FOR CAMERA-SHY SENIORS: 'Ensian Extends Picture Appointment Sign-up Date, + 'Einsian staffers, speculating on the evident reluctance of some of the seniors to sign up for their '49 Michiganensian pictures, think some of the seniors must have photo-phobia. This Freudian faction claims that after four years, experience with ID cards, many seniors have become negatively conditioned to cameras. The click of a shutter shiakes these poor victims dash madly off in the opposite direc- tion. ** * THE ENSIAN, sympathizing with these now camera-shy sen- iors, has extended the time through which the photographers will take pictures to Saturday, Oc- tober 30. Those seniors who have not signed up as yet for pictures may still do so this week at the Ensian office from 2 p.m.-5 p.m. And for the seniors who none- the-less can't find it in themselves to come so near the photographers in the Student Publications Build- Y :r": ing, the Ensian inaugurates a spe- cial service. All day tomorrow f \ (Wed.) the Ensian staffers will be on campus to make appointments' for pictures, and take subscrip- tions for the '49 Ensian. ** * SENIORS WHO want to make appointments, and students who } would like to sign up for their En- sians at the current lowest rate,. will find solicitous Ensian men waiting for them. They'll be at the Union, League, Engine Arch, Diagonal, and Willow Run bus stop. "a * * * SENIORS are guaranteed not toj look regressed, repressed, or even slightly hysterical. Nor shall they bear any resemblance to Johnny- with - the - pointed-head of the Psych 31 film of the same name. ..::.. 'Ensianites say that "you will look like you, that's all we can do." And for those seniors whose CAMERA SPOTS FIRE-This farm house, which would have fears are financial rather than photographic, the 'Ensian pic- been in the flood storage area after the Whitney Dam is completed, ture rate is no more than two was completely destroyed, by the flames which engulf it, near dollars. Waco, Tex. No one was injured. DnILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN' 'U' Courses NotA ffected BDecision Courts might prohibit religious teaching at the University if in- structors insert sectarian empha- sis in their courses, according to Edward W. Blakeman, Research1 Consultant in Religious Educa- tion. Blakeman, is working to im- prove religious facilities at the University. ** * HE SAID the Supreme Court's decision in March prohibiting "re- leased time" in public schools for religious instruction is not likely to affect the teaching of religion at the University. As long as the instructors avoid any sectarian emphasis, Blakeman believes the teaching would not be interpreted as un- stitutional. But if they do place such em- phasis, he warned, the courts would be justified in prohibiting such teachings, on the grounds that no state is allowed to provide state institutions of learning with funds to propagate a definite sect. Alumni Show ALAMEDA, Calif.-(A)-Happily carying an old tin can with 12 pounds of dirty-looking silver in it, Gerald T. Grace headed out of the Naval Air Station here for the United States mint. The mint would refine the silver, he explained, and the American taxpayer would be saved (with silver at 72 cents an ounce) around $145.00. What makes Grace feel good is that the silver was taken off old airplane engine bearings which otherwise would have been sold for surplus. * * * . GRACE is civilian supervisor of salvage and disposal at the Ala- meda Naval Air Station, where it also has been discovered that there's gold in the hills of junk airplanes and other surplus ma- terial left over from the unpleas- antness in the Pacific. Gold is found as the plating of certain radar parts, now ob- solete, and what pleases Grace is that they are getting $3.50 worth of gold off one type of old radar conduit housing which at one time was being sold as sur- plus to junkmen for 15 cents. "Never ridicule a junk dealer," Grace advises. "He gets fat on the stuff the rest of us throw away if we don't watch ourselves." - * * * "THERE'S GOT to be platinum somewhere," he insists. "They used gobs of it during the war." , "Keep looking," Grace replied. Reclaiming precious metal plating is a simple operation known to any electroplater. You just reverse the polarity of the electroplating process, and the metal comes off looking like or- dinary mud. The Navy has been doing it here for three years, deplating worn parts, but only recently has begun taking gold and silver off surplus parts. * * * RECLAIMING precious metal, however, is only a tiny part of the vast salvage operation carried on here, partly under warehouse roofs and pA tJ yout .in the open where GOLD IN THAT THAR' JUNK: Salvagers Rescue Surplus Metal junk is piled high over acres of concrete aprons. "Screening and selection is the secret," says Grace. First the stuff is sorted for anything still usable or salvageable by the Navy. What is left is sold as surplus. Officials estimate that