six THE AlICHIGAN DAILY FRTDtAY. itPRL 30, I-M - -- --- ._.......... . . ... . . . 'U' TAKES TO THE AIR: Armchair Listeners Hear Events by Remote Control By MARY STEIN The University is getting wired for sound. Campus radio listeners can now hear lectures, musical programs and other events from Hill Aud- itorium, L y d i a K,endelssohn Theatre, Burton Tower, Univer- sity Hall, the I-M Building, the stadium, and Harris Hall without budging from their armchairs. Portholes at Hill' Remote control set-ups are also being planned by the Broadcast- ing Service for Natural Science Auditorium, Kellogg Auditorium a n d Rackham Lecture a n d Assembly Halls. There's hardly a campus nook or cranny that can't. be reached by radio, at least by a walkie-talkie. Fund Drive Meeting Set Campus organizations who sponsor drives on campus have been requested to attend a drives calendar meeting by Jean Gringle, member of the Student Legisla- ture Cabinet. The fund drive calendar for next year will be set up at the meeting, to be held at 3 p.m. Wed- nesday at League, and plans to institute a campus fund chest will be discussed. Organizations who plan to con- duct drives during the summer session are also asked tor petition at this time, Miss Gringle said. Symphony audiences have pro- bably been startled to see faces peering down at them out of two of the light "portholes" in Hill Auditorium's ceiling. The faces belong to the Broadcasting Ser- vice's announcer and engineer, perched beside their equipment on a wooden platform behind the stage. Microphones are extended from the top of the auditorium's round- ed ceiling by nimble electricians who crawl, with their wiring ap- paratus, through the dome's maze of plaster and wire before each broadcast. Swing Symphony The Hill control room is now being finished, with a steel plat- form planned to replace the pre- sent wooden one. A swing symphony broadcast will be heard from Hill Auditor- ium May 9, and the equipment will also be in demand for sum- mer musical activities. A second control room is at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The "royal" box at the theatre, long unused by a democratic Univer- sity students-who also prefer better vantage points-is now crowned with an amplifier and other apparatus. Every Friday at 2:30 p.m. on- the-spot programs from admin- istrative offices in University Hall are broadcast. Wires are strung from the windows of the Broad- casting Service on Angell Hall's fourth floor down into the ad- joining building. . C C v c t i r C 1 HARRY T. MONTGOMERY ......speaks here today * * * BEER. DEPOT CONVENIENT DRIVE-THRU SERVICE BEER MIXERS WINE CHAMPAGNE & SNACKS Daily: 10A.M.-l0 P.M. Sunday: Noon-7 P.M. NO PARKING PROBLEMS 114 East Williams Call 7191 ............... . 1 Montgomery, j AP Business Editor, To Talk Harry T. Montgomery, business1 editor of the Associated Press, will give two lectures in journalism today, under sponsorship of the1 journalism department. "The Press and Business" will1 be the subject of a talk at 8 p.m.t in the Rackham amphitheatre. 1 Montgomery will talk to jour- nalism students on "The Import-1 ance of Economics in Today'sI News" at 3 p.m., Rm. E, Haven Hall. A former Nieman fellow at Har- vard studying economic history and theory, he has also studiedI at King's College, London, Colum- bia University, and the University of Michigan.1 For seven years, until 1937, he was a night editor with Inter- national News Service and from then until the outbreak of the war he was an assistant night edi- tor and cable editor for the As- sociated Press. During World War I, Mont- gomery was editor of foreign re- ports for morning newspapers. From 1945 to 1947 he was Chief of the Ottawa Bureau and at that, time became Business editor, his present position. Lawyers... (Continued from Page 1) cameras ecompany, turned pale when she saw the blue uniform and summons. "I told my. hus- band to pay that traffic ticket," she said. Once the initial shock had worn off, coeds gave Sgt. Huigenza an enthusiastic welcome. He was taken right into the dining room of several sororities to serve his subpoenas, and one group hon- ored him with three choruses of "the Birmingham Jail." A lawyer's wife in Pittsfield Vil- lage was the most relieved that the summons was only an invita- tion to a dance. "I thought for sure that four year old son of mine had broken something again," she sighed with