FAC-E t'V70 on la " I311CHIGAN DAILY 1 71M 7 MN DAT. Artur Rodzinski Will Conduct Here Sunday Cleveland Symphony Will Play in Third Choral Union Concert The Cleveland Symphony, directed by Dr. Artur Rodzinski, will present aj program of music by Beethoven, Tchaikowsky and Morton Gould in the third concert of the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p. m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium.{ Touring the country for its 24thI season, ninth under Dr. Rodzinski's direction, the Cleveland Orchestra is I noted for its policy of consistently; presenting the works of American composers in addition to works of classical composers. This policy is illustrated by the program. to be presented Sunday, which includes Morton Gould's "Spir ituals," designed for string choir and j orchestra._ The complete program of the Cleveland Symphony will be: "Sym phony No. 2 in D major, Op. 36" by Beethoven; Morton Gould's "Spir- uaas;" and "Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74, 'Pathetique' by Tchai- kowsky. Throughout its history only two conductors have been in charge of P the orchestra. Nikolai Sokoloff was sc the conductor from 1918 to 1933, p when Artur Rodzinski took over the fc position Leads in New War Drama v f BETTY ALICE BROWN JOHN BABINGTON "Sundown," the opening bill of Play Production- of the speech de- partumet, will be presented at 8:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn. A play which anticipates a better post-war society as a result of bitter sacrifice upon the youth of the country features Betty Alice Brown taking the part of Fay Gordon and John Babington portraying the role of Brad Sullins. "Sundown" was written by Prof. John L. Brumm, head of the department of journalism. Teachers' Colder at University Hi, The 7th annual Conference for Be- ginning Teachers which is sponsored by the School of Education will open at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the University High School. Each year this conference provides young men and women who have just begun to teach an opportunity to discuss problems of adjustment. Fac- ulty members of the education school and supervising teachers of the Uni- versity High School have planned a three-fold conference. Informal Meetings The first part consists of informal individual conferences arranged with specific members of the staff so that returning teachers may discuss spe- cial interests with them. The second part of the conference, is an Assembly for Student Teachers from 10 a. m. to 11:15 a. m. in the University High School auditorium. Ten speakers will discuss problems which have confronted thenm in their first few weeks of teaching. An open. discussion will follow these talks. Group Discussions, Group conferences make up the third part of the program. Three ses- sions to be held are: "Problems of Adjustment," Miss Odina Olson, chairman; "Curriculum and Instruc- tional Problems;" Katherine Hill, chairman: and "Problems of the Ele- mentary School Teacher," Edith Dow- ley, chairman. Resource leaders for these sessions ? _. w .. . . . rence to Open gh Tomorrow group; and Miss Margaret Kirkpat- rick for the third group. All leaders are members of the School of Educa- tion' faculty. Modern Trends Followed The purpose of the conference, in addition. to providing beginning teachers with information and prob- lem solutions, is to keep the education school in touch with the changing picture of Michigan schools and to provide the faculty with additional knowledge of the practical school situation throughout the state. The problems of adjustments which the conference will discuss include adaptation to the community and school situation. Classes which are particularly difficult to teach, espe- cially in crowded defense areas will be looked into, and personal problems will be related. Gargoyle to Feature Short Story Contest Two contests mark the beginning of a new fervor in Gargoyle work, as the magazine staff begins work on ,the December issue. The short story contest is again open to all young writers, with a $5 prize offered for the best 1,000-word offering. Stories must be submitted by the 16th of November. Editor Olga Gruhzit, '43, also an- nounces that the December "Photo of the Month" contest is open, and Sphinxes Tap Wrong Victim Stew Dinsmore, '42, and members of Sphinx, Junior Honorary Society, mixed blows in a tapping faux pas which took place very early Thurs- day morning. At 2:30 a. in., the rough, tough Sphinxes burst into the Sigma Phi house yelling loudly for Al Mactier, '44, whom they intended to tap. They noisily made their way to the second floor and to the closed bedroom at the end of the hall, where they were told Al was sleeping. The Sphinxes en- tered, and energetically began to tap the man in the lower bunk, without stopping to notice who he was. He was Stew Dinsmore, Al's