1PHE MICHIGAN DAILY 1'vt:udY i)t3lXT, , Tr. [il: IB; 1 4 WPA G Still Yanks Reach Unable To Oiutskits iof Broadcast Luzon Capital THE l(IIGI&NDA-- I _ - _- O 10 --- ----- ro WPAG, Ann Arbor's new radio sta- tion, has been forced to postpone its opening broadcast because of adverse weather conditions which have pre-j vented the completion of a 230-footI transmission tower, Edward F. Bau- ghn, general manager, said yester- day, adding that it was probable that WPAG woulb go on the air within a week. Devoted to Local Interest The station, which will operate on a frequency of 1050 kilocycles, will be devoted to programs of local interest. Mr. Baughn said that its purpose was 'to serve Washtenaw County.' In addition to its local office the station will have a studio in Ypsilanti, per- mitting it to service an area of ap- proximately 40 miles. WPAG will join with the Michigan radio network to present all Detroit Tiger games with Harry Heilman announcing. The station will fea- ture world, national andnlocal news on the hour and the "Community Calendar" broadcast every morning at 9:30 will list the day's events in Ann Arbor. Other programs will be' broadcast from the University studio with students from radio classes, fac- ulty and mtsical organizations tak- ing part. A Community- Fund pro- gram every Tuesday at 9:45 p.m. will provide time for local civic groups. With Radio Nine Years Baughn has been connected with radio for nine years most recently with CKLW and formerly with WCAR. Howard V. Walters, sales manager, was formerly with KDON, Monterey, Calif., Charles Wilton, program director, had been connec- ted with WWJ and George Stearns, chief engineer, was a staff member of WCAR. Program Will Honor Geologist. The Departments of .Geology and Mineralogy will sponsor a ceremony commemorating the. hundredth an- niversary of the death of Dr. Doug- lass Houghton, pioneer Michigan ge- ologist, at 4:15 p.m. EWT (3:15 p.m. CWT) Thursday in the Rackham Amphitheater. Miss Helen M. Martin, research geologist for the Geological Survey Division of the Department of Con- servation, will speak about Dr. Houghton's life. Besides being the state's first geologist, he was the first professor of geology at this Univer- sity. Division Rescues 7,000 Civilians By The Associated Press United States 33rd Division infan- trymen, beating down Japanese re- sistance, have reached the outskirts of Baguio, Philippine summer cap- ital in mountainous northern Luzon, and rescued 7,000 civilians who fled! Nipponese internment. In the fighting in the Ryukyus 325 miles south of Japan, Yanks of the 24th Army Corps control two-thirds of le island on the west coast of! Okinawa. The Japanese garrison of 1,000 is encircled on Mt. Iegusugu, on the southeast corner of the 10 square mile island. Japan itself felt the third Ameri- can Superfortress task force raid in four days, when B-29s hit six big airfields on Kyushu yesterday. Amer- ican eadquarters said a "large" num- ber of the giant planes-possibly 150 --made the attack. Kyushu is the southernmost of Nippon's home islands and base for air assaults on the Okinawa invasion forces. Gen. Douglas MacArthur said the 33rd Division reached the limits of Baguio Monday. PATRIOTISM PLUS: Annual Hillel S Be Held Saturd TR~~J CAPE Ii~ S~mi'P~f ~ f~N c;Yy rFY - MDTOO J U, on Boy y- " :Tsuwa fat LSESOKO' Chinao Na43 3rd Mane Oak Bay AmphibiousCop ZAMPA CAfEa YQNI1AN -Kmn A~IJ AIRFIEDu.. B ARFELDIg- IFNEIAZAaTAKkA 24t my!Corps Uchitomar. r KATCmMI4 ft4W& UA MAC~It4ATO Noktag4,saau rt AIRMIL DBa Jxgi tJAHA:-* ic:r Ilornan -~nUT A CAPE CtIAMLJ ALUMNI ON WORLD BATTLE FRONTS: Jiajor Haughey, f''Grad, Wins DSG; Son of AWM1-Michigan Family Is Cited I \. OKINAWA "Pleasure and Patriotism" is the motif 'of the annual campus-wide spring dance of the Hillel Founda- tion which will be held from 9 to 12 p.m. EWT (8 to 11 CWT) Saturday, in the ballroom of the League, ac- cording to Muriel Kleinwaks, social committee chairman of Hillel. The Foundation is sponsoring the dance as the opening event of cam- pus participation in the Seventh War Loan Drive, and will cover all dance expenses. The purchase of war stamps at the door is the require- ment for admission. Bob Cooch and his orchestra, made up mostly of University students, will provide the music, featuring Helen Bement as vocalist. The orchestra has played at U.S.O. dances through- out the state and at JAG school dances. War bonds will be sold during the evening, and members of Avukah, student Zionist organization, will sell corsages for the benefit of the Jewish National Fund. Chaperoning the dance will be Dr. an M ar M M Li mr M an H li G i -- J - YANKS NEAR NORTHERN TIP OF OKINAWA-The Marine Third Amphibious Corps pressed forward beyond Momobaru and Aha in the northern sector of Okinawa, within 10 miles of the northern tip of the island. Other units sought out isolated Japs on Motobu Peninsula. In the south, the 24th Army Corps and the Japanese defenders of the island are deadlocked north of Naha., / eaehlugJob, F- - pEringDace O Ao !ay inLea gue Shortages in Fields of Education Made Public id Mrs. Reuben Kahn and Mr. and