P Gr ru THE MICHIGAN DAILY TITUI 9D&T, NW)VFMIRFI3. 14, I.W. PAG1~ FOIJTI THTTR5J AV, NOVEMB~U 14, 1Mt~ Village FEPC Goal Will Be Reachedn-Lyon The goal of 1,000 signatures on pe- titions being circulated at Willow Village for a state Fair Employment Practices Commission will be he reached if the present trend con- tinues, Ollie Lyon, chairman of the Village FEPC campaign, predicted yesterday. Lyon said that one solicitor had ob- tained 40 signatures out of 51 regis- tered voters he contacted. If all so- licitors do as well, Lyon said that the goal of 1,000 would be reached, as every one of the Village's 1,700 regis- tered voters will be asked to sign. The house-to-house canvas at the Village is being undertaken jointly by the Willow Village AVC chapter and the Willow Run Citizens Com- mittee. The chief problem that so- licitors are up against is that many people do not realize what the Fair Employment Practices Commission is or how it would operate, Lyon said. Edmonson To Talk Dean James B. Edmonson, of the education school, will speak today at a dinner given by the Board of Edu- cation of Sturgis, Mich. HIGHLIGHTS ON CAMPUS Phi Kappa Tau ... Phi Kappa Tau fraternity is re- organizing after an inactive period during the war. Former members and others inter- ested may contact Frank Kelly at 7918 or Matt Mann, faculty advisor, at the I-M Building. French Lecture .. . "Topaze and Other Plays by Mar- cel Pagnol" is the subject of a French lecture to be given by Prof. Ch 4rles Koella of the romance languages department at 4:10 p.m. today, in Room D, Alumni Memo- rial flall. Zeta Phi Eta .,. Zeta Phi Eta will sponsor a speech tea from 3 to 4 p.m. today at the Speech Clinic. * * * Spanish Club . . . "La Sociedad Hispanica" will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Inter- national Center. S* * * Graduate Mixer .. . A Graduate Mixer will be held by the Graduate Student Council from 8:30 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the Rackham Building.. Bridge, dancing to records and re- freshments will be featured. The council invites faculty members and all graduate students to attend. A RIDER'S STUDENT SUPPLIES 302 South State Street MYDA Meeting ... MYDA will meet at 7:30 p.m. to- day in the Union to discuss thel picketing of the Barlum Hotel i Detroit and the work on the FEPC campaign. ROTC Lecture.. . Presenting the first in a series of lectures sponsored by advanced course ROTC ordnance students, Col. Steven L. O'Connor, chief of production at the Detroit tank arsenal, will speak on "Engineering Problems in the Modern Manufacture of Gun Tubes" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 303 West Engineering Bldg. The faculty and students of the engineering college and related sci- ences have been invited to attend. * Chess Club ... The Student Chess Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 302 of the Union. Members are re- quested to bring boards and chess- men. r ILLEL NOTES Activities of the B'nai B'rith Hil- lel Foundation will include a tea dance today, services tomorrow and a suppernar discussion Sunday. The West Quad and 820 Hill St. league house will be guest hosts and hostesses at the tea dance to be given from 3 to 5:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Herschel Lymon will deliver a sermon, "Guide to the Perplexed," at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow. The Hillel Student Choir will sing during the services, which- will be attended by members of the Faith Workshop, sponsored by the Student Religious Association. The suppernar, to be held at 5:30 p.m., Sunday, will be followed by a discussion on "Why 1 Am a Christian- Jew-Agnostic." Gertrude Haan will speak as a Chrsitian, Jay Singer, as a Jew and Bob Carneiro, as an agnostic. Frances Goodfellow will be moderator of the discussion which will follow the speeches. Members of the Methodist, Luther- an, Episcopal and Reformed student guilds will attend the meeting. Res- ervations may be had by calling the Foundation, 2-6585. Albania Hits U.S. LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Nov. 13 -(AP)-Albania registered a "strong protest" with the United Nations to- night against an alleged American demand that U. S. warships be per- mitted to enter Albanian waters to remove its diplomatic mission from the country. I DAILY OFFICIAL PUBLIC LECTURE John B. S. Coats of London, Eng land Under the Auspices of The Theosophical Society in Ann Arbor. "Reincarnation: One Life or Many?" Friday, Nov. 15 "The New Age and Ancient Truths" Monday, Nov. 18 Michigan League ... 