PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 23, - ----------- 7 WAR STAMPS AND BONDS ON SALE HRE! ' Starts * Sunday!} - Po - PRICES! Week Days 40c to 5 P.M.--Eves. and Sundays 55c All Day, Inc. Tax Co-op Houses Patterned After Democratic Rochdale Principle ', WVilii eoing To China On Rooseve1s Mlission WASHINTON, Aug. 22 -,A'-The White House announced today that Wendell L. Willkie, 1940 Republican presidential candidate would visit China as well as Russia and the Middle-East on his forthcoming trip as a special representative of Pres- ident Roo sevelt. Secretary Stephan Early told re- porters that the President at his press conference yesterday had fail- ed to include China among the coun- tries which Willkie will visit to tell the truth about what the United States is doing to win the war. ICC Allows No Religious, Racial Discrimination In PickingPersonnel (This is the last of a series on cooperatives at Michigan. This article discusses the personnel and govern- mental organization of the co-ops:) The eleven co-ops at Michigan pat- tern their personnel and governmen- I tal policies after those of the pioneers of the cooperative movement-the weavers of the little town of Roch- dale, England. Complete racial, religious and po- litical non-discrimination and a thorough democratic organizationI were the principles which bound to- gether that first coenergtive in Eng- land. and they are the principles adhered to by all the houses belong- ing to the Intercooperative Council on this campus. Recruiting new members and al- locating them to the various houses is done through the ICC personnel committee, which sets no barriers of color, race or creed to prospective members. Students wishing to en- ter a co-op ai'e interviewed by this committee in an attempt to deter- mine whether they will make good cooperators, and are then sent to the individual houses on the basis of both the distribution of vacan- cies among the houses and also the financial needs of the students (the room and board rates in the differ- ent houses vary from $2.75 to $6.00l a week.>{ The intetnal management of the houses is directed by officers elec - ed by the members. In most hous's there are a hou se president, a houie manager, a treasurer. an accountant, a secretary, purchasmn agents and delegates to the Intercooperative Council, House meetings are held eacha week at which all problems are thor- oughly thrashed out and finally de- cided by majority vote. Issues which are to be decided at the next ICC meeting are also discussed, and in many cases house sentiment is de- termined by a vote in order to equip the house's ICC delegatcs with their fellow house-members' opinion. Prof. Price Will Play All-Request Program Prof. Percival Price, University carilloneur, will present an all-re- quest prcgram for his final concert in the current Summer Session ser- ies at 7:15 p. m. today.E For his concluding evening reci- tal, Prof. Price has cancelled the pro- gram previously planned and will play instead Polish, French and Rus- sian airs. A composition by Bach, one by Hugh Glauser and a composition of his own are included in the pro- gram. - The ART CIN EMA LE Presents TWO FAVORITE PROC Sunday,Augu st 30 in The Freshma Also * GERTIE THE DINOSAU * ROBERT BENCHLEY * HIS BITTER PILL Sunday, September 6 " PAUL MUNI in I Am a FugitiyeI a Chain Gant Rackham Lec ure na AGUE "i JR f ro Hall ts 39c d League MOVIE PREVIEWS At The State ... Walter Wanger's new Universal production 'Eagle Squadron,' the first screen story of American fighter pi- lots in the Royal Air Force, starring Robert Stack, Diana Barrymore, Jon Hall, and Eddie Albert, opens at the State today. This is the story of the handful of intrepid young Americans who pre- ceded heir country's entrance into World War II by joining the Royal Air Force as fighter pilots. Robert Stack plays opposite Di- ana Barrymore in 'Eagle Squadron.' Miss Barrymore makes her initial screen appearance in the RAF film. Other members of the cast are Jon Hall, Eddie Albert, Nigel Bruce, Ev- elyp Ankers and Lief Erickson. 