THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAR( IFC, Panhellenc Endorse Plan To Send Medical Aid To Russia, Town Wrecked .in .Il itiwis Toriuado Student Senate Gives Support To Move For Reorganization Adding the OK of Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic to its grow-1 ing list of endorsers, the Universityj division of Russian War Relief, Inc., continues its all-out campaigning to secure adequate funds with which to "save the lives of 100 wounded Red Army soldiers." Don Stevenson, '42, IFC chief, said Sunday that "RWR has my whole- hearted support. No other agency is carrying on this important function1 of getting sorely needed medical sup- plies to the Soviet Union.' . Panhellenic president Patricia Hadley, '42, echoes this sentiment: "Russian soldiers are being killed and1 wounded in our battle. All possible aid including medical supplies should be sent in a continuous stream to the Soviet Union. In view of the crucial spring offensive being planned by the Nazis, we should redouble our ef- forts to aid the Soviet Army and peo- ple, ' Headed by Harry Stutz, the student CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c LOST and FOUND LST-Pair of rimless glasses on campus. Please call Saenz, 2-4231. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. 6c "With coeds who know dances best it's the Blowout 2 to ." - Student Polling Committee WASHED . SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c TRANSPORTATION SAVE MONEY Driving? We find paying passengers. Going away? We locate rides. Na- tionwide service. Fee nominal. DETROIT AUTO TRAVEL Detroit, Michigan 2976 W. Grand Blvd. Madison 6268 TYPING TYPING: L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., phone 5689. MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 TIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. WANTED TO BUY CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown," 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c MEN'S AND LADIES' CLOTHING suits, overcoats, typewriters, musi- cal instruments, ladies' furs, Per- sian lamb, mink, watches, dia- monds. Pay from $5 to $500. Phone Sam, 5300. 229c REAL ESTATE BUILD YOUR HOME in University Gardens-large tracts, trees, hills, restricted. $800 up. Farley, 2-2475. 275c RWR group has organized several fund-collecting projects. A share of the proceeds destined for Allied war relief, from the film, "Girl of Lenin- grad," which will be presented by the Art Cinema League Thursday through Saturday at the Michigan League, will be given to RWR. Two hundred savings banks, distributed by RWR Monday throughout the Ann Arbor public schools, will remain there for one week. In addition, 50 students have been authorized to solicit donations for RWR. To date, $800 has been collected by the local organization, which hopes to boost this figure to the $1200 mark by the end of the semester. Medical supplies necessary in sav- ing the lives of wounded soldiers in- clude hospital field tents, instrument and dressing sterilizers, anesthesia masks, wound clips and quinine hy- dro chloride and other vital drugs. New Technic Will Discuss AutoEngines Magazine Will Go O Sale Tomorrow; Will Offer Article By Prof. Bailey To those students who know why an automobile engine runs, but don't quite understand what gets it run- ning, The Michigan Technic will offer an explanation of the electrical sys- tems used in modern automobiles when it goes on sale at 8 a.m. to- morrow. Entitled "Electrification of the Automobile," this leading article was written by Prof. Benjamin F. Baily, chairman of the electrical engineer- ing department, and presents a his- tory of the starting and ignition cir- cuits without which no car would start. Other articles in the issue, which will be the last to come out under the retiring senior staff, are "Center of Pressure," by Prof. R. T. Liddicoat of the engineering mechanics depart- ment; "Stress Analysis" by Allen D. Christian, '42E, and "Perpetual Mo- tion Machines" by John S. Burnham, '42E Winding up another year of Tech- nic publication, its sixtieth, Editor-in- Chief Burr J. French, '42E, Business Manager Robert 'L. Imboden, '42E, and Managing Editor Burnham have already designated the new staff, to be headed by William "Hutch" Hut- cherson, '43E. A dark horse feature of the maga- zine this issue will be a special guest editorial by Col. W. A. Ganoe of the military science department, and ad- vance information indicates that it's "plenty hot." In addition to this array of feature material, The Technic will also pre- sent its usual feature departments, Rambling.. ., Reflecting . . . Explor- ing . . ., and Presenting . . . as in the past. Presented this month will be Busi- ness Manager Imboden, Prof. Charles E. Good of the mechanical engineer- ing department and Lawton Ham- mett, '42E, president of Vulcans, sen- ior engineering honor society. There will be a joint staff and tryout meeting today of The Michigan Technic at 5:00 p.m. in 3046 East Engineering Bldg. Staff plans and organization for the coming year will be decided on. [Continued from Page 11) on a junior and senior appointment1 system, will take over these duties. Other features