8:00 P.M. Charge: 50 Cents Guild Chair . . The choir of the Congregational- Disciples Guild will meet at 5 p.m. today at the Congregational Church Bridge Party . A contract bridge party will be held today at 7:30 p.m. in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Everyone interested has been in- vited to attend in couples. Infor- mation may be obtained by call- ing Mrs. Frances Shank at 2-0266. RenCI~uWt , Wife To Vsit Here Educator To Be Guest At iternational Center Dr. Abgar Renault, Brazilian edu- cator, and Mrs. Renault will be guests at a tea at 4 p.m. today in the Inter- national Center. Dr. Renault was the official Brazil- ian delegate to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization Conference in London in 1945. He is in Ann Arbor under the aus- pices of the Inter-American Educa- tional Foundation to observe the teaching of foreign languages, liter- ature and general science, and teach- er-training for secondary schools. Dr. Renault will discuss "New Out- looks in Brazilian Education" at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Amphi- theatre, under the auspices of the education school and the Romance language department. Dole Will Give Lecture Today Legislative-administrative relation- ships will bediscussed by Wilfred F. Doyle, past holder of both types of office, before a seminar of the In- stitute of Public Administration at 8 p.m. today in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Doyle is manager of the Michigan Chain Stores Bureau. He was a state senator in 1933-34 and has held of- fice as secretary of the State De- partment of Labor and Industry. Students not enrolled in the Insti- tute but interested in the lecture may obtain permission to attend the semi- nar by contacting the office of the Institute in Haven Hall during the day. AA UP To Hear Niehuss Speak The Michigan Chapter of the American Association of University Professors will hear Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss speak on legisla- tive issues concerning the University at 6:15 p.m. today in the Union. All members of the faculty are in- vited to join the Union Cafeteria line and take their trays to the Faculty Club lunchroom where an open meet- ing will be held, Prof. Dwight C. Long, secretary-treasurer of the AAUP, said. Dr. Coller Will Be, Honored Tomorrow Dr. Frederick A. Coller, chairman of the department of surgery in the Medical School, will be honored to- morrow at the November meeting of the Detroit Academy of Surgery. University surgical staff members, Dr. Kenneth M. Campbell, Dr. Jack Lapides and Dr. Robert E. L. Berry will present the scientific program for the evening. The meeting will be called, by cus- tom, the "Frederick A. Coller" meet- ing and will be held at the Detroit Athletic Club. Pre-Winter Storms Take Death Toll The death toll in pre-winter storms that have lashed western sections of the country for more than a week rose to at least 16 Wednesday as rain- laden winds continued pounding southern California, and planes, Army weasels, trucks and bulldozers were sent on mercy missions in snow- blanketed Colorado. Prof. Bromage Cites Need for State Reform . A state must first improve its own legislative and administrative proc- esses if it wishes to 'arrest the march to federal centralization," accord- ing to Prof. Arthur W. Bromage, of the political science department. Prof. Bromage spoke in Philadel- phia at a meeting of the State Gov- ernment Clinic of the National Mu- nicipal League. He listed as the basic problems of state reorganization those of ad- ministrative reform. In Michigan he believes this should be achieved through constitutional amendment. Measures which must be included in such an amendment are: (1) the short ballot; (2) four-year term for governor; (3) consolidation of state agencies into approximately 20 de- partments responsible to the gov- ernor, and (4) authorization to the governor to accomplish further re- organization by executive orders, subject to review by the legislature, Prof. Bromage said. Teacher Urgres Music Interest For Chld Ireni Any child, with or without talent, can learn to like and appreciate good music, Marjorie Truelove Mac- kown, of the Eastman School of Mu- sic faculty, said yesterday in an ad- dress before the last session of the Michigan Music Teachers Associa- tion's annual convention. Speaking on "Creative Theory for Children," Miss Mackown said that the talented child needs to be trained in writing down his compositions, whereas untalented children may be taught; to hear pitch relatively well, thereby gaining appreciation of mu- sic. By experimentation, Miss Mackown has found that feeling for rhythm and intellect