'Eagle Squadron' brings to the screen for the first time scenes show- ing the widespread activities of Bri- tish women in wartime, which in- clude flying transport planes, oper- and firing anti-aircraft guns. At T he Michigan... Columbia's new romantic comedy 'They All Kissed the Bride,' starring Joan Crawford and Melvin Douglas, will open at the Michigan today. Joan Crawford stars as a young million-dollar heiress and a career woman, who discovers that making love is more fun than making money. Douglas appears as a young man who believes that there's never anything wrong with a woman that a man's lips can't cure, and sets out to prove his thesis. Also playing in the romantic com- CLASSIFIED DIRECTOIY LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c WANTED TO BUY edy is Allen Jenkins, a jitter-bug truck driver, who stages a fast num- ber with Miss Crawford. Comedian Roland Young too fills one of the important comedy roles in 'They All Kissed the Bride.' The strong sup- porting cast also includes Billie Burke and Helen Parrish, Andrew Tombes, Roger Clark, Gordon Jones, Nydia Westman and Mary Treen. 7:00 and 9:00 P.M. Ticke Go On Sale Monday at Wahr's an 'v >.. \\ X~ \\ \'~ a STARTS TODAY! er .ctio~t in Mod rn oolbtg Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Adults-40c Children-i ic ncl. tax Produced by WALTE R WANGER Extra Added "YOUR NEWS AIR RAID OF THE WARDEN' DAY J And the Flying Heroes of the EAGLE SQUADRtON Foreword by Quentin Reynolds fapious War Corr,espondent -Coming Sunday, Aug. 30th- ANN SlIRIANj$uke ~f - _ _ _ _ ._ _ .. ___-__ _ _ ___ _ * VOL. 1, Ne 9 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN " AUGUST 23, 1942 Sixty civilian Army Sig- nal Corps employes from Wright Field, Dayton, 0., will be here this fall for training in aircraft radio work . . Prof. Glenn L. Alt, city council president, this week authorized the establishment of a com- mittee to study Ann Ar- bor's wartime housing problem . . . Col. Henry W. Miller, of the engine school, said in a magazine article this week that the artillery cf the future will consist of any weapons which can de- Stroy tanks and airplanes because an army must ei- ther destroy these offensive weapons or be destroyed by them . . . planes and tanks have nade heavy artillery otsolete in modern war- fare, he said. Ann Arbor police offi- cers, often put on the spot by college pranksters, this week were looking for monkeys. A batch of South Americar. monkeys, used for U' Uospital research, squeeze* through the wire bars of their cages and swung around campus through the trees ... most of t h e m were corralled shortly after the "jail- break" but some of them are still around . . . Eddie, +he enn n n t midnight is what they said about the 1941 club and that team went on to lose but one game, and that one by only one touchdown. Here's the schedule: Sept. 26: Great Lakes; Oct. 3: Michigan State; Oct. 10: Iowa Ca- dets; Oct. 17: Northwest- ern; Oct. 24: At Minne- sota; Oct. 31: Illinois; Nov. 7: Harvard; Nov. 14: At Notre Dame; Nov. 21: At Ohio State; Nov. 28: Iowa. WITH U-M MEN IN THE SERVICE Six former students are enrolled as aviation cadets at Maxwell r ieici, Ala. They are Cadets Thomas Brown- field, Marshall; Lloyd F. Clawson, Royal Oak; David L. Clayter, Muskegon; Paul H. Franklin, Pittsburgh; James T. Grill, Owosso, and Sidney Keischatein, Brooklyn, N. Y. Aviation Cadet Lloyd V. Newman, of Ann Arbor, and formerly assistant to the accountant in the chemistry department, is receiving bombardier and navigation training at El- lington Field, Tex. O. M. Phillips, a former instructor of medicine in University Hospital, has ENGLISH TYPE BICYCLE. weight. 20-inch frame or Man's or woman's. Call after 5 p.m. Light- larger. 2-6310 35c RePL S THERE IS a reply in Box 8. _I HELP WANTED WAITER WANTED-Good wages. Call at Liberty Inn, 112 W. Liberty., CARRIERS wanted to carry routes for Michigan Daily this fall. Call Duane Kenaga, 5627, evenings. MAGAZINE publishing house in Ann Arbor seeks one full-time and one half-time stenographer and secre- tary, both of whom should be competent typists and takers of dictation. Call 7205 for an inter- view. 34c LOST and FOUND LOST: Lady's white gold wrist watch, Evelyn B. Harvey engraved on back. $10 reward. Phone 2-4471 or write 1415 Parker, Detroit. Dick Wakefield, U. of M. base- lall sensation last year, has just been voted the most valuable player in the Texas League.....Dick is a right-fielder for the Beaumont cub. he's hitting over the .350 mark..U. of M. fans remember him asthe lad who went to the Tigers for $50,000. Service Men: This will be the last edition of the Michigan Daily Service PRACTICE TO START Michigan's varsity foot- ball team will begin its MULTI-COLORED Waterman pen without clip between Jordan and Library Thursday. Reward. 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