S.Ix THE MICHIGAN )AILY STJIIMAY, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ASSOCIATED POCT UR E PRESS NVEWVS (Continued from Page 4) day night, August 17, by the Depart- ment of Speech and the School of Music, are now available at the Sum- mer Session office (1213 A.H.), the Speech Department office (3211 A.H.) the School of Music, the Michigan Union, the Michigan League, and the Mendelssohn Theatre boxoffice. Admission will be by ticket, but tickets will be distributed free as long as they last. The Ecuadorean Fiesta. The stu- dents from Ecuador in the Latin American Summer Session will cele- brate August 10,.their national ho- day, by presenting a program of dances and short speeches in the ball- room of the Michigan Union, Sunday, at 8 p.m. The public is cordially in- vited to attend. Colleges of Literature, Science and the Arts, and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry, and Music: Summer Session students wishing a transcript of this summer's work only should file a request in Room 4 U.H., several days before leaving Ann CLASSIFIED DIEkCTORY TYPING TYPING-Experienced. L. M. Hey- wood, 414 Maynard St. Phone 5689. TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416..' -LOST and FOUND LOST-Eastman Kodak. Probably at Loch Alpine. V-116 films. Auto- graph slot in back. Call Habel at 2-4489. Leave message. Reward. TRANSPORTATION GOING TO MEXICO Aug. 15th. Re- turning Sept. 1. Need passenger. $20 round 'trip. Call Herrarte, 5407. FOR RENT ROOM for graduate student girl. $3 per wee including breakfast. One block frdm campus. Phone 7758. FOR SALE 1940 BUICK SPECIAL; 4-door Se- dan. Radio; heater; new white sidewall tires. 17,000 miles. Like new. $800. Dial 4800 days; 7380 evenings. LAUNDERING LA UNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. SILVER LAUNDRY 607 Hoover , Phone 5594 Free pickups and deliveries Price List (All articles washed and ironed) Shirts .......................14 Undershirts.................04 Shorts .....................04 Pajama Suits ............... .10 Socks, pair...................03 Randkerchiefs .............. .02 Bath Towels ................ .03 All Work Guaranteed Also special prices on Coeds' laundries. All bundles done sep- %rately. No markings. Silks and wools are our specialty. Arbor. Failure to file this before the end of the session sult in a needless delay of dlays. request will re- several Carillon Recital: Percival Price,' University Carillonneur, will present a carillon recital from 7:15 to 8 p.m., Sunday, August 10, in the Burton Memorial Tower. The program will consist of Mendelssohn and Wagner+ compositions. Freshmen and Sophomores, Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts. Students who .will have fresh- man and sophomore standing at the ,nd of the Summer Session and who plan to return this fall should have their first semester elections ap- proved before they leave the cam- pus. You may make an appointment to see me either by telephoning Ex-. tension 613 or by calling at the office :f the Academic Counselors, 108 Ma- ion Hall. Arthur Varn Duren, Chairman, Academic Counselors Crime and Punishment starring the celebrated French actor, Harry Bauer, will be shown at the Rackham School Lecture Hall on Sunday, August 10 at 8:15 p.m. Single admissions are available for thirty-five cents. Tick- ats are on sale at the Michigan League and at the Rackham School on Sun- day, August 10, at 7:30 p.m. Art Cin- ema League. Schedule for Film Evluation. Room 1022, University High School. August 11, 2-4 p.m. "Moving X-Rays" (Phys.) Sound, 1 Reel. "Journalism" (Journ.) Sound, 1 Reel. "I'll Tell the World" (Bus.) Sound, 3 Reels. All teachers interested in teaching films are in- vited to attend these showings. Speech Conference: Second annual' Speech Conference, sponsored by the Department of Speech, will be held Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, August 11, 12; and 13. The program will include lectufes and conferences on public speaking, debating, speech science, radio, interpretation, and draamtics. All sessions are open to the public. Spanish Lecture: Professor Clar- ence Finlayson, of the universities of Santiago, Mexico City, and Notre Dame, will present a lecture in Span- ish in the recreation room of the In- ternational Center on Monday, Au- gust 11, at 8 o'clck in the evening. His subject will be "El Futoro de las Americas." All persons interested in this Spanish lecture are invited to attend. Speezh Concentrates: All Speech concentrates who will receive their A.B. degree at the end of the present Summer Session must report to the Speech office on or before Monday, August 11. Lectures on French Diction and In- tonation. Professor Charles E. Koella will give his fourth lecture on French Diction and Intonation on Monday. August 11th at 7:15 p.m. at "Le Foyer Francais," 1414 Washtenaw. Students teaching French or con- centrating in French are especially in- vited to attend. Student Graduation Recital: Miss Phyllis Warniek, Pianist, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m., Monday, Au- gust 11, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. This recital is presented in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music and is complimentary to the general pub- lie. Faculty Lecture Recital: Joseph Brinkman and William Beller, Pian ists, will present a lecture recital at 4:15, Monday, August 11, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall. The program will consist of compositions by Cho- pin and Brahms. The recital is oper. to the general public. e Faculty Concert: Palmer Christian. Organist; Joseph Brinkman, Pianist George Poinar, Violinist; and th string section of the summer sessior Chamber Music Class, under the di rection of Hanns Pick, will present concert at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, A- gust 12, in Hill Auditorium. Thi concert will be complimentary to th general public. "Ladies