room- mate, who awoke from a sound sleep to find himself being dragged from his bed and doused all over with cold beer, by a bunch of complete stran- gers. All the while, Al Mactier, the would-be tapped, lay in the upper bunk chuckling. Before the Sphinxes realized their mistake, Stew began to get peeved. He let fly a couple of hay- makers which would have floored the Sphinxes, en masse, if they had ever, connected. But when the Sphinxes saw Al in the upper bunk, they grabbed for him; and left Stew sitting on the floor, mad and beer-soaked. Stew thinks they should at least have apol- ogized. contributions should be brought to the Gargoyle office. The magazine will appear in early December. Lilex, 0 - Rev. JohnI rcf. Harold] ience depa roblem oft rum at 8:30 Dorr to Debate Second in Hillel Forum Today FRIDAY, MOVN 7, 1942 Competition for White Award to Begin Soon Chemical Engineers Will Receive Problem for Annual Contest Dr. Robert R. White of the depart- ment of chemical engineering an- nounced today that competition for the annual Alfred McClaren White award would begin soon. One hundred dollars will be given to the undergraduate chemical engi- neer in the country who presents the best solution to a practical problem designed by various groups in the chemical industry. Second apd third prizes of $50 and $25 will be awarded and in addition three prizes of . $10 each. The three best solutions sub- mitted by University engineers will be entered in the national competi- tion. The award was designed in 1932 to stimulate interest in practical engi- neering problems and was named in honor of Alfred McClaren White, formerly of the department of chem- ical engineering. In that year the national award was won by George K. Hickin of the University. The problem is to be completed, three weeks after it is presented by the department and the winning so- lution will be published in "Transac- tions of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers." Undergraduate chemical engineers interested in competing for the award are to contact Dr. White, room 2217, East Engineering Building. Dick Manning Will Head University Flying Club Dick Manning, '43E, was selected president of the University Flying Club at its recent meeting held for the purpose of electing officers for the coming year. Other students who were chosen to head the club were datherine But- man, '43Ed, vice-president; Kent Ar- nold, '43E, secretary; Jack Behler,, '43E, treasurer and Jim Plenge, '43E, flight'manager. MICH IGAN NOW SHOWING - THE HILARIOUS STAGE HIT AT LAST HITS THE SCREEN! M. Miles of Detroit andI M. Dorr of the political rtment will discuss theI the Second Front in aI p. m. today at the Hillel i i in that subject in the political science department. He has spoken at Hillel will be Wesley Darling, Miss Edith many times in the past. Hoyle, Miss Helen Ryder, and Miss The talks will be followed by an Hope Chipman for the first group; informal question and discussion peri- Francis D. Curtis, Marshall Byrne and dr "Tha .lir is inxioladthr ~c nrai -arcf% -non~ - viavxondto.o . ie puul is invited and the The orchestra came into being Foundation. is no admission charge. Refreshmen through the initiative of Mrs. Adelia Professor Dorr will take the position will be served. Prentiss Hughes, who had brought that a second front should be estab! Preceding the forum, conservati ,geveland's . interest in symphonic lished only when the military leaders religious service will be held startir ?.usic to a very high estate by pre- of the United Nations decide the op- promptly at 7:45 p. m. senting internationally famous or- chestras in some 150 concerts under portunity is at hand, while Rev. Miles the direction of such famous conduc- will speak on "The Second Front 4 anoe toSpeak tosas Dr. Karl Muck, Victor Her- Now." bert, Gustav Mahler, Richard Strauss, Rev. Miles received his A.B. at How- at T C £b t Leopold Stokowski and many others, ard University and his Doctor of Di- (11998i d e.H ua ;beitween 1901 and 1918. vinity degree at Yale. He taught social Remaining tickets are being sold at science at Taladega College, Tala- Largest Pledge Cvroup the University Musical Society offices dega, Alabama, and was for eight in -the Burton Memorial Tower. They years pastor of the Chattanooga Con- To Be lOIIOr.d NOv. 1 will also be sold at the box office in gregational Church in Chattanooga, T IDill Auditorium after 7 p.m. Sunday. Tennessee. The 1942 Interfraternity Coun Rev._Milesisconsideredanexpert Pledge Banquet will honor the large Rev. Miles is considered an expert War Bonds Issued Here! on Negro problems and is widely group of pledges in Michigan fr known around Detroit for his speech- ternity history, Richie Rawdon, IF 1 # es and his work on the subject, publicity director, announced ye ,, 0Professor Dorr is an expert on con- terday, at the same time revealii