FRDAY, b EEIVER 3, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY mwmwmw DOUGH OR DIE: 'Ensian Staff To Answer MSC Yearbook's S.O.S. By LEE RUKEL An S.O.S. from financially des- perate Michigan State yearbook publishers will be answered soon by the business staff of the money making 'Ensian. They plan to visit Michigan State to give any tips they can to aid the ailing yearbook on that campus. * * * 'ENSIANEERS are going in re- sponse to an invitation from the business staff of the Wolverine, State's yearbook sent by the Staters in an effort to become better acquainted with the way that the business affairs of the 'Ensian are managed. A $12,000 loss that the State Smorgasbord Meal Planned Tickets are now on sale at In- ternational Center for the Club Europa's Smorgasbord Sunday dinner to be served 6:30 at IC Headquarters. The meal is the first of the Na- tional dinners sponsored by the different regional groups to be given this year. THE DINNER will consist of a hot and cold buffet plus regular table serving. It will be prepared by the women of the club. Eino Kainlauri, president of Club Europa in announcing the menu, said potato salad made with ten dozen eggs will be the special pride of the cooks. Also included on the dinner are Skinka, a Scandinavian ham; Swedish meat balls; sill, a her- ring; desert and beverage. publication sustained last year is the reason behind the Wolver- ine's present concern with im- proving their business neth- ods, State students explained. A previous request for infor- mation was answered by Bill Zer- man, general sales manager of the 'Ensian, in a letter to the Wolver- ine's business manager. * *, e ZERMAN'S LETTER related the various methods used by the 'En- sian to promote sales. It also out- lined the set-up of the business staff, which it modestly called 'terrific.' The letter emphasized fitting the right personality to the job, and hinted that "a few screw- balls go a long way." No definite date has been set for the business staff's visit to Michigan State. December 11 has been picked as a tentative one, but, "it will depend on the situation here," Zerman said. Survey Research Will Reveal All A chance to learn about the Survey Research Center's inter- viewing methods will be given the press and radio at 2 p.m. today in the Rackham Building. Key representatives of the Sur- vey Research Center will be on hand to explain techniques and to show how they differ from other systems. The meeting is part of a train- ing course for ten supervisors from all parts of the country. Phoenix Gives $6,400 To Aid AtomicStudy Four research grants totalling $6,400 from the Phoenix Project, University war memorial planned as a center of study and research on peacetime uses of atomic en- ergy, were announced yesterday by Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the Graduate School.' Prof. William A. Beierwaltes of the medical school received a $2,- 000 grant for research in radioac- tive iodine. Another $2,000 award was made to Profs. Robley C. Williams of the physics department and Robert J. Lowry of the botany depart- ment. Two grants of $1,200 each were made to Christian S. Rondestvedt, Jr. and Wyman R. Vaughan, both chemistry in structors. Rondest- vedt will conduct a study of the "Mechanism of the Dakin Reac- tion" and Vaughan of the "Mech- anism of the Rowe Rearrange- ment." Tree Trimming The traditional decoration of Lane Hall's Christmas tree will) be the feature of a Coffee Hour at 4:30 p.m. today. Students from the whole cam- pus participate in the annual event for which many new orna- ments have recently been ac- quired. An annual Supervisor Training Conference in preparation for the 1949 Consumer Finance Study is teing sponsored this week by the University's Survey Research Cen- ter. Intensive meetings will continue through tomorrow in the East Council Room of Rackham Build- ing. T1HE CONSUMER Finance Study, which the Research Center will undertake for the fourth con- secutive year at the