PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY T'1IUSAY, MA ItI128, 1910 Fuel Engineers To Study Heat, Ene rgyOutput. At"ca4inleie, i tdustrial Coal ExperIs ConVelle here For Meeliig April 22 Speeches Planned Industrial and academic leaders in the study of coal utilization will dis- cuss mutual problems when the Twenty-fifth Fuel Engineering Con- ference of Appalachian Coals Inc. meets here jointly with the Fourth Annual Coal Utilization Institute sponsored by the mechanical engin- eering department, April 22. Motivated by a mutual desire to study means of increasing the total heat Wnd energy output per ton of coal as balance against cost per ton, engineers interested in various phas- es of coal power production and con- sumption will convene here in an in- tensified one-day session rounded out by a banquet in the evening. Conference speakers from the Uni- versity will include Prof. R. C. Por- ter of the mechanical engineering de- partment, speaking on "The De- sign of Small Industrial Coal-Burn- ing Plants," and Prof. F. C. Calhoon of the mechanical engineering de- partment on designing domestic boil- ers, furnaces and stoves to increase combustion efficiency and eliminate smoke. In addition, five speakers on various phases of the subject will come here from various parts of the country. R. A. Sherman, supervisor of the fuels division of the Battelle Memorial In- stitute, Columbus, O., will open the series with a discussion of progress and trends in fuel utilization. Other speakers and their topics are J. W. Parker, vice president and chief engineer of the Detroit Edison Com- pany, on the varying fortunes of coal; L. A. Shipman, combustion en- gineer for the Southern Coal and Coke Company, Knoxville, Tenn., on trouble shooting in industrial coal- burning plants; A. W. Thorson, fuel engineer of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad in Detroit, on systematic coal selection and R. L. Rowan, -fuel en- gineer of the General Coal Company of Philadelphia, on servicing domes- tic stoker complaints. Talk On Jobs illBe Given Placement Head To&Speak Today On Interviewing "Techniques for Securing a Posi- tion" will be described by Mrs. Rox Fi th of the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information in her lecture it 7:30 p.m. today in the Grand Rapid Room of the League. Designed e(-ecially for seniors in education, ,he will, however, deal with thn bmaad aspects of interviews and application by letter. From her work as director of teacher place- ment Mrs. Firth will point out the manner in which qualifications of prospective teachers should be pre- sented to superintendents seeking to fill a position. As the third in the series of lec- tures sponsored by Pi Lanbda Theta, all seniors are urged to attend and to bring questions pertaining to prob- lems met in securing a position. Fol lowing the lecture, Mrs. First will give answers to the questions sub- mitted. Wealth oMie lin Teeth Stories have been leaking Out for the past couple of years about den- tists growing fabulously rich in Ti- entsin, Japanese army base in North China. Investigations have brought to light the following explanation: Japan, in- - order to bolster her steadily draining gold reserve, had ordered in all' gold except tips of fountain pen points and tooth fill- ings. Nipponese soldiers in China, given temporary leave to return home, were unwilling to take their pay with them in its original form- due to high taxes and to the ban on gold. So the custom grew up among the soldiers of having their pay turn- 'ed into gold in Tientsin, and having this gold pounded into their teeth as fillings! Debaters To End Seasoti ticsday17 Michigan varsity debaters willE complete theit season Tuesday with two events on their schedule, Arthur Secord, coach of men debaters, an- nounced yesterday. Russell B. Bowers. Jr., '41, and William Muehl, '41, will travel to Kalamazoo to tak part in a sympo- sium on the attitude of the United States Toward Nations At War. The symposium is being sponsored by 'Horaao Alger' Of Oil Industry To Speak Here At Conference Capt. Nicholson To Serve As Principal Speaker At F'oremiezn's Jieeting By RICHARD HARMEL They call him the "Horatio Alger" of the Texas Oil Co. . . . and Capt. A. A. Nichoson, its personnel direc- tor, well deserves that name for he has reached the top the long, hard way from laborer to craftsman to foreman to salesman and finally to personnel manager. Captain Nichoson will bring Ann Arbor the wealth of his 26 years ex- perience April 13 when he serves as principal speaker at the luncheon in the Union of the