the whole operation at this base alone is saving the government $100,000,- 000 a year. ONE OF THE sights Grace al- ways takes visitors around to see is an aluminum furnace where old airplane wings are melted down into aluminum "pigs" at a cost, he says, of two and a half cents a pound. "With aluminum at 17 cents a pound on the market this is not peanuts," he says proudly, "espe- cially when we are melting down around 12,000 pounds a day. We even sell the dross. There's a fellow who thinks he can make aluminum paint out of it. He comes and hauls it away and pays us a penny a pound." NI U Name Adviser To Inter-Guild r Joanne Smith will serve as ad- siser to Inter-Guild this year, Franklin H. Littell, director of the Student Religious Association has announced. Miss Smith,. recenly-appointed Danforth Graduate Fellow, holds a bachelor of science degree in home economics from the Univer- sity of Tennesee. As Inter-Guild's adviser, she will visit campus religious guilds, study their workings and partici- pate in their programs. It's the STAGE COACH INN for fine food and low prices STEAKS - SEAFOODS FRIED CHICKEN .i Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to ali members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1948 VOL. LIX, No. 13 Notices Certificates of Eligibility for participation in non-athletic ex- tracurricular activities may be se- cured in the Office of Student Af- fairs, Rm. 2, University Hall, Monday through Friday after- noons only. Each student applying for a certificate should present a blueprint of his scholastic record. Football game broadcasts: Men's organized house groups are authorized to entertain wom- en guests to hear radio broadcasts of the Purdue game between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. on Sat.,. Oct. 9. Groups planning this entertain- ment must notify the Office of Student Affairs and must receive the approval of chaperons not lat- er than Thursday noon, Oct. 7. Chaperons may be a resident' house director or a married couple 25 years of age or older. Rhodes Scholarships: Applica- tion blanks are obtainable in Rm. 2024 Angell Hall. Applications are due Sat., Oct. 9, in Rm. 2024 An- gell Hall or Rm. 2026 Angell Hall. Women students: A resting -room (beds and show- ers available for :women students in the Michigan League Building ( third floor, south end, daily be- tween the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 6 p.m._ University Community Center Willow Run Village Tues., Oct. 5, 8 p.m. Current Af- fairs Discussion Group. All in- terested persons welcome; 8 p.m., General Meeting, Coop- erative Nursery. Wed., Oct. 6, 8 p.m. Studio Work- shop Ceramics Group. Thurs., Oct. 7, 8 p.m. Studio Workshop Ceramips Group. Fri., Oct. 8, and Sat., Oct. 9, 1-5 and 6-8 p.m., Registration for Ypsilanti Township voters. Lectures 1948-49 Lecture Course Season Tickets are now on sale and will be available for one more week, Hill Auditorium box office. Indi- vidual admissions for the first four lectures go on sale next Mon- day morning. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Don- ald Gene Dobay, Chemistry; the- History Final Make-Up: 9 a.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. come with written instructor. sis: Adsorption of Aliphatic Amine Vapors by Silica Gel," 3 p.m., Tues., Oct. 5, Rm. 1565 Chemistry Bldg. Chairman, F. E. Bartell. Examination Sat., Oct. 16, Students must permission of Differential Geometry Seminar: 7. p.m., Thurs., Oct. 7, Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Discussion of Rota- tions in Four-Dimensional Space. Geometry Seminar: 3 p.m., Wed., Oct. 6, Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. W. J. Nemerever will talk on Poincare Geometry. To Be Aired "Hello Alumni," a new weekly radio program from 5:45 to 6:00 p.m. over WUOM, will keep Mich- igan alumni posted on alumni happenings. The first of these programs, sponsored by the Alumni Associa- tion, will be broadcast Thursday and directed to alumni within a 150 mile radius. Staff members of the Alumni Association will recapitulate hap- penings in this area. Letters from prominent alumni throughout the world will be read and character sketches of successful Michigan men and women will be given. From time to time the pro ram will feature visiting alumni who will add their informal note to the broadcast. Stump Speakers Will Hold Smoker Professors Ferdinand N. Mene- fee and Roger L. Morrison will speak at the annual "smoker mix- er" of Sigma Rho Tau, engineer- ing stump speaker's fraternity, at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Union. Prof. Menefee will have as his subject "What the consultant en- gineer can expect to meet in the courtroom." Professor Morrison will speak on "Selling Highways." Membership in Sigma Rho Tau is open to all students of architec- ture and engineering. Dun and Bradstreet, the famous credit rating firm, was founded in 1841, by Lewis Tappan. The World Book Encyclopedia relates that