PAGE FOUT HE MICIHIGAN DAILY I "HURflAYt 1I 4BCll 2% ;194ZL Labor, Business Pledge Includes Rights Of Unions, Management- Leaders Sign Post-War Charter Chamber, read the document aloud. A few minutes later all three signed it. Each expressed confidence that his own organization would approve the peace charter, and Murray observed that it was being submitted especial- ly to the people of the United States for their approval-"We want people to talk and think about it and give us their counsel." * * * irector Seeks BargD amr walt UAW Strikers FLINT, Mich., March 28.- (U)- Carl Swanson, United Automobile Workers (CIO) regional director, called a meeting tonight of some 12,000 striking employes at the AC Spark Plug Division of General Mo- tors Corporation in an effort to halt a worktstoppage which began Mon- day with a walkout of 600 workers. Similar pleas made by Interna- tional UAW (CIO) officers were re- jected last night at a meeting of 2,000, workers. Swnson and E. S. Patterson. In- ternational UAW General Motors representative, said the workers re- fused to resume production because of the company's action in discharg- ing ten workers and suspending five others in connection with Monday's strike. If other employes are found "who took an &ctive part in causing and leading the strike, disciplinary action will be invoked against them," H. W. Anderson, Vice-President of General Motors, told Walter P. Reuther, UAW-CIO Vice-President, today. State Congressmen Threaten Coalition LANSING, March 28.--()-A bloc of Republican House members rep- resenting urban areas threatened to- day to form a coalition with the Dem- ocratic minority, if this is necessary to obtain additional state aid for cities. Rep. Louis H. Freye, Muskegon Republican, Chairman of the bloc, said he expected the group would achieve its best effects by working within the House Republican caucus. High lights On Campus... lIon(or Assembly Jordan Hall will hold its annual Hon6r Assembly at 7 p.m. today, in the main lounge of the dormitory. Scholarships and awards will be presented to deserving freshman wo- men. Dinner guests will include Miss Alice Lloyd, dean of women, Miss Jeanette Perry, and Mrs. Mary C. Brummage, assistant deans of wo- men, Mr. and Mrs. Francis C. Shiel, Miss Waldo Stahmer, Phyllis Mof- fitt, Shirley Eibler, Phyllis Van Brocklin, and Janice Goodman. Saturday Dance The International Center will hold a dance at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the Racklham Assembly Hall, Assistant Director George Hall announced yes- terday. Chaperons for the dance will be Prof. and Mrs. Albert Marchwardt, Dean and Mrs. Peter Okkelberg and, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Klinger. The dance will be open to foreign stu- dents and American friends. JGP Rehearsal Women with acting and dancing parts in the Junior Girls' Play will meet at 7:30 p.m. today, in the JGP offices in the League, according to Carol McCormick. Attendance is compulsory, but any- one who is unable to attend should contact Miss McCormick. At this meeting, scripts will be given out and rehearsals will begin. Casts of Laboratory Theater One-Act Plays Are Announced Students in Prof. Rowe's English 85 Class Write Plays To Be Given at 'U "High School U! The casts of the four one-act flays to be produced by the Laboratory Theater were announced yesterday by William Cooke, production mana- ger. The pilays were written by stu- dents in Prof. K. T. Rowe's English 85 class. Carolyn West will play the hgroine "Lucy" of Joan Lochner's play "Pale Blond Boy". The play is Miss Loch- ner's first attempt at playwriting, CHURCHILL AND EISENHOWER ON RHINE BANK-Prime Minister Winston Churchill (left), cigar in hand, talks with General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower at an unspecifie(l point on the bank of the Rhine river. This is a British official photo. Combined Good Friday Service To BHeld at Methodist Church Minister's Association Sponsor Three Hour Program of Hymns, Meditation, Worship WINES A combined Good Friday service, sponsored by the Ann Arbor Minis- ter's Association, will be held from noon to 3 p.m. tomorrow in the First Methodist Church, consisting of three separate, though continuous hours, of hymns, meditation, and worship. Music Hour An hour of music, depicting the, life of Jesus in hymns, will be the first interval of worship, and is to be under the direction of choir dir- ectors from three of the participat- ing chmches. Mrs. Frieda Vogan, organist at the First Presbyterian Church will be the accompanist. The Ann Arbor Youth Council will conduct the second hour program which will consist of meditation from 1 to 2 pm. Kenna To Speak The final hour of worship will be a sermon by Dr. J. Brett Kenna ofj the First Methodist Church, and Rev. . .