THE MICHIGAN DAILY FR~iDAY, r Y , r a4s OM I - TUDENT PRODUCT: eichigan Journalist' Serves As Lab for Budding Writers By DON McNEIL A sparkling student newspaper with professional makeup, which sn't competing with The Daily, appeared on campus this past( week and will be published five more times this semester. The Michigan Journalist, begun 1 years ago as a laboratory ex- eriment for budding journalists, s brought out every spring by itudents of the journalism de- artment. )ver 100 Participate A four page affair, s the result of news the paper gathering, Exchange Talk To Open With George Allen, The Hon. George V. Allen, As- sistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, will speak at 11 a.m. Monday in the Rackham Lecture Hall at the opening ses- sion of the Conference on Foreign Student Exchange. a Mr. Allen, whose lecture here will be open to the public, re- ceived his present appointment in. February of this year, when he was named to head the Voice of America, official propaganda organ of the United States. He is also head of the Department of State's cultural program. Reprelsenting the government at the conference here May 10- 12, Mr. Alllen is a career officer of the Foreign Service with a wide variety of assignments throughout the world. H'e has served at posts in China, Greece, and Egypt. He worked in the State Department at Washington until his appointment as' am- bassador to Iran. He recently re- tired from this post to take his present job. Mr. Allen is a founding mem- ber of the Middle-East Institute of Washington. A graduate of Harvard University, he has written many articles for various magazines and journals. Radio Program To Feature Clinic The Speech Clinic will be the scene of this week's "On Campus Doorsteps" program at 3:30 p.m. today over WKAR. Dr. Harlan Bloomer, director of the clinic, and John N. Clancy, admitting officer and clinician, will discuss methods of speech correction and the work accom- pshed at the clinic. All Broadcasting Service pro- grams over WKAR formerly heard at 2:30 p.m. will now be heard at 3:30 p.m., inasmuch as the East Lansing station has remained on Eastern Standard Time. feature and editorial writing by four classes, consisting of over 100 students. Each year the students go' through all the technical difficul- ties of organizing a staff, getting together writers, make-up men, proof readers and headline writ-, ers. Cooperative Staff A board of faculty editors, con- s'isting of members of the depart- ment, acts merely as an advisory group. "The board," says Prof. Wesley H. Maurer, who heads the project,'! "creates as many situations as possible that develop students as a cooperative member of a staff, since cooperation and initiative in assuming responsibility are so large a part of successful journal- ism." By-Lines for All Students develop their own story ideas but receive approval from their news source before publication. Every article is by- lined as a means of identifying the individual writers. Editorials are chosen from among those writtenhby tworde- partment classes in journalism. Final editing is done at the Ann Arbor News which publishes the newspaper for the department. Music Makers May Audiftion Student musicians may have the opportunity to appear in. Car- negie Hall by entering the third annual Nationwide Auditions sponsored by the Associated Con- cert Bureau, Inc., New York. Entries, which are due by June 1, are open to all United States citizenswho are either artists ready for a career or student mu- sicians. Local auditions are planned for early next fall in Lansing and De- troit in the ten contest categories. Listed categories include bass, baritone, tenor, contralto, and coloratura, dramatic, lyric and mezzo-sopranos. State winners will appear next winter in the National 'Music Fes- tival at Carnegie Hall. Bonnie Elms, '48SM, represent- ed Michigan in the National Music Festival at Carnegie Hall last February. She was state winner in the mezzo-soprano di- vision. Union Petitions Petitions for Union vice- presidents must be turned into the student offices from 3 to 5 p.m. today. The petitions should bear 200 signatures and specify the school the peti- tioner will represent. Petitions for Opera Council Are Available Applications Are IDue At Union by May 14 Petitions for permanent posi- tions on the Executive Council of the 1948 Union Opera will be ac- cepted from 2 to 5 p.m. May 10 through 14 at the student offices of the Union, Dave Upton, chair- man announced yesterday. "With an excellent script al- ready finished, and 40 good song- writers hard