of the plan include elimination of proxies and "sena- torial courtesy," both among the more prevalent of present evils. In the new senate it will not be possible for a resigning senator to name his own successor and thus perpetuate a non- elected line of "representatives." Judging from last night's debate, the pian's major wrinkles lie in the number of representatives, its rela- tion to existing organizations, and the basic question of appointive vs. representative student government. A major feature of O'Connor's plan was brought out by one senator who declared that "it concentrates re- sponsibility in nine men and women, instead of dispersing it over 30. This may be the means of eliminating one of the most often voiced University objections to present student govern- ment." Discussion of the proposal ranged from mild parliamentary points to heated motion-making. Senator Ray Davis , '42, took a walk at 9:35 p.m. in protest against the chair's refusal to recognize him. Davis's "Al Smith" was greeted with mixed emotion from the floor but catcalls predominated. Basically O'Connor's plan embodies the. widely-successful city manager system while junking a policy-form- ing group overburdened by numbers. The senate itself is to be elective in origin, but the personnel who trans- late resolutions into reality w~ould be chosen on the same appointment sys- tem used now by The Daily. Other senate business saw the an- nouncement of a defense stamp out- let to be set up at the University Hall candy counter. The senate was also told that the Defense Stomp had taken in $2.90 in war savings stamps to fight the Axis. . It was also organizations arship fund functions. suggested that campus aid the Bomber-Schol- through special s'ocial "THE FLEET'S IN" at the new STATE THEATRE This is all that was left of "Main Street" in Alvi n, Ill., after one of two tornadoes that ripped across six Illinois counties struck it. The toll of dead in the stat e mounted to 18, with about 170 others injured and more than $500,000 in property damage estimated. In foreground is debris of the former postoff ice building. Everyone is rushing into Marshall's for those delicious Argentine Lady In Red' Describes i I Campus Good Neighbor Date Policy after-show lunches Next to the STATE Theatre By BOB MANTHO Pretty Senorita Gomez Carrillo- Argentina's own "Lady In Red"--hasi gone American on us.E She's here in the United Si ates asl a concert pianist because she won a contest in South America a year ago1 and can play a mean Chopin, Bachf or Brahns on the keyboard.c Early this year she was a special guest of Mrs. Roosevelt at the Whitet House. "Thrilled so much i can't de- scribe it," Senorita Carrillo met the' President and thinks "... he has the most wonderful expression I have ever seen. Dynamic, you call it." Visits Ann Arbor Wearing her mother's white pearl1 necklace and sometimes talking in Spanish too fast to understand, the Argentian "Lady in Red" is in Ann Arbor to see what a big university is like. Tomorrow she'll take the train for New York where she has an en- gagement." Already she's been noticed on cam- pus and has accepted three dates with admirers "but I don't know how I'm "Nattiest' Gar Ever Issued OutTuesday "Not all- the nuts in this vicinity are on the machinery at Willow Run!" proclaimed Garg Editor Chan Si- monds, '42, as he swung from chan- delier to chandelier and back before a clamoring mob of reporters who had besieged his inner sanctum re- questing info on the new magazine coming out Tuesday. Further enlightenment being urg- ently requested, aforementioned head whipcracker burst forth with a state- ment of this month' policy: screw- ball technique. "We're giving the campus the screwiest pages they've ever seen-even Cec DeMille with all his vocabewlary couldn't do it proper justice! "Honest injun!" he exclaimed as he carefully fitted an overstuffed waste- basket to his head, "there never has been and never will be (yes, you can quote me on this (a nuttier "mag" produced by any aggregation of wits and half-"wits on either side of the Rockies!" With this the big chief pulled a massive watch out of his pocket, glanced at it and screamed "Wednes- day already?" Three.pairs of glasses found their way to his nose and he buried his head in an inkwell, thus signaling to his audience that work was the order of the day. Naval Fortui Meets Toay Discussion of the possible means of taking the offensive against Japan will highlight the meeting of the Nav- al Affairs Club at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 16, Angell Hall. Mr. E. W. Mill of the political science depart- ment will preside at the meeting and will direct the discussion. going to do it." She thinks the library is "very large" and she's disappoint- ed with Detroit because they wouldn't let her see the "Ford factories." She's been guest artist over the NBC and CBS hook-ups and was of- fered a contract by the former. How- ever, the union fee of $50 was "too much for me" and "I couldn't join the union anyway" since the govern- nkent of Argentina was backing "my ;;ai eer" for the year. At the end of this month, Miss Carrillo is scheduled to play with the