T~l MCHIANDA ILY I wolow 3,087 Yanks Are Prisoners WASHINGTON, Jan. 16.-(IP)-The War Department reported today an additional 141 Americans held as prisoners of war or interned in neu- tral countries, bringing to 3,087 the number of prisoners reported to date. The group includes 117 menbers of the Army, among whom are 25 offi- cers and enlisted men imprisoned in Germany, one officer and one enlisted Ian held in Italy, dnd 15 officers andl 5 enlisted men interned in Spain. The list also includes 24 men of the Merchant Marine, of whom eig4t are in Germany and 16 in China. ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY FOR COEDS: Military Map Making Course Open to 'Women Next Semester The preparatory non-credit course in ilitary map making announced by the College of Engineering will be offered next semester for senior and graduate women, Prof. R. H. Sher- lock, head of the Engineering Science and Management War Training pro- gram here, reported yesterday.. Military maps especially designed for each branch of the armed forces are vita( for victory. A single pilot requires up to a dozen maps for the effective planning and execution of CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING w. - y _:. r ! In Mr rlrll _ _ r r r wr rra .. .. ...., f .. .. CLASSIFIED RAE 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 ANNOUNCEMENT SECOND SEMESTER Public Evening School begins Monday, January 18, at Ann Arbor High school. Busg- ness, cooking, sewing, Americaniza- tion, music, red cross, language, mathematics, arts, crafts, dramat- ics and recreation courses offered. A small fee will be charged for some courses. For further infor- mation call 5797. TYPING MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. ALTERATIONS STOCKWELL & MOSHER-JORDAN residents-Alternstions on women's garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone'2-2678. MISCELLANEOUS f MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308' . State. MAKE MONEY-on your used cloth- ing by phoning Claude H. Brown, 2-2736, 512 S. Main. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. FOR SALE IDENTIFICATION PHOTOGRAPHS -Any size. For 1-day service come to 802 Packard. 6-7:30 weekdays. LOST and FOUND LOST: Psychology Lecture Notebook in Business Office, Room 1, Univer- sity Hall. John Bauckham. Call 24591. FOUND: a fine lady's wristwatch on South University Monday night. Call Chuck Haugley. Phone 24609 & identify. TYPEWRITERS-All makes bought, rented, repaired. O. 1. Morrill, 314 S. State St., phone 6615. WASHED SAND AND GRAVEI- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112. PIANO INSTRUCTION , by Edith Koon, formerly on the staff of the University Music School. Telephone 2-3354. HELP WANTED WANTED-Boy to work one hour a day. for room. Call after 12. Phone 4489. FIRST TENOR wanted for male quartette. For information phone 6328 or call at 312 S. Division. COLLEGE or high school students to deliver Michigan Dailies. Good sal-' * ary. Call 2-3241, ask for. Mrs. Mosher. HELP WANTED-Male or female; two meals for 24 hours, no Sun- days or holidays; Lantern Shop, 6282. one bombing mission. His navigation charts of large areas must be supple- mented by approach charts, showing the critical territory' ona larger scale, and by detailed target charts of the immediate area of his objective. A map which is not up to date will cause loss of life and equipment and may even bring about defeat. Great numbers of maps of critical areas, some of which have never been map- ped for military purposes are urgent- ly needed. Needless to say it .is wo- men who must undertake this work now. A part of the ESMDT program sponsored by the U.S. Office of Edu- cation, the course here involves 60 hours of lecture and laboratory work, four hours a week. Map draftsman- ship, planimetric and topographic mapping, map series, aeronautical charts and photo mapping in two dimensions will be included. There is no tuition for the course. Mathe- matics and sciences are helpful back- ground, but not prerequisites. Those successfully completing the course and possessing a four .yea'r bachelor's degree by June, 1943, will qualify under Federal Civil Service as Engineering Aides at $1800 a year, and with excellent opportunities for advancement. Application for admission should be made through Professor Sherlock, or Prof. R. L. Morrison, of the high- way engineering departnient. Further information may be ob- tained at 301 West Engineering Building. Roth Quartet to Play here String Ensemble Will Give Annual Festival