F THE 'ICHIGAN IiYA___ _ MONDAYDEC 0, 1S45 , JOLLY GOODFELLOWS: Coercive Saleamanship /Irked Drives WOMEN' S NEWS BACK HOME IN INDIANA: Miliion-LeUer Business Comes Tt Swat ititis' Country Store (C tinii t Gill Pftge 1) able to play And the povertyhfvr pened senses of familie - were JI IrrId by people murmuring "The poOP things," as they handed them a big basket of food. The best thing to be done, the Bureau decided, was to let the par- and needed. The Daily, contacted ents buy what the children wanted by the Bureau, agreed, and volun- teered to sponsor a Goodfellow Drive and climax it by putting out a special paper on a night when they did not ordinarily work. This procedure has been followed ever since. Almost everyone from little boys up to President Ruthven has aided in the sale of the Goodfellow Dailies, wvih i ri have\' a bien;old for aiuilf-ienit. aftiYO i0 1iii it)H 1afEs ai hI n le+ varie d tremendously. Probably the most determined campaign took place in 1938, when the committee boasted of its lineup of "name" salesmen. Blocking olf every known entrance to the diagonal, such not- ables as Dean Bursley, Fielding Yost, T. Hawley Tapping, Prof. Lewis Vander Velde, Prof. Donal IHaines, and Prof. Roy Swinton made a formidable gauntlet. The engineering arch was guarded by four teachers standing shoulder to shoulder. And it is reported that President Rutliven stood right in front of the library, jovially threat- t I 4 i 7 f' Attention Goodfellow Salesmen: Here are your instructions for the Goodfellow Sale to- morrow: Goodfellow Dailies will be sold from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Those coeds who have signed to sell fron 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. should report to the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard, before 7:45 a.m. to pick up their supply of Goodfellow Dailies and buckets for coins. All other salesmen should report directly to their assigned posts promptly at their scheduled time. No salesman is to leave her post until someone comes to take her place. Materials are to be turned over to each succeeding salesman. The last sales- man leaving the post at .3 p.m. should bring her remaining papers and receipts to the Student Publications Bldg. Periodic collections of receipts will be made by the Good- fellow Committee. Paper stocks will also be replenished at that time. Any questions or difficulties should be reported immed- iately to the Goodfellow desk at the Daily, phone 2-3241. Goodfellow posts will be staffed North "U" Entrance of League: Al- by the following groups:p Engineering Arch: Oakwood House pha Gamma Delta Center of Diagonal: Stockwell Hall Corner North University and East North Entrance to Angell Hall: Vic- University: Alpha Epsilon Phi tor Vaughan Residence Angell Hall Steps: Alpha Phi Center of North University and Center of Law Quad: Sorisis State Street: Mosher Hall West Quad: Alpha Omicron Pi Alumni Memorial Hall: Adams Union Steps: Alpha Chi Omega House Lane Hall: Delta Delta Delta Front of WAB: Martha Cook Bldg. State and Liberty: Kappa Delta Hospital: Couzens Hall and Beal Behind Main Library: Chi Omega Residence Main and William: Sigma Delta Main Street and Washington: New- Tan berry Residence Main and Liberty (SW corner) : Main Street and Ann: Barbour Res- Zeta Tau Alpha idence Main and Liberty (NE corner): East Quadrangle: Jordan Hall Gamma Phi Beta In front of Arcade: Alpha Delta Pi North "U" and State: Alpha Delta enn nnswith rignij-i s i ! jdoioasi pated st c cefully duriig miainy drives, they were always supple- mented and usually supplanted by students who stayed at their posts despite freezing weather and pouring I rain. One year a salesman followed about by a gang of small boys summoned his executive ability and directed the erection of a large pile of snowballs. Thereafter the boys waited anxiously for someone to refuse to buy a paper. For many years the organization displaying the highest cooperative spirit was awarded a trophy, which, was won for the first three times by Senior Society. Peculiarly enough, there was no seventh annual drive, as an ap- parently un-mathematical Daily editor held a second sixth one. And this drive, in case you hadn't noticed, is the second tenth. The original idea of using the money to help people at Christmas time developed into an attempt to help people throughout the year. Ever since 1935 a substantial por- tion has been given to the Family Welfare Bureau, now known as the Ann Arbor Family and Children's Service. The rest of it has been shared by such .organizations as the Social Service Department of the University Hospital, the Goodwill Fund, and, since 1942, the Textbook Lending Library. The good it has done through these organizations is incalculable. Goodfellow money has been spent to buy glasses for students who needed but couldn't afford them; to give a student enough money to enable her to quit work until her broken leg had healed; to provide counseling and material aid for families which badly needed it. It has bought a dress for a little girl ashiaimed to apjea in a school pro- ;raa in her sh.abiby clothes; it has purichased hew shoes and rubbers for a child who constantly tried to hide his feet because of his worn- out sneakers. It gave self-respect to people spiritually broken by the trials