at work on the music, we are now ready to ap- point the men who will supervise the multitude of jobs vital to the production of a successful show," he said. The Opera needs men to be production chairman, promotion chairman and finance chairman. Also needed are committee heads for costumes and make-up, prop- erties, settings, publicity and ad- vertising, photography, rehear- sals, personnel and all other ac- tual production jobs. A corresponding secretary, re- cording secretary, and volunteers for budget work, accounting and requisition control are also sought. All petitions should list previous experience, school sta- tus, availabilityhduring summer school and all other pertinent in- formation. Leyshon emphasized that peti- tions should be submitted in per- son so that an appointment may be made for interviews to be held from May 17 through 20.1 Leyshon and Gene Sikowousky, president of the Union will con- duct the interviews. Pinafore' Tickets Are Still Available Members of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society are slowly recov- ering their breath today from the initial rush for tickets for "HMS Pinafore" to be presented May 13, 14 and 15 in Pattengill Audito- rium. Pinafore tickets are being sold daily from 9 to 12 and 1 to 5 p.m. in the booth outside Rm. 2, University Hall. By PHYLLIS KULICK A plan for the proclamation of a world federation directly through the people and not through the UN is snowballing toward actuality with the calling of a Peoples World Constituent Assembly for 1950 in Geneva. The movement began unassum- ingly enough in England in Jan- uary of 1946 when a group of backbenchers from Parliament led by Henry C. Usborne met to consider the problems of the peace. They refuted the two pre- dominant trends of thought that peace can be bought with dollars or be enforced by power. No Peace Without Law IBeginning with the premise that there can be no peace with- out law, they reasoned that a Direct World Federation Plan Will BeDrafted by Assembly Federalists officially endorsed the plan. Parliamentary groups in Great Britain, France, Holland, Luxem- berg, Italy and Belgium endorsed world federation and stated their readiness to back the movement. Men like Earnest Bevin, Clement Atlee, Paul Spaak, William Doug- las, and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., climbed on the bandwagon. Selecting Delegates England is already setting up electoral districts to select dele- gates to the convention. On this side of the international scene, a meeting was called for the fall at Princeton to create a plan for electing delegates in the United States. As more and more political leaders become convinced of the need for World Federation the dream of "peace in our time" comes a little closer to realiza- tion. Students Cite Social Needs In Education University curricula that train technicians instead of citizens came under fire from more than 600 students at the Michigan Christian Student Convocation in East Lansing. The students agree in discus- sion groups that the modern uni- versity's stress on objectivity and the scientific approach is produc- ing social misfits. Efficiency in a specialty is inadequate prepzra - tion for the problems of conmmu- nal life, they concluded. Bishop R. S. Emrich, of the Protestant Episcopal Church, charged that modern universities are "intellectual cafeterias," with no overall policy for balanced meals. He recommended an em- phasis upon Christian concepts in the universities since Christian- ity "is a struggle for order in hu- man affairs." DOG ADOPTS CHICK--Laddie, German shepherd, looks at a baby chick he has adopted in the home of J. W. Holley of Kansas City, Mo. The dog allows the chick to walk on his back and head, He whimpers when it is out of his sight. MYSTERY FELINE: Chem Profs Assume New Functions as Kitten Keepers By JO MISNER Members of the chemistry de- partment have viewed numerous chemical and physical reactions in the past without "losing their equilibrium." But a recent biological phe- nomena which took place between the new and old chemistry build- ings has the department all agog. This disconcerting event was the discovery at 9 a.m. yesterday of a tiny kitten in the combus- tion room between the two build- ings. An unnamed professor spied the kitten through a hole in the wall made by construction work- ers who are now knocking down parts of the walls for entrances between the buildings. Origin a Mystery The parentage of the foundling was clothed in mystery. The only means of entrance to the combus- tion room was a six-inch lead pipe. No