PAGE TWO THE MICHIA N DIAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER . 147 PANEL DISCUSSION: Piresident Faculty Analyze / Role of Education in Society Higher education has the in- creasingly prominent role of pre- paring students to think critically and intelligently in a rapidly- changing world, President Alexan- der G. Ruthven and three fac- ulty members concluded in a panel discussion Tuesday on higher edu- cation in present day society. Prospective teachers in the course "tCurrent Problems in Higher Education" heard Presi- dent Ruthven analyze the topic from the viewpoint of an admin- istrator, Prof. William Haber from the position of an economist, Prof. 'Messiah' Tickets on Sale at Burton Tower Tickets for the two perform- ances of Handel's "Messiah," to be given Dec. 13 and 14. are now on sale in the offices of the Univer-} sity Musical Society, Burton Me- morial Tower. Four soloists, the University Choral Union, a special orchestra and Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, or- ganist, will participate in the two concerts. Lester McCoy, associate conductor of the University Mu- sical Society, will direct the per- formances. Harold Guetzkow from that of a psychologist and Dr. Edward Blakeman from that of a research worker in religion. Administrators' Objectivej President Ruthven warned thatj the common fault of colleges is to become fixed in a mold and disregard the "higher plateau to which civilization is moving." He named as the administrator's ob- jective the educating of the public to see the importance of higher" education and to appreciate the problems before it. Higher education-s place is to work toward a cooperating so- ciety, develop skills in living to- gether and rectify the lag of so- cial sciences behind the physical sciences, according to Prof. Haber. Creation of Culture The creation of culture is an undeveloped area in higher insti- tutions, Prof. Guetzkow said. This basic, more penetrating function has been subordinated to the transmission of culture, he pointed. out, declaring that the creative aspect must be extended for a fuller appreciation of life. An orientation which will give students a college education in religion was advocated by Dr. Blakeman. SHAKESPEAREAN BATTLE-Laurence Olivier stars in the technicolor film of 'Henry V,' being shown here under the auspices of the Office of Student Affairs at 3:15 and 8 p.m. Oct. 15, at Hill Auditorium. Mail orders for tickets, ranging in price from $.90 to $1.80, are now being accepted by Dean Walter B. Rea, Rm. 2, University Hall. + Classified Advertising + WANTED WANTED single garage space to rent -preferably Liberty Street area. Call Mr. Howland, 20720 and leave num- ber. --) 44 DO YOU HAVE A BABY BED for sale? ZIeed one! Phone 2-6845. Mrs. L. M. Bouise. )33 WILL PAY for ride to Detroit every Tuesday and, or Friday afternoon. Call Mr. Graham, 2-3460. )12 FOR SALE ANN ARBOR'S ILLS are a cinch with three-speed English bike. Speedy, de- pendable transportation. Recently overhauled. Phone 6582 on Saturday. Bob Shugart, 431 Fountain St. )42 NEW, light-weight, Gx30 binoculars, ex- cellent for football games. Universal Geneva Chronograph. 300 Tyler House phone 2-4591. )52 DRAWING TOOLS for sale, $15. See Bentley 1319 Cambridge, phone 2-8312 after 7 p.m. )54 FEW CHOICE CHORAL UNION PAT- RON'S SEATS, phone 2-5152. )36 RADIO PORTABLE, slightly used. Call Lawrence Niblett between 12 and 1 or 6 and 7, 1014 Church. ) 43 "CONN" tenor saxophone. Gold lac- quer. "Conn Steelay" mouthpiece. Standard case. Excellent condition. Phone 6326. )50 '35 HARLEY "74" S.V. A-1 shape. $295. Call 26824. Ask for Hopps. )47 FORD-1939 convertible coupe, me- chanically sound, radio, heater, good tires, economical. Ladd, 1231 Olivia. )46 FOR SALE-Girl's Schwinn bike, 1 pr. ice skates, Roller skates, riding boots. All size 5 2 garment bags. Phone 4973, evenings. )2 1931 BUICK-Good running condition, $200. After 7 p.m. Phone 4583, Ad- dress 326 E. Liberty. )40 COLLAPSIBLE BABY carriage. Prac- tically new. $23. Call 8842. Address 115i% W. Huron. )141 SINGLE-BREASTED Kuppenheimer tux -size 36-37; white Palm Beach suit, size 36-37. Call Jim 7098. )26 BLANKETS: Navy surplus grey blan- kets. All wool, new, $7.95. 12 or more, $7.50 eaci. Army 100 per cent wool, new, khaki blankets, $5.95. 12 or more, $5.50 each. Daily, Box 15. )23 GAS STOVE, $5.00. Coil springs for double bed, $2.00. Pair French doors, $40. Phone 2-6943. )13 3 TWEED SUITS. Size 35-36. Good con- dition. 417 E. Liberty. 