PAGE FOURI TH IE MtCIICRAN N f LY ........ _ ___ _ Student Talent Needed In Shows at Percy Jones A new committee is being formed to Tryouts will be held from 4 to 6 provide entertainment for the wound- p.m. tomorrow in the Grand Rapids ed soldiers in Percy Jones Hospital. Room of the League for those stu- The Entertainment Committee dents who would like to help in en- which is a part of the Camp and Hos- tertaining servicemen. Mrs. Leona pital Committee and functions in co- P. Diekema, social director of Mar- operation with the Red Cross, urgent- tha Cook Dormitory and Chairman ly needs both men and women sing- of the Committee will be in charge ers, either solo or group, instrumen- of the auditions. talists, classical and popular pianists, The last engagement at the hospi- magicians, tap dancers, whistlers, and tal was March 21, and another group any type of specialty acts- is going Friday. The Red Cross pro- vides transportation facilities. Stu- dents are usually called on only once Deah ne Set to go to the hospital. They will be ex- cused from their classes as the trips o A e lare usually in the morning. The performances, which last two 1"hours in the wards, are very informal Board PetitR oos and there is no set program. The Camp and Hospital Commit- tee, along with the Red Cross has Positions Are Open To helped to aid the wounded by don- Unaffiliated $eniors ating money for wheel chairs and reading projectors. Martha Cook Petitioning for 1946-47 Assembly building and Soph Cabaret have al- Board positions will continue until so donated to the project. noon Saturday at which time all Mrs. Diekema said, "We hope there petitions are to be placed in the box wil be a large turnout of both men provided in the Undergraduate Of- and women at the audition as the fice of the League, according to Helen work is very worthwhile, and during Alpert, Assembly president. past engagements we have felt that The positions open to all unaffili- we were the gainers." ated women who will have senior- standing next year are those of pres- ident of Assembly, vice-president ofScout dv se dormitories, vice-president of league ,A houses, secretary-treasurer and per- +, sonnel chairman. The positions of I personnel chairman and secretary- treasurer are also open to indepen- Applicants dent coeds who will have junior standing next fall. Seniors petitioning must have had Applicants for permanent positions at least one year's experience in with the Girl Scouts Organization League activities. All petitioners will be interviewed today and to- should have a good scholastic stand- morrow by Miss Monna Heath, na- shgorigld e a gsa coperative spirit tional Girl Scout field adviser, in the ng, original ideasacoe ie Office of the Bureau of Appoint- and an interest in Assembly. Candi- Ofc fteBra fApit dates for all of Assembly offices are ments. advised to consult the President's Miss Heath, affiliated with the or- Report in the League Library and ganization since she was ten years Social Director's Office for sugges- old, graduated from the university tions and ideas. The duties of each in 1944 with a degree of achelor of position will be posted in the Assem- Arts in social work. She served as blypOffoie osDon the Atsim-an assistant Girl Scout troop leader bly Office, Room D, on the third in Ann Arbor and then as counselor Inthe egwille heldat Camp Metamora in Detroit. Now Interviewing will be held during acting as a traveling secretary for the week of April 8 and all candi- recruitments in Michigan, she will dates must sign up for an interview- interview girls with scouting back- ing time in the Assembly Office. grounds, who will be recommended to any position for which they ex- press a preference, anywhere in the country. Urging those who are interested Petitions Are in the Girl Scout Organization to contact the Bureau of Appointments for an appointment, Miss Mildred D ue Saturday Webber, assistant to the director in general placement, said that because Petitions for Junior Girls Play of a lack of trained girls and a great central committee, three junior posts increase in the number of chapters on Judiciary Council, and four junior throughout the country, there are League positions will be due at noon many positions now open. Saturday in the petition box of the- Undergraduate Office of the League. M b f U Ruthann Bales, chairman of Judic- M embers, J iary Council, urged all women who will be of junior standing next fallS to petition for these positions. Every coed petitioning must bring her eligi- bility card to the interview. D etroit I Ve tin Petitioners should sign for an in- terview when they turn in their Four University staff members will petitions. Information concerning the participate in the Michigan Audio- duties of the various posts will be Visual Conference, which willrbe held given at a meeting at 4 p.m. tomor- Thursday, Friday