P __k __OU_ _ _ _H____ MICHIGAN DAILY CTlk~ 1$~aY, MAT 17di5411 AlamonyApplications Made To Appointment Bureau "Students are registered with the that the camps may write back to Bureau of Appointments for every- the Bureau here for further informa- thing from busboy to head counselor tion about those whose qualifications in application for camp and resort meet their demands. work," said Dr. T. Luther Purdom, The camps and resorts which the director of the Bureau, in telling of Bureau is contacting are spread all current work the Bureau is doing fo over the United States. In special placement of students in summer demand among those who are regis- jobs, tered are the vacation spots of Yel- Dr. Purdom explained that the lowstone and the Cape Cod areas, Dr. Bureau is getting occupational in- Purdom added. formation for those registered with The wage scale corresponding to it by sending out letters to hundreds the qualifications of the various stu-. of different camps and resorts. These dents registered here ranges from letters tell the camp directors the no payment beyond room and board number and the qualifications of the to four or five hundred dollars, he students on the Bureau's lists, so explained. Dr. Purdom believes that persons vualified as waterfront directors and A0Cassistants and those who are able to instruct in handicraft work will be nost in demand for camp work' dur- twolng this, summer's season. However, ie expects favorable replies from the majority of the camps, because qual- (,EDITOR'S NOTE: Contributions to this fled student help' is needed for staff- column should be addressed to the Mili- ing summer camps. tary Editor, Michigan Daily, 420 May- nard Street.) Elmer Davis, director of the Office Reuther Says of War Information, was conducted + on a tour of a Ninth Air Force fight- W Su er-bomber base in Germany by a 1OYAj former University student, Major STEPHEN POLE SCHUK, before the S o Controls end of the war in Europe. Maj. Poleschuk completed a tour By The Associated Press of duty in the Pacific theatre be-, DETROIT May 16-Victor G. fore joining the 365th "Hell Hawk" DE OTMy 1VitrG P-47 Thunderbolt group as opera- Reuther, &ssistant director of the tions officer. United Automobile Workers (CIO) * :eiterated today that the War Man- Another former student, Lieuten- Dower Commission should suspend ant JOHN A. BIRD, is now stationed controls over all workers in the De- at the Army Air Field at Carlsbad, ;roit area to avoid an extended per- N. M., after a recent transfer. iod of unemployment during the re- Aeconversion period. .- Among those recently commis- Reuther renewed his proposal fol- sioAed second lieutenants at Aloe lowing announcement by Edward L. Army Air Field, Victoria, Tex., was ushman, State WMC director, that JAMES DON JORDAN, also a for- ontrols over women workers'in the ner student area had been suspended. Reuther Lt. Jordan was graduated with the baid the UAW-CIO had first urged twenty-third class from this single that action more than four months engine pilot training school. ago Lieutenant (j.g.) EDWARD W. The suspension of controls over VANNI,tSNR, has been transfer- women workers enables them to seek red to the Atlantic Fleet's Minecraft employment or shift from one job to another without. obtaining a certi- Training Center at Little Creek, Va. ficate of availability from the WMC. A graduate of 1941, Lt. Vanni "Pouto ubcsaraymd served a minesweeper of the and those immediately ahead are Fourth Fleet for 14 months. -reating and will create a reservoir Promotion of WILLIAM H. DU->f skilled and semi-skilled workers, SENBERRY, who received his A.M who will not be needed in the war and Ph. D. degrees from the Univer- bereleasuther said or civiliash o- sity in 1936 and 1941 respectively, to duction 'i the rank of captain recently was an- Th nounced by AAF Training Command The problems of unemployment to Headquarters in Fort Worth, Tex. result in the automotive industry as a 1 11" ,;result of war contract cutbacks will Second Lieutenant ROBERT J. be discussed at a meeting in Wash- BRATTON, co-pilot of a B-17 Fly- ington tomorrow of UAW-CIO off i- ing Fortress, has won the first cials and Chairman J. A. Krug of Oak Leaf Cluster to the Air Medal the WPB, and Henry Nelson, re- in recognition of "exceptionally conversion coordinator of the auto- meritorious achievement" on mis- mobile industry. sions directed against enemy pos-- t in Europe. Lt. Bratton at- I nc T the University. Recently promoted to first lieuten- Panel Sunday ant at a U. S. Troop Carrier base in France was EDWIN T. MATTSON, Kenneth G. Hance of the speech another former university student. For his participation in the in- department will be chairman of a vaslons of Normandy, Southern pae nCieeAeia eain France, and Holland, Lt. Mattson ships to be held at 5 p. m. EWT (4 has been awarded the Air Medal p. m. CWT) Sunday at the Wesleyan