PAGE TW ' IHE MICHIGAN DAWY SUNDAY, JANUARY 9, 1949 COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Public Mystified by Zany Student Stunts By CRAIG WILSON When a Northwestern coed once lunched on a grasshopper on a $7 dare and promised to dine on a scorpion for another $7, John Q. Public probably had a hunch that students are nuts. He is right. They are: WHEN FORBIDDING BLACK clouds darkened the sky during a football game at the University of Missouri, one student entre- preneur raked in cash selling sou'- westers. In order to further stimulate sales, he offered one shbt of wine with each set of water- repellants. According to the Missouri Stu- dent, as he was escorted away by blue-coated stalwarts, he shouted to his date to continue selling the hats. * * * ZANIEST JOB OF ALL was one that occupied a Dartmouth stu- dent last summer. With five other youths, he tramped 1,600 miles about the New England countryside in an attempt to prove that a certain brand of rubber heels were bet- ter than leather ones, according to the Dartmouth. Chiropodists checked their toot- sies every 1,000 miles for signs of blisters, hardening of the arter- ies andegangrene. After the test they announced that it had prov- en both types equally effective clod-hopper material, but that rubber out-trod leather 2 to 1. They also said that it had proven many foot disorders resulted from improperly fitted shoes and neg- lect of simple foot hygiene. HARD-PRESSED EDITORS of the Yale Daily News found that at the last minute some copy boy had misplaced a picture of a mountain-music band they had intended to publish. With their deadline only sec- onds away and nothing to fill the great white space, they in- serted a painting of two prehis- toric monsters happily engaged in committing a Highland Fling. The caption read: "We actually had a picture of the yokels in the story but some- one snitched it. So the only thing we could find in our up-to-date files was this little item which admittedly has no connection with anything whatsoever." A CRACK TEAM of University of Illinois recently competed in a tense struggle with the best com- petition the nation could muster -in a tasting contest. They comp'eted with 27 other tongue-trained epicures repre- senting schools all over the na- tion. Don't laugh. Members of the victorius squad got $850 scholar - ships, according to the Daily Illi- ni. "I LOVE SKELETONS AND skulls. I think they are beautiful and gorgeous." These thoughts come to us from a Hunter College woman student whom reporters for the Hunter Arrow credit with hav- ing a not-so-bad frame herself. Last summer she dug in the dirt with her bare feet and un- earthed them and various other non-de-script fossils. She was a journalism major un- til discovering that she "couldn't live without anthropology." * * * AWARD- FOR THE "Prize Stunt of 1948" undoubtedly went to an unnamed student, at a school we will not mention. The "stunt" cost him his life. He attempted to climb the al- most vertical face of a mountain near his campus. With him was an equally fool-hardy companion who was spared when he could "go no further." * * NEITHER CARRIED equip- ment. Neither had ever climbed so much as a hillock before. Neither told anyone where he was going or what he was attempting. Both knew that this particu- lar mountain face had claimed six lives already. Now seven are gone and John Q. Public is positive students are nuts! 'Ens ian Will Print Photos of Men in Drms All the men in the dorms now have a chance for their pictures to appear in the Michiganensian. For the first time in its history the 'Ensian will have a section for pictures of the residents of the quadrangles. The entire section will devoted to them, and set off by a division page. . MEMBERS OF A house will be split into two groups for the pic- ture-taking. Pictures will be two on a page, thus giving each house its own page. This is the. first time such an arrangement has been attempt- ed and members of the 'Ensian sale staff who were behind the idea expressed themselves as be- ing very satisfied with the re- sults. "We have had astounding