PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY - ~ --~-- - - - - - - - -- -- -----.-_________________________________________________- 1TJRSDAY. AP'RIL 25, 1146 Dean Bursley W-arns Married. Students of Housing Scarcity Housing facilities will be particu- than the dormitories. Six dormitor- larly scarce for married couples next ies this summer will not be used be- fall, Dean Joseph Bursley warned at cause of needed repairs. a meeting of the AVC at West Lodge This semester 5,000 veterans were Community House last night. expected to enroll, while the actual Students having houses were urged enrollment was 6,400. The Univer- to keep them during the summer in sity provided 1,00 apartments in order to be sure of having a place and around Westport for mar- to live next fall. Dormitory facilities ried couples and housing facilities this summer will be given to fresh- for 700 single students. Thirty- men and disabled veterans who must eight double modern housing units expect to double up in singles, while were moved to Willow Village near during the summer and fall terms the Coliseum to accommodate 76 Willow Village will be less crowded couples. By next fall two new dormitories capable of providing room for 1,000 S eech Contest students are expected to be com- pleted. One of these being built for W women students will house men for the first two years. 176 apartments are being constructed for veterans Judy Minogue, Lois next fall, for which 1,000 applica- tions have already been received. Garnitz r ke Honors Dean Bursley in announcing that the first obligation was to Michigan Lois Garnitz and Judy Minogue students said, "These are not the won first and second places for ther kinds of facilities that we would pick speeches entitled "The Unconquera- out for you, but we are better off ble French" and "Our Relations with than most other schools." Other Franco Spain" in the freshman schools, he said, had housing facili- speech contest concluded in the ties 30 miles away from campus, Speech Assembly yesterday. while one school had constructed 300 Other girls who competed for high- bunks in their gymnasium to house est freshman speech honors were students. Gwen Williams who spoke on "The Need for a Consumer Lobby"; Gwen- dolyn Sperlich who discussed the race problem in her speech entitled "I am an American"; and Georgiana Benesh For Research whose speech was entitled "Marriage Judges for the contest were Prof. Non-current federal agency records Louis M. Eich, Upton S. Palmer and in the National Archives at Washing- George Currie of thespeech depart- ton are now available to students for ment. Thomas C. Trueblood, who research purposes, Tar. Solon J. Buck, founded the speech department in 1892 and the Michigan golf team, archivist of the United States, re- was also present. vealed in a speech yesterday. Dr. Buck said that since the war's Prol Press o Atend end the government has been lager to Prof. Preuss To Attend openthe accumulatedrecords to all Washington Meetings persons engaged in research. The National Archives, he pointed out, Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the polit- were founded 10 years ago in an at- ical science department is attending tempt to assemble public records that a meeting of the Teachers of Inter- had been stored for 150 years in at- national Law and also a meeting of tics and basements of public build- the American Society of International ings. The job is not yet done, he Law this week in Washington, D. C. added.w CARRIER FUR WEIGHS ANCHOR FOR MANEUVERS-As tugs circle about her in Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Va., the mighty carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt-with President Truman aboard-starts to move out for the beginning of Atlantic maneuvers. President Truman will watch car- rier task force operations during his one-week vacation cruise. The large-scale Navy maneuvers will continue through a five-week period, HONEST GOVERNMENT: .Laws Devoted to Selfish Ends Cause Depressions, Siglear Says R108 eU~le 0 eI n3 Representatives Chosen by IRA For Meeting Civil Liberties Group Will Meet il Detroit Theodore Rosenberg, Maxine Spen- cer and Rona Eskin were appointed delegates to the Civil Liberties Con- gress meeting in Detroit this week- end at a meeting of the Inter-Racial Association held yesterday at the Union. The Congress has asked liberal or- ganizations from all over the country to send delegates to help organize a.- offensive against fascist aggression in the United States. Topics that will be discussed during the course of the two-day session include protecting minorities, theaColumbia, Tenn., case, labor rights, and domestic fascistic organizations. Prof. John Shepard of the psychology department, presi- dent of the Michigan Civil Rights Federation, is one of the sponsors of this meeting. Members of IRA also voted to as- sist MYDA in their campaign May 2 and 3 to circulate petitions in order to 'publicize the Columbia, Tenn., case and aid the victim of the at- tempted lynching there. Plans for brotherhood week and for coordinating the work of the lib- eral organizations on campus were also discussed. Panel Includes VU Professors City Planning Will Be Discussed by Institute Six University faculty members will participate in round table discussions at the Local Planing Institute sched- uled to meet Tuesday in Port Huron. The panel of experts on the city- village round table will include Rob- ert N. Cross of the Bureau of Business Research, Prof. Amos Hawley of the sociology department, Prof. Harlow Whittemore of the department of landscape