PAGE EIGHT 'T CIF'ICHIC DAILY1E DA , ATAY 14, 1344 - .-.- - - - - - - .- -.,- I -.. - - I ..." . . . ..., m . . . . ............... ......... ....... ... --------- - -- ---- . .......... ........ .................... ......... . . ...... . ................. . ..... . ..... . . .. ......... n-- . . .............. .- - M !- HELP WAR VICTIMS: Collection To Be Made For UN Children's Drive The chorus of 7,500,000 grateful children who owe thein lives to food and clothing provided them by many relief organizations may swell to powerful proportions but it is ominously overshadowed by the cries of 222,500,000 children of the world who are still face- to-face with starvation.,4 An opportunity to help these famine victims will be given stu- dents from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. next Wednesday. A squad of volunteers from several cooperating campus organizations will man the buckets at convenient campus cross-roads.7 * * * Groups Cooperating The drive will be carried out through Lane Hall in conjunction with the Washtenaw County Cam- paign which is already underway. Cooperating campus organizations include Pan-hel, IFC, AVC, UWF, YPCM and seceral student relig- ious organizations. Campus chair- man is Seymour Goldstein, chair- man of the famine committee of SRA. The student campaign is an arm of a vast United Nations Ap- Local high school students swung behind the UN Appeal for Children with a vota by the senior class of University High School to contribute $100 of $150 they had collected for a weekend class outing, it was learned yesterday. The donation was made when it was found there was no avail- able weekend for the trip before their terms end. peal for Children being carried out in. 45 countries. The Amer- ican drive is spearheaded by the American Overseas Aid Commit- tee. Twenty-five national and in- ternational labor, farm, religious, social and relief agencies are co- operating to make this a sort of community chest of the world. Because of the extreme need represented by these millions of starving children, the goal is a dollar a student," Seymour Gold- stein, chairman of the campus drive said. Public Health Called Fertile Fi eld for Jobs There are practically unlimited opportunities for medical and non-medical workers in the field of public health. Dr. John Hanlon, of the University School of Public Health, said yesterday. He spoke at one of the current series of ad- visory talks on professional schools sponsored by the literary college. "Public health is really an amal- gamation of professions," Dr. Hanlon said. "It includes not only physicians but statisticians, ad- ministrators, nurses, engineers and dentists. It is the newest profes- sion, not just a small group inter- ested in things like cleaning out swamps." Dr. Hanlon told the group that the public health program at the school consists of six main groups. These are control of communica- ble diseases; maternal, infant, and child health care; environmental health care (water and food pri- marily); vital statistics; health education; and laboratory work. Many new openings are becom- ing available in administration work, particularly hospital ad- ministration, he said. The Uni- versity is planning a hospital ad- ministration curriculum which will probably begin next fall, Dr. Han- lon added. Most of the students taken into the pblic health school, which has a number of openings, have a professional school degree, al- though some interested in, for ex- ample, laboratory or administra- tive work do not. Dr. Hanlon em- phasized the fact that the en- trance requirements to the public health school are very pliable. University of The Dance' Dance-minded students who want to go to summer school yet never open a textbook, may aittend a novel "university of the Dance." The unique school, at Jacob's Pillow, Massachusetts, offeits courses in ballet, ethnologic dance, modern dance, American dance, and even body conditioning. Members of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo--including Alexan- dra Danilova, Natalie Krassovska, and Frederic Franklin--will teach ballet courses this summer. The course continues for 12 weeks beginning June 21. Stu- dents may enroll for eight weeks at $400, or for smaller segments of time. The preparatory course ONE OF 7,500,00 ..he needs your help U' SlymphonyI Concert Due Next Sunday Contemporary works for small orchestras will be presented by the University Little Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Wayne Dunlap, in their first concert of the semester at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. The opening work, "Serenade for Small Orchestra" was com- posed in 1947 especially for the Little Symphony by James Wolfe, a composition student here under Edmund Haines, Homer Keller, and Ross Lee Finney. Wolfe has since conducted the Honolulu Symphony in the "Serenade." "Music to be Danced for Small Symphony Orchestra," which will be premiered Sunday also was composed especially for the Uni- versity group by Ross Lee Finney, guest professor of composition here last summer. Prof. Finney, who is from Smith College, is the winner of several composition awards including the Guggenheim Foundation Award, Pulitzer Award, and the Connect-S icut Valley Prize. Digby Bell will perform the solo part of Cecil Effinger's recent "Concerto for