PAGE SIX THE MIWCHTGAN DAILY WEDN gESDAY, MARCH 26, 1941 Speech Squads Are Announced For Congress Michilodeon Offers $10 Prize "Michilodeon," the Union-W.A.A. five cent carnival scheduled for May 3 and 3 is still looking for a winner in its "Why For" contest, according to Franhy Aaronson, '42, and Phil Fisher, '42. Delegates to the Delta Sigma Rho Thy sponsors of the show are of- annual speech congress to be held this :ering $10 for the best explanation year in Chicago April 3, 4 and 5, were ,f the name "Michilodeon." Entrants announced yesterday by Arthur Se- Imust limit their answers to 50 words. cordunand Prof. Knneht AG.hu Hace 3allot boxes are located in various cord and Prof. Kenneht G. Hance sampus places and the League and of the speech department, directors Union. respectively of the men's and wo- Twelve-year-old Dick Thurston, the men's varsity debate squads. '>oy who writes poet y for the Gar- William Muehl, '41, Edwin Bowers, royle, submitted the first explanation '41, Arthur Biggins, '41, and John ,esterday, but carnival leader Charles :-Tinen, '41, admitted that 'his ef- Huston, '41, will be the delegates from ort Wasn't exactly big-time." the University participating in the "Michilodeon" is the modern suc- variety of speech activities offered esor to the old campus Michigras by Congress. __--- Jean Maxted, '41, Mary Martha - Taylor, '41, June de Cordova, '411 and Janet Grace, '42, will be the Can 'Technocracy' members of women's squad to par- ticipate in the national tourney. "Where Do We Go From Here?" Delta Sigma Rho, national honor- a lecture on Technocracy, will be de- ary forensic fraternity, will hold a ivered by A. W. Atwater, of Minne- complete legislative session at the apolis, at 8:15 p.m. Friday in the meeting in which the delegates from Michigan Union. 45 colleges and 200 students will Mr. Atwater is an official lecturer participate. for Technocracy, Inc., and is appear- ng on a national tour. He will speak Hilel Council n Detroit this evening. 1110e1 Council Several years ago, Technocracy theorists gained widespread publicity Deadine Set when they developed a social scheme based on technical sprinciples. The - -roup is now organized on a nation- Petition Must Be In Today, wide scale' 1 i i 4 i i carnivals and will feature regular circus acts, side-shows and dancing. The show will make a two-night stand in Barbour and Waterman gymnasia. Arrangements are now being made so that campus fraternities and so- rorities may enter side-shows and exhibits. Papers Will Be Read At Study Club Today The second monthly meeting of the Graduate Study Club of the speech department will be held at 4 p.m. today in the East Conference Ropm of the Rackham Building. Paul R. Beall, Grad., will present a critical analysis of "Prolegomena to Argumentation" written by William Rowell. Hugh Norton, Grad., will review "Some Elementary Contri- butions of Aesthetics to Interpreta- tive Speech." Some of the more serious types of speech handicaps will be described by Courtney Osborn, Grad., with illus- trated case histories. Glen Mills, Grad., will discuss "Practical Prob- lems in Research in Rhetorical The-I ory and Criticism." Senate Releases First Of True Case Histories Editor's note: In conjunction with the Senate's renewed campaign for alumni scholarships The Daily is publishing true case histories which illustrate the gravity of the need. This is the first case. Miss C's stepfather is a Cana- di'an war veteran minus one leg. There are three younger children in the family. The mother worked in a restaurant while the daughter went to high school. half time. Miss C. graduated from high school with honors and came here on an Alumni scholarship. She works for room and board with an elderly couple who have eleven boys rooming in the house. A corner of the coal bin has been boarded off for her room. She made B in freshman Eng- lish and three A's - including Chemistry 5. Her job takes 28 hours a week. In addition she takes care of children two nights a week to supplement her income. Her mother developed tuberculo- As this winter and was shipped to Arizona by a local relief agency. The three small children were dis- tributed. This June the girl has no home to go to. She received 99 and 97 on psychological tests. By A. P. BLAUSTEIN His folks wanted him to follow in his father's footsteps and become a lawyer, but Cabell Galloway III had other ideas. And today there are few people in the country who have not heard of Cab Calloway, "His Hi-De-Highness of Ho-De-Ho." Cab's songs, and his interpretations of various tunes written by others, are even more famous, particularly "Minnie the Moocher," "The Reefer Man," "Zaz Zuh Zaz," "The Scat Song," "Minnie the Moocher's Wed- ding Day" and "Kicking the Gong Around." His Highness, and his well-known Cotton Club Orchestra, are scheduled to make their first Ann Arbor ap- Kappa Kappa Psi Will Hold Contest Kappa Kappa Psi, honorary band fraternity, will hold-its third annual solo and ensemble contest, March 30, at 4 p.m. in the Unidn. The contest