rAGE SIC THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY N. 19 t6 .P......... .. ..x ........U ..... ........ ....A.Y......2.. ....9..... Students Present Three One-Act PlaysMonday Three one-act plays, "Girls Must Talk" by Paul T. Gantt, "The Neigh- bors" by Zona Gale and "Rehearsal" by Christopher Morley, will be pre- sented by students in Play Produc- tion at 8 p.m. Monday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Sally Pearson, Marcie Resnick, Jean Bechtel, Patricia Pontius, Janet Carter, Florence Wohl and Roland Speech Patients Sign at Clinic Six Types of Defects Among Group of 33 A group of 33 new speech patients have registered at the Speech Clinic this week for a six-week course of in- tensive therapy. Among the patients registered are ten aphasics, many of whom are vet- erans; thirteen stutterers; four peo- ple with articulatory disorders; three with cerebral palsy; one with cleft palate, and two people with husky voices-whose problems may be eith- er structural or functional. These people will attend, between: 9 a.m. Ind 3:15 p.m. daily, classes in speech, hygiene, relaxation and con- versation drill. Also registered for the six week pe- riod are University students, and townspeople who receive speech cor- rection an hour a day; and three deaf children of pre-school age. Pupils Stage Strike Over Bulding Veto PORT HURON, Mich., May 1-(") -Students at four local schools, dis- gruntled by failure of voters to ap- prove a school building program, left their classes today to stage a mass demonstration. A total of 2,716 pupils in Port Huron High School and three junior highs were dismissed from classes after demonstrations interrupted school work. The "strikers" continued their pro- test meeting in downtown areas. Voters Tuesday failed to give the required two-thirds majority to a proposal to increase the tax limita- tion to 191/2 mills to provide funds for construction of new schools. McLaughlin are in the cast of the comedy "Girls Must Talk," which was adapted and directed by Lucy Chase Stephenson. The plot revolves around a group of models in a store window. The cast of "The Neighbors" in- cludes Patricia Owens, Betty Bloom- quist, Peggy Cummings, Audrey Ene- low, Serene Sheppard, Larry Darling, Jack Iskin and Shirley Pope. The play, directed by Jim Bob Stephen- son, combines comedy and pathos in the story of a self-centered commun- ity facing an important problem. I "Rehearsal," with Janet Bancroft, Harriet Rohr, Fay Hansen, Kathryn Volkman, Harriet Risk and Phyllis McVoy, directed by Janine Robinson, is a comedy about the rehearsal of aI master dramatic offering. Directed and staged by students in the advanced course in dramatics, the three productions will be present- ed as a laboratory bill of plays, ad- mission free. Tickets may be obtained at the boxoffice of the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday. Mail orders will be ac- cepted but tickets must be called for at the box office Monday. UA W Protests Price Increase DETROIT, May 1-(1)-The CIO United Auto Workers, through Presi- dent Walter P. Reuther, today planned a protest against an OPA al- lowance of "a second round" of auto- mobile price increases. The OPA Tuesday raised retail prices of General Motors Corp. cars1 $16 to $60 to compensate for wage in- creases in the industry. The boost was in addition to an earlier ceiling increase which Reuther said averaged $150 to $250 above the pre-war car price. "OPA explains that most of the in- crease reflects engineering changes and improvements," Reuther said in, a statement. "It appears that they (the manufacturers) have found a loophole for turning normal peace- time practice into a profitable racket under government price con- trol." He contended that yearly changes in models were customary before the war but that it was not "peacetime practice", to reflect these technical developments in higher prices. CI WES: Giles' Recitals Will Precede Festival Music Sidney Giles will play the Carillon recitals before each May Festival concert this week, it was announced yesterday. The concerts are a traditional part of the Festival weekend. Tonight's' program, to be presented from 7:55 to 8:20 p.m. will begin with the "Prel- ude in B-flat" by Jef Denyn, "The World is Waiting for the Sunrise" by Seitz and "Londonderry Air," an Irish folk song. The remainder of the con- cert will be "Waltz in A" by Brahms and a "Suite" by Nees written espe- cially for the carillon. Mr. Giles has served as substitute carilioneur this year while Percival Price has been traveling in Europe, particularly Belgium and Holland, reassembling carillons damaged or depleted during the war. Mr. Price is expected to return to Ann Arbor some time in the next two weeks. ' British Spy System LONDON, May 1 -(/P)- A White Paper disclosed today that Britain spent $209,723,368 on its secret ser- vice - the British spy system - in four years of war beginning in 1941. Prof. Hargis1 Names Speech Contest Finalists Finals To Take Place Ini Kellogg Auditorium Prof. D. E. Hargis of the speech de- partment has announced the five winners of the preliminary all-cam- pus oratorical contest. The winners are: Terrell Whitsitt, a junior in the Literary college from Mount Clemens; Elvira Smolinski, a sophomore in the Literary college from Detroit; John J. Carroll, a spe- cial student from Detroit; Carroll D. Little, a senior in the Literary college from Evanston, Illinois; and Nafe E. Katter, a sophomore from Saginaw, Michigan. Eighteen speakers entered the con- test yesterday and judges were mem- bers of the speech department. The? final contest will be held at 8 p.m. May 15 in Kellogg Auditorium. Perkins Attends Mid-West' Meeting on Civil Service John A. Perkins, assistant profes- sor of political science, is attending the annual Mid-west regional meet- ing of the Civil Service Assembly of the United States and Canada in Detroit. Prof. Perkins will speak on "In- service Training in the Public Ser- vice under the G. I. Bill of Rights." 