SUNDAT, -AlArRM 2 1, - lt.k4l tr1p~irtrTN Ds-tiLy PAGE THREE DAILY ChwITC-TIA1 I TT.T.TIM A WOMAN'S TOUCH: Elbow Grease Converts Male Co-op Into Female Domain .A. A. J LN .. LA XA A..V SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 1943 VOL. LIII -No. 118 All notices for the Daily Offtcial 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- Notces Engineers - Special Assemblies: Engi- neering students wUl be excused from classes in order to attend special assein- blies In Room 348, West Engineering Building, as follows: Sophomores-Tuesday, March 23, 1 o'clock Juniors-Thursday, March 25, 1 o'clock Seniors-Wednesday. March.24. 1 o'clock Freshmen as usual-Wednesday, March 24, 10 and 2 o'clock. Assistant Dean A. H. Lovell, Credit for Men Entering Armed Serv- ices: -By action of the faculty of the College of Architecture and Design, stu- dents Jeaving for active duty with the armed forces will be granted general credit in proportion to the number of weeks of the term attended in courses elected, up to the time of withdrawal. Forms for students withdrawing will .be mailed to instructors in all courges, re.- questing an immediate report as to the student's attendance and tentative grade up to the time of withdrawal. Each stu- dent's case will be reviewed as to specific credit and grade in any given course at such time as the student may return to the University. Partial credit in specific courses is not being recorded at this time. Wells Bennett, Dean German Table for Faculty Members will ineet Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Found- ers' Room, Michigan Union. Members of all departments are cordially invited. There will be a brief talk on "Kriegsgase'" by Mr. R. H. Gillette. Seniors: May, 1943: College of L.S.A., Schools of Education, Music, and Public Health: Tentative lists of May, 1943, graduates have been posted in Room 4, U Hall. Please check the list, and notify counter clerk of any discrepancies. Assistant Registrar Robert L. Williams, Aeronautical, Civil, and Mechanical Engineering Seniors: Mr. Fletcher N. Platt, Design Engineer for Fleetwings In- corporated' of Bristol. Pennsylvania. will interview May hnd September graduates .n Monday afternoon, March 22, for posi- tions in aerodynamics, structures, draft- ing, and production engineering. Inter- views will be held in Room 3205 East Engineering Building. Interested seniors will please sign the interview schedule posted on the Aeronautical Engineering Bulletin Board, near Room B-47 East Engineering Building. A.d .. A. L LA1 Notice for Water Safety Instructors: Preliminary training for candidates for Water Safety Instructors certificates will begin Monday, March 22, at the Union Pool. Class will meet on Mondays and Wednesdays from 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. This preliminary training consists of 15 hours of work. Course is open to men and womn- -en. Those who are renewing their certifi- cates will begin their training April 19. Arrangements will be Made for any' stu- dent who .wishes late permission if she will contact Miss Betty Bandlow at Bar- bour Gymnasium. Women Students: Lieutenant Nina Mun- cie of the WAACs will be in the Armory on March 24, 26-and 27, and in the War' Information Center, Michigan League, ,March 25. The University Bureau of Appointments has received notice of the following: U.S. CIVIL SERVICE Analysts (Business & Industry); Until needs have been met; ,$2,000 to .$6,500 a year plus overtime. Aircraft Factory Inspectors (must pos- sess' a valid Aircr aft Mechanic's certifi- cate and an Aircraft Engine Mechanic's certificate); until needs have been met; $3,200 a year plus overtime. Agricultural Specialists; until needs have been met; $2,600 to $6,500 plus over- time. Social Scientists (Historical Specialist); the closing ,date previously announced has been extended. indefinitely; $2,600 to $6,500 -a year plus overtime. MICHIGAN CIVIL SERVICE Mighway Engineering Aide B; April 7, 1943; $125 to $145 per month. Highway Engineering Aide AI; April 7, 1943; .