I SAT Jitney Licensing Proposed To Alleviate DSR Strike Tie-Up Jeffries Summons Cit Plan; Meeting Held T DETROIT, April 5- (P) - Mayor Edward J. Jeffries today proposed the licensing of jitneys to alleviate hardships caused by the five-day strike of Detroit street railway trolley and bus operators. He summoned the City Council to a special Saturday session to consider the plan. Jitneys have been out- Veterans Will Speak At Verein Meeting With six student veterans as guest speakers, the Deutscher Verein will hold its first meeting of the semester at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Hussey Room of the League. "Germany-My Impressions" will be the subject of discussion for the speakers. Clayton Bigelow, Gustav A. Butterbach, Charles Knorpp, Jack E. Short, J. Gerald Wetzel, and Asa Springer, Jr. Most of the talks will be in English. Singing of German folk songs, with William Sinnigan at the piano, and a short business -meeting are also scheduled. ty Council To Consider ro 'Clarify the Issues' lawed by ordinance in Detroit for two decades. The DSR Commission met for two hours today mwithsofficials of the striking AFL's Amalgamated Associ- ation of Street Electric Railway and ?Motor Bus Employes in what both sides said was an effort to "clarify the issues." A commission spokesman said, however, that the meeting was not a "negotiation." He said the commis- sion and Mayor Jeffries were holding to their stand that they would not talk settlement terms until the strike ends. As 900,000 ordinary DSR riders trudged through another day without municipal transportation, the Detroit Retail Merchants Bureau produced some figures of how the strike has affected business. Retail trade slumped sharply Mon- day a few hours after the strike be- gan, the bureau reported, but has since returned almost to normal. Industrial plants reported a sharp but not severe increase in absentee- ism the first day of the strike, but later reported this had fallen off to a point near normal. li- . , .t CLASSIFIED ADViBTISING U, ' ' CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 1Oc for each additional five words.) Non-Contract $1.00 ptr 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional five words.) Contract Rates on Request LOST AND FOUND LOST - Camera in Arboretum on flats. Film inside-pictures im- portant! Reward. Call 7037. LOST--Gold ring with black onyx setting. Has initial "14" in onyx setting. Lost in Econ or Main Lib- rary. Reward. Call Jean Darnton at 2-3193. LOST: Pair of red rimmed glasses in blue case. Please call 2-5161.. NURSE'S Elgin Wristwatch with red sweep second hand, between Wash- ington and Catherine Streets. Con- tact Donnabelle Collins, Beal Res- idence. LOST: Gray "51" Parker fountain pen Tuesday. Call Grace Hansen, 24561, Mosher. Reward. FIVE DOLLARS REWARD for re- turn of black notebok bearing in- scription L. G. Balfour Co. Attle- boro, Mass. picked up in error. Phone 9533. FOUND-Fountain pen. Owner iden- tify and pay for ad. Call 4652. Diamonds and Wedding dd SINCE 7 S~N. UmeRINGS 717 N. University Ave. J LOST: Gold Bead necklace Thurs. noon in vicinity of Mich. League or Union. Family heirloom. Reward. Phone 6632. LOST: One soft ball and bat on Beer Mountain, Mar. 30. Call Pi Beta Phi, 2-4514. WANTED WANTED-Veterans and wives who can wait table for Schoolmasters' club on April 26 are invited to drop in Personnel Office, 209 University Tall, at once. WANTED-Student veteran requires good matched set golf clubs. Phone :?789. MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib- erty. We have rebuilt used bikes for sale. Your bike can be expertly repaired also. FRATERNITY HOUSE would like boarders. For information contact .Hugh Carpol, 8623. HELP WANTED HELP WANTED-Male. Part time and weekends. Allenel Hotel. WANTED-Experienced waitress for part time work. Apply Mr. L. W. Anderson, Willow Run Bowling Al- feys. 1065 Midway, Willow Run Village. Phone Ypsi. 1852. STUDENTS: The Willow Run Bowl- ing Alley can use students to set pins one or more nights per week, also Saturday and Sunday after- noons. You can earn from $2.00 to $4.00 per