RAGE P01111 THE MICIGAN DAILY SATaRA, JULY 3V 194g ., . _ _ _ ,., i i LISTENING IN AGAIN: Vaughn Monroe Calls Jitterbugs Vanishing Race By MARY STEIN Daily Special Writer DETROIT - JITTERBUGS of the old Knock-'em-Down And- Drag-'em-Out School are definite- ly a vanishing race-and our au- thority for this statement is a man who knows what the teen-age and college crowd has on its mind musically - band-leader Vaughn Monroe. I had quite a chat with Monroe $t Eastwood Park where he's been playing this week. It was an after- noon jamboree, and it looked as though a goodlydnumber of hep- eats were on hand. "This is supposed to be a jam session," Monroe admitted, "but those kids out there"-and he mo- tioned to the couples waiting out an intermission-"are the last of the Mohicans." "Sweet music, and more of it- that's the trend among teen-agers today," Monroe, who has a radio program of his own, said. Jitter- bugging has its place, he com- mented, but toned down and ab- sorbed among the more refined ballroom steps. * * * I NOTICED THAT he didn't confine himself only to "hot-lick" numbers at the so-called jam ses- sion, but mixed them plentifully with such successful Monroe smoothies as "There, I've Said It Again" and "Ballerina." "My band may be a 'square' out- 7t, but all the boys know what's going on in music today," he de- clared. I got the impression that their leader does, too. "People want sweet music, so we play it for them. You have to, if you want to stay in business." "What about be-bop and Stan Kenton?" I wanted to know. "They're on their way out," Monroe said. "Bands like Kenton's are just too big to play authentic jazz." Both the be-bop and dixie- land varieties, in his opinion, can be arranged, only for big bands. "They have to be spontaneous, or they don't jell," he declared. * * * WHILE I WATChED Monroe direct the band and give out with his famous baritone ("muscles on his tonsils," as one critic put it), Mrs. Monroe was sitting at a table nearby, unconcernedly reading a drug-store "pocket-book," She is brown-eyed, tall and 'slim. Monroe is plenty enthusiastic about other things besides music. In addition to photography, his hobbies are model railroading and flying. Lately the latter has branched out to become part of his business, and now the Monroe band is the only one in the country which is air-borne. In its 14-passenger Lockheed Lodestar, the band will be off to Canadian parts after the Detroit engagement. * * ,* MONROE HAS COME a long way from his Jeannette, Pa., be- ginnings. He started out'with con- cert ambitions, but found that the way to the top of the long-hair ladder was pretty gueling. Not that getting to the head of the name-band list wasn't, too. After two years at Carnegie Tech, and then at the New Eng- land Conservatory of Music, Mon- roe got a band together. For six long years they played Knights of Columbus balls and DeMolay par- ties for nickels. But that was some time ago, and now he is well up in the money. He broke the record at Hollywood's big Palladium dance palace last year, with a $6500 a week take- plus percentages. Since 1940 he and the band have been Victor recording stars, mak- ing as many as 800,iTJ initial pressings of a record. Monroe has appeared briefly in two movies- "Meet the People" and "Carnegie" Hall." Getting back to Monroe himself, he's well-built, six-foot-two, 35- ish, and even more handsome than his pictures. We were impressed by his down-to-earth friendliness. When relaxing with photogra- phy, his first love after music, he calls on his superb German Leica. He confided that he never uses a light-meter for anything except color photos "which are tricky." Figures Show 442 Foreign Students Here Far East Contributes Greatest Enrollment Foreign student enrollment of 442, representing 52 countries, has jumped eight per cent over last year's total of 399 from 48 na- tions, Robert B. Klinger, assistant counselor to foreign students at International Center, announced yesterday.. The Far East, first last summer with 152, still leads with 197, while Latin America, second last year with 134, maintains its position despite a drop to 108. The British Commonwealth is the next in line with 60 (49 last year), and the Near East with 35 (30 last year). The increase in students from Europe is taken as a sign of recovery. An additional gain in European students is ex- pected for the fall semester, Klin- ger predicted. Countries with 10 or more en- rolled students are: China, 105; India, 60; Canada, 48; Venezuela, 24; Mexico and Cuba, 20; Philip- pine Islands, 19; and Columbia 18. Enrollment of Chinese students has almost doubled since last summer when there were 58 stu- dents here. Students from American pos- sessions number 31 as compared with the 14 of last summer. Alaska, Guam and Hawaii have increases while Puerto Rico has an insignificant loss. The Someone in Ann Arbor may be really planning