'The General Library is now ex- pecting shipments from the Library of Congress of books and journals I printed in Europe and South Ameri- ca during the war," Warner G. Rice,' Director of the University Library said in a recent interview. The Library of Congress is now distributing to various libraries throughout the country, duplicates of more than 300,000 literary pieces, collected by their representatives who worked in close association with the Army during the last years of the war, he said. This material re- presents a considerable portion of the literature published abroad dur- ing the war. "A main problem has been the dis- tribution of foreign acquisitions among the research libraries-an ex- tremely complicated process. The present plan divides material into 250 categories. Each research library has been given priorities according+ to its requests for materials in par- ticular fields, the strength of the several collections in the libraries, and a fair geographic distribution. The purpose of the plan is not to disperse materials as widely as pos- sible, but to make good libraries better!", he explained. A(Coach . "'S 0 Dine in the Charming Early American Atmosphere c of TiHE COLONIAL ' OOM Specializing Steaks - Chicken - Sea Food Give your Student Parties in our Private Dining Rooms Call 2,6544V Reservations not necessary 503 EAST HURON STREET 0)<=->o<==>()<==!>(<==>t)<==->t<= >to The General Library is high in twenty-four categories, and highest, he specified, as regards the British Isles, the Philippines, Canada and Newfoundland, insurance, fish cul- ture and fisheries and motor vehicles. "We have pledged ten thousand dollars from our books funds as pay- ment for an estimated ten to fif- teen thousand pieces that we will receive. The material will finally be Art Student Wins Scholarship Award Robert C. Gaede has been the re- cipient of an honor award presented by Alpha Rho Chi, national architec- ture fraternity, Dean Wells I. Bennett of the College of Architecture and Design announced yesterday. Announcement of the reinstate- ment this spring of the award, which was withdrawn during the war, came too late to be made at the Honors Convocation, he added. paid for at so much per piece," he said. When the publications arrive they will be catalogued and placed in the stacks for public use, he added. Bus. Ad. School Delays C Ruling The School of Business Adminis- tration has not yet ruled whether it will adopt a C average requirement similar to those of the Engineering and Literary Colleges, Prof. Herbert F. Taggart said yesterday. If the school should decide to put the requirement into effect, he point- ed out, it would affect very few stu- dents, since veterans, exempt from the ruling, in other colleges, compose more than 90 per cent of the school's enrollment. LIBRARY SIIIPMENT: Material Printed Abroad Is Due Here Ry - - - j DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) with Dr. F. Huntley and Mr. Robert Hayden to discuss the poetry of club members. Tryouts: All those interested in trying out for the Make-up Staff of the Gargoyle meet at 3:30 in the Student Publications Building.. Copting Events The University of Michigan Branch of the AIEE is holding a field trip to Howell Motors, Howell, Michigan, on Friday, May 3, for members only. Those planning to attend should be in front of the Union on Friday at 12:30 sharp. The bus will leave at this time. There are a few tickets left for sale and they are available at the Electrical Engineering office in the West Engineering Building. The Graduate Outing Club is plan- ning an informal hike on Sunday, May 5. Those interested should meet at the northwest entrance of Rack- ham at 2:30. International Center: Due to the May Festival, there will be no Sun- day evening program this week. The series of Sunday evening programs will be resumed on Sunday, May 12. The picnic scheduled for Saturday, May 4, will be postponed until May 11. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation: Any Hillel member interested in ush- ering for Hillelsapoppin, May 25, contact Charlotte Kaufman, 26585. 'Il Try our Casiid REASONABLE RATES SAVE BY MONTHLY CONTRACTS 1-15 WORDS every day for only $7.80 per month --____-- or - 1-15 WORDS every other day for only $4.30 per month NON-CONTRACT: 1-15 WORDS at: 40c for 1 Day $1.80 for 6 Days $1.00 for 3 Days $2.40 for 10 Days For other rates not mentioned, consult THE DAILY'S CLASSIFIED AD DEPT. Phone 23-24-1 i ___ Ind s [ The second Sunday in May- every year -i the day officially set aside to honor Mothers.w It's the day when, if you'~re too for away, you write- or send flowers -- or select a gift that you know will please her, because it's '-' Q ~ 2 A. Y; She s Everybody' S Sweetheart I Remember Mom on May 12th Seconded by the following merchants of Ann Arbor L. G. BALFOUR CO. 802 S. State CAMPUS SHOP 305 S. State DILLON SHOP 309 S. State INDIA ART SHOP. 300 S. State MADEMOISELLE 1108 S. University TIME SHOP I 1