i THE AlL MCIIGAN DAILY a Michi gainensian W.11 Soon Go To Engravers Pictures and Stories To Give Emphasis to Campus War Effort "The entire housing section, pic- turing all the sororities and fraterni- ties, of the 1943 Michiganensian has been sent to the printers, and we hope to have the whole book ready for the engravers within two weeks," Dorothy Johnson, editor of the cam- pus yearbook announced yesterday. This year special emphasis will be given to the military and to groups of war volunteer workers. Two pages will picture the Manpower Corps at work on farms, stores, and campus. University women who have been do- ing their part are shown working as nurses' aides and rolling bandages. Informality is the 'keynote to this Ensian, and candid camera shots- many of them submitted by amateurs in the contest held last semester-are found at the bottom of each senior panel page. We feel that the photography and art are exceptional, and the book is being planned to take in every phase of campus life," said Miss Johnson "The pages this year will have more color and more design," she added. Each school of the University, and all campus organizations will be tied up to the war effort with stories and photographs showing what they have done throughout the year. As the deadline approaches, try- outs who are willing to work on the yearbook are needed even more since many of the junior and senior editors have been called into the armed for- ces, according to Miss Johnson. Engelke Hits Housing at Willow Run (Continued from Page 1) more than 18, furnished all drink- ing water, he reported. There was no organized system of garbage dis- posal, no municipal sewage disposal facilities, no water supply systems. Acutal photographs which he had taken in this area showed children playing in rubbish and garbage heaps; others pictured tents, tra- papered shacks, trailers, and poorly built houses crowded together-and ofter with four or five privies dotting the landscape. Wells, from which many families received their drink- ing water, were poorly covered. Housing plans and developments, while an improvement, will not be adequate, Dr. Engelke maintained. The "Townsite" has dormitories which will accommodate 3,000 single people. There are also planned trail- er partments which will house 960 married couples, temporary dwelling units for families to hold about 2,000 people, and a trailer coach "park" for 500 trailers. FHA Lets Contract for Willow Run Trailer Site CLEVELAND, Feb. 27.-(P)-Con- struction =centracts to relieve the housing shortage in Ohio and Michi- gan were announced today by the Federal Public Housing Authority. The O. W. Burke Co., Detroit, has contracted to make 'site improve- ments and installation of utilities for 500 trailer privately owned by work- ers of the Ford Bomber Plant and other war plants. The improvements are to be made in the Willow Run Townsite area outside of Detroit. Postu'far Debts Not To Be Patd I, Gold or Goods WASHINGTON, Feb. 27.- OP)- The House Foreign Affairs Commit- tee, recalling the international debt problems arising from World War 1, cautioned the nation today against expecting repayment in gold or goods when the time arrives for a post-war settlement of lend-lease aid: In a formal report to Congress on the necessity for continuing the lend- lease act for another year, the com- mittee declared that "the method of settlement by payment in gold or in goods has in the past proved self- defeating and destructive." Moreover, it argued that such a balancing of accounts among nations after this war would seriously inter- fere with the achievement of the "world economic order on which the prosperity of this country largely de-j pends." In glowing phrases, the committee reviewed the part which this pation's lend-lease, amounting already to more than $9,000,000,000, has con- tributed to the cause of the United Nations, first in warding off the Axis thrusts, then in taking the offensive. Play Production Picks Cast for Spring Drama The cast of characters for "Heart of a City," the play by Lesley Storm tp be presented by the Play Produc- tion of the speech department March 3-6 in the Lydia Mendelssohn, has been announced. The play is the story of a small revue theatre, The Windmill, during the days of the Nazi terror as seen from backstage, and the involved romances of the showgirls. The role of Judy, gay and defiant in blitzkrieg and out, will be played by Catherine Fletcher. Rosalind, who wins her aviator in the traditional chilly Brit- ish style, will. be played by Patricia Meikle. Harry Cooper will portary Tommy, the heart-broken song writ- er; the lucky RAF pilot Paul Lundy will be played by John Babington; Marjorie Leete is cast as Toni, one