relief. Lawyer with Padded Shoulders In spite of his nine years on the police force, one coed refused to believe Sgt. Huizenga was a real officer and not a lawyer with padded shoulders. "He smiled so sweetly I didn't think he was a cop," she said. All indications were that no lawyed would be stood up tonight. "Not one of the women tried to dodge the summons," Huizena said. Goal of $5,000 Set for Fresh Air Camnp nd Tag Day Collections< Scheduled Wednesday With a goal of $5,000 as their objective in this year's Fresh Air Camp drive, students will be out. with tags and buckets at every conspicuious spot on campus next1 Wednesday. Tag Day, an annual student fund-raisingdcampaign to help "send the kids to camp" will' represent the cmbined efforts of' several campus organizations- Assembly, AIM, Pan-Hel, IFC, the- League and the Union. Formerly just an Assembly pro- ject, the Tag Day Drive has been expanded to an all-campus affair to assure maximum student sup- port and interest in its objectives. Some of the money collected on Tag Day will go toward the pur- chase of camping equipment and craft materials for the camp, which is located on Patterson Lake, 24 miles northwest of Ann Arbor. Student contributions will also be used to help defray the camp's operating expenses, and provide personnel for its medical services, transportation, dietitians a n d laundry services. Members of the Fresh Air Camp Executive Committee are Norris Domangue and Eugene Lamb of AIM, Kathleen Watson of Pan- Hel, Jim McCobb of IFC, Mary Quiatt and Irma Eichhorn of Assembly, Janet Cork of the Lea- gue, and Bob Holland of the Union. Walter Dean is in charge of the publicity for the Fresh Air Camp Drive. The faculty members spon- soring the project are Miss Ethel McCormick and Peter Ostafin. Campus Calendar United World Federalists: Ex- ecutive Council Meeting, 4 p.m., Michigan Union, 3rd floor. International Center Instruc- tion classes in American Ball Room Dancing will resume, Room 302, Union. YPCM: Executive Committee meeting, 5 p.m., Union. German Coffee Hour: 3-4:30 p.m., League Coke Bar. Students and faculty members invited. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Friday Evening Services from 7 to 7:30 p.m. to accommodate those who wish to attend the May Fes- tival. Wesleyan Guild: Open house, 8 p.m., Wesley Foundation. Col- ored slides of the West will be shown. Roger Williams Guild: Open house after the May Festival Con- cert. DIRTY HANDS: Fir ig Lin' Work Precedes I whte Collar Studis Told > - "You're going to get your hands dirty," Thomas A. Beaver, Ford director o saiaried personnel, warned 100 business and engin eer,- ing students yesterday, at. a lun- cheon in Dearborn Inn, Detroit. Beaver discussed "Opportunities in the F'rd Motor Company" and outlined the company's two-year "post graduate" training pro- gram. One hundred college grad- uates from all over the nation are accepted each year and spend one Garg Editor Red-Faced After Attack By M. F. CALLAUAN, JR.. A near-tragedy was averted to- day when local gendarmes res- cued Thom Strope, managing edi- tor of the Gargoyle, from the maddened clutches of a shapeless female who gave her name as An- astasia Bogolomets. Strope had been walking toward Angell Hall, when he was set upon by this women, who belabored him about the head and elbows with a large bronze hammer and sickle. Miss Bogolomets was wearing a large mauve and green "Shaeffer for President" button, which sub- sequently lodged in Strope's trachea. Resuscitated, Strope expressed an ignorance as to the reason for the affair, and also revealed that he had been shot at from a pass- ing automobile late last evening. The vehicle, pure white save for the legend 'Cal is your Pal-So Spill It!", bore a Lansing license plate. It has not been seen in Ann Arbor since. Miss Bogolomets gave what may be a clue to the whole affair, when she mentioned a few words about "that awful rag!" It devbloped, al- though her suit was showing the effect of proletarian orgies, she was referring to the Gargoyle, which is slated to rock the campus Monday with its blushing Commu- nist issue. As Miss Bogolomets foams at the mouth at such times, no further information could be gained. Strope was no help either. He has gone to see the State Capitol. Life membership cards for Union members will be ready May 3 and may be picked up in the business office of the Michigan Union, located