PAE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY J'JE SDd \V; Tviti lf 12, 1942 -- - - ------- Helen Hayes T o Star Here I, Latest Play Ann Arbor theatre-goers will view the product of a great new theatrical triumvirate when Helen Hayes stars in Maxwell Anderson's latest play, "Candle In the Wind," staged by Al- fred Lunt, on Saturday, May 23, in the Michigan Theatre. Miss Hayes, renowned for stage performances in "Victoria Regina" and "Twelfth Night," will play the part of an American actress who is in love with a French journalist and naval lieutenant in occupied France, over an 18-month period beginning June, 1940. Opposite Miss Hayes, in the role of the French editor imprisoned in Paris by Nazis, will be Louis Borell. John Wengraf portrays the callous commander of a Nazi concentration camp, while the part of the young German lieutenant second in com- mand of the camp is taken by Tonio Selwart. Evelyn Varden has a major role as an American actress vaca- tioning in France and trapped there by the German occupation of . the country. Others prominent in the cast are Lotte Lenya, Philip White, Benedict MacQuarrie, Robert Harrison, Harro Meller, Michelette Burani, Mario Gang, Joseph Wiseman, Brian Con- naught, Ferdi Hoffman, George An- dre, William Malten, Bruce Fernald and Guy Monypenny. Jointly sponsored by the Theatre Guild and Playwrights' Company, "Candle In the Wind" boasts three stage settings designed by Jo Miel- 2iner- Tickets may be purchased daily from 1:30-4 p.m. and from 6:30-10 p.m. at the Michigan box office. Prices range from $1.10 to $3.30. 'Pen Pal' Column Featured In Garg, On Sale Thursday A pulp magazine parody, contain- ing wild Western, futuristic and mys- tery stories, will be on sale Thursday as the May issue of the Gargoyle in disguise appears. The new staff, under the first' woman editor in Gargoyle history, Olga Gruhzit, '43, will inaugurate new features and photo pages. "The Friendly Corner," a pen pal column similar to "The Port of Lone- ly Hearts" seen in pulp magazines, will bring Garg readers a new type of feature. In addition, photo pages will cover the "Initiation of Honor Societies," and "Women in Sports." Coast Guardescues Two, Saves One All-City Bond Buying Drive ClosesToday, 4:aiuis Employes Asked To Join Systematic SavingsProgram When the city-wide bond buying drive closes tonight, every University employe will have been asked to par- ticipate in a voluntary systematic savings plan which the University is sponsoring. High school seniors in their can- vass of the city, while asking all citi- zens to pledge a portion of their in- come for buying bonds, will call at homes of University employes to tell of the payroll savings plan. An adaptation from the highly suc- cessful industrial savings plans, ev- ery employe may participate in it. The plan is completely voluntary and even after joining participants may revoke their pledges at any time. By making deductions in payrolls in multiples of $3.75 each month, funds are obtained for the purchase of Series 'E' war bonds. The plan is designed to facilitate the purchase of thesebonds without affecting pri- vate savings accounts. Each person designates the denomination of the bond which he wishes to purchase and when sufficient funds have ac- cumulated through the monthly de- ductions, the bonds are purchased and distributed to the owners. Series 'E' war bonds come in de- nominations of $25, $50, $100, $500 and $1,000 and are not transferable. If any University employe is missed by the drive or wishes further infor- mation concerning the plan this may be obtained in the South Wing. In- formation has been mailed to most employes with pledge cards. The savings plan was inaugurated earlier in the year and the present drive is to obtain the full participa- tion of the University. Professor Percival Price Plays Dinner Mu sic On Carillon Bells By ROBERT MANTHO1 Perched in the Carillon Tower ten' stories high, shirt -sleeved Percival Price, the University of Michigan's world-famous carilloneur, plays din- ner music for Ann Arborites every, Thursday and Sunday night on 63 tons of bells. In the small tower room-bare ex- cept for an electric clock and phone- stands the carillon keyboard which makes 53 bells boom out the tunes Professor Price has chosen to play for his spring season recital series. And that's just what the distin- guished musician does to the key- board of the carillon . . . he booms out on little wooden levers with half- closed fists, using his feet to tramp down on foot pedals for the low,! deep sounds. Keyboard Of Levers The keyboard resembles a spinningj machine. There are two rows of! wooden levers which are connected to small-diameter rods reaching to the ceiling. When the wooden levers go down, so do the rods . . . then the bells get going and there's music. Professor Price sits on a high bench big enough for three people, and slides all over it to tramp down on the right foot pedals. When he's not using his and