night. We will arrange your work to fit in with your stud- ies. If you can use a few extra dol- lars a- week see Bowling Alley Man- ager. Willow Run Bowling Alley, 1065 Midway, Willow Run Village. Telephone: Ypsilanti 1852. STENOGRAPHER, shorthand and typing, for two hours every other day. Cal 6669-ask for Fred.. FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1937 Hudson Sedan, anx- ious to sell this week. First $400 buys. Phone 2-2205. E. A. Nielsen 320 S. State St. Highlights On Campus Vocational Talk . .. John L. Davis, executive secretary of the Board of Higher Education for the Disciples of Christ, will speak on "The Importance of a Christian Phil- osophy in Your Vocation" before the Congregational-Disciples Guild at 7:30 p.m. today in the Guild House. Prof. Henle To Talk .. . Prof. Paul Henle of the philo- sophy department will discuss Ber- trand Russell's "History of Western Philosophy" for the Lane Hall Saturday Luncheon at 12:15 p.m. today. Reservations for the luncheon must be at Lane hall before 10 a.m. t'oday. Unity Leader To Speak..'. Elizabeth Sand Turner, Unity lea- der, .teacher and lecturer, will speak on "What Shall I Do With This Man?" at 8 p.m. Monday in the Michigan League Chapel. Miss Turner will speak under the sponsorship of the Unity School of Christianity and Ann Arbor Unity. 'Europe and Palestine'. The campus chapter of the In- tercollegiate Zionist Federation of America (formerly Avukah will present a panel discussion on "Eur- ope and Palestine-Rescue and Re- demption" at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Hillel Foundation, Stuart Goldfarb and Sam Rosen will give eye-witness reports on the situation of Jews in Europe and in Palestine during the war. Beth Lai- kin will be moderator for the dis- cussion. A social hour will follow the talks. Williams Guild Forum .. . The Rev. C. I-I. Loucks will review "A Partisan Guide to the Jewish Problem," by Milton Steinberg, for the Fireside Forum of the Roger Williams Guild at 8:30 p.m. today in the Guild House. East Indies Lecture . . Lt. Brand, of the Dutch East Indies Army, will discuss the po- litical situation in the Dutch East Indies at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lane Hall. Prof. Albert hlyma of the history department will introduce Lt. Brand, who spent three years as a Japanese prisoner. The lecture is being sponsored by the Student Evangelical Chapel. Steere To Speak. .. Prof. Douglas V. Steere, of the de- partment of philosophy at Haver- ford College, Pa., will speak on "A Christian Report on Europe" at 8 p. m. April 18 in Rackham Amphitheat- re. Prof. Steere, who will speak under the sponsorship of the Student Re- ligious Association, has just returned from Europe, where he has been di- recting relief work under the aus- pices of the American Friends Ser- vice Committee. He is a member of the National Council on Religion and Higher Education. Organ Recital To Be Given RED TROOPS MARCH OUT OF IRANIAN CITY-Russian troops march through the eastern Iranian city of Meshed during evacuation movement. Withdrawal of Red Army troons from Iran under long-range scrutiny of the United Nations Security Council, may be followed quickly by the election of a new Majlis (Parliament). Byrnes Asks Conference on Peace Treaties WASHINGTON, April 5--(AP)--Sec- retary of State Byrnes has proposed a meeting of big power foreign minis- ters to begin in Paris April 25, the State Department announced today. Byrnes sent his suggestion yester- day to Foreign Minister Molotov of Russia, Bevin of Britain and Bidault of France through the United States embassies in Moscow, London and Paris. Byrnes made it plain he was pro- posing the meeting of foreign minis- ters to speed completion on the drafts of proposed peace treaties with Italy, Roumania, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Finland because he was "much distressed" at what he called the "slow progress" made on those docu- ments by the deputy foreign minis- ters now meeting in London. The Secretary of State urged that the foreign ministers instruct the deputies to "press forward their work on the drafts