PAGE SIX THE M'ICHIGAN DAILY - -~ I I Campus Higghitsjui Lecture on Colombia .. . Gustava Rueda, '46E, will speak on his native country, Colombia, at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Auditorium. He will be introduced by Prof. Charles N. Staubach of the Romance Language department. The program, sponsored by the Latin American So- ciety is open to the public. A.S.I.E. Will Meet .. . The student chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. The meeting will feature a talk by Prof. Frank W. Wilson of the mechanical engineering depart- ment on "Opportunities for Me- chanical Engineers in the Process- ing Industry." Prof. Wilson, only recently added to the faculty, assoeia. ted with the DuPont Company for 15 years and has wide experience in chemical industries. Guild House TIa, The Chinese Chistian Fellowship will be the guests of the Roger Wil- liams Guild at a tea from 4:30 to 6 p.m. today in the Guild House. Club Holds Breakfast . . . The Canterbury Club will have a breakfast today in the Student Cen- ter after the 7:15 a.m. Communion Service in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. SRA Program 'Ioightu- The music committee of the Stu- dent Religious Association will pre- sent an evening of music at 7:30 p.m. today in Lane Hall. Robert Taylor will discuss Bect- hoven's "Choral Symphony," con- paring it with the "First Sym- phony." The discussion *will take place in the Lane Hall -fireplace room. A second evening of music will be presented May 1. Davis .0 Speak A lb I "Industrial Relatios After Con- version," will be the topic of William H. Davis when he delivers the main address at the eighteenth Founder's Day Dinner of the Lawyer's Club Fri- day. Mr. Davis is a member of the New York Bar and former head of the Na- tional Labor Relations Board. He will be introduced by the toastmaster, Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law School. The Founder's Day Dinner tradi- tionally honors William W. Cook who established the Lawyer's Club and whose contributions to the University includes the Law Quadrangle, the Martha Cook Building and the Wil- liam W. Cook Lectureship on Ameri- can Institutions. Over 300 persons are expected to attend the dinner, including law stu- dents now living in the Lawyer's Club, several practicing lawyers and Michigan state and Federal judges who are honorary members of the club. MCF Discussion . . The Michigan Christian Fellowship will discuss "The Last Supper and Gethsemane" at 8 p.m. today in Lane Hall. Franklin H. Littell, director of the Student Religious Association, will lead an open forum to be held by the Fellowship at 8 p.m. Thursday in Lane Hall. The presentation of the prizes won by students in the essay contest held recently by the Fellowship and 'the reading of the prize-winning essays will precede the discussion. Calvin Didier will read his paper on "Why I Am a Christian" and Robert Taylor wil read his essay on "Why I Am Not a Christian." Liu'l To Lecture . .. Franklin II. Littell, director of the Student Religious Asociation, hbas been invited to lecture at Gosh- en College, Goshen, Indiana on May 5 and 6. Ilis lectures, which will be given under the auspices of the Mennon- ite Historical Society, will be on "Centrality of the Great Commis- sion for the Anabaptists" and "The Inadequacy of Modern Pacifism." Dr. Meng To Visit 'U,.,.. Dr. Meng Chih, director of China Thu;itute in America, will arrive in Ann Arbor tomorrow, the purpose of his visit being to interview Chinese students here. These special conferences will be held between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. to- morrow at the International Center. A tea honoring Dr. Meng will be given by the Chinese Students Club and the Director and Staff of the Center following the interviewing. I1ousel Will Speak . . Prof. William S. Housel of the .civil engineering department will spteak on airport construction at the Sunday International Center program at 7:30 p.m. in Rms. 316- 320 of the Union. The address will be preceded by a 'March of Time' film, "Airways of the Future." The program. which is open to all foreign students, their friends, and American students, will be concluded with refreshments and community singing in the Cent'r. Stevenson at Chicago . . Dean Russell A. Stevenson of the School of Business Administration will attend a meeting of the Mid- west Economic Association tomorrow, Friday and Saturday in Chicago. He 