PAGr- EIGHT m .J A i5A A FT . L .L £ 1ri.Xv x t r TTl r Tt&V "n.17 A ATas.u V1 L 11 T K IANT Lt1 a 1WT L 1. 1 UL, D 1YJULYX 4, 1944 A 71 - .40 ! * --I in I E r All "A' Students At University Are Announced 56 Achieve Scholastic Peak in Spring Term Fifty-six students in the University received a grade of 'A' in all their courses for the spring term of 1944, according to the registrar's office. In the College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts those receiving all A's are: 44 in Lit School Jessie May Ahrens, Sarah B. Ames, Betty J. Anderson, Gerald N. Beal, Marjorie Billmeier, Martha L. Brad- shaw, Lois Brandenburg, Agnes A. Brown, Harry W. Daum, Annette' Epstein, Cornelia Groefsema, Eliza- beth Harrison, Karl T. Hecht, and Glen G. Hedler. Marian G. Hill, Evelyn A. Huf- nagel, Israel S. Jacobs, William J. Kehoe, Martha F. Klee, Jack A. Kohn, Jane G. Langton, Elizabeth D.' Lewis, Harry Loberman, Muriel Mc- Alister, Mary J. McCormick, Kather- ine McGinnis, and Mary E. Mayberry. Carol Miller, Constance Rinehart, May- E. Risch, Ann Robinson, Alice D. Roelofs, Robert M. Roman, Lewis Shenker, Joyce M. Siegan, Helen F. Simpson, Yuma W. Stahmer, Bar- bara Storgaard, Florence R. Tucker, David V. Wend, Olive J. Whitaker, Harriett E. Wilson, Helen G. Wilson, and Lester M. Wolfson. Navy Pulls A Four students in the Navy assigned to the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Allen R. Hennes, Irving A. Rose, Albert B. Shachman and J. D. Wheeler made all A's. Gabriel Caldevilla in the School of Forestry and Conservation, Charles W. Moore in the College of Architec- ture and Design, and Mary Anne Olson in the School of Education re- ceived marks of 'A' in all their courses. Three A Music Students In the School of Music Dorothy Feldman, Mary M. Laughlin, and Virginia M. Lowery made straight 'A' as did Mildred Juntila and Mar- garet E. Nix in the School of Public Health. Daily senior editors appointed by the Board in Control of Student Publications for the summer session are Betty Koffman, '45, of Detroit, (left) and Stan Wallace, '45, of Detroit, (right). Miss Koffman will serve as editorial director and Wallace as city editor. -Daily Photo by John Horeth Tryouts ... (Continued from Page 1) the came system of promotion and appointments. A large percentage of Daily editors go into newspaper work upon grad- uation. As a training school for prac- tical journalism, The Daily has al- ways been noted for the thorough groundwork it offers for later news- paper work. Wartime conditions have cut down the size of The Daily staff and have turned it into a paper run chiefly by University women. Opportunities for thorough newspaper training and rapid promotion are much greater than they have been at any time in the past. The Daily normally is published every day except Monday. This sum- mer The Daily will be xpublished every day except Monday and Tues- day, for the first eight weeks of the summer term. Seniorteditors for the summer term will ?be Jane Farrant, '44, man- aging editor; Betty Koffman, '45, ed- itorial director; and Stan Wallace, '45, city editor. Business manager for the summer term will be Lee Amer, '45. Auto Ban ... (Continued from Page 1) applications require a letter of con- sent from parents and evidence of property damage and public liability insurance on the car. Special Rules for V-12 With reference to the operation of cars by trainees in the V-12 program, Capt. R. E. Cassidy, Commanding Officer of the Navy Training Unit V-12, stated that use of motor ve- hicles by trainees on leave or liberty will not be permitted unless for transportation, such as buses, taxis or as a passenger when asked to participate in passage. According to Army headquarters here no trainees quartered in bar- racks will be permitted to operate privately-owned cars during their enrollment in the University. Navy trainees not quartered in the West Quadrangle and Army trainees not quartered in barracks whose cir- cumstances require the use of cars may secure application forms at the Office of the Dean of Students, where permits will be granted after the completed applications have been approved by Capt. Cassidy and Col. Edward H. Young, respectively. French Club Will Convene Koella To Discuss 'The New France' The first meeting of the French Club for the summer will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday at the League with Prof. Charles E. Koella speaking on "La France Nouvelle dans un Monde Nouveau." Also planned for the meeting will be the election of officers, French songs and a social hour. All students in the summer session and term as well as servicemen who know a little' French are invited to attend. French teas will be held at 4:15 p.m. every Tuesday and Wednesday in the grill room of the Michigan League, starting tomorrow. Teas will also be given at the same hour on Thursdays at the International Cen- ter. The aim of these activities, said Prof. Koella, director of the club, is to provide an opportunity for the student to meet new friends, to prac- tice informally French conversation, to hold discussions on present ques- tions and to enjoy songs and play together. There will be no fees for being a member of the French Club for the summer session. Future meetings will also be held at the same time in the Michigan League. Hambro Will, Give Address Carl Joachim Hambro will present an address, "The Teacher and the World Crisis" at the Rural Educa- tion Conference at the Michigan State Normal School in Ypsilanti today. Mr. Hambro is a former president