2-3776, after 7 p.m. Ask for Harry. )7 MID-NITE BLUE formal,tails. Size 38- 40. Worn three times. Complete with shirt and white vest. Very reason- ably priced. Dr. W. S. Clifford. Phone 2-1487. )10 TAILS AND TUXEDO 38 long, like new, $50. .1117 Southwick Court, Willow village. )34 MAN'S BIKE! English three speeds. Good condition. $43. Call Dezso Sek- ely, 5806. )1 ROYAL PORTABLE Typewriter, only 70.00 Call 8600. D. R. Anderson. )24 NEW, light-weight, 6x30 Binoculars, ex- cellent for football games. Universal Geneva Chronograph. 300 Tyler House, 2-4591. )44 HOUSE TRAILER $750. 18ft., two room. Clayton Schooley Trailer No. 7. Shad.y Park Trailer Camp, 5295 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti. )15 CANARIES: Beautiful singers. Colorful parakeets. Bird supplies and cages. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 South 7th. )3 HELP WANTED ,BABY SITTERS wanted. Call 7253, 6-7 p.m. ) 25 SODA BAR FULL OR PART TIM: Days only. Apply in person. Witham's Drug. Corner of Forest and South University. )20 ATTENTION-Former telephone opera- tors, we have a limited number of part time jobs to offer. Apply Michi- gan Bell Telephone Co., 323 E. Wash- ington St. )22 FOR RENT MALE STUDENTS interested in rooms on campus be at 538 N. Division Sat. 10-12 a.m. )48 ROOMS for football weekend guests in private homes. Phone Student Room Bureau. 22239, 6-8 p.m. )18 BUSINESS SERVICES HOOVER SPECIALIST, SERVICE and sales. Buy through Goodyear store. For service call A. A. 2-0298. W. O. Taylor, 1612 Brooklyn, Ann Arbor.)32 PHOTOSTATIC COPYING, discharges, birth certificates, drawings enlarged or reduced. Leave your work at Wikel Drug Co. )21 BY ESTABLISHED tradition, we do all types of sewing, alterations, formal restyling. Hildegarde Sewing Shop, 116 E. Huron. Phone 24669. )29 CLOCKS-Repaired. Week service. SMS MOVING? Rent big trailers for a dol- lar at East Ann Arbor Trailer Co. 3304 Platt Rd., 25-9931. )5 Products. 210 N. Fourth Ave. Tel. 7082. )9 RADIOS REPAIRED. Careful work reasonable prices. Open evenings for convenience of students. Radio Doc- tors, 512 E. William, 2-0671. )15 FOR BEST DANCING this fall, it's music by TOM McNALLS ORCH. featuring vocals by JACKIE WARD. Phone 2-3021 for record audition. )4 TYPING: Theses, term papers, address- es, etc. Duplicating: Notices, form letters, programs. A2 Typing Service, 208 Nickels Arcade, phone 9811. )38 LOST AND FOUND LADIES BULOVA watch with sweep second-hand and brown cord band. Lost near stadium on Saturday at game. Reward. Phone 8776. ) 49 GOLD football pendant lost. Sentimen- tal valve. Reward. Phone 20720. Hank Klauke. ) 51 LOST: Lady's black and gold fountain pen. Sentimental value. Reward. Call 2-3797. )45 SAD SACK LOST season football ticket, Section 30, Row 33, Seat 4. Reward. Phone 8221. )133 LADIES WRIST WATCH. Girard Perre- gaux, somewhere near Stadium. Re- ward. Write, Berna Hicks, 1328 Oak- ham Court, Willow Run; Ypsilanti, Michigan. )30 LOST: Student football ticket, section 25, Row 72, seat 26. Reward. Call El- ton Price, Ypsilanti, 9216. )19 ALPHA XI DELTA sorority pin, vicin- ity Rackham around Sept. 17. Pleasea call Mary Ann Harris, 2-5570. )6 TOPCOAT lost at State game Satur- day. Hurd's lable. Write W. D. Weav- er, 104 S. Logan St., Lansing. )14 MISCELLANEOUS IF THE GAME you want to see leave your little child with me. Mrs. Aut- en, R.N., Call 2-3697 after 5 or Sat. a.m. )8 Englis Food, Fuel Situation Critical--pelts Fuel and food shortages in Eng- land are appalling, according to Prof. Elizabeth Spelts, voice in- structor in the music school, who recently returned from a concert tour there. Only an exceptionally good fruit crop relieved the otherwise grave food situation this summer. Prof. Spelts said. During her seven- week stay in England, Prof. Spelts stayed with a London family and "learned a great deal about Eng- lish pluck in hard times." Appearing jointly with Shirley Turner, an American pianist studying in England under a Yale fellowship, Prof. Spelts, a soprano, sang for informal concerts and church recitals as well as her seven-week concert series. "Americans can help English families by sending them food boxes and good used clothing, es- pecially woolens," Prof. Spelts said. She added: "The English have shown that they have the pluck to weather their troubles. They deserve the best in friendliness and help from Veterans To File 4 bsence Reports Veterans in training under Public Law 16 are reminded that they are required to file a report of absence with the V'eterans Ad- ministration. Student veterans in this cate- gory who failed to obtain an ab- sence report card during registra- tion, should secure one at the Veterans Service Bureau in Rm. 1514 of the Rackham Building. Absence report cards will be handed in the initial day of final examinations. SERVING HOURS: 11 A.M.