PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, -1IAHCH 28, 194x, PAGE TWO TIWRSDAY,'~MARCH 28, 1948'~ Campus Highlights White To Sing ... Andrew B. White, baritone, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m. Wed- nesday in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. Mr. White has recently joined the School of Music faculty after four years of service with the Army in Europe. His program for Wednes- day wil include compositions by Lot- ti, Durante, Scarlatti, Torelli, Delius, Franck, Wagner, and Rossini and will close with a group of English songs. Conversation Group,... The weekly conversation group of La Socledad Ilspanica will meet at 4 p.m. today in the League Cafe- teria. All students interested in Spanish are invited to attend. French Movie .. . "Pearls of the Crown," French mo- tion picture presented by the Art Cinema League, will be shown at 8:30 p.m. today through Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The story of the four pearls of the British crown from the 13th century up to the present time is depicted in the film, which stars Sasha Guitry. Voice Recital... Lorna Storgaard, mezzo-soprano, assisted by Ruby Joan Kuhlman, pianist, will appear in recital at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. Miss Storgaard has held solo positions in churches in Detroit, Ypsilanti, and the First Baptist Church in Ann Arbor. She is a member of Sigma Alpha Iota, na- tional music honorary, the Univer- Reuther... (Continued from Page 1) without raising prices. He contended "huge profits" made price increases unnecessary. He was asked if he would maintain his position on the much discussed "ability to pay" issue. Labor elements had questioned his wisdom in press- ing the point in the General Motors negotiations. Reuther gave no detailed reply but remarked, as he has done before, that abliity to pay "is not the only deter- mining factor-only one of them" in a wage dispute. . Reuther also indicated he would seek a stronger discipline within the union. A fist fight enlivened today's balloting. Strengthen Staff Reuther said he planned to strengthen the UAW staff. He said there would be "no purging.' He said he had not decided whether to retain his position as director of the Gen- eral Motors department. The UAW-CIO's newly-elected leader, who took office immediately and will preside during the rest of the convention, said that as long as he was president the auto union would be a "source of strength for Philip Murray and the CIO." In the bitter pre-election fight the young leader of the General Motors strike was attacked for his "attitude" toward Murray. On one occasion Thomas said Reuther was "really running" for the CIO presidency. Will Support Murray "I want to take my place by the side of Philip Murray," Reuther said to- day, "and carry part of the burden he has had to carry as president of the CIO." Reuther also pledged his coopera- tion to UAW secretary-treasurer George F. Addes, who supported Thomas in the union's political bat- tle. "I extend my hand to him and to- gether we can unite this union again," Reuther said. I Twice this afternoon, in the course of the hours-long roll call, melees broke out. Cooler heads separated the com- batants. No one was reported in- jured. sity Choral Union and is a pupil of Hardin Van Deursen. Miss Storgaard's recital will be presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Spanish Society** La Sociedad Hispanica will hold a social evening at 8 p.m. today in Rm. 305 Michigan Union, Burton Gavitt, president, announcec yesterday. Augusto Malavet of Colombia will highlight the evening by playing part of his own collection of South Ameri- can records. He will also illustrate popular South American dance steps such as the tango, rhumba and sam- ba. The singing of South American songs accompanied by the guitar of Dr. Olmedo of Paraguay will follow. Square Dance . . A square dance session, with Scott Colburn acting as caller and instructor wil be held at 7:30 p.m. today at Lane Hall under the spon- sorship of the American Youth Hostels, Inc. Previous square daning experi- ence is not necessary as Mr. Col- burn demonstrates several of the figures for beginners. A small ad- mission fee is charged and refresh- ments will be served. In addition to sponsoring folk dances, the hostel group, a non- sectarian, non-profit. community organization, is planning several overnight week-end bicycle trips to farms near Ann Arbor. A trip schedule will be announced short- .y.. Pi Lambda Theta . . A business meeting and panel dis- cussion by South American students on "Education in South American Countries" will be held by Pi Lamb- da Theta, National Educational Fra- ternity, at 