and Saturday at row in the League ballroom. Past the Rackham Educational Memorial presidents' reports may also be con- in Detroit. sulted for this information. The conference, which will be at- Each petition should include in full tended by educators from schools the candidate's original ideas for the throughout the state, is an indirect position which she desires. If a coed result of the trip taken by Michigan is petitioning for more than one schoolmen last summer to visit mili- office, she should include plans for tary training centers and examine GI all and list them in order of her teaching methods. After this trip, preference. a State Audio-Visual Aids Committee was organized to study state needs and stimulate interest in this field Yout (,Cii ouAJntci, of education. Mr. Ford Lemler, director of the To M eet Toda University Extension Service Bureau of Visual Education and member of the State Audio-Visual Aids Commit- Detroit Police Adviser tee, will preside at the Saturday af- To Be Guest Speaker ternoon question-and-answer session. At the closed pre-conference meet- Choosing "Out of School Teen- ing of visual education directors, Dr. Agers ..- Community Adjustment" as Stuart A. Courtis, professor emeritus the topic for its discussion, the Wash- of education, will speak on school tenaw Youth Guidance Council will use of commercially sponsored teach- hold its quarterly meeting today in mg aids. F. Dean McCluskey, visiting the Perry School Auditorium. lecturer in education, will direct the Highlighting the day's discussion sectional meeting on "Organizing the as guest speaker will be Dr. Howard School's Audio-Visual Program," Fri- Lane, a former professor of psychol- day morning and afternoon. At the ogy at Northwestern University, cur- Saturday morning session, Prof. Mar- rently associated with the Detroit shall A. Byrn, of the School of Edu- Police Department as Advisor on cation, will speak on "Doing the Job Youth Problems. He is also now on with Visual Materials a Demon- the staff of the psychology depart- stration. ment of Wayne University. Judge Jay Payne of the Municipal TliE MOST R0W0CED Court, Ann Arbor, will preside at the meeting. A panel of six resource WATCHO0NT i assistants has been created to lead E discussions of the assembly. Gov. Kelly Declares Public Nurse Week LANSING, April 1-(MP-Governor Kelly today proclaimed the week of April 7 to 13 as Public Health Nurse Week in Michigan, declaring that "the public health nurses in Michigan r are of great significance to the con- tinued progress toward the goal of higher health standards." Wortd's Farrar P'ZF _29 fc~le.:iA !#4:';A r 1 i i t a ' JAILED NAZI-Arthur Azmann, former leader of the Hitler youth movement, is shown at an undis- closed town in the American zone of occupation in Germany after his arrest by counter intelligence men. U. S. Officers lnt ItNa Is Claim Sunda y'sRaid Broke Underground FRANKFURT, April 1-P)-Unit- ed States intelligence officers are still pressing a manhunt for remains of the powerful Nazi underground movement smashed in Sunday's spec- tacular mass raids, Allies in occupied Germany disclosed today. While Sunday's raids broke the back of the most sinister Nazi group yet to reappear, intelligence officers indicated this was only the begin- ning. "Operation Nursery," meanwhile, continued. Counter-espionage agents working night and day hunted for remnants of the group headed by 32-year-old, one-armed Arthur Ax- mann, one-time leader of the Hitler Jugend (Youth Movement). Heymans Will Lecture Here "Regulation of Blood Pressure- Theoretical and Practical Aspects" will be discussed by Dr. Corneille Hey- mans of the University of Ghent in Belgium, at 4:15 tomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheater. Dr. Heymans, who was a guest of the American Physiological Society' at its recent meeting in Atlantic City, won the Nobel Prize in 1939 for his discovery of peripheral chem- ical regulation of breathing. Hiiolili hts On Campus Speech Society'. "Wranglers' Rendeveous", a smoker- mixer, will feature the regular meet- ing of Sigma Rho Tau, engineering stump speakers society, at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union.I According to Prof. R. D. Brackett,< faculty sponsor of Sigma Rho Tau, a pronunciation contest will probab-t ly be held with a prize offered to theF winner. Icoioiiics Club,, . Students concentrating in eco- nomics who are interested in form- ig an economics club have been1 asked to attend an organization meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. Hindu st an tro+ N . .. The Hindustan Association will in-' augurate India Week with India Night at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Rms. 316-' 20 of the Union. A community sing and social hour will take place in the international Center following the program. All-Nations Club T. S. Eliot, poet, will