TIE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APrHL 24, 194S . .. . . .... . .... ........ Union Constitution Amendments Proposed by the Board of Directors 1. Seven Vice-Presidents of the Union, to be student mem- bers, elected as hereinafter provided. Five of these shall be elected from the following schools and colleges by the students therein: Literature, Science, and the Arts, Engineering, Archi- tecture, Forestry and Conservation, Music, Business Adminis- tration, Education. Pharmacy. At least four schools and colleges shall be represented among the Vice-Presidents from the group. Two of the seven Vice-Presidents shall be elected from the fol- lowing schools by the students therein: Law, Medical, Dental, Graduate, Public Health. Two schools shall be represented. (Article IV, Section I, Paragraphs 2 and 3.) 2. At least ten candidates from at least five of the follow- ing schools and colleges: Literature, Science, and the Arts, En- gineering; Architecture, Forestry and Conservation, Music, Bus- iness Administration, Education, Pharmacy; and at least four candidates from at least three of the following schools: Law, Medical, Dental, Graduate, Public Health; the candidates for Vice-Presidents to be students in good standing in the respec- tive schools or colleges which they are nominated to represent., Proposed by Petition 1. Selections Committee. The President of the Union and its Recording Secretary, to be students, are to be appointed by a committee composed of the Dean of Students, ex officio; two faculty or alumni members; and four student members chosen from the seven Vice-Presidents. The faculty, alumni, and student members shall be appointed by the Appointments Committee. The Dean of Students shall be Chairman of the Selections Com- mittee. (Article X). 2. Finance Committee. There shall be a Finance Commit- tee, which shall consist of (a) the Regent member of the Board of Directors, ex-officio; (b) the President of the Union, ex- officio; (c) the Financial Secretary of the Union, ex-officio; (d) the Dean of Students, ex-officio; (e) the Recording sec- retary, ex-officio; (f) two non-student members of- the Board of Directors, each a resident of Ann Arbor, to be appointed by the appointments committee, and (g) the senior Vice-Presi- dent. The Financial Secretary shall be Chairman of the Com- mittee. (Article V). 3. Appointments Committee. The President of the Union, ex-officio; its Financial Secretary, ex-officio; its Recording Secretary, ex-officio; the General Secretary of the Alumni Association, ex-officio; the two senior Vice-Presidents; and the Senior Faculty Member of the Board of Directors shall consti- tute a standing Appointments committee, a majority of which shall have sole power to appoint all except ex-officio members ANNUAL MEETING: Education Issues Discussed By Michigan Schoolmasters .I t Daily-Wise. MAY DAY FESTIVAL-Hawaiian students who participated in the opening scene of the "Interna- tional Pageant." Twenty-nine students combined their talents for song and dance to produce this interpretation of a festive day in the islands. The campus felt the effects of an educational invasion yesterday as hundreds of state high school teachers met for the annual Mich- igan Schoolmasters Club meeting. They met in a general morning session to hear Prof. Ralph W. Tyler of the University of Chicago discuss means of improving high school teaching, then divided into conference sections. New Teaching Blood At a conference on teacher placement Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, state superintendent of instruc- tion, revealed that Michigan will need approximately 3,600 more teachers this year than will be available. Rural schools are espe- cially hard hit by the shortage Students Get eel' of Radio On 'U' Station Speech students will cram two full days of broadcasting experi- ence into six hours next Tuesday and Wednesday as their "Opera- tion 4006" gets underway. Broadcasting over "Station WMDS," 200 students in 10 speech classes will get the "feel" of radio, by sticking to advanced program schedules, writing to order, pro- ducing, acting and announcing in their own programs. Right now they're polishing up plans for quiz shows, soap operas, musical programs, myteries, com- edies-all the types of broadcasts that real stations carry. They're even experimenting withetheir own sound effects. They'll broadcast from Rm. "4006" of Angell Hall from 7 to 10 p.m. both days. Three studios, including one classroom wired for sound will be used, with pro- grams alternating between them. Since all programs must be con- densed to fit into the limited schedule, a 30 minute show is shortened to about 10 minutes, and a 15-minute program runs only about six-on a rough three to one ratio. A public "listening post" will be in Rm. 25 of Angell Hall, and non- speech students who want to sit in on audience participation pro- grams can do so--though no re- frigerators or trips to Bermuda will be handed out. with 1.100 already closed because of lack of teachers. There will be 2,026 new teachers graduating from colleges this spring according to Dr. T. Luther Purdom, director of the Bureau of Appointments. Of these 90 will be University graduates, education school figures indicate. However, surveys show that