THE MICHIGAN ]DATLY I TUESDAY, NOVEMBER1, 1950 ,I SCHOOL KIDS' FRIEND: Baldwin Handles Tots, Traffic, Troubles Martin E. Baldwin is the only man in Ann Arbor who knows most of the names of the Angell school children. "I rarely slip up," Baldwin said, "except when the two sets of twins in the school come along. After a good many years on the job, I still can't tell them apart."..: * * *.. :. THE WHITE-HAIRED traffic = manager, sporting a black overcoat and a policeman's cap, may be seen four times daily at a driveway near Washtenaw near Hill. Rain or shine, his job is to see the children' safely across the street. >< He keeps tabs on them all, de- livers messages from anxious pa- rents and even sees that their y noses are well-blown before they... enter school. "My work's wonderful," Baldwin I declared. "I have been on it five years and it's fun to watch the kids grow up." Besides his traffic- manager's job, Baldwin works from midnight to 7:00 a.m. on the Ann Arbor News. "It isn't hard to keep ups My bicycle gets me anywhere I want to go. I just zoom up to the driveway, park my bike by a tree and go to work/' For the college crowd, Baldwin had a comment that' could best be described as cryptic. "They are all so friendly," he said,;"and their morals are as good as -they ever were." Originally from New York, Bald- win likes Ann Arbor. One of the reasons is its arrangement of streets. "Funniest thing," he mus- ed, "You know the street Martin? Well, Baldwin comes right after it." Stamp Speaking ST. LOUIS - (R) - A taxpayer objected yesterday to paying three cents "postage due" on campaign literature 'mailed to him by Ray- mond O. Douglas, Republican seeking reelection as St. Louis county circuit clerk. "This will never win friends and influence voters," the taxpayer wrote Douglas. The office holder checkd with the post office and found that all 1,700 letters he had mailed were marked "postage due."- Douglas said he simply couldn't under- stand it. -Daily-Jack Bergstrom HOLD THAT LINE--Traffic Manager Martin E. Baldwin halts the wheels of two Angell school children as he waits for Wash- tenaw traffic to pass. Playhouse To Air Poe Story Can Control Germ War SaysMey er American doctors now have thej tools to minimize the effects of germ warfare, according to Dr. Karl F. Meyer, director of the Uni- versity of California's Hooper Foundation. In an address yesterday before the School of Public Health on the subject of "Diseases of Animals and Men," Dr. Meyer called for an increasing "plague conscious- ness" on the part of professional medical people so that they might be prepared for any possible at- tack. HE DECLARED that by. the use of streptomycin and aureomycin, the Black Death can be effectively controlled. Dr. Meyer also told how cer- tain human infections can be transferable to animals, espec- ially bovine tuberculosis in cat- tle. He declared that carriers, often farm workers, can spread the damaging disease to the cat- tle through their excrements. People working at animal hos- pitals, he continued, can pass on lepto-sclerosis to dogs. He advised that dogs be treated before being brought home. DR. MEYER emphasized that in attempting to stamp out epidemics in the animal world, public health workers must consider the, socio- logical and economic factors of the situation. He illustrated this by showing that Brucellosis Melitensis, a di- sease found in goats, swine and cattle, causing undulent fever, should not be stamped out by slaughtering the animals but by immunization. Before this was done, herds of cattle were killed with little attention to the finan- cial loss incurred. Mencken Better BALTIMORE-(AP)-H. L. Men- cken has recovered to the point where he can have an occasional drink of beer and is demanding that his doctors allow him to smoke. The author, critic and newspap- erman is still in Johns Hopkins Hospital, where he was admitted last Oct. 12 after a severe heart attack. The 70-year-old writer was not then expected to recover. -Daily-Jack Bergstrom RAISING A LEGAL POINT-Lee Saulson, '52L, pleads her case in the law school case club's opening mock trial. Presiding, from left to right are John Carpenter, '51L, Prof. Lakin L. James, and William Flaskamp, '51L. Miss Saulson and her colleague, Daniel Kirk, '52L, won a point for Knappen club with the best oral argument, although their Woodward club opponents copped the prize for the best prepared brief. 'U'Graduate Writes Book On Atom Blast A University graduate, Richard Gerstell, has capitalized on his wide experience in the field of atomic radiation to write a new book, "How To Survive an Atom- ic Bomb." The book consists of five sec- tions, all dealing with the proper methods of precaution and care to be taken before, during and af- ter an atomic explosion. It has been published in two editions, one with a paper and the other with a hard cover. Gerstell was senior radiological safety monitor for the first board- ing teams in the atomic bomb tests at Bikini. His work there was re- warded with a citation from the late Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal. Later, he served as an instrue- tor in the Navy's first Radiologi- cal Safety School, which he helped organize. At present he is consul- tant to the Civil Defense Office of the National Security Resources Board. Read and Use Daily Classifieds * a * * * * * 'Court' Hears Initial Case Club Trial N Edgar Allen. Poe's "The Pur- loined Letter" will be this week's presentation on the Angell Hall Playhouse. This program will be heard at 7:30 p.m. today over WUOM and will be rebroadcast at 8:30 p.m. over WHRV. THE ANGELL HALL Playhouse is a half-hour dramatic program written, acted and produced by radio students in the Speech De- partment. Designed to give all in- terested students an opportunity to hear their ,work performed, it also presents outstanding literary work by other campus writers. Rehea'rsal begins for the broadcast on Friday two weeks before the show is to be aired. Two hours on each Friday be- fore the broadcast and another full dress rehearsal on Tuesday of the broadcast day conipletes the schedule. The entire company then re- mains to hear the show rebroad- cast in order to study the final result, make comments and criti- cism on the performance and take notes for future productions. ' Merrill McClatchey will direct "The Purloined Letter" which will be narrated by Gerard Leone. Pres Holmes is the announcer and Jacquelin Heyman will handle sound and music effects on the show. The play was adapted for radio by Arthur Prosper. Mystery Solved AUBURN, Ind.