$145 to $165 per month. Further information -may .be had from the notices which are on file in the office of the Bureau of .Appointments, 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9-12 and 2-4. Bureau of Appointments and occupational Information Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Merle Curti, Professor of History, University of Wis- consin, will lecture on the subject, "The Impact of American Wars on Education", under the auspices -of he chool of Edu- cation, and the Department of History, on Thuray, March 25, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackhain Amphitheatre. The public is invited. University Lectures: A Symposium on Traumatic Vhodk will Ue conducted by Dr. Carl J. -Wiggers, Professor -of Physiol- ogy, MeIQ.al Sohool, Western Reserve Uni- versity; Dr. Roy D. McClure, Surgeon-in- Chief, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit; Dr. Frederick A. Coller, Chairman of the De- partanent of Surgery, University of Michi- gan; with Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, Chair- man of the Departmnt of Interal 4edi- cle, prehding; un er the auspices of the edica1 Schgol and of the Michigan Acad- (Continued on Page 4) By KATHIE SHARFMAN Wallpaper, paint, and elbow-grease -these were the ingredients which converted Rochdale, a large men's cooperative, into a strictly feminine house. The exodus of men from school for the armed services left the house last semester with hardly enough mem- bers to keep it going. So the girls' cooperatives, who had an excess of applicants, decided to take over. The women moved into Rochdale at the beginning of this semester, and in a few short weeks they have re- moved all signs of masuline occupa- tion. True to the spirit of cooperation 'each girl was alloted an equal share of work. During the weekends, work holidays were arranged with men and women from other cooperatives. At the work holidays house man- ager Elsie Litman, '43SM, apportion- Scabbard and Blade Closes 20-Year Orgaization Dissolves for War After twenty years at Michigan, the Scabbard and Blade last week halted activities on campus for the duration. Founded some forty years ago at the University of Wisconsin the Scab- bard and Blade, a national honorary military society, selects its members from the advanced course of the ROTC on a basis of high scholarship and efficiency in military work. Although officially suspended in accordance with the constitution of the organization, the company's high standards are being carried on by the men who are now in the armed forces of the United States. 83 WASN'T ENOUGH SEATTLE, March 20-(P)-Eighty- three times a civilian employee of the Sand Point Naval Air Station tested a parachute he had. designed, using dummies of his own weight. Then he decided to try it out in per- Son from 10,000 feet, taking along a regular 'chute as an emergency. Tonight the 13th Naval District staff headquarters reported that he was killed in a drop from a plane when both parachutes failed to open. ed about three hours work to each person, giving the heavier tasks to the men. After the assignments were completed, the men and girls relaxed and spent a pleasant evening dancing. The girls and men who have worked at Rochdale feel that they have accomplished a good deal more than merely the re-finishing of a house. Each person feels that he has participated in a democratic experi- ment. Many believe that in addition to having fun, they have become bet- ter adjusted to the war effort through, the experience of working as a uni- fied group toward a common goal. Girls' Co-ops To Be Featured in 'Post' A three-page pictorial survey of the girls' cooperatives at Michigan will be featured in a June issue of the Saturday Evening Post, John Mac- Kinnon '43 BA, ICC president, an- nounced yesterday. Photographer Serge Balkin of the Saturday Evening Post has been on OAQVIEI PREVIE F" WIS SAtI ht Michigan . . . At theState ... Based on James Hilton's best-sell- Hailed as the finest of Alfred Hitch- ing novel, "Random Harvest," open- cock's suspense-dramas, "Shadow of ing today at the Michigan, brings to a Doubt" opens at the State today. the screen a poignant tale of love Starring Joseph Cohen and Teresa entwined with the fate of a man try- Wright,the film deals with an aver- ing to find himself. age American town aud an average Starring Greer Garson, as a dance- American family. ma':king a depart- hall actress, and Ronald Colman, as ure from the usual Hitchcock plot. Charles Ranier. a millionaire British The story concerns a notorious industrialist. the plot deals with fugitive murderer who hides out in- Ranier's fight to recapture the lost cognito with digtant relatives totally period in his life during which he unaware of his