THE MICHTAN DAILY SUND AY, - n FULL SEMESTER: Guest Speakers, Conferences Highlight Student Guild Plans Release of semester plans of the speakers in the Sunday afternoon student guilds indicates a pre- programs. Among them will be: dominane of guest speakers and Prof. fFrenec Kiss, noted ana- weekend conferences for the cam- tomist from the University of pus in the spring program. ..Budapest, Hungary; Hans Burki, Michigan Christian Fellowship guest instructor at Wheaton Col- will present a number of guest lege, from Zurich, Switzerland; Dr. Allan MacRae, president of Faith Theological Seminary; and Bishop Subhan, of the Methodist -SRA -To H ol Church in Bombay, India. _______________________Ar GUILD NEWS Mnnual Dinner National Brotherhood Week of the National Conference of Chris- tians and Jews will be observed ocally when the Student Relig- ious Association holds its annual Brotherhood Banquet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow. Students and townspeople will hear George Schermer, of the Detroit Inter-Racial Committee, discuss community efforts toward iitercultural understanding af- ter the banquet. Proceeds from the dinner tickets, which are priced at $1, will go to the World Stud4ent Service Fund. Theninter-faith program, which will continue on campus in suc- ceeding weeks, will feature stu- dent speakers following a theme of brotherhood and cooperation. Deadline Set for N.Y. State Service Exams New York seniors who are plan- ping to take the examination for professional and technicalassist- ants to enter State service will have until Saturday to file their pplications. Application blanks and com- plete information may be obtain- ed at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. Only half of the world's total forest area is made up of soft- wood and temperate hardwood forests, according to the Ency- clopedia Britannica, yet these for- ests supply 91 per cent of all the timber cut and used. Tropical hardwoods furnish the remaining 9 .percent. -I Spring Retreat MCF will also hold a spring re- treat with guest speakers at Wal- denwoods, near Brighton, in April, and a missionary conference at Lane Hall in May. The Lutheran Student Associa- tion's first guest speaker will be Dr. Ruth Wick, executive assistant of the Student Service Commis- sion of the National Lutheran Council. On March 14, Miss Edith Eycamp, Lutheran missionary to India and recipient of the British Kaiser-I-Hind award, will speak to the student group. Ping Pong The third weekend in May will signal a retreat to a nearby camp site for fellowship and worship byte hAssociation students. Some of the highlights of the Newman Club schedule will be a ping pong tournament in March, a St. Patrick's Day party, Hard Times Dance and Formal Dance. Officers of the Ohio Valley prov- ince of Newman Clubs will hold a weekend convention on May 15. Continuing its theme of "Chris- tian Living in the World Com- munity," the Wesleyan Guild will undertake four International Teas, monthly parties with other campus groups and assistants- with youth programs innearby towns. On May 1, the group will join in a state-wide Convocation in Lansing. Gamma Delta, Lutheran stu- dent club, will hear Alfred T. Wil- son, president of the Internation- al Lutheran Laymen's League next Sunday. Birthday Ball Hillel Foundation will open their program with a Birthday Ball Saturday at the Union. In March the group will present Hill- elzapoppin', musical revue, and Masquerade Ball in celebration of the holiday Purim. Sabbath eve- ning services every Friday and Corned Beef Corner each Sunday round out the program. Freshman Day, for and by freshman, will be held by the Roger Williams Guild next Sun- day. Prof. William Frankena, of the philosophy department, will also speak. in Easter play, "The Dawning," on March 28, and a spring retreat May 8 have also been planned. The Evangelical and Reformed Guild is planning a meeting with foreign students soon and an- other with the Congregational- Disciples Guild to discuss merger plans for the two student groups. At MICHIGAN JACK KELLY smokes CHESTERF I ELDS Jack says: "Chesterfields give the only complete smoking en joy- in i." A nation-wide survey shows that Chesterfields are TOPS with College Students from coast-to -coast. In conjunction with the World Day of Prayer to be observed today, St. Andrews Episcopal Church will present Rev. John Burgess, '30, chaplain and pro- fessor of religion at Howard Uni- versity in Washington, D.C., in two talks today. Rev. Burgess will speak on "Christianity and Race Relations" at 10 a.m. in the Student Center.