THE MICHIGAN DATAV wEIDNEbSlAYj. . . ......... ... ; r _ State Veteran 'Evening of Ballet' To Feature SEducation Billsy C 1- -._ ___ .ty Clle Orch-es-tra Saturday theme about the ship, entitled, "Our Lady", which his father Raymond Sheets of Rockford, Ill., forwarded to Tapping. Describing the christening cere- mny, Lt. Sheets wrote, "To the mind of each mother and father, and every member of the crew, must have flashed the thought, What does fate have in store for this ship-where will the tides of war take her?" He prophesied the future of the ship, which, fire-swept and bomb-! shattered, docked in Seattle May 25, after limping from Okinawa under her own power. "She would save lives, both friend and foe, and she would take lives. The blood of wounded, the corpsesE of those who become victims of war's grim reaper would meet this lady. She would feel the pain of being hit but she would dodge andj wiggle and fight back at suicide! planes." The ship replaced the first "Laf- fey", which went down with all guns firing in the fall of 1942. Both were named in honor of a Civil War hero.I In concluding his theme, Lt. j Sheets wrote, "She would take America's young manhood away from all that they hold dear, and she would bring them back with the spirit and the courage that is hers." QUISLING ARRIVES FOR IIEARING-Vidkun Quisling (left), dic- tator of Norway under Nazi occupation is accompanied by a guard as he enters the court room in Oslo, Norway, for a preliminary hearing on the charge of high treason. Quisling pleaded innocent and was ordered held for trial. (AP wirephoto via radio from Stockholm.) SERVICE REWARDS: Hillel Members To Be Lauded At Special Awards Banquet of Music, is serving as acting con- For those whom the Laffey did not ductor of the orchestra in the ab- bring back, Comm. Frederick J. Bec- sence of Thor Johnson, the orche-, ton said, "Theirs is the valor." I stra's regular director. The coming program will see an' aggregation of about 65 player. Stearns Relates Most of he orchestra members are S University students. Two or three Ao faculty members will occupy posts WPAG Policy in the orchestra, and a few guest players from Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti To Eeers and Detroit will paricipate. George Stearns, Chief Engineer of Education Class radio station WPAG, spoke on "The Formation and Operation of Radio Gives Assem bi Station WPAG" at the last meeting of the student branch of the Ameri- Play, Musical Numbers, can Institute of Electrical Engineers held Monday in the Union. Skit, Singing Featured New officers elected for the sum- An assembly presented yesterday by mer term were: Jess Santo, presi- and for members of the Education dent; Jim McFadden, vice-presi- A-10 class, featured a play, musical dent; Belle Sperling, secretary; Augh numbers, a skit and group singing. Mehlenbacher, treasurer; and Wayne The clas shad been divided into Bartlett, Engineering' Council Rep- "Interest" groups earlier in the seme- resentative. Plans are now under ster and each group was responsible way for the summer session. for a part of the program. Marie Martel, chairman of the mu-CiyT*s*s sic group, acted as emcee for the assembly, which was opened by the students singing "Varsity" ScottyE Hoffman directed the group singing Er of old favorites. The dramatic section performed Proposed enlargement of the city "Common Clay," by George Cohan. of Ann Arbor to include Pittsfield Cil- Peggy Coxon, chairman, Mildred Weeks, Dawn Saari, Mary Bronson, lage and Darlington subdivision will B etty King, Edna Lofstedt, and Mary be discussed at a meeting to be or- Ellen Wood were the actresses. ganized this week by the city plan-I Representing the music group, Vi- ning commission and representatives vian Caplin played Brahms' "Inter- of the two communities, Edward M. mezzo, and Marilyn Watt sang Couper, commission chairman, an- "Smilin' Through" and "The Man I - Love." Shirley Mattern accompanied nounced yesterda-.I her on the piano. Initiated by the outlying communi-I As the contribution of the hob- ties, the plan aims at inclusion of bies group, which will sponsor a pic- te:1itory south and east of the city. nic for the class at 4:30 p. m. EWT} Tle present problem will be to ob-1 tomorrow, A-10 students majoring in tmin consent of property owners whose physical education presented a skit, h: lies beta ea t city and the, representing their training. u.v1'iVisions. Reservations for the Hillel Founda- tion Annual Installation and Awards Supper to be held at 5:30 p. m. EWT (4:30 p. m. CWT) Sunday at the Foundation may be made by calling the Foundation--2-6585. Hillel Members To Be Honored The supper is held to honor Hillel Fraternity ,Plants Announced... (Continued from Page 1) same conditions prevail the year following, it will lose its right tos initiate new members. All undergraduate officers of the fraternity must satisfy University eli- gibility qualifications to hold their offices. The Conference report recommends