- --__- -_ Clarke Speaks At Raekharn "The days of pioneer oceanography are past," Dr. George Leonard Clarke, Associate Professor of Zoology at Harvard University and Marine Biol- ogist at the Woods Hole Oceanogra- phic Institute at Cape Cod, declared yesterday afternoon in the addressI which he delivered in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The descriptive work is done, Prof. Clarke continued, and we are now in a new era. We are getting in- creased data and new instruments practically unheard of before the war, he said.rPeace research has stopped, he remarked, and the Woods Hole Institute is now working under Navy contracts. We now realize, he stated, how important it is for our organiza- tion to work as a team, for the asso-I ciation of men with original ideas has brought results. Oceanographic methods may be used in the study of the Great Lakes, Prof. Clarke stated. He showed slides representing the methods being used at the Woods Hole Institute, and a moving picture of a sample project, a research cruise. GROCERIES - MEATS H. L. Pickerill of the Congregational Church, will be in charge. Although persons are encouraged to attend the entire service, Rev. C. H. Loucks of the Baptist Church stated that they may attend any p rtion of theworship they desire. Lutheran Churches To Hold Services Preceding the regular Good Friday services, Trinity Lutheran Church will hold Maundy Thursday com- munion services at 7:30 p.m. today. Both Trinity and Zion Lutheran Churches will conduct Good Friday services tomorrow in their respective churches. The Trinity service will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. and will be conducted by Rev. Henry Yoder, assisted by Rev. Erwin Bondo of Christ Lutheran Church, Willow Run. Communion will follow this two-hour worship program consisting of sac- red Good Friday litany and medita- tions on the Seven Last Words on the cross. , Zion Lutheran Church will con- duct worship from 1:30 to 3 p.m. tomorrow, and Rev. E. C. Stellhorn will lead the service. A communion service will also be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the church for those who wish to partake of the Holy Supper on Good Fiday. Good Friday candlelight services will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Unitarian Church with Rev. E. H. Redman officiating. The topic of his sermon will be the "Relevance of the Cross." OPA Increases Ration Values WASHINGTON, March 28-()- The OPA tonight increased pork ra- tion point values to spread small sup- plies more evenly, shortly after Sen- ate investigators tossed back to OPA the packers' phase of the meat short- age problem. The boost of one or two points a pound on most pork cuts and pork products will become effective next Sunday. Price Administrator Ches- ter Bowles said an estimated five per cent less pork will be available for rationing in April than in March and the point increases are necessary to aid in getting a better distribution. Increases also were ordered for lard, shortening, margerine, salad and cooking oil. Point values for all cuts of beef, lamb, veal and but- ter will remain unchanged. The Senate Agricultural Commit- tee, investigating the civilian meat shortage, a short time earlier check- ed back to OPA the packers' demands for "a small reasonable profit." After hearing "Big Four" packer Thomas E. Wilson reiterate the tes- timony of other meat producers that OPA price ceilings are driving the industry into bankruptcy or govern- ment control, the Senate Agriculture Committee dropped that phase of their inquiry. Chairman Thomas (D.-Okla.) told the committee that attorneys for the packers and the OPA will try to work out an agreement. The com- Helen Titus, pianist, will present3 the final recital in a series of School of Music facultytprograms at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Mendels- shn Theater. Miss Titus will open her program with selections by Beethoven and Brahms. "Two Florentine Sketches", "Etude in C Sharp" by Pattison and Shepherd's "Second Sonata" will comprise the remainder of the pro- gram. SRA Coffee Hour. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Hance will be guests of honor at the third weekly Lane Hall Coffee Hour from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday, Joyce Seigan, social chairman of S.R.A. announced today. Hance is associate professor in the speech department and faculty ad- visor to Student Town Hall. Hostesses will be Alice Schwaderer and Allene Golinken. R~ailway ... (Continued from Page 1) all-steel bodies. One is still being used by a railroad between Pontiac and Jackson. First Streamlining At present only two passenger trains run per day, one leaving To- ledo and the other leaving Frankfort each morning except Sunday. The company specializes in freigh- ting and offers the advantage of avoiding the delay which other rail- roads between the Upper Peninsula, Toledo, and points east encounter whenthey go through Chicago. Ten to twelve cars per day is the average freightage .into Ann Arbor alone. 'Ann Arbor" was Kept in the name of the railroad because of Asi py's ansktence. Final Recital 1 *. 0 Frterich Circle Will Present TCes Dames' "Ces Dames aux Chapeaux Verts," a French comedy by Albert Acre- mant. will be presented May 2 at 8:30 p.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. This year's production marks the 39th year, consecutive since 1907, that the Cercle Francais has pre- sented a French play. A psychological study of four old maids and an old bachelor, "Ces Dames aux Chapeaux Verts" shows the narrow-mindedness of such peo- ple and the tragedy of their frus- trated life. When a young Parisienne orphan is placed in their custody, new ideas and sunshine enter into their figuratively dark home. As the curtain falls in the last act, the young girl is betrothed to a former sweetheart whom she met in a weal- thier period of her life, and the youn- gest of the old maids is about o marry the old bachelor. This charming prologue in three acts met with great success in France when it made an uninterrupted iun tor one year at the Theatre Sarah Bernhardt in Paris. Tennis Players To Meet Today To Determine Future Organization of Club Tennis players are invited to an organization meeting of the WAA Tennis Club at 5 p.m. today in the WAB. At this meeting the club will de- cide whether to remain as one unit or to divide into advanced and be- ginners' gruups, and a meeting time will be arranged. Anyone unable to attend this first meeting may call Harriet Risk, Tennis Manager, at 2-3225. The activities of the club will in- clude instruction for beginners, club tournaments, and rainy day meet- ings at which rules, court strategy, and techniques of team play will be discussed. The club members will work on the courts if the labor short- age makes it necessary. o~ifoffl... . R Tournament To End All first round games in the WAA individual elimination bowling tour- nament must be played off by 5:30 p.m. today. The schedule for the second round will be posted tomorrow at the WAB. Any game not played off at the time scheduled will be regarded as de- faulted. although she received the freshman Hopwood award in 1944 for her short stories. All.-Girl Cast "Pale Blond Boy" is a play about one man, but there are no men in the cast. The story is told by the women who know him. Dorothy Edgar, Eras Kussurelis, Beth-Sheva Laikin, and Anne Partney play the principal roles. "Voice of the Mountain", a sym- bolistic play by Eleanor Goodrich will feature Loraine Shepard and Mae Dix. Miss Betty Lesley will arrange the dances for the prologue. Veterans Return "As You 'Were" by Mary Lou An- drews considers the problems of the returning veteran. Arthur Shef, John Maring, Martin Litman and Henry Kaminski will play the leading roles. "Let the Great Gods Command" by Lois Barker is the story of a mercy killing. The play has only f ;ur characters, played by Sherry Murray, Barbara Weisiberg, Richard Milliman and James Land. Bety Feltenstein, Evelyn Burden, and Ellen Estlun will assist in pro- duction. The date, tentatively set for the presentation is April 23, in the audi- torium of University High School. The production is sponsored by the English Department in cooperation with the Speech Department. at 5S1etb is N ews G /N Special Student's Rate Only 2.67 for 8 months of TIME FOLLETT'S . I I I A :w MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE I I We Deliver -.. .. ._ -____ __ - -- _ . _._u i TRULY BEAUTI FUL PORTRA I TS WAKE UP! ~ppt4 1Pecffi t For An Early Springk HIKES in the Arboretum are more fun when you're wear-., ing a playsuit, or shorts and a T-shirt from the Campus Shop. It's a spring custom to get your sun tan as early as possible, so begin to wear our "exposure" clothes now. ., PARK LANE STUDIOS , 'ENSIAN 7 MUNICIPAL COURT 4 I ut~ywu r i a PPwlii -vsl wwwo i:I I I i 11 1