% At 11 a.m. he will speak on "Christian Brotherhood" at thet church. Rev. Burgess is a mem-I ber of the Bi-racial Commission of the National Council of the Episcopal Church and the social relations department of the Washington Diocese. Michigan Christian Fellowship will hear Rev. Harold DeVries, of the Grace Bible Church, speak on, "The Content of the Gospel," at the regular Sunday afternoon meeting at 4:30 p.m. Refresh- ments will be served following the talk. Grace Bible Guild will hold a meeting and cost supper at 6:15 p.m. today in Fellowship Hall. Hold Those Bonds! ,t " tresz Th 0-i' IEK t ' i j'zlsrnShale peaes$ 's'cintcoll) Sf , UXt A W HUG;T.7ARD ~iJ~4~ O QTrr 66liREj$UYV I I \1 In~n 21hlC~,.c~T i F Eu mEt I.YtIA 3. 19 Zu F-, 2 Shows Daily - 3:15 - 8:00 P.M. - All Seats Reserved .IV FRIENDSHIP TRAIN BEGINS JOURNEY-Dressed as Abraham Lincoln, Illinois State Represen- tative William G. Horsley, of Springfield, recites the famous farewell address which the Great Emancipator delivered from the same spot 87 years ago. The ceremony signaled the start of the Abraham Lincoln Friendship Train, carrying food for Europe and Asia. At left is G. H. Sido, railroad official. Anthropologyv Museum antIs G.I. Souvenirs PRICES: Mat. 1st floor Eve. 1st floor $1.20, Balcony $ .90 $1.80, Bocony $1.20 t BOX OFFICE OPEN ALL NEXT WEEK Feb. 16, 17, 18 - 10A.M. - Feb. 19, 20, 21 -- 10 A. 5 P.M. 1 0P.M. - I TODAY-Mon.-Tues.!! .1 By DOLORES PALANKER For all you veterans' wives whose fingers have been itching to rid your already cluttered-up homes of those annoying wartime souvenirs, here's your opportunity. The Museum of Anthropology has announced that it will be happy to relieve anyone of any collections pertaining to the back- ground and culture of peoples of the world. Melanesian Exhibition This announcement was prompt- ed by the exhibition of Melane- sian art now on display in the Museum rotunda. The various bowls, weapons, masks and uten- sails being exhibited are the con- tribution of Dr. Justin W. Leon- ard of the Michigan Institute for Fisheries Research and Mr. Kenneth W. Prescott, a graduate. student of zoology and for the most part were collected during' the recent war. The black-skinned inhabitants of the islands of the Solomons group which are the heart of Mel- anesia are among the best native artists in the world. Their art has been hurt but not destroyed by the invasion of the white man and the slavery, plantations and shock of battles such as Guadal- canal and Bougainville. Carved Hardwood Melanesian art is character- ized by hardwood carved into liv- ing forms which are stained, pol- ished and highlighted with shell and lime designs. The swift-dart- ing frigate bird, the bonito and other fish of the island waters are used as religious symbols and have deep religious significance. Among the representative spec- imens in the display are two elab- orate wooden bowls forming the body of a bird and carved from a single block of wood. There is TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Bought, Rented, Repaired, STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0. P. MORRILL 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted A ROOM AND BOARD OFFERING meals for girl students. 520 Forest. )55 WANTED-Men to join boarding club at 1315 Hill. 3 meals $1.80 per day. Call Mike 2-2252, noon or evening. )49 HELP WANTED QUALIFIED young woman to tutor 10th grade girl student. Evening home work. Mention hourly rate in detailed reply. Box 53. )45 EXPERIENCED men and women coun- selors for Jewish co-educational sum- mer camp in Michigan. General and specialty counselors. Phone 2-8439, evenings 5-9 p.m. )20 WANTED: Young woman for counter and fountain work. Student wife preferred. Campn1s section. I'. 