be the topic of an All-American Club cultural discussion at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the International Center. The club will sponsor a tea dance in the Cen- ter from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday. Polon ia Society.. Polonia Society will meet in the Re- creation Room of the International Center at 7:30 p.m. today. Dancing Classes . . Registration for student danc- ing classes in the League has been announced for the following times: Hostesses from 2 to 5 p.m. today, advanced and intermediate men students at 7 p.m. tomorrow and be- ginning men students at 7 p.m. Thursday. Classes will be held im- mediately after registration. YDA Meet in... All members and other students have been asked to attend the MYDA meeting to be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. At the meeting delegates to the AYD conference to be held Friday, Saturday, and Sunday in Detroit will be elected. Gargoyle ePosts *.* Students planning to sellGargoyles Thursday should come to the office today to check their posts. Organists Will Present Recital At Hill Today Vogan, McCall To Play SoWerby Selections In a program made up entirely of Leo Sowerby compositions, Frieda Op't-Holt Vogan and Mary McCall Stubbins, organists, will present the third in a series of five organ recitals at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Mrs. Vogan is an instructor in or- gan in the School of Music and is director of music of the Presbyterian Church. She earned her Master's degree in music at the University in 1939 under Palmer Christian. Mrs. Stubbins has also received a Master's degree under Prof. Christian and is serving now as organist at the Methodist Church. Mr. Sowerby, who is a prominent American composer and head of the composition department of the Amer- ican Conservatory in Chicago, will be here as guest lecturer on the pro- gram. His symphony in G which Mrs. Vogan is playing has been called the "biggest" work of its kind for the organ. The fourth program in the series will be presented by Kathryn Karch and Francis Hopper at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. Both Miss Karch and Mr. Hopper are studying under Prof. Christian now. Mr. Hopper's part of the program will be made up entirely of his own compositions. Andrew White, Baritone, To Present Recital Andrew B. White, baritone, assist- ed by JohnrL.Wheeler, pianist, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m. to- morrow in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. White came to the School of Music of the University from the Shriven- ham American University in Eng- land, where he was a member of the faculty, concluding five years of service with the army, most of which was spent in-Army intelligence work. His voice training includes two de- grees at the University of Arizona, four and a half years of study with Sidney Dietch of New York City and attendance at leading dramatic schools. White has done extensive radio work. This is to be his first program as a faculty member of the University. Veterans interested in waiting on table for the Schoolmasters Club April 25, 26 and 27 are re- quested to call at the Personnel Office, 209 University Hall at once. -p *' ;, * ccebborie RIDE IN STYLE with one of the CAMPUS SHOP's brand new leather or plastic purs- es. Tailored or dressy, and all in the latest fashions. You'll be sure to want one to complete that new spring outfit. You'll find them in black, brown, or white. o TOGETHER? ou bet this luscious talcum and y perfume do! A special at the UARRY this week, they come In Pleures D'Amour," "Blue Carna- on," and "Night of Delight" frag- nees, and both for only $125. nEON one of the new cloth belts in the )ILLON SHOP. It's what you're, >oking for, cowboy! Take your hoice of braids, solid, or web 'eaves in any or all of the follow- ng colors: chartreuse, aqua, pink, vhite, blue, green, red, and brown. .y n 'e n SOMETHING TO TALK ABOUT and you'll say plenty about th lovely earrings you'll find in EIBLER'S. Designs for every typ of costume and budget. Sterling gold-filled, solid gold, and ever diamond ones, too. Fron $4.00. 1 t .l s t z I i, e s : e f . s , p 4 t "OLD MAN S1" ( won't bother you in one o ,...- MADEMOISELLE SHOP'S cotton blouses - with high lines and eyelet push-up sli they're perfect for starting o spring season. In white only. 10-16. f the new neck- eeves, ff the Sizes THEY USED TO DRESS LIKE THIS- but now they're wearing love hand-crocheted, sleeveless slit overs from the JUNE GREY Sho They come in red, white, and bh color combinations, and are ide for any type of sports. Priced $14.95. TIME TO SAY "YES,. GALS b ' . r F FOR THE KIDDIES with records from the RADIO & RECORD SHOP. Our shelves are well-stocked with children's song and story record albums. They make excellent gifts for any mem- ber of our younger set. i i '~ ~