMS OF TH MORNING - Philip Stern . . . . . . . 3.00 THE UNINVITED - Dorothy Macardle . . . . . . 2.50 SUEZ TO SINGAPORE - Cecil Brown . . . . . . . . . 3.50 SIGNED WITH THEIR HONOUR - James Aldrich . . . 2.50 SEE HERE, PVT. HARGROVE -- M. E. Hargrove . . . 2.00 PETER ARNO CARTOON REVUE . . . . . . . . . . 2.00 NEw YORKER WAR ALBUM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.50 in Room 1025 Angell Hall, Monday, November 2, at 4:10 p.m. AGENDA: 1. Consideration o the minutes of the October meeting. 2. Introduction of new member. 3. Consideration of reports sub- mitted with the call to this meeting. a. Executive Committee-Profes- sor I. L. Sharfman. b. Executive Board of the Grad- uate School-Professor Z. C. Dick- inson. c. Deans' Conference-Dean E. H. Kraus. 4. Oral report. a. The General Library and its services-Director W. G. Rice. 5. General procedure for the prep- aration of the College budget-Pro- fessor J. K. Pollock. 6. New business. 7. Announcements. German Table for Faculty Mem- bers will meet Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room, Michigan Union. Members of all departments are cordially invited. There will be a brief talk on "Vulkane in Java" by Mr: Senstius. WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! DAY OR NIGHT TODAY AND A'J5AmallNTATRE SATURDAY! / CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR MEN IN THE MUST BE MAILED NOVEMBER 1. January and May 1943 Graduates In Aeronautical Engineering: Mr. D. W. Lee of the National Advisoryt Committee for Aeronautics, and a member of the U.S. Civil Service Commission, will interview men/ for Junior Engineer positions in its lab- oratories at Langley Field, Virginia, Cleveland, Ohio, and Moffett Field, California, on Tuesday, November 3, in Room 3205 East Engineeringf Building. Please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineering Bulletin Board. Senior Engineers in Aeronautical, Mechanical, Civil, Chemical and Metallurgical, Electrical, Industrial Engineering, and Physics: Mr. B. G.- Andrews of Curtiss-Wright Corpora- tion (all divisions) will interview men graduating in January and May, 1943, on November 4 and 5, in Room 3205 East Engineering Building.,Ap- plication forms and descriptive ma- terial may be obtained in Room B-47 East Engineering Building. Interested students will please sign the inter- view schedule posted on the Aero- nautical Engineering Bulletin Board: Seniors in Mechanical, Industrial, Chemical, Metallurgical & Aeronau- tical Engineering: Mr. Stacy R. Black, of Thompson Aircraft Products Company, Cleve- land, will interview seniors of the above groups today. Interviews for Friday morning may be arranged in the Mechanical Engi- neering Department and for the aft- ernoon in the Chemical & Metallurgi- cal Engineering Department. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments has received notice of the fol- lowing Civil Service Examinations: Baltimore, Maryland-Statistician (open to State Roads Commission employes only); $3200; Oct. 31, 1942. City of Detroit: Technical Aid: Business Adminis- tration, Medical Science, Social Sci- ences, Public Administration, Psy- chology, Mathematics & Statistics; 20 to 30 age limit; male and female; $1716 per year; until further notice. Housing Manager (Male); Nov. 17, 1942; $2706 to $4800 per year. Jr. Engineering Aid (Male); until further notice; $1914 per year. Jr. Typist (Female); Nov. 2, 1942; $1320 per year. Boiler Operator (Low Pressure) (Male); Nov. 2, 1942; $1.00 to $1.05 per hr. Posting Machine Operator (Fe- male); Nov. 6, 1942; $1716 per year. Further information may be had from the notices which are on file in the office of the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9-12 and 2-4.1 Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information The Atlantic Refining Company representatives will be at the Bureau of Appointments on Monday and Tuesday, November 2 and 3, to inter- view the following: Chemical engineers and chemists. There are positions available for per- sons with bachelor's, master's or doc- tor's degrees. There are a few open- ings for Juniors also. Call Ext. 371 for appointments. Interviews will be scheduled at fif- teen-minute intervals. Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information 201 Mason Hall Academic Notices vember 3, and will be offered on a non-credit basis. A small fee will be charged which will be refunded upon completion of the course. Registra- tions are now being received at the University High School office. Shorthand, 2021 UHS, 1:00 TWThF. Typewriting, 2022 UHS, 4:00-5:30, TTh. Section 1 Typewriting, 2022 UHS, 4:00-5:30, WF. Section 2 (Fee for typewriting, $3.50; for typewriting and shorthand, $5.00) Doctoral Examination for Lloyd, Lyman Smith, Jr., Zoology; thesis: "A Fisheries Management Program for the Waters of the Huron Moun- tain Club," will be held today in 3089 Natural Science, at 1:00 p.m. Chair- man, C. L. Hubbs.I (Continued on Page 4) h Footbalt VIws with THOMAS MITCHELL EUGENE PALLETTE CESAR OMERO GAIL PATR-lC ' ROL AND YOUNG ELSA LANCHESTER GEORGE SANDERS JAMES GLEASON and THE HALL JOHNSON Ck otw Mvichigon vs.-Minnesota MATS. 25c EVES. 40C inc. tax 2 SERVICE BUY WAR BONDS! Devoted Exclusively to Your Enjoyment of Recorded Music * STROMBERG-CARLSON AND FREED-EISEMANN FM COMBINATIONS. * EXTENSIVE RECORD STOCK - SCORES - RECORD CABINETS- ALBUMS FOR LOOSE RECORDS - NEEDLES plug INTELLIGENT SERVICE 205 East Liberty Phone 3675 Operated by Musicians for Music-Lovers In Color "ROYAL ARABY" Also - "OUR LAST FRONT] ER" II WORLD SNEWS SLATER'S I q Coning Surnday! SONJA HENIE "ICELAND" i I 16 NEXT FRIDRY - 7 6 Watch for the Drop in: 1942-43 STUDENT DIRECTORY De f eise Slain p 3NIvN For light lunches served at-our fountain. For student supplies and magazines. For prescriptions and other necessities. At the Rexall Store on the campus. I I The Directory will go on sale at the Engineer- ing Arch and the middle of the Diagonal just as soon as we get it from the printers. All avail- 4 r3' . . .a' F -~ :: ; .. F1