Second Annual Michigan-Ohio Foremen's Confer- ence convening for a one day session. Dr. Nichoson will discuss "Stream- lined Foremanship-1940." Viitually every important indus- trial plant in the United States has been contacted by Captain Nichoson in his studies of industrial rela-1 tions. He has acquired a reputationc as an authority in personnel work.i The Foremen's Conference, spon- sored by the Extension Service withf the cooperation of the National Asso- ciation of Foremen, the Foremen's Clubs of Michigan and Ohio andf the Michigan State Board of Con- trol for Vocational Education, will attract foremen from the entire mid- western region. Mr. Malcolm W. Bingay, editorial; director of the Detroit Free Press, isk another principal speaker. Renowned as the author of the column "Iffy the Dopester," Mr. Bingay will givec the featured address of the morning session on "America's Debt to In-N dustry." Prof. Lewis M. Gram, chairman of the Department of Civil Engineer-c ing, will greet the delegates to the1 Price T o Offer Concert Today Carillonneur Will Present Second Program in Series The second carillon concert in the spring series will be played at 7 p.m. today by Prof. Percival Price, Uni- versity carillonneur. A group of compositions Dy royal personages will open the concert, with "Fantasy a 3" by Henry VIII of Eng- land the first selection played. Two compositions by Louis XIII of France, "Gavotte" and "Amaryllis," will fol- low, and the first part of the concert will close with "Flute sonata 6, arioso, allegro," by Frederick II of Prussia. Three revolutionary songs will then be played, "Farewell, London Town," "Ca ira," and "International," fol- lowed by two compositions by Emil Vendette, carillonneur of the Monas- tery of St. John the Baptist in Otta- wa, Canada, who arranged the music for this concert. These selections are "Melodie" and "Suite Canadienne." Southern Quartet Will Appear Here The Southernaires, NBC Negro quartet, will make an appearance April 18 in the Ann Arbor High School, sponsored by the Second Baptists Church. The singers claim that they pre- sent traditional American Negro melodies, not popular ideas of them like "Old Black Joe." Student Christian Association To Canvass Campus On Tag Day Funds Will He Collected To Sendl Underprivileged Boys To Outdoor Caiup Some lime in May a battalion in knee-pants will overrun town andI campus, and half-pleadingly. half-I threateningly, stop every passerby with: "Ya gotchur tag?" The occasion will be the annual Tag Day campaign for funds for the Student Christian Association's Fresh Air Camp, a campaign instituted 20 years ago to enable underprivileged boys to trade slums and misery for une month of summer camp and joy. In 19 years approximately 6.500 boys from Ann Arbor, Detroit, Flint, Platt, Wyandotte and other cities in Law Fraternity Meeting Features Kauper's Talk The combined contributions of six outstanding judges in the Supreme Court cover every aspect of constitu- tional law existing today, Prof, Paul G. Kauper, of the Law School, assert- ed Tuesday at a meeting of Tau Epsi- lon Rho, national legal fraternity, in the Rackham Building. Professor Kauper named John Mar- shall, Roger Taney, Stephen Fields, Samuel Miller, Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis D. Brandeis as the men who contributed most in their terms on the bench. An informal discussion followed his talk. The program was arranged by Bernard Cohen, '41L. CAPT. A. A. NICHOSON greeting will be given by Mr. Arthur C. Horrocks of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Akron, who is also presi- dent of National Association of Fore- men. The afternoon session of the con- ference will consist of 11 conferences held simultaneously. Station WCAR Will Air Uiversity Activity News southeastern Michigan have been selected for vacation at the camp, to work and play under the direction of c ounselor s drawn from University ranks. The University entered the camp sct-up three years ago when the Stu- dent Christian Association became officially a part of the University, :)tit the Camp has continued as a private volunteer agency. As such, it is supported entirely by voluntary contributions. In recent years campus organiza- tions-Union, League, Interfraterni- ty Council, Assembly, Congress, Pan- hellenic, Student Religious Associa- tion, Wyvern and Mortarboard-have given the campaign vital support. Students have contributed an esti- mated $28,000 to the fund total over the 19-year period. The 170-acre Camp has been locat- eed since 1923 at Patterson Lake, about 25 miles northwest of Ann Arbor. It