THE MICHIGAN DAILY I1 A FACULTY FOR KNOWING: Haines'Day: Students, Music, Books,_Fish' Constitution ... By HARRY LEVINE EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the 11th of a series of articles on faculty personalities. . Prof. Donal Hamilton Haines is probably the only man within a 200 mile radius who can teach a University class, listen to a sym- phony, write a book and go fishing all in the same day and not con- sider it outside of his usual rou- tine. Good Hunter Prof. Haines who teaches jour- nalism here likes to regard Ann Arbor as a base for hunting and fishing operations. Lawn Students ATry NLRA Practice Case The University law students to- morrow will argue the question of whether supervisory employees have collective bargaining rights under the National Labor Rela- tions Act. In the hypothetical case "Jort Motors Inc. v. The National Re- lations Board," law students Stanley Kaplan and Charles Levin, representing Jort Motors, will op- pose Richard Sieswerda, and James McNicholas representing the employees. The case will be aired at 4 p.m. in the practice court room, second floor, Hutchins Hall. Judges include: Prof. Russell A. Smith, law school secretary; How- ard, Jacobs and DeWittChatter- ton, seniors in the law school. The U. S. Supreme Court is considering a question similar to the one posed in "Jort Mortors" case. Hillel To Hold Holiday Party The Jewish festival Hanukah, which will begin Wednesday, will be celebrated at 8 p.m. today at the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation. Hanukah commemorates the In fact, Prof. Haines once lived a year and a half in Sacramento, California, "mostly because there was good hunting and fishing nearby and a tennis court down the street." Raisedin Kalamazoo and edu- cated at the University, Prof. Haines is a Midwesterner at heart. He was graduated here in 1909 and in the traditional style of newspaper men started out free- lancing-a vocation that took him all over the country. Wise Newspaperman Like .most wise newspapermen Prof. Haines soon discovered that the best newspapermen are ex- newspapermen, and it wasn't long before he branched out into short story writing. Little did he suspect that his favorite forms of recreation, bunt- ing and fishing, would prove to be a subject strong enough to in- terest readers 25 years later in the second World War. Juvenile Books At the request of his publishers, Farrar and Rhinehart, he started a series of "outdoors" books for juveniles. Much to Prof. Haines' surprise, the book drew more readers from the adult popula- tion than it did from their chil- dren. In 1943 when the government reprinted one of his books, "Luck in All Weathers," in an Armed Services Edition, Prof. Haines re- ceived many letters from soldiers andsailors overseas, some of them ex-students of his. Ex-Students homesick "They came from all over- India, Japan, the Pacific-and they all said the same thing : they were homesick," he says. Today, back in Ann Arbor, Prof. Haines manages to combine the things he likes best into one schedule. "I still get in a lot of hunting and fishing," he says, "and I never have to go more than 35 miles away from home. I never get be- hind on my homework that way." Registration for Medical Aptitude Tests Required Students who wish to take the medical aptitude test, required by the Association of American Medi- cal Colleges, must register for the tests tomorrow, Tuesday and Wednesday in Rm. 100B of the Rackham Building. The tests will be given through- out the country on Jan. 11. Re- sults will be sent to three medical colleges of the student's choosing. Fee for the test is $5. Plans in India Made Known U.S,. Model To Serve As Basis for Project EDITOR'S NOTE: This column of news from India is published for the information of Indian students on campus and other students interest- ed in Indian developments. The American Constitution will probably be used as a model for the constitution for India to be drawn up by the Constituent Assembly. Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha, tem- porary chairman of the assembly, pointed out that the American Constitution had 'been taken as a model for subsequent constitu- tions, including those of the Do- minions of Canada, Australia, and South Africa, and he did not doubt that the Constituent As- sembly would pay greater atten- tion to the provisions of the Amer- ican Constitution than to those of any other. le added that "as a result of my long experience of public life for now nearly a century reason- able agreements and judicious compromises are nowhere more called for than in forming a con- stitution for a country like India." "The question of exchange of populations is unthinkable and impracticable," Mr. Ghandi de- clared recently, according to the Associated Press of India. He added: "In every province everyone is on Indian, be he Hin- du, Muslim, or of any other faith. It would not be otherwise even if Pakistan came in full. For me any such thing would spell the bankruptcy of Indian wisdom or statesmanship, or both." The Honorable Mr. Asaf Ali has been appointed' Indian am- bassador to the United States. A prominent Congress leader, Ali is at present transport mem- ber in the Interim Government. Jailed several times in connection with the Congress movement, he was returned, on the joint votes of Hindus and Muslims from Del- hi, to the Legislative Assembly in 1935 and again in 1945. He is also a former member of the Congress Working Committee and deputy leader of the Congress party in the Central Assembly. Lw Student Held DETROIT, Dec. 14-(P)-A 20- year-old sophomore law student, unable to follow his fancy on a "pin money" educational allot- ment from the government, was held today on charges of burglar- izing spacious Detroit homes of $15,000 in cash and jewtls. ETS f or A1[ '1 J PERFUMES ad COLOGNES will be appreciated if they're from* Phone 5933 235 South State (State Theatre Next to Us) Complete Lines of Gift Sets - Toiletries - Colognes - Perfumes - Body Powders - Tolcums - Vanities - Courtleys - victory of the Maccabees over the Syrians who had attempted to suppress the Jewish religion. The Intercollegiate Zionist Fed- eration of America, which is spon- soring the celebration, will donate all proceeds of the event to the Jewish National Fund, the organ- ization which purchases land in Palestine for the Jewish National Home. Air Force Group Appoints Leader Phil Smith was appointed tem- porary commander of the Ann Ar- bor branch of the Air Force Asso- ciation at its recent organizational meeting. Other temporary officers ap- pointed by Tex Brown, chairman pro-tem were Max Mathers, vice- commander; Al Mundt, secretary; Herman Miller, treasurer, Mich- ael Miatech, Bill MacDermot, John Reeves and Don Wilson, council members. Plans were made to draw up a constitution which, after approv- al, will be sent to the Washington headquarters with the proposed local name, "Ann Arbor Squadron-" Pastors To Assemble At Annual Conference The Eighth Annual Pastors Con- ference will be held Jan. 20-22 in the Rackham Building under the sponsorship of the University Ex- tension Service and the Michigan Council of Churches and Christ- ian Education. The Conference is open to pas- tors of all denominations, reli- gious educators, and other inter- ested persons. Dr. Walter Horton, member of the faculty of the Oberlin School of Theology, will deliver the con- vocation address on the subject "The World's Need and the Church's Task." VE DEADLINE IS DEC. orders for books must LAST CHANCE to st mainder of this semes 3 x 1 1 Blue Grass 2 GRN1 DANA DRDRY Cyci 40 'J R rr l JET xx i. rABU 0 4 % ' 4 LI MO N W CIudUSTMAS For Children of All Ages CL A** Just So Stories w s " Count Tie Pupoies . . . . . 1.00 America's Paul lRevere . . . . 2.30 Mr. Plum and the Little Tree . . 1.75 The Secotud Jigl ' Book . . . 2.50 Green Eyes 'qZQ oC. Sets Kiki and Muffy Mother Goose stories . . . .50-3.00 THE GOLDEN ENCYCIOPEDIA In the language children understand . in full color . . . 2.50 Wahrs Bookstore 316 SOUTH STATE STREET 0 0~ U) U) ci U) U, 0 Qy (4 oS A-\) 0, 0 p0*r J Rlj&k ;Vs 'ker TF' S A Friendship Garden I y i T E AN'S! 5 DAYS LEFT 20 for all purchases on veterans requisitions, either be filled or cancelled this week. t ah. 'ps .A e (A] Wris ley's S N s~tt (A 1r~ D - - - L L - - 0. 0 4k -o _ S A s t Back. Lock up on paper, pencils and notebooks for the re- ster. ./t 13 III f