of the chorus leads and Gertrude Slack, the comic, middle-aged Cock- ney charwoman. Others in the cast include Blanche Holpar, Janet Stickney, Barbara White, Rebecca Kynock, Carold Mis- ner, Dorothy Wineland, Suzanne Wood, Zabelle Yardumian. _-~- ~ 11h - - - IREOD by ALEC TEMPLETON . . heard in recital Thursday evening CHiCKEN -EATER -Pvt. Raymond H. Hohn (above) of San Francisco tears into a roast- ed chicken, a delicacy at his United States post somewhere in India. BACK TO EARTH FOR B L I M P PAT R O L-A big U. S. Navy blimp slowly settles earthward after an anti-submarine patrol while a sister ship cruises nearby. -incudes "Blues in the Night," "Grieg Concerto in A Minor," "Summertime," "It Ain't Necessarily So," "Sleepy Lagoon" and "Tschaikovsky 6th Symphony." PIANO SOLOS by ALEC TEMPLETON (Decca Album A-314, $2.10 PHAPSODY IN BLUE (Columbia Set X-196, $2.62) VOCAL IMPRESSIONS; Caprice in Old Style (Columbia Record 35723, 52c) TEA FOR TWO; A PRETTY GIRL IS LIKE A MELODY 1(Columbia Record 36164, 75c) Ask to hear them at GRINNELL BROS. 323 S. MAIN STREET _ Phn 71 -OPEN EVtENQ$ I .- -- - - - 11 Picked frp r' 5 3 Choose a loose fitting coat, immaculately tailored to give that casually smart ap- pearance. Made by a famous maker of 100% wool, this jewel of a buy comes in soastels, red, and navy. :iA $21.95 u C A K E C U T T E R S - Ensign J. V. Pickart .helps his bride, Ann Louise Wickar& daughter of cabinet member, cut cake. T E A C H E k -California shipyard workers learn sliderule 'suse from giant model, held by Betty Bounds. .. , Stop at our accessories counter for the newest in spring merchandise. Bags, gloves, jewelry, sox, and blouses. Ihe CAMPUS £hpI 305 SOUTH STATE STREETI * THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION VOL. I, No. 20 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FEBRUARY 28, 1943 Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Commander-in-Chief of all Allied operations in North Africa, wears a knitted, hoodlike visored cap as he inspects the Tunisian front. (AP Photo by radio from London to New York.) was done in convenient campus locations . . . And another sign of the time- women did most of the registering. THE CAST for the next Play Production perform- ance has been announced . . . Those who will play the lead roles in "Heart of a City," by Lesley Storm, are Catherine Fletcher, Pa- tricia Meikle, Harold Coop- er, John Babington, and Gertrude Slack. The play will be given March 3-6. IN LINE with the possi- bility that Michigan may be one of the colleges to be used in the new Navy training plan comes the news that an inspection of the facilities of the Uni- versity was completed this week by Lieut. D. W. Beste and all Friday night that it intended to win the Con- ference Indoor title next Saturday, when it routed a supposedly favored aggre- gation of thinclads from Ohio State, 75% to 28%2. . . Michigan took eleven 1sts, one a tie for first, to two for the Buckeyes. Bob Ufer's 49 seconds flat in the 440 set a new Field House record. He finished twenty feet ahead of OSU's Russ Owen, who is the Conference outdoor champ at the quarter mile . . . The Wolverine entry finished one, two, three in the mile, two mile, 880, and 65 yard low hurdles, the mile and half mile events in a dead heat. Michigan pulled up- sets, even where they were supposed to be weakest, in goalie Hank Loud was the defensive star for the-Wol- verines ... he turned back a total of 110 Illinois shots, 62 saves being credited to him in the Saturday game. Next week Vic Heyliger's crew comes to Ann Arbor Por two games .. . at pres- ent the Varsity sextet has a Conference record of one tie and five losses . . . Min- nesota, by the way, clinch- ed the Big Ten title last weekend ... Benny Ooster- baan's cage team dropped two last weekend to Ohio State, 46-44 and 53-38 ... The first game was marked by five Buckeye points in the last 60 seconds by sub Dick Shrider, to take vic- tory away from the Maize to the Wolverines and two to Milt Peppe's crew . . Keo Nakama, OSU sopho- more, and Jim Counsil- man lowered the record in the 440 freestyle and 220 breaststroke . . . The 300- yard medley relay team and 400 yard freestyle team and Harry Holiday in the 150-yard backstroke were the record smashers for the Maize and Blue. .. . last night the ill-fav- ored five, which has had difficulty since winning two of its starting games in Big Ten competition, added a third victory to its meager string by de- feating the pitiful Chicago Maroons in a one-sided battle, 67-33 . . . It was F A T A L N 0 S E DI V E-Four crewmen were killed and three reported missing when this Navy patrol bomber crashed after taking off from Norfolk Naval Air Station, . . .... :.,