THE IMCHWAIGAN ~~ m u ____________________________________ Jin FiUreSL Bureau Abates Tax tunate Few * * * . S t u d e n t s anticipating long sleepless nights filling out income . tax forms may have no worries at all, according to Irv Stenn, new- .:..ly appointed chairman of Student Legislature's Better Business Bu- reau-. Stenn, who has just completed a .study of student income tax re- J;turns in cooperation with Maurice S. Hahn, lecturer in the School of SBusiness Administration, pointed uiout that persons earning less than $600 do not have to file returns. S* * * "AND I DOUBT if many stu- dents earn that much in Ann Ar- bor in a year's time," he added. Stenn emphasized, however, that students earning less than $500 a year shoud file -returns in order to receive rebates on taxes withheld throughout the f+1Jr >rs~f:>r :.:f :year. }"... Although students receiving un- restricted scholarships and grants - 4from trust funds do not have to i ,file income tax returns, those who receive scholarships stipulating that students must work part-time in order to receive the funds must ...""...,make out the tax forms, he added. INAUGURATED by the Better Business Bureau for the first time :r,{this semester, the income tax ser- vice supplements the BBB's exist- .:ing program of protecting students from misrepresentation by vendors who sell goods in dormitories, fra- ternities and sororities. The Bureau requires each ven- I dor to register with its office be- fore approving his solicitation in University residences. A staff of investigators is maintained to study reports of misrepresentation by these vendors. In addition, the Bureau approves .. } /. f" _.rall posters before they may be placed on the Diagonal, insisting that they meet certain basic stan- dards drawn up by the Office of Student Affairs and Student Leg- 4 islature. 4.Theatre Tryouts Ann Arbor Civic Theatre will MADELINE hold a meeting for men interested . . . silent beauty in trying out for roles in "The Male Animal." .heThose interested may tryout at will move her till the building 7:30 p.m., today, at 1117 Church crumbles into ruins. Street. * *. * _________ MEANWHILE, Madeline is not Gulantics Winner saying a word. She just looks off into space, her mouth forever clos- Beverly Olszynski, '52E, winner ed, leaving the mystery of her ori- of Saturday's Gulantics show, will gin for some post-Hydrogen age appear on the Union-League spon- archeologist, digging among the sored "State Street Station" remains of the East Quadrangle, broadcast over WUOM at 5:15 to ponder over. p.m. today. JOURNALISTIC RELICS: Past Publications Exhibited at Rackham OPENS SERIES-John Useem, sociology professor at Michigan State College, last night gave the first in a series of five lectures on marriage at Rackham Hall. The lectures are under the gen- eral title of "Contemporary Set- tings for Marriage." 'U'Sponsors String Quartet Cornpostiton The University has commission- ed Prof. Quincy Porter of Yale Un- iversity, eminent American com- poser to write a string quartet, Prof. Gilbert Ross, of the School of Music has announced. The work will be given its world premiere by the Stanley Quartet July 25 as a feature of the Sum- mer Chamber Music Series. Last year's commission in the support of American music went to Walter Piston of Harvard. Prof. Porter has composed sev- en string quartets which have been performed by the Buda- pest String Quartet and many other top-flight organizations. Prof. Ross has also announced that Prof. Alvin Etler of Smith College is working on a quintet for piano and strings which will be given its first performance this summer by the Stanley Quartet. "The commissioning of works by already established or unusual- ly promising American composers is the natural result of what the University already has achieved 'in the support of American music," Prof. Ross said. "Our Rugby Team; The Nucleus ] of It Practicing Daily on The Campus," headlined the first is- sue of the "U. of M. Daily" in 1890. Volume one, number one of The Daily is one of the many treasures from,the past in the