THE MICHIGAN DAILY THIURSDAY,' . . . ....... . FOR LATIN TYPES.- Spanish Club Provides Ke to Biiligual Livingr EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of language club profiles. Habla Vd. espanol? By FREDRICA WINTERS If you are a Spanish student or interested in improving your knowledge of Spanish life and language, La Sociedad Hispanica offers a fine opportunity. The Spanish club, founded in 199 is one of -the oldest organ- rations on campus. Its activities are variedand designed to arouse the students' interest in the lit- erature and culture of Spain and Latin America. Annual Lectures Every year the club sponsors a series of lectures, the majority of which are delivered in Spanish. Lecturers come from the Spanish department, other departments of Grains Come Out of Slump In LateRally CHICAGO, Feb. 18-(/P)-A late' rally pulled some grains out of their price slump today in a ses- sion that held mostly bad news for consumers. The government reported that the nation's meat-on-the-hoof supply is the, lowest since 1939. This news caused a temporary slump in grains. Prices rallied later, however, on trade reports that unfavorable weather was en- dangering the new wheat crop in the Southwest. The most cheerful note for the housewife's food budget was the weakness in butter prices, both in the wholesale markets on the Chi- cago mercantile exchange. Whole- sale butter declined % to 1% cents a pound in Chicago and 1 to 2 cents in New York. On the Chicago exchange, where butter is sold for future de- livery, prices broke as much as 2% cents. Butter trade sources said favor- able weather for pasture growth and lower grain feed prices indi- cate that butter production is due to spurt soon. As a result, many merchants are accumulating only the supplies they need for imme- diate requirements. This is de-' pressing wholesale prices. Positions open On Union Staff Men who were unable to attend the Union tryout smoker yester- day may receive information con- cerning the position on the vari- ous student committees from 3 to 5 p.m. any tday this week in thet Union Student Offices. Positions are open on ,all five committee: social, 'campus af- fairs, publicity, administration, and house. Valuable experience in office procedure and public re- lations can be gained by partici- pating in one of the student com- mittees, members of the Union Executive Council pointed out.- After the preliminary tryoutt period, students become eligiblei for election to the Union Execu- tive Council, which plans and carries out all Union sponsorede functions.' All tryouts are eligible to work on Michigras, the annual all-t campus carnival to be held this spring.- PRINTING for Posters - Handbills Programs - Tickets done at RAMSAY-CANfIEL D 119,East Liberty (Acrossr from P-Bell) a Phone 7444 b (X==XX=>(X=X '' < the University, and Wayne Uhi versity in Detroit. Prof. Mercado, faculty adviso to the group, said that second yea Spanish students could easily un- derstand the lectures. In addition to hearing good Spanish at the lectures, speaking the language is stressed at con- versation meetings held weekly. Although these meettings are supervised by a member of the faculty, the students do all the talking on any subject they may choose. Teeacher steps in only to clear up a moot point, or the Spanish equivalent thereof.,' Play Project The main project of the club each year is a play which is pre- sented at the Lydia Menclssohn Theatre on two successive nights. This year the play is to be "Nu- estra Natacha," by Casona, direct- ed by Mr. Pasquariello of the Spanish department, with a cast chosen from the 250 members of the club. The club has seen two Spanish movies this year, and is expect- ing to present another during the semester. Scholarships Club dues are used to give schol- arships to three members of the club deemed worthy by club offi- cers and Prof. Mercado to attend the summer session at the Na- tional University of Mexico, in Mexico City. Prof. Mercado said that members are so enthusiastic about the idea, that generally fif- teen or twenty non-scholarship students attend the University of Mexico summer school also. Prof. Mercado said that the club aims to supplement the Spanish learned in the classroom and show the student the value of being bilingual. Library Gets Historie Plate The original copper plate from which British army maps were printed for the campaign of York- town have been added to the Clements Library's collection of American Revolution materials. The plates for the maps, which showed fortifications of the York- town area, were presented on be- half of the British Admiralty by D. F. H. Brickell, British Consul General in Detroit. The Clements Library holds 13 of the manu- script maps of the Yorktown cam- paign, including a map used by British General Henry Clinton. The British Admiralty is donating to American libraries the copper plates from which all the British campaign maps of the Revolu- tionary War were printed, Dr. Randolph G. Adams, director of the Library, disclosed. Prison Problem Will Be Discussed Problems of prison management and criminology will be the cent- er of attention at the first annual meeting of the Michigan Correc- tion Association, to be held Friday in Detroit. Highlighting the meeting, which will be attended by people inter- ested in improving Michigan's correctional institutions, will be a talk by Prof. John B. Waite, of the Law School. President