.. _. 1." 7 -War*i T l\TTT\T\T-u Tf T.i 'r li-r i --T. 7 -1. p 7. M i i aamuel Will Talk Sunday At Rackham 'Jewry in World of Tomorrow' Is To Be Discussed in Lecture Maurice Samuel, author and lec- turer, will speak on "Jewry in the World of Tomorrow" at 3 p.m. Sun- day at the Rackham Auditorium, under the auspices of the B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation. For the last 15 years Samuel has been traveling throughout the world interpreting Jewish values to other peoples in lectures and in books. On his current lecture tour his topics have included "Jewry in the World Revolution," "Hitler's Last Hope" and "Palestine and Asia." His translations of Sholem Asch's "The Nazarine" and the recent best seller, "The Apostle," have attracted interest in this country. Other trans- lations of his have included those on the works of I. J. Singer, and the humorous stories of Sholom Alei- chem, a Palestinian writer whose works had not previously been trans- lated into English. Of his own books, that which has attracted the greatest attention in this country was "The Great Hatred," a study of the pathological nature of anti-Semitism. His treatise on the character of Jewish civilization, "You Gentiles," also received acclaim from American critics. A group of 200 week-end guests of the Hillel Foundation, on their an- nual visit to the University, will at- tend the lecture. The public is cor- dially invited to attend. Student To Give Piano Recital Sarah Hanby, '44SM, will present three sonatas (in G minor, A major, B-flat minor) by Cimarosa, and the Beethoven "Sonata, Op. 110" at her piano recital at 8:30 p.m. today in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. She will also play Tschaikowsky's "Theme and Variations, Op. 19, No. 6," the Bach-Busoni "Choral Prel- ude" (Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stim- me) and Bach-d'Albert "Prelude and fugue in D major." A student of Joseph Brinkman, Miss Hanby came to the University in 1942 from Smith College, where she studied with John Duke. She is a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, honor- ary musical society, and Phi Kappa Phi. UNDER'VILEGE BOYS: Fresh Air Camp Tag Drive. Seheduled To Be Held ay 12 ASSOCIATED PRESS TRE University students, faculty mem- bers and townspeople will be asked to contribute for the twenty-fourth consecutive year to the annual Tag Day Drive to be held May 12. Meeting yesterday to complete plans for the annual campaign, a commit- tee of University students and Prof. F.N. Menefee, faculty director, named Marjorie Hall as chairman of the drive. Tag Day has become a University tradition, according to Prof. Mene- fee. "The $1,500 we hope to collect this year will be used to send young boys of metropolitan areas to the Fresh Air Camp." "The camp," he pointed out, "serves as a vacation center for boys who have had difficulty in adjusting to their environments. It is staffed by experts in the fields of psychiatry, psychology and soci- ology who can make a diagnosis of each individual case." The children who are sent to the camp are chosen by 25 different co- operating social and case-working agencies. Included among this group are the Michigan Child Guidance Institute, the Council of Social Agen- cies of Detroit, the Wayne County Clinic for Child Study and the Michi- gan Children's Institute. Other members of the directing committee for the drive include June Von Karman To Talk Today Aeronautics Authority To Lecture at Rackham Dr. Theodore von Karman, a world authority on technical aeronautics, will speak on the subject "Faster than the Sound" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. Dr. von Karman is the Director of the Daniel Guggenheim Graduate School of Aeronautics at the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology. Before coming to this country in 1929, he held professorships at the University of Goettingen and the University of Aachen in Germany. He has at various times been visit- ing professor in Japan, China and India. An author of many technical pa- pers and of several books on mathe- matics and aerodynamics, Dr. von Karman has made contributions in1 the field of applied mechanics andt mathematics. The lecture is sponsored by the aeronautical engineering department. NEWS V e Gregory, Orris Mills, Robert Rosema and Virginia Rock. Form letters td annual patrons were sent out last week and contri- butions are already coming in, Prof. Menefee said yesterday. A thousand new names were added to the list, he stated. Last year's spring drive netted more than $1,300. The University cam- paign furnishes the main support for the Fresh Air Camp which is open two months to furnish boys from metropolitan areas with a real vaca- tion. Prof. Ham To Speak Today on Voltarianis m Prof. Edward B. Ham of the French department will speak on some of the enemies of Voltarianism at 4:10 p.m. today in Rm. D, Alumni Memor- ial Hall in the last in the series of French lectures. Prof. Ham said the enemies of Vol- tarianism and of the Encyclopedists in generalanumbered well over600, that'in some cases the believers car- ried their attempts to win support so far as to incur proscription on the Index. He said that some of the o1 tstand- ing examples of "apologist vagaries" in France and a discussion of