7:45 p.m. today in the Rackham West Conference Hall. Candidates for State Primary Race Increase By The Associated Press LANSING, March 27--With four Republican candidates committed to the race for governor and at least four other possibilities the GOP has prospects of its largest primary fight in 14 years. The developments which raised that prospect were the promise of Raymond J. Kelly, former national commander of the American Legion, that he was in the gubernatorial contest for keeps and an attempt to draft Herbert J. Rushton, of Esca- naba, former attorney general, for the campaign. Four Certainties The four asserted certainties in the contest are Lt. Gov. Vernon J. Brown; Kim Sigler, former special prosecu- tor of the Ingham County Grand Jury; Mayor Edward J. Jeffries, of Detroit, and Kelly. Politicians here who know Rushton well declare they doubt he will yield to the draft move, but they think he might be agreeable to keeping some other candidates on tenderhooks for a while. Rushton has declined to say definitely to newsmen that he won't run.. An entry by Rushton would give the GOP its biggest gubernatorial contest in the primary since 1932 when there were five candidates also. Record Hunters A campaign by a sixth candidate would send the record hunters back to 1924 when Alex J. Groesbeck was first in a field of seven in his last suc- cessful campaign for governor. Others mentioned for the contest include Sen. George Girrbach, of Sault Ste. Marie; Orrin A. De Mass, of Detroit, former chairman of the State 'Liquor Control Commission, and Louis C. Miriani, of Detroit, member of the State Welfare Com- mission. Foreign Policy To Be Debated 'U' Squad, Albion Will Discuss Free Trade Audience participation will fea- ture a parliamentary debate on the question of directing U.S. foreign policy toward the establishment of free trade among nations at 4 p.m. today in the Union. Howard Cole and Archie Carmich- ael, of the University Debate Squad, will argue the affirmative against students of Albion College. A bill for fostering free trade will be introduced and explained, follow- ed by the affirmative and negative speeches, rejoinders and amendments. The audience will be asked to add general amendments, and a final vote will be taken. The bill which will be introduced calls for a tariff policy embodying the principles of the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, outlawing of cartels and financial and technical assist- ance to non-industrialized countries. Speech Ability Aids Success Banker Emphasizes Progress in Business "Public speaking ability is a suc- cessful businessman's indispensable asset," Leroy Lewis, educational di- rector of the American Institute of Banking, told the speech assembly yesterday. Lewis used the replies of twenty corporation presidents as authority in answering two questions: "Do you consider public speaking important in business?' and "Has anyone in your organization progressed because of his speaking ability?" The presidents of these organiza- tions emphasized six points: five deal- ing with the value of speech training and the sixth a warning to all people with speaking ability. Every corporation president was able to cite an example of one man who progressed rapidly in his or- ganization because of his speaking ability. outstanding CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SHE (ARRIES ON: Wife of Iprsotle(L Premier Champions Indonesia fit6 u CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional five words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional five words.) Contract Rates on Request FOR SALE FOR SALE: Encyclopedia Britan- nica, 13th Edition, in excellent condition. Priced at $50.00. Phone 24553. PORTABLE electric phonograph. In leatherette luggage case. $40.00. Call Clark Marlor, 6741. TWO MEN'S SUITS size 40 excellent condition. Call 5789 before noon or after 6. FOR SALE: 5 Arrow Shirts, size 15- 33, excellent condition $1.75 each. No. 68 Vets. Housing Project, 5th and Hill, any evening. BLACK DINNER DRESS and jacket size 12. Size 512 shoes. Size 38 white flannel trousers. Size 40 Til- den tennis sweater. Two tennis racquets. One badminton set. All for sale. Call 22761. HELP WANTED COOK WANTED. Private boys camp, northern Michigan, June 23-Aug. 24. Phone 7265. WANTED WANTED: Secretarial position by wife of student. Mornings 8-12. 5 years experience. References. Call 2-3241, 9-5 p.m. MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib- erty. We have rebuilt used bikes for sale. Your bike can be expertly repaired also. WANTED: Veteran and wife to live in private home in Ypsilanti. Care of two children and assist with' housework for complete board and room. Ph. 1241-J, Ypsi., after 5:30 p.m. FOR RENT LIVING QUARTERS and meals in pleasant, modern country home two miles from campus available atI once to student and wife in ex- change for housework and cooking. Mrs. G. L. Buhrman, Ann Arbor, 8928. ROOM AND BOARD MEALS: For girls. Splendid home cooked meals at League House, 604 E. Madison. Phone 4489. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Will the person who picked up white sweater and windbreaker in Room 122 Chem Bldg. please return same to Chem Office, Room 212 Chem Bldg. LOST - Silver Air Corps Identifi- cation bracelet bearing name of E. K. Dodman. Please call "Janet," 6922. BIKE - Red, black fenders, taken from West Engineering Monday noon. License 772. Reward for information leading to recovery. Phone Carl.Zwinck, 9676. LOST: Plain brown felt purse con- taining Shaeffer pen and keys. Call Janet Ingling, 453 Jordan. Reward. KEY LOST: Corner State and North University, tied with blue ribbon. Call 2-2331. $5.00 REWARD-Shaeffer Lifetime maroon striped. Lost about 3 weeks. Probably in West Quad. Henry Lukasi, 101 Chicago House, West Quad. LOST: Rhinestone ear-clip Saturday night in vicinity of campus. If found, phone 9823, ask for Marilee. Reward. WANTED TO RENT EXCHANGE TENANCIES: House in Detroit for rent of house or apart- ment in Ann Arbor, or Ypsilanti. Want two bedrooms or more, Sep- tember 1st, but will exchange earl- ier. Our Detroit property has se- ven rooms, three bedrooms, two car garage. Write I. J. Turnbull, 2511 Fischer Ave., Detroit 14. MISCELLANEOUS TYPEWRITERS bought, sold, rented, repaired. Work guaranteed. Two) days service. Office Equipmenti Co., 111 4th Ave. Phone 2-1213. DANCE BAND: Vocalist with ex- perience needed for engagements in April and May. Other openings. Call Leland Stewart, 303 Wenley, 2-4401. CAMPUS ORCHESTRA has open dates. Five pieces, student-veter- ans. Phone Ed Morhous, Ypsilanti 1220-W. SAND, gravel, cement gravel, fill dirt or any other kind of trucking. Phone 257435. ByT he Associated Press HAARLEM, Netherlands, March 27 -The exiled Dutch wife of Sutan Sj ahrir. premier of the unrecognized Indonesian Republic, believes that at least 1,000,000 Indonesians are pre- pared to take up arms to achieve full independence from the Netherlands. Bitter toward the government which she says imprisoned her hus- band in 1934 and banished her to S4 chola rshis Are Offperedfor Study Abroad Five scholarships for a. year's study at Oxfogd or Cambridge in England are now available to American stu- dents, officials of the Charles and Julia Henry Scholarship Fund have announced. Candidates for the scholarships, established by the will of the late Julia Henry, must be unmarried American citizens, men or women. Preference wil be given to applicants who have received the bachelor's de- gree since June, 1941, and to those now in their last year of undergrad- uate work who expect to receive the bachelor's degree by July 1, 1946. Application forms and further in- formation will be furnished by the secretary of Yale University, New Haven, Conn. Deadline for applica- tions is April 15. Stiulents Will See Dow Plant More than 100 students in the chemistry and chemical engineering departments will take an all-day plant trip tomorrow to the Dow Chemical Company in Midland. The purpose of the trip, which is sponsored by the Student Chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, is to give the students aii idea of plant methods and organiza- tion as well as information on the technical processes and equipment employed in manufacture. Fro-lit [SO 11out' On short leave from the world- girdling USO Camp Show production "Three Men on a Horse," Truman Smith, A.B. '35 and A.M. '38, is visit- ing his mother, Mrs. Anna C. Smith. 1004 S. Forest. Playing the leading role of "Ir- win." Smith toured Luzon, Leyte, Samar, Cebu and several cities in Japan.4 While at the University Smith was elected to Phi BetaaKappa, Phi Kappa ~Phi, Phi Eta Sigma and Mimes. her native Holland. the itall, blonde housewife is confident of the eventual success of her premier-husband, from whom she has bee separated since her deportation from Java. Foresees Fighting "Indonesia must he independent ,", she said. "Then there will be peace. If that is not granted, then I fear there will be fighting." Mrs. Sjahrir was at the piano in her modest home in an outer suburb of Haarlem, play- ing Mozart. At first she was suspi- cious, but gradually lost her nervous flush. When she spoke of her Itus- band, it was in glowing terms. As youthful Mies Duchait c uiof Amsterdam, she mlet Siahri' when both were students at Leiden Uiver- sity. They were married in 1932 in a Mohammedan ceremony and she ac- companied him to Java when he