4 TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY si ' . w tiu t P itL20, i94 ' ._.. .. . y . sa. vy av , Board Names 'Daily' Editors, Business Staff (Continued from Page 1) vice-presidency of Alpha Phi Omega, a brief appearance in the Union Op- era of 1942, and the chairmanship of the Bomber Scholarship Swing Com- mittee-to say nothing of Sphinx, Les Voyageurs, and a counselorship at freshman camp Rendezvous. Douglas is also affiliated with Phi Gamma Delta and is a member of Sphinx. Holding the post of junior business manager in charge of ac- counts, publicity, and national ad- vertising, he took time off to appear in the opening chorus of the Union Opera. Miss Gruhzit has been extremely active in League work, taking part in frosh frolic, frosh project, soph cabaret, and JGP. She is a member of Alpha Phi and served as junior editor on the Gargoyle with feature assignments. Zimmerman, president of Chi Psi, served on the Union and The Daily before becoming circulation and pub- licity manager of Gargoyle. He was also a member of the Student Senate before his February resignation. Secretary of Sigma Delta Chi, Sal- lade is a member of Sigma Phi and the Quadrangle Club, while Thatcher, a major in chemical engineering be- longs to Sigma Chi. Thatcher is also president of the campus chapter of AIChE and vice- president of Scabbard and Blade. He is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Tri- angles, Vulcans, the Concert Band, and the Glee Club. Junior appointments on all staffs, and other senior appointments will be made later this week. Clarinet Quartet, University Choir Will Give Concert A joint concert will be held at 8:30 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by the University Choir un- der the direction of Prof. Hardin Van Deursen and a clarinet quartet un- der the leadership of William H. Stubbins, instructor of clarinet in the music school. The program, which will consist of English and American folk songs, will feature singers Leo Imperi, '42SM, and Robert Holland, '43M, and instrumentalists Arthur Berg, Grad, Norris D. Huston, '44SM, Charles Hills, '44SM, and Robert Sohn, '45SM At 7:15 p.m. today Prof. Percival Price will present the sixth carillon recital of the current spring series in Burton Memorial Tower. The series dedicated to the music of the conquered nations of Europe will feat- ure the music of Czechoslovakia. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. Bc WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c LAUNDERING LAUNDRY --- 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c STUDENTS' BUNDLES WANTED- 6c per lb., rough dry. Shirts extra 10c each. Handkerchiefs, lc each. Phone 25-8441. 295c WANTED TO BUY CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. Sc CLOTHES BOUGHT AND SOLD- Ben the Tailor, 122 East Washing- ton. Phone after 6 o'clock, 5387. CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY- Pay $5 to $500 for Suits, Overcoats, Typewriters, Saxophone, Fur Coats (Minks and Persian Lambs), Watches, and Diamonds. Phone Sam, 5300. LOST and FOUND LOST-One key chain with seven keys. Call International Center, 4121-2131-Reward. FOR SALE CORONA PORTABLE with case. Excellent condition. Call 1104 Ypsilanti betwee- 6-8 p.m. i 340c TYPING L. M. HEYWOOD, experienced typist, 414 Maynard Street, phone 5689. MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. Named To 1942-43 Michigan Daily Senior Staff Positions Herm the dil Etemp here rec meet c Reserve Huds particips Hudson Loses In Speech Contest an Hudson, '44, winner of test which was in the form of a trict meet of the National roundtable discussion on the ques- Gore-Discussion contest held tion, "How Can We Best Imple- cently, lost out in the regional ment the Good Neighbor Policy?" onducted Friday at Western From this group, Hudson was elim- University in Cleveland, 0. inated, thus ending Michigan's repre- on competed with 16 other sentation in the txtempdre-Discus- ants in the preliminary con- sion. U SEN IORSI; rer Of ficial WILL SAPP MORTON MINTZ ..