THE MTCHTC AN DATTS PAGE TIMEE ........ . .,. .. .. ." ,.. -.-.,... 1 1 1 1 1 ,.-1. . .a A. . A l. 4..l . .UJ 4. . A 5 1 -_ TTJP MTC~~IHANfTT .. ____ L A(t! 1i1V 4 TAG DAY WEDNESDAY: Fresh Air Camp Runs Workshop To Aid Boys By DAVE THOMAS "Workshop"in human behavior." This is the maxim upon which the University Fresh Air Camp has been run throughout the 29 years of its existence, according to Camp Director William C. £forse. * ~* * AT THE Fresh Air Camp site NSA Hopefuls To Be Quizzed Candidates for campus dele- gates to the National Student As- sociation will write quizzes at 7 p.m. today in Rm. 35, Angell Hall. The exams will cover the struc- ture of student government on campus, information on NSA and principles of Roberts Rules of par- liatnentary procedure. Zach hopeful will also be inter- viewed by the Student Legislature cabinet next week before final ap- pointment of seven telegates and seven alternates. The 14 chosen will attend all regional and national meetings of N8A, including the Third Na- tional Congress at the University of Illinois in August. on Patterson Lake, 24 miles north- west of Ann Arbor, underprivi- leged boys with behavioral prob- lems have received unforgettable summer experiences along with expert therapeutic treatment every summer since 1921. The generosity of University faculty, alumni, students and friends have made their vaca- tions possible, Morse pointed out. This year a $5,000 goal has been set up for the Fresh Air Camp Tag Day collections Wednesday. * *-* THE 230 BOYS who are now accommodated each summer in two four-week sessions are select- ed by social agencies in and around Detroit. "We try to get boys with definite adjustment problems who are not so far gone on the road to delinquency that the short summer program will not do them any good," Director Morse said. At the camp the boys, who are generally between the ages of eight and 13, are worked into a program of activities which in- clude everything from organized athletics to craft work and over- night trips. -Daily-Wally Barth STARTS TODAY-Ted Heusel, Grad., as Abraham Lincoln, talks things over in a final rehearsal with Nafe Katter, '49, and Marilyn Scheel, '49. "Abe Lincoln in Illinois" is the speech department's final major dramatic production of the semester. * * * * Abe Lincoln in Illinois' Bfegins Local Three-Day Run Tonight A'4- a custom radio phonograph' for the discriminating listener lwitkN l0hallicrafters am fm radio " 41 watt audio output 0 webster (25s) automatic 2 speed changer " jenson 12-in. speaker 0Q bass reflex cabinet $160.00 complete for information and showing: call 2-6843 (after 6 P.M.) 0<-'""><--><--0<-yo<->0<-50-->0--><-- 0 U' Students To Perform In Festival Another Martha Scott may be in the making at the University. Continuing a practice which be- gan with the first season of the Drama Festival back in 1928, Fes- tival producers are recruiting stu- dent talent for bit parts in the forthcoming five-play season. IT WAS IN one of the earlier Festivals that Miss Scott, who had every intention of becoming a schoolmarm, first became ac- quainted with professional grease- paint. She played small roles !°n Festival productions. So far, 17 University students have been chosen to appear in "Ah Wilderness" and "Twelfth Night," the first two plays of the season. Appearing in "Ah Wilderness" will be Pat McKenna, '49, Mar- garet Pell, '50, Stanley Challis, '51, John Sargent, '49, and William Bromfield, '49. * * * STUDENT ACTORS in "Twelfth Night," May 17 to 21, will include Earl Matthews; Vic Hurwitz, '49; Ted Heusel, Grad.; Nafe Katter, '49; and Harold Lentz, '50. Sargent and Bromfield will also appear in "Twelfth Night." Also in the cast are Marilyn Scheel, '49,; Robert Samuelo- witz, '52; Forrest Campbell, Marilyn Begole, '50, and Richard Etlinger. Choice seats are still available, especially in the middle price brackets, according to ticket chairman James Murnan. Single seats will go on sale May 5 in the Garden Room of the League. 