re- turned to lead the Indonesian inde- pendence movement. Two years later, she said, her hus- band was arrested and sent to a po- litical detention camp at Dighol- -"a horror camp," she called it-and she was deported to the Netherlands with their two children, a boy and a girl. Worked With Resistance "I was treated as a pariah by my friends, and even one of my rela- tives," she said. "I was deprived of everything. I started working as a secretary. During the war I worked with the Dutch Resistance. For a long time the Germans did not know vho I was. It was fortunate. Other- wise I would have been laden with their privileges." She said that Dutch authorities had destroyed her Mohammedan mar- riage papers. "However," she contin- ued, "they allowed me to marry by proxy to conform with Netherlands law." Negotiations Failed In 1942, she said, when the Japa- nese invaded the Netherlands East Indies, Dutch authorities sought to reach agreement with Sjahrir and other leaders, but negotiations failed when the Indonesians insisted on abolition of the Dighol detention camp. WOMAN DIES IN CROSSING CRASH - Officials prepare to remove the body of Mrs. Elva F. the scene of the crossing accident near Westbrook, M-., th t caused her death. Ic"r car freight train and completely demolished. She was the snie occupant of the car. Marilyni Mason TO' CGive Organ Recital Today Marilyn Ma, n. organist, will ap- pear in a recital at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Hill Auditorium. Miss Mason is a native of Okla- Noma and received her earlier train- ing at Stillwater and at Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kansas. The recital, to be presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, will include compositions by Bach, Reger, DeLamarter and Sowerby. Miss Ma- son is at present studying under Pal- iner Christian. She is a member of Senior Society, Sigma Alpha Iota (professional music society) and chairman of the music committee of S.R.A. Tonight's program is the first in a series of five organ concerts by present and former students of Prof. Christian as follows: Adrienne Mor- Pof. Lobanov Wil Spewak on *V T Speaking under the auspices of the League of Women Voters, Prof. An- drew Lobanov-Rostovsky of the his- tory department will lecture on the topic "The International Situation As Seen by Russia" at 4:15 p.m. to- day in Rackham Amphitheatre. The speaker will be introduced by Prof. William B. Willcox, also of the history department, who will preside at the discussion to follow the lecture. Mrs. Samuel P. Dana, president of the League of Women Voter's Ann Arbor chapter, will open the meet- ing. The lecture is open to the public. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Rented Repaired STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S, Stale St. Phone 7177 Bancroft from was hit by a presents4 "PEARLS OF THE CROWN"4 SASHA GUITRY Fr 'nch Dialogue English Sub-titles Internat ionally Famous French Historical Production Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, 8:30 P.M. Admission 42c (Tax included) Telephone 6300 All Seats Reserved AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG wl _ _ __.._. ._ 1 - ,i Try our Classifieds THURS., MARCH 28 7:00-News 7:30--Sleepyhead Serenade 8:00-News 8:15-Wake Up and Live 8:25-Morning Novelties 8:30-Musical Reveille 8:55-News 9:00-Music Box 9:30-Popular Music 9:40--News 9:45-Moments of Melodies 10:00-News 10:05-Hawaiian Moods 10:15-Quiz 10:30--Broadway Melodies 10:40-Community Calendar 10-:45-Waltz Time 11:00-News 11:05-Three Suns 11:15-Lean Back & Listen 11:30-Verse With Music 11:45-Across the Footlights 11:55-Hit Tunes 12:00-News 12:15-Jesse Crawford 12:20-Spike Jones 12:30-Farm and Home fHour 12:45-Man on the Street 1:00-News 1:05-Salon Music 1:10-Victorious Living 1:15-Ray Bloch Presents 1:25..Flashes From Life 1:30-Tin Pan Alley Goes To Town 1:45-World of Song - ---mpp- 2:00--News 2:05-Melody on Parade 3:00-News 3:05-Fred Felbel 3:15--University of Mich. 3:30-Latin American Music 3:40--It Actually Happened 3:45-Trade Winds 'Tavern 4:00--Campus Ballroom 5:00-News 5:05-Rainbow Trio 5:10-Jack Smith Presents 5:15-Mystery Melodies 5:30--Little Show 5:45-Salon Music 6:00-News 6:15-Along the Sports Sidelines 6:30-Quiz 0 Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. .krerF,.,,5, srAiFrA- Weekdays 30c to 5 P.M. ax -STARTS TODAY- - REASONABLE RATES I 11 11 SAVE BY MONTHLY CONTRACTS 1-15 WORDS per month for only $7.80 per month or 1-15 WORDS every day for only $4.30 per month 4' \ .a r _ .-.si /J Your Eye Q. (quality) will swing upward when you try CONTACT LENS I Ti s l ove of Oulrs Y~1iO[~ iVL~I~ NON-CONTRACT: ..- a i 0 Oik im m f. . I ,A i I I I I 1'"W AmR%,- - I