Abraham Lincoln, a friend of Tap- pan, served for a time as a Dun and Bradstreet correspondent. I Statistics Seminar: 11 Wed., Oct. 6, Rm. 3201 Hall. a.m. Angell 503 E. Huron St. Scandinavian 31 Tuesday evenings 7-9 Library. will meet p.m. in 403 Continuous from 1 p.m. , Today and Wednesday, Spanish tutors: Some of the Spanish majors in the Sociedad Hispanica are willing to tutor, free of charge, any of their co- members who need help in the ele- mentary courses. The tutoring sessions will take place in Rm. 408 Romance Language Bldg. from 4 to 5 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday, Oct. 7. Concerts Eileen Farrell, Soprano, will give the initial program in the Choral Union Series under the auspices (Continued on Page 4) t A CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE GIRL'S Used English Bicycle. Ph. 4764 after 7:00 Tues., Wed. )93 NATURAL LYNX Coat. Size 14. Beau- tiful condition. A bargain. 2-5117. )92 WHIZZER Motor Bike. In good condi- tion; accessories. A real bargain. Ph. Lew 2-5104, 615 East U. after 4 p.m. )94 CONCERT Series Tickets at cost; Or- chestra; Single Choral Union; Pair to Extra Series. 2-9597. )91 1934 FORD Tudor, new motor and tires. Radio, heater and seat covers. Ph. 8341 )78 WHIZZER Motor Bike. Good cond. New paint, saddle. 2025 Hill St. Ph. 2-6965. )67 WEBSTER Record Changer. Ex. cond. Reasonable price. 1204 Oakland. Ph. 2-5275. )66 TYPEWRITER, practically new, noise- less Remington. Full-size. Ph. 2-4832 evenings. )82 MUSKRAT COAT, sable-dyed musk- rat, good condition. Size 9 or 10. Call 25-9394. )84 HIGH SCORING STADIUM FASHIONS Come in and get your particular grandstand styles at the ELIZABETH DILLON SHOP )1 1 James 125cc motorcycle, $250. Never used. 1 125cc French Motobecane cycle, $200. Never used. 1 Servi-cycle, $1.25, in very good condition. Call 2-3173 between 9 and 5 daily. )87 NEW LINGUAPHONE German lan- guage records 30 lessons - $30. Schwinn "Continental" bike, 3 Mo.'s old. $75 when new. Still like new. $45 Box 138 )88 FORD '37 2 door, radio and heater, 2 new tires. Special, $275, Washtenaw Motor Sales, Inc. Phone 8864. )89 WOMAN'S white figure skates, size 5, in excellent condition For sale or ex- change for size 61-7. 2-4471. Rm. 2054.Sally Morse. )90 FOR SALE I PURE BRED GREAT DANE 6 mos. Broke. Handles well Excellent Health. Dark Brindle. Male. Call 8856 after 7 p.m. )49 Need a Good Place to Live? Louis trailer, 1946 24-ft. Admiral, is ready to move into behind 1880 Pack- ard. Reduced price. Terms )51 BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED Baby Sitting. Mature Grad student. Call 2-0122. )9B TYPING SERVICE Will call for and deliver 1820 Pontiac Phone 4798 )7B ALTERATIONS - Restyling - Custom clothes, Hildegarde Shoppe, 109 E. Washington, Telephone 2-4669. )1B LAUNDRY-Washing and ironing done in my home. Free pickup and deliv- ery. Ph. 2-9020. )3B BOUGHT AND SOLD--Men's used clothing by Ben the Tailor at Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )5B ,THE "WHISTLE STOP" Diner is open again. Sandwich delivery serv- ice from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. 208 South Fifth Ave Ph. 4585. Closed Mondays. )8B SADDLE HORSES for hire. Student rates, week days: $1.50 per hour. Also horses boarded. Stable % mile south of Ypsi Airport, corner of U.S. 23 and U.S. 112 Phone A. W. Cowan, 2-2266 or 871W11 Ypsi )6B ROYAL TYPEWRITERS Standards -- Portables Sold - Rented - Repaired. We also Sold - Rented - Repaired We also buy used typewriters OFFICE EQUIPMENT SERVICE CO. 1116 S. Univ., 2-9409 111 S. 4th, 2-1213 )2B FOR RENT ROOM, large, pleasant, quiet, share WANTED NEED 2 tickets to Illinois game. Call Joyce, 2-3231. )6W ONE OR TWO tickets to Ohio State game. Write Box 139, Mich. Daily. )7W WANTED-1000 HEADS!!! Be they square, round or flat THE DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State )5W EMPLOYMENT TWO experienced baby sitters desire regular or short notice work. Write Box 136 for further particulars. )lE WANTED TO TRADE '36 PONTIAC, good running condition. 2 new tires, heater. $200 or best offer. Call 7945. )1D LOST AND FOUND LOST-Ladies Wrist Watch. Rosegold Near East Quad. Call 2-4591-; Mrs. Newell. )1L LOST--Pair glasses Saturday, vicinity new Bus. Adm. Bldg or East Engr. Quad.BPhone 2-2794, Reward. )2L HELP WANTED SODA Fountain Help. Mornings and noon hours. Alexander Drugs. )6H PART TIME SALESMAN. Inquire Ar- thur Beden, 216 E. Huron. Ph. 7181 )9H PERSONAL DO YOU NEED A SHMOO? Leading Shmoo producer in southern Michigan now has the new, improved 1949 Shmoo on display. See your near- est dealer today! )6P CLIFF HOFF ORCH. Judy Pardee, Vocalist, will make your party a success. Ph. 2-8808 3P SPECIAL! Fine Feathers hosiery, originally priced at $1.35 pr, NOW $1.09 pr. 3 prs. $2.99. New Fall shades, First quality - Aver. length, size 9-10% imnnm _ _ COMING MON DAY, OCT. 11th, 8:15 P.M. PEASE AUDITORIUM ... . YPSILANTI, MICHIGAN nd screen ~ i t 11 featurina stars of stagae a I 71