to paint the town red-scientifically. Carlton Duncan, 611 Church St., reported to police that a large paint spray unit disappeared from his truck sometime early yester- day. Besides the unit, the spray com- pressor, motor, the unit's heavy iron base and 20 ft. of rubber hose attachment were missing. * * * City police are making routine checks on the Michigan League after receiving a complaint of prowlers on the premises. * * * The ashes of Robert P. Lamont, donor of the University's Lamont- Hussey Observatory, in Bloemfon- tain, Union of South Africa, were laid to rest in Ann Arbor's Forest Hill Cemetery yesterday. The 81 year old philanthropist died Feb. 19, in New York. The number of cases handled by the Washtenaw County Depart- ment of Social Welfare fell from 177 to 154 in the past month, ac- cording to Mrs. Marjory R. Lan- decker, supervisor. Tr 'u man Will Honor Bolivar BOLIVAR, Mo., July 2-/)-- Bolivar rushed through a state of "orderly confusion" today as it completed preparations for the day its 3,000 residents expect to be the biggest in its 112-year his- tory. Next Monday the community will be host to President Truman and President Romulo Gallagos, of Venezuela as the latter presents to the United States' a $100,000 statue of Simon Bolivar, for whom the city was named. The mayor' and the citizens of Bolivar have been looking for- ward to this day since the time some seven years ago when it was suggested that a statue of the South American liberator be placed in the largest city in the United States bearing his name. Welcome placards, bunting and flags of the 21 South American republics dot the city. More than 1,000 pounds' of turkey will be served Monday to the guests. LIFE IN HOLLYWOOD-This original angle shows the latest in full-length diving boards. Covered with finely-spun green hemp, it provides a fitting prop for pretty Dorothy Malone, up and com- ing screen actress. Dottie, wearing the white one-piece bathing suit, is brushing her hair out of her eyes. /ILTED BY WOMEN: Fur Coat Styings Change; * S e R Continuous Lsfrom 1 P.M. COOL Last TimesTToday!. ®ifiufi : HENRY DOLORES- FONDA- DEL RIO PEDRO ARMENDARIZ' STARTS SUNDAY s:=-' ami y ver to Win Your Heart!I IRENE DUNNE .,. "'in 'V~Co starrng Barbara Bel Geddes Oscar H-omolka.Philip Dorn Cedric fardwicke- Edgar Bergen ANRbRAI I(UE WASHINGTON, July 2-UP)- The farmers are sad. The hunters are mad. The raccoons are glad. And the women of this country rare the cause of it. That's the gist of a report to- tlay from the Department of In- terior. The women are to blame, all right. It seems that they no longer wear coon skins, so the trappers have quit trapping coons. Result: The raccoons are hav- ing the time of their lives, eating succulent corn, gobbling the rnuskrat's young, feasting cheer- f'ully on a tasty dish of scrambled birds' eggs. Frank G. Ashbrook, of the Fish and Wildlife Service, later ampli- fied for a reporter: Everybody Complaining "We're getting reports from everywhere, complaining. The hunters say the raccoons are eat- ing duck eggs. The farmers say they're eating the corn. The trappers say they're getting in the rnuskrat houses and eating their young." What makes it so. tough, Ash- brook explained, is that the rac - coon gets around. He is found in every part of the United States except .the Great Plains region. Normally most people look on the raccoon as a cute little fellow who daintily washes his food before he eats it, stays up all night, but generally behaves himself much better than the collegiate wearers of coon skin coats in the 1920's. Coons Multiplying Normally the muskrat supplies more skinm for the fur market than any .other animal, with the raccoon second. Well, the muskrat is still first, but the 'possum is second, the skunk third and the raccoon has dropped to fourth. In some places a coon skin fetches only 15 to 25 cents. The coon population is the highest it's been in years. What can be done? Ashbrook says he doesn't know. Raccoons are protected by game laws in every state. The hunting seasons are usually short. The fish and wildlife people hope to run the raccoon price up by finding some new uses-in gloves, for instance - for coon skins. But they haven't had much luck Young hems May Send Onlooker to Convention The Young Democrats, student political club, will consider send- ing' one of its members as a spec- tator to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, chair- man Bob Collins his announced. Collins also appointed Jack Jor- dan, Grad, to head a committee which will make a comparative study of the platforms of the va- rious parties bidding for national supremacy in the coming elections. The Young Democrats will con- tinue to function throughout the summer session. yet, and the complaints still roll in. Ashbrook says he's heard from everybody but the raccoons. They've probably been too busy stuffing their fat little