that active houses "should place less' emphasis on limited house bills. Suf- ficient charges for board, room, dues and extras to take care of house- owning corporation requirementsE should be made in order to maintain the individual chapter in the ac- customed way so that all expenses can be met. Fraternities should be encouraged to maintain their ownj individuality which may mean dif- ferent degrees of service with result- ant varying cost." The group urges that as many houses as possible engage a house-j mother, or at least some responsi- ble person to supervise the work of the paid employes, although the con- members and citizens of various Michigan communities. Presentaticn of 'service and memorial awards, in- stallation of the newly elected Hillel student council officers and members and a program of entertainment comprise the agenda for the evening. Hillel Honor Keys will be pres- ented to two Hillel members for un- usual service to the Foundation, and announcement of those person: whose names are to be engraved on the Hillel Cabinet Plaque and the Hillel Service Plaque will be made. The former plaque contains names of graduating seniors, while the latter honors citizens of Michigan com- munities. Awards To Be Revealed Winners of the scholarship awards will be revealed at this time. The Arnold Schiff Hillel Memorial Prize will be presented to the person who has made the most outstanding con- tribution to the Hillel cultural pro- gram, and the Milford Stein Forensic Prize will be given for excellence in public speaking. The Arnold Schiff Inter-Faith Memorial Scholarship is an award of- fered, without consideration of race or creed, to the student who has con- tributed the most toward improving inter-faith good will ideals on cam- pus. The winner of this award is chosen by a committee of three fac- ulty members representing the Pro- testant, Catholic and Jewish faiths. Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen, director of the Foundation, will serve as toast- master and will deliver the principle address. iederal Payments Fail To Cover School Costs LANSING, May 29.-t)-Signing legislative bills providing $2,600,349 more for educational institutions, Governor Kelly said today the state is putting up $1,500,000 to educate an estimated 5,000 discharged service-. men next year. The governor said $2,500,000 would be needed to educate that group, but that the federal G.I. Bill would pro- vide about $1,000,000 toward the cost in Michigan. Defends Administration He sought to defend his adminis- tration against complaints the state was paying for veterans education which should be borne by the federal government. The governor reported that it is costing Michigan $700 a year to edu- cate each of approximately 500 vet- erans now attending the University of Michigan, although the University can recover only $200 per student from individual tuition or from the federal government. A similar pat- tern can be found at the Michigan State College, the governor added. Boosts 'U' Appropriation The governor signed a bill boosting the University of Michigan appro- priation from $4,804,000 to $5,867,- 451, with $1,000,000 of the increase earmarked for veterans education, He approved a bill increasing the Michigan State College appropria- tion from $2,950,000 to $3,986,898, of which $500,000 was for veterans edu- cation. He signed a bill providing $500,000 to pay Wayne University and the junior colleges of the state $250 per year for every veteran enrolling. The governor said he was informed that the $250 grants, plus contribu- tions under the G. I. bill, would pay for the cost of educating veterans at Wayne University and the junior col- leges. Dr. Eliot Will Preach on Faith Unitarian President Will Be Heard Sunday Dr. Frederick May Eliot, President of the American Unitarian Associa- tion, will preach on "The Faith and Fire Within Us" at 11 a.m. EWT Sunday in the First Unitarian Chu- rch. Prior to his election as Unitarian president, Dr. Eliot was minister of the Unity Church, St. Paul, Minn. where he was active in civic and social organizations. Graduating from Harvard in 1911, Dr. Eliot left for Europe where he studied the administration and government of European cities. Retuning to the United States Dr. Eliot taught muni- cipal government at Harvard for a year. He holds the honorary degrees of Doctor of Divinity from Carleton' College and Meadville Theological School and that of Doctor of Laws from the University of Minnesota. Dr. Eliot served as First Lieutenant in the United States Army Chaplain Corps at Tours, France in 1917 for nine months. Dr. Eliot now is Chairman of the Board of Trustees at Mount Holyoke College and president of the Board of Trustees of Hackley School, Tar rytown-on-the-Hudson, N.Y. Musical background for the ballet, acrobatic and tap dances at the Evening of Ballet" performances at 8 p.m. EWT ( 7 p.m. CWT) Friday and Saturday at the city high school auditorium will be furnished by the Ann Arbor Civic Orchestra. Vroman Will Direct Clyde Vroman, University instruc- tor in music education, will direct the orchestra which is reduced to 40 players for this occasion. Besides furnishing the musical introduction and accompaniment for the 36 stage dance acts, they will play overture and entr'act selections.