PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY NOVEIMBER 8, .1945 PAGE TWO ThURSDAY, NOVEMBER. 8, 194~i Chinese Communists Capture Two Generals As Undeclared Civil War Continues Government Armies Retreat To South By The Associated Press CHVNGKING, Thursday, Nov. 8-Chinese Communists have captured two Central Government Army .Commanders-one reportedly committed suicide-in Southern Hopeh province and forced the government armies to retreat, a military spokesman acknowledged today. The scene of this reversal in China's undeclared civil war is the same one where the Communists claim they have routed 70,000 government troops. The spokesman said one of the captured generals was Ma Fah Wu, Commander of the 41st Army. He is understood to have committed suicide. *The other was Kao Shu Hsun, Com- - Cleveland Orchestra To Present Concert Sunday Exchange Sales Approach Final $1,000 Total President Attributes Success To Students Having completed a season de- scribed as "more successful than we thought probable or possible" by Pres- ident Wayne Saari, the store of the Student Book Exchange at the Game Room of the League closed yesterday. The final tabulation of sales has not been completed, but John Hou- ston, store manager, expects the sales total to approach 1,000 dollars. Mem- bers of the Exchange attribute this success to the cooperation of students in dealing with the organization in buying and selling used texts. Besides general campus coopera- tion, the Exchange success depends directly on the contributions of work made by more than 50 students who helped at the store, in preparing pub- licity and in collecting books. Saari points out that the cooperation of the student officers and staffs of the Union and League are also responsi- ble to a great measure for the suc- cess. A general membership meeting of the Exchange will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Rm. 302 of the Union. Reports on the activities of the Ex- change since it opened October 29 will be made and plans for future functioning discussed. Game Progress To Be Recorded At Grid Shuffle The Grid Graph, designed to let stay-at-home fans follow visually the progress of the Michigan-Navy game at Baltimore, will be prominently featured at the Grid Shuffle, first campus mixer of the term from 2 to 5 p. m. Saturday in the Rainbow Room of the Union. Crossed by 11 lines to indicate yard markers on the gridiron, the pro- gress of the ball toward the opos- ing goal will be marked by colored chalk, yellow for the Wolverines and blue for the Middies. Each play will be recorded, as well as a notation of the down and the time left to play in the quarter. The board will be wiped clean at the beginning of each quarter. As they note the score of the game, students will be dancing to the music of popular phonograph records over the ballroom's public address system. Various mixing stunts and circle dances will be initiated throughout the afternoon. "Thetsuccess of Grid Shuffles last season indicates that there should be a capacity crowd in the ballroom Sat- urday. We can confidently promise a fullyafternoon's entertainment for everyone," John Sorice, head of the Union Campus Affairs Committee and director of the Saturday mixer de- clared yesterday. Spectators may come with or without dates and there is no admission charge. The radio report of the game will not interfere with the music for the dancers, as the scorekeeper will keep posted through earphones. Whenever either team reaches scoring territory, however, the radio will be turned up so that all the fans can receive the first-hand account. mander of the Eighth Army. The spokesman said the 8th and 41st armies, attacked north of Tzehsien in Hopeh by several tens of thousands of Communists, were "taken unawares and were unable to concentrate in time to ward off the assault." He said their commanders were captured the night of Oct. 30 at dif- ferent points and their armies subse- quently withdrew southward to await orders from Chungking. The dispatch said about 30,000 Communists are concentrated at Tsaochow in Western Shantung pro- vince, preparing to attack the Lund- Hai railroad. Intensified fighting flared on sev- eral fronts and both Chinese and for- eign quarters in Chungking agreed that the situation is nearly beyond repair and full-scale war is almost inevitable. The Communists claimed that under able Gen. Ho Lung, the Com- munists drew their fiery siege ring tighter around Kweisui, capital of Inner-Mongolian Suiyuan