with utmost speed." The deputies should reserve "major matters on which they cannot agree" for disposition at the suggested meet- ing of foreign ministers in Paris, Byrnes said. Overnight .Bike Trip Planned The Ann Arbor Youth Hostel group will make the first of their April overnight bicycle trips April 13 and 14 to the Saline Valley Farm Hostel, where an outdoor picnic supper is be- ing planned. Though the trip is open to all stu- dents, cyclists are requested to bring a sleeping bag or blankets, eating utensils and a hostel pass. Hostelers will meet at 2 p.m. April 13 at Lane Hall, at which time they will start their twelve mile trip to Saline for a picnic supper and folk and square dancing. The night will be spent at the farm and cyclists will return the following day to Ann Arbor. Reservations are necessary, since the group is limited to 20 because of shortages of sleeping accomodations. To place reservations and for fur- ther information, those interested may call Nancy Smith, 7211, or Doro- thy Armstrong, 7695, after 8:15 p.m. Prof. Emeritus Thomas G. True- blood, first chairman of the Depart- ment of Speech and oldest living per- son affiliated with the University, is celebrating his ninetieth birthday at Bradenton, Florida today. Prof. Trueblood, who received his education at Blue River Academy and at Earlhan College in Indiana. became instructor in oratory at the University in 1884, and was promoted from assistant professor of oratory in the English department to chair- man of the newly-organized speech department in 1892. Before coming to the University, Prof. Trueblood and Robert L Ful- ton had established the Fulton and Trueblood School of Oratory in Kansas City, Missouri. Prof. Trueblood had received special training in speech and dramatics under Prof. S. S. Hamill, and James E. Murdoch, the Shapespearean actor. At the University he organized the first Midwest debate with Wisconsin, and later, debates with Northwestern, Wisconsin, Illinois, Chicago, and In- diana. He was a founder of Delta Sigma Rho, an organization for hon- ored debaters, and the National Speech Arts Association. Prof. Trueblood also organized the Oratorical Association Lecture Course in 1911, and was chairman of the sponsoring faculty committee until he retired from teaching in 1926. In 1930, he founded the Michigan Emeritus Club, which he served as president for six years. During sabbatical leaves, he lec- Local Orchestra To Enter State Festival The Ann Arbor Civic Orchestra, under the direction of Prof. Joseph E. Maddy, will participate in the first post-war Michigan Massed Orches- tra Festival to be held at 3 p.m. to- morrow at Michigan State College. During the war, the festival was held in conjunction with the School of Music each spring at Hill Audi- torium. This year, Hans Lange, con- ductor of the Chicago Civic Orches- tra and associate conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, will be guest conductor. Sixteen orchestras will participate in the festival. The program will be broadcast over station WKAR. I tured in Tokyo, Manila, Beirut, Syria (where he found a former student who had become president of a Syrian college) and in Hawaii, New Zealand and Australia. Prof. Trueblood, who played varsity aaseball and football at Earlhan when footballs were round, was well- known for his golf and tennis skill while at the University. He was a member of the Faculty Tennis Club and held the club's championship ranking for the last five years of his membership. Ordered by his physi- cian to give up tennis, he developed an interest in golf, and helped or- ganize the Ann Arbor Golf and Out- ir Club. He was also the author of the "Lo- comotive" yell that has since been adopted by many colleges and high schools. The Locomotive, according to Prof. Trueblood, is good voice cul- ture. The old yell has been too hard on the voices of his speech students. UNIVERSITY SAGE: Prof. Thomas J. Trueblood' Celebrates Ninietiethbirthday AVC Chapter Urges Passage Of Science Bill Resolution Wired to State Congressmeu A resolution endorsing the Kil- gore-Magnuson Bill, which would