Philadelphia Youth Orchestra as soloist. Artur Rubenstein has been her "adviser in this country. She composes too. Her three songs Campus Hild~yihls Today .. t t MICHIGAN Four graduate speech students will present addresses before the monthly, meeting of the Graduate Study Club today at 4 p.m. in the East Confer-, ence Room of the Rackham Build- ing. The speakers and their topics in- clude Donald Hargis, "Radio Vocabu- lary," George Herman, "The Testing of Hearing for Speech," Willis Pitts, "Sources of Greatness in American Drama" and Harry Williams, "Some Problems of Research in Oratory." Men candidates for fall orienta- tion advisers will be interviewed from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Room 305 of the Union all this week. Successful applicants will be asked to serve during the orienta- tion period for new students to be held next fall during the week of' Sept. 27 to Oct. 3. The positions are voluntary and there will be no remuneration for the work. At a later date advisers will be selected for a special three day or- ientation period which will take place prior to the opening of the summer semester in June. And Tomorrow His travels "off the beaten track" have provided Dr. Norman Hartweg, Assistant Curator of Reptiles and Amphibians in the Museum of Zool- ogy, with some unusual material for his lecture to La Sociedad Hispanica at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Alumni Memorial Hall. Dr. Hartweg has visited southern Mexico on three expeditions for the purpose of studying the reptilian and amphibian life of that region. Dur- ing his studies he has observed the customs of the Indian tribes. Speak- ing mainly of the Indians of Chiapas, Dr. Hartweg will lecture in English and will accompany his talk with slides. Search Fails To U cover New Torch-Death (lues Special to The Daily) MANCHESTER, Mich., March 17. ---A fine-comb search of several acres of woodland marsh today failed to produce any new evidence in the torch-death of Orville Wurster, 34- year-old dry goods store clerk, whose charred bodyv was found near here early today. Washtena w county sheiif's offi- -"Quinta Blanca," "T'Hei Dejar" and "Charcanui Munanquita"-will be introduced April 9 at a concert sponsoi'ed by Joseph Levine in Phila- delphia. No sooner did her boat dock at the New York pier a year ago than she was rushed by her many New York "boyfriends." These Miss Carrillo classified as: 'Good Neighbors' Classified 1) the "youngsters' with terrific enthusiasm for port wine. Between 20 and 25. 2) the very attractive men who "unfortunately" are all mrtried. They ranged between 28 and 35 years of age. 3) the "wealthy ones" who are not married and she didn't like them very much, she said. Their ages run from 35 to 42. As far as Miss Carrillo is con- cerned, New York is "nothing excep- tional." She's used to it because it's similar.to Buenos Aires. The art galleries in Washington, D.C., impressed her and she spent days "just looking." But West Virginia was something else. "The atmosphere there is pure United States with a flavor you can't find in all your big cities." During her short visit "in the mountains" Miss Carrillo square-danced and "loved it." Ham Will Speak Today Synopses and analyses of strange medieval tales will be given at 4:15 p.m. today in Room D, Alumni Me- morial Hall, when Prof. Edward B. Ham of the romance language de- partment will offer the last lecture in the current series sponsored by the Cercle Francais. Included among these tales are the bestiaries, fabliaux, books of manners, proverbs and the short poems and "epics-grotesque" written during the Middle Ages in France. All Proceeds I AL 11U. # Allied War Keiter I IT PACKS A WAR-TIME WALLOP THAT HITS YOU UP- STAIRS AND DOWN. The action in the snow is both beautiful and deadly ... exciting as it is real . . . Zoya Fyodorova is thorough- ly splendid . . . The news of current Russian victories in the deep snow renders GIRL FROM LENINGRAD more than timely. It rings the bell. Besides it has a magnificent collection of photographed explosions. The shooting and burning of an enemy bomber is alone worth the price of admission. -ARCHER WINSTEIN, New York Post - - - Extr - *.Tigers Captured Alive in Siberia * Hairless Hector (Cartoon) MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Thursday, Friday, and Saturday 8:15 P.M. Box Ofhce Open-Tickets 39c , Phone 6300 for reservations Special Saturday Matinee at 3:30 For -k I ART CINEMA LEAGUE I S_ w momemmu momeme malms" SHOWS DAILY 25c to 5 P.M, AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. ?1ow 1l~i I A 1 aP BOA 3'N E STT vfA rAfE by going in MID-WEEK to ease WEEK-END congestion Wartime conditions tend to crowd transportation facilities on week-ends when soldiers and war workers travel. You can aid by going places during the mid- week when possible, and by get- ting tickets and travel informa- tion in advance. Going by Grey- hound, you'll be saving your car and tires, saving materials Amer- ica needs. And you'll be saving =oney for Defense Bonds at low Super-Coach fares! One-way , $ .8 add,Tnrrp 1.6 Jaksn d [.1 Lr l . l}SS e]? .V it t(a .!..vv ".h . ."... r-.__..__. i_. a nG "l rt C_ .