in Waiting:" "Ladies ir Waiting," a two-act mystery by Cyrl Campion, will be presented by thr Secondary School Theatre of the De- partment of Speech at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 12, in the auditorium of the Ann Arbor High School. The performance is open to the public, and there will be no admission charge, Lectures on French Painting: Pro- fessor Harold E. Wethey, Chairman of the Department of Fine Arts, wil give the third illustrated lecture on French Painting Monday, August 11 at 4:10 p.m., in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. The subject of his lecture will be "The School of Paris" (20th century). The lecture, which will be given in English, is open to all students and Faculty members. This will end the series of lectures on French Paint- ing offered by Professor Wethey dur- ing the Summer Session and spon- sored by the Department of Romance Languages. Engineering Seniors: Diploma ap- plication blanks must be filled out in the Secretary's Office, 263 West Engineering Building, before' August 18, for graduation after Summer Ses- sion. Zoology Summer Session Picnic: For staff, students and friends. Thursday afternoon, August 14, 1941. Cars to leave from Mall at East side of Natural Science Building at 5 p.m. for Dexter Huron Park. Eats, songs, baseball, swimming. Tickets on sale at Zoology Dispensary and Zoology Office and these should be secured before Wednesday noon so that Com- mittee will know on how many to plan. Record Concert for Graduate Stu- dents and others interested will be held Tuesday, August 12 in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. The following program will be played: Handel, Concerto for Viola and Orchestra, Mozart Sonato for two pianos, Szostakowicz, Fifth Symphony. Doctoral Examinatic: for Byron Everett Janes, Botany; Thesis: "Some Chemical Differences between Arti- ficially Produced Fruits and Normal Seeded Fruits of Tomatoes and Pep- pets," Monday, August 11, at 1:30 p.m., in 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Chairman, F. G. Gustafson. Doctoral Examination for Kenneth Lee Pike, Linguistics; Thesis: "A Re- construction of Phonetic Theory," Monday, August 11, at 2:00 p.m., in the East Council Room, Rackham Building. Chairman, C. C. Fries. By action of the Executive Board the chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. Speech Conference: Second annual Speech Conference sponsored by the Department of Speech will be held Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, August 11, 12, and 13. The program will include lectures and conferences on public speaking, debating, speech science, radio, interpretation, and dramatics. All sessions are open to the public. Monday's events: 9-11 a.m.: Registration, Kellogg Au- ditorium. 11 a.m.: Address by Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, Director of the Summer Ses- sion, Kellogg Auditorium. 2 p.m.: "The Place of Public Ad- dress in American History," Profes- sor W. Norwood Brigance, Chairman of te Department of Speech, Wabash College, Kellogg Auditorium. 3:30 p.m.: "Directing Forensics, with Special Application to the Na- tional High School Debate Question for 1941-42." Professor Bower Aly, Director of Forensics, University of Missouri, Kellogg Auditorium. 8 p.m.: Demonstration debate on national' high school question for 1941-42, Rackham Lecture Hall. Members of the i acuity who wish to attend the breakfast which will be given on Sunday, August 17, at 9 a.m. for candidates for the master's de- gree may purchase tickets at sixty cents each at the office of the Sum- mer Session, 1213 A.H. Louis A. Hopkins AFL Petitions Roosevelt CHICAGO, August 9.-(P)-The American Federation of Labor, fore- seeing the possibility of another de- 4 NEWS SOURCE-Brig. Gen. Alexander D. Surles, new chief of war department's bureau of public relations, wore this tank crash helmet during his stay at Fort\ Knox. A' S '-C 0 A C H A N D F 0 U R '-Manager Connie Mack of the A's credits the team's valiant climb from cellar to Earle Brucker (right), who spends hours coaching young moundsmen. Busy with a hurling lesson are, left to right: Relief Pitcher Tom Ferrick; Luman Harris, rookie who comes from Birmingham, Ala.; Phil Marchildon, the Pennetang, Ontario, rookie. SPECIES : BASEBALL FAN-It takes more than heat F A M I LY P O R T R A IT-Behind the beard is Lou Nova; to defeat a baseball fan like Dr. B. Wichlenski who stripped to the who's training at Nicatous Lake, Me., for September bout with waist and ducked under a paper hat during a Brooklyn-Chicago Champion Joe Louis. On hand to watch the training grind are baseball game won by Dodgers, 14-2. Mrs. Nova and their daughter, Hertha Louise. q- s-r SUNDAY DINNER Service from.1:00 until 2:30 and from 6:00 until 7:30 o'clock Rum Flavored Grapefruit Coupe Chicken Noodle Soup Jellied Consomme Branch Celery Mixed Olives Iced Grape Juice Fresh Shrimp Ravigote Consomme Royal Sweet Pickles Planked Salmon Steak, Baked Stuffed Pepper ............1.25 Stuffed Milk-Fed Chicken, Dressing, Apple Jelly ..........1.25 Braised Rack of Native Veal, a la Bouquetiere.............1.25 Cold Baked Ham, Ox Tongue, Potato Salad ................1.00 Roast Choice Beef Tenderloin, Natural Gravy.............1.25 Broiled Noisette of Spring Lamb, Zucchini Bearnaise ... .1.25 Union Special Steak Dinner ............................1.50 Tenderloin or Porterhouse with French Fried Potatoes to order French, Fried Potatoes New Potatoes in Cream Candied Sweet Potatoes New Peas in Butter Baked Tomato with Cheese Glaced Baby Carrots Fresh Fruit Salad Lettuce Hearts, French Dressing Fresh Blueberry Pie Honey Dew Melon and Lime Baked Cup Custard Fresh Peach Parfait Treasure Cheese with Toasted Wafers Chocolate Slices Red Raspberry-Royal Ice Cream Hot Rolls, French, Graham, Rye, White Bread Tea Coffee Milk I Cinnamon Rolls Buttermilk ,a. Coff.,...Milk. awl= ,.MWMIOIMA m "'HE. mr