PAGE SI Freak Weather Plays Hayoc in Outstate Areas Snow, Rain and High w-MTCHGANI- V 'DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH h8,1M9 WAR CAN'T STOP KIDS: Uuversity Fresh Air Canp To Open Agaun This Smitimer ~1 T IE NEW inds Create Chaos in Several Communities By The Associated Press A heavy snow storm swept through a four-county area in the northern section of the Lower Peninsula Wed- nesday as flood waters threatened another part of the state, necessitat- ing the evacuation of many families. High winds blew a cornice off the top of a two-story building in east Detroit, killing one woman and ser- iusly injuring two others. Police Id the woman's body was so mangled by the debris that identifi- aon as difficult. sibility was zero in the area atoilnd Antrim, Kalkaska, Leelanau arid - Grand Traverse counties as Wednesday's snow fall, which plugged oighways, followed in the wake of daiftlging sleet storm Monday. Flood waters rose in several sec- tions of the Saginaw Valley, the. Granid River. Valley and the Mt. Cl0snens area. ProIress of utility repair crews in th u .19Ur-county area was hampered bi today's snow, after the sleet storm hId ravaged orchards and utilities ±ailities. Q. W. Miarsch; Michigan h Bel Teldphone Company regional manager, said that 1,300 phones were ottof service in that area, and in iwof the snow storm, all the trouble wilnot be cleared before Saturday n#ht AmloUgh service has been re- stor 4 to'many, communities with radio-phone equiment, several had Iil isolated, including Mancelona, Lake Leelanau and Northport. ''eephone. company officials re- po*tie that 72poles were felled in the fogircounty area and there were handreds of wire breaks. Crews, aug- mnrited by help from Saginaw, total 120 pmen. Bicycle Thieves To Be Punsh ed To Crack Down On Student Borrowers That certain student who persists in. taking the nearest bicycle, and riding it to within a few hundred feet of -4s house, will soon be regretting his actions, Police Headquarters re- port. The "dLaw" is cracking down! Oificer Schmidt, chief-in-charge- ofbicycles down -at City Hall, reports tht while bicycles are still being tQlen; the ratio of bicycles stolen to 1eyvles ,keturned, is gradually be- coning less. Efficiency in licensing bfiycls has been the major cause of the decrease, Officer Schmidt re- 1orts, but he also said that rationing h"i Its effect. More and more stu- delts began looking their bicycles when ,he'y found out there just were no.,ore bicycles to buy. In listing the bicycles still unre- covered this year, Officer Schmidt Ointed out that the majority of ve- hicls were unlicensed, and unlocked. The chances of such bicycles being recovered are slim, and Officer Schnidt emphasized the necessity of licensing all "bikes." Espie Supports Kelly's Budget Recommendations for Economies Presented LANSING, March 17.- OP)- Rep. John P. Espie, veteran chairman of the House Ways and Means Com- mittee, today presented to State Fis- cal Officers and members of the House and Senate Financial Com- mittees his recommendations for. granting Governor Kelly's demands for a balanced budget. Espie proposed that the appropri- ation to the public schools be scaled from $50,000,000 to $47,500,000 and described other economies which would scale the budget from its pres- ent total of $149,116,000 to $130,370,- 000. He said he expected this would not be done without incurring "some pretty strong opposition from some of those who would be cut" but that he was hopeful his recommendations would prevail. Efforts to speed through a. long calendar of work in the House of Reprepentatives ran into obstacles in the form of parliamentary man- euvers in behalf of individuals' pet bills, and the chamber, against the wishes of Speaker Howard Nugent, suddenly adjourned as his staff was trying to untangle a dispute which found more votes cast for one bill than there were members present. Wallace Lands in I I rw- rn By VIRGINIA ROCK In spite of the war and upset con- ditions that prevail in the nation to- day, the University of Michigan Fresh Air Camp will embark on its twen- ty-third year this summer, Prof. F. N. Menefee, chairman of the camp committee, announced yesterday. Established for the benefit of un- derprivileged and maladjusted boys of metropolitan areas, this camp pro- vides a unique and vital service, Prof. Menefee