will be judged by Mr. Dale Harris of Pontiac, Mr. Clyde Vroman and Mr. William Champion of Ann Arbor. Winners will be award- ed medals and their names will be engraved on the Kappa Kappa Psi trophy. The public is cordially invited. Out- standing brass and woodwind sections are expected. His Hi-De-Highness Of Ho-De-Ho Is Title Won By Cab Calloway pearance next week playing at the engineers' annual Slide Rule Ball from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, April 4, in the Union Ballroom. Born on Christmas Day, 1907, in Rochester, N.Y., Calloway received his schooling in Baltimore, Md., where his family moved when he was very young. At the age of 16, he really began 'his musical career singing in the choir of the Bethlehem Metho-I dist Church. At first Cab was interested in law and considered his music as a means to that end. He joined his sister, Blanch, in the cast of a colored show, "Plantation Days," after his family moved again-this time to Chicago. His first big opportunity came when he was working in the Sunset Cafe in the Loop. One of the main attractions was too ill to sing and Cab took her place. His success was so complete that he became official understudy for the entire cast. Later he became master of cere- monies at the Sunset Cafe and still later he became leader of the band there, the Alabamians. During this period he was studying at Crane bol- lege but after another semester de- cided that he could "make the human race happier by giving it music than by trying to keep it out of jail." The young band leader left: the Alabamians in New York to become a singer again in an all-colored musi- cal show "Connie's Hot Chocolates." Mercado Announces Free Tuition Grant By Mexican School The efforts of La Sociedad His- panica to foster closer relations be- tween American and Mexican stu- dents materialized yesterday with the announcement that the University of Mexico Summer School will not require payment of tuition from the two recipients of Spanish Club schol- arships. In answer to a letter written some time ago by Prof. E. A. Mercado of the Romance Languages Department, Mr. Mario de la Cueva, secretary of the Mexican school, replied that they would be glad to allow the students to enter free of the $35 tuition. The addition of this sum to the original $50 increases the value of the scholarship to $85, which will coyer the cost of tuition, books, board and room for the entire summer, Mercado announced. All undergraduates of the Univer- sity who are studying or have studied Spanish, are eligible for the two scholarships. Interested students are requested to see Prof. Robert Lincoln in Room 100 Romance Languages Building in the near future. Co-Op Leaders To Meet Here Convention Over Weekend Will Feature Parleys Representatives of consumer co- operatives from all over the state of Michigan will be campus guests this' Saturday and Sunday at the First Annual Michigan Cooperative Con- ference. The convention will be sponsored by the InterCoopeyative Council and will feature parleys on problems com- mon to the consumer cooperative movements. All cooperative houses on campus will be open to public inspection Saturday and Sunday. All students and townspeople in- terested in learning about coopera- tives are welcome to attend any or all of the parleys, even though they are not delegates. Lenten Services Today Lenten services will be staged to- day in several Ann Arbor churches. St. Mary's Student Chapel will have Lenten devotions at 7:30 p.m. to- day, and there will be a mid-wek program, also at 7:30 p.m., at Trin- ity Lutheran Church. Textile Exhibit Continues Housing Exhibit Opens The exhibition of Javanese and An exhibition depicting various Balinese textiles, taken from the col- phases of defense housing, prepared lection of Professor and Mrs. Everett by the Central Housing Commission, Brown, now being shown in the main Washington, D. C., -will open today floor display cases of the Architecture in the third floor Exhibition Room Building, will close tomorrow. of the Architecture Building. Chairman Announces Tocay is the deadline for all peti-' tions of persons who wish to be placed on the ballot for the Hillel1 Council election Friday, Theodore DRL Liebovitz, '41, chairman of the elec- ion committee, announced yester-- day. (Continued from Page 4) Lane Hall and the Hillel Founda- ------ tion will be the polling places and will information on file at the Bureau of be open all day. Only members of Afom ens a thecupau o- Hillel who present affiliate cards will appointments and occupational In- be allowed to vote. formation, 201 Mason Hall, hours A slate of over 30 names has been,_-_ -4 made up by the retiring Council. The University Bureau of Appoint- With voting on the basis of propor- ments and Occupational Information Lional representation, 12 membersrrnsadOcptolIfrmin wilerset tservon themershas received notice of the following will be selected to serve on the coun- United States Civil Service Examina- cil for the coming year. Lions. Last date for