Returning to Ann Arbor for the third year, the Roth String Quartet will present its Annual Music Festi- val, Friday and Saturday, Jan. 22 ind 23, in the Main Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. Three concerts will be played by the Quartet, the first at 8:30 p.m. Friday. The Quartet will appear again at 2:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Saturday. Organized in 1922 by its first violin- ist and leader, Feri Roth, the Quartet first came to the United States in 1928. It has since toured the country annually. The Roth ensemble has become known as the "festival quartet" from its practice of performing concerts of 'two or three days' duration, usually in college towns. They have' per- formed frequently over.national radic hook-ups and have made many pho- nograph recordings. The repertory of the ensemble in- cludes the works of both classica masters and contemporary composers with the result, according to the Col- umnbia Masterworks Records Catalog "that .concerts by the Roth Quarte are marked not only by' the beauty their playing, but by the virtual ex citement of the 'program bala ce Post-War Chinese Problems Discussd "After the war, China should be come an industrial rather than a raw material country," Prof. Arthur Smi thies of the economicc departmen said yesterday in the first of a serie of lectures on the economic problem of China. The lecture, held at 5 p.mz in the East Lecture Room of' th Rackham Building, was sponsored b the Michigan Chinese Economic Soci ety. "The inapplicability of the free trade theory to the eastern countrie does not mean the blockade or isola tionism of the far eastern countries On the contrary, sincere cooperatio between the eastern and wester countries is absolutely necessary t maintain a permanent peace in th post-war world," Prof. Smithies saic Additional lectures on the economi problems of China will be given in th near future. Brush Exhibit Depicts Africa Reischer Collectimi to Open at Rackham North Africa, one of the most wide- ly discussed parts ofthe world today, will be the subject of an exhibition of water colors painted by Mrs. Alice Reischer, which the Horace H. Rack-I ham School of Graduate Studies will! present at the Rackham Building be- ginning Jan. 21. The exhibition will open at 7 p.m. Wednesday and will continue for two weeks. The Rackham galleries on the mezzanine in the Rackham Building, where the paintings will be presented, will be open from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 19 p.m. every day during the two weeks. Mrs. Reischer, a Vienna-born pain- ter, who has been a resident of Ann Arbor for the last few years, spent some months in Tunisia studying the costumes and habits of the native population. In her paintings she has, tried to show these peoole in their everyday occupations. Mrs. Reischer had to paint without being noticed by her subjects, for, due to their super- stitions, they were afraid the images might be used to cast spells upon them. To the collection of water col- ors done in North Africa Mrs. Reisch- er has added her paintingh of Medi- terranean and South European life. KATE SMITH 'IMPROVING' NEW YORK, Jan. 6.- OP)- The ,condition of Kate Smith, 33-year-old radio star who suffered a gall bladder attack a week ago yesterday, was de- scribed as "improving" today by the office of Ted Collins, her manager. New State Troop Head City Tin Drive Nets 25 Tons Ann Arbor's first city-wide tin sal- vage drive Thursday netted twenty- five tons of scrapped tin cans, City Engineer George H. Sandenburgh an- nounced yesterday. Eighteen tons of flattened tin cans were loaded on a special freight car for immediate shipment to smelters, Sandenburgh said. The one-day col- lection, first general pickup since the beginning of the war, failed to meet a quota of 30 tons. Ten trucks and 23 men worked all day to collect the tin cans which city residents pressed and placed in-boxes in front of their homes. Although the engineer's office could not estimate contributions from dormitories and fraternities, they said the southeast district of the city had highest per-house contri- butions. Out-city residents contributed a good amount of tin, officials said, and one Ann Arbor manufacturer sub- mitted two tons of cans. Brig. Gen. Thomas Colladay, of Flint, who commanded the 63rd Brigade of the famous Red Arrow Division in training in Louisiana in 1940, has been named by Governor Kelly as commanding officer of the Michigan State troeps, subordinate only to the governor