-1:30 P.M. 5-7 P.M. "Known for Good Food" The TAVERN CAFETERIA 338 Maynard Street TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Bought, Rented, Repaired, STATIONERY & SUPPLIES1 o. D. MO RILL 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted Mtusical Supplies REEDS - STRINGS Complete Musical Repair P AUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 209 E. Washington Ph. 8132 ii i Carillon Recital *... Percival Price, University caril- loneur, will present another in the current series of carillon recitals at 7:15 p.m. today. His program will include selec- tions from Verdi's La Traviata, a group of German folk songs, and Sonata for Forty-Seven Bells, written by Prof. Price. * * * Hillel Players .. . There will be a meeting of the Hillel Players, open to those interested in participating in a White Crosses Mark Hazard Newberry Women Complain of Yard The white crosses in the Bar- bour-Newberryryard are there for a serious purpose-to call atten- tion to "hazard" in the yard-and not merely for publicity purposes. "This is definitely not a mean- ingless prank," a spokesman for Newberry women said.yesterday. "The pit left by workmen last spring is dangerous. Just think what might happen around ten- thirty or so when someone's in a hurry to get home!"' "Not only that, but the whole yard is unsightly with those mounds. We've just wanted to draw attention to that." "Nobody here knows how to get something done about the yard, so we took steps of our own." The Newberry spokesman said they had considered writing to "some Board" but they didn't know which one. She said the de- cision to plant the crosses arose out of a "discussion" in which sev- eral Newberry girls were involved. Building and Grounds Superin- tendent Walter M. Roth could not be reached for comment. Two Faculty Members At Library Conference Two members of the faculty of the library science department are attending a conference of librar- ians of large public libraries being held today and tomorrow at Wal- denwoods. Prof. Rudolph Gjelsness, chair- man of the department, is a mem- ber of the panel discussing "Edu- cation for Librarianship," and Prof. C. J. McHale is participating in the panel on "Personnel Ad-' ministration." dramatic program, at 3 p.m. to- day at the Hillel Foundation. * ". * Alpha Phi Omega ... Former scouts desiring to pledge Alpha Phi Omega this se mester are asked to attend a meet- ing at 7:30 p.m. today in Rms. 323-325 of the Michigan Union. All members are also requested to report at the same time. Boots and Spurs ... Boots and Spurs, men's rid- ing club, will hold an organiza- tional meeting for old and new members at 7 p.m. Monday on the steps of the Union. * * . Delta Epsilon Pi ... Delta Epsilon Pi, Eastern Orth- odox student society will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Fri., Oct. 3 in Upper Room at Lane Hall. The meeting is open to all Eastern Orthodox students and their friends. * * * Foreign Student Tea... A tea for foreign students and their American friends will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in the International Center. Hostesses for the tea are Mrs. M. Robert B. Klinger, and Mrs. Marie-Louise Esterer. * *~ ' SRA Coffee Hour .. . The Campus Religious Council will be special guests at the SRA Coffee Hour at 4:30 tomorrow at Lane Hall. HomesRady For N.Y. Vets HICKSVILLE, N. Y., Oct. 1-(/P) -Doubling-up with the in-laws, living in hall bedrooms with "kitchen privileges" and other housing shortage woes ended to- day for about 250 veterans in a pleasant stretch of Long Island countryside. It was "moving in" day at Is- land Trees, a potato farm three months ago and now the nation's biggest post-war rental project. It involves single houses where 6,000 families eventually will live in new homes renting for $60 a month. The entire job, to be finished in about a year, will involve an in- vestment of $48,000,000. All of the homes are for veterans. Levitt said "the demand is for rental homes now and that is what we are try- ing to satisfy." Campus Highlights ' 1 U.S. -Russian Issue To Be LectureTopic Two Programs Will Discuss Soviet Union Russia, and the U. S.