re- ception from the men in the houses," Tom Cramer said. Cramer, together with Slug Kettler, and Bill Zerman, have been busy contacting the dorms about the set-up. So far ten houses have signed contracts with them. The houses are: West Quad; Adams, Allen - Rumsey, Lloyd, Wenley, Winchell, Wil- liams; East Quad; Tyler, Hayden, Greene and Straus. Off the /feCd . By RALPH MATLAW I can hear it now by Edward R. Murrow and Fred. W. Friendly is a chronicle of the era 1933-1945 "told in the authentic sounds and voices of the men who made this history" and narrated by Mr. Murrow (Columbia MM-800). The album should be heard at least once, since it recaptures many of the stirring and vital occasions of these years, but the telescoping of those events into 45 minutes entails dire conse- quences. * * * * THE ALBUM IS particularly disturbing because of the juxtapo- sition of events. There is insufficient differentiation in sound, and practically none in volume in the reaction of Germans and Italians to Hitler and Mussolini before their acts of aggression and the reception accorded Roosevelt by Congress before the declaration of war. The hysterics of Hitler and Mussolini, the much more sedate, though equally vituperative speech of Stalin and the avowals of friendship of Roosevelt, Churchill and Truman for our allies of the east follow each other so rapidly that the exact intentions of the speakers are not clear. In the same manner, Herbert Morrison's magnificent spot narration of the burning of the "Hindenburg," one of the few sections in the set when verbosity gives way to sincerity, is followed within 30 minutes by Chaplain Downey's prayer at Tinian before the take-off of the plane that took to atom bomb to Hiroshima. The contrast is too stark to make both acceptable. CHOICE OF THE materials should have been sufficient editorial comment, but Mr. Murrow's narration bridges a number of gaps de- spite his tendency toward sensationalism. The continuity is highly effective, especially when Mr. Murrow follows some of Churchill's most impressive statements with the petty squabbling of the 1940 and 1944 presidential campaigns or when Premier Reynaud's frantic appeal for help, ending with the reverberating "la France ne peut pas mourir," is followed immediately by the German broadcast of the surrender at Compiegne. * ..'. . I CAN HEAR IT NOW contains numerous familiar voices and re- calls many events of the recent past. In one sense it is highly provoca- tive: it offers the opportunity to compare present with the original impressions. This short documentation of international struggle could be instrumental in destroying the vestiges of discarded attitudes and in solidifying a current political outlook. However, the set is designed primarily as an oral history, and as such it is a drastic failure. It does not fail because of the comparatively small amount of material used and it probably doesn't fail because of the nature of recent events. it fails because it offers the one advantagenrecords of that nature have, the actual sound and words, and then proceeds to editorialize and dramatize so that there are two distinct progressions: the facts and the comments. Either one or the other must be wrong as they ap- pear in this album. Scandinavian FellowshipsOffered DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN L !s =7 .,. _ 4 Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all 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 daiy preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). SUND4Y, JANUARY 9, 1949 VOL. LIX, No. 80 Notices School of Education faculty meeting: 4:15 p.m., Mon., Jan. 10, University Elementary School Li- brary. Any L., S., & A., Architecture, Forestry or Music Senior inter- ested in a chairmanship for one of the committees listed below should submit a letter to: Val Johnson, Committee Clharmen- ships, 1020 Administration Build- ing, stating his reasons for wish- ing to head a committee, experi- ence, and ideas. The committees to which chairmen will be ap- pointed are: Information, Activi- ties, Publicity, Senior Ball, Cap and Gown, Reunion, Finance, and Announcements. Letters must be in by Thursday, Jan. 13. Recommendations for Depart- mental Honors: Teaching depart- ments wishing to recommend ten- tative February graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Education for departmental hon- ors should recommend such stu- dents in a letter sent to the Reg- istrar's Office, 1513 Administra- tion Building, by 11 a.m., Thurs., Feb. 3, 1949. Attention, February Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, and School of Public Health students are ad- vised not to request grades of I or X in February. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instructor to report Tutorial Service To End The Union announces that as of Thursday its tutorial service will be discontinued until next semes- rer. Most tutors will not be available :luring finals. However, students desiring aid in a course may con- act the Union before Thursday, -tnd an attempt will be made to provide tutelage. the make-up grade not later than 11 a.m., Thurs., Feb. 3, 1949. Grades received after that time may defer the student's gradua- tion until a7 later date. The Division of Schools of the Panama Canal is in need of exper- ienced teachers in the following fields, for September, 1949: Kin- dergarten, all elementary grades, elementary science, Spanish, Eng- lish, social studies, general, wood, and metal shop, mathematics,ebio- logical science, physical science, home economics, and physical ed- ucation. For further information, call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 201 Mason Hall. Camp Livingston, at Loveland, Ohio, needs men and women Jew- ish counselors, at least 19 years of gage. Also, waterfront head hold- ing a lifesaving certificate, camp nurse, camp doctor, camp cook- dietitians. Contact Bureau of Ap- pointnments, 201 Mason Hall, im- mediately. Representative will be here Fri., Jan. 14. Camp Songo, Casco, Maine, needs general counselors and group heads. Specialty men of all types. Men must be 21 years of age. Con- tact Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall, at once. The Marathon Corp., Menasha, Wis., will be unable to come for in- terviews before examinations, but they will be glad to receive appli- cations. They are interested in per- sonnel, salesaccounting, research, and manufacturing trainees. In (Continued on Page 4) TODAY MICHIGAN Shows 1-3-5-7-9 at P.M. DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH presents "THE TRAGICAL HISTORY OF DOCTOR FAUSTUS" By Christopher Marlowe Wed., Thur., Sat. - 8P.M. Tickets $1.20 - 90c - 60c (tax mci.) I Special Rate for Students, Wed. and Thur. - 48c I I Box Office Opens Tomorrow 10 A.M. - Ph. 6300 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Fellowships of up to $2,000 dol- lars are available for graduate study in Denmark, Norway, Ice- land and Sweden for 1949-1950. Requirements include good health, United States citizenship and ability to carry out original research on a definite plan of study. In most of the Universities classes will be conducted in Eng- lish. Subjects will include socia] welfare, political science, eco- nomics and culture and language of the Scandinavian, countries. Application papers must be filed before March 15. Blanks may be obtained by writing the Ameri- can - Scandinawvian Fourndation. 116 East 64th Street, New York 21 New York. ORPI-EIJM (Continuous from 1:30 P.M.) Cinema Triumphs from All Nations presented in Intimate Luxury CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING --TODAY - Y(VERRI'S "LA TRAVIATA'Q M~ll" ENGLISH TITLES" Maria Giovanni Mariano G EBOTARI * MALIPIERO + STABILE Orchestra, Chorus and Verdi's score given perfect ren Ballet of the Royal Theatre possible only with our mo of the Opera in Rome acoustical equipment. ndition odern HELP WANTED ROOM and breakfast in exchange for baby-sitting. Phone 2-3525 for de- tails. )6H ADVERTISING MANAGER for four store apparel chain. Must be experi- enced in writing copy and under- stand layout production. Write Box 167. )411 WANTED TO RENT SUNNY single wanted now. $30, two miles or so out. Have car. Grad stu- dent. McLeod, Box 168, Mich. Daily. ) 5N FOR SALE< RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIRS- Quick, competent service by experts. Aero Radio, 335 S. Main. Ph. 4997. )4 BUSINESS SERVICES 9 WANTED TO BUY ALTERATIONS on ladies' garments. Near Stockwell Hall. Ph. 2-2678. )4B BABY'S Play Pen in reasonable price and condition. Phone 2-2035. )2J '39 FORD Cpe. Deluxe. Radio, heater, excellent motor, tires, new paint job. $500. Call "Mac," 115 Strauss Hse., E.Q. )6 COUSINS on State Street A Special Selling of Better Dresses at $10.00 ea. )10 BABY Parakeets and Canaries. Bird supplies and cages. Moderate prices. 