PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TITITR.SDAY- OCTaRRIZ. 9A 14AR a a;a.1 lei1 \I ii1TV tA11 1/1IA T -- .. . .~- u . & S ~ .1 1AL.1. AL1TU tTI J h'ID T 4 1fA . A,'J. .5LR,4'~I' U AnnArbor Draft Board Officials List First216 LocalRegistration Numbert ASSOCIATED PRESS POCTURE NEWS Names of the mn who received the first 216 numbers in the shuffle- numbering of cards for Ann Arbor residents were announced yesterday. Students living outside of Ann Arbor must obtain their numbers at their home districts. This list is not. the order that the men will be chosen for service. They are only the numbers that have been assigned for the lottery that will be held in Washington next Tuesday when Secretary of War Stimson will select the numbers out of a huge bowl. The order in which he picks these registration numbers will be the order that men will be called for active duty unless they can prove grounds for deferment. Succeeding list of the names will be published in The Daily during the rest of the week. Because of the lim- ited time they have to number and file the approximately 4,000 cards for the city, no information on num- bers can be given out at the board headquarters, Harold F. Golds, sec retary of the city draft board de- clared. The list follows: 1. Harold A. Jacobus. 2, Adolph F. Kappler. 3, Donald R. Fox. 4, Arthur Bernard Ness. 5, Carl J. Ekstrom. 6, Moward E. Tatel. 7. Russel J. Dunham. 8, Fred L. Johnson. 9, John E. Swisher, jr. 10, Alex J. Shaw. 11, Harry J. Toms. 12, Edgar L. Pickett. 13. Lewis J. Domke. 14, John G. Hoad.I 15, Herman M. Pollard. 16, Roger E. Frederick. 17, William J. Pearse. 18, Roger W. Packard. 19, George M. McEwen. 20, Harry L. Stearns. 21. John W. Thomson. 22, Kennth P. Wesley. 23, Robert S. Greene. 24, Roland W. Brandt, jr. 25, Roscoe H. Weller. 26, Randolph J. Peterson. 27, Headley X. Downey. 28, John P. Bezirium. 29, Procopio J. Manzanc. 30, Thomas L. Wile. 31, Chriss H. Simpson. 32, James K. Ray. 33, O. E. Roszel, Jr. 4. Walter P. Loesing. 35, juu E. Kinert. 36, William B. Henline. 37, Bennet F. French. 38, Henry C. Darling. 39, Reed . Dingman. 40, Kenneth C. Biedermann. 41, Theodore C. Schaible. 42, Jack B. Lichtenauer. 43, Steve Renias. 44, Omar H. Lovejoy. 45, Douglas J. Harvey. 46, Jack S. Kinney. 47, S. Albert Toutant. 48, Emerson W. Conlon. 49, Earl H. Fawcett. 50, Roland J. Ingerson. 51, Fred A. Key. 52, Don K. Rider. 53, Harry Wilkens. 54, John W. Kenne. 55, Ralph E. Bennett. 56, C. Starl Ritchie. 57. Nelis R. Kampenga. 58. Laurence E. Slick. 59, William W. Gilbert. 91, John N. Graef. 92, Rex B. Martin.' Ar hur W. Burke. 94. Owen O. McDougall. 95, Harry J. D'Anjou. 96, Gustav K. P. G. Neumann. 97, Robert S. Fodor. 98, Franklin C. Forsythe. 99, Thomas C. Tilley. 100, Arthur Nelson. 101, Thelbert T. Cobb. 102, Roland B. Miller. 103, Roland J. Gainley. 104. Clarence L. Munn 105, George E. Hotzel. 106, Courtleigh W. Eliason. 107, Joseph E. Werner. 108, William H. Merrill. 109, Russel T. Dobson. 110, Edward M. Root. 111, Jack M. Farris. 112, Edgar M. Hoover. 113. Emanuel F. Cheshire. 114, Alfred R. Ingebrigtsen 115, James S. Love. 116, Harry Parks. 117, Richard C. Wixson. 118, William C. Steere. 119; Harold C. Byers. 120, James P. Love, jr. 121. Arthur I. McNamara. 122, William J. Russell. 123, Julius C. Van Holsbeck. 124, Claude T. Blakely. 125, William L. Ayres. 126, Rudolph L. Gutekunst. 127, Orville F. Land. 128, John P. Paup. 129, Martin L. List. 130, Charles J. Barclay. 131, Robert A. Schlupe. 132, Raymond J. Knieper. 133, Hubert Thompson. 134. Shirley H. Garland. 135, Lyle D. Elliot. 136, Charles E. Dowdy. 137, Edward K. Reichmann. 138, James A. Morton, jr. 139, John R. French. ~140. Donald K. Pullen 141. Earl C. Exinger. 142. Dominie P. Ciarauino. 143, Oscar W. Ladd. 144, Denver Blake. 145, George E. Calton. 146, Paul Henle. 147, Walter Smiley. 148, Donald Beckier. 149, Robert O. Behringer. 150, Glenn Reno. 151, Oscar H. Kleinschmidt. 152, Leland C. Gray. 153. Herbert V. Holzhauer. 154, Herbert T. Schmale. 