THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNES-50 I C ' I I F l I F 'I' 1 J P A R A T R Q 0 P E R S B 0 A R D C - 4 6-Paratroopers prepare to board one of the new Curtiss C-46 Commandos during maneu- vers at Stout Field, Indianapolis, Ind. The Commando has two jumping doors instead of the one on planes formerly used. P R E S I D E N T A N D F A M IL Y - Here is a recent photograph of the new U. S. President, Harry S. Truman with Mrs. Truman (right) and their daughter, Mary Margaret. ANNUAL SPEECH CONTEST: Prof. Hance Will Supervise Interstate Contest at Evanston Dr. Kenneth G. Hance, associate professor in the Department of Speech, is leaving Ann Arbor today to attend the Seventy-First Annual Contest of the Interstate Oratorical Rose Derderian Places First in Music Contest Rose Suzanne Derderian, sopho- more student in voice, took first place in the Student Musicians section ofj the Great Lakes District Contest Sat- urday in Detroit.1 The contest is sponsored by the National Federation of Music Clubs, and the district includes Ohio, Mich- igan, and Indiana. Miss Derderian is a lyric soprano, from Detroit and is a student of Har- din' Van Duersen. She sang three selections in the contest: "Le Colibri" by Chausson; "Mariettas Lied" by Korngold; and "The Dark King's Daughter" by Crist. Miss Marilyn Mason, junior student in organ, accompanied Miss Derder- ian. Both are members of Sigma Alpha Tota. Dr. Dow V. Baxter's talk, "Carib- bean Profiles", which was to have been presented at 8 p.m. EWT to- day in the Rackham Ampthithea- ter will be cancelled until further notice. Senators Approve Felding Yost Day' LANSING, April 24-(P)-The Sen- ate today adopted a concurrent reso- lution declaring April 30 to be an- nually known as "Fielding H. Yost Day" In commemoration of the for- mer University of Michigan athletic director's "usefulness" to the State. The resolution, introduced by Sen- ator Ben Carpenter, Harrison Repub- lican, declared that in Yost's 40 years of athletic coaching he has "trained the minds and sinews and influenced for good the hearts of hundreds of Michigan sons who to- day are fighting and winning the most devastating war the world has ever known." POW Work Reported NEW YORK, April 24.-(/P)--Ger- man prisoner of war labor has be- come a $100,000,000 a year business benefiting the United States Govern- ment, Maj.-Gen. Archer L. Lerch, Army Provost Marshal-General, says in an American Mercury Magazine article made public today. . i Association Thursday and Friday in Evanston, Illinois. Executive Secretary As executive secretary of this or- ganization, which is the oldest and largest of its type in the United States, Dr. Hance will supervise the contests and will preside at the an- nual business meeting. The Association has held contests every year since it was founded in 1874. It has expanded until it now includes 125 colleges and universities in 11 midwestern states. Famous Persons in Past Contests Many famous persons participated in these contests during their college days. Among the winners are the late Senator Robert M. LaFollette, the late Senator Albert J. Beveridge, Bishop Edwin R. Hughes, President C. F. Wishart of the College of Woo- ster, the late President Irving Maurer of Beloit College, and the late Presi- dent James A. Blaisdell of Claremont Colleges. Chorus To, *SiL ng At Stock well Members of the Navy Chorus, under the direction of Prof. Leonard V. Meretta of the School of Music, will present a program of popular songs at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow for the residents of Stock- well Hall. The vocal group, which consists of 20 Navy men and three Marines, was heard at the Christmas program and the recent Army-Navy Revue in Hill Auditorium. They will perform such numbers as the "Desert Song," "Night and Day," "Deep in My Heart," "Hal- lelujah" and "Strike Up the Band." Members of the Stockwell Chorus, composed of approximately 30 girls under the direction of Kay Keyes, SM, will then sing "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and "I Had a Little Talk with the Lord." FIJI ISLAND FAIR Highlights On Campus ... Capping Exercises . Capping exercises for the School of Nursing will be held at 8:15 EWT (7:15 CWT) Friday at the Rackham