the smallest could only serve as a coffeepot. At every quarter hour, the bells sound the time out over the city through a special clock-and-chiming mechanism installed by a New York company. Teaches Composition Also Professor Price teaches composi- tion in the music school. Behind him is an amazing record. He received his musical training in Canada and Europe and his degree from the Uni- versity of Toronto in 1928. In 1934 he was given the Pulitzer Prize in music by Columbia University. Since 1939 he has been Univer- sity carilloneur here and has given guest recitals all over Europe and the Two seamen adrift on a raft for 12 "days stand up and wave as a Coast Guard plane from which this Picture was made draws near them to make a rescue. The men, Terrence J. Bradley, 22, and Joseph Dieltiens, 43, were members of a crew of a Panamanian ship torpedoed April 20. Dieltiens died in a Norfolk, Va., hospital. United States. He knows the carillon so well that he has written a book on it. Right now Professor Price is in the middle of his spring recital series. He will continue to play at 7:15 p.m. promptly every Thursday and Sun- day night until May 31. At three of the recitals he is assisted by a guest artist, Mr. Hugh Glauser of Cleve- land, O. Sometimes his fingers grasp the wooden levers and press down but most of the time he uses his fists- with the little finger of each hand protected by finger stalls. When he hits the upper part of the keyboard, the bells tinkle. He mixes up his movements to get a combined rhythm out of the carillon. Ringing Fills Room An audience standing outside of the Carillon Tower hears a lot of bells I making music, but a person sitting in the tower room with Professor Price hears nothing but the clack of wood- en pegs and somewhere above bells ringing, filling the room with sound. The 53 bells which make up the Charles Baird Carillon cover a range of four and one-half octaves. KeeneSibley Elected Leads Officers And Directors Named By Wolverine Gal Keene, '44L, of Menominee, and Robert Sibley, '42E, of Pontiac, were elected president and vice president- secretary respectively of the Michi- gan Wolverine at a meeting Sunday. Six students and one faculty man were elected to the board of directors Ion Wednesday at the annual meet- ing of the Wolverine. Elected for a two-year term were Keene, Tudor Thomas, '43, Al Schinderle, '42, and James Strawbridge, '44L. Paul Don- nelly, '43E, and Arthur Biggins, '42, were elected for one year. Spooner, of the mechanical engineering de- partment, is the new faculty member. On Sunday Strawbridge was also named chairman of the executive committee. The 'other members of this committee are Sibley and Big- gins. The retiring board members are John R. Scheibe, '42M, president since 1937, Wilbur Nordstrom, '42E, and Paul Sampson, '42. Hillel Group Given Honor Awards, Kelys Hillel honor awards for service during the past year were announced yesterday by Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen. The following students re- ceived Hillel keys: Robert Warner, '43; David Crohn, '43; Lois Arnold, '43; Aaron Moyer; JVildred Gerson, '42; Marjorie Teller, '42; Dan Seiden, '43; Herbert Lon- don, U.S. Army Air Corps; Jack Lew- in-Epstein, '43; Hadassah Yanich, '42; Janet Crohn, '43, and Gloria Donen, '43. Students receiving the Hillel Cabi- net Award are Mildred Gerson, Syl- via Forman, Sid Sachs, Hadassah Yanich, Marjorie Teller, all seniors, and Urie Bronfenbrenner, Grad. The names of the following adults will be engraved on the other plaque: Samuel Bothman, Mrs. Reuban Kahn, HarryKaufman, Mr. and Mrs. Sam- uel Levy, Dr. Jacob Sachs, Osias Zwerdling, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Weiss- berg,.Mrs. Jess Feiler, Charlotte Gant, Mrs. Saul Rosenman, Lewis Scho- stak and Mrs. Charles Solovich. The Fraternity-Sorority Coopera- tive Cup was awarded to Alpha Epsi- lon Phi, with Zeta Beta Tau, last year's winner, receiving honorable mention. Sid Sachs, '42, received the Milford Stern Award for leadership in for- ensics. One of the two hostess schol- arships given by the Women's Aux- iliary B'nai B'rith No. 122 was pre- sented to Gloria Donen, '43. Student directors Robert .Warner, '43, and David Crohn, '43, were re- appointed. Engineers To Hear Talk By Atkinson A A Meein g Today, Lieut. A. H. Atkinson of the naval science and tactics department will speak at a meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers at noon today in the Seminar Room.of the East Engineering Building. Movies will also be shown. Students having 1 p.m. classes will to be excused to attend their classes. Business of the meeting will be the installation of officers. Perry's Chemical Engineering Handbook will be awarded to the member having the highest score in the daily quizes each meeting, announced Charles Thatcher, '43E, incoming president. I c h y it Mltary l By The Surge The fast growing U.S. Navy Air Corps continues to induct Michigan students and graduates at