PAGE ETG'-T THE MIC141GAN DA-,ty-,v TRYTR.g11AV nvTnrtrlt *i 1Cio . .: - . . . -_.. _. ,,. ,. m T CT ~ :~ I:TE2AN rb A TTVr41G::!I U f d A!-,l A A E1l1Lf. LPl X, +. l;A Jtz311i lA, 1;7' 1 I 5 COME JOSEPHINE: Daily Reporter Takes First Airplane Trip _,.- _ OUTDATED DEADLINE: Inspired Brothers Publishing Campus Paper Occasionally' ASSOCIATED PRESS By PHOEBE FELDMAN I was taken for a ride yester- day-by the Flying Club. Member Bob Goslow took me up in the blue to get a new look at Ann Arbor. The plane we were in was the club's newly purchased Cessna. PURCHASED last August foi the licensed pilots in the club, it is intended primarily for cross- country trips. Cross-country, Dick informed me, meant things like flying down to see the Purdue game; commuting to school from Pontiac, and running down tc Florida for a vacation. The club members nonchalantly do all this. and more. But of course, not everybody who has the "flying bug" can go whipping off about the country. For the less experienced, the blub has two Aronca Champions to train and practice in. If you don't know how to fly at all, or have just begun to learn, the club's instructor, Roger Marko will help you out. I was just about to ask where I could sign up. But it seems that the club is actually a corporation. This is so the members can be pro- tected from damage spits. How-, ever, it pretty well limits the member-stockholders to about 66, and in order to join, you must de- posit $40. There are also dues of six dollars per month. In addition to buzzing around the country, the members -of the club also compete in annual races with Michigan State's club. They have won two out of the last three. Last June, they played host to flying enthusi- asts from all over the world at the Intercollegiate Flying Clubs meet at Willow Run. Though the membership is nec- essarily limited, club members emphasized that room could prob- ably be made for anyone who really wants to fly. They know what the flying bug is. PUC TURE NEWS By LEON JAROFF The Daily has discovered 'a com- petitor in the East Quadrangle. Published by a small, but enthu- siastic staff, the Strauss House Occasionally has emerged as a definite threat to the Washtenaw County press barons. WHY IS it called the Occasion- ally? "Well," explained James Dav- ies '50 and his brother John, '50E, originators of the title, "the Atlantic Monthly comes out every month, Business Week is published weekly, The Daily reaches us daily, and the Occa- sionally is published - you guessed it-occasionally." The Davies brothers, Garth Owen '49E, and Bob Papworth '50 were originally inspired by Jimmy Stewart's portrayal of a newspaperman in "Call Northside 777." But their ideas didn't crys- tallize until someone complained about the scarcity of Dailys on Monday. "LET'S KEEP Strauss House well-informed even on Mondays," suggested James Davies-and an enterprise was born. But, rather than adhere to a strict Sunday night deadline, the amateur editors decided to publish on a "casual, informal basis" and reserved the right to deliver the Occassionally to the Strauss mail boxes at the most unexpected times. Since no mimeograph machine is available in the East Quadran- gle, the Occasionally rolls off the most unusual "press" in the world. COMPOSED OF a wood table leaf, an old bedsheet, a. mimeo- graph stencil and a cider jug (empty), the press spews forth copies of the Occasionally at the rate of more than four a minute. When the task of rolling the cider jug over the press becomes too tedious, Papworth becomes an integral part of the machin- ery by doing a two-step on a drawing board placed over the stencil, ipjk, and paper. "The finished paper is truly a sight to behold," Papworth said proudly. Other residents of Strauss wryly agree with him. SO FAR, the Occasionally has not delved into partisan politics. Said co-editor John Davies mod- estly, "We are waiting for a deci- sive moment to throw our weight behind and swing the election for the most worthy candidate." Service Fraternity Alpha Phi Omega, National Service Fraternity, will hold an open meeting 7 p.m., Thursday at the Union. All members, prospective pledges, and men interested in joining must attend the meeting to be active in the fraternity this semester. L U T 1 I N B I G C I T Y - Dr. Donn Campbell of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals offers food to doe at New York City shelter. The deer was rescued