155, R. Cyrel Sorte. 156. Raymond J. Papineau. 157, Russel H. Steinke. 158, Clarence W. Chapman. 159, Harold F. Paul. 160, Leo K. Chaney. 161, Leonard C, Franzel. 162, William F. Blair. 163, William W. Franklin. 164. Frederick C. Ziesemer. 165, Bernard H. Betke. 166, Richard W. Goodwin. 167, Henry R. Robbins. 168. Carl H. Wagner. 169, Albert Kellenberger. 170, Elton C. Fielde. 171, Geogre O. Markey. 172, Everett J. Field. 173, Walter S. Hotalen. 174, Bernice A. Winchester. 175, Richard Kearns. 176 Gerald E. Engle. 177, Frederic M. Keppler. 178, Lawrence E. Quinn. 179, Harold A. Kleinschmidt. 180, Earl R. L. Condon. 181, Cheser S. Bass. 182, Paolo Tramontin. 183, Vaughn J. Harris. 184, Max Pittelco. 185, Paul D. Beckman. 186, Edward Zakraysck. 187,Clarence F. Weiss. 188, Leon Tirado. 189, Harold F. Welch. 190, James R. Laurey. 191, John C. Wagner. 192, Carl f'. Hahn. 193, Kenneth W. Strang. 194, Claude D. Wilson. 195, Ross F. Acree. 196, Ross J. Blue. 197, Robert F. Allen. 198, Wilfred L. Hanson. 199, Royal D. Burnett. 200, Robert T. C. Anderson. 201, Wilbur R. Standbridge. 202, Richard Dennard. 203, Serenus W. Gakle. 204, Victor M. Vokovich. 205, Rusell L. Cook. 206, Walter H. Etzel. 207, George L. Dougan. 208, Robert P. Gauss. 209, Leonard E. Sager. 210, Cassimere Samborski. 211, Ralph M. Wilson. 212, Walter A. Smiley. 213, James C. Monaghan. 214, Clarence E. LeBeau. 215, Daniel D. Asprin. 216, Roland W. Hadley. 10-Year Study OfFreshmen Is Compiled Is Johnnie High School going to make Phi Beta Kappa or flunk out dismally when he gets to college? That question is, in substance, the often repeated query which caused workers in the Office of Educational Investigations to compile the formid- ably entitled "Statistical Summary of the Records of Students Entering the University.of Michigan as Fresh- men in the Decade 1927-1936." The 226-page book, recently pub- lished by the University Press, is a great deal more than an answer toi this question, however. It shows, to 4 a great extent, that high school re- cords of students indicate to a reason- able degree of accuracy the type of work which they will do in college. According to Prof. H. C. Carver of the mathematics department, the re- sults thus obtained are approximate- ly as accurate as longevity tables of insurance companied. Thoroughness has been a keynote in preparation of the volume, with tables containing high school grades, records of achievement test resulLs, variable elements with their respec- tive weights and results of college tests. Miss Reika Mary Schwanke, of Austin, Minn., was so convincing in her a:gument over wanting to join the army "right now" and that she had heard that women could regis- ter, that a woman draft board reg- istrar at Austin, Minn., accepted her. She was assigned No. 14. The draft board, which has notified state authorities, said it believed she would be exempted. Grave of face, Adolf Hitler (center), Benito Mussolini (left) and Count Gaieazzo Ciano, Italy's Foreign Minister, conferred behind curtained windows on an armoured train at Brenner Pass. It was the third meeting of the Axis partners this year. One topic of conversation, it was reported, was the attitude of the United States toward the war. BEAUTY'S ONLY FEATHERS DEEP-Color pho- tography is needed for rare quetzal, brought from Guatemala by Victor von Hagen. It's going to St. Louis zoo; has crimson breast, an emerald green, gold-trimmed head, yellow-edged black wings. F L U T E 'j A M' S E S S IO N--Band practice halted and the players gathered about, to pull, when Beverly Blake (above) of San Jose, Cal., Junior college got her finger stuck in a flute. Soap and water finally brought release of finger. 1 s'tate'sTax Delinquent Lands No Longer Constitute Problem 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72. 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80. 81. 