THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DEC, 5, 1943 .:..., I Lectures in Food Handling Th Be Given University and Ciy Cooperate o VAuate For Wartime I'a Two lectures on tle fundamental principles of food handling sponsored by the University Health Service and the Ann Arbor City Health Depart- ment, will be held at 8 p.r. Tuesday, Dec. 7 and 14, in the auditorium of the W. K. Kellogg Building. In keeping wit the wart ime streamlining of educaton, these lec- tures will include films and slides of importance to tw food handler. "The increased activitv in food handling and the corresponding shortage of food handlers hjis created a problem in public he' ih" Melborn Murphy, sanitary, chairman at Health Service, said. "Beuse of the war situation more peop re eatng out at soda fountains, restaur-ants and factory cafeterias I, h ever before. "Through inexpeienced help and sometimes neglect. dishes and glasses are often improperly washed and! food improperly cooked and handled! -all of which may lead to infection: and endangered public health," he! stated. Even in peacetime health officers found that maintenance of adequate standards in food sanitation requires constant supervision. But during wartime, intelligent cooperation be- tween proprietors, employees, health officials and the public is necessary. Murphy urged all persons concern- ed with food service and those who have not previously attended to come to these lectures. The public is also invited. -- Be A (oodfellow - faculty eta To BeGiwen Prof Joseph Brinkman pianist, and Arthur Hackett. tenor, of the School of Music, will be heard in the final program of the current series of faculty recitals at 4:15 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Professor Brinkman will open the program with a Beethoven sonata for piano .alone, whi'h will be followed by Beethoven's "An (ie ferne gelieb- te'," (To the diat loved one). This work, which will be heard for the first time in Ann Arbor, is believed to be the first song cycle ever written' and the model for those that follow- ed. 'Franck's Prelude, Chorale and Fugue will be presented by Mr. Brink- man, and the two soloists will close the program with a group of songs by Chausson. Shrapnel Wouded This Private in the Majkn Island Invasion National Rost4( riT' E~P A."ANTUAS: Surveys SkiIL- Of Students Questionaires Provide List of Specialists For W.M.C. Records To provide a complete list of per- sons with special skills who might be of use in the war effort, the National Roster has placed questionaires in most of the departmental offices to be filled out by students graduating within the next year. This National Roster of Scientific and Specialized Personnri is conduct- ing its annual survey of colleges and universities to record the training of students in a wide range of fields. The questionaires will be returned to the Roster, which is under the War Manpower Commission, and as the need arises for persons of J'11t- cular qualifications, the information will be furnished to the various agen- cies. Students who are within one year of receiving their degree in almost any branch of engineering and chem- ical sciences, as well as those in cer- tarn fields of the physical and social sciences are asked to register. Those taking graduate work in an even wider range of subjects, includ- ing' accounting, administration and managemient, agricultural and bio - logical sciences and languages, also come under the survey. Questionaires will not be given to students in the Army or Navy train- ing programs. Th blanks may be obtained from the departmental offices which come under the survey. -- Be A Goodfellow - e g C rio _I 3. a _i ..- - I h:,- chyi a f Habt L. _ . - _le a ll 'i) t. iii who . 101' i cc ~cigan~ dyigTGranttila ;U ii toinls repot, oilTt- (Xn 1'~y O 1101 It'01'S O" 1u- 'i.lai has nevr seen 2 PIICS ue tir fangs on hu- ~ u ~ les 2 crn un fred:, or uuy iaveneve bin me i su web. They ace hunting sp s 2a'.goafter prey at night. 0i An Army private, wounded in both eyes by shrapnel during the invasion of Makin Island in the Gilberts, Nov. 21, is assisted abroad a transport by two hospital corpsmen. This is one of several pictures of the Makin Island invasion, taken by Clarence Hamm, Associated Press photographer on assignment with the wartime still picture pool. GLEE CLUB JOINS CO. A FOR CONCERT: Coed, Soldier Choir To Sing Dec. 12 IrRnI! al Smoker SlecLed as the most valuable man to the University band for the past year, George W. Roberts of Pontiac wA ed amedal Friday at the an- ntial smoker of the band. Drummer in the band, Roberts is a N.R.O.T.C. senior and has played in the Navy-Marine organization and served as manager of the University band. A tradition was broken or a new one started at the smoker when anI 'M" blanket was presented to Lynn G. Stedman, Jr.. of Detroit. For three years Stedman has been the I drum major, tossing the baton over the goal posts at the fall games and helping plan the intricate maneuvers of the group. This is the first time that a drum major has been official- Iv recognized at a smoker. u'.c h:'hun oer bana plaons am' o t sleep b teen theclusters il t[!drg e day. they are comonly called banana spilers. Mst insct, ea t their food, bt ranua; just lick and suck the ll and ju They eat other in- 'li and occasion1ally small birds. <:t( as humming birds. "Tarantula iders are practicallyv blind and can- nt see thir food." states Mr. Baird. The' wouldn' know there was any d pre'nt if they diin't touch it. They swarm over the food. holdl it in place Cwith their fang's, and th1en tn with the spiders. r. Baird di no, feed them firom Sepembei through June. One of them weighedt six grains more in June than in September. "It may have had some water just before I weighed it. which would account for the dif- ference in weight." At the Swi~e .. Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins will be co-starred together for the first time since "The Old Maid" in "Old Acquaintance," the new film which opens at the State today. With theme similar to the last ye- hicle in which Miss Davis and Miss Hopkins performed together, the story deals with the hidden love of a woman of the world. "Old Acquain- tance" was directed by Vincent Sher- man. I One of the main features of the concert to be presented Sunday Dec. 12 in Hill Auditorium by the combin- ed choirs of the University Women's Glee Club and the soldier chorus of Co. A,.is the number of soloists who' will appear in the performance. The Glee Club will cont'ibute four girls with solo roles: Jackie Bear, Midge Gould, Charlotte McMullen and Harriet Pierson, while Co. A boasts three vocalists of noteworthy skill., Cpls. Arthur Flynn, Joseph Pro- t'cacino, and Allan Beach. The latter two both have solo parts in the feature number of the performance, "Dona Nobis Pacem" by Vaughan Williams, a tone poem based on the writing of Walt Whit- man. Cpl. Beach bias become familiar to Ann Arbor audiences the past year as the singing star of Co. A's musical "Nips in the Bud." He has also been one of the standbys of the chorus since its inception last spring. Starting his career when he wa l ayoung enough to sing in a bathtub Beach has followed an interesting x musical path. His many assignments have found him as a singing waiter. vocalizing for the Marines (he was a Leatherneck before entering the Ar- miy). at church functions and private parties, and conducting his own ra- dio program. He comes from Seattle and attended the University of Wash- ington. Teaming with Beach will be a 'young man from the other side of the nation, Cpl. Proccacino of New York'City. Proccacino also has been on intimate terms with music since 'his childhood, though his appren- ticeship has followed a more for- malized course than Beach's. Ile has studied under some of the bet- ter teachers and his repertoire in- cludes an imposing array of classic- I al, light classical and religious se- lections. His fluency in several tongues makes music of an opera- tic variety a rich and natural fieldI for him. The Soldier Choir itself represents over 20 college Glee Clubs, some of the noted undergraduate musical or-- ganizations in the country. The'thir-s ty-five members under direction of Wilson Sawyer have been practicing together for over seve months. Evangelist To Conclude Only one member of the course has engaged in professional choral work, Cpl. Ely Figundio, also of New Yoik, who has sung with Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians. The student director of the Choir, Cpl. Joseph Running, has also been undergraduate director of the famous St. Olaf College Cho.ir, as Well as instructor in Music at' Stanford University and assistant or- ganist of that school. ekvival Session Today The Rev. F. R. Dawson, evangelist from Seattle, Wash., will speak at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. today at the First Free Methodist Church to conclude a two weeks revival session. His topic will be "The Meaning of Perfect Love," and "Into the Night." Everyone is invited to attend. .i i Honorable mention was given to the following band members: Robert Commandy. Leon Diekpff. Paul Lid- diccat. John Shier. Robert Glickstein,j Anthony Desiderio. Caleb Warner, Alfred Leiman. TYPE WRITERtS Bought, rented, repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES STATIONERY . . . MOIrRILL '114 S. State Street Phone 6615 7 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ____.. ,s ' G!deyL CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request LOST and FOUND LOST-One delapidated rust-colored bicycle; red front tire, black back tire, from Natural Science at first of term. Reward. Call Barb Smith, 21454. FOUND: Grey rabbit fur mitten. Am interested in meeting owner. Will she please call Norman Nitschke at 2-3779. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING: thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S State. HIGHEST CASH PRICE paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claud Brown, 512 S. Main Street, FOR SALE TUXEDO-Size 40. Perfect condi- tion. Including all accessories, $20. Phone 3064. Mr. Sheon. FOR SALE-Brown moten lamb fur coat, muff, and hat to match. Like new. Size 14-16. Call 4917. Audrey Weston. FOR SALE: One suit men's dress tails, size 38, excellent condition. Reasonable. Phone 2-4258 eve- nings. FOR 'SALE-1941 Standard Upright Royal typewriter. Latest pre-war model. Slightly used. Perfect con- dition. 1011 E. University. Phone 3504. 11 _1 '#"' If she loves quaint things;;: the romance of yesterday brought up to date:: she will adore this fragrance inspired by an Empire flower fantasy in crystal. The spirit of a thousand flowers 3: . it captivates with its elusive charm. Purse size flacon of Mille Fleurs in a gift box (use it Iater for jewelry) ; t ; , 5.00 Milre Flurs Dustin' Powder ond Eau de Toilette in a satin gift box (use it later for gloves o' handkerchiefs) frcx A romance such as Bette and Bette alone could portray so brilliantly -the story of the hidden love of a woman of the world. ;GOY OUNG excitingiy reunited with her rva o 'The Old Maid', Every man will wonder if such a love is possible Every woman will know at once it's true! JD LD ES M R IAN DIR ECTED BY VINCENT SHERMAN I I I Ha;lf tlhejob- of Christmas is raking other people happy. Make a list of till hose, ' jon want to remrrember on hdis oyous I I . E I ,I I