THEI MTlCHWAN MDAT SATUDAY, JULY 29, 1950 I i _.. --- iTEP CONSCIOUSNESS: Library Repairs Blamed On Ann Arbor Weather Weighing In .> _ ____ Ann Arbor weathe"r is the in- direct cause of the ripping and wrecking being carried on in front of the General Library. According. to Walter M. Roth, superintendent of plant service, frost action has pushed the stones 'Bed-Checking Charlie' Back At Front Again In Korean Uniform For ThisCampaign By DON WHITEHEAD WITH AMERICAN TROOPS IN KOREA - (W) - Old "Bed-Check Charlie" is back again at the fight- ing front and in the rear areas. The veterans of World War II will remember Charlie. He was the enemy pilot who always came. snooping around after dark as if to see that everybody was tucked into his blanket or foxholes. * * * WHEN Bed-Check Charlie wore a German uniform, he patrolled North Africa, Sicily, Italy, and then kept late hours across Eur- ope. He would come droning over in the- darkness and you would lie there and wonder if he were look- ing for you this time with a stick of bombs. Well, Bed-Check Charlie was back again the other night-this time in the uniform of a North Korean, I suppose. He slipped through the Ameri- can night air patrols and came ov- er at less than 500 feet to plop a fire bomb in our area. HE PROBABLY returned home north of the 38th parallel and re- ported: "We slaughtered 'em, Boss. There was a -great explosion and flames shot into the air for hun- dreds of feet. I must have hit an ammunition dump." Actually, old Bed-Check put his bomb smack in the middle of an empty courtyard. The most damage he did was to interrupt the snores of correspondents and get a South Korean fire depart- ment out of bed. It was a puny effort, but it made me thankful once again that the American flyboys rule the air al- most completely over Korea. Bed-Check C h a r 1 i e wouldn't da;e stick his nose out during the day. Not with those jet shooting stars and F-51s roaring through the skies, giving the fighting troops magnificent air support. as much as four inches out of place. WHILE THIS may have been unnoticed or ignored by most cas- ual observers, it was more than a triffling technicality to members of the photostatic department of the library. With their offices located di- rectly below the library's front platform, they became highly conscious of the fact, every time that it rained. Roth assured those of little faith, that the building would not be permanently bereft of its front steps. As soon as the water-proof- ing operation is completed, the paving blocks will be returned to their original positions. * * * THOSE WHO REALLY want to, can still get into the library through the side door. The little red machine with the tractor tread feet and the prongs in front that is lifting the paving blocks from the plat- form, and piling them neatly, is called a Hi-Lo Lift, Roth de- clared. Similar repairs were made last year at Rackham. Another recent manifestation of the University's step-conscious- ness, are the rubber strips on the marble staircase of Angell Hall. Ease Permit Renewal Plan LANSING - Licensed drivers in Michigan henceforth will not be required to pass written or oral tests when renewing permits un- der a change ofipolicy announced by State Police Commissioner Donald S. Leonard. Persons seeking their first li- censes, willshave to pass all tests as in the past. The changeover, Leonard said, will enable drivers license exami- ners to devote more time to begin- ning drivers. Those renewing licenses will be forced to pass vision, color and hearing tests, however. The abbreviated tests for licens- ed drivers will not affect the sus- pension, revocation or restriction of licenses of drivers who build up bad-driving records. Newscaster Hits Richards LOS ANGELES-(P)-A former newscaster at KMPC said yester- day that station owner G. A. Ri- chards once had a minister talk to the news staff on ways to combat Communism. OVERWEIGHT-Sgt. Lawrence Majowski looks on with dismay as he uses two scales to weigh 331 pound Karol Hays, 23, of Wash- ington, Ill., at the Chicago induction center. One regular 300 pound scale wouldn't do the trick, so two were used and the totals added. Despite 120 pounds of excess weight, his enlistment was approved. CARS ROLL TODAY: Mother Gives Advice To Derby Contestant Cruises, Picnics Scheduled An evening cruise on the De- troit River will be sponsored by the Voice of Christian Youth Mon- day with the Grace Bible group leaving the church at 6 p.m. Transportation will be furnished to Detroit and tickets are $1. Any- one interested is invited to call 21121, according to Bob Garfield who will take reservations for the cruise. A PICNIC meeting will take place at the Hunter Estate on Geddes Road tomorrow with cars leaving the Canterbury House of the Episcopal Student Center at 4:30 p.m. Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department will speak on "Christian Paradoxes." The Lutheran Student Asso- ciation will present Rev. Norman Menter, president of the Mi- chigan District of the American Lutheran Church, who will speak at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 4309 E. Washington St., on "Lu- theran Unity." A Portage Lake outing is plan- ned at 2 p.m. tomorrow by the University Lutheran Chapel and Student Center. The picnic-swim meeting is sponsored by Gamma Delta. Sunbathers' Convention Set In SunnySpot MAUCH CHUNK, Pa.,-(IP)- Bright sun and birthday suits featured the opening yesterday of the annual four-day convention of the.Eastern Sunbathing Asso- ciation. "Sunbathing Association" is the up-to-date term for what was once known as a nudist colony. THE EASTERN Sunbathers - from the Atlantic states - meet at Sunny-Rest Lodge on a plateau overlooking the Lehigh River be- tween Parlmerton and Parry- ville, Pennsylvania. The public, which rolls by on busy Bethlehem Pike three miles from the camp, is invited to drop in, says Donald Johnson, of Virginia, who acts as public re- lations official at the camp. But the public is not encouraged, he added, and visitors may take off their clothes or keep them on as they like. It is a family affair for the most part. The oldest member at- tending the convention is 82, and there are many babes