aftex being hit by a car at Henry Hudson Parkway near Dyckman St.! Daily--Milburn NEW BOAT-Bob Goslow and Carol Anderson check the engine of the Flying Club's new Cessna which cruises at 100 m.p.h. 0 Orchestre National of France To Appear in Hill Auditorium Choral Union ticket-holders can thank the French government for their next source of music en- joyment. Under the direct sponsorship of their own government, the Or- chestre National of France, the first foreign group to tour this country since 1920, will appear at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Audi- torium. APPEARANCES OF the group throughout the nation will be pa- tronized by brighter and lesser lights of Franco-American diplo- matic services. Henri Bonnet, French ambas- sador to the United States, started the series last week, at the orchestra's sole New York -ppearance. Prominent figures throughout the country are making the symphony's list of sponsors read like Who's Who. On the continent, the Orchestre National occupies first place among the many French orches- Wanna Buy a Fire Engine? Fire engines seem to be a drag on the market. Since the story of Phi Kappa Tau's bid on the city's fire engine appeared in The Daily Tuesday, the fraternity reports being smothered with callers wanting to sell fire engines. Top offer came from a Detroit automobile dealer (The Daily gets that far away) who said he has six 1920 American-France flre en- gines, purchased from the Detroit fire department, sitting on his lot which he will sell cheap. TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Sold, Bought, Rented, Repaired STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0. . MORRILL 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted tras. From their refuge in Free French Marseilles, the group re- turned to Paris after the libera- tion more popular than ever be- fore. SINCE THAT TIME, it has toured various European countries and participated in 1947's great London Music Festival. Tickets for the orchestra's Ann Arbor performance are now avail- able at University Musical Socie- ty offices in Burton Memorial Tower. I. f YOU CAN STiLL BE A WINNER- GET INTO THE PHILIP MORRIS SCORECAST -CONTEST NOW! -I in stock now FINE SLACKS ,1 ~ Yr *i .r ~ MICHIGAN vs. MINNESOTA OHIO STATE vs. WISCONSIN SILLI NOIS vs. PURDUE Q U E E N -- Janet A. Link (center), Western Springs, Ill., and her court pose at pageant at Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass. Front (I. to r.): Virginia Merriam, Mountain Lakes, N. J.; Jean Campbell, Minneapolis; Miss Link; Phyllis Thorpe, Villanova, Pa., Jean Feickert, Sum- mit, N. J. Rear: Alice Deklyn (left), Morristown, N. J., and Virginia Perris, Philadelphia, 4pat$ Me M*ovrC AW & es 64a/oav HERE'S WHAT YOU WIN FOR YOURSELF: 1 HA O CAN W LIVIN GU O ri 0re cres ig fr ,ospores g o e sct" HERE"S WHAT YOU CAN WIN FOR YOUR LIVING GROUP OR CLUB! from $13.50 DELUXE QUALITY GABARDINES COVERT'S FLANNELS Smooth Venetians Sizes 28 to 42 /2rtle Lroi. Custom Tailors-Furnishings Phone 9520 1119 S. University Ave. I L E S S,0 N I N S A F E T Y - Lassie, the collie, waits at curb for Officer Ernest E. Pressley's signal before pushing Susie across a Chicago street. Pressley staged demonstration with dogs -to teach traffic safety lessons to school children. U ,- - - - - Who says "IT CAN'T BE DONE" "Bob" Goch says "IT CAN!" DANCE PICTURES FREE!!! We will take pictures with LEICA and CONTAX cameras, just as we have done since 1935. The film and a locket-size print will be given to the FIRST PRIZE A Stunning Large Screen Oldmt al Television Set with full 13 Channel coverage and Direct-View 10" Tube. This handsome prize goes to the Group entering the most ballots dur- ing entire contest. SECOND PRIZE A Beautiful Qidym2ka1 Auto- matic Radio-Phonograph Console with Miracle Tone Arm. Plays both 45-minute and standard records-for Group with second highest number of ballots entered. THIRD PRIZE OIddViW lConsole Radio Phonograph with Miracle Tone Arm. Plays up to twelve records. Changes records in 3 seconds - for Group with third highot number of ballots entered. FOR COMPLETE PARROT RESTAURANT ALEXANDER DRUGS INFORMATION SEE CAMPUS DRUG BULLETINS AT: WIKEL'S DRUGS ANNOUNCING! LAST WEEK'S WINNERS! "WINNERS OF 50 PHILIP MORRIS CIGARETTES" BILL McGOVERN G. SCHACTER WARREN L YOUNG HUGH BLECKI JAMES R. QUINN HAROLD W. SHERMAN subject gratis. There is no obligation to buy ' w . u