:,; PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 19M -I Arts Magazine Needs Articles Generation, the student inter- arts magazine, is currently looking for publication material, Louis Or- lin, managing editor, has announc- ed. Essays, fiction, and poetry are all acceptable, according to Orlin. Critical or expository articles on contemporary society are also wanted, Orlin said. Because the 'Ensian photogra- phers are using the Generation office, Orlin asks that all contri- butions be turned in at the 'Ensian office in the Student Publications Building. 'Garg' Requests Joke Contributions Bob Uchitelle, managing editor' of the Gargoyle has announced the opening of a local humor con- test. Jokes, limerickgs, parodies, or anecdotes are wanted for the hu- mor magazine with a $5 prize be- ing offered for the best contribu- tion. The jokes,.according to Uchitelle should not be borrowed from other college magazines. He requested contributions to be sent to the Gargoyle, 211 S. State St. SIREN SIGNALS SET: City Well Organized For Civilian Defense Staff of 1000 KING OF THE KITCHEN: Ann Arbor has not been tardy in organizing for the first nation- al civilian defense to be set up in peacetime, Prof. Arthur Bromage, local civil defense director, said yesterday. During the summer, a civil de- fense staff was appointed for Ann Arbor as a first step in creating a coherent and inclusive system of disaster prevention in case of at- tack. Signals and procedures have been set up for everyone to follpw in the event of an attack, Prof. Bromage said. It is very important that all persons living in Ann Ar- bor, students included, be aware of these signals and procedures, he added. AIR RAID The air raid warning signals, which will be standard throughout" the state, will be sounded simul- taneously on the steam sirens lo- cated at the University power house and the King-Seeley Corp. plant, and the mechanical sirens in the tower of the An'n Arbor Fire Station. A "red alert" will be sounded if an attack is imminent. This will consist of a continuous three min- ute blast on all the sirens and will indicate that "hostile aircraft have been identified and are within our Air Defense sector or within ad- jacent sectors with a high prob- ability of entering our sector." The second signal will be known as a "white signal" and will mean that the danger is past. It will be indicated by three one-minute blasts each separated by two min- utes of silence. WHAT TO DO Instructions to be closely fol- lowed by everyone in case of an air attack were also given by Prof. Bromage. If a red alert sounds, try not to get panicky, he advised. Don't run out into the street to see what is happening, and if you are at home, in class, or at work, the smart thing to do is to stay there, he further counseled. If out on the street, take cover in the nearest building, and if you are driving a car, park it at once and seek shelter. Be sure the car is left out of the traffic lanes and away from fire plugs, hospital en- trances, and anything else that may be important, Prof. Bromage said. The best thing to do, if you are in a building, is to seek shelter in the basement away from doors and windows, he advised. Finally, Prof. Bromage said, don't use the telephone unless it is an extreme emergency. Since its organization the civil defense staff has been working to- ward coordinating the .civil de- fense efforts of other cities, towns, and villages in this area. Fire Chief Ben Zahn has completed a mutual-aid agreement with the Chelsea Fire department and it is expected that other agreements will be forthcoming. Union Cards Union membership cards may be picked up from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Union stu- dent offices according to Fred Eittmer, '52, Union councilman. Will ConductI India Survey With an ultimate view toward aiding human welfare, The India National Sample Survey will get underway this month Prof. P. C. Mahalanobis, director of the In- dia Statistical Institute, said yes- terday. Prof. Mahalanobis, sponsored by the Department of Mathematics and the Survey Research Institute, said that the initial aim of the sur- vey is to collect information re- lating to India's national income, beginning with a comprehensive survey of economic conditions in rural areas. The staff of 1,000 investigators hopes to be able to extend its work to urban areas as soon as possible. COMMODITY FACTS The staff members will try to collect information in terms of quantities, commodities and 'ser- vice rather than merely in terms of money, Prof. Mahalanobis stat- ed. The National Income Commit- tee needs statistics to establish a sound economic policy, and when we know what the people are eat- ing, we will have a good basis of information as our guide, he said. The survey will be conducted in 1800 villages located all over In- dia. There