the reputation which Voltaire had in 19th century Canada will form the basis of the talk. He added that the believers have been noticed little by scholarship but that they have had special signifi- cance in the evolution of French thought. Tickets for the lecture can be secured from the secretary of the Romance Language Building or at the door at the time of the lecture. Dr. Adolph Will Be Guest at Tea Reception at Center To Honor Professor Dr. William H. Adolph, professor of chemistry at Yenching University, China, will be present at the tea to be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today at the International Center. He will be the guest of Prof. How- ard B. Lewis, chairman of the depart- ment of biological chemistry and director of the college of pharmacy. Dr. Adolph spoke on nutritional problems in China and the Orient yesterday at the Rackham Building. Dr. Esson M. Gale, director of the International Center, said that the Chinese students on campus should be particularly interested in meeting Dr. Adolph. Yenching alumni and Dr. and Mrs. Blakeman are holding a dinner re- ception for Dr. Adolph at noon today at the Liberty Street Chinese res- taurant. He will relate his experi- ences while in a concentration camp for a year after his university was closed by the Japanese in 1941 and of his trip last December on the Gripsholm. Servicemen Receive Mechanic Badges The first driver and mechanic .adges to be given to servicemen sta- ioned in Ann Arbor were awarded 11 members of the 3651st S.U. by Col. Frederick C. Rogers yesterday in Army Headquarters. Staff Sgt. Mike Petkovich and T-5 Eainar R. Swenson were given driver and mechanic badges. Soldiers re- ceiving drivers' badges were Sgt. Richard E. Arnson, Sgt. Matthew J. Nowicki, T-4 Albert Kogut, Cpl. Wil- liam T. Scott, Cpl. William R. Senf, Cpl. Thomas Vetter, Pfc. Donald Amy, Pfc. August M. Cassell and Pfc. Harold Thornton. SOUTH PACIFIC DYNAMITE-Pfc. Herman L. Halter of Wood- GUADALCANAL SILHOUETTE-Two natives, holding their burn, Ore., loses his seat on "Dynamite," bucking bronco, at the Second spears, stand silhouetted against sky and sea alongside a beached Marine Division's rodeo in the South Pacific. canoe on Guadalcanal Island. INTERNATIONAL POLIC: 'U' Debaters To Meet Squads Of Western Michigan College S T A P T E R--molli Keane compares an airplane starter shell (right), made at Winches- ter Repeating Arms Co. plant at New Haven, Conn., with an ordi- nary 12-gauge shotshell. Cart-( ridge furnishes single powerful impulse starting airplane motor. LAUNDRY SET UP IN NEW GUINEA JUNGLE-With a gleaming new washing machine as their chief item of equipment, these American soldiers at Army headquarters in New Guinea set up as their sign proclams, "Sno-White Laundry-Service Supreme." From left to right are: Technician Alaj 0. Peterson, Union Mills, Ind.; Pfc. William Grant, Long Island, N.Y.; Technician Bernary G. Cincinnati, 0.; Pfc. Eugenio Benavides, Roma, Tex.; Pfc. Paul Langham, Altoona, Pa.; and Sgt. Rupert Altizer, Logan, W.Va. Members of the debate squad will meet two teams from Western Michi- gan College in four non-decision de- * * W orld Peace To Be Debated Four members of the Speakers Bureau will hold a symposium dis- cussion before the Plymouth Town Forum at 8 p.m. tomorrow, discuss- ing the topic "Should the Big Four Rule the World?" The discussion is being presented in conjunction with the Adult Edu- cation Program. Bonner Crawford, adult education consultant, will act as moderator. Martha Bradshaw, '46, will sum- marize international cooperation be- fore the war, Richard Scatterday, '45, will outline United Nations' pres- ent cooperation, and Howard Cole, '45, and Joyce Siegan, '46, will pre- sent cases for and against post-war world domination by England, Rus- sia, China and the United States. 7 bates at 11 a.m. and 1 and 2 p.m. tomorrow in Angell Hall. The affirmative side of the ques- tion "Resolved: That the United States should cooperate in maintain- ing and establishing an international police force on the defeat of the Axis," will be upheld by Fay Lorden, '46, and Barbara Levine, '46. The debate will take place at 11 a.m. in Rm. 4208, Angell Hall. In the second round Joyce Siegan, '46, and Dorothy Service, '46, will speak for the affirmative in Rm. 4203, and Margaret Farmer, '46, and Doro- thy Murzek, '46, will uphold the nega- tive in Rm. 4208. Martin Shapero and John Condylis will debate on the affirmative side at 2 p.m. in Rm. 4203. The debates, scheduled as a return engagement for a debate held in Kalamazoo earlier in the season, are being presented before speech classes and ark open to the public. Daily Staff Meeting The business staff of The Daily will meet at 4 p.m. today, Margery Batt announced. II - H 0 S P I T A L V I S I T 0 R S-Pvt. Melvin Weaver, Hagers- town, Md., talks to Peggy Wells (left) and Shirley Veale after the girls took part in a Dallas Junior Chamber of Commerce show at a Ashburn General Hospital, McKinney, Tex. CHINESE BUILD RUNWAY--Using age-old equipment more fam- iliar to them than modern tools which are not available, Chinese laborers prepare material for an airfield runway. Gals and Gup To hear the ys gather kings of th e Boogie SAWYER Woogie And the swing of BILL at MICHIGAN UNION Hour of Fun II low4