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, Richard J| Beissel, Herbert J. Hayman. Harry M. Thomas. Wilfred Kaplan. Edward J. Fitzgerald. Arthur H. Clemes. Donald L. Katz. Dale M. Ransom. Joseph L. Hewitt, jr. Robert J. Lirette. Gilbert Anderson, jr. Tauno E. Ekonen. Harold C. Gatzka. Ivan W. Stevenson. Hubert W. Burke. James T. Bradbury. Herbert N. Abbott. Prescott N. Stocking. Frederick P. Blum. Elmer L. Stadel. Judson C. King, Jr. Barton E. Hiuser. Fred C. Stofflet. Charles W. Edmunds. Claude A. Eggertsen. Dale R. Stump. Robert E. Brown. Edward T. Calver. Thomas M. Reynolds. Harry L. Hallock. Gerald B. Gustine. BY GEORGE SALLADE Tax-delinquent lands reverted to he State are gradually ceasing to be uch a pressing problem to the 111 ities and villages who sent represen- atives to the State Conservation department's Land Utilizations Con- erenrces. These conferences, sponsored by he Conservation Department in con- junction with the Michigan Munici- >al League and the Board of Con- trol for Vocational Education, were 'ield during the summer, but the -esults of their work are just now eginning to take shape. They were conducted by Mark W. Alger, field onsultant of the league, of Ann Arbor, George R. Sidwell, attorney of :he league and C. A. Miller, village nanager of Kingsford. All the citites and villages agreed to submit plans for recommendation for the disposal )f the reverted property in their area. To date, 40 cities have sent their olans and all the others are ex- oected to follow., Four courses are open to the cities. They may either have the land sold at public auction, deeded to them for )ublic use, exchanged for other and, or witheld from sale. Many ,ommunities also request free use "ermits to the mineral rights held by he State. The most common of these pro- -edures, however, is the deeding of he land for public use. Some cities have asked for property adjacent to Price To Present Carillon Concert Prof. Percival Price of the School of Music will open his regular Thurs- day evening carillon recital at 7:15 hcir public buildings while others have requested land for community .rest purposes, airports, street wid- nings and openings, building sites, parks and playgrounds. In several ities the State Conservation Depart- nent traded a state-owned lot for a privately owned one and then ieeded it to the city for its use. One request of withholding the land from public sale came from a vil- lage where 1100 reverted lots formed almost a solid block within the vil- lage limits and the necessary im- provements would cost more than the amount the lots would bring on the market. The Municipal League plans to continue follow-up work on the spec- ial problems of each individual com- munity with the hope that even- tually solutions will be found for each one. Reents Accept Special Git' $27,009 Is Presented For Research Work More than $27,000 in grants have been accepted by the Board of Re- gents for the University, providing for special training work. one re- search fellowship and four scholar- ships. The United States Public Health Service grant of $25,500 came as the renewal of a fund for public health personnel training under Prof. John Sundwall, director of the Division of Hygiene and Public Health. The grant has been budgeted and approved HAVEN --A tale of how an American helped in his escape from a French concentration camp, ahead of arrival of the Nazis, was told in N. Y. by Lion Feuchtwanger (above), German novelist. He finally reached U. S. on the Liner Excalibur. F L E E T' S I N, A N D H 0 W !-when 10,000 sailors from more than 30 warships got shore leave on west coast, the rush landward was terrific. Here's a batch disembarking at Long Beach, Cal. NF ICE ,A7:Y F R :I C SOMLNDN ?UTH Extension Service Will Begin Classes In Two Arts Oct. 31 New classes in ceramics and paint- ing will be available through the Extension Service beginning Oct. 31 Dr. Charles A. Fisher announced yes- terday. The ceramics class will be con- ducted by Mr. G. D. Cole and will deal with clay construction and mod- eling, glaze making, application, and the study of the materials used by .1 I