has a capacity of 150 boys who usually remain about four weeks and give way to another group. Administration is under the direc- tion of a Camp Committee, whose chairman is Prof. F. N. Menefee, of the engineering college. Southern Organist To Give Program Chester Alan Tucker, '40, organist from Richmond, Va., will present an organ recital at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium in partial fulfill- ment of the Bachelor of Music de- gree. Among the selections scheduled to be heard on his prograrA are Mar- cello's Psalm XIX, "The Heavens De- clare the Glory of God," Bach's Prelude and Fugue in D major and Symphony for Organ, No. 4, by Louis Vierne. He , will also play three chorale preludes by Bach, "O Sacred Head, Once Wounded," "Turn Thou to us, Lord Jesus Christ" and "Jesus, Joy of Man's Desiring" (Chorale Tran- scription from the Cantata No. 147, "Herz und Mund und That und Leben.) Fram Speaks Here Sunday To HillelGroup Detroit Rabbi Will Discuss P'eace Following War; Services Precede Talk Rabbi Leon Fram, religious direc- tor of the Temple Beth El in De- troit, will speak on "The Peace That Shall Follow This War" at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in the Hillel Foundation, fol- lowing the regular reform services. A graduate of the University of Cincinnati and the Hebrew Union College, Rabbi Fram is a member of the Commission on Jewish Edu- cation of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, a member of the Board of the Jewish Welfare Fed- eration and director of the Temple Forum, as well as President of the League for Human Rights in Detroit. He has also been active in labor problems, serving as chairman of the committee to investigate labor conditions under Frank Murphy and as a member of the committee of three chosen to study and arbitrate the sit-down strikes of 1937. In addition Rabbi Fram is the founder of the Beth El College of Jewish Studies and chairman of the Speakers Bureau of the Allied Jewish Campaign. He received the largest number of votes in the election of De- troit delegates to the American Jew- ish Congress. Student Wins oGntest But Has Close Shave "Keep ahead of your hair," the slo- gan which won its author Douglas Gould, '41, $15 worth of services in a contest conducted by a local bar- ber, is only one of the -examples of student ingenuity submitted. Of somewhat dubious advertising value were the slogans, "Get a good trimming at -", and "College clip joint", but such witticisms as the following made judging difficult: "Let us do your part"; "If your hair is not becoming to you, you should be com- ing to us"; "Hair today, gone to- morrow"; and "Close shaves for col- lege braves." Station WCAR, Pontiac, has in- augurated a new series of daily broadcasts on University news which will be handled here by Leonard Schleider, '41, Ann Arbor correspon- dent for Transradio Press Service. News of student activities and Uni- versity research and sporting events are broadcast every hour on the hour as a part of the regular newscasts of the Pontiac station which can be heard throughout Southeastern Michigan. hANDY SEUVICE IRECTOR Y I :nierence. Tinc response to his' Crease Bail Guests Summoned By aslitenaw Couny Sherif Approxinately 250 women received summonses, delivered by the sheriff of Washtenaw County yesterday, to attend Crease Ball, annual lawyers' formal, which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. The purpose and nature of the dance is also disclosed in the summons, a true copy of which appears below. STATE OF RAPTURE i1 aInl for THE CREASE COURT I for 'I The County of Nocturnal Enjoyment complainant vs. I defendant 'i't'I~epes u'pius Ad SatisfuCienmdum theKfepes of the Liberty, by the Authority of the Sovercigi, De- fender of h- Faith, To the Honorable Bailiff, --~~~~, - - - -_- -- - - - - - - - - -- - GREETING: Whereas, It has been made to appear to the said Crease Court that judgment, properly and solemnly executed, for specific performance has been taken on a certain covenant executed under seal between Lady Extraordinary, and --_ complainart Gentleman, whereby the party of the first part did cove- nat and agrec, in consideration of love and /or affection, to keep a tryst with her aforementioned swain at the Great Hall of the Manor; that the said complainant has at all times been willing and prepared to discharge his covenant but that the defendant has willfully and without cause, desert ed and' abandoned the complainant to his great distress, absenting herself and refusing to perform her lawful covenants. Nd Whereas, it has been made to appear to the