PACE 'I tyGO i"HE MICIGIAN DAILY FRhA -.._ _v. ______.... . --s-- Severe Bottleneck Threatene In Willow Run Defense Sector (Oontinued from Page 1) cipal district could well be the solu- tion to the problem. The district could go after government funds be- cause it is a defense area, could get the aid of Federal grants, could float revenue bonds on consumers to take up the remaining slack and then go about setting in its own disposal and water filtration plants. Or it could arrange with -the al- ready-existing facilities for their ex- tension as far as possible. This could be accomplished through rentals to the municipaities whose faciities would be used. .These things have been done in the past. But it would require an appraisa of the facilities .in, Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti to determine how far their services would go. (A county sanitation code has al- ready been drawn up and is expected to bep assed by the county health committee of the Washtenaw coun- ty Board of. Supervisors in the near future. This code will control all private, semi-public and public water supplies outside of municipal areas. It will regulate cabin camps, will im- Mrshall's 235 South State Next to the State Theatre D U pose restaurant control and will leg- alize refuse regulations on a county- wide basis.) Ten trailer camps-with a poten- tial population capacity of 1,100- are already going full blast in the Willow Run region and three more are planned. In many places, trail-i ers have been hauled up into private back-yards. Fortunately, steps are being taken by -the health department to insure satisfactory sanitation.. Two pseudo- camps have already been closed up because their sanitation, equipment was below standard. The others have promised . to comply with the state trailer-camp law which was passed in July. (Under this law, two trailers do not constitute a trailer-camp. There must be a minimum of three. Water supply, sewage, laundry, garbage dis- posal and food-handling in. public, kitchens-those which sell food to customers-can be effectively con- trolled because sanitary standards must be Observed.) Trailer-camp operators who will not improve their sanitation will not be permitted to open-for-business and every improvement must be on the ground before trailer-camps can obtain a license. (The 10 camps which were in operation prior to the enactment of the regulatory state law have been granted temporary permits while they are in process of improvement. Health authorities are keeping them under observation at all times.) However, the control of communi- cable diseases is almost impossible due to the crowded conditions. The immunization status of children should be raised without time to spare. All those of school age down to nine months should be immunized for diphtheria, small pox and whoop- ing cough. .Such a program is under- way now. Four Outstanding Films. Series Tickets Available. February 22 Technic Sales Break Record SII Drive Ranson, Gordy, Fairbanks Articles Are Featured In February Issue A record-breaking sale yesterday served notice that prospective pur- chasers of the February issue of The Michigan Technic, engineering pub- lication, had better get their copies soon after the issue goes on sale again at 8 a.m. today. -In spite of the precaution of having extra copies printed, the editors an- nounced late yesterday that it looked like another sell-out, and advised prorastinating customers to get their copy early. Chief attraction of the issue is a description of "U. S. Fighting Planes" by Charles W. Ranson, '42E, an ar- ticle accompanied by a number of ac- tion pictures which make the story even more graphic. Other attractions in the issue are "And So You Failed" by Prof. Charles B. Gordy of the mechanical engineer- ing department and "Engineering in Sculpture" by Prof. Avard Fairbanks of the sculpture department. Art students wishing to obtain the article by Professor Fairbanks may obtain it at any of The Technic sell- ing stands today, or at The Technic office, 3036 East Engineering Build- ing. Copies will be available over the Engineering Arch, in the East Engi- neering Lobby and in front of the secretary's office, West Engineering Building. Students Assist In Civic Mus'ic Projet Sunday Members of Prof. Kenneth L, Rowe's class in advanced playwrit- ing take important roles in the Ann Arbor Civic Music Association's pre- sentation, "Battle Songs of Free- dom," scheduled for 4:00 p.m. Sun- day in Hill Auditorium. With University students partici- pating in the event for the first time, the project will be marked by 'inno- vations of continuity, written by John Ebelke, Grad., John Craig, '42, and Sheldon Finkelstein, '42, and audience participation with the local church choirs in the singing, accom- panied by the Civic Orchestra. Songs of the Revolutionary, Civil, World and present war periods furn- ished the basis of the student script. Preliminary writing and research were done after a plan of coopera- tion with the Civic Music Association was developed by Professor Rowe. After the outbreak of war he or- ganized his creative writing classes to join in aiding the war effort, en- couraging dramatization of defense themes wherever practicable. Themes promoting national drives, morale and the information of the public were stressed. The first manuscript produced by Prof. Rowe's classes to be utilized toward these ends is "Battle Songs of Freedom." Dr. Ernst Sheyer Will Lecture Here Dr. Ernst Sheyer, instructor in the history of religious arts at Wayne University, will give an illustrated lecture on "Christian Art in the Middle Ages" at 7 30 p.m. Wednes- day in Lane Hall. German-born Dr. Sheyer, who has studied art history and philosophy at Heidelberg and Cologne, has spent years in research in Germany, France, Belgium and England. In addition to curatorships at the Municipal Mu- seums of Cologne and Breslau, he has been lecturer at the Prussian State Academy of Fine Arts and at the Nieuwe Kunstchule in Amsterdam. This lecture is the first of a series on Christian art in the Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation. Today and Saturday Of His Family, Of His People.. Augusta Walker,."carrying 20 hours and helping myself through," still found time to enter two out of three divisions in the eleventh annual freshman literary contest, winning firsts in both-the second person in Hopwood history to do so. Her prize-winning contributions were "Barney Keeps Faith" ("a yarn about a girl I knew once") and a col- lection of ten poems ("no blank verse"), treating such subjects as "Night in a Mountain Cabin," "Thoughts on Observing a Stranger's Face," "Determination," and "Futil- ity." Creative writing is not new to quiet, golden-haired "Polly" Walker, who has had "scribbling inclinations" at the age of five, when she produced her first manuscript. With reporting on a high school Hopwood Double-Prize Winner Unawed By 20-Hour Schedule "The Forgotten Village," John Steinbeck's famous work, will be continued by the Art Cinema League at 8:15 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Lydia- Mendelssohn Theatre. Juan Diego, above, is a central character in the film, with his family and his people who live "in the long moment when the past slips reluctantly into the future."