in arm. Katona Gets Post Prof. George Katona, Program Director of the Michigan Institute for Social Research, will act as an advisor to the Office of the High Commissioner in Frankfurt, Ger- many, on matters of public report- ing and attitude measurement. Katona will leave in early Aug- ust, and spend two months in Ger- many. Hey, Bathless, you can stop place. This is a regular occurence worrying, you haven't got it. in nature-next year some other It's no fault of yours that those bug will thrive, the zoologist ex- tiny black bugs keep landing on plained. you. According to Prof. J. Speed "You'll probably have to go on Rogers of the zoology department flicking them off your skin for its simply a case ofan unnatural- about one more week, but then ly large increase in, the population they'll disappear," Prof. Rogers of the bugs this year. said. * * * 'The bug which hits unusually THE BLACK pin point, known hard for all of its one-sixteenth of as an Oat Thrip, usually isn't no- an inch, commonly thrives on ticed by anyone except green- grass and oats, Prof. Speed addeeZ house-owners, but an unexpected Unhappy Ann Arborites, who zoom in population has taken have been swarmed by little black bugs should know that they are considered harmless. Experts pooh- pooh the idea that the Thrip stings like a mosquito. But victims of the buggy on- slaught know differently, and re- laxed happily when they learned that the death of the insects was imminent. See W. C. Fields at Hill Auditorium DRAT THAT BUG: OatThrips' Death Imminent -- Rogers By PAULA STRAWHECKER "You're going to go to bed to-- night-and sleep." This command was the reaction of the fond and worried mother of a young contestant .in this af- ternoon's soap box derby as she and her son stood surveying the racers in a Huron Street motor sales company yesterday. * * * ELEVEN RACERS, all built by the contestants themselves, were on display and small boys moved from one to another critically ob- serving the competition. Rocket - and - crouch shapes seemed the most popular; al- though there were a few box- models. Some of the cars have seats while the drivers of others will be sitting on the floor. The hopeful winners have some ideas that auto manufacturers might do well to copy : insides up- holstered with red quilting and a tastefully moderate use of chrome ornamentation. . * * * A JOLLY PIG emblazoned one sleek car. Others were nicknamed and the class of each one was painted on its side. (Class B is for boys between 11 and 12 years old, class A for boys between 13 15.) and} Y O n e determined youngster crouched beside his car, tongue out, painting and scraping fin- ishing touches with loving care. The first heat is scheduled to start at 1:30 p.m. today on the 630 foot course down Broadway. * * * THIS IS Ann Arbor's first post- war Soap Box Derby. The winner will compete in the Akron, O., fin- als on August 13, where he will race with 150 boys from other cities for the national champion- ship. Approximately 24 cars are ex- pected to compete, and* were weighed-in and certified yester- day by representatives of the Toledo Scales Co. Each heat will consist of two cars, with the winners determined on a time basis. Each heat winner will receive a prize. The final win- ner will be rewarded with a plaque by the Chevrolet Division of Gen- eral Motors Corp., and the run- ner-up with a bicycle. Yesterday the spinning red wheels and the proud red racing helmets which mark all contes- tants seemed to wait as tensely as their owners for today's outcome. Violinist Evich To Give Recital Today Featuring Lab, Tartini Starting at 15 to become a violin virtuoso isn't easy, according to Walter Evich who will give his violin recital at 8:30 p.m. today in Architecture Auditorium. "And after I started," he added, "I spent twenty months in the Navy, away from my violin." WHEN EVICH returned from service he dug into his studies, made up a defficiency and now plans to graduate after three and a half college years. This recital is in partial requirement for his mu- sic degree. Evich particularly favors his closing selection, the Symphon- Fired Coal Miner Returned to Work By The Associated Press An Illinois coal miner who lost his job after he tried to carry out John L. Lewis' order to return to work during last winter's coal strike was ordered reinstated yes- terday by the National Labor Rela- tions Board. The miner was fired by the Uni- ted Electric Coal Companies upon Union demand. He was also fined $50,000by- United Mine Workers Local 7455.r He had tried to get his fellow miners to go back to work follow- ing UMW President Lewis' formal order for the Union men to return to the pits. He was president of the local union at the time. The NLRB held that the Taft- Hartley Law had been violated. ie Espagnole, Op. 21 by Edouard Lalo. "It's the most difficult number on the program and covers the whole compass of a violinist's skill testing his tech- nical and expressive abilities. His opening selection, Sonata in G minor by Guiseppe Tartini is a popular composition by an Ital- ian composer w h o struggled through a profligate youth, tried to be a lawyer, a priest and a school-teacher in rapid succession, and became one of Italy's best composers and violinists. Also included on the program are Bach's Sarabande in commem- oration of the composer's death, and the Sonata in C major by Mo- zart. Evich, who will be accompanied by Alice Sano, pianist, will con- tinue his studies for a master's de- gree, and then plans to play pro- fessionally with a symphony or - chestra or teach on the college level. His recital will be open to the public. rJ FRATERNITY a o JEWELRY DIAMONDS - WATCHES OCUPS --TROPHIES . L. G. BALFOUR CO. O 1319 S. University c "Home of the Official Michigan Ring" c Summer Hours, ten till five;. o closed Saturdays. L 1 IT /4'ow kJuI4 Ifralike 7 £ee a peat 9d3 m for ZScf Here's your opportunity to see not ONE but TWO of them! W. C. FIELDS' finest movie "You Can't Cheat an Honest. Man" with Edgar Bergen and Charlie (NOT Senator) McCarthy and "HANGOVER SDUAE" YOU are invite dto hear "WINGS OVER JORDAN" World Renowned Radio Choir with LAIRD CREGAR and LINDA DARNELL t 2 D M TflMIV:T ;. MiII A InITfiDIIAA