-(A)-Ever since his unsuccessful primary election campaign in 1942, Prosecutor James A. Angelone of nearby But- ler had been intrigued by a minor mystery-who cast that one lone vote he received in. Butler town- ship? He even mentioned his curiosity about it in 1946 and 1948, when he won the Republican nomina- tion and the elections as DeKalb County prosecutor. Yesterday ,a Butler farmer, Wil- liam Custer, told Angelone he had cast that vote for him in 1942. The prosecutor sent him a letter of appreciation. By AL LUCKOFF Standing before stern-faced, black-robed "jurists," four Univer- sity law school juniors yesterday pleaded their case in the semes- ter's first trial in the law school Case Club court. Here under actual court condi- tions, students" receive their first baptism of fire in their chosen pro- fession. WORKING UNDER a tourna- ment system, members of one case club try a case against opposition "lawyers" from one of the 16 rival clubs. All the individual units are under the general law school case club organization. In yesterday's inaugural, law school juniors Lee Saulson and . Daniel Kirk representing the Knappen Club vied with J. G. Brummer and Allan Neef of the Woodiward Club for the court's approval in a bankruptcy case. Sitting as judges in the case tri- ed by juniors are two seniors and a faculty instructor who speciali- ize in the type of law involved in the particular case. When fresh- men are standing before the bar, two juniors and a senior preside. * * * THE CASES though generally fictitous, often are based on act- ual incidents. The facts of the case are drawn up by the presiding judge and presented to the attornies on both sides a few weeks in ad- vance. Based on these facts and a considerable amount of re- search, each' side writes its brief and presents it to the court. After both sides have pleaded their cases, the judges retire to consider their verdict. This is de- livered in three sections. First they announce which brief they con- sider to be the best prepared, sec- ond, they announce which oral ar- gument they have adjudged the best and finally the decision of the case is announced. Winners of the first two points gain a point for their club. The senior judge then criticizes the "lawyers" on their handling of the case. / . -DAILY OFFICIAL4 BULLETIN A 11 (Continued from Page 3) New Jersey, will interview Thurs., Nov. 9, Chemists, Chemical Engi-, neers, Physicists, and Metallurgi- cal Engineers on the B.S., M.S., or Ph.D., level for research and de- velopment. Work will be on ti- tanium, with emphasis on pig- ments and metal. I For further information and ap- pointments call the Bureau of Ap- pointments, Ext. 371. Lectures Lowell Thomas, Jr., at Hill Aud- itorium tonight. Color motion pic- ture lecture, "Inside Forbidden Ti- bet," 8:30 p.m. Tickets on sale to- day, Auditorium box office, 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Guest Organist, 4:15 p.m., Wed., Nov. 8, Hill Auditorium. Mr. Has- kin is organist of the First 'res- byterian Church, Buffalo, New York. Program: Works by Bach, Gabrieli, Clerambault, Couperin, Copland, Bingham, Langlais, Dur- ufle, and Franck. Open to the pub- lic. Program Cancelled: Opera Work- shop program, previously announ- ced for 4:15 p.m., Tues., Nov. 7, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, has been cancelled. Events Today Congregational, Disciple, Evan- Club 211 cope4 4~aih! gelical and Reformed Guild: Tea, 4:30-5:45 p.m., at the Guild House. g Christian Science Organization: Testimonial meeting, 7:30- p.m., 116 N. Fourth Ave. Upper Room, Lane Hall. Opposite Court House Student Religious Association: Phone 2-2549 S.R.A. Executive Committee: Meeting, Lane Hall, 5 p.m.Assets Over Square Dance Group: Lane Hall, $13,500,000 7 p.m. (Continued on Page 7) Ivora Sl~i every- *r er0 .000 erISt** *0 0 . 00 *0 .e .f ** ( . . e* * ert" a FREE BUS TRANSPORTATION Round-Trip Chartered Bus to J. D. Miller-s Cafeteria Leave Business Administration Bldg.-12:01 P.M. Academic Notices Engineering Freshmen: Inter- views with your Mentor, concern- ing your first Mentor Reports, 5 to 6 p.m., Wed., Nov. 8. Reserve this hour for that purpose. Bacteriology Seminar: 10 a.m., Wed., Nov. 8, 1520 E. Medical Bldg. "The Use of Anti-metabolites in the Study of Bacterial Metabol- ism," by Dr. Ross Pringle. Mathematics Colloquium: 4 p.m., Tues., Nov. 7, 3011 Angell Hall. Prof. K. Knopp, University ofTu- bingen, Germany. "Analytical Con- tinuation by the methods of Euler and Borel." Set Theory Seminar: Wed., Nov. 8, 3 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Mr. Shoenfield will speak on "The Operation A." Concerts' Organ Recital by Squire Haskin, 131Wbeels ."" torn to ® I 4e BLEND PIPE TOBACCO 1. 'k Leave Engineering Arch 12:05 P.M. S North on East University-West on South University Follows Same Route Returning at 12:45 P.M. STARTS TODAY-Mon. thru Fri. 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