Province. Other Red forces battled for the be- sieged rail junction of Tataung to the east and prepared to assault Pao- tow to the west. Appearing for the fifth consecutive year, the Cleveland orchestra, con- ducted by Erich Leinsdorf, will pre- sent the second Choral Union concert, at 7 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Erich Leinsdorf, returning to the Podium after a year in service, has established himself among the fore- mest younger conductors of America. He has appeared as guest conductor in Germany Italy, Canada, Cuba and in many American cities. Now in its twenty-eighth season, the orchestra was first conducted by Nikolai Soko- loff and later by Artur Rodzinski. Winter Concerts Numerous During its winter season, the or- chestra presents nearly fifty con- certs in addition to its forty regular subscription concerts in Cleveland, twilight concerts, ballet performances, civic concerts and radio concerts. The Cleveland Orchestra is one of the few symphony organizations to own the hall in which it plays. 8ev- erance Hall, its home, the gift of the noted philanthropist, John Long Sev- erance, was first opened to the public on Feb. 5, 1931. Broadcast to World The Sunday night program will be highlighted by the orchestra's per- formance of the Bruckner "Sym- phony No. 7 in E major." Ravel's "Bo- elro" and the suite from the ballet, "Appalachian Spring" by Copland complete the program. Two years ago the Cleveland Or- chestra added a series of nineteen world broadcasts toits activities, Soviet Construction Shown at Rackham "Building in the Soviet Republic" is the subject of the architectural ex- hibit being shown by the School of Architecture and Design from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m., today through Nov. 18 in the Rackham Galleries. The exhibition, consisting of some 200 photographs, maps, charts and panels of texts, covers the major de- velopments of Russian architectural history form the earliest pre-iedieval days to World War II. DOOLITTLE FLIERS ASHES-Two military policemen (L-R), Pfc. William Richardson, Lexington, Ky., and Cpl. Paul Wardzale, Chicago, Ill., stand guard over 40 boxes containing ashes of American prisoners of war, including those of three Doolittle raid fliers executed by the Japs in Shanghai. These ashes are in a Shanghai funeral home operated by Americans before the war. COLLEGE DAYS, 1843: Exhibit Shows Change in Life Of Students Through the Years HIIGHLIGHTS ON CAMPUS 9' 1 Forestry Club To Meet The Forestry Club will hold its first meeting of the semester at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 2039 Natural Science Building. Frederick L. Hopkins, president of the organization, announced that a nominating committee would be ap- pointed to draw up a slate of officers, and that plans for the year would be made. * * * , Esperanto Classes Begin Students will have the opportunity to study Esperanto, international auxiliary language, at the Ann Arbor Secretarial School, 330 S. State, Nich- els Arcade. The first class is to be held at 8 p. m. November 7. Dr. Hirsch Hootkins will be the instruct- or, and no tuition will be charged. Alpha Phi Omega To Meet Alpha Phi Omega, campus service fraternity, will hold its, first meeting of the semester at 7:30 p. m. today in the Union. All members and former fraternity members from other colleges are re- quested to attend the meeting to plan future activities. Among the past projects directed by the frater- nity were the V-E Dance, War Bond sales and War Chest drives. * * * Sphinx To Elect Officers There will be a tmeeting of the Sphinx at 7:15 p. m. today in the stu- dent offices of the Union at which new officers will be elected. Foreign Students' Reception Planned Plas are being formed for the An- nual Foreign Students Assembly and Reception to be held Nov. 14 in the Rackham Building. Arrangements have been completed to have President Alexander G. Ruth- ven as one guest speaker at the As- sembly in the amphi-theater. More complete details will be an- nounced later in the Daily. Reminders of the years when the University advertised that room, board, lights and fuel" could be ob- tained by students for "$1.50 to $2.00 a week," and when the way to decor- ate a room was to pin as many pic- tures as possible on a fishnet spread over one wall, are now on exhibition in the office of the Michigan Histori- cal Collection, 160 Rackham Building. Tickets for Sousa In an attempt to present the pic- ture of "Freshman Days-1843 to 