indicated. The camp is a kind of "practical improvement- ground." Boys are sent by several social agencies; University professors and counselors study each individual case, diagnose the problems and sub- mit reports and suggestions to the agency that sent the boy. By spending four weeks at camp the boys who have had difficulty in adjustment to their home, school or community have an opportunity to play, learn and practice skills, make new friends, and generally do the things that make them happy. "The cost of the camps' operation will be higher, and we may have dif- ficulty in getting men and women to serve as counselors, but we are hoping to take at least 140 boys in the two four-week sessions as we have done in other years," said Prof. Menefee. Besides offering a healthy environ- War Activties H~ovie To Be Shown Sunda The second in a series of Sunday evening programs of war activities movies will be given by the Michigan Union and the University Extension Service at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the auditorium of the Kellogg, Dental Building. These public programs of war films from the Bureau of Visual Education film library are being given in an effoit to present to the campus and the community the type of filns bein disseminated today by government agencies. They portray war activities in colleges throughout the country and present other phases of the war effort. Three films will be shown Sunday. "Airplane Changes Our World Map," is a film of special interest to navi- gators and cadets and deals with the changes which the airplane has made in the world map. "Youth With Wings," another fihn to be shown, portrays the training of a youth from induction to battle in the air corps- the hardships and objectives of cadet training. The last film to be shown is of special interest-the Army's meteorology students on campus. It is "Weather," which deals with the means arid methods of predicting the weather. The dates for the other film pro- grams are: March 28, April 4, April 11 and April 18. Positions Open For Engineers Students wishing to become can- didates for officers of the senior class of the engineering school must file petitions containing the signa- tures of 15 classmates, along with an eligibility card, at the Office of the Dean by Monday noon. Stu- dents who willgraduate in engi- neering in May are eligible. Officers to be elected are the pres- ident, secretary and treasurer, while the runner-up for president will automatically become vice-president. Election will take place from 9 a.m. to noon Wednesday at booths on the second floor of the West En- gineering Building above the arch, and on the main floor of the East Engineering Building. Tani Beta Pi Takes In 21 New Members Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, held its semi-annual in- itiation at the Union last night. The new members are: Norman Barish, '43E, Ken Beu, '44E, Greer Bingham, '44E, Fred Bryan, '44E, Warren Burgess, '44E, Marvin Can- vasser, '43E, Ken Cordes, '44E, Robert Dangl, '44E, Richard Drutowski, '44E, Arthur Geib, '44E, Edward Haag, '43E, Phil Hemily, '44E, Robert Jones, '43E, Howard Kammeradd, '43E, George Sawyer, '44E, George Sloane, '44E, William Summerfelt, '43E, Ralph Townley, '44E, Cabel Warner, '44E, Frederick Wellington, '44E, John Witheridge, '44E. Sigma Rho Tau Initiates Six Men and Two Women Sigma Rho Tau, engineering speech society, announces the recent initiation of eight. Those initiated were George M. Chute, 46E, Eugene Ivash, '46E, Jan- ment to maladjusted boys, the camp also affords an opportunity for Uni- versity students: to earn six- hours credit while gaining valuable experi- ence in the guidance and adjutment of boys in a summer camp itation. Courses are offered in the Mental Hygiene of adolescence (Education C120) in the guidance and nental hy- giene of the adolescent- (Education C220), and group behavior.. Instructors at the camp .will in- elude Dr. Lowell J. Carr of th sociology department, Dr. Fritz Red of Wayne University, 'and. Mr. Fred Miller of the School of Education, who will be the coordinator of re- ports for the social agencies. "Experts have conseirvatively esti- mated that 200,000 new families haVie moved or will move into southeastern Michigan this year to. aid the nation's war production program," said Prof. Menefee. "This means that the need for such a camp is icreasing." "It will be tragic irony," he added, "in our efforts to win the War and preserve a. democratic way. of life for. the children of Michigan's war workers, if we permit-these same chil- dren to become physically and emo- tionally neglected in the process, later to be among those in our penal in- stitution upon which we already spend $11,500 a day." Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, religious chairman, said that a fnew source for camp counselors has been found in students who attend theology-,seI- naries. Among the schools cooperat- ing in the project are University of Chicago Divinity School, Chicago Theological Semiinary, 'Meadvile SSeminaryand Garett Biblical-In- stitute. The counselors receie board and room 'n4 are reimbursed for their tuition by the tlniversity. The University 'Tag Day, which last year netted $2,196-one-sixth of the annual operating'budget of the camp -has beep set sentatively for April 30. ' . e Petition To Be .Sent to Senator-s 'U' War Forumi Clu Backs Post.War Plan A proposal for the presentation to the Michigan $6n~tors of a Petition endorsing, the Bh-Brtn- Hill resolution for international 'co- operation now befor e the Senate was made in the War Forum Club last night In Angell Hall. , This petition win be .presented to the members ,6. the club for thir signatures next week. Copies will then be sent to Senators Ferguson and Vandenburg. The Ball-iatch-Burton-Hill reso- lution was fnly discussed by-, the War Forum Ofub aid was decided to be of great value. The club arranged all thd Senators they surmised would be definitely in favor of the proposal on one side of a line and. al those they. thought would be against on the other side. The result wa 15 Senators for and 14 against. According to Edward W. Mill, fac- ulty advisor, this shows that the vote is going to be close. "It will take all the effort we can get behind this resolution and future plans of this sort to get them through," he said. General Thanks4 Correspondenhts. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA; March 17.-VP)-On the first anniversary of his arrival in Australia, General Douglas Mac Ar- thur expressed his thanks today to assembled American, British, Aus- tralian and Dutch war correspon- dents for the. reporting of events in. the 12 months since he broke through the Japanese lines at Corregidor to take command of United Nations forces in the Southwest Pacific. The General expressed his grati- tude in the third off-the-record press conference he has held in Australia. He reaffirmed his opposition to at- temps to shade or dictate newspaper- men's opiniois .or to stifle criticism except where the criticism or opinion was'based upon incomplete informa- tion or false premise. MacArthur wore a leather flying jacket on which was a regulation name-stripe bearing the one word "MacArthur." Four silver stars em- bossed on the epaulets were the only marks to distinguish him from any U.S. Air Forces officer. State Legislature May Be Rearranged LANSING, March 17.-VP)--The House Apportionment Committee to- day released J bill calling for reap- portionment of the Legislature, to give Wayne County 27 seats in the SAFETY - Designed to assure survival of seamen cast adrift after sinkings, this fully equipped life raft including radio, smoke signals, food, sails and waterproof suits, is being issued as replacement for old- type raft which only gave support and water. Demonstration is beiag conducted in Washington on the Potomac River. ISU N SWEATER' -Carol Winters models a kelly green "sun sweater" and striped shorts at a Los Angeles pool. 1' NEW STAR - Georgia Lee Set- tle (above), 18 years.old, f*mi Cincinnati, 0., has been giveni seven-year Hollywood movit 4ft- tract, which has been approv4 bt Los Angeles Superior Court. ,W A A C S " S N A P' T H E I R C H I E F-After Inspecting units in San Francisco, Col. Oveta Culp Hobby, director of the WAACS, voses for snapshots by admirers in the ranks. FENC E R - Pretty Muriel Calkins, University of California at Los Angeles co-ed, Is Pacific Coast women's open foils cham- pion. Here she practices for a meet- ARMY- BROADCASTS IN NORTH AFRICA -In the studio of the U. S. Army Broadcasting Service in North Africa. established to entertain soldiers, records are passed around. 'Give to the I