-Stein- beck prologue. CTNEM-4 - r MENDELSSOH N THEATRE Art Cinema Lea g TONIGHT - 8:15 P.M. JOHN STEINBECK'S ue I AG John Steinbeck's greatness as a writer has never been his ability at just plain story-telling. It has stem- med, rather, from his power to por- tray the simple lives of simple people -people he has known and lived with. He did this in "Tortilla Flat" and in "The Grapes of Wrath." And he hs done it again in "The Forgotten Village." Here is a tremendously powerful. picture of man's strongest emotions, yet told and filmed with remarkable simplicity and beauty. We say "beauty" and that reminds us of the most controversial scene in the entire film-the birth sequence. This is the scene, you will remember, which was ruled out by the New York Board of Censors because it was sup- posed to be "indecent and inhuman." We went, therefore, expecting to see State Highway Head Stresses Post-War Plan (Continued from Page 1) keeping the public informed of all traffic and highway regulation plans. Separate afternoon meetings were held for traffic officers, county road' commissioners and State Highway' Department men, each discussing their individual problems. The traffic session included a talk on "Military Traffic Engineering" by Maj. L. M. Lenone of the U.S. Army, who enumerated the difficulties which may be anticipated in large troop movements and defense indus- try concentration. Speakers at the county session in- cluded J. A. Long of the American Road Builders' Association; Dr. Louis Webber, of the Michigan Association of Road Commissioners and Engin- eers, James T. Sharpensteen of the Delta County Road Commission, and J. C. Rabowsky of the Ingham Coun- ty Road Commission. something which was perhaps a lit- tle rough, perhaps a little sexy. What we actually saw was a beau- tiful, dignified handling of the en- tire subject. We find it difficult to understand how anyone could possi- bly object to a scene which depicts such love for human life. It should not be objectionable to any audience --young or old. In the prologue, Steinbeck says of the characters that they "live in the long moment when the past slips re- luctantly into the future." This, in our opinion, is too weak a phrasing of the central theme. The past does not slip into the future either in the little Mexican village or anywhere else. Change and progress mean a fight, mean conflict-and so in the picture a family is torn apart, so in this our own country anything new must be paid for with sorrox* and struggle. This, then, is the message the film conveys-it is not just a "public health" short. Steinbeck is, of course, not all of the picture. There is also the ex- cellent photography. One is amazed at the ease of the Mexicans before the camera. The photographer must have know as much of human psy- chology as he did of cameras to be able to so fully portray the natural emotions. The completely unusual music by Hans Eisler increases the interest and heightens suspense throughout. And the voice of Burgess Meredith is just right-never overworked or used to spoil the action on the screen. -=H. S. PHONE 6300 FOR RESERVATIONS (39c) The II Diall 5U200 for ecial Delivery Service Kegs Wito Beer Pumps Furnished Open Until Midnight 303 North Fifth Avenue paper her only claim to literary fame, Miss Walker went to live for two years in Honolulu, writing "Ghosts in the Throne Room of Iolani Pal- ace," "Steel Guitars," and poems of similar native subjects for the Ha- waiian magazine, "Paradise of the Pacific." The most exciting part of the con- test is described by Miss Walker when she tells of receiving the cus- tomary contest letter-"You have won a Hopwood prize"-and not knowing how she had placed or in which field she had placed. Later, in the Hopwood Room, the winners were "lined up as if for shooting," and the prizes given out, Augusta Walker topping the prose-narrative and poetry divisions. The winner dashed out, paid off her debts, sent. a portion home, and 1 bought a $50.00 defense bond. I Sp kk Paul Robeson in Em'peror Jones Mar. 8-La Maternelle (English Titles) Mar. 15-The Thirteen (N. Y. Daily News) Apr. 5-The Lady Vanishes (Hitchcock's best film) MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Sunday Shows-6:30 & 8:30 P.M. Series Ticket Price $1.10 Single tickets will be sold -- On saic at Wahr's and League ART CINEMA LEAGUE ANN ARBOR 11 IL NVADED r t- f' . 'U RECORDED AT THIS YEAR'S PERFORMANCE IN HILL AUDITORIUM BY THE CHORAL UNION AND UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY SETS OF FOUR RECORDS - $3.50 Limited Quantity Left! These Records, Recorded by Paul Schulte under the Personal Direction of THOR JOHNSON :;.H BULLETIN- (A.P.) - Feb. Enemy planes, tanks, and guns are hurled at college town. Authoritative sources revealed that after a heroic battle, the gallant de- fenders of the nation's foremost cent- er of learning fell .. . Victim to the cannibalistic forces of Cot. Fritz Von Drizzel. The university is now under the complete control of the JAP- ITALO GERMS. Alexander G. Ruthven, former president of the U. of M., looks at the situation optimistically, "Now I, too, can go deep sea fishing." '7 .I It's Gay! v I GAYEF THAN1 MELVYN DOUGLAS" u r S CONSTANCE ROLANP B EN NETI YO U NG t irect'by GEORGE CUKOR S Original Screen Play by S. Be hrman I Salk. Vert.!And Geoge Openheimer. S PrOdJcad by Gottfripd Rafnhardl f xw Don't Miss This Thrilling Feature in FEBRUARY'S GAR GOYLE may be obtained exclusively at II Radio & Record Shop ON SALE IF TI ( 11 I 3 ~ ~ ~' I III