stitutional law and teaches a course that the ban uet date h b ire 1 viss ureiiat Haiyesj for the second .ts ive .ng i cil st a- 'C s- ng Continuous from 1 P.M. - NOW PLAYING - r Union Ticket Resale Desk to Open Today I The facilities of the football ticket resale desk will be available today from 3 to 5 p.m. and tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 2:15 p.m., according to Bunny.Crawford, '44, publicity direc- tor of the Michigan Union. The desk is located at the Travel Desk in the lobby of the Union. It ? operates for the purpose of aiding students and alumni in buying and selling tickets for Michigan's home football games. There are also regular tickets avail- able for sale provided by the ticket office., Since student tickets are non- transferable, only general admission tickets can be accepted for resale over the counter. No profit is real- ized by the Union in handling trans- actions, and all unsold tickets are returned to their owners. Success of the Resale Desk in the past has made it seldom necessary to return unsold tickets. Last season's operations boast a selling record of 98%, according to Crawford. All persons who have not completed their transactions with the Desk for the Illinois game are asked to con- tact the Resale Desk today or to- morrow at the times specified. APPLICATIONS DUE Applications for the 1942-43 Hillel Scholarship must be turned in at the Hillel Foundation today, Rabbi J. M. Cohen, director, announced. The scholarship, amounting to $150, is awarded annually by the Pisgah Auxiliary of B'nai B'rith to, some member of Hillel. LnLLe aqu et~ as seen seL as Nov. 10. The banquet will be held in the Michigan Union and the main pro- gram attraction will be a speech by Col. William A. Ganoe. As yet, how- ever, his topic has not been an-f nounced. Over 700 people are expected, Raw- don claimed, attendance being com- pulsory upon all fall pledges. Each house's pledge chairman and presi- dent is also expected to be present. General banquet chairman is Paul Wingate, Zeta Beta Tau member and IFC secretary. Bud Burgess, '44E, Theta Delta Chi," and Mark Hance, '44, Delta Tau Delta, are handling tickets and program arrangements, while Bud Brown, '44E, Zeta Beta Tau, and Jack Handley, '44. Phi Kap- pa Psi, are in charge of seating and the menu. Ralw don is publicity chairman. t roken Axis orces Fleeing (Continued from Page 1) what is left of them-were short of fuel, thanks to the steady rear-line battering of their supply depots by American and Allied airmen. (A Reu- ters dispatch said not a single Axis tanker had been able to cross the Mediterranean in the last six weeks.) There were also accumulating signs that the German African Corps, the backbcne of the Axis invasion, was outstepping its Italian counterpart in the flight. The advancing British dis- covered that Axis rear-guards were mostly Italians, that most of thej screen of rear guard weapons were of Italian make. Marshal Rommel, these dispatches indicated, clearly was trying to save his own tattered formations and leaving the Italians to fend for themselves in a "jack- rabbit war" where most commanders appeared to be left on their owln be- cause of demoralized communications and leadership. Von Stumme Killed The British announced yesterday that General Von Stumme, second in command to Rommel, had been killed. and that Gen. Ritter Von Thoma, third of the topflight Axis leaders, was in captivity. The tidal wave across the desert was triangular, most of the speed be- ing made along the Mediterranean coastal road. Far to the south, near the edge of the Qattara depression, isolated enemy groups were being mopped up with little trouble, dis- patches said. There was also a steady' eastward trickle of Axis prisoners which already has passed the 9,000 mark. Truce Called For Three days ago the Italians were reported to have asked for a truce to bury their dead. The advancing Brit- ish ignored this apparent "breather device" and pushed on ahead. Allied airmen reported desert roads and trails were packed tight with re- - ASME TRIP If members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers intend to go on the inspection trip through the Huron Forge and Machine Co.sof De- troit they must show their birth cer- tificates to Hugh Miller, '44E, today.j The trip, on Nov. 11, will includeI lectures and demonstrations on the forging of ordnance parts. FRIDAY, NOV. 6 VOL. LIII No. 29 All notices for the Daily Officjal 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 To the Members of the University CGncil: There will be a meeting of the University Council on Monday, November 9, at 4:15 p. m. in the treating Axis vehicles, and their bombs tore huge gap in these con- centrations. Fighter planes also strafed Axis troops scurrying away from the roads. *While al the Allied air forces spread continued destruction down the long, weaving lines of retreating motor convoys and armored vehicles, U.S. heavy bombers reached out to plaster Bengasi, Rommel's miain rear- ward supply port. They hit four ships for sure and probably a fifth, reducing by that much the German Marshal's chances of supplying his defense. In the air U.S. fighters got at least four more enemy planes during Wednesday's dogfights. No American plane was lost. (Axis high commands said their desert armies had fallen back to "new lines" or "prepared second positions." Rome, placing the fighting between El Alamein and Fuka, admitted: "Our losses have been severe.") Co vers on Qf xcursionShips Is Advocated GRAND RAPIDS, Nov. 5.