T ~, - -- iGA WE~NES)AY OVl. , 1942 4 - 4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Line Play May Feature Irish 1it 1 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1942, VOL. LIII No. 33 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 nxo- tices should be submitted by 11:30 a.m. Notices Student Tea: President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Observance of Armistice Day: By order of the Deans' Conference, classes, with the exception of! the clinics, will be dismissed between 10 and 12 this morning for the purpose, CLASSIFIED I 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.) 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. of celebrating Armistice Day. Those attending clinics who have present or past connection with the military' or naval services, or are members of Reserve Officers' Training Corps, should make individual arrangements to be excused from' clinic duties on this occasion. Offices, except those which are connected with clinical or similar services, will be closed for; the same period. 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 IDVERTISING LOST and FOUND LOST-Blue kid purse Saturday-re- ward. Call Nancy, 2-5579, contents valuable only to owner. LIGHT TAN TOP COAT. Lost Fri- day afternoon at Wolverine. Call 2-1941. Ask for Hank. LOST-Black Sheaffer pen, between Library and State Street. Inscrip- tion John Arnold. Call 2-4401. LOST: Brown leather brief case containing sheet music. Please call Don Johnson, 6738, immediately. Reward. WHITE GOLD Hamilton watch set with eight tiny diamonds, between Maynard side Betsy Barbour and Congregational Church. Phone 7922. Reward. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY-2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. WELP WANTED HELP WANTED: Two men students to work in evening or afternoon. Varsity Laundry, 300 S. Fifth. WANTED: Students-male or fe- male to assist night cook Saturday and Sunday nights, 8:30 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. 51 cents and 48 cents per hour. Apply Personnel Office, University Hospital. WANTED WILL PAY 50c for any Goodman record I don't possess-call 2-3179, Bill Harrelson. the medium of a first mortgage. Such financing may effect a substantial saving in interest. Foreign Journals on Microfilm: Fifteen hundred issues of about three hundred and fifty scientific and tech- nical journals are now available on microfilm in the General Library.- Most of this material was originally. published within the last year in Ger- many or in some part of occupied Europe. It is hoped that use will be made of it by members of University faculties and qualified graduate stu- dents. This microfilm is in charge of Miss Agnes Tysse in Graduate Reading Room Number 4 on the top floor of the General Library. Miss Tysse will answer reference questions and assist readers in using the reading machines in the microfilm room. In case it is necessary to use the film in other buildings it may be charged out by departmental and collegiate librari- ans and read in their libraries. A portable reader is available for this purpose. Lists of the periodicals avail- able may be seenin the General Li- brary and in Departmental and Col- legiate Libraries. Warner G. Rice, Director Bronson-Thomas Prize in German. Value $32.00. Open to all under- graduate students in German of dis- tinctly American training. Will be awarded on the results of a three- hour essay competition to be held in March, 1943 (exact date to be an- nounced two weeks in advance). The essay may be written in English or German. Each contestant will be free to choose his own subject from a list of 30 offered. Students who wish to compete must be taking a course in German (32 or above) at the time of the competition. They should register and obtain further details as soon as possible at the office of the German Department. 204 University Hall. Freshmen in the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts may ob- tain their five-week progress reports in the Academic Counselors' Office, Room 108 Mason Hall, from 8:30 to 12:00 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. ac- cording to the following schedule: Surnames beginning A through H. Wednesday, November 11. Surnames beginning I through O, Thursday, Nov. 12. Surnames beginning P through Z, Friday, Nov. 13. Any freshman who cannot meet his scheduled time may come in on Saturday morning. Arthur Van Duren, Chairman, Academic Counselors Seniors, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts, Schools of Edu- cation, Music, and Public Health: Tentative lists of February seniors including tentative candidates for the Certificate in Public Health Nursing have been posted on the bulletin board in Room 4, U. Hall. If your names does not appear, or, if includ- ed there, it is not correctly spelled. please notify the counter clerk. Robert L. Williams Engineering Freshmen: On Armis- tice Day, Nov. 11, the Freshman As- semblies will not be held. A. D. Moore, Head Mentor The University Bureau of Appoint- ments has received the contest rules for Vogue's 8th Yrix de Paris, and 5 Fashion F'ellowships offered by the (Continued on Page 4) I.IHIA Two of the nation's most elite for- ward walls will be pitted against each other at South Bend Saturday after- noon when the mighty Michigan Wol- verines clash with Notre Dame's Fighting Irish. An expected sell-out crowd of more than 50,000 fans will keep its eyes on the rich crop of Wolverine ball carri- ers and the flashy Irish backs, but those two great lines will gain their share of attention. Man for man. Notre Dame averages about six pounds more than Michigan. The Irish forward wall averages 198 pounds to 192 for Coach Fritz Crisler's "Seven Oak Posts." The Irish linemen are all at least six feet tall and a majority of them are playing their third year of ball. Dove Catches Themr Holding down the left flank is Bob Dove. 193-pound All-American, whc is 6 ft. 1'2 in. tall. Dov. caught 15 of Angelo Bertelli's aerials for 187 yard last season, and Coach Frank Leahy is quite aware that Michigan is weak on pass defense. Next