es- tablish a national science foundation, was telegraphed to Michigan con- gressmen and senators yesterday by the Ann Arbor chapter of the Ameri- can Veterans Committee. Adopted at the AVC meeting Thursday, the resolution reads: "Because of the necessity of main- taining constant scientific research for the continued improvement of our standard of living and to secure the maintenance of national defense, the Ann Arbor Chapter of the Ameri- can Veterans Committee endorses S. 1850, the National Science Founda- tion Bill, to promote these ends." Pointing out that the bill provides for substantial grants to states and private institutions, AVC officials in- dicated that scientific research at the University might be expanded if the bill were passed. The resolution was adopted follow- ing an address by John Lemish of the Legislative Action Committee, who pointed out that the bill has been fa- vorably received by scientists in gen- eral, and that it would eventually create many job opporutnities for veterans. The fundamental aims of the bill, he said, coincide with the policies of AVC toward achieving a better post-war world. TU' Grad Heads Philippine State Vincente Del Rosario, formerly a Philippine government fellow at the University, is now Governor of the Philippine province of Batangas. In a letter to the Alumni Associa- tion, Del Rosario, who received an L.L.M. degree here in 1921, writes of his occupation since leaving the University. Active in Philippine public service, the 55-year-old legalist has served as judge in the Philippine Supreme Court, technical assistant in the De- partment of Interior and as a mem- ber of the University of Philippines Board of Regents. \/ Continuous Shows Daily Starting 1:30 P.M. 4 1VUE1 Ti TipEATIE 25c till 5 P.M.; NIGHT and SUNDAYS 30c SUNDAY -- MONDAY - TUESDAY ThatLaughter...Song 1.OV I N ' au r ard Romtance! ::. Womani" Y YON NE 'sute D E CA R L O AND ..,: ::; " ROD CAMERON t N A K rA - JRne hN T ECHN ICOLOR Last Times Tonight Wait Disney's 'THE THREE CABALLEROS" and "JUNGLE CAPTIVE" Claire Coci, organ virtuosa, will zThe dieyel //teI 126 EAST HURON STREET PHONE 4241 With Easter coming THE ALLENEL intends to serve its traditional FAMOUS EASTER DINNERS. Start planning now to enjoy a quiet, satisfying Easter Sunday dinner at Ann Arbor's MOST FAMOUS RESTAUR- ANT. Watch for the appearance of our EASTER MENU and give it your own personal approval. 6 -# ttZ i~ present a program of organ music at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Audito- rium. Miss Coci's several transcontinen- tal tours, from Montreal to Los An- geles, have won her nation-wide ac- claim. Miss Coci studied at the University for two years as a special student under Prof. Palmer Christian of the School of Music. For the past three years, she has been an instructor on the organ faculty at Oberlin College. She is the wife of Bernard La Berge, a concert manager in New York. Miss Coci has chosen a compre- hensive program, ranging from Bach to contemporary composers. Michigan State Reports Record Enrollment Figure EAST LANSING, April 5-0')- Final registration figures for Spring Term show that Michigan State Col- lege has the highest enrollment in its history, 8,042 students--4.632 men and 3,410 women, Registrar Robert S. Linton reported today. The previous high recorded was 7,- 231 students. Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. Jrpi IB 7N ,'wFfirmAliFg STARTS TODAY BEER VAULT Beer - Wine - Mixers - Keg Beer 10 to 10 Daily 8 A.M. to 11 P.M. Sat. 303 N. 5th Ave. Ph. 8200 I Weekdays 30c to 5 P.M. MICHIGAN i I r M 4 s: I y , 1 Register Today SECRETARIAL AND BUSINESS COURSES ,, ' I Unprecedented opportunities in business and government Free Placement Bureau. Individual advancement and personal assistance of instruc- tors makes it possible to begin any Monday and proceed at your own speed. Your schedule will be ad- justed to your personal needs. v u 'LAS ' , , A ; . de tt ! .: !1 ewitt+ , .,_. e Kn4 + s r° r ' /+LFj { , . . w" I I I I I I ,fit i::'t: . ...a. .:.°. .. tY':i*iii: ..t.'S5: ......s# .v......_ x ?'..x k....: n...!' . '.s.' .- b. .t_'..