request of the Federal Reserve Board, has a two- fold purpose. It measures attitudes toward the financial condition of the nation, and consumer spending. The study reports people's satis- faction toward their own finan- cial situation, their spendings for the past year, and their ex- pected expenditures for the fu- ture. Supervisors attending the con- ference will hire and train inter- viewers for the study all over the nation. Beginning Jan. 2, over 3,- 500 persons will be questioned. * * * PANEL DISCUSSIONS on the objectives of the Consumer Fi- nance Study, and on the specific questions to be used in surveying were held yesterday. Prof. George Katona, program director of the Center, and Miss Janet Austrian, study director, led the discussions. Prof. Rensis Likert, director of the Center, presented a report on the activities of the Survey Re- search Center to the conference. He outlined activities of the past year, and plans for the future. Speech Winner Stanley F. Johnson, '51, was the winner of the Speech Depart- ment's semi-annual extemporane- ous speaking contest held yester- day in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. FINANCE SURVEY: Research Center Sponsoring AnnualSupervisors Meeting List Winners Of Competition Winners of the Spanish poetry, reading contest are first place Syl- via Von Reis '52, and second place Von Reis '52, and second place Mae Cade '51 in the intermediate group. In the advanced group Richard Etlinger '50, took first place with William Najjar '50, placing sec- ond and John Ricardo '49 third. Other contestants, in the inter- mediate group were Jane Topper '51, and Jchn Hall '52. Others in the advanced group were Charles Fossati '49, Elizabeth Iden '49, Elizabeth Taucek '50 BAd. Each winner received a Spanish poetry book as a prize. In Ann Arb 508 East w wr - (illiam /sn joteC° c,,rsto o'f bra I I Swhere There's Coke The re's Hospitlifty I RECOI nre nlwnvs hits for those "doubt- hits for those "doubtful" names on your gift lists .. . Stop in tomorrow for a leisurely hearing of these time-honoured 7 Lv I EXECUTIVE CAREERS r IN RETAILING One-year Course Use Michigan Daily Classified Ads I 1 leads to Master's Degree I I i , M , - Prepare to step into a responsible executive position in the retailing field: buying, advertising, fashion, personnel. Specialized training, exclusively for col- lege graduates, covers merchandising, personnel management, textiles, store organization, sales promotion, and all phases of store activity. Realistic ap- proach under store-trained faculty. Classes are combined with paid store work. Students are usually placed be- fore graduation. Co-educational. Mas- ter's degree. Tuition $350. Four full- tuition scholarships available. Limited enrollment. Write Admissions Office for Bulletin C. RESEARCH BUREAU FOR RETAIL TRAINING UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH " Pittsburgh 13, Pa. SINGLES and ALBUMS, popular the world over! CHRISTMAS ALBUMS 'TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians. Silent Night, Holy Night - Adeste Fideles - Cantique De Noel. Dec. 480. $3.95. CHRISTMAS CAROLS By the St. Luke's Choristers. It Came Upon a Midnight Clear-- O Little Town of Bethlehem - Deck the Halls. Cap. BD-2. $3.31. A CHRISTMAS CAROL Lionel Barrymore as Ebenezer Scrooge. MGM 16A. $4.00. THE LITTLEST ANGEL With Loretta Young. Dec. 399. $3.16. MERRY CHRISTMAS Bing Crosby. Jingle Bells - Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town - White Christmas. Dec. 403. $4.74. THE MESSIAH Handel. Sir Thomas Beecham and the Royal Phil- harmonic Society. Vic. DM-121. $28.25. CHRISTMAS SINGLE RECORDS TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS Fred Waring and his Pennsylvan- ians. White Christmas. Dec. 24500. 79c HALLELUJAH CHORUS-THE MESSIAH Glory of the Lord-The Mes- siah. Vic. 11825. $1.25. STILLE NACHT, HEILIGE NACHT Ernestine Schumann - Heink. Weihnachten. Vic. 6723. $1.25. WINTER WONDERLAND Perry Como. That Christmas Feeling. Vic. 20-1968. 