1945," the glass cases have been filled with such materials as a ticket for "Sousa and his Band" and pictures of students' rooms at the turn of the century. Believing that letters from students tell many things about University life that might otherwise not be known, Miss Dorothy King, assistant curator, has included in the exhibit a yellowed letter written by a boy to his parents in 1875 telling, among other things, of a "great baseball game" played with Kalamazoo. Changes Shown Side by side are the first edition of The Daily and this year's freshman supplement, emphasizing the changes Native Lands Topic of Talks Latin Americans Visit Michigan Communities Under the sponsorship of the Uni- versity Extension Service, cooperat- ing with the Office of Inter-American Affairs at Washington, groups of Latin-American students from this University have been traveling to communities in the LoweraPeninsula to lectur about their native countries. During the period between semes- ters groups of foreign students vis- ited Jackson, Kalamazoo, Hillsdale College and Hope College in Holland. They spoke to high schools and serv- ice clubs, Spanish classes and clubs as well as the college assemblies. They exhibited films on Latin America in each community, and pamphlet ma- terial provided by the Office of Inter- American Affairs. These lecture groups are being sent as part of a program "promoting un- derstanding of and good-will toward the countries of Central and South America." It is hoped that the Latin American project can be continued later in the semester. which have been made in the paper since a front page article urged every 1890 rugby player to "put his foot in the ball." In another case, next to an 1843 catalogue and 1856 admittance records, is a notebook containing clippings on the then weighty subject of women entering the University, compiled by George Willard, regent from 1864 to 1874. These and other similar objects may be seen daily from 8 to 12 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. throughout the month of November. Kala To Speak Nov.15 at First Of TU' Lectures Dr. Maximo M. Kalaw, Secretary of Public Instruction and Information in the cabinet of President Osmena, will open the 1945-46 University lec- ture series Nov. 15 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Dr. Kalaw, exchange professor of political science here in 1931, will speak about "The Philippines under Japanese Rule." Before the war he was dean of the College of Literature and the Arts at the University of the Philippines. Kazakevich To Talk Other lecturers on the tentative program are Vladimir D. Kazakevich, whose subject Nov. 16 will be "Rus- sia's Economy and Postwar Recon- struction;" Newton B. Drury, direc- tor of National Parks; Joseph Hud- not, dean of the architecture school at Harvard; Prof. Van Rensselaer Lee of Smith College; and Dr. M. S. Di- mand of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Kazakevich, one of the principal lecturers for the Committee on Edu- cation of the National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, Nle' York, will speak under the auspices of the economic department. Trained in Russia Born in St. Petersburg, Mr. Kaza- kevich received training in a Russian school in Harbin, where his father was engineer and general manager of the Chinese Eastern Railroad. He later studied in the United States at i the University of California and Co- lumbia University. Besides teaching economics and finance at Columbia and in the American Institute of Banking, he has contributed to sev- eral volumes on economic affairs and to numerous magazines and journals.. Accountants To. Hold Annual Conference The twentieth annual Michigan Accounting Conference will open Sat- urday morning at the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Sponsored jointly by the Michigan Association of Certified Public Ac- countants and the University School of Business Administration, the con- ference will be highlighted by the luncheon speech of John D. Morrison, auditor general of Michigan. Buy Victory Bonds! playing a weekly hour's broadcast program over stations. in the United States, Canada and by short-wave to Central and South America and Eu- rope, as well as Africa and the Pacific war front. SRA Invites All Students To Song Fest Churches Schedule Other Social Functions All students are invited to the Song Fest at 4:30 p.m. today in Lane Hall by the Student Religious Association. A new feature of the SR.A program this year is Hobby Night which will be introduced at 7:30 p.m. today, also in Lane Hall. Square dancing and games are among the activities on the program. Students interested in the Camera and Poster Clubs or the Workshop are especially urged to at- tend. A Coffee Hour will be held at 4:30 p. in. tomorrow in Lane Hall. Fresh- men and transfer students who are new to the campus will be special guests. Hostesses for this informal gathering are Harriet Beck and Carol McGrady. Local Churches Plan Studeti Activities Student activities for tomorrow have been announced by Ann Arbor churches. ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH will hold open house from 4 to 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Student Center, 408 Lawrence St. For a hayride party students are asked to meet at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the WESLEY FOUNDATION. Fol- lowing the ride refreshments will be served at a party in the Foundation. The LUTHERAN STUDENT CEN- TER, 1304 Hill St. will be open for the evening both tomorrow and Saturday. Following Sabbath eve services at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow in the HILLEL FOUNDATION, A. K. Stevens will lead a fireside discussion on the topic "Minorities, Labor and Public Opin- ion. MYDA Elects Officers At First Formal Meeting The members of the Michigan Youth For Democratic Action Society on campus eleted Jack Gore presi- dent at their first formal meeting yesterday. KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR Our personnel is ready to serve you with the latest hair styles and tonsorial services. You are welcomed. Head- quarters for the B.M.O.C. THE DASCOLA BARBERS Between Michigan & State Theaters i 11 CLASSIFIED ADVER TISING i i ,i CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional five words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional five words.) Contract Rates on Request WANTED WANTED-Veterans and any stud- ents interested in dance work by former Campus Band leader. Lee Brant. 537 Elm. Phone 5291. WANTED-Students who wish to work for their BOARD. Contact F. J. Ruck at Sigma Phi Epsilon, 733 S. State St. 6764. WANTED: Male reader for blind stu- dent. 60c hour up to 20 hrs. week. Jerry Dunham 1111 S. University. Rear apt. ATTENTION SAGINAW STUDENTS "Saginaw News" campus corre- spondent desires news and social items. Contact Gwen Sperlich, 581 Jordan, 2-4561. WANTED-Couple with baby will ex- change 3 room apartment near campus, no children, for apartment, fiat, or house in Detroit. Call 2-3601. WANTED: One concert series tickets, preferably 1st balcony seat. Call Madelyn Heeney, 26112, after seven p. M. WANTED: Boy to wash dishes. Mar- tha Cook Bldg. Apply any morn- ing. FOR RENT LARGE BEAUTIFULLY FURNISH- ED ROOM with adjoining private bath for 1 or 2 gentlemen. Phone Ypsilanti 990-W. 1200 Whittier Rd., Ypsilanti. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Blue lady's wallet containing identification and snapshots. Finder may keep money. Bring to Box 1, Michigan Daily office or phone Helen Balowin. 2-3279. FOUND: Top of Eversharp pen, North University, Nov. 1st. Call Dr. Wang, Dental School. FOUND: Sh*ffer fountain pen. On Maynard St. Call Jane McKee. 2-5553. LOST: Heavy silver identification bracelet engraved, Ellen R. Gold- berg. Please return to 300 Victor, Vaughn House or Telephone 2-5553. Reward! LOST-Blue wardrobe trunk picked up mistakenly at NYC station Oc- tober 25. (Check No. D14-53-83) Call 8568. LOST: Large black Waterman pen, Ice skating rink, Oct. 25th and, pair of brown gloves. Graduate school, Nov. 2nd. Call Dr. Wang, Dental School. ALTERATIONS ALTERATIONS on ladies garments. New address, 410 Observatory. Vi- cinity of Stockwell Hall. Phone 2-2678. Alta Graves. Buy a 'hlToRfi Nb See this\ Vc ory PREMIERE Great Show Band- REElr, Wed., Nov. 28th - 9 P.M. "'WEEK-END AT THE WALDORF" at the State Theatre Bonds Purchased at theatre receive FREE TICKETS this Continuous from 1 P.M. Weekdays 30c to 5 P.M. TA STA!T T/FAT'f __STARTS TODAY! , i .1 i. hf". STORE UP ENERGY for a Healthy Start .. . 9 }*~ s. . ",-+, N , NOW PRESTON FOSTER GAIL PATRICK and the WILDE TWlNS in thc comedy romance "TWICE RL V 11fl Check your PHOTOGRAPHIC PROBLEMS with the .9 We are of all receiving new large supplies textbooks sold out in the ut of Stock Titles Are Arrivin Daiy 11 FOOD first days of the school rush. OUR STOCK IS LARGE AND COMPLETE TEXTBOOKS AND SUPPLIES 1UrD Al I I I lt/rcI- 1-r 1/ fnM inr from I I I I I III 11 ii I I 11 rC i. II