PACT SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY >. l l l .liG! C:, ALyi..1 Hillel Eleetion Coincil Posts Three-Day Voting Begins Tomorrow; Polls Set At Lane Hall And Hillel Voting for candidates to the Hillel Council will be held from 2 to 6 p.m. tomorrow, Monday and Tuesday at Lane Hall and from 9 a.m. to noon, 1 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 11 p.m. tomor- row, Monday and Tuesday at the Foundation, Betty Steinhart, '40, in-' cumbent president announced yes- terday. All Hillel members are eligible: to vote and are required to bring their identification cards and affiliate membership cards to the polls. Twelve Council members will be selected in the three-day election, Miss Steinhart said, with three addi- tional members being chosen by both the new and old Councils. The presi- dent of Avukah, Editor of the Hillel News and the president of the Hillel Players are automatically put on the Council. Candidates for office include Shir- ley Altschuler, '43, Helen Bittker, '42, David Crohn, '43, David Davidson, Grad., Gerald Davidson, '43, Norma Ginsberg, '41, Ben-Zion Gotlib, '40 and Betty Grant. Other contestants for Council posts are Arnold Horelick, '42, Laura Katz- enel, '41, Jane Klein, '41, Arelene Lazansky, '43, Theodore Leibovitz, '40, Herbert London, '43, Jerome Mec- klenburger, '40, Anita Newblatt, '41, and Bettijane Reicher, '42. Beverly Sadwith, '42, Shirley Sil- ver, '42, Edith Silverman, '41, William Simon, '41, Evelyn Sislin, '41, Sidney Steinhart, '41, Jean Tenofsky, '41, Shirley Toubus, '41, Marcia Wilk, '41, and Irving Zeiger, '41, are also in the race. Sheridan's 'The Critic' Finishes Run At League Play Production will present its closing performance of Richard Brin- sley Sheridan's "The Critic" at 8:30 p'.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.* Some tickets are still avail- able at the theatre box office in the League. "The Critic" is the second of the great satires on the theatre. It first appeared in 1779, exaggerating heavy dramatic tragedy. For many years afterward it was a standard pro- duction of English theatre compa- nies. Belittles Dewey RTep. George 11. Tinkham (Rep.- Mass) who sports the only beard in Congress, issued a statement at- tacking Thomas E. Dewey, New York District Attorney, as "un- fitted to he the Republican candi- date for President." Bridge Front, ToBe Scene Of Sex Duel The "War of the Sexes" will break out on a new front at 2 p.m. today in the Union where the women are scheduled to meet the men in a "He- She" bridge tournament. According to Harold Singer, '41, under whose direction this new wrinkle in sex warfare is being put on, the event will attempt to settle, for at least a day, the age-old ques- tion of the relative superiority of male and female. On the Union's agenda of activities for the week is Pete Brown's program of "pure entertainment" which is slated for tomorrow in the Union. Aimed at giving the campus a pro- gram of diversified entertainment in the slack period, of Sunday after- noons, the program will present Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the history department, who will speak on "Fin- land and Its Problems." Plans have been made, Brown said, to bring in speakers from numerous other fields as well as for the pre- sentation of other forms of enter- tainment. Foreign Center W iti lid IuIit iO Indian Nationalist Leader Mrs. Ammu Swaminadan Will Lecture Tomorrow Problems of international educa- tion will be -discussed at the third education conference sponsored by the International Center, to be held at 2 p.m. today in the Center's lounge. The conference will include discus- sion of the various methods employed by educational institutions through- out the world and will deal with the problems of education that have arisen from the present world crisis. Scheduled to participate in the discussions are students in the Uni- versity who have been undergrad- uates at universities in more than 15 different countries. All students in- terested in international education are invited to attend. At 7 p.m. tomorrow, Mrs. Ammu Swaminadan, noted leader in the Nationalist Movement in India, will discuss events in that country and the general history of the struggle for freedom by the Indians under the leadership of Mohandas Gandhi. At 7:30 p.m. Monday, movies will be shown of the Magnolia Gardens and the Cypress Gardens of Charles- ton. The films are talkies in tech- nicolor. The Center's first annual sports Open House will be held April 26 at the Intramural Building with both men and women taking part. For- eign students at the University will play off the finals in the tourna- ments of several sports, exhibitions of many activities will be conducted and a program of the folk dances of several different countries will be presented. Tickets for this event are com- plimentary and will be available to foreign students, their friends and others interested