THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1950 j Name Phi Fiddle Faddle Eta Sigma Candidates Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honor society, has named eighteen men as eligible for membership on the basis of their scholastic averages. These men attained an over all average of 3.5 or better for either their first or first two semesters. * * * THOSE MEN who attained the average in their first semester are; Harry Iwasko; Loren Banum Johnston, Jr.; Jack Elliott Or- want; Warrin J. Robbins; Mur- ray Yolles., Those who earned their honor5 in two semesters include: Carl DaL. vid Bernstein; Willard DeVeere Den Houter; ;John C. Fountaine; Maurice Leon Heller; Harold Mar- cus Herman; Victor Wessel Glad- stone; Herbert Erwin Katz; Jos- eph Michael Scandura; Eli David Schoenfield; Jack Michael Van Der Bogaerde; Franklin William Vogenitz; Arnold David Wein- stock; Carl Eugene Wulfman. Any man who is eligible for membership but whose name was not includedbon the list is in- structed to contact Charles R. Webb, Jr., at 217 Adams House, West Quadrangle. OSU Official Hung in Effigy An angry mob of 500 yelling and snowball-throwing Ohio State stu- dents hung OSU athletic director Richard Larkins in effigy in a fol- low-up to Michigan's 9 to 3 victory over the Buckeyes, according to the United Press. The demonstration was report- edly staged to protest Larkin's de- cision to play Saturday's football game with the Wolverines in spite of severe weather conditions. The riot was calmed only by the appearance of OSU President Howard L. Bevis. Crawford To Talk? In New York City Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the Engineering College will address a meeting of engineering alumni in New York City tonight on the sub- ject "The Educational Function of the College of Engineering." Rehearsal time in the bass section of the U Symphony * 1' * " 'U' Symphony To Play Ravel, Glinka, Brahms Tomorrow Police Pick Up Gambling Ringleaders (Continued from Page 1) pus. The pool has been purely local and has no connection with other pools, the police investiga- tion has shown. "Two students, Robert Mc- Guire, age 20, of Chicago and S. Lee Setomer, age 26, of New York City were arraigned in Municipal Court on a charge of registering bets and waived an examination. They were releas- ed on bond. Sergeant Walter Krasny of the Ann Arbor Police said that McGuire and Setomer had given complete coopera- tion in the investigation." Brandon said that the "com- plete cooperation" mentioned in the statement did not mean that the two had confessed. This will' ohly be determined tomorrow by how they plead, he said. Brandon said the University would take no disciplinary action until the court action is completed. \HE WOULD NOT identify the "friend" who had gone bail for the two except to say that he is "a very reliable person in the Uni- versity who frequently helps Uni- versity students." Setomer has been prominent in intramural sports for a num- ber of years. In 1948 he won the trophy presented annually by The Daily to the outstanding intramural athlete and the fol- lowing year he was co-holder of the award. For a time he was on the Intra- mural Building's staff as a boxing instructor and joined with Charles Orwick, another instructor, in do- nating a cup to the building which is given each year to the outstand- ing intramural boxer. McGuire is in his second year in the College of Architecture and Design. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta. SRA To Discuss FinlandTonight. The present world status of Fin- land will be the topic of a student- faculty discussion group sponsored by the Student Religious Associa- tion at 7:30 p.m. today at the home of Prof. William Willcox of the history department. BUSINESS SERVICES i I 1 FOR SALE TYPING - Accurate work, reasonable rates, Will call for and deliver. Tele- phone Marie Schuler, 6341. )30B KIDDIE KARE Reliable sitters available. Ph. 3-1121. )10B GOOD RENTAL TYPEWRITERS now available at Oiice Equipment Ser- vice Company, 215 E. Liberty. Guar- anteed repair service on all makes of typewriters. )6B VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist. 308 S. State. Legal, Master, Doctors dis- sertations, etc. 2-9848 or 2-4228. )12B TYPING - Accurate wor, reasonable rates. Phone 3-4040. )3B WASHING -- Finished work and hand ironing if preferred. Also rough dry and wet washing. Free pick-up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. ) lB TYPEWRITERS AND FOUNTAIN PENS Sales, Rentals, and Service Morrill's - 314 S. State St. )4B TYPING done in my home. Call 2-3357. )27B Prof. Boston To Be HonoredTonight Prof. Orlan W. Boston, chair- man of the metal processing de- partment will be awarded the Worcester Reed Warner Medal to- night in New York City at the annual banquet of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. CHICAGO COLLEGE of Nationally Accredited An Outstanding College in a Splendid Profession a Entrance requirement thirty hours of Liberal Artstcredits. Advanced standing granted for additional L.A. credits. Next Class Starts February 12 Excellent clinical fa- cilities. Recreational and athletic activities. Dormitories on campus. Approved for veterans. 