other traces of cats or kittens were found in the build-' ing. The kitten's eyes are still closed, and various authorities estimate its age as somewhere between 2 and 5 days. The orphan kitten has been adopted temporarily by doting professors and is making its home in the main office of the chem building. Christened 'Benzene' The kitten, dubbed "Benzene" (C-6 for short), is living in luxury on a white fur mitten-bed. Her meals are administered through a medicine dropper by top-notch chemical authorities. Though the chemistry profes- sors are doing everything in their power to make "Benzene" com- fortable, they expressed a deep concern over the kitten's future. As a matter of fact, they will be quite happy to turn "Benzene" over to any layman who promises to give the kitten a "good home." world government is needed which has the authority to make and enforce laws applicable to in- dividuals. There was less and less prospect that the UN would take an about face on its present pol- icy of national sovereignty. But they believed that the people were ready and ahead of their statesmen in the quest for world government. And so the plan for the people themselves arising and proclaim- ing a world federation was born. It was proposed that a Peoples' World Constitutent Assembly meet in 1950 to draft the charter of World Goveijnment. Delegates to the convention would be unofficially elected in as many countries as possible on the basis of one delegate per million of population. Ratification Procedures Two possible procedures for ratificationswere seen.d Fist, it would be submitted to the UN for approval. If this failed, the dele- gates would have the democratic right to submit the draft directly to their national legislatures for formal ratification. Groups in the United States were quick to follow up the pro- posal. The Hutchins group in Chicago drew up the first con- crete draft of a World Govern- ment. A World Republic group was organized to back the plan. One week ago the United World a 001% Our Spring Parade of "Proven Hits"" Today and Saturday! Continuous from 1 :30 P.M. George Sanders wHO M Charles Coburn Boris Karloff } u U -' s6 p~~to+ ROY Action! ROGERS "THE GAY Music! RANCH ERO" I I Coming Sunday. "GOOD NEWS" JUNE ALLYSON ART CINEMA LEAGUE presents 7WBR/4Nj#T/M46/A/IVF//.M3 4'yone of/he few authen/ic geniuses of/the screenl"-CUE "A MASTERPIECE1. Surpasses "Clearly fashioned by an artist Rene Clair In the profound search with lyrical ideas!" --PM. for truth! Michel Simon gives one "On a rare and unfamiliar level of the "screen's greatest perform. a film art!" -S -HOLLYWOOD QUARTERLY CUge G~ateSIMON i "Has a spirited sense of 11Witty, sensitive and compas. gaiety!" -THEATRE ARTS sionatel" -PM "A devastating satire!" "Has a curiously appealing -NEWS (quality!" --TRIBUNE ., "Satirical, pagnant a nd "Ecstatlcvally lyrical I" strangely fascinating1l".-CUE CINEMA (Mag.) FRENCH DIALOGUE Z m dTeoA nds Both with Complete English Titles A Cine-Classics, Inc. Release CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING "Home of 3-Hour Odorless Dry Cleaning" , \1C LEAN E RS Plant: 630 S. Ashley Branch:. 619 Packard Phone 4700 WANTED v_ it Newman Club SPRING 3IV ALL CAMPUS DANCE MICHIGAN UNION FORMAL FRIDAY, May 14th $2.50 a couple HAGANA urgently needs GI clothing! Khakis, fatigues, O.D.'s, shirts, all battle dress. Call 2-6585 for pickup. )lb TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride, student couple to Bay City May 8. Jos. Schultz, 9471 after 5:30. ) a STUDENT COUPLE desire ride to Bay City, Sat. 8th; share expenses. Call Jos. Schultz, 9471 after 5:30 p.m. )2a HELP WANTED NEED MONEY? Sell Food Savers! Ex- cellent commission. Send $1.00 for sample and details. Money back guarantee! Handy Pak Co., 3417 Maryland, Midland, Mich. )4b WANTED TO RENT AVIDLY interested in furnished apt.I or house for two years - teachingI fellow and wife (dean's secretary). Univ. 334 - Mrs. Ecker. )23 VETERAN and wife need apartment, starting next fall semester. Call 8470 and ask for Bill L. if you have the impossible available. )9a WHAT-Furnished Apt. WHEN--June.! WHY-Wedding Bells. WHERE-.-Not fussy. WHO-Bill Wyckoff, call 2- 3256 after 6. )6b APARTMENT in Ann Arbor for summer session only. No children or pets. Will consider trading apt. in Cleve- land suburb 10 miles west of square for S.S. Excellent references. Harlan L. Thomas, 19241 Shoreland Ave., Rocky River, Ohio. )3b MICHIGAN1 Continuous Weekdays Daily A 35c to 5 P.M. from 1 P.M. T Today and Saturday POSITION WANTED NEED HANDYMAN to repair, clean, paint or maintain your home this summer? Law student would like to stay with family. Willing to work for room, board. Phone Zalenski, 4145, 7-9 P.M. )71 FOR RENT AVAILABLE now: Half of double for male student. Pleasant location. 