of the association is Prof. A. E. Wood, of the sociology department, who, together with several other men interested in correct prison mangement, and factors operating in the lives of criminals, organized the associa- tion last year. Other matteis facing discussion by the group are methods of keep- ing prisons out of politics, im- proving the status of prisons and various fields of research into criminology. Prof. Schwartz To Talk Prof. Frank L. Schwartz of the mechanical engineering depart- ment will address the Western Michigan section of the Society of Automotive Engineers in Mus- kegon tonight. His topic will be: "Gas Tur- bines for Vehicles." Sheeps kin Shortage Bad weather in England during last winter has caused a shortage of sheepskins for diplomas this year so most of the "skins" passed out twill be high quality paper. cvrrent rat7 N M AVIN M t S ,r dAnnual Exhibit Of Advertising1 Art onDisplay Winge(I Victory and Cheesecake Compete That group of photographs, drawings and paintings that sep- arate the stories and articles in N our favorite magazine is now be- ing referred to as "Art," and with a capital "A." Only a few yards from the Uni- versity's reproduction of the fam- ed monument "Victory of Samo- thrace" hangs the proof. For there in Alumni Memorial Hall's Art Gallery hangs the 26th annual exhibit of Advertising Art, now on its transcontinental tour. Very few examples of the popu- lar leg or cheesecake "art" are to be found. Present are a few brush and ink fashion sketches of women in bathing suits. but these sket- ches are designed to appeal prim- arily to women. The other ex- ample of this "art," is a photo- graph of the rear view of a re- clining model. The collection also includes paintings used in advertisements for phonographs. containers, and diamond merenahts. A box top design for a fashionable depart- ment store, as well, is among the varied group. However, the attendance for the 1 , Campus Highlights am Dancing Classes.. A series of eight classes in so- cial dancing will begin at 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 20, at the Interna- tional Center. Taught by a professional in- structor formerly with the Ar- thur Murray studios, the classes are open to all foreign students and their American friends. Men taking the lessons will be charged a nominal fee for the course. Women are invited to at- tend the classes free, as part- ners. Mrs. Mead, assistant to the director, will act as hostess for the women guests. * * * Hillel Services... The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun- dation will hold its Friday Eve- ning Services at 7:45 p.m. Immediately following the services, Mr. Albert Cohen, di- rector of the Vocational Service in Detroit will speak on "Your Chances for a Job in 1948." * * * will hold their first meeting of the semester today at 7:30 p.m. at the League. Rev. John Miles of the Peoples Institute of Applied Religion in Detroit will address the group on the subject, "Racial Discrimina- tion, Past and Future." * * * 'Campus Quarter'.. A meeting will be held for anyone interested in working on the various committees of the Campus Quarter, the student directed and produced radio show, at 5 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. ' Mixer DaInces .. . The League and the Union will co-sponsor the first in a series of mixer .dances from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday in the League Ball- room. Tom McNall and his orchestra with Jackie Ward, featured vo- calist, will provide the music. Daily-Patterson. BRIDGE -IN THE UNION . . . a small section o f the group that played in the National Inter- collegiate Bridge Tournament last weekend. Bridge Players Crowd Unio ballroom in National Contest By GEORGE WALKER Had you walked into the Union Ballroom last weekend you would have been confronted with a scene quite different from that usually seen at a Friday or Saturday night dance. Crowded into the north half of Professor Sheds Light Son Fish Life The life of a fish in the Great Lakes and neighboring bodies of water is no longer the cloistered, secret thing that it was. Prof. Karl F. Lagler, of the zoo- logy department, has seined, net- ted and hooked the finny creatures out of their seclusion and, in col- laboration with Prof. Carl L. Hubbs of the University of Cali- fornia Scripps Institute of Oce- anography, has written a most revealing book about them en- titled "Fishes of the Great Lakes Region." First Work The first complete work of its kind, the volume is valuable to ichthyologists as well as sports- men. It supplies information on the habits of each fish family, pro- cedures of collecting and pre- serving fish, and angling methods for game fish. Unlike other books on the subject (and herein lies its hope of hitting the best seller list) it tells not only how to catch fish. but where to catch them. Prof. Lagler's field work was impeded at times by frozen ,.ater, limestone filled nets, Lake Huron storms, and once by a split boat. The periodic expeditions, which extended from the summer of 1925 to Nov. 1947, resulted however, in a huge collection of fish by refer- ence to which regional distribu- tion maps were drawn. Fish Listed Among the rare fish listed in the book are the paddlefish, which is distinguished by a paddle-like nose and large size, and the Amer- ican eel, which is interesting chiefly in that it shouldn't be found in land-locked waters at all. According to