a steadily increasing rate. Announcements of inductions are rolling in daily from the great Pensacola Naval Air Base. Striving for his wings at the "An- napolis of the Air" is V. F. Morin of Chicago, Ill.,-former Michigan stu- dent and graduate of the literary school. Morin received his basic training at the U.S. Naval Reserve Base at New Orleans, La. in January and after successfully passing his elimination training, was transferred to Pensacola. Also at Pensacola in the midst of a tough seven-months intensive training course are John W. Canaan, of Detroit, who attended the Uni- versity for two years, and John R. Thayer, Stamford, Conn., student for. three years here. At the completion Wesleyan Guild Officers New officers of the Wesleyan Guild are Robert Shugart, '44, president; Inez Chamberlin, '43, vice-president; Virginia Long, '44, secretary, and Ed- win Henry, '43, treasurer. [ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISIN4. of their training, both cadets will re- ceive commissions as 2nd lieutenants in the Marine Corps Reserve. From Maxwell Field in Montgom- ery, Ala., comes assurance that the Army Air Corps is not suffering from lack of Michigan men. Cadet Irwin M. Paschal, New York City, and Cadet Leland Rhed of Kansas City, Mo., both former Uni- versity students, will complete their pre-flight course within a few weeks and then will be sent to a primary flying school for the first phase of the pilot training. A graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School, James H. De Weerd, on active duty with the Army Medical Corps, has just been promoted to captain. Captain De Weerd, a native of Grand Rapids, is stationed at Sixth Corps Headquart- ers in Chicago. Prof. B. F. Bailey, head of the Department of Engineering, has re- cently announced that his son Ben- jamin F. Bailey, Jr., '33E, has been commissioned a lieutenant in the United States Navy and has reported to New York for assignment to duty. Frank A. Jagger, '41, of South- hampton, N.Y., is about to begin his second month of flight training at the Naval Base at Atlanta, Ga. Jewish Appeal Drive Nears Goal Of $3,500 "The results of the United Jewish Appeal drive are encouraging so far, but the good work must be continued if the goal of $3,500 for the commun- ity is to be reached," declared Sam Rosen, '44, chairman. Over a hundred students are solic- iting contributions under the direc- tion of the following chairmen: Fr~a- ternity-Sorority, Ira Katz; Inde- pendent Men, Paul Mishkin and Lew Warner; Men's Dormitories, Lew Saks and Warren Schwayder; League Houses, Elise Zeme, and Women's Dormitories, Regene Oppenheim. Griffen Attends Meeting Dean Clare E. Griffen, of the School of Business Administration, is in Washington, D.C., today for a meeting of the Advisory Committee on Engineering, Science and Man- agement Defense Training for the United States Office of Education. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c TYPING L. M. HEYWOOD, experienced typist, 414 Maynard Street, phone 5689. MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. VIOLA STEIN - Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. WANTED TO BUY CANOE WANTED. In good condi- tion. Phone 8085. 378c ONE triple speed bike, men's or wom- en's. J. P. Parker, 306 Winchell, West Quad, phone 2-4401. 377c 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: SHOWS DAILY at 1 3-5-7-9 P M Today and Wednesday LOST and FOUND LOST-Mortarboard pin with "Doro- thy K. Rakestraw, '41," on the back. Reward offered. Please call Eleanor Rakestraw, 2-2543. 375 MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOQRAPHING - Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. 6c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles., Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c TRANSPORTATION ALLIED VAN LINES, INC. Long distance moving. Call Godfrey's. 6927. 410 N. Fifth Ave. 350c PASSENGERS WANTED-Woman passenger to Colorado. Leaving June 5. Dial 2-3307, Miss Rich- ards. 362c HELP WANTED CLEVELAND, May 11. -(/)-The Army's recent raid on Tokyo showed that Japan apparently had "no in- ternal defense against psychological warfare, no linking of national ef- fort to combat panic," Col. R. Ernest Dupuy of the War Department's Bu- reau of Public Relations declared to- day. "Some day we are going to get a token air raid," Colonel Dupuy added. "Its objective will be the production of fear, panic and uncertainty in the minds of our people. Are we going to play it like soldiers, or are we going to cackle and squawk on the air like barnyard hens when a hawk flies over?" Addressing the National Associa- tion of Broadcasters, Colonel Dupuy recounted details of the Tokyo raid: Bombed In Broad Daylight "The bombers who performed that task winged their way in broad day- light, riding the radio beam of a Japanese station which at that time was broadcasting a little rhapsody on the scenic beauties of Japan, nestling peacefully in the assurance that it could never be