criminal record. suffered from war shock. Miss Wright in the role of the Hailed by critics throughout the murderer's nice, turns in an excel- nation for its splendid characteriza- lent performance which contrasts tions, "Random Harvest" played for sharply in type with the previous over two months at the Radio City role she had playud in "Mrs. Miniver" music Hall. and "Pride of the Yankees". Cotten Featured in the fine supporting as the mysterious guest, is noted for cast are Philip Dorn as the doctor, his remarkable characterizations in Susan Peters, Henry Travers, and "Citizen Kane"' and "The Magnifi- Reginald Owen. cent Ambersoas". I1 MARSHALI L"S mw campus this weekend taking pictures which will be used in the article. Mr. Balkin has taken pictures which will best show the spirit of the cooperative movement. Activities photographed include an ICC "work holiday," the 15-minute morning clean-up, an exchange din- ner, morning exercises, an applicant's tea, and an ICC party. The pictures taken will show how 75 co-eds living in Katharine Picke- rell, Muriel Lester, Alice F. Palmer and Rochdale cooperatives have ad- justed their life in school with life in a nation at war. Welcomes the Men of the U. S. Armed Forces To Ann Arbor MhINE .SP.qAT 'SIZ E P An 3 IRONIZD : YEAST TABtLETS 7jf0 MARSH1ALL'S c UTIIIRATE 365 DAYS A YEAR 11 235 South State Next to State Theatre II TOT;7;/, 7,77r 4~A11I I (1 40 4 rpoT CONTRIBUTE $1,010.42; Girls Scrub for Bomber Fund ~la~uf~dd[~' 300K MATCHES nt~AK~ M~iifls\CARTON ADHESVE P.LASTER] KStYDS. 0 AU L By BETTY KOFFI5AN Dust rags, floor mops, and carpet sweepers have beenefficiently wield- ed -by Stockwell Hall's girls with the result that a grand total of $,010.42 has been added to the fund of the Bomber Scholarship. During the Fall Term, when help was difficult toobtain, the girls were without the aid of the dormitory's usual maid service, so they all pitched in and did their own work. And in- spection showed that the girls did a very good job of keeping their rooms in order. On the suggestion of the House Council, the money thus saved will be contributed to the Bomber Scholar- sbhi. Mrs. Ma.rtha Ray, Stockwell's 4o.use director, announced yesterday that the follpwing letter has bpeen re- ceived from Mr. Francis C. Shiel, Business Manager of Residence Xialls: "It gives me a great deal of pleasure t ipform yog, on behalf of the .Bar4 of Governors of Residence Halls, that financial recognition in the amount of $1,010.42 has been voted the res- idents of Stockwell Hall for house- keeping duties which they as- sumed during the Fall Term of the present University year. By your choice, this remuneration will be in the form of a check drawn in favor of the University of Michigan Bomber SEcholarship Fund, and will have attached to it a complete list of the residents of Stockwell Hall during the Fall Term, all of whom areto be considered as contributors to the. Fund. The Board wishes to express their appreciation for the patience and the cooperative spirit you have shown in assisting us vol- untarily during this emergency." "This proves that University girls. are not only capable of doing their own cleaning efficiently when it is necessary, but they are more than willing to contribute such services when they know it will help a worthy ,,cause," Mrs. Ray said. ,00 A A - -/ Be ready for them! Get your golfing needs eariy. Due to curtail- Ment of materials used in making golf equip- ment, our stock is limited. Get yours now. Com.- plete line. You'll save strokes with clubs and balls designed for the utnost in effectiveness. =iI couie and .et ALL THREE We Imow you are glad to hear that we are now Serving BREAKFAST prepared in the same p 1 ,\ HIEKLE 9c LAY.TW iLLMu, DT 90"u .01 M (. LUX O;ET I 9 s m CAE .(Limit 2) . . . * £ Ni~/~ otex orModess ef~nl SANITARY NAPKIN S C #air Box i-91' 94 Iz ZOR434 30c S1E "FAiM limit nJ), . 19C 9 76 KTEX,54i..189- 1Oc Sweetheart anD Soap 4 for 23c UPJN0 S R1USES NO 50c Phillip's Tooth eorr a 0' Paste 29c TE(BRS -39 TEK BRU-5"E S --- ----~~~WFRE i Check Your 11IAX FACTOR1'S Cosmetics at ,VXRSHALD V MARSRALvS SQU\1B5 PANCAKES -SOH S LIPSTICK CREAMS LLEOTESN Lipstick and Polish SI(VLO LIPSTICK REF ILLS GROVs C 'jITAML x\ t SHAITOAMINBi TALETS 'y'. I-11:50 x OL s TASTY SA 190 o/ Richest Mlteds .r-IISodm, -d-3 HISe T -IAS7" A' NDWrCHsS / I P ~ Bu, War Bonds'~ DROP IN AND PUTT-ER AROUND I a I