Prof. Lagler the eels were planted 60 to 75 years ago by Dutch settlers in Michigan who had a taste for pickled eel but little knowledge of the eel's breeding habits. Inasmuch as eels don't spawn in fresh water, any that are caught in. Michigan can be assumed to be at least 60 years old. The limits of the ranges of each type of fish, that is the general region in which it lives and moves about, are given in lists compiled by Prof. Lagler based on his own collecting forays and on previous data of Prof. Hubbs. Help Urged for Fiish Students The University's Committee on Intercultural Relations has writ- ten to Senator Vandenberg, en- dorsing a Senate joint resolution for aid to Finnish students. The resolution provides that money received from Finland in payment on her debt to this coun- try from World War I, "be used to provide educational and tech- nical instruction and training in the United States for citizens of Finland." The University has now two students from Finland: Nils En- kvist, Grad., in speech science; and Eino Kainlauri, '48 Eng., in civil engineering. Chairman of the University committee is Dr. Essen M. Gale, director of the International Cent- er and counselor to foreign stu- dents. The flowers of the calla lily, ac- cording to the World Book Ency- clopedia, are not the beautiful I l the ballroom were some 120 bridge players, hunched over several doz- en tables; muttering at brief in- tervals a hesitant "three hearts" or "Four spades." Every several minutes the entire congregation would rise and shift through the smoky room to another table, where hands prepared by the Na- tional Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament Committee awaited them. This was the first phase in a tournament which may take some of the contestants to the national finals at Chicago. The twelve highest scorers in the round will play an additional set of prepared hands and from these two players will be sent to the Chicago com- petition. The Tournament is an annual affair sponsored by the Union, under the direction of Keith Jor- don and Bob Holland of the Union executive council. Mrs. S. J. Shank, who is noted in this region as a bridge expert, officiated at the tournament. Hitchcock Thriller Comes to (aHipizs "The Lady Vanishes," classic mystery thriller directed by Alfred Hitchcock, will be shown at 8:30 p.m. this Sunday and Monday at the Kellogg Auditorium. A short, '"The Feeling of Rejec- tion," will be shown along with this film. The films are being pre- sented by the Art Cinema League and the Student World Federal- ists. Tickets will be sold from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. at University hall. Tickets will also be available at Kellogg Audito- rium the nights of the perform- ances. Label Laund ry Sent in Mail, Students Told Students were requested to put their name and address inside their laundry cases when they sent them through the mails yes- terday by assistant postmaster A. J. Mayer. IR Meeting . The Inter - racial Association . I f 1Ii 11 "It sometimes happens that the address on the outside of the caseI is lost," Mayer said, "and if there is a duplicate within the case on top of the laundry, it can be iden- tified. Mayer assumed that many stu- dents who failed to receive their laundry cases simply gave them up for lost. "This is not neces- sary," he said. As long as no written message is packed in the case, ae inclu- sion of name and address is per- missible, Mayer said. "It is against the law to enclose any letters in such cases, unless they are sent first class." Laundry cases which are lost in the mails usually end up in the dead parcel office of a large city post office. Unless they are claimed within six months, they are sold at auction by the postai authorities. Tickets for Soph Prow. o Go 0ott Sale Today Tickets for Soph Prom, featur- ing Phil Levant and his orchestra, to be presented from' 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, March 5 in the Un- ion Ballroom, will go on sale to- day. The tickets for sophomores only will be sold from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. today and tomorrow and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday in the University Hall booth. General ticket sales will begin next week. museum is under par, but this is attributed to the slushy weather by a museum official. "After all," as one attending student put it," you don't even have to turn the pages of your magazine." Chopstick 1)inner Kindai Nihon Kenkyn Kai, the Japanese club, is giving a suki- yaki dinner, 6:30 Saturday at In- ternational House. The dinner will be eaten with chopsticks from authentic Jap- anese bowls. Those interested in attending can contact Judy Yosh- ihara at 2-2181. At MICHIGAN EILEEN HICKEY smokes CH ESTERF I ELDS She says: "Aly c(hoice is C;heserfields becausethey are mild and tigbtl packed. I1never tire of the, r laste." A nation-wide survey shows that Chesterfields are TOPS with College Students from coast-to-coast. STOP losing valuable time Students, save yourself time and money! The Ann Arbor Business School offers you classes in Typing & Shorthand to be taken in your free hours during the day or in night classes. Veterans may receive this in- struction under the G.I. Bill, albng with your University courses sei ts for particulars. ANN ARBOR BUSINESS SCHOOL 330 Nickels Arcade I I I Phone 2-0330 1t jJj~p I ' it : I 4 i ... _ __-' __-' _ __ _is_ __.__...1_ I 11 IN.U