-Soviet problem, will receive special treat- ment during the 1947-48 Lecture Course sponsored by the Oratori- cal Association. Opening number for the series will be a debate on "Can Russia Be Part of One World?" by Walter Duranty and H. R. Knickerbocker, October 25, and, as the fifth lec- ture, Julian Bryan will present an illustrated lecture, "Inside Russia Today." Duranty, who will take the af- firmative, and Knickerbocker, who will present the negative view, both have spent many years in Russia. They will debate the question in light of all develop- ments prior to the time the dis- cussion takes place. Previously, Duranty has taken the view that Russia can be part of one world if, without weakness or appeasement, the English speaking people will understand Russia and its problems. Knick- erbocker has stated that it is use- less and dangerous to waste time to convert the Soviet Empire to our way of life. Julian Bryan returned from Russia last March with what is believed to be the only full-length color film ever taken by any American in Russia. He spent three months observing the work of UNRRA as part of his trip. Bryan's film will show collec- tive farms, hospitals, Russian homes, churches and synagogues, factories and universities. Season tickets for the complete course of seven lectures are now on sale at the Hill Auditorium box office. Library Will Open Sundays Starting Sunday students will have all of 28 Sunday afternoons in which to catch upton their out- side reading or pursue their stud- ies. According to Samuel W. McAl- lister, associate director of the University Lbrary, the main Reading and Periodical Rooms of the General Library will be open from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. every Sunday afternoon during the fall and spring semesters, except dur- ing the holiday periods. Three reg- ular members of the staff will be on duty to assist students request- ing information. Books from other parts of the building which are needed for Sunday use will be available in the Main Reading Room if re- quests are made on Saturday of an assistant in the reading room where the books are usually shelved. In case you are stricken some day by an attack of appendicitis,' you may well find yourself re- ferred to a funeral home in regard to ambulance service. This referral is the rule, for allI emergency ambulance service, ex-I cept accidents, is handled by the, Staffan Funeral Home, which maintains two ambulances for the purpose. The University Hospital has one ambulance which is used exclusively to transport patients between different units of the Hospital. Accident Service People injured in accidents oc- curring in Washtenaw County are taken to either the University Hospital or to St. Joseph Hospital by the sheriff department am- bulance, unless it is out on call. In such a case, the Staffan am- bulance is used. Drivers for the Staffan ambu- lance are University students who work on a part-time basis. No doc- tors or internes ride the ambu- lance since the time consumed in traveling from the site of the in- jury to the hospital is so short that little could be done to aid the patient. The drivers must, however, take a course in first aid so that proper handling of the patient is assured. Emergency Cases Most emergency calls involving accidents take place after mid- night, according to Jack Zoller, director of the Staffan Home. Appendicitis calls most frequent- ly take place after meals, while patients being discharged from hospitals are taken care of in the morning. HOSPITAL SERVICE: Ambulance for Emergencies Provided by Funeral Home The GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Stands for: JESUS CHRIST AS THE UNIQUE SON OF GOD Students are cordially invited to attend our evangelical worship services and to fellowship with other students in the University Class and at the Guild Supper each Sunday. Guild Open House Saturday, Oct. 4, 7-10 P.. Corner of State and Huron Phone 2-1121 i 4 1 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT*... CHANDAN'S cQ' rTrAGE IN 512 E. William - One block from State St. GOOD FOOD - REASONABLE PRICES Chef's Luncheon Specials for Thursday LUNCHEON SPECIALS Meat Loaf, soup, scalloped potatoes, green peas, coffee and dessert............75c Liver and Bacon, soup, mashed potatoes, green beans, coffee and dessert ......90c Pork Chop, soup, mashed potatoes, green peas, coffee and dessert............90c Deliciously different Indian foods served every evening in addition to tasty, home-cooked American meals. I + Hours 11:30 to 1:30, 5:00 to 8:00 I Closed Mondays ART C IN EMA LEAGUE and AVC Return by Popular Demand I Wed., Oct. 15 MAIL ORDERS NOW ; ...For Best Choice of Seats 2 PERFORMANCES Matinee 3:15 Evening 8:00 The THEATRE GUILD presents LAU RENCE OLIVIEre' in William Shaamspeare's ;.... T 7 I }; University of Michigan Oratorical Association 1947-48 LECTURE COURSE Third Nu FrRbe r D WA D.A RK D M"'LJ A DI RVD n I I