562 S. Seventh. Phone 5330. )5 TYPING WANTED. Rapid, accurate, MOTORCYCLE wanted. Let's see what reasonable rates. Phone 2-3357. )8B you have. Call Art Meier, 2-3143. )3J I' f .I I BE SMART! !Illy *yI Xxx- y _ FINE semi-dress double breasted black overcoat, 40 long by Kuppenheimer. Worn 4 times, $45. Cost $150. Ph. Ypsi 1286W4 or 6130 Munger Rd., corner Textile. )13 SAVE % ON DRESSES Whether you wear size 9-15, 10-44, or 16%-24%, gabardines, crepes and wools priced $12.95 to $39.95 are going out at half price. The Elizabeth Dillon Shop, 309 S. State COUSINS on State Street The balance of our camel hair coats reduced to $30. Sizes 7-15. )11 Motorcycle Clearance Sale Buy now, save 40 % on motorcycles, bicycles, tricycles and scooters. 1942 Harley 45, new battery and tires, runs good. $145.00. 1934 Harley 45, rebuilt motor, new transmission, generator, battery, seat and paint. $185.00. 1935 Harley 74, motor overhauled, sad- dle bags, buddy seat, good rubber, $295.00. 1936 Harley 80, motor, generator, trans- mission overhauled, new windshield. saddle bags, battery and rear chain. Good Rubber. $345.00 1942 Harley 45, good motor, transmis- sion overhauled, new battery and paint, buddy seat. $345.00 India Motorcycle Sales 207 W. LIBERTY, PHONE 2-1748 MOTION PICTURE PHOTOGRAPHY "A great asset to any organization" 1507 White St. Ph. 8975 )6B DRESSMAKING - ALTERATIONS Formals a Specialty - Prices Reasonable 205 East Ann 2-2020 )2B 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 Custom Clothes - Restyling - Alterations Prompt Service on all alterations Hildegarde Shoppe 109 E. Washington Phone 2-4669 )1B Any Make Any Model PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS Small down payment will deliver OFFICE EQUIPMENT SERVICE CO. 1116 S. Univ., 2-9409 111 S. 4th, 2-1213 )6B "NEARLY NEW" QUALITY CLOTHING Coats, $9-$25 Suits, $7-$25 Dresses, $2-$10 Skirts, $1-$8 Also other miscellaneous apparel Hildegarde Shoppe 109 E. Washington )1B Do you have Watches in your Drawers? Do their sad little faces reproach you because their wheels have stopped? Don't just sit there! Bring them im- mediately to the Veteran's Watch Repair Service Station nearest your home. All work is guaranteed-our prices are so low we wonder how we stay in business. Complete repair for watches-less than $6.75. THE ILVER "BEDTIME for SNIFFLES" Color Cartoon KING LATEST WORLD NEWS 7Aif oor 'MAk - 44off4w4 - BE THRIFTY I CAMPUS DRUG BLUEFRONI WITHAM DRUG WEST LODGE PX )7B s U CHID E TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY $.0 USED CARS FOR RENT PHIL HANSON USED CARS 1947 CROSLEY-2-door sedan, seaweed green, circus red wheels, radio and heater, seats and matching head- lights. Formerly owned by an 8 ft., 6 in giant with Ringling Brothers Circus who complained of too much headroom and traded for a smaller car. Front and rear bumper guards, license plate holder, and steering wheel at no extra charge. 40 miles per gallon. $550 will buy it. PHIL HANSON USED CARS 3060 Washtenaw Ave. Phone 2-7833 MALE student desires roommate, phone 2-4346. )9R SINGLE near campus for male student. Double for couple. Ph. 2-5128. )1R J-HOP GUESTS? Rooms available in private homes. Call Student Room Bureau, 2-8827, 11:30-12, 6:30-7:00. )2R SMALL furnished cottage, elec. stove, refrigerator, oil heat. Winan's Lake. Phone Brighton 3375. )4R MALE grad student wanted to share apartment. Write Box 170, Mich. Daily. )2R JSTTava al.i2nh d 9 rirnhIp newiv fur- LOST AND FOUND LOST-Between Jordan and Chem. Red i III ii ,