rs. Osias Zwerdling. The patrons Job opportunities for June gradu- e to be Rabbi and Mrs. Jehudah ates equipped with teaching certifi- . Cohen, Prof. and Mrs. Theodore cates are even better now than they . Newcomb, Dr. and Mrs. Franklin were last year, Dr. T. Luther Pur- ttell, Dr. and Mrs. Edward Blake- dom, director of the Bureau of Ap- an and Miss Charlotte Kaufman. pointments and Occupational Infor- A further list of patrons includes mation, has indicated. r. and Mrs. Samuel Bothman, Mr. Because of the shortage of experi- nd Mrs. Frank Fishow, Mr. and Mrs. enced teachers, Dr. Purdom has arry Kaufman, Mr. and Mrs. Phil- shown that the demand for inexperi- p Lansky and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. enced teachers is so great for the next lass. school year that the average begin- ning salary a teacher may expect will be above $1,729, which was the DAILY OFFICIAL average beginning salary for last year. BULLETIN A study of teacher supply, demand, and placement has been carried out among seventeen Michigan colleges. (Continued from Page 2) Its results, Dr. Purdom said, reveal that the Teacher Placement bureaus could place some 4,800 beginning aragueta, tonight at 7:30 p.m. I te~achers in Michigan. However, in e Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. CalltchrstitoMthigD.PHowevesi 00 for reservations. La Sociedad contrast to this, Dr. Purdom believes cture series tickets are good for 25 that there will be approximately only tureseres tckes ae god fr 1 ,000 newly trained candidates avail- nts toward purchasing a play tick- 100ew by surrendering lecture ticket. able. ydn tu k. An estimated 30 per cent decrease in the supply of teaching candidates Lecture in Sacred Music: The Stu- I now in training, as compared with nt Religious Association and thenwinrangscmprd it htRliiousAsoiawion andthe last year's supply, completes the sur- chool of Music will present Dr. vey's general conclusions which point elen A. Dickenson who will speak; out a critical shortage in the teach- " The Place of Music in Protestantinprfsobth fexrecd orship" this evening at 8 o'clock ing profession, both of experienced the Kellogg Auditorium. and beginning teachers, Dr. Purdom announced. Coming Events Saturn, Moon To Be Tea at the International Center, Observed Fridav ery Thursday, 3-4:30 p.m. Faculty, reign students, and their American The planet Saturn and the moon iends are cordially nvited. may be viewed from 8:30 to 10:30 p.m. EWT (7:30 to 9:30 pjn. CWT) Inter-Guild Inventory: Rev. H. 0.3 m W 73 o93 ~.CT Friday from the telescopes at the oder will discuss "Lutherans and Angell Hall Observatory, weather otestant Action" at the Inter- permitting. uild Inventory Thursday afternoon Through the telescopes may be 4 in Lane Hall. seen the engirdling rings of Saturn, the sixth major planet from the sun. Town Hall: Thursday evening at The observatory will be open to 30, the Student Town Hall will de- tie public. Children accompanied by te the subject, "Resolved, That the their parents may come. 'aternity and Sorority System Is-- zsically Undemocratic". Students terested in this discussion should INVEST IN VICTORY By PAT CAMERON The Haughey family, 100% Michi- gan, made the news again when Wil- frid Jr., a major in the Fifth Infan- try Division of Patton's army was recently awarded the Distinguished Service- Cross, a letter to T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of Alum- ni Association, has revealed. Mother, father, two daughters, six sons, and three of the in-laws of this Battle Creek family attend- ed the University between 1902 and 1943. Wilfrid Jr., '35, was a mem- ber of Psi Upsilon, as were three of his brothers, and a member of Scabbard and Blade. The citation accompanying the Distinguished Service Cross said that Major Haughey led assault elements across the Moselle River near Arna- ville, France, against strong enemy ,positions. "Completely disregarding his own safety, this intrepid =officer direc- ted operations from front line po- sitions, encouraging his men by his bold, courageous example," the ci- tation stated. It continued, "After gaining the Registration for Nursing School Ends April 23 April 23 is the last day for regis- tration in the coming semester of the nursing program being offered by the University of Michigan School of Nursing, and the next chance to enter this program will not be until registration in September, Rhoda F. Reddig, Director of the School of Nursing and of the Nursing Service, announced. Girls who enter this program are eligible for entrance into the United States Cadet Nurse Corps, in which the government pays the nurse's ex- penses in the professional part of her program, Miss Reddig explained. The degree program being offered leads to a Bachelor of Science degree and a diploma. in nursing. The program consists of sixty hours of 'credit pre- requisite to the professional course. This college work may be taken in any accredited college and offered in transfer to the University of Michi- gan. Miss Reddig remarked that the need for nurses is urgent, as is shown by the government's request for 