THIIf1lC iCcAOADTLY smx -w anw 9r ^inmX... M+!1 1 + I 1Y^: iYh. w, +.. : k.:v. A: w.a . HOMEMAKERS, NOTE: Food Costs Tabulated: Higher Than Detroit's Food costs in Ann Arbor have been determined for three in- come levels by a group of sociol- ogy research students under the direction of Clark Tibbitts, direc- tor of the Institute for Human Adjustment. By tabulating the prices of 70 Alumni Skits Will Go on Air Old-Time Graduates On 'Campus Quarter' Skits describing the organiza- tion and the development of the Alumni Emeritus Club will be pre- sented on "Campus Quarter" from 9:45 to 10 a.m. today over Station WPAG. Limited to alumni who were graduated from the University not less than fifty years ago, the Club was established in 1931 and has held yearly reunions. "Campus Quarter" will also feature a news resume of impend- ing campus social and cultural events. Sponsored weekly by the Un- ion and League, the program is produced under the direction of Jim Schiavone. The script for this week's broadcast was prepared by com- mittee headed by Leah Marlin and Marjorie Zaller. Other members of the group are Doug Parker, Pres Holmes, Barbara Barnes, Frank Dysarz, Peggy Cummings, Betty Lou McGaeth and Bea Hart- man. Expectant Dads 1%) Quiz Obstetrician. A question and answer group consisting of expectant fatheirs will be held at 8 p.m. Monday in the Child Health Building on East Catherine St. An obstetrician sponsored by the County Medical Society will conduct the discussion. Expect- ant fathers are requested to pre- pare questions for group discus- sion. The discussion will be the sec- ond in a series of meetings pro- moted by the County Medical So- ciety in its educational program for expectant fathers. basic items in 16 of the city's 60 foodstores, they have established an average budget for low cost food, moderate cost food, and lib- eral cost food items. The students, with the aid of two Ann Arbor housewives with previous experience in the survey field, also determined food costs for families of two, four, and sev- en persons. Their results have been com- pared with a similar survey re- cently taken in Detroit, and found in most cases to be one or two per cent higher than those find- ings. Results of the researcn show that a woman between the ages of 16 and 20 needs to pay be- tween $4.62 and $6.10 each week for food, depending on where it is purchased and which quality is bought. A man of the same age range will need from $5.99 to $8.- 24. Families of two must pay be- tween $11.09 and $17.12, while a group of four need from $18.67 to $26.41 a week for food. The researchers, selected from sociology classes taught by Dr. Ronald Freedman, chose both in- dependent and chain stores from all sections of the city, and incor- porating all income levels. They surveyed specific grades of meat and produce, and standard sizes of containers. Car Presented To Mrs. Yost Christmas Gift Given By Friend of Coach Mrs. Fielding Yost just received the biggest Christmasnpresent she's ever had-a brand new car. The car was given to her yes- terday by Fred Zeder, a long-time friend of the late Wolverine coach. In giving Mrs. Yost her French- blue Christmas package, Zeder said to her, "The coach was a good friend of mine, and I'm going to make sure you have transporta- tion as long as I'm alive."' Mrs. Yost was pleased by the gift, which will replace a car given the Yosts on their golden wedding anniversary in 1940. She has one misgiving, hodiever-she doesn't know how to drive. Santas' Local Seeks Action AgainstGarg Local 395, Union of Santa Clauses, filed suit today against the Gargoyle, campus humor magazine, for conspiracy in re- straint of trade. "The Gargoyle," exclaimed Noel Noel, First Vice-President In' Charge of Laddered Stockings, "has deliberately given us har- bingers of Yule joy a bad time. For example, who filled the fod- der bags with old Gargs Tuesday week- The doggoned reindeers quoted Joe Miller at me for forty- eight hours! A Dirty Trick! And who stuffed our test-run chimney with 'Ensians? K. Krin- gle, our oldest member, nearly broke his--but then, he's getting old. Still, we know that the Garg's at the bottom of this. No one else would give Prancer a hotfoot. We're suing them for all they've got!" The Gargoyle staff, whose com- bined assets total 2 cents, did not seem noticeably affected by the suit. When approached by a re- porter, Thom Strope, Managing Editor, smiled affably. Strope Remarkably Calm "We have a magazine to put out, son," he drawled to the reporter. "It's the Christmas Gargoyle, and it goes on sale Monday. Why should we worry about this asi- nine litigation? Do you remem- ber what Patrick Henry said?" The reporter replied that he didn't. Strope retorted that he didn't either, but that it didn't really matter, "I intend to fight them on their own ground," he bawled. "Come Christmas Eve, every member of the Gargoyle staff will be 'watching for Santa Clauses, running from house to house, and yelling, To arms! The redcoats are coming'!" Harried Students Given Chance To Mail Parcels Harried students will have an extra chance to mail Christmas packages and laundry cases when both the Arcade and downtown post offices extend their hours to 5 p.m. today and next Saturday. Extra help will be put on, when- ever possible, to