will be six independent surveys of 300 villages each, cover- ing a rural population of about 300 million. NUMEROUS DIALECTS Fifteen to twenty languages will have to be used by the staff mem- bers because of the number of dia- lects spoken in the rural areas, Prof. Mahalanobis stated. A stan- dard of investigation will also have to be set up to minimize the in- vestigators' bias. Prof. Mahalanobis is advisor on statistics to the Indian govern- ment, and is also the present chairman of the United Nations subcommission on s t a tis tical sampling. He was one of the founders of The Indian Statistical Institute, which is located in Cal- cutta. The survey will provide a continuous flow of information for the Planning Commission of India, to help it formulate national so- cial, economic and agricultural programs. The main advantage of the survey is that it will be con- ducted on a country-wide basis, and will pi-ovide an overall view of the economic situation through in- dependent reports. By WENDY OWEN S' "Culinary art is a dying science," according to an expert Chef Nar- cisco Apraiz of the Union dining room., The Chef, who runs the kitchen with an old-fashioned gallantry based on a strict hierarchy of wait- er, cook and chef, claimed that no young men were willing to serve the strenuous apprenticeship which would fit them for top jobs in so- ciety clubs and hotels. He, himself, served his appren- ticeship in the Basque country of Southern France. He rose at 3 a.m. to start fires in the enormous ranges which were then in use, and stayed on his feet doing kit- chen chores until 8 or 10 p.m. While he labored he was able to watch the master chefs pre- paring delicacies for the French vacationists who flocked to the Biarritz area to escape Parisian heat. LAMB CHOP CROWNS At the Union he has not had much chance to utilize his talents at creating ladies' slippers froin tongues, or lamb chop crowns, but he rules the football team's sto- machs from his oven-lined do- main. Asked why the team didn't live up to expectations last' Saturday, he blasted, "No more soft rolls, that team needs hard ones." But the Union doesn't offer enough facilities for a chef who has served at the Waldorf-Astoria, the Edgewater Beach, Antoine's in New Orleans, and the Detroit Golf Club, he said. "My profession is for exclusive clubs, where I can fix my own bud- get. There the people are used to and will pay for delicacies." Apraiz has served at the Union twice, the first time from 1925 to 1935 and the second when he Touring Con Sees Secret Si Union Chef Tells How It's Well Done # # * * * Music Series Will Begin With Traubel Helen Traubel, leading Wag- nerian soprano of the Metropoli- tan Opera Association, will open the Choral Union concert series at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Miss Traubel, who has won criti- cal acclaim throughout the coun- try is one of the few American- born, and American-trained opera singers to achieve first rank dis- tinction. Born in St. Louis, Miss Traubel made her first public appearance PROGRAM Gottes Nacht und Vorsehung .................Beethoven Freudvoll und Leidvoll), Die Trommel geruhret) from "Egmont" ....... Beethoven "Divinites du Styx" from "Alceste"............. Gluck, Der Atlas ) Nacht und traume ) Jager ruhe von der Jagd) ......... Schubert Morgen.......,..... Strauss Zueignung.... .....Strauss INTERMISSION Polonaise in C-sharp minor . Chopin Waltz in G-flat.......Chopin Mr. Bos Isolde's Narrative from "Tris- tan und Isolde" .... Wagner Go Down, Moses Nobody Knows de Trouble I've Seen Sea Shell ..........Carl Engel I'm- Wearin' Awa', Jean .... .. Arthur Foote Upstream . Albert Hay Malotte .4 " y"" - v r . . q v ....{. .'flrflst} .W V}} "" flow on 4ptavj in. our windtcow 4 green. diamond A BEAUTIFUL GEM WHICH OWES ITS UNUSUAL COLOR TO BOMBARDMENT IN A CYCLOTRON. WE WILL BE PLEASED TO EXPLAIN THE PROCESS BY WHICH A DIAMOND BECOMES GREEN. arcade jewelry s Oa {.: is -aily arlile Marsall CHEF'S DELIGHT-Union Chef Narciso Apraiz demonstrates proper carving technique for a rib roast in the pot-lined, behind- the stove area of the .Union kitchen. Apraiz has been in Ann Ar- bor since 1944. * * * * * * returned to Ann Arbor in 1944. "I guess I just like Ann Arbor," was the only reason he could give for his return. GOOD EVENING, CHEF Under his domination, new wait- ers at the Union are impressed by the strict formality which charac- terizes the kitchen. To build friendly spirit in the staff Apraiz demands that each waiter say ressrnan oviet Area "Good evening" before ordering his meals. If he hasn't, he cannot receive an order. New waiters are all boiler-mak- ers," he claimed. This term has mysterious origins, which Apariz did not reveal, but packs a tre- mendous wallop when muttered by the Chef in the complete siience that occurs after a tray of dishes has fallen and