-TH[ MICHIGAN iDAILY - ; i c 4 C, ITING AWARDS: Ten t reshimen Win Prizes i Ainnuial Hopwood Contest Michigan Troops Ford Buna Stream Ten students received awards total- ing $300 in the annual Freshman Hopwood Contest, announced Prof. Roy W. Cowden, director of the Hop- wood Room, yesterday. Three students were granted prizes in the field of the essay. Jean Mac- Kaye, Ann Arbor, won $50 with her essay "Pathway Leading On." Donald Epstein, York, Pa., received $30 for his entry "Stalingrad - A World Saved." Third place and $20 went to Jennie Fitch of Cloverport, Ky., for her manuscript "A Protest and a Prophecy." First place award of $50 in prose fiction was given to Robert H. Frick of Lakewood, 0., who was inducted into the U.S. Army on Jan. 21. His winning entry was entitled "How We, Beat the Kittyhawk" and "Steinbeck Comes to Michigan." Marian Johnson of Maywood, Ill., won $30 with her short story "Remembrance." "The Father Learns the Truth Hal E. Bentley of 536 Thompson suddenly cancelled his police com- plaint that a pair of 30 gallon water tanks had mysteriously appeared in his back yard tool shed. He had talked with his son. Root of All Evil," by Mary L. Garland, Pittsburgh, Pa., took third place prize of $20. In the field of poetry there was a tie for both first and second place. First place winners Catherine W. Shilson of Grosse Pointe, Mich., and Shirley Hastings, Elkins Park, Pa., were awarded $30. Mary S. Palmer of Ypsilanti won $20 for her entry "At Random." Vance Simonds, Dearborn, Mich., submitted a group of poems entitled "Black Pain and Hymn to Emancipation" which won $20 and a tie for second place. Mr Simonds is enrolled in the School of Engineering. Judges for the contest were Prof.. Arno L. Bader and Prof. Louis I. Bred- vold of the English department, Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts, and Dr. Frank E. Robbins, di- rector of the University of Michigan Press. Stolen Cab Recovered Police recovered a radio-cab yes- terday at the corner of Willard and Church streets that was stolen at 2:30 a.m. Thursday morning. The driver reported to police that his cab had disappeared after he stopped in an Ann Arbor restaurant for a midnight lunch. "Zi 14,~ mow K! 'ow - 0 0> d it .O 01 Members of the 32nd division, originally a Wisconsin and Michigan National Guard outfit, wade across a New Guinea stream with their bearers (right) during the march on the Japs in the Buna sector where they won 55 Distinguished Service Crosses for heroism. NO ALARM CLOCKS: Newand Enterprising Student Will Pursue Astro-Physics Legislature Storts Work Passes 13 Bills State Senate Receives Budget, Speeds Work To Meet Adjournment LANSING, Feb. 11.-(P)-The Leg- islature, letting loose the flood gates of legislation, today received its first official budget measure and passed 13 bills and one proposed constitu- tional amendment. The Senate, spurred by remarks it was dilatory, approved eight of the measures and the House the other five and the constitutional revision resolution which already has passed the Senate. It would validate mort- gages which were defective for lack of the signature of a wife but which were unchallenged for more than 25 years. In the face of objections that the Senate was lifting bills from commit- tees and rushing them through gen- eral orders and final passage all in one day, Senator George P. McCal- lum, President Pro Tempore of the Chamber, asserted: "It is not only unpatriotic but abso- lutely cowardly to sit around here and do nothing. If we don't begin to move we won't get through by April 26." A March 26 adjournment already has been approved by the lawmakers. The first governmental budget bill of the season, the Mental Hospital Measure, appeared months ahead of schedule and probably will be reported to the floor of the Senate for action early next week since it was written by the Senate Finance Committee. The measure would appropriate $11,784,684 for the Mental Hospital group during the next fiscal year, but made no mention of the following f is- cal year in line with the Legislators' decision to return again next winter. The bill would provide wage n- creases totalling $518,931, and is $819,249 more than was appropriated this year. Will Draft Liquor Bills LANSING, Feb. 11.- (P)- Federal Judge Frank A. Picard was invited officially today to write five bills which would embody what he consid- ers the most necessary corrections to the Michigan liquor laws. Picard, "father" of the original Michigan past-repeal liquor statute and First Chairman of the State Li- quor Control Commission, received the invitation from Senator Murl' H. Defoe, Republican, Charlotte, Chair- man of the Senate Liquor Committee. Referring to a recent report of a Liquor Study Committee which Picard headed, Defoe said "I believe the best way for the legislature to get Judge Picard's findings before it in form on which we can act would be for him to draft his own bills." Primary Polls Will Not Observe War Timne Change LANSING, Feb. 11.- (P)- James F. Shepherd, Deputy Attorney Gen- eral, held informally tonight that election polls in Monday's primary election should be opened and closed on the present Daylight Saving War Time, although a legislative act turn- ing the clocks back an hour will be- come operative that day. Shepherd said a legislative act seeking to exempt Michigan from "War Time" did not apply in the case of election laws. Although Attorney General Herbert J. Rushton has held the legislature had no right to enact such a law, Shepherd said the department would abide by it. 1 4 /) .: ;. ~fr y, "1. ._ WAACs Open Division For Negro App iant§ eerf NegI owomien ap licant to the WRAC's, thie Civilian Defense office announced yesterday. Quarters at the Dunbar Community Center have been set aside at the re- quest of Negro representatives, ac- cording to CDVO chief, Mrs. Welles I. Bennett. A big response from women of this district is reported at the Armory's recruiting station which yesterday sent six more recruits to Detroit for physical examinations. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Rented Repaired STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 6615 Y yOIp ?