- City Editor . .. Editorial Director GEORGE SALLADE CHARLES THATCHER ... Associate Editor ... Associate Editor Annouincemnenfts Now!l BURR, PATTERSON & AULD CO. 1209 South University Proposal Puts Supervision On CityFinances Dr. Ford And Goodrich Suggest State Control In ' Research Pamphlet A more comprehensive plan of con- trol of municipal finances by the state to check the excessive growth of municipal debts is recommended by Dr. Robert S. Ford, director of the Bureau of Government, and Ken- neth S. Goodrich, former research assistant, in the Bureau's pamphlet, "State Supervision of Local Borrow- ing," released recently. Any such plan, the authors declare, would include administrative super- vision by the state, an over-all county debt limit linked to the property tax levy or collections for several pre- ceding years, and permission to in- crease the debt beyond the limit, sub- ject to the approval of the Public Debt Commission and the electorate. The suggested plan could be easily administered by agencies that are already in existence, and it would meet the urgent need for an effec- tive method of debt control. Possible agencies are the State Public Debt Commission and the county alloca- tion boards. Dr. Ford and Goodrich point out in their study of the municipal debt situation that the present state con- stitutional and statutory debt pro- visions set up four different mechan- ical limits on the amount of debt that may be incurred by municipali- ties. These limits may be classified as (1) the flat amount; (2) fixed per- centage of the tax to be levied or collected"; (3) fixed percentage of assessed valuation; and (4) a maxi- mum tax rate for retiring debt in- curred for certain specified purposes. Engineers' Picnic Tickets To Be Sold With more than a hundred tickets to the senior engineers picnic already sold, the remaining fifty will go on sale tomorrow at a booth over the engineering arch. The annual picnic, which has been moved up from its usual post-exam- ination place to keep pace with the defense-shortened semester, will be held at 5 p.m. Friday on the Island. Inter-departmental softball teams have been formed specially for the event and formation of a faculty team has been rumored. Playoffs will be held at the picnic and will feature contests between chemical, mechanical, metallurgical and ma- rine engineers and naval architects. Hitler To Meet Reichstag LONDON, April 25.--OP)-Reuters reported today that the Berlin cor- respondent of the Swiss Gazette de Laussane said Adolf Hitler soon might address the Reichstag on Ger- many's relations with France. The correspondent was quoted as saying he had learned that a large number of French prisoners were to be re- leased soon, but that most of them would remain in Germany as factory workers or be returned to French in- dustries producing for the German military machine. cU Tag Day Receipts Will Send Under-Privileged Boys To Camp' If the annual University Fresh Air Camp Tag Day, to be held Friday, May 1, reaches its $1,500 goal, over 300 underprivileged boys of south- eastern Michigan will have a four- weeks' summer vacation and a chance to become better citizens than their present circumstances promise. A diagnostic rather than a correc- tive institution, the Fresh Air Camp 13 .I every year gives maladjusted boys a respite from their environment in' congested ur- ban areas. At the camp, located on Patterson Lake in Livingston Coun- ty, wholesome food, sunshine and rigorous exercise contribute im- mensely to the health of the young- sters, accustomed only to the recrea- tional facilities of the city streets. Boys are chosen for the camp largely on the basis of need for psy- chological correction. According to Prof. F. N. Menefee of the civil engi- neering department, camp director, the chief cause of delinquency among boys who attend the camp is lack of proper parental attention. This Canadian Draft To BeDecled Dominion-Wide Plebiseite Will Be Tomorrow OTTAWA, Ont., April 25. --? From the Yukon to Labrador Cana- dians will vote Monday on the ques- tion of freeing the Government from present restrictions on the use of drafted man power in service abroad. More than 4,000,000 of Canada's nearly 7,000,000 voters are expected to cast ballots in this second Com- monwealth-wide plebiscite of Domin- ion history. The Government, having commit- ted itself not to impose conscription I for overseas service, is asking the people to free it from the commit- ment. The people will mark their ballots "yes" or "no." It will then be up to the Govern- ment to proceed according to the plebiscite results. Nearly 500,000 Canadians in the Army, Navy and Air Force, among them about 150,000 volunteers who are serving overseas, started marking their ballots April 16 and completed their voting today. Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie King and the leaders of two major opposition parties, R. B. Hanson of the Conservative Party, and M. J. Coldwell of the Commonwealth Fed- eration, have joined in, urging an af- firmative vote. Organist To Give Recital One of America's foremost young concert organists will present a reci- tal at 4:15 ,p.m. today when Clair Coci plays in Hill Auditorium. Miss Coci who is renowned for her interpretation of the classics and her ability to play on the most compli- cated and intricate organs used on the concert stage will devote her en-. tire program to the music of the masters. deficiency results in a disordered home life, which leads to dissatis- faction and frequent trouble with the law. The camp does not attempt to cor- rect these defects during the boys' four-week stay, but opportunity is given the trained counseling staff to observe child reactions and to make recommendations for treatment to the social agencies which sent the boys to the camp. The counselors are graduate students of the Univer- sity in psychology, sociology and ed- ucation. They receive six hours of academic credit for the eight-week season. The boys are drawn largely from the Ann Arbor, Jackson, Flint and Detroit areas. So successful have been the efforts of the Fresh Air Camp that it is ranked as one of the foremost insti- tutions of its kind in the country. Recognizing its worth, social agencies contribute regularly to the camp's budget. The rest is secured through private donations and the annual University Tag Days. The camp has been located on University-owned property on Patterson Lake since 1923. Previous to that year the camp's sites were Port Huron and Moon Lake in Livingston County. The hillel Foundation Student Council will meet at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at Hillel Foundation. Two vice-presidents will be elect- ed. All council members are urged to attend. Slosson, White To Open War Forum Series First Discussion Group Will Be Held Today In Unitarian Chureh The first of a series of three for- ums dealing with Revolution and Re- construction will be presented at 11 a.m. today in the Unitarian Church by Prof. Preston W. Slosson and David McKelvey White. Today's discussion will particularly emphasize the "European Back- ground" of the general topic. White served in the Spanish Revolution with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and was formerly a professor at the City College of New York. Prof. Mentor Williams of the Eng- lish department and Walter Nelson, a leader in civil rights, will discuss "Signs of Fascism in America" in the second forum on May 3. Speakers have not as yet been pro- cured for the May 10 forum, the topic of which will be "Opportunities for Intelligent Change." The committee in charge includes Harry Stutz, Grad, Marvin Lerner, '43, Wayne Ericksen, Prof. John F. Shepard and Mrs. Leonard Dornbush. Records of the Chinese and Red Armies will be played in the inter- missions of the forums. BROWN I' I, Recently returned from Singaprore and Austt'kft CECIL .. .Reporting .. . Ie Wi ithetacto u sensatiowal word pictuire of the tW.' is the Far East. Tomorrow Night, 8:15 P.M. Tickets $1.10 - 83c - 55c (including Federal tax) Box Office Open All Day Tomorrow HILL AUDITORIUM MICHIGAN , Starting TODAY "I'mdust a Poor Little Girl in a W~e-T C- .. S... World 0s* ~ %GG Ladies and Gents, meet Roxie . .. as demure a load of dynamite as ever blasted tlfe screen 1 Here's her whole hiLarious history .s.. from boudoir to bail bonds...from petty larceny to just pettin'! She's coy!l She's cutel She's cataclysmic I And so is the picture!I ROG ERS Attend Matinees Today 1 -3--5--7-9 P.M. I First NEW DAILY 1-3-5-7-9 P. M Tarzan thrill in yers! NOW PLAYING 5Fc4TFSAf JOHNNY WEISSMULLER MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN JOHN SHEFFIELD . REGINALD OWEN BARRY FITZOERALD.TOM CONWAY PHILIP DORN ........................ THERTRf 1 '4 9 TRANSPORTATION I II { :. . .tiff::.. .. . .. ..:1 : V .. , 1 . ...: : s titi