broken. After six years of boiler-makers the Chef is seriously considering retiring-to write books on the cul- nary art. "All the great chefs I've worked with have written books, and I challenge any dietician or recently trained cook to tell me something I don't know." "The main problem for the modern cook is cleanlineos 'and sanitation. If chefs fed the people right," he claimed, "we wouldn't nEea so many doctors." at the age of 12, when she substi- tuted for her mother in the choir of the local church. Her first engagement outside her home town came when she went on a six weeks tour with the St. Louis SymplTony in 1925. Offered a Metropolitan audition the fol- lowing year, after her first New York appearance, she turned it down claiming that she was not yet ready for the big time. Not until 1939 did she at last feel secure enough to give a con- cert in New York's Tawn, Hall. By March of the next year the critics were voicing her claim as the first lady of the Metropolitan and one of the greatest Wagnerian sopranos of all time. A i. P vt 16 Nickels Arcade Since 1916 F TOMORROW meet Flirt? Gerty! at the P-X 1313 South University k A Registered Jewelerse American Gem Society _- BERLIN - (/) - A touring American Congressman yesterday told how he came back from a dangerous trip into the forbidden Russian Army area and got a peek at secret new Soviet wea- pons.. Rep. Thurmond Chatham (D- NC said a Soviet officer eager to pay off an old debt of friendship took him on the 50-mile jeep ride which included such points of in- terest as a newly completed air- field and an armored infantry compound. Asked if he realized what might have happened had he been caught-arrest and possibly shot as a spy-Chatham replied: "I've spent most of my life get- ting in trouble. or getting out of it." NEW WEAPONS He said he saw the Soviet offi- cer in civilian clothing in a West Berlin night club. The Russian was so pleased he threw his arms around him, and after a chat of- fered a trip into occupied East Germany. The Russian changed into the uniform of a senior army officer for the ride. At an airfield completed but six weeks ago, Chatham said, he saw the swept-back-wing jets which appeared as fast as the latest American types. At the armored compound he saw about 20 of the new type tanks lined up. He said they were only about three feet high and looked to be low enough to scut- tle beneath the normal trajectory of an anti-tank gun. But they were heavy enough to pack long- muzzled guns, probably of about 90 millimeters. U.S. Intelligence sources said they knew about the fast jets in Germany, but not about the new type tanks. Chatham said he would turn all photographs he had taken behind the Iron Curtain over to the "proper military authorities in Washington." 'Student Rate Ducats'on Sale More than 35 per cent of the special student - rate oratorical series tickets have been sold, ac- cording to a recent box-office an- nouncement. These special tickets offer stu- dents unreserved second balcony seats at $2.40 for the entire series which this year will include such illustrious figures as David Lilien- thal, past AEC Commissioner, hu- morist Bennett Cerf and actor Charles Laughton. The special rates apply only to season tickets, and will be avail- able until the first lecture, Oct. 18, by Lilienthal. Regular seats in the first bal- cony and main floor are also be- ing sold at the Hill Auditorium box-office from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 to 5 p.m. daily. H r I COR Many people thi Store. carries only . * + Ulrich's carr used and new bo the Michigan cam tECTION nk that Ulrich's Book ENGINEERING books ry a very huge stock of oks for every, course on pus. A :4 L r - 4 /\... i lumni Guests Carlton Blunt, president of the Dartmouth Alumni Association will be the guest of University alumni president Glenn M. Coulter Saturday when Michigan plays the Dartmouth team. Coulter plans to entertain top officials of the opposition's alum- ni association at each football game this year. Last week Lee Benner, Chairman of the Michi- gan State College Alumni Advisory Committee, and his wife . were feted by Coulter. rt f' .--- -- 4 , ,> . . : ... ;.,.:. ; ,.::;. -: .A 4 I "WHAT? NO TOOTSIE ROLLS?" "THEN THE DATE'S OFF!" rt th Flo er Fragrance of Romance Embodying the very essence of Springtime, Lenth&ric's"Red Rose" SEd ROSE Perfume and Bouquet captures the fragrance of a bouquet of red roses Bouquet Red Rose just arrived from the florist, with (the daytime fragrance) their freshness of dew and foliage 3 oz., 1.00 k- F this were literally so . . . we'd put our excess profits into a new stadium and any needed new buildings for your school .. . but really, . .. a TOOTSIE ROLL or two does please any student . . . and his date. Delicious, chocolaty flavor. Truly, good Flair v Vi 1 0 I intact. You would imagine such