2-3762. )27 VACANCY for 10 men students, sum- mer semester. For information call 2-0646. Ask for Mrs. Field before 5 p.m. )84 LARGE double room for summer and fall semester for men. Call 2-3481 or 6938. ) ic DOUBLE and single room for summer one mile from campus. Burns Park area- Box-99. )9b PERSONAL OUR FEATURE FOR MOTHER'S DAY Nylon, 8 gore slip. Lace top and bot- tom. White only, size 32, 38. $5.95. Dries in 15 min.-no ironing neces- sary. RANDALL'S 306 South State Street MOTHER'S Day Cards. Excellent selec- tion of appropriate gifts. A Spring, Jeweler, 221 S. 4th Ave., Ph. 4834. )65 Tommy Coats-Rayon Jersey and Crepe or Cotton Batiste and Seersucker. SMARTEST HOSIERY SHOPPE Michigan Theater Building. )7 SAVE SAVE SAVE The 1948 MICHIGANENSIAN costs $6.00 now. May 15 it will cost $6.50. )88 CAMPUS CORSAGE SERVICE "A Student Service for Students" Call Bill Barish PHONE 2-7032 )18 SLICK AS A WHISTLE Cottons.in fresh-as-a-daisy Fabrics to keep you from wilting now and all summer. Size 9-15. 10-44. $8.95-$22.95 THE ELIZABETH DILLON SHOP 309 So. State Street )2 10,% VIRGIN WOOL TOPPERS with full lining. $25.95-$39.95 In black, grey, red, green, white & yellow. COUSINS ON STATE STREET ) 1 BUSINESS SERVICES LAUNDRY-Washing and ironing done in my home. Free pickup and deliv- ery. Phone 25-7708. )43 ALTERATIONS-RESTYLING- Cust- om clothes. Hildegarde Shop, 109 E. Washington, Telephone 2-4669, )87 TYPING: Theses, term papers, ad- dresses. Duplicating: notices, form letters, programs. A2 Typing Serv- ice, 208 Nickels Arcade, Ph. 9811. )28 TYPEWRITERS Sold - Rented - Repaired Free pickup and delivery. Office Equipment Service 111 S. Fourth - Ph. 2-1213 )66 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Storm coat, South Ferry Field, April 15, Reward, call 9371. )95 LOST: Dark brown tweed sportcoat last Saturday night, Bear Mountain. Please call Lackey 4145. Reward. )3c LOST or STRAYED: 6 spiral notebooks from Wikel's Monday afternoon, Chem. and Math notes. Return im- perative. Grad student. Reward. Call 5518. )91 GOLD TOP Parker "51" pen in Nat. Sci. library, loose clip. Finder PLEASE call Bob, 20022. Reward. )26 FOR SALE ROYAL Standard typewriter, pica, good condition. Phone 9014, 3-5 P.M. only. )28 GOLF clubs, 8 Jones registered irons good condition, $45. Call Paul O'Hara N-42 Law Club, Phone-4145. )25 FRENCH Selmer Clarinet - Excellent condition. Morton Ross - East Quad. 24591. )24 TWIN baby oarriage - Excellent con- dition. Simmons studio couch. Phone 25-9365. )22 GOLF EQUIPT.: Spaulding, MacGregor, Wilson. Ph. 4044 or 2-2058, J. Malloy. FOR SALE: Trailer, completely furn- ished, including piano. Parked for permanent occupancy. Inquire at gas station, 1880 Packard Road after 5 p.m. )7b CUSHMAN Motorscooter, Side - Kar, Windshield, two good tires, recently overh pled, Box 94, Daily. )82 NEW Bolex H8 movie camera, never used. Complete with F1.9 lens. Will sell for considerably less than list price of $330. If interested, write Daily Box 98. )2b GOLF CLUBS, 2, 5, 7, 9, and putter, (3) woods with gloves, (5) balls new and used, canvas bag. Phone 26432 after 5. )8a MAN's White Shoes, 12A, worn 5 times, $7.00; white net and satin formal, size 12, $10; Red reversible raincoat, size 12, $10; Man's all wool gabardine grey suit, tailored by Saffel and Bush, size 37 regular, $20; Sport coat, tan, size 40, $6. Thomson, Phone 5745 af- ter 5 o'clock. 7a HOUSECOATS: Seersucker, sateeA, pi- que, chintz and dotted swiss. Florals and plain. Smartest Hosiery Shoppe. Michigan Theatre Building. )7 YOUNG LOVEBIRDS, parakeets, cocke- tiel, and canaries. Bird supplies and cages. 562 South 7th. Ph. 5330. )19 WHIZZER for sale. Call 2-4591. 330 Prescott House before 10 a.m. )2c CAMPUS SHOP SPECIALS THIS WEEK All wool spring suits 1/3 off. 1/3 off on all pigskin and leather gloves. All colors and sizes. 305 South State Street )11 COLUMBIA balloon tire bicycle, prac- tically new; $31.03. Phone 22477. )99 __ __ THURS., FRI., SAT.-8:30 P.M. Admission 50c (Tax Inc.) Box Office Opens Wed. at 2 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATER Phone 6300 I C ..ter: f- -2 A Todwt Erce 35c until 5 P.M. STARTS SUNDAY! ALL ACADEM WINNING P CELRIMED! "RICHLY Y AWARD ROGRAM REGU LAR PRICE'S I 4 DESERVING OF AWARD!" _ -Weitschat, News "His Performance Proves Right To 'OSCAR'" i v .n.. . s'.o P*.. oe , I f a. /' ROBE0.T cillivA M TGREER pNE Bit i '- II I .I 11 I I