in line is burly Lou Rymkus who spreads 218 pounds over his 6 ft. 4 in. frame, and is one of Leahy's most crushing blockers. A bum knee and thigh injury bothered Lou for the past two seasons but this season has been his best. Bob McBride alternated with Dove at left guard last year when Leahy had his All-American wingman flank- ing the pivot man. He's fast and pow- erful for his 6 ft. and 198 pounds. Switched from Tackle One of Notre Dame's outstanding All-American prospects is Wally Zi- c mba, center, considered one of the Midwest's most outstanding defensive stars. A tackle last year, Wally blocked three Trojan extra points last year in Notre Dame's 20-18 win over Southern California. He's 6 ft. 22 in. I tall and weighs 225 pounds. Harry (Horse) Wright, 6 ft., 190- pcunder, switched from quarterback las fllto right guard, and proved to Leahy that it was not a mistake. He is one of the team's best down field blockers and does the signal call- ing from his line post. Senior right tackle is Bob Neff' whose job is to fill the vacancy caused by Captain Paul Lillis' graduation. Once the team's biggest man at 230 pounds, Neff now weighs 185 on a 6 ft. frame. The seventh member of that tough Irish forward wall is Captain George Murphy, a slim 6 ft. flankman weigh- ing just 170 pounds. Murph is espe- cially adept at catching Bertelli's bullet-like aerials, a big factor in Notre Dame's success this season. Last year he caught 13 passes for 130 yards. Backing this elite line are at least MltI4ATOh U ti Player Pts. T. . White...................36 Kuzma..................24 Brieske ....................22 (19 pts. after touchdowns, 1 F.+ W iese ......................18 6 4 Strong Notre Dame Forward Wall Outweighs 'Oak Posts' Stenberg ... Madar ..... Robinson Chappuis Wardley ... Yaap ...... Pregulman. Total .... ...............' 12 .......... . .....12 . . .. . .. .. .. . . ... 6 .......... ..... . 6 ................ 6 ..6 6 G. 3, 2 2 s 1 1 1 1 .154 22 Starts Thursday - YARDS GAINED BY RUSHING LOUl RYMKUTS ... rugged tackle and a real bone- crusher, he is one of the biggest of Notre Dame's huge line and may give the Wolverines considerable trouble. Player Lund ..... Wardley ., Chappuis. Robinson. White .... Wiese .... Kuzma ... Player Chappuis Robinson Wise .... White ... ............29 ............15 ............48 if ... +.. -.. --.41 ............61 ............68 ............40 PASSING Tries ............50 ......... 29 .............15 .. .... .11 Maizea nd Blue Statistics 40.. SCORiG 140 70 217 184 263 236 131 Good 19 10 7 4 2 Tries Net Bears, Packers Meet CHICAGO, Nov. 10.- (A)- Once again it's the Chicago Bears vs. the Green Bay Packers in a down-the- stretch pro football thriller scheduled for Sunday. In the waning creeks of the Na- tional Football League campaign, they're the rivals in the only close race being staged in either division. - Last Times Today - ERROL FLYN N "DESPERATE JOURNEY" A/YA'If5"E57 ~frHSA'fv Av. 4.8 4.7 4.52 4.48 4.3 3.4 3.3 Net 233 134 112 61 29 Kuzma ..............10 PUNTING Player Trie Wise...............4 Wiese ...............15 Kuzma .............. 9 Robinson ............ 4 TOTALS FOR MICHIG OPPONENTS es Yds. Av. 160 40 529 35.5 310 34.4 106 26.5 GAN AND MISCELLANEOUS THESIS BI4DING-Mimeographing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. MAKE MONEY-ofn 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. FOR SALE PE SONAL STATIONERY. - 100 sheets and envelopes, $1.00. Printed with your name and address- The Craft Press, 305 Maynard St. Mich. First Downs.............104 First Downs (Rushing) ... 72 Net Gain (Rushing) . .,..1339 Net Gain (Passing)......591.... Passes Attempted ........118 Passes Completed ........ 43 Passes Intercepted ........9 Pass Interception Returns.169 Net Return of Kicks . . .744 Op. 68 36 642 .791 117 56 8' 72 586 --lso SCR EEN SNA PSHOTS CARTOON - NEWS .. .. E I * HARRY WRIGHT ... mastermind of the Irish, call- ing signals from the guard position, he also excells in downfield block- ing. 15 capable reserves as only Notre Dame can turn them out. And Wolve- rine fans know that Michigan is weak in this department. Ii ~ I, ART CINEMA LEAGUE PRESENTS ....... ..e... .. .1 ICORY t("LaNoche de Los Myas") Thurs., Fri., Sat., Nov. 12, 13, 14 Winner of the-First Prize Award of the Motion Picture Academy of the Mexican Governrment Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre I1l" V mt'k..F1 iAillJ £k13' L can and will be ours through efficient work such as the Michigan Manpower Corps is doing. KEEP IT UP! Irish Stress Passing SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. 10.-OP)- Notre DIame Coach Frank Leahy gave his football squad a look at Michigan plays in operation during dummy scrimmage today as Russell (Pete) Ashbaugh, junior right halfback, was hospitalized for treatment for a char- ley horse. Leahy said he thought Ashbaugh might be able to start against Michi- gan Saturday, however. Indicating concern about the bog- ging down of the Irish passing attack in the last two games, Leahy said that he wanted to stress aerial work this week. llini Lose Duffelmeier CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Nov. 10.- (IP)- Illinois' football team, already wea- kened by the loss of its star passer, Dick Good, received another jolt to- day with the announcement Art Duf- felmeier, a sophomore who had taken over the passing assignment, may not be available for the Ohio State game Saturday. Sailors Meet Camp Grant RObKFORD, Ill., Nov. 10.- (IP- Great Lakes' football team, which seems to have hit its stride in recent shutout victories over Missouri and Purdue, will oppose Camp Grant's warriors in an All-Service football feature tomorrow at Camp Grant, near here. III Box Office opens Wed., Nov. 11. 10 a.m. I Tickets 40c (tax included) 8U1 MORE WAR STAMPS AND BONDS New under-arm Cream Deodorant [~safely Stops Perspiration (f 1. Does not rot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 2. Nowaiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3days. Prevents odor. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 5. AwardA vv Arorval Seal of I f1