350 Belden Ave. Chicago 14, Ill. WHITE SEQUIN formal and slip. Size 14. Worn once. Call 2-7276. )115 DIAMOND Engagement and Wedding Rings. Large discount. Lee Anger, wholesale representative. Ph. 2-3481, 2:00-5:00.)4 OANARIES, parakeets, finches, and cock- atiel. Bird supplies and cages. 562 S. Seventh at West Madison. )2B ENTERING SERVICE, MUST SELL -- Lamps, electricsclock, G.E. flatiron, Motorola television 7-inch portable + with outside antenna, new Columbia long playing record changer, amplifier, base reflex cabinet with 12" speaker. An FA Davis Cyclopedia Med. & Surg. and specialties, 19bvolumes. Students desk, dressing table, crib and mat- tress, bathinette, stroller, small kitch- en table, 6 by 3 work bench, clothing men's size 42, women's 14. Ph. 5644. )113 CHRISTMAS Gift Rates on TIME and LIFE now available. Phone Student Periodical Agency 2-8242 to order. )2 TOURIST HOME for Overnight Guests. Bath, shower, reasonable rates, 518 E. Williams St. Phone 3-8454. )12R FOR THOSE WINTRY NIGHTS, Flan- nelette pajamas from COUSINS on State Stree. Warm as toast, in pat- terns or solids that are color fast. "Sanforized" shrunk, too! )3 TAILS-Worn once, like new, size 36, $50.00. Call 2-8781 or 1008 Natural Sci- ence Bldg. )14 MENS RUBBER FOOTWEAR-Toe Rub- bers $1.49, ankle-high galoshes $3.75, 4-buckle dress galoshes $3.75, high zipper galoshes $4.88. Open 'till 6 p.m. Sams Store, 122 E. Washington. )5 Friday "TREMENDOUS.. . Simply must TELEGRAM and be sen+e u .Sie tre LEW AYRES LOUIS WOLHEIM #"o ICH AMIAW MEARQONEL .. KUt O,eed by LEWIS WIESTONE FOR SALE BOOK SHELVES, bathinette, ref tor, ice box, bunk bd. 518 E. W rigera- Tilliam. ) 12R ROOMS FOR RENT 3 - ROOM APARTMENT for married couple without children or pets. Man must be able to care for lawn and miscellaneous jobs. WSter furnished, immediate possession, 2-4632. ) 58R SINGLE ROOM on campus with board. Newly decorated, 1354 Geddes. )57R 3RD FLOOR STUDIO NEAR CAMPUS- Prefer two to four art or arch. men students. Linens, use of dark room. Student landlord. Ph. 2-8545, 6-7. )23R HELP WANTED LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Stu)io 122 E Liberty Phone 8161 )lP 10 ENSIANS for $1.00. Thise are your earnings every time you sell 10 Michi- ganensians. Start selling today! If interested call at the Ensian offices of the Publications Building. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Brown corday purse Nov. 22, con- taining billfold, I.D., etc. Phone 9274. ) 94L LOST-Double strand of pearls. Near Ann & State. 3-1478 after 6. )93L GRAY COVERT topcoat exchanged at Bell Tues., Nov. 21. Contact Mrs. Vib- ert, 733 S. State, 3-4183. Robert Mc- Ghee. )92L i TYPIST wanted in near future for PhD thesis in Spanish American History. PhD thesis experience and accents on typewriter obviously necessary. Write Box 31, 420 Manard, Ann Arbor. )44H LOST-Man's gold Bulova watch Sat. noon at U. Hospital. Reward.cPhone W. Stephan, 2-2252. )90L LOST - Tan, gabardine trench coat, probably downtown. Reward. Call 2-4896. . )89L PERSONAL Under the direction of Wayne Dunlap, the University Symphony Orchestra will highlight its ini- tial concert of the year with the first performance in Ann Arbor of the complete score of Maurice Ravel's Daphnis et Chloe" ballet. Appearing at 8:30 p.m. tomor- row in Hill Auditorium, the Or-l chestra will also present the Over- ture to "Russian and Ludmille" by Michael Glinka, and "Concerto for Speech Finalists To BattleToday. Words will be weighed carefully today by judges in the finals of the speech department's public speaking contest. The winners of the Speech 31 preliminaries will speak at 4 p.m. in 4203 Angell Hall. They are: Bill Yeager, Normand Naumoff, Alan Luckoff, Bonnie Sinkule, Charles Richter, and Rosemary Bachman. The Speech 32 preliminary win- ners will compete at 9 a.m. in Kel- logg Auditorium. They are: Ed Griffin, Dave Ponitz, Sanford Shanblatt, Bill Shehan, and Jane Zoghibe. Violin and Cello in A major" by Johannes Brahms. THE SECOND suite of the "Da- phnis et Chloe" music is fre- quently performed but the entire musical score to the ballet is rarely played except when the ballet it- self is given. The opera "Russian and Lud- milla" by Glinka has been noted as having had a great influence on such important Russian com- posers as Tchaikovsky and Mus- sorgsky, and the Overture is in sonata-allegro form, the second subject resembling a folk tune. The Brahms Concerto is the composer's final work in concerto form, and is characterized by its terseness and great economy in development of its themes. * * * THE TWO soloists will be Unto Erkkila, '51SM, and Jerome Jeli- nek, '52SM. Erkkila, a violinist, is assistant concertmaster of the Or- chestra, and Jelinek is the prin- cipal cellist. The Orchestra, composed of students from all schools of the University, presents its concerts in Ann Arbor and throughout the state. PERSONAL PERSONALIZE your Christmas Cards with photographs of your family or drawings of your