Lecture Hall, Prof. Rhoda F. Reddig, Director of the School of Nursing, announced yesterday. Miss Jane Taylor, Nursing Con- sultant of the Division of Nurse Edu- cation, United States Public Health Service, will deliver a speech to the 100 nurses of the class of 1947 who will receive their caps. The caps of the Michigan nurses are a starched white band curving around the head, forming a high peak in the front. The cap is trim- med with a black velvet ribbon, the width of which denotes the class of the nurse. * * * A.I.E.X. To Meet . . Harold A. Strickland Jr., Chief Engineer at the Budd Induction Heat- ing Corporation, will illustrate his lecture "The Internal Induction Heat Treating Process" with a movie at the third meeting of the student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at 7:30 p. m. (6:30 CWT) in the Michigan Union today. Mr. Strickland graduated from the University in February, 1937, with a combined degree in electrical and mechanical engineering. All engi- neers are invited. Adams at 'U IE uWe.t . . John P. Adams, provost to the University, spoke last night at the annual banquet of the University of Michigan Club in Toledo. T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of Alumni Association, and Rob- ert O. Morgan, assistant general sec- retary, accompanied Dr. Adams. The movie, "Michigan on the March", was shown to the gathered alumni. i PacficIsleI y Capt. Bradley LL.B. here in 1932, wrote that the only relief from the heat in the South Pacific was a shower of cold salt water. The effect of a salt water shower was the same as rubbing with a cake of paraffin, he wrote and added, "I don't know whether it is best to be hot and wet or somewhat cool and sticky." For a time Capt. Bradley wondered why he could find no Presbyterian Church in the area, but he discovered that- in 1820 the Presbyterians and the Congregationalists made an agreement, whereby the Congrega- tional Church took over the mission- ary work on that island and the Presbyterians got exclusive jurisdic- tion of another one. Chinese Siudents Will Give Progran Chinese songs and selections from Chinese operas presented by Hung- Yun Kuo will highlight the program DEL ECGATE - prince Faisat Ibn Abdul Aziz (above), son of the king of Saudi Arabia, heads his country's delegation to the United Nations world security 'conference in San Francisco.., B L A I R H 0 U S E--Bair House (above), guest residence for visiting foreign dignitaries across Pennsylvania avenue from the White House, became the temporary home of President and Mrs. Truman following FDR's sudden death. SHAPELY - A two-$iee swim suit of striped design sets off the charms of Jeff Donnell, . motion picture actress. . , Life ona Souti Is Described b A ferris wheel at a native fai, salt water showers, and the absence of Presbyterian churches on a South Pacific island were described in a letter from Captain George S. Brad- ley, '30, to Robert O. Morgan, as- sistant general secretary of Alumni Association. The fair, held on a Fiji Island, con- sisted of a number of small tents for fortune telling and concessions. Capt. Bradley's attention was taken by "one of the most unusual contraptions I have ever seen in my life," the four- seated ferris wheel. It was built of rough-hewn timber and was about 29 feet high. A large crank operated by hand kept the wheel going around. Capt. Bradley, who received his Liberated Prisoners Say Schuschnigg Murdered FLOSSENBURG CONCENTRA- TION CAMP, Germany, April 24-(/") -Political prisoners just liberated at this camp by the 90th Division of ' N U B B I NS' PAYS A VISIT - - Forest (Nubbins) Hoffman, 3-year-old Cheyenne, Wyo., boy whose life was de- spaired of last November, enjoys himself on a visit to the Wire. photo station of the Associated Press bureau in Denver.r SOAP FOR EUROPE -- A workman in Toronto, Canada, stacks cartons containing laundry soap ready for shipment through UNRRA to the needy'people of Europe. Canada plans to send large quantities of soap and canned meat. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from g'age 4) War Council, and Michigan Youth for Democratic Action. All those interested are invited to attend. There will be no admission charge. .. .:.. }mow err r & :n f s:... I-> y A?-47 _vq