of the depression. Perhaps the most unusual case in which it helped was that of Dr. Kath- erine Crawford. Dr. Crawford, the first woman Negro doctor to be graduated from the University, had been so defeated by prejudice and misfortune that in her eightieth year she was found living all alone in a miserable Ann Arbor flat. Out of her $30 a month income she had to pay $25 for her un- heated rooms. Furthermore she had difficulty in caring for herself because she had injured both ankles in a fall. Goodfellow money and help placed her in a home with friends, bought her special shoes so that she could walk without pain, bought her a radio, and did what it could to brighten her last years. In hundreds of ways the Goodfel- low Fund, to which you have just contributed, gives help to those who need it. ----Thanks, Goodfellow Pas-tors Need RVooms in City A plea for rooms for pastors who wish to attend the conference of the Michigan Council of Churches and Christian Education Jan. 21, 22, 23 has been issued by the University Ex- tension Service. Insufficient accommodations else- where make it imperative that 125 rooms in private homes be offered the pastors. Anyone who could give a room to a pastor during the three days should call 4121, extension 354. Tourmrey 'Co fhii While Michigan coeds will m 0uuiheI to play in WAA's intramural volley- ball tournament, it has been an- nounced that an even larger basket- ball tournament will get underway during the week of Dec. 31. All athletic managers have been re- quested to hold meetings for the pur- pose of deciding the number of teams they will enter and the time prefer- ence for each team. Since schedules for the tournament must be made before it commences, time preferences must be turned in by tomorrow. They may be placed in Barbara Osborne's box in the League, or managers may contact Jean Brown at 2-5618. Suomynona To Meet .*. . The second meeting of Suomynona, the organization of women living out- side of university residences, will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Hussey Rom of the League. The group will discuss plans for this year and will conclude the meet- ing with the singing of Michigan songs and Christmas carols. These Suomynona get-togethers are de- signed for the purpose of benefiting coeds who live independently with greater social and recreational con- tacts. /\NTs i t L'A v i Wti~ Chiii ever had. Postmaster Oscar Philips, who needs padding to look like the chil- dren's saint, says the postoffice in his little country store probably will handle more than a million letters and packages this month. A dozen extra helpers, mostly housewives, sort and postmark about 40,000 pieces of mail each day. The piles overflow onto the grocery shelves, but Phillips has moved the ketchup and crackers out of the way. The postmaster is a genial chap, even though his girth is a little dis- appointing, and he erjoys the holiday rush. So do the other residents of this 15-dwelling, southern Indiana hill town. The community lies outside the lush corn and hog belt of upper In- diana and extra incoimie resulting from its name is gratetully received. The memory of Jim Martin helps keep the Christmas spirit alive in Santa Claus. Martin was postmaster-merchant here for thirty years until his death in 1935. Letters addressed to Santa Claus in. childish scrawls, once routed to the dead letter office, were forwarded to Martin. He answered as nuir-v as i e coulild :Iud gult 1i s home chilsei li gut's wul imw it C]hristmas otherwise. The Santa Claus American Legion Post has taken over t.he task. With help from volunteers who believe in a Merry Christmas, it has answered some 25,000 letters this year. Legion- naire Jim Yellig went to Evansville this week-end to collect more money for the Post's stamp fund, and Evans- ville 40 & 8 chapter helped gather small change from Christmas shop- pers. to travel than the buying of a ticket. Have one who knows prepare your itin- erary for you. TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. 336 S. State Dial 4622 i, _ i READING FAVORIT ES for a ., \ & "7 IN APPRECIATION TO \\ z.\ j: /' /') " The White Tower, James Ramsey Ullman 3.00 "Not apt to be surpassed for authority mingled with thrills." Lovely Is the Lee, by Robert Gibbings 3.00 "By the author of Sweet Thames Run Softly and Coming Down the Wye." So Well Remembered, by James Hilton 2.50 "A plain man ... a remarkable woman and her sinister influence over three men ... clashing wills . . . a struggle for mastery." Any Number Can Play, by Edwar hleth 2.00 "This new Harper 'Find' is ther story of Charley King, profession bler." Silversides, by Robert Trumbull "A great submarine story of the just released from naval censors You and I, by Myron Brinig "A warm sincere novel of tw searching for each other and s Daisy Kenyon, by Elizabeth Janew "A unique 'historical' novel by th of The Walsh Girls." d Harris powerful nal gam- 2.50 e Pacific ship." 3.00 o people ecurity." ay 2.50 ze author / T /7 / 7, '7' 7 7/ '7, '/7 * /7 /7 '7' '7 /7 .7 7 '7 7~k * 7. ~ HE ANN ARBOR IMPLEMENT C 210 South First For Donating Sever t Street n Pails to the Drive. The Manatee, by Nancy Bruff 2.50 "A .lusty drama of vibrant love and cor- rosive hatred." Goodfel low WAHR'S BOOKSTORE 316 South State Street 7\N ............. i7; -.-;: :.4 W .