bombed. Suddenly he went off the air. The radio monitor in the bomber formation heard the Jap announcer scream 'Enemy bomb- ers coming! Coming fast! Many bombers!' "As the bomb sticks whirled down, this Nip announcer kept on the job. Screaming in high-pitched panic, he called our shots in a play-by-play description, noted the fires caused, shouted casualty bulletins. Our ships received the fullest information that anyone could want, on their accom- plishments. Tone Began To Change "It was not until 24. hours later that the tone began to change, that casualties and damage were played down. In the meantime we had re- ceived from the enemy precious con- firmation of our successes. Why? Be- cause it was a complete surprise, be- cause there apparently existed at that time in Japan no internal defense against psychological warfare, no linking of national effort to combat panic." Byron Price, Censorship Director, told the broadcasters: "You are in actual contact with the Japanese Psychological Defense Shown Uready By Tokyo Raid; enemy, whose submarines are listen- ing near our shores." Nevertheless the people must have comprehensive news about the war, Price said, ap- pealing for application of "the rule of reason" to newscasts. Archibald MacLeish, Director of the Office of Facts and Figures, ob- served: "We will tell you of the informa- tion the government wants delivered to the people. But we will leave it to you to devise the effective means by which the job can be done. "It is not your antennae or your electrical installations or your con- trol rooms that we want. It is you- your brains and your hearts-your experience and your ingenuity. If it were relying only on facilities, the government would do far better to pi'ovide its own facilities." New May Technic Will Feature Article On Evaluation Plan America's oldest and most out- standing college engineering maga- zine, the Michigan Technic, will be placed on sale within a week and this final issue of the present term is intended to be one of the year's largest issues, William W. Hutcher- son, '43E, newly appointed editor, announced yesterday. Headline articles for the issue in- clude the results of a survey made in 1940 in which the University's stu- dents evaluated the various courses, the methods of teaching and the ability of the professors in general. This article, compiled by Editor Hut- cherson, is entitled "Your Grade, Pro- fessor." C. Freeman Alexander, '43E, who is the new business manager of the magazine, has contributed a special article on the various unique methods of obtaining power from such sources as solar energy, ocean waves, atomic power, wind power, and heat engines. Engineers, inventions and their safe- ty from patent infringements will be dealt with under the title of a special article, "Patent Law" by Roy E. Mat- tern, '42E. i M t i s , Shorthand and Tpwitin FOR COLLEGE PEOPLE A special intensive streamlined SUMMER COURSE in SHORTHAND and TYPEWRITING, arranged to meet our present emergency, will commence June 15 and continue for twelve weeks. Send for information. Detroit Business Uniersy United Artists Building, Detroit MICHIGAN One Night SAT. May 23 BOX OFFICE SALE NOW present- H E T E T E G I D 4 d T EP A W I H S O P N L E N H A YE S zMAXWELL ANDERSON'S NEW PLAY sapd by,. ALFRED LUNT .ette s JO MI/RZINER PRICES (including tax) MAIN FLOOR-$3.40, $2.75, $2.20, $1.65 JALCONY-$2.20, $1.65, $1.10 MEN WANTED for afternoon work. Coca Cola Bottling Co., phone 8815. STUDENTS for full or part time em- ployment. We now are employing students successfully. Must be 21 or over. 40% of total fares. Ap- ply at Radio Cab Co., 344 So. Main St. Ask for Mr. Smith. FOR RENT LOVELY first floor studio room. Adaptable for graduate students, campus secretaries or student cou- ple. Inquire 422 E. Washington. FOR SALE FOR SALE-Tux, size 37. New this year. Several symphonic and vocal recordings. Call Osborn, 5213. 379 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1942 VOL. LH. No. 168 Publication in the Daily Official Bulletin .is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices To the Members of the University Senate: There will be a meeting of the University Senate on Monday, May 18, at 4:15 p.m., in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary Will all those students holding pro- bationary or special commissions iii (Contiued on Pg 4) I SEND SNAPSHOTS I I to the men inl camp. I MICHIGAN hip Ise { 0 .,. i ao ® { Re aw. No matinees today or Wednesday due to installation of new seats. JAMES SNEY S y i ve ( yCn to iiy 01. hlere's the 'what, why, how, where and w hent; tee Cream . .X. 1 II . . 4iwrj d) There's no better way to keep the men away at camp in touch with home than by sending them plenty of snapshots. Come in today for some Kodak Verichrome Film and start shooting. Helpful picture-taking hints are yours for the asking. While you're here ask to see the latest Kodak albums. Several types available for sendiing snap- ""r* I' i I i i II I