-(R)-A resolution urging that excursion steamers now making weekly pleasure bruises on Lake Michigan and Lake Huron be converted to common car- resto transport tourists to resort centers in the state was passed by members of the West Michigan Tour- ist and Resort Association at their annual meeting here tonight. The resolution authorized appoint- ment of a 'three-man committee to discuss possibilities of the plan with operators of lake steamers and the director of defense transportation. Speeches and discussions at the meeting centered largely on the prob- lems created for the state's resort in- dustry by gasoline rationing and other wartime influences. Only optimistic note injected in the gloomy picture for 1943 was the as- sertion by Jacob Zweedyk, manager of the district Office of Price Admn- istration here, That numerical losses of tourists would be offset to some extent by the longer stays they will make at vacation spots. They're fHere! CARMELIZED --- - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Rackham Amphitheatre. All regular meetings of the University Council are open to the members of the Uni- versity Senate. If you wish to finance the purchase of a home, or if you'have purchased improved property on a land contract and owe a balance of approximately 60 per cent of the value of the prop- erty, the Investment Office, 100 South Wing of University Hall, would be glad to discuss financing through the medium of a first mortgage. Such financing may effect a substantial saving in interest. German Table for Faculty Members will meet Monday at 12:10 p. m. in the Founders' Room Michigan Union. Members of all departments are cor- dially invited. There will be a brief talk on "Japanische Namen" by Mr. Laporte. Choral Union Members: Members of the Choral Union, whose attend- ance records are clear, will please call for courtesy tickets, admitting to the Cleveland Symphony Orches- tra concert, today between the hours of 10 and 12, and 1 and 4, at the of- fices of the University Musical So- ciety, in Burton Memorial Tower. After 4 o'clock -today no courtesy tickets will be issued. Charles A. Sink, President, University Musical Society Faculty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The five-week freshman reports will be due Sat- urday, November 7, in the Academic Counselors' Office, 108 Mason Hall. Arthur Van Duren, Chairman, Academic Counselor Fraternity and Sorority Presidents are reminded that membersnip lists for the month of October are now due at the Office of the Dean of Stu- dents. Naval Reserve Class V-5, V-7 and Marine Corps Reserve: The recruit- ing board for these reserves will be on the campus November 10. Stu- dents interested in enlisting at that time must have all their papers ready for the board when it arrives. Instructions may be had at the In- formation Center, 1009 Angell Hall. Seniors in Aeronautical, Civil and Mechanical Engineering: Dr. Newman A. Hall of Vought-Sikorsky Aircraft (Continued on Page 4) .3A t fti - -LI r BRIAN AHERK "Neptune's Daughters" FightingSpirit South America World News - Coming Sunday - E RROL FLYN N "DESPERATE JOURNEY" CLASSIFIED ADVER TISING G[ORGE TOBIAS -ALLYN JOSLYN Mats. 25c CARTOON Eves. 40c inc. tax NEWS Sun., tSpringtine in the Rockies' - ---- M __ _ = --, I; III I ?: '4 . ; P i ., ' J '.: S. 3#$ ., :. j.. < '. ,r ... t ,. ? -.. k ? ? . 5 ' y ...., , 5, > ; , °.; F f 2 > r,% ; : t r .. v 2 f } /r 'd f f 7 i ' :r ' f ., .. .. } ? M {, S' 1 ? ._. .. .,:rvr. ... .. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two' days. (In- crease of 0c .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 Request Our Want-Ad Department will be happy to assist you in composing your ad. Stop at the Michigan Ddily Business Of- fice, 420 Maynard Street. PERSONALS } DRIVING TO MIAMI in mid-Novem- ber. Desire companion to do part driving. No. 208 Michigan Union. FOR SALE PERSONAL STATIONERY. - 100 sheets and envelopes, $1.00. Printed] with your name and address- The Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL-- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 712. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 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