with two clusters. He also wears Guild House. five campaign stars on his Euro- The panel will consist of two Chi- pean Theatre ribbon and a Presi- nese and two American students: dential Unit Citation ribbon. Miss Bei-Tsung Li, Mr. Hua Lin, Miss Charlotte Mueller, and Roger Appleby. "Keep A-Read The panel will attempt to answer of Your Hair" such questions as What do we hon- Let us solve your tonsorial estly think about each other?; Why problems. do we think this way?; What can we do about important differences?; The Dascola Barbers and How can we apply these answers Between State & Mich. Theatres to our relationship on campus? MYDA To Give Panel oni World Affairs smnday, State, Wayne AYDA Chapters Participate MYDA, with American Youth for Democratic Action chapters from Wayne University and Michigan State College, will present a two- session conference at 2:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. EWT (1:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. CWT) Sunday at the Union. Presenting panels with world af- fairs as a general theme, the confer- ence is open to all students and fac- ulty on campus and, from the other two institutions. Prof. Edward W. McFarland of the department of economics at Wayne University will speak on "Bretton Woods and the San Francisco Con- ference" at the first panel, followed by a discussion of the issue. "Argen- tina, Poland, and Colonial Ques- tions", will also be discussed. Anna Vadakais, president of the Wayne chapter will preside at the meeting. The second session will cover the general topics, "The World Youth Congress", "60,000,000 Japs" "Fed- eral Aid to Education", "The 18- Year Old Vote", "Fair Employment Practices Committee and the Poll Tax", and "The Murray-Wagner- Dingell Bill". Virginia Kougias, AYD organizer in the Chicago area, will speak at this session. Sabbath Eve Services To Be Held by Avukah Members of Avukah, student Zion- ist organization, will conduct an Oneg Shabbot (in honor of the sabbath) at 8 p. m. EWT (7 p. m. CWT) to- morrow at the Hillel Foundation. This service will be conducted in the same manner as those held in Palestine. Sabbath eve services are held regularly every Friday night at the Foundation, but are of either the Orthodox or Conservative form. Palestinian services emphasize the traditional cultural ritual rather than the pure religious aspect. Services SUCCEEDS DOOLITTLE- Maj.- Gen. William E. Kepner is the new commander of the U.S. Eighth Air Force, succeeding Lt.-Gen. James H. Doolittle, who has relinquished the command and will return to Washington "for a new assign- ment." Progrram for Lantern _Niuht Is Announced Lantern Night, sponsored by WAA, will honor senior women at 7:30 p.m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) Monday at Palmer Field after a Line of March formed in front of the Li- brary at 6:45 p. m. EWT. The Line of March will be led by the Ann Arbor High School band under the direction of Mr. Charles Yates. Following the band will, be past presidents of key women's ac- tivities on campus. They will include Marge Hall, former president of Women's War Council; Natalie Mat- tern, past president of Women's Ju- diciary Council; Florene Wilkins, 1944-45 head of Assembly Associa- tion; Peg Laubengayer, outgoing head of Panhellenic Association, and Shelby Dietrich, former president of WAA. Highlights Ot Campus. pi .ter To . Viewed Visitors are welcomed to observe the moon and Jupiter from 9-11 p.m. EWT (8-10 p.m. CWT) tomorrow at the Angell Hall Observatory, wea- ther permitting. Tomorrow evening will be the last opportunity for the public to view the stars this semester. Children may come if accompanied by their parents. * * * Geology Club Will Meet The Geological Journal Club will hold its semi-monthly meeting at 12:15 p.m. EWT (11:15 p.m. CWT) tomorrow in Rm. 4065 Natural Sci- ence Building. Prof. R. C. Hussey will review "Early Man and Pleistocene Stra- tigraphy in Southern and Eastern Asia", a paper Ly H. L. Movius. This technical work deals with recent anthropological discoveries, describing the location in which the find was made and attempting to discover its age. Prof. Shepard To Talk ... Prof. John F. Shepard of the Psy- chology 'department will speak on the "Psychological Symptoms of Fas- cism" at 8:15 p.m. EWT (7:15 p.m. CWT) Saturday in the home of Mr. and-Mrs. Jules Needle of 332 E. Wil- ham St. Unitarian graduate students, young instructors and their wives will at- tend. -* *~ * Church Will Celebrate *. * The Ann Arbor Unitarian Chu- rch will celebrate the 120th anni- versary of the American Unitarian Association Sunday at 11, a.m. EWT (10 a.m. CWT). The service will consist of re- ports on the activities of the de- nomination, an anniversary mes- sage from Boston and the Rev. Mr. Ridman's sermon "Unitarianism Today". The anniversary is being observed in local churches -because transportation