home, by the Litho- printing process. Braun-Brumfield, Inc. 308 S. State, Ph. 2-2615 or 3-8243. )38P STILL THE BEST BUY IN TOWN! 3 meals a day $9.00 a week. Club 211, J. D. Miller's Cafeteria. )2P WILL GIVE piano lessons. School of Music senior. Phone 2-8242.ch 2 GIRLS! Catch a batch. Learn to dance with RAY HATCH DANCE STUDIO 209 South State Phone 5083 )4P LOST-Tissot wristwatch someplace in the Arb while tobogganing Nov. 25. Call Tom Cecil 3-4145. Reward. )91L LOST-Ronson Adonis lighter initialed A. L. K. Phone 9434. Anne Kermath. )88L WANTED TO RENT GARAGE within easy walking distance of Law School. Call 2-4896. )12W TRANSPORTATION ARE YOU goin' to the Rose Bowl Game? You can drive a Cadillac, Oldsmobile or others. Free gas. Call WO 55768 or come to 103 W. Vernor, Detroit. )34T r z~-A ~/Cinema id r* and THE GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL present with JAMES MASON and the Abbey Theater Players "An absorbing chronicle of a manhunt in Belfast." -New Yorker "An exalting experience of heroic tragedy."-Life FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY . All aboard for the holidays! -and save on DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN NOWSHOWING ............. FRED ASTAIRE " RED SKELTON The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11 a.- m. Saturdays). WEDNESDAY, NOV. 29, 1950 VOL. LXI, No. 55 Notices To All Students, College of Liter- ature, Science, and the Arts: Elections for the Spring Se- mester are now being approved. Freshmen and sophomores who h' I Conqraftu aioni and 12,3t W i.4ej-mm WE of the 1951 Michiganensian salute the mighty men of Michigan football who once again have proven the old adage, "You can't beat a team that won't be beaten!" Best of luck, and bring home the roses. will have less than 55 hours by the end of this semester should make appointments for approval of elections in t he Academic Counselors' Office, 1210 Angell Hall. Juniors and seniors, and those sophomores who will have 55 hours or more by the end of this semester should make appoint- ments for approval of elections in the Board of Concentration Ad- visers' Office, 1006 Angell Hall. All Counselors and Advisers have advance information on when and where Spring Semester classes will meet. Students are urged to have their next semester's elections approved early. If elections are not ap- proved before the final examina- tion period begins, students must report during the half day preced- ing the time they are scheduled to register. There will be no ap- pointments during the examina- tion period. Employment Interviews: Mr. G. M. Chute of the General Electric Company, will conduct a Group Meeting of Electrical, Mechanical, and Industrial Engineers and Physicists who expect a bache- lor's or a master's degree in Feb- ruary, on Thurs., Nov. 30, Room 348, W. Engineering Bldg., 5 p.m. Detroit Civil Service Commission announces an examination for Technical Aid. Any citizen of the United States is eligible to apply and applications must be filed by Dec. 15. Technical Aid includes these classifications: business ad- ministration, general (social sci- ences, public administration, psy- chology, mathematics and statis- tics), and medical science. These three classifications are open to women, but only the general and medical science classifications are open to men. The age limit is 20 to 25 years of age. For further in- formation call at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administra- tion Building. (Continued on Page 4) Books by Franz Kafka The Castle........2.75 The Trial.........2.75 Penal Colony ...... 3.00 Great Wall of China 3.00 GROUP TICKETS! And the trip's more fun by train 1 Here's the Low-Down on Low Cost! Gather a group of 25 or more heading home in the same direction at the same time. Buy GROUP PLAN tickets. Each group member SAVES 28% compared to regular round-trip fares, or up to 50 % compared to buying one-way tickets in each direc- tion! Go Together-Return as You Please! You all leave on one train. But you can return sep- arately, in time for reopening of school. Group plan savings apply as far as you all go together. Then buy individual round-trip tickets the rest of the way. Plan Your Group Plan Savings NOWIYournearestrailroad pas- senger agent will help you or- ganize a group to get these big savings... good on most coach ;--: trains east of Chicago or St. Louis, north of the Ohio and Potomac Rivers, and west of New York City. Going Alone-or Stopping En Route ?You can still save plenty ... up to 24% ... with regular round-trip coach tickets. Round- Lrip coach or Pullman tickets are good for six months ... and give you stopover privileges going and coming back. Alone or Together, the Train's Best! Swell dining car meals. And room to roam around and visit. For Fun -For Comfort -For Safety IN ANY WEATHER-- TAKE THE TRAINI I -J I -- ARCH. AUD. Price 50c i Starting TODAY 1m'1 7:30 and 9:30 EASTERN RAILROADS " LAST TIMES TODAY " WITH JOSEPH COTTON & VALLI ~iI:1t .I ® STARTING T HURS DAY FEATURE SHOWN AT 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:25-9:25