in the Center from April 15 to - 26 at the Center's of- fices. The Open House is under the general direction of Charlie Ochs, '4QEd. Prof. Pollock To Speak Prof. James K., Pollock of the po- litical science department will speak on the foreign situation tonight at a meeting of the University of Mich- igan Club of Ferndale. T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association, will also attend. Giant Mt. Palo itiir Teleceope' By JAY McCORM CK If Bob Ripley gets stuck for a car- toon figure at any time in the near future, he'll do well to check Prof. Jesse Ormondroyd, of the mechanical engineering department here. Enough material for a whole series of start- ling facts may be found in the story of the 200-inch telescope which is being built on Mt. Palomar in Cali- fornia. Professor Ormondroyd was in charge of the manufacturing de- sign, and the actual manufacturing of the mechanical parts for the tre- mendous scientific instrument. Weighing one million pounds, the giant steel unit will be moved in every direction desired by scientists, by a one half horsepower motor. Actually, Professor Ormondroyd told a meeting of the American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers Wednesday night, the power necessary to rotate the mech- anism would be that of a 1/165,000th horsepower motor, due to a new type of bearing developed to eliminate friction difficulties rising out of the great weight supported. The list of biggest things going into the new telescope is a startling col- lection of scientific superlatives. Not only is the mirror, about 17 feet wide and 30 inches thick, twice the size of the present largest telescope at Mt. Wilson, but it will be support- ed in its framework by the largest bearing ever built, a unit measuring 46 feet in diameter, Professor Or- mondroyd said in his talk. Furthermore, the professor added, the whole project of the telescope was aided, during the 22 years since the birth of the idea after the Mt. Wilson telescope was seen to be a suc- cess in 1918, by more scientists and Richard P. McKeon, Chicago Instructor, t :ginters thani liave workefti (! any Uther scientific undertaking in his- ry, l .He described the tremendous amnount of work which was done long before any construction, or even the casting of the giant mirror was start- ed. A grant by the Rockefeller Foun- dation of approximately seven million dollars was none too much for the costs involved, even though engineers and astronomers of the entire coun- try gave their services free to the v.ork. Three large buildings were built on the California Tech campus for use directly and exclusively with the telescope, Professor Ormondroyd noted. One contains spectroscopes and laboratory material connected with the instrument, another is a large machine shop to handle the in- credibly delicate yet massive mech- anical portion, and another is devoted :solely to the grinding and polishing of the large mirror and the other op- tical material required in Ihe tele- scope. Surgeons To Hold Three Day MWeing (Continued from Page 1) will be held at 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. respectively. In the first, Dr. Carl V. Weller, chairman of the Depart- ment of Pathology; Dr. Max M. Peet, Dr. Edgar K. Kahn and Dr. Fenimore F. Davis of the surgery department; Dr. Milton S. Goldhamer and Dr. Arthur C. Curtis of the internal medi- cine department; Dr. Marvin H. Pol- lard, secretary of the medical school, and Dr. Fred J. Hodges, chairman of the Department of Roentgenology, will speak. The afternoon general conference will take place in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. Attend- ing will be Dr. Carl D. Camp of the neurology department; Dr. Bradley M. Patten, chairman of the anatomy department; Dr. Howard B. Lewis, chairman of the biological chemistry department and director of the Col- lege of Pharmacy, and Dr. Louis A. Newburgh of the Department of In- ternal Medicine. p.m. The guest speaker will be Mr. Philip Slomovitz, editor-in-chief of the Defroit Jewish Chronicle, who will discuss the current land prob- lls in Palest inc. The public is invit- e( . The Monday Evening Drama Sec- iin of the Faculty Women's Club will meet on Monday, April 1, at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. h(Jutrches First Congregationrl Church: 10:451 a.m. Public worship. Dr. L. A. Parr will preach on "The Fault, Dear Bru- tus." 6:00 p.m. Student Fellowship sup- per, followed by a talk by Mrs. Stan- ley Mitchell of Betsy Barbour House on "Do It Rigi" St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Sunday, 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion. 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Ser- mon by the Reverend Frederick W. Leech. 11:00 a.m. Junior Church. 11 a.m. Kindergarten, Harris Hall. 7:00 p.m. Student Meeting in Harris Hall. Mr. Harold Gray will speak on "How a Cooperative Works" and will show moving pictures of Saline Valley Farms. Unitarian Church: 11 a.m. "Why I Am a Unitarian." Eleventh Anniver- sary sermon by Mr. Marley. 