himself. Known affectionately to his su- bordinates as the "Old Man," Col- laday was head of the brigade when it shared in citation from Mac- Arthur for its action overseas. ON BOY SCOUT COUNCIL Registrar Ira M. Smith was elected President this week of the Washten- aw - Livingston County Boy Scout Council. Fielding H. Yost is new com- missioner for the district. ROTH STRING QUARTET FOUR DISTINGUISHED ARTISTS IN THREE PROGRAWS FERI ROTH, Violin SAMUEL SIEGEL, Violin JULI US SHA IER, Viola OLIVER EDEL, 'Cello Fire Razes Interior of Local Grocery Fire gutted the interior of Jack's Grocery on South University Avenue yesterday morning, destroying $6,000 worth of stock and equipment. The blaze which Fire Chief Benja- min Zahn blamed on a defective re- frigerator unit in the building's base- ment burned through to the first floor before firemen were able to control it early yesterday morning. Shielded by a heavy iron door in the basement, it probably smouldered half the night Zahn said. He esti- mated damage to the building itself to be $1,500. The store is owned by Lieut. Jack Dulgeroff, former University law stu- dent now with the Army in California. An adjacent barber shop and radio shop were damaged from water and smoke, firemen said. An electrician had checked the faulty refrigerator unit the day be- fore the fire according to Zahn. MQ'/I PRE/IEW THIRD ANNUAL CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL LECTURE HAILL-RACKHAM BUILDING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JAN. 22-23 PROGRAMS Friday Evening at 8:30: Quartet 'li D major, Op. 76, No. 5 .. .......Haydn Quartet in D-flat major, No. 2..........ohnanyi Quartet in F minor, Op. 95.............Beethoven At the State .. . Centering about the adventures and romances of a genius who differs from ordinary men, "The Moon and Sixpence" starring. George Sanders and Herbert Marshall opens today at the Statg Theatre. Based on the Somerset Maugham novel, the story concerns a wealthy banker, Charles Strickland, played by George Sanders, who walks out on his family and society to become an artist. Herbert Marshall, playing the role of a successful novelist, is in- duced to search for him, finding him .in a shabby Parisian garret. Strickland's search for inspiration leads him to Tahiti, where he finds it-plus complications.. The supporting cast includes Doris Dudley, Elena Verdugo, Albert Bas- serman and Eric Blore. At the Michigan ... Jack Benny and Ann Sheridan head the cast of the comedy hit "George Washington Slept Here" opening today at the Michigan. Taken from the Broadway success by Kaufman and Hart, the tale is that of a city-bred husband whose antique-hunting wife buys a pile of ruins whe'e George Washington is purported to have slept. The house proves to be a veritable, gargantua, for it swallows the re- pairs without showing signs of im- provement. The situation is not im- proved by the turning up of a rich uncle, and a mortgage. Rommie, the dog, comes to the rescue and the old homestead, such as it is, is saved. Included in the supporting cast are Hattie McDaniel, William Tracy, Joyce Reynolds and others. I Saturday Quartet Quartet Quartet Saturday Quarteti Quartet Afternoon at 2:30: in D major, No. 2 ..................Borodin No. 4.....................Quincy Porter in B-flat major...................Mozart Evening at 8:30: in F major, Op. 18, No. 1 .........Beethoven in C major, Op. 49............Shostakovich in F major .......................Dvorak Season tickets, tax incl (three concerts) $1 .10-$2.20-$2.75 Single concerts, tax included, 55c-$1.10 On sale at Offices of University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan ".i. ART CINEMA LEAGUE presents STARTING TODAY! SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Attend Matinees for early seats - . HAROLD LLOYD in. ",TH pFRESHMAN" Plus Five Shorts 'I Also PARAMOUNT NEWS ODDITY t i Ill Sunday, Jan. 17 - 7 and 9 P.M. Lydi MENDELSSOHN Theatre Box Office Opens TICKETS - 40c 2 P.M. Sunday (including tax) I IMPQRTA4T BEST SELLERS THE SONG OF ERNADETT E Franz Werfel $3 THE PRODIGAL WOMEN Nancy Hale $3 I SEE HERE, PRIVATE HARGROVE Marion Hargrove $2 THEY WERE EXPENDABLE W. L. White $2 Marshalls For Latest Shades in NAIL POLISHES'and LIPSTICKS Max Factor Pancake Make-up and Lipsticks VAN LOON'S LIVES Hendrik Wilhelm Vary Loon REPORT FROM TOKYO Joseph C. Grew $1 $3.95 LEE'S LIEUTENANTS Douglas S. Freeman $5 0 LAST TRAIN FROM BERLIN Nr-nrI 1< Smith S2.75 DENTAL AID Tooth Powder -" - . rII I I. I I i I M. > .. .__ u ._ .. E. a.