architecture, Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the School of Educa- tion, and John Perkins, secretary of the Institute for Public Administra- tion. Draft Issue Is To Be Debated Compulsory peacetime military ser- vice will be discussed at the Eleventh Annual Conference on Problems in School and College Cooperation which will meet at 2 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Henry W. Miller, Chairman of the Department of Mechanism and En- gineering . Drawing, will discuss the affirmative side and Virgil M. Rogers, Superintendent of Schools in Battle Creek, will discuss the opposing view- point. George E. Carrothers, director of the Bureau of Co-operation with Ed- ucational Institutions, will be chair- man. C iristirity Fiort.i . The Michigan Christian Fellow- ship will hold an open forum on Christianity at 8 p.m. today in Lane Hall. The discussion will center around the two topics used in the Fellow- ship's recent essay contest, "Why I Am a Christian" and "Why I Am Not a Christian." Following presentation of the contest prizes, the two winning essays will be read. Calvin Didier will give his arguments for being a Chris. tian and Robert Taylor will explain why he is not a Christian. The meeting will then be open for discus- sion. Franklin H. Littell, director of the Student Religious Association, will act as chairman of the discussion. Spanish Conversation . La Sociedad iispanica will hold its weekly conversational meeting at 4 p.m. today in the League cafe? teria. The group has asked any people who arc interested in Span- ish to attend. Film on Beethoven .. . "The Life and Loves of Beethoven," a motion picture starring Harry Baur, will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The. film traces, the course of Beethoven's life, and excerpts from his works are played. The dialogue is in French with English subtitles on the screen. Preceding the Beethoven picture, there will be a short of Jacques Thi- baud playing Albeniz's "Malaguena." Both films are being presented by the Art Cinema League. 4 * 4 All-Nations club ... A discussion of current affairs will highlight the All-Nations club meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the International Center. Turkish Pro gram ., "Modern Turkey," the first in a ,eries of area studies intended to ac- quaint students with the traditions, ideals and way of life of foreign countries, will be presented by the International Student Exchange Committee at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Amphitheatre. The area studies will consist of panel discussions and lectures on tehe history, religion, social and political structure, and economic aspects of such geographic areas as the Near East, Latin America and the Bal- kans. The Turkish program will include a film on modern Turkey and a panel discussion. Campus Highlights R4 THEY'RE HERE!, T11CE COLGE A LIMITED SUPPLY Now Available at DETROIT, April 24 - (A") - Kim Sigler, candidate for the Republican nomination for governor, declared in a radio campaign address tonight that laws written by "greedy financial interests and- their lobbyists" were partly responsible for the economic depression of the '30's in Michigan. Warning that the nation again is heading into a boom period when the public is not watchful of legisla- tion, Sigler declared the issue in the current political campaign is: "Who is to write the laws of Michi- gan-the men elected and entrusted with that duty by the people of Mich- igan, or the lobbyists employed by selfish, hidden financial interests?" Speaking over a radio network, Sigler, former special prosecutor of the Ingham County grand jury, de- clared "there are a thousand indica- ToEdit orna1ts 'U o o . * 'r-U1. N-I R J StrS a 10 h ,OtlR Profs. Norman _ ,.Hartweg and Reeve M. Bailey of the Museum of Zoology stall have been appointed "ana ging editors of "Copcia," offi- cial journal of the American Society of Ichtlhyologiss and Herpetologists which met last week in Pittsburgh. Dr. William A. Gosline was elected and Dr. Lartweg re-elected to the Board of Governors of the Society. Dr. Emmet T. Hooper and Dr. W. H. Burt, also of the Museum of Zo- ology, were reelected corresponding secretary and member of the Board of Directors, respectively, of the American Society of Mammalogists, which also met in Pittsburgh last week. tions that, 'ere long, our present in- dustrial troubles will subside and Michigan will launch out on a pe- riod of unprecedented prosperity. Then, as never before, will there be need for the people of Michigan to be watchful against the current lob- byist, selfish interest and the public servant who betrays his trust." Sigler declared he was a candidate for governor because "some one must make the fight for clean government and honest government in Michigan." Reciting the record of the Carr grand jury, Sigler recalled the ac- quittal of Frank D. McKay and four others on charges of conspiracy to in- filuence the Liquor Control Commis- sion. "No sooner," he said, "were Frank McKay and the other defendants re- leased than the avowed enemies of the grand jury, the 'enemies of dis- closing and uncovering graft and cor- ruption, delivered a blow in the ap- pointment of a Senate investigating committee." Persons fearing a grand jury in- dictment on the Branch Bank bill, Sigler said, have sabotaged the work of the grand jury and added "they stop at nothing." Aluini Give Mountings To East Quadrangle Colorful mountings depicting scenes of foreign countries, for the four recreation rooms of the East Quad- rangle, have been procured from sev- eral alumni by T. 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