- The opening number will be selec- tions from Victor Herbert's "The For- tune Teller". Following intermission, "Mignonette" from Hadley's ballet suite, "The Flowers" will be played. Compositions of Chopin, Strauss, Tschaikowsky, and others will also be featured in the production. Sponsored by Slauson School This will be the eighth annual pro- gram in which the Civic Orchestra and the Sylvia Studio of Dance have collaborated with resulting popular appeal. It is sponsored by the Slau- son School Parent-Teacher Associa- tion as a community project demon- strating the abilities of youth in dance and to give support to some school needs. Tickets may be obtained this week at the lobby desk in the city high school. General admission tickets will be good for balcony seats on Friday and Saturday nights and for International Song Night To Be Held Sunday An International Song Night will be held at 7:30 p.m. EWT (6:30 p.m. CWT) Sunday in the International Center. Organizations contributing will be the Hindustan Association with In- dian songs, the Turkish Club, the Chinese Club, the Latin American Society, the Philippine - Michigan Club, and the Russian Club. Final program of the year, the evening is traditionally a musical. Foreign students themselves will supply the entertainment, and the public is invited. Church Group Elects officers Ray Buntaine, Grad., was elected President of the Canterbury' Club of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, at the student group's weekly meeting Sunday. Ann B. Davis was elected vice- president; Eva Glasius, secretary; Dick Mock, chairman of the worship committee; Carolyn Manchester, chairman of the social committee; and Martha Peet, chairman of the program committee. A picture of the campus as it was "way back when" was published on the feature page of Sunday's Daily, but it seems we were a little mistaken as to what was concerned. Two letters and a telephone call have explained that our crystal ball was cloudy and that the scene de- picted is portrayed from the point of view of the stores on State St. and NOT the League as we so glibly reported. the main floor at the 2:30 p.m. mat- inee Saturday. Reserved seats can be obtained for the evening perfor- mances. Madonna Scene To Open Program A Christmas Fantasy will open the program with a Madonna scene and then dancers appearing as Christ- mas tree ornaments and other holi- day decorations. The Dance Studio's "babies", three to five year'olds, will be seen in some of these numbers, Other acts will be "Broadway In- dian" Pas de Quatre from "Swan Lake", "Acrobatic Ballet", "Ballet Mazurka", and "Me and My Gal". The last presentation will be "Les Sylphides", a ballet designed for sev- eral of Chopin's waltzes nd noc- turnes. "Grand Valse Brillante" with the entire corps de ballet will con- clude the prograrh. Knudsen Will Retire Friday Leaves Army Position; Future Is Undecided WASHINGTON, May 29-A)-- After five years of riding herd on U. S. War Production, Lt. Gen. Wil- liam S. Knudsen will retire Friday as War Department director of pro- duction. Twice decorated for his work with the air forces, the 66-year-old expert is expected to rest a few weeks in Detroit, the War Department said today. Knudsen's future plans were not announced. General Motors Corpor- ation, of which he was president un- til he entered the government ser- vice as a dollar-a-year man, wants to give him an important post, but Knudsen was reported undecided, SDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) evening, May 31, in Rm. 4203 Angell Hall. The platform acting and nar- rative-recital method will be used. Persons interested are cordially in- vited to this program. The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert will be held in the Ladies Lounge of the Rackham Buil- ding at 6:30 p.m. Act I of The Magic Flute by Mozart will be featured. All graduate students are cordially in- vited to attend. The University of Michigan Wom- en's Glee Club, assisted by the Navy Choir, will be heard at 7:00 p.m. (CWT), Thursday, May 31, in Hill Auditorium. The first half of the program will consist of songs by the Glee Club, while the balance will be an informal arrangement of popular songs and light opera selections. The general public is invited. Geological Jounlal Club will meet in Rm. 4056 N.S. Bldg. at 11:30 CWT on Friday, June 1. Professor E. H. Kraus will speak on "Some Influen- tial European Mineralogists". All in- terested are cordially invited to at- tend. Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Friday, June 1, at 4:30 p.m., in Rm. 319 West Medical Building. "Alloxan" will be discussed. All in- terested are invited. IL mittee realizes the difficulties of se- Radio Skit on Program. curing adequate. personnel and ac- A radio skit directed by Ethel commodations. Isenberg, and vocal selections rend- Throughout the report the frater- ered by A/S Eugene Malitz will high- nities are urged to use University light the entertainment. facilities for counseling, and to avail Members of both the faculty and themselves of the service of their the University administration, and own educational, social and financial recipients of the awards will be the advisers. 1 gests of honor. "The University greatly appreciates the work of the fraternity alumni in Reservations must be made by ri- counseling with the University fra- day. ternity alumni in connection with, postwar plans for the fraternities," JPI Head Predicts Dean Joseph Bursley declared yester- day. "It indicates a real desire on Increased Job Losses the part of the fraternity alumni to co-operate with the University in WASHINGTON. May 29.- (iP)- building up the fraternities as an in-f tegral part of the campus," he said. WPB Chairman J. A. Krug predicted The full report of the Conference today that unemployment will climb is on file at The Daily and in the from the present 800,000 level to a Office of the Dean of Students. It total of 1,900,000 persons three may be studied by any persons inter- months from now, then drop to 1,.- ested in more of the details of its 300,000 as reconversion gets under contents. way. AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG ' 9- (EDITOR'S NOTE: Contributions to this in the Air Supply Division of the1 column should be addressed to the Mili- AAF Service Command in Italy prior1 tary Editor, Michigan Daily, 420 May- to V-E Day. nard Street.) Overseas since August, 1943, Sgt- Lieutenant (j.g.) JAMES A. OLIV- Purdum wears the Good Conduct ER, a graduate of the University, wit- ribbon, the European-African-Mid-I iessed an historic scene shortly after die East campaign ribbon with one he Yalta conference. campaign participation star, and He was communications officer three overseas stripes. of the Atlantic destroyer which * * * journeyed to the Red Sea port of First Lieutenant ELWOOD J. I Jidda where King Abdul Aziz Saud, HUNEMORDER, another former supreme ruler of Saudi Arabia, University student, has been over- boarded the vessel with his party. seas since February, 1943, serving as They then proceeded to the -confer- operations and flight control officer ence at Bitter Lake, Egypt, with the at Abadan Air Base in Iran. His late President Roosevelt. post V-E Day assignment has not yet. I Lt. Oliver is a zoologist in civilian been made known. life. * * * * * Seaman First Class PAUL PLIER Lieutenant ORA E. SIEVERS has PENLAND has arrived at the 'ompleted eight months of duty with Naval Training Station, Norfolk, he "Flying Tigers" fighter group of Va., to undergo training for duties Viaj. Gen. C. L. Chennault's Four- aboard a destroyer of the Atlantic eenth Air Force in China as a fighter fleet. ilot. Before enlisting in the Navy, Pen- ? A former student of the Univer- land was a student at the University. sity, Lt. Sievers *is a member of Zeta Beta Tau fraternity. Recently commissioned a second lieutenant on completion of trainingI The grade of Master Sergeant re- at the AAF Officer Candidate schoolI ently was awarded to CLAIRE E. at San Antonio was ELMORE V. 'URDUM, a former student who sup- KINNARD, who received his M. A.I rvised power and ground equipment degree here in 1942.( 0 r s WED., MAY 30 E.W.T. 7:00-News 7:05-Morning Round-Up 7:25-News 7:30-Musical Reveille 8:00-News. 8:15--1050 Club. 8:30-Breakfast Melodies. 8:45-Bouquet for Today. 8:55-Musical Interlude. 9:00-News. 9:05-Goodyear's Music Box 9:30-Community Calendar 9:45-Music for Millions. 10:00-News. 10:05-Music for Remem- brance. 10:15-What Do You Know. 10:30-Broadway Melodies. 10:40-Women Today. 10:45-Waltz Time. 11:00-News. 11:05-Popular vocalist. 11:15-Parson's Grist Mill. 11:30-Farm & Home Hour. 12:00-News. 12:15-Milt Herth. 12 :30--Trading Post. 12:45-Luncheon Melodies. 1:00-News. 1:05-Hollywood Reporter. 1:15-vocally Yours. 1:30-Lawrence Welk. 1:45-Ellen Mitchell-Al. & Lee Reiser. 2:00-News. 2:05-Bob Chester. 2:15-Johnny Green. 2:45--Round Towners. 3:00-News. 3:05-Jesse Crawford. 3:15-Glenn Gray. 3:30-Band Music. 3:45-Merle Pitt. 4:00-News. 4:05-Gordon Quintet. 4:15-Baseball Brev. 4:25-Baseball (Det, at Clev. ) 6:00-News. 6:15-Albert Wallace. 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-Evening Serenade. 8:00-News. 8:05-Seventh War Loan. 8:10-Piano Interlude. 8:15-Put & Take It. 8:30--Concert Hall. Wool Suits Sizes 7 to 20. Pastels, Checks, Twills, Gabardines. Formerly 29.95 to 35.00. *Dresses Sizes 7 to 40. Flannels, Crepes, Rayons, Jerseys, Gabardines. Formerly 13.95 to 49.95. *LoungingPams Sizes 14 to 18. Formerly 17.95 to 21.95. I 112 Price I 719 M004 BUY WAR BONDS I TYPEWRITERS Office-,a ,dPorable Modls / V'k W Tll IM 19M r rinrin7, im rv r% -a y n " -.r Y or m r% n 1111 i I II I