7:30 p.m. Student Panel Discussion. "Upping that Tuition." Disciples Guild (Church of Christ): 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. Rev. Fred Cowin, Minister. 6:30 p.m. The Disciples Guild will present Mrs. Rosa Page Welch, Ne- gro Mezzo-Soprano, Chicago, Ill., who will sing and also lead the group DA iLY OFFICIAL in sineIn Spirituals. All students i.at_1 l .ii. -h of Chi-AA. i..( : ,.Illll_ .t ' . C"1 , a1L[ . 1 :U I 11 in i jj S1111day School at 11:45 a.ln. First Methodist Church: Morning Worship Service at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. William Lyons Phelps will speak on "The Greatest Sermon in the World." This is one of the lectures in the Hen- ry Martin Loud Lecture series. Stalker Hall: 9:45 a.m. Student Class at Stalker Hall. Prof. John L. Brumm will lead the discussion. Wes- leyan Guild meeting at the Church at 6 p.m. Supper and fellowship hour at 7 p.m. Members of the Dra- ma Club will present the play "The Great Choice," by Fred Eastman. The Ann Arbor Meeting of the Re- ligious Society of Friends (Quakers) will hold a meeting for worship in the Upper Room at Lane Hall from 5 to 6 on Sunday. Professor W. R. Hum- phreys will talk on "The Philosophy of the Old Testament Prophets" from G to 7. All interested are invited. First Presbyterian Church: 10:45 a.m. "Building a Faith" will be the subject of the sermon by Dr. W. P. Lemon. 5:30 p.m. Westminster Student Guild meet for supper and fellowship hour. At 7 o'clock Miss Anna M. Scott, secretary for personnel service, Department of Missionary Operation, will speak. Baptist Church: 9:30 Graduate Bible Class. Prof. LeRoy Waterman, teacher. 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. Ser- mon topic, "Ownership of Life." 12:00. Student Round Table. Dis- cussion topic, "What Can We Be- lieve About Marriage." .6:15. Roger William's Guild in the Guild House, 503 E. Huron. Rabbi Isaac Rabinowitz will review Solem Asch's novel, "The Nazarene." The Roger Williams Guild of Ypsilanti will be our guests. Lectures On 'Logic' (Continued rrom Page 1) Pens - Typewriters - Supplies "Writers Trade With Rider's" RI DER'S 302 South State St. HANDY SERVIC DIRECTORY the distinctive characteristics of vari- ous philosophers: the dialectic meth- od of Plato; Aristotle and "conten- tious reasoning; Agricola's conten- tion that the syllogism is a mere manipulation of words; Peter Remus' dividing logic into judgment and in- vention (or discovery); Bacon's in- tensification of that classification of judgment and discovery; John Stu- art Mill and inductive reasoning and Bertrand Russell's statement of first principles. Despite the tendency to believe that logic, in the 17th century, turned toward inductive reasoning, that method all but died out until the 19th century in England," Dr. McKeon added. Dean of the Division of Humani- ties at Chicago since 1935, Dr. Mc- Keon is famed for his works upon the general subject of philosophy. He is author of such books as "The Phil- osophy of Spinoza" and "Studies in the History of Idea, Vol. III)." Adventuhe in E ating 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 tfiree or more insertions. Five average words to a reading line. Minimum of three lines per inser- tion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST. Our Want-Advisor will be delighted to assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop at the }ichigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard Street. FOR RENT MAN to share desirable suite, $3. Meals if desired, $4. 1436 Washing- ton Hgts. Phone 8256. 346 WANTED-TO RENT-6 VISITING faculty member desires furnished from about June 15 to August 30. Write, giving partic- ulars, to N. D. L., care of Michigan Daily. 348 ARTICLES FOR SALE-3 FOR SALE-Buick coupe, seats 5. Good condition. $50.00 See it after 4 p.m. at 310 North Thayer. 349 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 AIND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 WANTED - TO BUY -4 HIGHEST CASH PRICE paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 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 look neat today. 1114 S. Univer- sity. 19 MISCELLANEOUS--20 CANARIES: Lovebirds, Finches. Bird food and cages. Birds boarded. 526 S. Seventh facing Madison. Phone 5330. 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WI1WW I1PFOUND 17 THlE KE1LE HAD 1~01LED DRY! in the Main Dining Room Fried Cornmeal Mush Grilled Bacon and Syrup Ice Cream e Wafers Beverage 50c Union Special Club Sandwich Raspberry Sundae Bev-erage 50c Russian Goulash, en Date Torte or Ice Beverage Casserole Cream I Ii 60c Essence of Tomato Grilled Veal Porterhouse Steak French Fried Potatoes Lima Beans Orange Chiffon Pie Beverage 75c GOOD FOOD Excellent Service 6 to 7:30 o'clock M"A' 14 31 e 190 TYPEWRITING nnd lINl E 1111 lill!