in the basement. Men students who have spent eight semesters at the University are eligible. year working "on the firing line" in the manufacturing processes and then move up to white-collar work, he said. Many Openings "The job opportunities for busi- ness administration and engineer- ing students are not as great as in normal times, although there are still many openings. We have been reorganizing in the past three years and making many per- sonnel changes involving men al- ready in the auto industry," Beav- er explained. "But once your foot is in the door. merit and ability to assume responsibility will determine how far you go," Beaver commented. Need Experience Students need a background of experience, besides college train- ing, because there is much to learn about the auto industry, he said. "That is the reason for the apprenticeship program." The group, which was sponsor- ed by Delta Sigma Pi, business ad- ministration fraternity, took an "off the beaten track" tour of the River Rouge plant and in- spected the motor assembly and glass manufacturing plants. Plant "B" where Ford is tool- ing up for a "revolutionary" 1949 car was officially closed to the group, but two wide-eyed mem- bers of the party reported a glimpse of the new Ford. Accord- ing to their hazy accounts, the vehicle incorporates all the best features of the Tucker, Cadillac and Studebaker. Professors Leave Five University political science professors left today for the Sixth Conference of Midwest Political Scientists, to be held today,to- morrow, and Sunday at Indiana- polis. Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the political science de- partment, will participate in a discussion on "Political Trends in Europe," and Prof. Harold M. Dorr will be one of a group dis- cussing "Recent Developments in American Constitutional Law." Also attending the meeting are Prof. Joseph Kallenbach, Prof. Russell H. Fifield, and Prof. C. F. Norton. For Sale at SWIFTS DRUG STORE 340 South State Street The Rexall Store on the Campus Ft I SLACKS ... custom tailored at this low price Values up to $9.85 E PLEATS and N J I BLUE BROWN TAN ZIPPERS FREE ALTERATIONS ANN ARBOR CLOTHING 113 South Main ii 11 tH E PHILADELPHIA O RCH ESTRA eugene URMANDY, conductor for your permanent enjoyment on Colum bia aRecords FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK Three-Year Day Course Four-year Evening course CO-EDUCATIONAL Member Assn. of Amer. Law Schools Accredited College Degree Required for Admission Veterans of World War II who have completed two years of college work toward accredited degree may matri- culate within one year of honorable discharge. Full transcript of record required in every case. FIRST YEAR CLASS BEGINS September 27, 1948 For further information address REGISTRAR FORDHAM UNIV. SCHOOL OF LAW 302 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. v BEETHOVEN: Seventh Symphony MM 557 ................................. $7.25 BEETHOVEN: Ninth Symphony with Westminster Choir and Soloists M M 591 .................................$10.85 BRAHMS: Third Symphony M M 642 ..................................$6.00 BRAHMS :Fourth Symphony MVM 567 ................................ $7.25 PROKOFIEV: Classical Symphony MX 287 ........................... RESPIGHI: Pines of Rome MM 616.......................... ....$3.50 .$4.75 RESPIGHI: Feste Romane MM 707...............................$4.75 STRAUSS: Death and Transfiguration MM 613 ................................. $4.75 TCHAIKOVSKY: Fourth Symphony M M 736 ................................. $7.25 WEBER: Der Freischutz Overture 12665D...... ........................$1.25 These are but a few suggestions from the long list of Philadelphia Orchestra recordings on Columbia Master- works. Hear this superb orchestra at the May Festival and enjoy their music in your own home on Columbia Records. The Philadelphia Orchestra EueeOrmandy, geeconductor Transcontinental Tour sponsored by Columbia Records inc. NOW APPEARING IN THE MAY FESTIVAL for your permanent enjoyment on Columbia wRecords BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 9 in D Minor, Op. 125 "Choral" with Stella Roman, soprano; Enid Szantho, Contralto; Frederic Jagel, tenor: Nicola Moscona, basso; and The Westminster Choir. Set MM-591 GERSHWIN: Rhapsody in Blue with Oscar Levant, Piano Set MX-251 HANDEL: Water Music Suite. Set MX-279 . I I ( II M t & r=' 1 11 I 11 11 ;11