of the Norwegian Parliament and also of the League of Nations Assem- bly. Improving the instruction in rural schools will be the theme of the con- ference which will begin at 10 a.m. in the Pease Auditorium. YOUTH PROBLEM: Soution Demands Recognition Of Changes,' Says Edmonson I Drown in Canoe On Huron Lake "Youth is in difficulty in this coun- try because those in control of soci- ety, the older age group, have not taken adequate account of changes in the society," declared J. B. Edmon- son, Dean of the School of Education, who spoke yesterday in the Univer- sity High School auditorium to a group of graduate students. In order to provide adequate pro- tective services for youth, Dean Ed- monson proposed ,a longer period of schooling with increased attention to educational and vocational guidance, and elimination of those conditions and influences in community life that tend to undermine the habits and attitude that parents instill in their children. A great blunder has been made in turning over to those who are con- cerned with making a profit th'e rec- reational life of our youth, according to Dean Edmonson, who said that detrimental recreational activities LImdall Returns From Helsinki Former 'U' Student Is With U.S. Legation Returning from Helsinki with the American Legation following the diplomatic break of June 29 with the Finnish government, will be Eric G. Lindahl, former University student, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Lindahl of Ann Arbor. Lindahl received his appointment to the diplomatic service in 1942, and was assigned to Sweden follow- ing a brief period of training in Washington, D.C. He remained in Stockholm for approximately a year and a half, and was sent to Helsinki on a temporary mission in March. While studying at the University he took courses related to his field, concentrating particularly in politi- cal science and history. Lindahl's father expressed the be- lief that his son would return to Stockholm and perhaps be stationed tere. are permitted to operate in many cases because someone would lose a profit. He suggested the provision of addi- tional wholesome recreation in the school and community and the crea- tion of opportunities for beneficial jobs for youth, stressing the impor- tance of teaching youth the ways of true democracy. Socio -economic changes have in- creased the problems of youth, he pointed out, and called attention to the difficulties resulting from the closing of the frontier opportunities, the change from a rural to an urban society, and the complications aris- ing from specialization and mass production. Negro Housing Recommended A commission which has been studying -housing facilities in the Willow Run area is expected to rec- ommend opening rentals of vacant living quarters in the Willow Run village to Negro war workers. The commission is made up of Dr. Frank Horne, special advisor to Philip Klutznick, FPHA commission- er at Washington, D.C., Stanley Pinel, acting area director of the Willow Run Federal Housing Pro- ject, R. M. Hoisington, area office managements advisor and DeHart Hubbard, race relations advisor to the FPHA. Ypsilanti civic leaders claim that such a development would greatly relieve congestion and supply better quarters for many war workers' fam- ilies in Ypsilanti. New Post-War Council Will Meet Tomorrow Post-War Council will hold an ex- ecutive and business meetmg at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Union, Presi- dent Harvey Weisberg announced. All persons interested in serving on the Council are invited to attend this meeting. Plans are being made for this -semester's activities T. L. Jones, f lorice Holmes Lose Lives Florice Holmes, 22 year old junior medical student, and Thomas Langs- ton Jones, 26 years old, who was working on his doctor's degree in education, were drowned Sunday, 25, when the canoe which they were in overturned on Huron Lake near the Whitmore Lake Road. Miss Holmes attempted to change places with Jones in the canoe, caus- ing it to overturn. She started to swim to shore, but when she saw that he was having difficulty she turned around and attempted to save him and both of them were drowned. Miss Holmes's father is a professor at the university at Durham, N.C. She came here in the fall of 1942 and entered medical school. During this time she lived in Stockwell Hall. Miss Holmes, a Negro, was a member of the women's medical sorority. Jones, who was also a Negro, lived at 210 Glen Ave. He received his master's degree in education in 1940, and was enrolled in the University during the summer and fall terms of 1943, working on his doctor's degree. IFC Will Register Rushees This Week President Bill Ducker, of the Inter- fraternity Council, urged all new men on campus interested in rush- ing to register at the IFC office in Rm. 306 in the Union, so that rush- ing may begin as soon as possible. The office will be open for regis- tration between 3 and 5 p. m. Wed- nesday, Thursday, and Friday aft- ernoons of this week. Aussies Celebrate 4th U.S. HEADQUARTERS IN AUS- TRALIA, July 4.-(P)-Independence Day passed without formal observa- tion either by the Army or the Navy, but many American servicemen were surprised to find that their Austral- ian friends had arranged informal parties for the occasion. Two Students there thseese' ctvte 3l. -i I1 * SUMMER TERM and SESSION EM AP Aft ®m Aft am IL® lE.A IDUUIfEUNM at FOLLETT'S i. i Cash 3S Ig BpO S Its Q e,, ;nas 6 Your OLD BOOKS are c good as CASH . them along. Brir 04 I. III 0 is III U ®IIm III