filing application The Hillel Council serves as the is noted in each case: law-making body of the Foundation, xn which is run on a democratic basis Expediter Marine Propelling and by the student members. Outfitting Equipment Salary: $3,200, until further notice. Y OFFICIfiL BULLETIN the examinations this spring. Exhibitions Javanese and Balinese textiles from the collection of Professor and Mrs. Everett S. Brown are on exhibition in the display cases, main floor cor- ridor, Architecture Building, March 10-27. Exhibit: Defense Housing, arranged by the Central Housing Commission, Washington, D.C.; third floor Ex- hibition Room, Architecture Building, March 26-April 4, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 Auditorium. Box Office at Hill Audi- Major: Vienna Philharmonic Orches- torium will be open beginning today, tra, Bruno Walter, conducting. 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Brahms: Four Songs. Sung by -Marian Anderson, accompanied by v ythe Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene E""e 's Today" J Ormandy, conducting. Pre-Medical Society: The bus for Brahms: Quintet in F Minor, Ru- Eloise hospital will leave from the dolf Serkin, pianist, and the Busch Michigan Union today at 1:00 p.m. Quartet. or shortly thereafter. All who in- These programs are open to the tend to go and have not paid their general public. Commentator: Ivor transportation fee may do so at that Schilansky. ;ime. No payment will be accepted after the trip has started. hobby Lobby will meet today ----i o ce at 3:15 p.m. in the Women's Athletic Alpha Phi Omega will hold a closed Building. Plans will be made for Imeetling. in the Michigan Union this Paswl emd o Leeing instead ofhann meeting, spring work on leather and metal, evening nseofan open eP ig' beading, weaving, and whatever other as was previously announced. Pledges handcrafts are desired. After the 'are asked to meet at 7:30, and active meeting the group will start immedi- nembers at 8:00. Itely on some leather work. If in- terested but unable to attend, con- Harris Hall: A Lenten be served this afternoon to 1:00. Proceeds will go dent Lenten. Project. Lunch will from 12:00 to the Stu- I Head Soil Scientist, $6,500, April 24, p.m. CL SS F ED1941. ~~~~~- _.. S CLASSIFIE Eookbinder (hand) $1.20 hr. 40 Lectures hour week, April 24, 1941. DI 'ECT RY Bookbinder (Machine Operations) University Lecture: Paul S. Martin. Chief Curator of the Department of $1.26 r 40 hr week, Aprl 24, 1941.I Anthropology of the Field Museum JuniorEngineering Draftsman, sal- of Natural History, Chicago, will lec-, FOR SALE l ary $1,440, April 24, 1941. ture on the subject, "Archeology of The Bureau has also received notice the Southwest" (illus.), under the TAME BABY PARAKEETS make de- from the United States Naval Acad- auspices of the Department of An- lightful, inexpensive pets. Also emy 'that examinations will be held thropology on Thursday, March 27, canaries, bird foods and cages, for Appointment of Instructors at the at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- 562 So. 7th, Phone 5330. 311 U.S. Naval Academy. Vacancies will theatre. The public is cordially in- WANTED TO RENT-6 probably exist in the Departments vited. of Mathematics, Electrical Engineer- ' ROOMS WANTED for high school ing (Chemistry), English, History, University Lecture: John Garstang, students visiting University, for and Government, and Foreign Lan- Professor of Theory and Practice of nights of May ] and 2, at 50c per guages. Applications on file at the Archaeology, University of Liverpool, night per person. Mail card to Prof. Bureau. will lecture on the subject, "The L. Brumm, 213 Haven Hall, giving ' Complete announcement on file at Foundations of Bible History," (illus- full details. 316 the Bureau of Appointments and trated) under the auspices of the De- Occupational Information, 201 Mason partments of History, Greek, and TIYPING -18 Hall. Office hours: 9-12 and 2-4. Oriental Languages at 4:15 p.m. on : i # TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or. 2-141e 14c TYPIST. Experienced. L. M. Hey- wood, 414 Maynard St. Phone 5689. 1 27c TOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. . MISCELLANEOUS--20 THESIS BINDING-Mimeographing. Brumfield & Brumfield, 308 S.{ Academic Notices Algebra Seminar will meet today at 4:15 p.m. in 3201 A.H. Dr. SamI Perlis will speak on "Theory of p-algebras." Seminar in Physical Chemistry will meet today in room 410 Chemistry Building at 4:15 p.m. Mr. Theodore Berlin will speak on "Theory of the change of refraction in the formation of hydrogen halides." a State 19c Political Science Round Table will E PLURIBUS UNUM - The best meet Thursday evening, March 27, at night club in Ann Arbor at Lydia 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Mendelssohn's "Jumpin' Jupiter." Room of the Rackham Building. Topic: "South America." WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL-- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Student Applicants for Commis- Tuesday, April 8, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: William S. Cul- bertson, former ambassador to Chile, will lecture on "Political and Econom- ic Aspects of Hemisphere Defense" at 4:15 p.m. on Friday, April 4, in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Build- I ing, under the auspices of the Uni- versity Committee on Defense Issues. The public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Harry D. Tie- mann, physicist at the Forest Pro- ducts Laboratory. U. S. Forest Serv- ice, Madison, Wisconsin, will give an illustrated talk on "Significance of Research on Wood" at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, April 3, in the amphithe- atre of the Rackham Building, under the auspices of the School of For- estry and Conservation. The public is cordially invited. French Lecture: Professor Marc Denkinger will give the fourth lecture on the Cercle Francais program; "La vie audacieuse du Duc de Lauzan sous Louis XIV," today at 4:15 p.m., room 103, Romance Language Building. Tickets may be procured at the door. Lecture: "The Science of Laugh- ter," by Miss Elsa Maxwell, on Tues- day, April 1, at 8:15 p.m. in Hill Graduate Speech Students: The I tact Elizabeth Malhman (5558 Stock- Graduate Soudy Club of the well). Speech Departiient will meet to- - day at 4:00 p.m. ini the East The Slavic Society will meet to- Conference Room of the Rackham night at 7:30 at the International Building. Papers to be presented "enter. The meeting will be followed are: "Prolegomena to Argumenta- by folk dancing at 8:00 at the Michi- tion," by Paul Beall; "Some Elemen-j gan Union in Room 305. tary Contributions of Aesthetics to iinterpretative Speech," by Hugh Al-Thaqafa, the Arabic Culture So- Norton; "The More Serious Types of ciety, will hold a round-table discus- Speech Handicaps with Presentation 'tonight at 8:00 in the Interna- of a Case," by Courtney Osborn; tienal Center. The subject is "Arab- "Practical Problems in Research i ism As I Understand It." Fakhri Rhetorical Theory and Criticism," Maluf will lead the discussion. All by Glen Mills. those interested are welcome. International Center: Tonight, 7:30-9:00, the weekly program of re- The Publicity Committee of the iorded music will consist of: Frosh Project will meet today at 4:00 Brahms: Symplony No. 3, in F 1 p.m. at the League. eweenc asse.. pause an The Faculty Women's Club an- nual tea will be held at the home of Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven today from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Coming Events Alpha Lambda Delta: Important meeting of all members in the League at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday. Look on bulletin board for the room number. The Great Vespers, an arrangement of an Ortl'odox Russian Litany, will be sung by the Latvian Singers, sup- ported by two student choirs under the direction of Professor Palmer Christian of the School of Music in Hill Auditorium, at 8:30 p.m., on Thursday, March 27, under the aus- pices of the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association. Stu- dents, faculty, Ann Arbor citizens, as well as parents of students and in- terested alumni are invited as guests of the Chapter Houses. Graduate Students: Informal dance will be held Saturday, March 29, in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building, 9:00-12:00 p.m. Bridge and refreshments. Slight admission charge. W ATCH ! TH4IS SPACE FARM MADE 'SPRINGTIME 11 is . -. I Killins Gravel Company. phone 7112. 5c HELP WANTED' STUDENT-To work for board. Two meals daily. Mrs. Slade, 1223 Hill, or phone 2-2276. 318 WANTED-Girl as waitress and as- sistant. Hours 11 to 2 daily. Per- manent job. Nut and Nibble Shop, 339 So. Main. 317 TRANSPORTATION -21 H. B. GODFREY MOVING - STORAGE - PACKING Local and Long Distance Moving. 410 N. Fourth Ave. Phone 6297 29C TAILORING & PRESSING - 12 TAILORED suits and coats, custom made. Day time, evening gowns made and remodeled. Phone 3468. 24c LOST and FOUND PIT DELTA PHI KEY-Kent '42, sions in Naval Reserve: The eighth of the series of lectures on Naval Subjects will be delivered by Com- mander W. N. Wallin, U.S. Navy, on Thursday, March 27, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 348 W. Engineering Bldg, Sub- ject: "New Construction." Preliminary Examinations for the Ph.D. in Economics will be held dur- ing the week of May 5 for graduate students qualified to write them. Please leave your name in the office A the Department of Economics as soon as possible if you plan to write Comes spring and the young man's - or anyone else's fancy turns to thoughts of vacation and travel, Sometime in the next few sunshiny months you too will want to pack up and get away for a couple of weeks or a month. When you do, be sure that those vaca- tion clothes and that new spring suit will be kept neat and clean by good lug'gage. Drop in atWilkinson's for your vacation luggage needs..e From $10 to $12.50 Others at lower prices. usl i enace or an excdinq rIamee .. S A. 1 s pause T®r ece-c®au ,a 11