'U' Professors Set To Attend Conferences Thirteen members of the faculty will travel to various parts of the country for professional confer- ences this week and next. From the physics department, Professors Ernest Barker, James Cork, H. R. Crane, David M. Den- nison and Philip Jastrom will at- tend the annual convention of the American Physical Society today through Saturday in Washington, D.C. PROF. ARTHUR H. Copeland of the mathematics department will be in Philadelphia Friday and Saturday to give a paper at the American Mathematical Society meeting. The American Society for Clinical Investigation will draw six members of the Medical School staff .Monday through Wednesday. They are: Dr. Frank H. Bethell, Dr. J. W. Conn, Dr. Jere M. Bauer, Dr. Ivan F. Duff, Dr. Chris J. D. Zarafonetis and Dr. J. Marion Bryant, all of the internal medi- cine department. Prof. Frederick S. Turneaure will represent the geology depart- ment at a Conference on Radioac- tive Ores at the Michigan College Student and teacher crossed verbal swords last night before a meeting of the United World Federalists. Pamela Wrinch, Grad., and N. Marbury Efimenco, political sci- ence instructor, hotly debated the issue: "Garry Davis-Realist or, Dreamer?" MISS WRINCH contended that Davis has shown himself a dream- er in his revolutionary approach to' world government. "If progress is to be achieved by a minimum of human labor, it will be effected through exist- ing foundations," Miss Wrinchs said. She pointed out that national-. ism which hinders the United Na- tions will also hinder any scheme for world government. Even more important, she said, is the fact that Davis has no real plan for organization.t -Daily-Bill Ohlinger ARBORETUM ACCIDENT-Two local teen-age boys landed in University Hospital yesterday afternoon after the car in which they were riding crashed into a tree in Nichols Arboretum after rounding a curve on Glen drive. Carl Plantz of 1460 South Maple road, the driver, and Henry Frees of 605 East Huron, his passenger, were treated at the Hospital and then dismissed. Graduate Student, Instructor Trade Views in UWF Debate "If Mr. Davis offered a plan, any plan, it would be easier to follow him," she said. TAKING THE VIEW that Davis' approach is actually realistic, Efi- menco contended that orthodox weapons for solving world prob- lems have apparently failed. "Perhaps things have come to such a shape in the world that we need a revolutionary ap- proach," Efimenco said. "As long as we fiddle around with the UN we can have no gov- ernment beyond it," Efimenco said. He felt that there must be a big jump in the minds of people from a national loyalty to an in- ternational one. * * * "THE ONLY WAY we can ex- pect people to become aware of world government is by dramatic advertising, such as Davis has done," he declared. The speech department will be- gin a three-day run of "Abe Lin- coln in Illinois" at $ p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Robert E. Sherwood's Pulitzer Prize winning play is directed by Blusiness Drops At Health Service Student health in March con- tinued to be good, according to Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of the Health Service. "Despite the highest second se- mester enrollment in the history of the University, compared to other years the total number of clinic calls was reduced slightly," he said. At no time this year has it been necessary to provide five hospital beds per thousand population, a standard agreed upon by health authorities, Dr. Forsythe declared. Prof. William P. Halstead. Jack Bender, Grad., designed the nu- merous sets. TED IIEUSEL, Grad., will play the leading role of Lincoln, and Margaret Pell, '50, has the part of Mary Todd. Others in the cast are: Ruth Livingston, '49; Nafe Katter, '49; Marilyn Scheel, '49; Victor Hurwitz, '49; and John Sargent, '49. Beginning with a rude scene in a log cabin, Sherwood shows how the loose-jointed youth of New Salem grew into the sad- faced man who left Springfield to become President at a dark moment in history. There are scenes of raw prairie life, romance, humor, and rural politics. Tickets are on sale now in the theatre box office. A special price rate for students is granted for tonight and the Saturday matinee N.Y. Police End Man's Long Hidig NEW YORK-(A'-The world Paul Makushak shunned for ten years closed