faces. OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Hall of the Rackham Bldg., and are open to the general public. Symposium on Theoretical and Nuclear Physics The following lectures have been arranged for the week be- ginning July 5th. Tuesday, Wednesday and Fri- day at 10 o'clock-Professor H. B. G. Casimir, Di rector of the Philips Research La bor a to r y, Eindhoven, Netherlands. Subject: "Theoretical Aspects of Low Temperature Physics." * * * Tuesday and Thursday at 11 o'clock. Professor Martin Deutsclh, Massachusetts Institut e of Tech - nology. Subject: "Selected Topics in Nu- clear Spectroscopy." All the lectures will be given in Room 150 H-utchins Hall. C _nert IFacilty Recital: Webster Ait- ken, Pianist, will present the sec- and in the series of Monday eve- ning programs sponsored by the School of Music and presented in the Rackham Lecture Hall July 5th. His program will include Cop- land's Piano Variations (1930), Virgil Thomson's Sonata No. 14, and Veranderungen uber einen Waltzer von Diabelli, Op. 120 by Beethoven. The recitals are open to the general public. Cornint gEvets U. of M. Radio ('lub: Organiza- tion meeting 7:30 p.m. Tues.. July 6, Room 1084 East Engineering. All former membei's and anyone interested in amateur radio urged to attend. English Teachers' Sunmcr As- sembly-Tues., July 6, 1948, at 4 p.m. (promptly), in Rooms 316- 318-'20 Michigan Union. All gr'ad- uate and undergraduate students who teach English are welcome. Faculty-student panel discussion on the teaching of composition, I EICIGA I Ending Tdy- Hughes Cites istlakes n Tsaryrng io 0misake chintren lit art bitra ry stand ards of devehomeut is a 5er'i01s mistake on it ni prt of adults, Prof. Byron hughes, of the education school, said yester-- day. Speaking in the educat ion school summer lect ure series, Prof. Hughes cited the recent find- ings from moder'n research in child development which indicate that the more reasonable policy is to make use of the growth each child has, whether it is fast or slow. Individual Standards "Desirable standards can be set only in terms of the individual since scientific studies of growth do not indicate life ages when all children can be expected to at- tain certain levels of growth." The majority of the problems adults experience with slow devel- oping children come from their own unreasonable behavior, Prof. Hughes said. There is little essen- tially wrong with growing slowly, he pointed out. "It is wholly un- reasonable and inaccurate for us to conclude that he who grows slowly is abnormal." Repeated failure can be dan- gerous and destructive for the child, Prof. Hughes warned. Some children may grow and live well despite failure, none will develop because of it, he added. Reducing Problem "Certainly the problems asso - ciated with slow-growing children would be markedly reduced if we made it easy to succeed and diffi- cult to fail." Failure of adults to recognize the individuality of the child's rate of growth and to plan ac- cordingly, present problems, Prof. Hughes said. Parents and teach- ers should adjust their expecta- tions of what the child should do according to the pattern of indi- vidual growth because the child needs wide opportunities for re- sponsibility if he is to develop self- understanding and self control. UInderstanding Gaoals "The adult must un derstand the ehild's motives and goals if he tis to provide effective educational guidance." The school is becoming, a place where children like to go and not a place where they have to go as punishment for' being a child, Prof. Hughes declared. This is due to the new stress on uwnderstand ing children's needs in relation to their abilities to grow. + G U LLID NIE W S 'I'he Roger Williams Guild will The Wesleyan Guild will meet hold an outing at 1 p.m., Monday. at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Guild for Members will meet at the Guild a combined outing and Guild and are requested to wear sports meeting at Wampler's Lake. The 'lot hing and bring swimming beginning of a series of discussions ~nits. on "Christianity Tested" will be A cost supper will close the day's featured. In the event of rain, the activities. program will be held indoors. SThe Congregational Disciples t G(ild will meet at 4:30 p.m., Sun- tl day at Guild House for a picnic and Vesper Services on the Island. X 'uztu * * * . St. Andrew's Episcopal Church j 1,a li will hold a student supper at 5 ' nfl' all BaIIOL p.m., Sunday. Deaconess Swin- burne, of Honolulu, will speak on LANSING, July 2- (I) -Six "Christian Missions in the Pa- public questions will be voted on cifi ." by the electorate at the November general elections. The Lutheran Council Student The Michigan Education Asso- Center will hold a picnic Sunday. ciation piled the sixth question on tudents will meet at 5 p.m. for the ballot yesterday by submitting the outing, which will take place 183,019 