/a/entine Whether She's 12 or 80 We've Everything from a PIN TO A PURSE Beguiling, bewitching gifts to make you king of her heart. JEWELRY TIDBITS Just arrived! Lapel pins, earrings, neck- laces, bracelets, compacts . . . hundreds of lovely pieces from $1.00 FASHION IN HER HAND NEW BAGS New leather and combinations. Black and colors from $2.00 to $10.95 e p '5 3 '442 C tI ,I ; S / 'I: Rigid University entrance rigma- role was abandoned this week to al- low Emil Kaczor, deaf since he was eight years old, to begin the study of astro-physics at Michigan. University authorities boosted the bespectacled, pleasant eighteen-year- old over the usual red tape attendant with a first term at Michigan when they found he last week was Valedic- torian and top student in Chadsey High School's latest graduating class in Detroit. Here on a scholarship; from the State Board of Rehabilitation for the Handicapped, he will carry a full schedule of classes in the lit. school and delve into his best-loved subject, astro-physics. At the University's speech clinic, he Places Available In All-Girl Band "Numbering 67 strong, the new All GirlBand is well on its way to making a permanent place for itself among the University musical organizations," Professor William D. Revelli, its di- rector, said yesterday. While the band already has a con- siderable complement of musicians, Revelli continued, a shortage of trom- Change of rehearsal schedule of All-Girl Band: Beginning this weeli, Sunday, Feb. 14, rehearsal will be held 3 to 5 p.m. Sundays at Morris Hall. William D. Revelli bone and bass players still exists, and girls having experience with these in- struments are urged to try out at Morris Hall. Although this is the first All Girl Band to be organized at the Univer- sity, women have for many years been members of the regular Concert Band and at present constitute one-fifth of its musicians. will seek to retrain his unsteady or- gans of speech. Lip-reading has been his best communication with the out- side world since he lost his hearing ten years ago as an after-effect of scarlet fever and diphtheria. When Emil emerged from the fury of registration last week with five 8 o'clock classes, he was a little wor- ried. "How can I ever hear an alarm clock," he asked Peter 0. Ostafin, director of the West Quadrangle where he now lives. But regardless of such minor dif- ficulties, Emil is convinced he can make the scholastic grade. Fellow res- idence hall men (who act as alarm clocks) think he's right. They describe him as the kind of a fellow "who'll go to the library and investigate the whole history of a course before sign- ing for it." After several near collisionon campus, Emil is a bit leery about stu- dent bicycle riders. He thinks there should be a law forbidding riders to speed behind a student with no other warning than a shout. Modern Art Reflects Varied Conditions of Time, Shapiro Says Art as a reflection of the psycholo- gical and sociological conditions of our times was discussed by Prof. Mey- er Schapiro in a lecture on "The Con- tent of Modern Art" yesterday. He explained that modern art is as much a mirror of the contemporary scene as was the art of the Renais- sance. With a Series of slides he illustrated the works of Riviera, Picasso, and numerous other artists of today, de- ciphering the meanings of the most abstract. He also made note of the modern artist's constancy to his themes and his attempts to represent dreams, fan- tasies, and hallucinations. In the past twenty years artists have been attacked because they are accused of being too individualistic and not enough concerned with their communities, he said. The Shoe Question.. The recent rationing plan has taken us all by surprise-but its consequences will not be as drastic as first supposed. Shoes are still available! The emphasis ,however, is on qual- ity, rather than quantity. With spring so close, no doubt you were thinking of those navy shoes to offset your Easter outfit. Palter de Liso shoes have had the earmark of quality at the finer shoe salons in your home town as in Ann Arbor. We have a new shipment of these beloved "Debs" and invite your inspection. $8.95 and $9.95. Don't forget your Ration Ticket No. 17 BROOKINS' Smart SLoe 108 East Washington Phone 2-2685 r ---- -- - gat Political Adertisement HANSEN GLOVES cur Dressy and casual types from: $1.00 to $6.00 SMARTLY BELTED Belts in a variety of styles and colors from $1.00 MARY BARRON SLIPS Lace trimmed or tailored, from $2.00 "Townwear," "Run Guard" and "Phoenix" Hosiery in rayon, cotton and lisles from $1.00{ BLOUSES of every kind from (1 tailored shirts to frilly sheers $2.25 to $6.00 a NEW SCARFS just the kind she's been asking for Sfrom $1.00 CW pt t .1 ~1/ AFTER THE EVENING SHOW top at the MICHIGAN WOLVERINE FOUNTAIN AND SANDWICH SERVICE JAY H. PAYNE Je O//eri Y -WA *o - Judicial Experience, and a Remarkable RecOd. NEXT MONDAY, February 15th, the voters of Ann Arbor will elect a Municipal Judge to take the place of and to hear the cases formerly heard in the Justice Courts of this City. It is highly important that a fair, impartial, experienced and judicially tempered man fill this office if the public is to be best served. JAY H. PAYNE deserves your vote for many reasons. As for legal education, he is the possessor of the degree of Juris Doctor, the highest scholastic award of the University of Michigan Law School. As for experience, he has been a prominent member of the local bar for six- teen years. As for actual experience in the office he seeks, consider his record in judicial office. As our Justice of the Peace for the past several years he has heard thousands of the same sort of cases which will be brought daily before the Municipal Court. During this service he has been repeatedly commended by attorneys and litigants alike for his hon- est, impartial, humane and unbiased interpretation of the law and for his insistence that justice be administered without regard for the color, creed, politics or social position of the persons involved. HE IS A PROVEN, IMPARTIAL, CONSCIENTIOUS ADMINISTRATOR OF JUSTICE Not a member of any political clique or faction, he owes favors to no one. He may be counted upon to render the same unbiased judicial ser- vice in the future as he has rendered in the past. All other things being eaual. there is no substitute for JUDICIAL EXPERIENCE. 1111