in on him yesterday. He didn't like it. While psychiatrists sought to plumb his mind, Makushak, 33, pleaded to go back to the dark filthy cubicle in the wall of a Brooklyn tenement house where he says he lived since 1939. * * * POLICE broke 'through the wall Tuesday night and fell back be- fore the fetid air of the cubicle and the strange sight confronting them. Out crawled a massive man wrapped in filthy rags. A great fringe of curling dark beard almost covered his face. He was stooped and barely able to stand after the ten years in his three-by-five-foot cave. He had not bathed in ten years. * * * THAT WAS the Paul Makushak whom his tailor father, Peter, had not seen since he went on an errand for him ten years ago. His mother, who fed him and tended to his needs, guarded the secret of his existence until she was forced to go to a hospital Tuesday. In anybody's book, one of them is hustling, strapping Charles H. (Chuck) Percy. Said TIMEl early this year: Ever since he was an undergradu~ate at the University of Chicago, Charles Ii ercy has been a young business- man in a hurry. To work his way through college (his banker father had gone broke in the depression), Chuck Percy ran a wholesale business supply- ing the university's fraternities with food, coal, furniture and linen. He also held two other jobs, and captained the rough, tough water polo team. In th~e summer vacation of 1937 he took a job at $12 a week in Chicago's Bell & Howell Co. (cameras). For the next IIf% years he was in & out of BelC& Howell, but was seldom out of the nind of its president, Joe H. McNabb. It was McNabb who persuaded Chuck Percy to work for Bell& Howell on weekends and vacations, and gave him a full-time job when he graduated from Chicago in 94c. He was put in charge of a nb department to handle defense contracts. The contracts rolled in so fast that six months later, when Percy was 21, he was in charge of the major part of Bell & Howell's business. Just before he joined the Navy as a seaman, McNabb made him assistant secretary and a company director. New Theme. Stationed on the West Coast, Percy spent his spare time studying West Coast industries and the causes of strikes. His reports so impressed McNabb that when Chuck Percy was discharged (as lieutenant), he became Bell & Howell's industrial relations and personnel director. ~A0L Sig u t Sign up today with . performance. I performance of Mining 6 and 7. and Technology May Cook Coeds Take Pledge (Continued from Page 1) some of the comments weredfa- vorable to the Martha Cook dec- laration, a majority of the men expressed concern about its suc- cess. "If we give in to a limited re- striction, it won't be long until holding hands will be considered immoral," a worried-looking en- gineer said. Others feared that the volun- tary withholding of affection would become a campus craze. "Just like goldfish swallowing," a freshman explained. However, Mrs. Leona B. Diekema, social di- rector of Martha Cook, was highly pleased with the pledge. "I hope," she said, "that this ac-, tion, initiated entirely by the stu- dents themselves, will be adopted by all 5,000 women on campus and that it will eventually include the 15,000 men, also." VET'S WATCH REPAIR EXAM TIMEj demands EXACT TIME Blue Front-Packard and State West Lodge PX-Willow LodgeI U. of M. HOT RECORD SOCIETY Presents a Er *, A ART HODES ...,...~~~~~~~~..... ... . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ... . . P a o .. " L L. . . . . . . .. ...... . . . . T . k t-~% ART T ion)F........................... Piano "W" 7,) f;;r! '.NV ..... N ... ....... ..... Trumpet ChUCK PERCY The reports were impressive. Percy began to streamline Bell & H~owell's management. In 18 months, he reduced the number of departments from 189 to 130, hopes to bring them down eventually to 88. New Boss. This week, Percy got the go-ahead to finish the job-and in his own way. To succeed McNabb, who died last week, the directors chose him president.At .29, he is boss of a com- pany that sold r> milion worth of motion-piture cameras and equip- ment last year,"and earned a net profit of some $2,300,000. Successful Business. man Charles Percy of -~ ~Add&61Y '£