Piano and Orches- tra," scored Feb. 29, 1948. I Walter Piston's "Prelude andI Allegro for Organ and 'Strings" will be conducted by Emil Raab, with Marilyn Mason at the organ. Virginia Hyde and Helen Joseph, violinists, and Harriet Risk and Thomas Leland, cellists, will aug- ment the orchestra for this num- ber. Speech Group Will Present Final Offering 'Berkeley Square' Starts Wednesday John Balderston's play "Berke- ley Square" will be presented next week, Wednesday through Satur- day, May 19 through 22, as the speech department's final major dramatic bill of the season. Balderston, an American au- thor, wrote "Berkeley Square" in 1928 and it has enjoyed repeated success in this country and abroad. The plot concerns Peter Standish, a 1928 American, whose spirit is projected back to the year 1784 when his namesake and most distinguished ancestor lived. American Visitor The criginal Peter is concerned at that point with a visitor from America to the ancestral home of the Standish-Pettigrew family in Berkeley Square, London. Peter, of 1928, as Peter, of 1784, knows the future and is constantly mak- ing faux pas. The daughter of the household in 1784, whom Peter loves, dies, but when he returns to 1928, he determines to live with her memory because he still loves her. Special Ticket Prices William P. Halstead will direct the play, with settings by Jack Bender.tStudents will be granted special ticket rates for Wednesday and Thursday evening perform- ances. All tickets will go on sale next Monday at 10 a.m. in the theatre box office. Hours Monday and Tuesday will be from that time to 5 pm. and the balance of the week from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mail orders are now being received. Campus Calendar Students Against Mundt Bill- Organizational meeting, 4:15 p.m., Union (third floor). Plans for pe- tition drive. Ann Arbor Art Association- General membership meeting, 7:30 p.m., Architecture Auditori- um. Election of officers, commit- tee reports. Hillel Foundation - Evening services. 7:45 p.m. Archery Club - Final meeting, 4 p.m., Women's Athletic Build- ing. Student Recital - Francelia Whitfield, pianist, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Radio--3:30 p.m., WKAR. "On Campus Doorsteps," from the Health Service, with Dr. Mar- garet Bell. State Theatre-"A Double Life," 1, 3:55, 6:10, 8:15 p.m. Michigan Theatre-State of the Union," 1, 3:30, 6, 8:50 p.m. Art Cinema Movie-"Volpone," 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Girls' Dance To Be 'uky' IL 1 C A L I F O R N I A B 0 M B B U R S T S--Live 500-pound bombs, dropped by Marine fliirs, explode around tanks and other military targets at Camp Pendleton, Calif. The bomb run was the conclusion of five weeks of intensive maneuvers under simulated wartime conditions.. DECATHLON P R O SPE CT- A Lawrence, Univer- sity of Southern California hurdler and broad Jumper, became definite prospect for decathlon honors in 1948 Olympics by scoring 6,973 points in his first try in the 10-event specialty. i fl C O A G T O W N - Jockey Leroy Pearson gives Coaltown a workout in training ,r t : ' ,:? The concert is admission free There'll be a lot of quacks over to the public, at Martha Cook this week-end. The c(oeds decided that the mid- die of "The Blue Room" would I e j be too bare for their annual spring dance Saturday night, so the dec- orations committee has lined up J1 ?t Q~i'Uthree ducklings to provide a con- tinuous floor show. The feathered fleet will be Siwakvrs hO A4dIIreS swimming among the dancers in a lighted pool. In case :the ducks Group I o m rro WW and band music put up too much fuss, a flowery, lantern-lighted The First Annual Tax Confer- terrace has been provided for ence will be held at the Rack- guests to escape to. ham Building tomorrow under the I In the words of decorations sponsorship of the Detroit Chap- chairman Marian Dewey, "Every- ter of the Tax Executives Insti- thing will be just ducky." tute and the School of Business -- Administration. Prof. Willidm Wa rren, of Col- O ei 6 P o . W li m W r e ,o Co-umbia University, tax adviser to the Secretary of the Treasury, will E addres the ceferscOfficLerss lative Trends in Federal Taxa- tion" at 3 p.m. Klemme Jones has been elected "Problems of Fringe Areas in Commodore of the Quarterdeck Michigan" will be the subject of Society, an organization of Naval a talk by Prof. Arthur W. Brom- Architecture and Marine Engi- age, at the conference luncheon neering students. at 12:15 p.m., in the League. Other officers elected were Other speakers on the program Richard Broad, Vice-Commodore; include Alan L. Gornick of the Alan McClure, Purser; Robert Mil- Council in Charge of Tax Matters, ler, Steward; Raymond Pearlson, Ford Motor Co,; Henry G. Merry. Program Chairman; and Robert chairman, Excess Profits Tax Wernick, Membership Chairman. Council, Washington; and Norris At the initiation banquet, to be Darrell, Sullivan and Cromwell, held at the Farm Cupboard Wed- New York.nesdav the following new mem- D E M 0 C R A T.-Mrs. India Edwards was named executive director of Democratic commits tee's women's division. Mosher Elec's New President Jeanette Sprung, 49, was named bers will receive their scrolls: Kenneth Fox, Ray Pearlson, George West, and Robert Miller. Horseshoe Lake SIruCk by Flood I A flack.1.fbnnri uith a . hrop n. t .,".