5464 after 4:30 pizn. )3 FOR RENT HALF Double room, family home. Pre- fer engineer student. Two blocks from Union. Ph. 8196. (74) LARGE DOUBLE ROOM for male stu- dents. Near Field House. Call 2-0873. )40 ROOM to rent, two boys. Close in. Phone 4546. )64 ONE BLOCK from Campus, Half of Double Room available in new resi- dence building at 413 Forest, $5 a week. Contact I J. Nagler at Nag- ler's Fur Shop. Phone 2-2619. )61 WANTED TO RENT VET wanting to be married needs apartment immediately. Call Stover 2-6173. )43j WANTED - Graduate woman student and child desperately need housing for summer 1948 and school year 1948-49. Box 55, c/o Mich. Daily. )78 BUSINESS SERVICES j PIANO STUDENTS taught by music school graduates now accepted for new semester. Beginners and ad- vanced. Phone 2-0779. )77 WANTED--Sewing, Dressmaking, Alter- ations or Repairs. Miss Livingston. 315 S. Division. )63 DON'T BE LATE-Get "It's a Date!" weekly guide to events in Ann Ar- bor. Send name and address with $1.00 to Jack Trustman, 1037 Olivia, Ann Arbor. )15 DEVELOPING AND PRINTING also a hardwood headrest of the efit humanity with your contri- type which Melanesians substitute butions whether it be the com- for pillows. plete skeleton of a prehistoric So, all you ardent souvenir man or a simple little bowl. The hunters --- and meticulous hoiuse- Museum of Anthropology will wives-here's your chance to ben- welcome it with open arms. + Classified Advertising + WANTED TAILS 40 long. Call Maurice Riley, Ypsilanti 600. )75 TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Dearborn commuters arriv- ing on campus 9:00 a.m. leaving 4:00 p.m. to ride in 1946 Mercury. De3926. William Fulton. )12 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Gruen wrist watch between Burton tower and music school. Finder pleaserleavedat Music School office. Reward. )67 WHO TRADED stadium boots during Wednesday night's rushing? I have dark brown pair; lost light brown, Sun Valley Pair. Call 4549, Stockwell. )71 PARKER Pen and Pencil. Grey. Lost on campus Wednesday, Jan. 28. Call Joan Benson, 2-4561. Reward. LOST - Lusina Watch in Chemistry Building. Silver spring wrist band. Reward. 419 Adams House, 2-4401. )52 WILL PERSON who "borrowed" 2 books (Shakespeare and American Lit.) from League cloakroom Monday please re- turn them to Rose Cornish, 2-0379. )50 PARKER 51 Pen. Brown. Lost between Tappan Hall and Bus. Ad. School. Phone 9766. Reward. )41 FOR SALE TUX and Tails, 36 or 37 long. Call Maurice Riley, Ypsilanti 600. )76 SKIS, Groswold matched hickory, used five times. Size 5 ft.. 9 in., with cable bindings. $15. Phone 2-7614. )65 FOR SALE-Engineering drawing in- struments. Call Irene Kole. 24561. )68 BICYCLE; new balloon tires; new paint job; excellent condition, $30. Call Mansour or Morrill, 20549. )69 1947-5 passenger super deluxe Ford Club coupe. Perfect condition. Radio -heater. $1,875. Call W. C. White, 4145. Lawyers Club. )70 UNDERWOOD portable typewriter, $25.00. Call 6118. )72 DRAWING INSTRUMENTS, practically unused, $17.50. Call Al, 2-1044, after 8:00 p.m. )73 ONE PAIR size eleven hard toe, pre- war hockey skates. Used approxi- mately five times. )38 BABY Parakeets, African Lovebirds, and Canaries. Also Bird Supplies. 562 South 7th. Phone 5330. )36 BEAUTIFUL Solitaire Diamond Ring. % carat plus. Yellow gold. Tax-free. value can be verified. Call 2-8114. )57 FOR SALE-1940 DeSoto 2-door fully equipped, good condition. Call 2-2330 after 7:30 p.m. )18 ROYAL Portable Typewriter. Modern, Magic Margins, etc. $60. Call 4866 evenings. )56 FOR SALE-B & L Microscope, triple objective, mechanical stage. Good condition. Call 2-7629 after 5:30. )54 KING Cornet-Gold lacquer. Excellent condition. Tel. 2-4591, 324 Hinsdale House. )47 FOR SALE: '36 Chev tudor, radio and heater. Very good condition. Rea- sonable. Reply Box 54. )46 USED HALLICRAFTERS S-40, in ex- cellent condition. Will sell or trade, 419 Adams, West Quad. 2-4401. )44 MICROSCOPE: New Bousch and Lomb. 4 objective, mechanical stage, wide angle ocular. Call 2-8192. )42 ,# NAU TICAL_,NAU r CAFLF sleek ad supple °-- -- days on fresh new lies.~ MATCH NG BAGS around' 18.00 CAdeigeLFIp 9ODEIS 1Itt aT Fx 9 108 East Washington Phone 22685 w .4 Plus! What can Affair It Was STARTS TODAY! Your's for Fun -- m ~. 8 Exposure 12 Exposure 16 Exposure1 20 Exposure 36 Exposure Roll Roll Roll Roll Roll .35c .50c .70c .85c .1.50 In and Out in 1 Day Guaranteed Work DU SAAR PHOTO SHOP 10 E. Eighth St. HOLLAND, MICH. )62 "Home of 3-Hour Odorless Dry Cleaning" * \C LAN$RS 630 South Ashley Phone 4700 ___ __. _v . r I SANDWICHES ...at... 4111 with IA I