PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. .. _ . WSSF Week Opens Drive Today for Blood, Funds * * * * -Courtesy WSSF DAILY BREAD-Helping students to maintain their health is one of the important functions of WSSF.' Two Greek students are shown pausing at one of the WSSF centers in Greece for a nourishing meal. 'They Still Need You,' Motto IOf Anal ReliefuCampaign: By PHOEBE FELDMAN Banners and posters spotlighted with the motto "They Still Need You" will go up around campus today and tomorrow, highlighting the beginning of World Student Service Fund's concentrated drive this week. Begun last semester, the campaign will reach its climax in the next seven days when approximately 500 members of the campus drive organization combine with Alpha Phi Omega, national service fra- ternity, to put the University up near its yearly quota by the end of the week. NEW FEATURE in the annual WSSF Wek will be the national service fraternity monitored "blood booths," placed around campus Thursday and Friday, where students will be asked to sign up to con- tribute a pint of blood to the blood bank, with the fees going to the WSSF drive. Two hundred solicitors will also canvass organized houses and dorms during the week asking for pledges of blood. Procedure for donation is simple and quick, according to drive chairmen. Students wishing to donate blood can call the blood bank and make an appointment-with the actual donation taking just a half hour, and or phone or mail their pledges for blood or money to the WSSF office, Lane Hall. WSSF, FOR WHICH about $490,000 was collected last year, is devoted to aiding students throughout the world. By supplying needy students wit hessentials of life and study materials, WSSF attempts to foster its goal of helping develop international good will. Depending entirely for its income upon individual and group contributions, WSSF maintains approximately eight different kinds of drect and indirect aid to students. Regular projects of WSSF are supplying emergency food and clothing, and medical aid, including first aid materials, and equipment for student health and dental clinics in countries in both Europe and Asia. * * * * PROJECTS RECENTLY instituted by WSSF agencies include maintenance of rest-centers for students who are physically run down, aid to refugee and displaced students, and to tubercular and pre- tubercular students, plus furnishing needed educational supplies and equipment. * * * * -Curtesy Wor CLOTHING ISSUE-Torn by years of civil war, Greece is short of clothing. To aid students in continuing their education, WSSF supplies warm clothing purchased with contributions from Amer- ican colleges. * * * * with DELORES LASCHEVER The after dinner radio listener The heroes of these 17-odd had better be a mystery fan or chillers are of various shapes, find some other pastime. sizes and intelligences. The For no less than 17 who-dun-its quality of the scripts is like- weekly are scheduled on the two wise. And you can be sure the major networks. On Thuirsday criminal is always the least evening alone the, Columbia Broad- apparent iember of the cast casting System .(WJR) within the as well as the most lovable. space of two hours broadcasts four Inner Sanctum's squeaky door mystery programs successively, still tends to be the eeriest thing 4t * about the program but generally THE PRIMARY point gained it is one of the better programs from the preponderance of such of its kind. On a par with it is programs, excluding the FBI in Suspense, which has well-known Peace and War, is the Johnny- stars as its primary attribute. come-lately characteristic of our** police forces and the obviously WHAT FUNCTION the hermit's higher I-Q of the private detec- cave plays in the story of the tive. -amp naema ha c m+-ilth - Gargoyle Goes Hog-Wild! Lunatics on Campus Humor Magazine Threaten Students With Zaniest Issue Yet Bar-Room Humor, Biting Satire, sex' And Just Oodles of Jokes i I I i EDUCATIONAL AIDS-China, still in the is desperately short of laboratory and book girl does chemistry research with the help of by WSSF. --Courtesy WSSF throes of civil war, supplies. A Chinese equipment furnished Double Cast Announced for Cosi Fn Tutte A double cast has been an- nounced for the performance of Mozart's comic opera "Cosi Fan Tutte," which will go before the footlights at 8 p. m. March 8 in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The two casts for the comic op- era, which is produced under the combined auspices of thehspeech department and the School of Music, will perform on alternate evenings. The cast of the opening perfor- mance, and of March 10, consists of Norma Heyde, Grad. (soprano) as Fiordiligi; Elsie Bell, '50 (so- prano) as Dorabella; Carol Neil- son, '50 (soprano) as Despina, a servant girl; Jack Wilcox, Grad. (bass) as Guglielmo; Reid Shel- ton, Grad. (tenor) as Ferrando; and Robert Elson, '50 (baritone) as Don Alfonso. The alternating cast, to perform March 9 and 11, consists of Rose Marie Jun, Grad., as Fiordiligi, Joan Sapf as Dorabella, Ruth Campbell, '50, as Despina, Jack Norman as Ferrando, Dale Thompson, '50 as Guglielmo, and Bertram Gable as Don Alfonso. Tickets may be obtained at- the Lydia Mendelssohn box office or reserved by calling 6300. Latin Americans To GiveSupper Latin American students will take their turn at playing host at 6:30 p.m. at the traditional Sun- day supper at the International Center. At the World Affairs Round- table, which follows the dinner at 8 p.m. and is open to the public, the topic of discussion will be "How and When Should the U.S.A. Intervene in Latin Amer- ica?" Roberto Gordillo, a former Uni- versity student, now working at the Sacred Hearts Seminary Li- brary in Detroit, will be the guest speaker at the roundtable. r --. Two Bits Ma rch~ X13 THE MAIN DINING ROOM of the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNION 40 Serving Sunday Dinner To Our Members and Their Guests 12:50 to 3:50 P.M. Try FOLLETT'S First Every Book for Every Course USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES I _li i - I Johnson New YR President Howard Johnson, '51, has been elected president of the Young Re- publicans Club and Howard Hart- zell was chosen for the vice-pres- idential position. Other officers elected include Jasper Reid, '51, treasurer, and Keith Carabell, '51, secretary. Members of the new board of di- rectors-at-large are Leonard Wil- cox, '52, Mary Martin, '51, and John Donaldson, '51. The first undertaking of the new executives will be an open de- bate of the YR's with the Young Democrats on the labor plank of the YR's "Opportunity State" platform, to be held at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Chapel of the League. This debate may be the first of several such contests if sufficient interest is shown, Johnson said. /jy fr y/ -.4... f ..- r: 1 : p4 " ,{, HOW MUCH IS ONE RESCUE WOR? A tiny hand above the water. Then slowly, slowly it sinks. But there is time-still time- if only someone is near, someone who knows what to do. A twelve-year-old boy, a woman, an old man-anyone, if only he knows. And the wonderful thing is that there are millions who do know what to do and how to do it. Last year alone, you-through your Red Cross-made it possible to train more than a half-million people in water safety. Another 55,000 were trained and qualified as instructors in water safety and first aid. It is estimated that 17,000,000 have had training in first aid and water safety through your Red Cross. // f Many of these people are able to save human life-priceless human life. How much is this ter: / J ability worth? It's hard to say-unless it is someone you love who has been rescued. Your contributions to your oed Cross can - w help carry on this training program, help take "S I: v~rest Westports it to new areas that need it. Give now--it may save a life sooner than you think. You, too, c hel through Yi1 R E D LCR0S S swing into Spring with colors flying Bright dashes of color ... shades that sing with the vibrancy of spring! Our new collection of Westports presents a gala afray of the latest footnotes for 1950. i.C .:'FY.1 :4 s ::;ii:j:'i ': ,: t;:." : %I ..:..:.:: ., f .; ., rM ......... : - ._ :.. y ...... ,,..,M~ .. ..M I I