Student Pub- lications display, Rm. 160, Rack- ham Bldg. * * * THE DISPLAY, open to the pub- lic 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Fri- day, features copies of The Daily, 'Ensian and Gargoyle and their predecessors dating as far back as 1840. Michigan Historical Collec- tions, directed by Prof. Lewis Vander Velde; chairman of the history department, is sponsor of the exhibit, which gives a visual history of student publi- cations. The Daily's ancestor, "Univer- sity Chronicle," was begun" as a bi-weekly by male students in 1867 and two years later absorbed "Uni- versity Magazine," a monthly also launched in 1867. As "The Chron- icle" it became a weekly in 1877. First issue of "The Chronicle" carried a front page editorial on "Michigan . . . the university of the New World." Featuring a preview of the Rug- by season, the first Daily revealed that the Michigan eleven was stealing tricks from "Snake Ames," star of Princeton, Michigan's strongest opponent. THE 'ENSIAN was founded in THE PERFECT _ DOESN'T 1-k.._.A.,,"JUST HAPPEN" Here's the key to happiness: A seclud- ed cottage all your own (automatically heated, with bath), deep in wooded hills, companions you like, things you like to do and marvelous meals (break- fast until 11:00). Open all year for newlyweds only.i Rates include meals. Mention dates if you wish our Three Hone ymoon Plans and other folders. The Farm on the Hill, Swiftwater, Pa. 1867 as a merger of three annuals: "University Paladium," started by the fraternities in 1858; "Casta- lian,". established by independents in 1866; and "Res Gestae," which the law department had begun in 1895. The Gargoyle announced its birth with a "Junior Hop" edi- tion in 1909. It wsa then a lit- erary magazine with a small humor section. The Gargoyle's fore-runner was "Wrinkle," pub- lished, "every little while" from 1893 to 1905. An impressive list of fore-fath- ers greets "Generation," literary magazine to be launched this month. FIRST WAS a handwritten re- cord of Alpha Nu society, begun in 1840. Another, "Peninsula Quar- terly and University Magazine," was started in 1853. The next year its editor and owner, J. Sterling Morton, was ex- pelled. However, Morton got his degree in 1858 and became Presi- dent Cleveland's Secretary of Ag- riculture. "Perspectives," a literary re- ment of The Daily in 1939. The Student Publications collec- tion will be on display for at least two weeks, according to Prof. Vander Velde. r i '^'^ -" -_-.-.- .. --.-.-.mow.. CHICKEN-IN-A-BASKET $1.00 FOR LENTEN MEALS For a Snack or a Feast, it's the Fisk & Chips Restaurant Corner East Liberty and Fifth A 11 / a when Traveling carry '.,', j,', a I # . ! ,,, " r ' ;;.:. - a . M: ., ;' gwft-t -- - I SALE * r 11 TRAVELER'1S CHECKS ANN ARBOR BANK 4. Main and Huron Sts. Nickels Arcade 1108 South University South State at - L * 4L * - l * * * I L -. * * r University Instrument Shop Room 2320 E. Engineering Bldg. ALL KINDS OF PRECISION WORK I RESEARCH WORK Special Work of all Kinds n ^a a , :TM a :, MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ...give... DETAILED COVERAGE A R K D R 4S 1 1 Student Union Buil University, Arkans (Fayetteville) ° P n ayetevileA rkanisas,1 SCIENTIFICALLY TESTED Y. TICK LIKE A DOCTOR'S STETHOSCOPE-ON YOUR WATCH No haphazard watch repairing herel We don't hang your watch on a board for a week or two to check it. No, indeed! When you bring your watch in, we put it on the WatchMaster and this amazing elec- tronic instrument prints a record . telling us exactly what is wrong (see the "dad-ot", above). We can then estimate proper charges, immediately, adding nothing by guesswork. When your watch is repaired, we check it again, assuring you of "proven" efficiency of our work.-faster, tool DEMAND THAT YOUR WATCH REPAIRS BE CHECKED ON A L, , awer LOST qnd FOUND pp. 0 N41- i t ADS RENEW r g4 o'ff R00Ms For RFN 4; P, f there is rina of / IJniversity of Arkansas students at the Student Union Building. And, as in college campus haunts every- where, ice-cold Coca-Cola helps make heseget-oLtI(,Yphers somei~thi ng E - IM 2l 1 I