can be combined to teach "unmusical" children to understand and like music. At a business meeting before the lecture, Prof. John Lowell of the music school was elected correspond- ing secretary for the Association. Former Hospital Director Returns By JOHN CAMPBELL EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of series of three articles on the metal processing department laboratories. The metal processing department of the engineering college received a definite boost recently with the addi- tion of a great quantity of valuable equipment, including machine tools, cutters and inspection equipment. The value of the instructional equipment, received during the past summer and fall from the U. S. Army Ordnance Department without cost, has been placed at several hundred thousand dollars. The donations were authorized un- der a law permitting the Ordnance Department, upon termination of war contracts, to present equipment to educational institutions tohbe used for pre-induction training. The do- nations were made with the approval of the state superintendent of public instruction and the training officer of the Army Service Command Dis- trict. Much of the new equipment has now been installed in the metal processing laboratories in the south wing of the East Engineering build- ing. Some fifty machine tools of mod- ern design, having a total value of about a quarter of a million dol- lars were received by the depart- ment, according to Prof. Orlan W. Boston, head of the department, who spent two months negotiating in Detroit for the equipment. Most of them, he emphasized, had been used less than two years and are in excellent condition. Some were practically new with little use in industry and few show the hard physical wear and tear of mass production. The department also received a great number and variety of cutting tools worth much more than the de- partment's previous total inventory. These cutting tools will be used to set up the new machine tools for routine' instruction and in demon- strating manufacturing methods. Although the new equipment was obtained without cost from the Ord- nance Department, the metal process- ing department has encountered numerous headaches as a result of the gift. It was necessary to clean all pieces of equipment thoroughly as they had been coated with a thick grease for protection during shipping and storage. Mines Found off Albania LONDON, Nov. 13-(JP)-The ad- miralty reported tonight that the Royal Navy swept up 22 moored mines today in the Corfu Channel off the Albanian Coast, where two British de- stroyers recently struck mines with a loss of more than 40 lives. ARMY DONATION: Engineering College Receives Valuable Machine Equipment Several of the machines weigh more than 17,000 pounds. In some cases workers were forced to dear down part of the laboratory walls in order to get the new machines into place. Shipping costs of all the equip- ment were paid by the department. The greatest expense involved in the installation of the new equipment involved' the electric power supply. ~ for true OUT DOO RSMEN and for v 11 The",t~tte4 SIIRTJAK In Virgin Wool Plaids. Tuck in trousers.- . .it's a shirt. Wear it out ... it's a jacket. Two roomy pockets. Rayon lined yoke and cuffs. $9.9 5 Dr. Christopher G. Parnall, versity graduate and director of versity Hospital from 1918 to Uni- Uni- 1924, has returned to Ann Arbor after 21 years absence. During his absence he served as Medical Director of the Rochester General Hospital, Rochester, N. Y. He has opened offices for hospital consultation here. Read and Use The Daily Classifieds THE PERFECT COMBINATION r BULLETIN 1' '1 (Continued from Page 2) sponsoring an Inter-Faith Suppernar Sun., Nov. 17, at 5:30 at the Founda- tion. The topic for discussion will be "Why I am a Christian, Jew, and Atheist." For reservations call 2-6585. Willow Run Dances: Women stu- dents living in private homes may sign up to go to Willow Run on Fri- day evenings by leaving a note in the Undergraduate Office or calling Allene Golinkin, 2-4471. The Personality Hair Style is blended and shaped to your facial features. Your choice of eight good Barbers. THE DASCOLA BARBERS Between State and Michigan Theatres SDiamonds and Wedding 1998 Rings 717 North University Ave. 1<-0-0-0-><-0 ( 613 EAST LIBERTY STREET Finest American Foods Tasty Genuine Chinese Dishes CHOP SUEY and QUICK SERVICE CHOW MEIN AT OUR POPULAR PRICE To Take Out Noon-Hour Plate Luncheons Phone 6380 CLOSED EVERY MONDAY Open from 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. LONG WEAR... 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