'will serve as chairman of a gen- eral meeting on Post-War Labor Pol- icy in tomorrow's opening session. AmericaJap Alumni Groups Meet In Tokyo Alumni groups comprised of both Jaanese and Americans are meeting in Tokyo, according to a letter re- ceived by the Alumni Association from Maj. Ivan H. Ware, '22, of the Property Custodians Office, Japanese Occupation Forces. Alumni Associations from colleges and universities all over the United States .are gathering their former students, Maj. Ware writes. "Person- ally I feel this is a very worthwhile project. "Our best efforts to re-educate the Japanese people in the ways of peace and democracy depend to a great extent upon these returned students, who are exponents of our ways of thinking and ideals. Closer contact with them will be of benefit to our overall effort." Maj. Ware requested that Alumni Asociation send him a list of Univer- sity graduates who had given Tokyo as their home address so that they could be contacted. Engmie Alumni To Hear McMath Dr. Robert R. McMath of the Mc- Math-Hulbert Observatory and Prof. Allen F. Sherzer of the Mechanical Engineering Department of the Uni- versity will be guest speakers at a dinner meeting of the Michigan En- gineering Alumni, classes of 1913 to 1917, to be held Friday in the En- gineering Society of Detroit Club- rooms in the Rackham Building. These meetings are held for the benefit of the large number of Michi- gan Alumni in the metropolitan area who are taking an active part in the industrial and building activities of greater Detroit. Any alumnus not already notified may contact the committee chair- man, K. W. Collamore, at University 2-8402. Former Teachers Aid U..S. in Japani Eleven former Japanese Language School instructors of the University are now doing work for the U. S. Government in Japan. These Japanese are in the Civil Censorship Department of the U. S. Army at General Headquarters, Tokyo. The Air Corps has also claimed some University Japanese instruc- tors; three have been called to Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio. A 11 "'C 'U IE NEWS H E L M E T-A. W. Marten- sti of Berlin, N. J., inspects the shiny helmet of the late Gen. Georgc S. Patton, JTr., prcsented to Virginia Military Institute by Mrs. Patton. U . S' M 1 L I T A R Y C E M E T E R Y -- Dedication ceremonies are held at an American military cemetery near Athens, Greece. U. S. airmen are among those buried here. P RiCI 0 U S - This valu- able gray-furred chinchilla, with 15 others, arrived in California by plane from a Yosemite Park fur ; ranch. Stewardess Mavis' Corkery holds it. C H I N E S E R I V E R S C E N E - On the Pearl River in so'uthern China, half way between Hong Kong and Canton, the LCM 226 passes a Chinese tug pulling a cargo junk against the current. L. to r.: SI/C H Yenkala, armed guard, Pittsburgh; Ensign R. B. Weaver, Fillmore, N. Y.; SI/C 3. 0. Phelps, Pittsburgh; MM3/C R. D. Tierney, Joliet. Ill., and F/C IW. G. Long, Ava, Mo. ATTENTION MEMBERS 1P7'Il KAPPA SIGMA Interested in' Local Chapter, please get in touch with JOHN H. BENJAMIN Phone 5887, 1314 Sheehan, Ann Arbor, Michigan If Mr. Benjamin is not in when you call, please leave your name and telephone number. THE ODDS ARE ALL IN YOUR FAVOR When you're not quite sure alout a telephone number and vou wonder whether to call"Informa- tion"-please remember: the - odds are that the number you - *.want is right there in the book. In Michigan, 3 out of 5 calls to "Infornution" are for numbers listed in the Telephone Directory. There are so many of these un. necessary calls that answering them adds up to more than 1,000 wasted hours of operator and switchboard time every day. You can help us to save tliat time and give Better service on the necessary calls if you'll co- operate in these two simple ways: Please look in the Directory be. fore you call "In f ation." 2 If the number isn't rijted an ESKIMOS FLY TO HOSPITAL-ThreeEskimos. -brought to Halifax, N. S., for hospital treatment, stand in the door of the plane which flew them to an RCAF station on their 1.000-mile journey from the Arctic. Left to right, Tommy Saunders, Mrs. Jessie Ford. Joe Pachene and Dr. Harry W. Lewis of Ottawa, M O D E L FIRE E N GIN E - Chief Thad Fife of the Western Cartridge Co., East Alton, Ill., shows how he uses a, model pumper and a miniature building, in which he can repro, duce actual fire conditions, for training his men. malm- TTIR!1;1 71Z-U, W