signatures for a constitu- at North Lake. tional amendment to ease the 15- mill tax limitation. The Unitarian Church will hold TLegixlatic. student group meeting at 6:30, The Legislature placed five other Sund VistingProfKenntl1issues on the ballot. Sunday. Visiting Prof. Kenneth One would clarify the line of Weir will talk, succession to the governorship in the official state family. Another 'DIodsworth' Film would repeal the Sales Tax Diver- sion Amendment. Two others Showing Planned would permit the Legislature to fix the salaries of itself and state of- The movie version of Sinclair ficials, now fixed by the Conistitu- Lewis' best-selling novel, "Dods- tion. worth," will be shown at Hill Au- On a separate tgallot will be the ditorium Friday and Saturday, question of calling a constitutional July 9-10, by the Art Cinema question to write a new state con- League. stitution. Directed by William Wyler, the A seventh question still is pend- film stare are Walter Huston, ing. The State Board of Canvas- David Niven, Mary Astor, Ruth sers must decide whether to put Chatterton and Paul Lukas. The on the Callahan "Freign Agenrts" supporting cast incluldes Maria Law. This 1947 measure requires Ouspenskaya and John Payne. the registration of any person r "To Live in Peace," the Italian agency directly or indirectly ser- film originally for this scheduled ing the purposes of a foreign weekend, will not be shown be- power. cause of a dispute over ownership Attoney General Eugene F. of distribution rights, according Black has refused to enforce the to Norman Rappaport, business law, asserting it was unconstitu- manager of Art Cinema League. tional. The initiatory repeal sig- The Art Cinema League will natures were filed last year but the continue to sponsor top-rated for- question was withheld from the eign films and re-issues of proven ballot to see whether the 1948 American pictures throughout the Legislature would repeal it. The summer and winter terms. Legislature failed to act. MARSHALL'S CUTRATE DRUG STORE 236 s. State Open Regular Hours during the Holidays BEER .. WINE CHAMPAGNES S.DD. for Michigan State Liquor Control Connission Ik 4t { i -- , 7\AX YOU LOVED THEM IN SEVENTEEN AND I? MADEMOISELL...NOW WE HAVE THEMI GOLDEN SANDALS It's P"aic one golden kid thong .lled through black feather sole to make it adjustable to any width . . . to make patterns new and exciting. In Gold Kid, Sizes 4 to 10 ------ '-~-7 I -/ ,/e fiLLENEL preient. "MAGN IF ICENT Starring ... ROAST PRIME RIBS OF BEES JUMBO FROG LEGS WHOLE BROILED LOBSTER Cr-TOTCYE FT FT MIGNON FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CH URCH 1432 Wa htenaw W. 7,P,. Lc'rrntn, 11.1).. Ministecr 'ieda O 't Holt Vaogan, Director of Music 10:45 A.M.---Mor~ning Worship. Sermon by Dr. Lemon, '"Farewell to Revolution?" 5:00 P.M. -Westrin r Ghild. meets in Lewis Parloi'~, Dicuzssion on "What Is Christianity?" led by Dr. W. P. Lemon. Refreshments follow. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and Wnillam Streets M inister- Reverend Leonard A. Parr, D. ). Student Ministry-- Reverend H. L. Pick- erill, Assistant, Miss .ean Garee. Director of Music-- Mr. Wayne Dunlap. Organist, Mrs. Mary Gwin. 10:45 A.M. --The subject of Dr. Parr's sermon is "A Minority Report." 4:30 P.M. - Student Supper and Vespers at Riverside Park. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtena~w Avenuea~ Alfred T. Sclae rip s, Paster (The Lutheran Church--Mlssouri synod) 10:00 A.M.--Bible Study Hour, preceded by breakfast at 9 :40. 11:00 A.M.-Mornimg Ser'vice, with sermon by th e Rev. Prof. Fred Kramer of Winfield, Kansas. Lutheran Student Club. 5:30 P.M.-Supper meeting of Gamma Delta, FIRST MET HODIST CH URCH LUTH ERAN STVUDENT ASSOCIATION For National Lutheran Council Students 1304 Hill Street Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor 8:30-9:00 A.M.-Breakfast at the Center. 9:10-10:00 A.M.-Bible Study Hour at the Center. 10:30 A.M.-Worship Services in Zion and Trinity Churches. 5:00 P.M.-Meet at the Center and leave from there for L.S.A. Meeting at the cot- tage of Jeannette Graf. Tuesday and Friday, 7:35-7:50 A.M.-Devo- tions at the Center, Wednesday, 4:00-5:30 P.M.-Tea and Coffee Hour at the Center. STUDENTS EVANGELICAL CHAPEL Meeting at Lane Hall, Corner, State and Washington Rev. Leonard Verduin, Minister 10:00 A.M.-Morning Worship. 7:30 P.M.-Evening Worship. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron Rev. C. H. Loucks, Minister Roger Williams Guild House 54'2 East Huron 10:00 A.M.-Bible Study Class. 11:00 A.M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "A Christian Starting Point," by Rev. Loucks. 6:00-8:00 P.M,-Guild program. Rev. Loucks will speak on "Baptists in Action." MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan F. E. Zendt, Minister to Congregation Mr. Howard Farrar, Choir Director -. 5 -- - d .. WY1 ,, - _ I i. I i I aT* ~ I i