75c WHITE CHRISTMAS Bing Crosby. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen. Dec. 23778. RUSSIAN CHRISTMAS MUSIC Leopold Stokowski and his Symphony Orchestra. Christmas Music. Vic. 11-9837. $1.25. MAIL AND PHONE ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY! Read, Use Daily Classified Ads ; mmmud r If 303 NORTH FIFTH AVE. VOCAL MUSIC on COLUMBIA RECORDS By Artists Long Popular Among Ann Arbor Music-Lovers *DEBUSSY: La Damoiselle Elue Sayao, Nadell, with'Philadelphia Orchestra MM 761..............................$4.75 DON COSSACKS ON THE ATTACK -Song of the Plains, Cossack Songs, etc. Don Cossack. Chorus under Jaroff MM 542 ........................... $6.00 *CELEBRATED OPERATIC ARIAS -From "Faust," "Manon," "La Boheme," etc. Bidu Sayao, Soprano MM 612 .............................$6.00 4' BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY ANN ARBOR COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY © 1948, The Coca-.Colo Company 4, % /1L IRISH SONGS -Kerry Dance, Killarney, Rose E'ileen Farrell, Soprano M 662 .................... *MOZART: Operatic Arias EJo Pinza, Basso M M 643 .................. . *OFFENBACH: Arias Jennie Tourel, Mezzo-Soprano M X 299 . . .... ........ POSTGRADUATE CURSE I 'ATO of Tralee, etc. $4.90 $6.00 $2.90 POPULAR ITALIAN SO Ezio PinZa, Basso M M 768 ............ .$3.90 We expected this... YOUR TELEPHONE must take hard knocks as they come-and go on working. To make sure it can, we test samples of each day's pro- duction and put telephones through the equivalent of years of service in a few hours or days. For example: we drop handsets into their cradles 22,000 times-equal-to 4 years' normal use. And not just once, but from 16 different posi. tions, we drop sample telephones from desk-top height onto a hardwood surface. We even check their feet to be certain they won't scratch your table. Here at Western Electric, we've been making Bell tele- phones since 1882. But telephones themselves are only about 6% of the equipment used in your service. The other 94% includes wire, cable, switchboards, trucks, poles, tools, office equipment. With the exception of buildings, we make or supply almost everything Bell telephone people use-and test it with utmost care. RACHMANINOFF: Songs Jennie2Iourel, Mezzo-Soprano M 625 ................. *ROSSINI: Arias Jennie Tourel, Mezzo-Soprat/o MM 691................ VILLA-LOBOS: Serestas Jennie Tourel, Mezzo-Soprano M X 249 ................ .$4.75 5=00 .wwai* $4.75 PLUS AN IMPRLTA :NT4000-A-YEAR ASSIGNMENT .$3.50 VILLA-LOBOS: Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 Sayao, Soprano with Light Celli and Bass 71670...............................$1.25 PONCH IELLI: Scene and Duet (La Gioconda) THOMAS: Swallow Duet (Mignon) Ezio Pinza and Rise Stevens 7237 1 ............................... . $1.25 INTERVIEWING TEAM COMING SOON! Few opportunities open to college upperClassmen can match this one! Here's a chance to get both flying and executive experience with the world's leader in Aviation -the U. S. Air Force. If you can qualify, you join a select group of college men for 52 weeks Aviation Cadet-Pilot 'I.raining- -kitpay; When you complete the course, you git your wings A special interviewing team will be on campus to tell you more about it and to give preliminary qualifying examinations. Stop in after class and talk it over with the pilots themselves. If you wish, you may sign up now and finish your schooling before starting your training. HERE ARE THE REQUIREMENTS: You must be a male citizen, between 20 and 261 years old, phy sically sound, and have at least two years of college (or be able to pass the equivalent examination administered by the inter- -v .r tem ). Roth single and married men may now apply. Also available on LP (Long-Playing) Records-- Bacaloni, Bonelli, Nelsonl dd, K iKu h, Lotte Lehmann, 11IGteunI 1 "b('t- Ths arreti//i zany othetr Coilumb ia artists are old Ann Arbor favorites. Hear thean on Columbia Records at the I 11