one-fourth of the graduates will never teach so that even by hiring out of state teachers there will probably be only 2,300 to meet a need for nearly 5,000. The need for elementary teach- ers will be especially great in or- der to match the growing enroll- ment rising from the increased birthrate of recent years, Dr. El- liott said. Zooming Birth Rate Higher birth rates will also catch up with universities and colleges, Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss told a conference of deans of women and girl's counselors. "If post-war babies seek higher education in the same proportion as their predecessors, the enroll- mentwill be nearly 3,000,000 in 1960-65, one-third more than it is today," he said. Facilities, physical plans and fi- nancial support of higher educa- tion must be vastly expanded in the next ten years to meet this growth, he emphasized. Average Salary Rise A bright note on the salary problem was sounded by a Bureau of Appointments survey which in- dicated that the average salary has gone from $1,100 in 1939 to $2,400. I1 -I {I i i I of all committees authorized by V). the Board of Directors. (Article I I RKO Hunting New Tarzan The successor to Tarzan of the jungles and the movies is being sought on the University campus, according to a letter received on campus from RKO studios. The letter, which was signed by a talent director, stipulated quali- fications for the new Tarzan. Among other things, he must be between the ages of 22 and 25 years and at least six feet, three inches tall in his stocking feet. Prospective Tarzans must also, according to the letter, be excel- lent swimmers and "general all around athletes.- "He should have broad shoul- ders, full chest and muscles fully developed, yet not to an abnormal extreme." The letter did not stress acting ability of the candidates. "Al- though acting experience would of course be helpful, a strong face aWlIe toproject -a pleasing person- ality is even more important." Campus Calendar Student Recital - Bertram Gable, baritone, 8:30 p.m., Rack- ham Assembly Hall. Play - "Importance of Being Earnest," 8 p.m., Lydia Mendels- sohn., Movie - The Good Earth, 8 p.m., Kellogg, Auditorium. Open House-Michigan League, 7:30, tomorrow, League Ballroom State Theatre-Out of the Blue; 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Michigan Theatre-This Happy Breed; 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Money Is Something You can't just walk up and take a Detroit paper out of the rack each morning, Merle G. Sheetz, 45, 514 E. Williams found out in Municipal Court yesterday. Judge Jay H. Payne fined Sheetz $10 and added $1.25 costs for the papers he had taken from a stand in front of a restaurant. City May Shift To Daylight Savings Time Ann Arborites will have to do some fancy calculating in the next two weeks to keep up with local and national time changes as a good part of the nation goes on Daylight Savings Time. Complications will set in tomor- row when Detroit changes to sum- mer time and will continue until May 3 when the City Council will probably vote to put Ann Arbor on the new time. At the last two council meetings an amendment to a local ordinance was passed making it possible for the council to change Ann Arbor time to DST by resolution. Radio programs originating in cities which go on Daylight Sav- ings will come to Ann Arbor an hour earlier. The Daily will go to press an hour earlier since the Associated Press wire service which originates in Detroit will go off at 1 a.m. instead of 2 a.m. Students going to and from DST areas will have to change their watches each time they leave or return to Ann Arbor for at least a week. On May 3, after the May Fes- tival, if the council acts on the time changing ordinance, all cal- culations will have to be thrown out the window. For the most part, original time schedules will resume for Ann Arbor residents. The University will probably follow Ann Arbor time, officials said yesterday. current r to ..insured to $5,000. Any amount opens your account at A N N ARBOR FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assn. 116N. Fourth Aveiuve opposite the Assets Over Court ouse 11,oo,ooo I I I, d/ 1I g -77- Daily-Wise. HAT DANCE,-Beatrice Patton and Bill Miller execute some intricate steps around a sombrero in the Latin American Carnival scene from the "International Pageant." ,IrV,4 Stamp Sale 1o Fe(d Europeans Foreign stamps will return lected from student contributors abroad in the form of food under and auctioned at a sale Wednes- a plan formed by the Student Re- day at Lane Hall. Proceeds will be ligious Association Public Affairs used to fill food requests directed Committee. to the University by European The foreign postage will be col- families. .~. R ways suggziest sprinig .. U 1~i~'aI as suggests voi- women always sugges.th dat you hold a spring dance . . . dances always sug- - gest programs . . . and program s al- ways suggest to us the fact that (Craft Press is the best place in town to get thcm! CAF TPRESiS 330 MAYNAIM ST~rtFA Phone 8805 " ' ! Q 101 SoUTH MAIN I FOUR E SPECI MEN'S SPRING SHOES ABOUT 475 PAIRS FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK IN 4 SPECIAL GROUPS 100 PAIRS 125 PAIRS 122 PAIRS 128 PAIRS T N I G H T A $395 $995 U - ..w. . I.F, L B U''' 11111 I