eliminate long waiting lines. Peter Lorre Is Featured in German Film "M," an internationally ac- claimed. German crime film star- ring Peter Lorre, will be presented tomorrow at 3 and 8:30 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The picture presents the mod- ern screen version of the life of "Jack the Ripper," a pathological murderer who terrorized London at the turn of the century. The New York Sun said, "Peter Lorre gives one of the most amaz- ing performances in the history of films." "Fritz Lang's uncanny direction makes 'M' one of the notable con- tributions to the art of the cin- ema," according to the New York Post. The psychological reaction of the demented killer, who is chased by both the police and his fellow criminals, form the essential plot of the film. The German dialogue is supple- mented by complete English sub- titles. Tickets will be sold after 2 p.m. today at the Mendelssohn Theatre box office. The film is sponsored by the Art Cinema League. VETS CHECKS] Checks are being held at the Ann Arbor Post Office for the fol- lowing veterans: Dawson, Lawrence R. Jr.; Ep- skamp, James J.; Feinberg, Bart- ley B.; Harvill, 4lton M.; Her- mance, Nelson F.; Jackson, James B. (2 checks); Lynglip, John H.; Parker, Thomas H.; Ross, Dorothy N. Mineland; Rich, Lawrence; Scholey, Walter L.; Soderstrom, Alice E.; Storrer. Robert R.; Virgo, Richard S.; Weigel, Richard L.; Webb, Howard M. Veterans listed above should pick up their checks, by Dec. 23 when they will be returned to Co- lumbus, O. Ruthven Tea To Honor Willow Village Wives President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, of the University of Michigan, will honor the student and faculty wives of Willow Vil- lage at a tea from 3 to 5 p.m. to- day at the University Community Center. POCTUMRE NVEWVS ASS OCIATED PRESS __. . i 4 4 4 °+ H U N T E R A N D B E A R-.....Charles Schiel, Jr., of Hazle- ton, Pa., poses with the 325-pound black bear he bagged on the opening day of the season. He and a companion dragged the bear two miles through woodland to their car. D 0 L L H 0 U S E - Known as "The Doll's House" to resi- dents of Collingwobd, suburb of Melbourne, Australia, this home has an eight foot frontage, three rooms, three windows and yard- squara front garden. A man and his wife live in it. A ~1 \ /' ' ,EASY / oN y a . I Get Funny .Win Money -..Write a Title t 4 This is easy as falling off a log. A smalI log, ihat is. .l'it send us a caption for tlis cartoon. The best line gets $5. Or you can sendJ in 'art:on ideas of your own. For cartoon ideas we buy, we pay $10 apiece . .. $15 if you draw them. PAWS ACROS T H E SEA --Carol Landis, (left) American film actress in London to take part in a command per- formance with British stars, shakes hands with Floppy, Patricia Roe's pet dog, at a rehearsal. D O U B L E S P L I T ON IC E-Evelyn Chandler, noted skater, does a split through the air while her fellow performer, Mae Ross, does one on the ice in a rehearsal for a skating show in Madison Square Garden. Are you doundb=-hy? (.et us! We ire the stuff awav. fllding; monei, to. Yes sir, Pepsi-Cola Co.- pay fri om$1 to $15 for gags you send in and we print. Why worry about an honesi ving ! .This is easier. Just send your sItff, along with your name, address, school and class, to kasy Money Department, ox 1, IPepsi-Cola Co., iong Island City, N. 1. All contribu- tions become t le property of Pepsi-Cola Co. We pay only ftjr those we print. There's nothing to it-as you can see from the sam 1ples below. If, by- coinci- dence, the words "°1'epsi-Cola" turn up somewhere in your gag, don't worry about it. We don't mind. (Malter of fact, we kind of like it.) .o start your stuff in now -for Easy Money. GOOD DEAL ANNEX Sharpen up those gags, gagsters! At the end of the year (if we haven't laughed ourselves to death) we're going to pick the one best item we've bought and award it a fat extra $100.00 LIPMIE MORN COR NER Our well-known tor bot camipus, Mur atroyd--now a sti- dent in the school of agriculture-- has developed a new theory on sheep-feeding. lie msakes a daily . ... @690 4 ' . If you're a He, and know a She-- or vice versa-this should be your meat. Here's your chance to strike a blow for the home team in the battle between the sexes-and maybe win three bucks besides! * He Ubangi: I hear that Mbongo has left his wife. She Ubangi: Really? Why? He Ubangi: He says that every time she drinks a Pepsi, she smacks her lips, and he can't stand the clatter. He: Why do you call my date "Pepsi," when her name is :Betty? She: Oh, we all call her "Pepsi" be- cause she goes with anything! * He: I never knew what real happi- ness was until I married you. She: Darting! He: Yes, and by then it was too late. Three bucks apiece for each of these we print. Let your con- science be your guide. R E C 0 R®D C A T C H -LeRoy H. Dorsey of.Chicago stands beside the 9 foot, 7 inch, 105 -pound Pacific sailfish which he 9aught off Acapulco, Mexico, on a three-thread or g-pound test line, a record for such tackle. P I A N I S T - P A I N T E R --- William Kapell, young Amer- ican pianist whose spare-time hobby is amateur painting, pursues his avocation in the back yard of the brownstone house where he makes his home while in New York. taff.y efnit'ons --- A OEM91MMEW.,