Crease Court that the said defendant contivue to refuse to perform the aforesaid covenants, immediate per- fortnmnce of which hath become needful to prevent injury, yea irrepar- able loss to s-,d complainant, of profits and pleasures reasonably to be anticipated from said covenants. Nevertheless, the said defendant, not regarding her said promise and undertaking, but contriving and fraud- ulently intending, craftily and subtly to deceive and defraud the said ,- hath hitherto wholly neglected and re- fused, and still doth neglect and refuses to perform her lawful covenant. Aiid Whereas, It hath been made to appear to said Crease Court that the complainant before and at the time of aforesaid breach of aforesaid cov- enants sustained a good name and character amongst his neighbors and acquaintances for moral worth and integrity and if said covenant is not performed the complainant will be wickedly and maliciously injured in his good name, fame and credit, and be brought into public scandal, infamy and disgrace with and among his neighbors and other good citi- zens of the state, Now, Wherefore, ye are hereby commanded that ye forthwith take said --, Lady Extraordinary, wherever she resideth, skulketh, wandereth, or lieth hid within the confines of your Bailiwick, and her safely keep so that ye may bring her body and conscience before our Justices appointed to take the Assizes on the Friday following the fifth Sunday in Lent, between the hours of 9 p.m. and 1 a.m., to satisfy the judgment on the said covenant by specific performance thereof. Given in the name of the Lord Chancellor, on this day of March, A.D.. 1940. Clerk of Crease Court Handy Service Advertising Rates Cash Rates 12c per reading line for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Charge Rates 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 13c per reading line for three or more insertions. Five average words to a reading line. Mininu-u of Lh4:e lines per 111ser- tion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST. Our Want-Advisor will be deliglited to ass1st you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop at the Michigan Daily Buisiniess Office, 420 Maytlard Street. MISCELLANEOUS-20 SPECIAL-$5.50 Machineless Per- manent, $2.50; $3 oil cocona, $1.50; end permanent, $1; Shampoo and fingerwave, 35c. Phone 8100, 117 Main. 36 WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list- ings of your vacant houses in The Daily for summer visiting profes- sors. Dial 23-24-1 for special rates, LAUNDERING -9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 ACE HAND LAUNDRY -Wants only one trial to prove we launder your shirts best. Let our work help you STRAYED,_LOST, FOUND - 1 X OST-Slide rule. Reward. Phone Walter Wilson-6826. 345 LOST: A charm bracelet with Tri- Delt crest and blue "M". Call 2-3203. 344 TRANSPORTATiON -21 TRANSPORTATION HOME: You can find a ride home very econom- ically by inserting a Ride Ad into The Daily. Find passengers for your car or seek your ride now. 15 words for 36c. Dial 23-24-1 now! WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 TYPING- 18 TYPING--Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Plione 2-2935 or 2-1416. - 34 VIOLA STEIN--Experienced typist and notary public, excellent work, 706 Oakland, phone 6327. 20 WANTED -TO BUY- 4 HIGHEST CASH PRICE paid for your discarded wearing apparel, Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 TYPEWRITING Mimeographing Promptly and neatly done by experienced - ' operators in our own place of business, at moderate rates. 0. D., MORRILL Trie Typewriter vaid Stationery Store 314 S. State St. (opp. Kresge's) I # 00 of uy Duy NEW STYLES FIRST AT WILD'S #I look sity. neat today. 1114 S. Univer- 19 iri . raia i I ,. "7 4/ A / / ''7 7'7 9 -/7 A / '4/ '7 A --7 ;, / . -7/ -7 / USEFUL and DESIRABLE W e C/91 cinqiti / ,-- :, j%' / A BAR HARBOR JACKET AN TUG SLACK Let's tatch .. . heads you win . tails, we lose one very smart ensemble . . . which reminds us, that this tale is about Bar Harbor Jackets and Tug Slacks, and the glorious blending and modeling job VARsTY-TOWN has dorme in these ensembles. In jackets, it's a toss-up between "Crim- son" and "Movictown" . . . and the new Sloucher and Tug Slacks are the "best two" . . . more than a match for any other slacks we've ever seen. BAR HARBOR JACKETS. . $15. to $25. -°r . CI A#"'*WC &,e In C! :_ &1n 1100K Reference Books Textbooks Ficfion ... in plate . . . vegetable dishes, water pitchers, rmeat trays . . . for $5 and up. ... and sterling silver . , , bon bons $4 up, bowls, $10 up, sugars and creams, $10 up. I am I