difficulties prevent a national convention. * ~* * Prescott Club s Picnic All members of the College of Pharmacy are invited to a picnic given by the Prescott Club from 5-7 p.m. EWT (4-6 p.m. CWT) Sunday at the Island. The group will meet at the front door of the Chemistry Building be- tween 4:15 and 4:30 p.m. EWT (3:15- 3:30 CWT). All those who are inter- ested, should sign the bulletin out- side the Pharmacy Office in the Chemistry Building. PLEISTOCENE BEACHES Geology Students Take Field Trip to Chicarro A group of students and staff members of the department of geol- ogy, under the leadership of Prof. I. D. Scott, spent last week-end on a field trip studying the geological for- mations of the Chicago region. Visited Pleistocene Beaches The group left Ann Arbor on Thursday, May 10, and returned Sunday, May 13, after investigating the old Pleistocene lake beaches of Lake Michigan and studying .the various types of sand dunes. The dunes near St. Joseph, Benton Harbor, and Saugatuck were the special topics of investigation. The students learned how to identify the different types and determine their ages. They saw how dunes are pre- vented from growing by planting dune grass and evergreens. Some of them climbed the "Bald head", a dune near Saugatuck which is said to be one of the highest in the state. Outlines of Lake Michigan , In Chicago and its suburbs the ancient Pleistocene beaches, which trace the outline of Lake Michigan as it was thousands of years ago, Roberta Booth To Give Recital violinist, Carillonineuir Will Present Programs Roberta Booth, pianist in the School of Music, will present a recital, featuring selections by Villa-Lobos and Schubert, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the B.M. degree at 8:30 p.m. EWT (7:30 p.m. CWT) today in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater. Opening her program with "Mo- ments Musicaux" by Schubert, Miss Booth will play three Villa-Lobos se- lections, Debussy's "Estampes" and the Beethoven "Sonata in F minor". She is a pupil of Maud Okkelberg and formerly studied with Gladys Overton in Korea and under Mabel Ross Rhead in the School of Music here. Miss Booth is a member of Sigma Alpha Iota, music sorority. A student recital by Raymond Spagnuolo, violinist, accompanied by Jean Farquharson, will also be pre- sented at the same time tomorrow in the Assembly Hall of Rackham. Se- lections by Handel, Bruch, Beethoven and Saint Saens will be included. Old English Airs, Flemish. Songs, "The Swan" by Saint Saens and Prof. Percival Price's "Sonata for 43 Bells" will be played by the Univer- sity carillonneur at 8:15 p.m. EWT today. werQ followed. These beaches are sometimes as much as ten miles back from the present beach. The group visited Glenwood, the oldest of these beaches, as well as Blue Island, located on what was an island in this ancient lake, and drove along the Des Plaines and. Sag out- lets, former glacial channels, Plans Reported For Educating Cor m unties Plans to send University educat- ors to educate state communities in their responsibilities toward returned servicemen were announced today by Governor Kelly, according to an As- sociated Press report. Conferences tonight and tomorrow, Governor Kelly said today, will devel- op extensions of the Michigan Veter- ans Program which will continue the state's position of pioneering in the nation. He. said he would ask the State Veterans Advisory Council and the State Administrative Board to ap- prove spending $65,000 to train ten physicians as psychiatrists because of a shortage of that type of train- ing in the state. He proposed also the training of 50 psychiatrists aides, all as part of a program of helping veterans. He called for an intensive program of training counselors, declaring Michigan was far ahead of other states in such a program, and that local communities were spending more than $1,500,000 to operate local counseling centers. The governor said. he would ask administrative board approval to es- tablish an "emergency interim care" program for veterans, declaring it now takes "48 hours of red tape to get a sick veteran federal care." Decline In Traffc Accidents Reported LANSING, May 16.