60,- 000 Cadet Nurses this year. Those wishing to know more about the pro- gram and the requirements for it may see her in Rm. 2036 at the University Hospital. far shore, he directed the troops in repulsing repeated fanatic enemy counterattacks." A letter from the father, Wilfrid Haughey, '04, revealed that his son had been in the first of Patton's army to cross the Rhine and take Frankfort. The most recently graduated Hau- ghey, Louis, '43, was a member of Michigan's first graduating class in the NROTC and now holds the rank of lieutenant, junior grade, on the destroyer "English" with Admiral Halsey's task force. Lt. Haughey won Floor Show Is Planned for Ball Pan-Amnerican Dance To Be Held Friday A Latin-American floor show will be featured at the Pan-American Ball, to be held from 9 to 12 p.m. EWT (8 to 11 p.m. CWT) Friday in the League Ballroom. Gilbert Pesquera will be master of ceremonies, and a Mexican quartet will sing Jalisco. Rhumba specialties will be provided by the Cuban quar- tet, and the Harave Tapatillo- will be featured as one of the dance num- bers. The program will open with a pre- sentation of the flags of the twenty- one nations in the Pan-American Union. Russ Girt and his orchestra will supply music for the semi-for- mal dance. Tickets may be purchased at the League, the Union and the Inter- national Centeir. Kershner Will Talk Thursda'y Relief plans for children in Europe will be discussed by Dr. Howard E. Kershnen, vice-president of the Save the Children Federation, at 4:15 p.m. EWT (3:15 CWT) Thursday:in the Hussy Room of the Women's League. Speaking on "Saving the Future" Dr. Kershner will disclose plans now being formulated in France for the rehabilitation.of Europe's education- al system. The talk will be sponsored by the Post-War Council and the Ann Arbor branch of the Save the Children Federation.. Dr. Kershner, who is chairman of the overseas committee of the feder- ation, plans to go to Europe next month to carry on work in behalf of child victims of war. a letter in diving here anl was a member of Psi Upsilon, Triangles, Vulcans, and Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil. Charles S. Haughey also was graduated in 1943, receiving his B.S. in chemical engineering and metallurgy. His sister Esther was a student here in decorative design for three years, finishing at Chi- cago. Her husband is Ronald W. Dolan, '37. Louis and Wilfrid are not the only sons in service. Capt. David 0. Hau- ghey, recently returned from an as- signment in France, was graduated in 1940, and was affiliated with Psi Upsilon. His wife is the former Rob- reta Leete, '40, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, Mortar Board, and Alpha Kappa Delta. The Iaugheys were all very ac- tive Michigan students, as demon- strated by the campus career of Phillip C. Haughey, now a Naval Architect designing and building amphibian tanks. Phillip was pres- ident of Psi Upsilon, Tau Sigma Delta, and of his Senior Class, be- sides being a swimmer and a menh- ber of Scabbard and Blade. Also a Naval Architect, at Henry Kaiser's Vancouver yard, Clifton, '37, was a member of Delta Tau Delta, Engineering Council, and Quarter- deck. His wife, the former Margaret Mustard, '35, was a member of Pi Beta Phi, Woman's Manager of the Gargoyle and vice-president of her Senior Class. The elder daughter entered the University in 1927 and was a mem- ber of Kappa Tau Alpha. She was in newspaper work until her mar- riage. Wilfrid, Sr., was a member of Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity and is now a specialist in ear, nose, and throat diseases. The mother, Edith Cowle Haughey, taught school after two years (1902-'04) here. RECRS r ;I I: COTTON CLASSMATES C0-EDS cherish their cool cottons for class- room and campus events. sDouble-duty favorites in- cude one- or two-piece fashioned from cham- bray, spun rayon. ging- ham, pique . . . Checks, stripes, or solid patterns Y_ in a variety of colors. Junior and misses' sizes. H8#95 . ti 8gyp i Zo th 63 lei ce et de Se W in ev fo fri Yc Pr GI at 7:: ba Fr Ba int AT THE RADIO & RECORD SHOP 711.UIEST §e et arnd JumperisI in the Casual i 4 be in Lane Hall at that time. The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065, N.S. Bldg., at 12:15 p.m., on Friday, April 20. Program: C. B. Slawson will report on "Indus- trial diamonds in the war effort". All interested are cordially invited to attend. Hungry- CHATTERBOX 800 SOUTH STATE THE MICHIGAN DAIIY WISHES TO GIVE THE REST POSSIBLE SERVICE TO ALL OF ITS SUBSCRIBERS N ORDER to accomplish this aim, we are inaugurating a special courtesy service. We request that you call 23-24-1 before JV New tricks in* jumpers for the long sunny sea- son! Try a trim tailored jumper with a variety of blouses . . . try a pastel with frilly ruf- fles . . . try a white with check trim . all these and more are yours so come in with open arms and an open mind and fill up on these sweet, smooth jumper "fash- ions! Shop I ' ": Y ¢¢ ?k: r. fs. t :;;:r:r;' .: t i' $St r:}: Y , v '$^- ,' i':' :? ;L e pi tX' .. y.;p ,-.SCE Junior misses' and sizes. ii E I I %- I OI #.,% IA 43 a