-(1P)-A 32 per cent drop in fatal traffic. accidents in Michigan during the first 16 days of the current brake emphasis pro- gram was reported today by Oscar G. Olander, State Police Commissioner. One out of 19 of the 10,203 cars checked by state police during the first month of the current safety pro- gram had defective brakes, the com- missioner said. NS .1 4 I A will be read in sephardic Hebrew by Seniors, wearing traditional caps Benson Jaffee, and in English by Saul and gowns, will form a double line, Levine. flanked on either side by an under- Beth Laikin will give a short talk classman. Juniors will be recogniz- on the meaning of Shavuot, the Jew- ed by yellow ribbons; sophomores ish Feast of Weeks. This holiday is will wear red hair bows, while fresh- observed in celebration of the har- man will be denoted by green ribbons. vest time in Palestine, and also in The Line of March will proceed honor of the Torah, the book of laws. from the center of the diagonal, up There will be readings from the Tan- North University to Palmer Field ach (Bible), and Palestinian songs where "The Star Spangled Banner" will be sung. and "Hail to the Colors" will be sung These services are offered once a, after the group has formed an "M". year, and Beth Laikin, president of An annual song contest will be held Avukah, emphasized the fact that with thirty women's residences par- everyone is welcome to attend. ticipating. Members of the School of Music faculty will act as judges, * ()CJJ and Barbara Osborne, president of ichigan CD WAA, will present the WAA sing cup to the winning group. JW7 1 (Condg tiDr. Margaret Bell will present that organization's participation cup which was awarded to Pi Beta Phi at LANSING, May 16-(AP)-Although the 1944 Lantern Night. some parts of its organization may be discontinued, the State Office of Civilian Defense (OCD) is prepared'UniqueC ase to place stronger emphasis on its Michigan home front program on the Enters Hospital war with the Japanese.o p Capt. Donald S. Leonard, state The unique case of a patient whose OCD director, said a conference of diaphragm was fluttering 200 times representative OCD officials from a minute was reported today by Uni- versity Hospital authorities. various communities would meetI The man, claiming to be an army here tomorrow to "evaluate" the OCD captain, gave his name and age program "in the light of the Ger- a ard g uettis e as mansurendr ad te sraner m-as Millard Duckett, 68. He was man surrender and the stronger em- tothe hospital after col- phasis on the war with Japan." lapsing on South Division St. Tues- Leonard said it was planned to day. His army uniform had service discuss how to curtail the OCD pro- ribbons for the European theatre, gram and still offer the best assist- but Duckett told Hospital authorities ance to communities. President that he had been a Jap prisoner until Truman has asked for the abolition recently, as well as having served in of the Federal OCD, but recommend- the Spanish-American War, and ed its continuance on state and local World War IL Campus army officers levels, were unable to find record of Duck- He said such home front drives ett. as salvage campaigns would be con- Dr. Albert C. Kerlikowske, Assist- tinued, and that the auxiliary OCD ant Medical Director of the hospital police and firemen would be con- said that except for the diaphragm tinued probably to aid communities ailment the man's condition was short of that type of manpower. good. AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG 4 I1 r ~ ,. . v - He's blind ...but he's watching us, THURS., MAY 17 Eastern War Time 7:00-News. 7:05-Morning Round-Up. 7:30-Musical Reveille. 7:50-Bouquet for Today 8:00-News. 8:15-1050 Club. 9:00-News: 9:05-Music Box. 9:30-Community Calendar 9:45-Lean Back & Listen. 10:00-News. 10:05-Carmen Cavallero. 10:15-What Do You Know. 10:30-Broadway Melodies. 10:40-Women Today. 10:45-Waltz Time. 11:00-News. 11:05-Piano Moods. 11:15-Mario Morelli. 11:30-Farm & Home. 12:00-News. 12:15-Merle Pitt. 12:30-Trading Post. 12:45-Luncheon Melodies. 1:00-News. 1:05-Hollywood Reporter. 1:15-Pat DuPont (voc.) 1:30-Johnny Long Orcb. 1:45-Marie Green. 2:00-News. 2:05-Bob Halsey. 2:15-U. of M. 2:45-Baseball Brev. 2:55-Baseball (Phila. at Det.) S :00-News. 5:05-Campus Ballroom. 5:45-Sport Review. 6:00-News. 6:15-Harry Horlick. 6:30-Telephone Quiz. 6:45-Piano Interlude. 6:55-Flashes From Life. 7:00-News. 7:15-Fireside Harmonies. 7:25-Band of the Week. 7:30-A. A. Civic Program. 7:45-Evening Serenade. 8:00-News. 8:05-Dance Time. 8:15-Put and Take It'. 8:30-Extravaganza. N THE Mighty 7th War Loan, the eyes of the whole world are on us-the eyes of our enemies .. of our boys in the foxholes ... of our wounded in the hospitals-won- dering whether America will make it. Only America could put over such a whopping War Loan as the Mighty Seventh. It's really two loans in one -last year, by If you have an income, whether from work, land or capital-you have : quota in 7th War Loan. FIND YOUR QUOTA... .AND MAKE ITI YOUR PERSONAL MATURITY IF YOUR AVERAGE WAR BOND VALUE OF INCOME QUOTA IS: 7TH WAR LOAN PER MONTH IS: (CASH VALUE) BONDS BOUGHT $250 $187.50 $250 225-250 150.00 200 210-225 131.25 175 200-210 112.50 150 180-200 93.75 125 140-180 75.00 100 100.140 37.50 50 Under $100 18.75 25 IP this time, there had been 2 War Loans. So find your personal quota in the table on the right. Re- member -you're not giving. You're lending. Then dig deep .. . dig, dig; dig! Y _ MIONTY pq F " W t L\..-L1 i / f I I"D TYPEWRITERS I I I I A I 1 0%1 IMF r-#%ft driLl IM am m&v-*tjmpw PJth I&& A 1% N Aft A KV