TTTE MICHIGAN DAIILY Scholar and religious leader, Dr. Abram Leon Sachar, national Hillel' director, will speak on "Sufferance is the Badge" at 8 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation following the regu- lar Friday night Conservative Serv- ices. Dr. Sachar, former professor of his- tory at the University of Illinois, will also speak at 12:30 p.m. today at a banquet given in his honor by mem- bers of the old and new Hillel Coun- cils and members of the faculty and will conduct an open forum discus- sion at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Zeta Beta Tau fraternity. An address on "Democracy and Social Pluralism," sponsored by the Foundation, will be presented by Dr. Jacob J. Weinstein, Rabbi of Temple K.A.M. in Chicago, at 8 p.m. Sunday in the League. Dr. Weinstein was founder of the Hillel Foundation at the University of Texas and served as director there for a number of years. Ionday To Be New Deadline For Essayists Deadline for the submission of en- tries ,in the Engineering Honor Sys- tem essay contest has been extend- ed from 4 p.m. today to.4 p.m. Mon- day, Art Brandt, '40E, chairman of the Honor Committee of the Engin- eering Council, sponsors of the con- test announced last night. The additional time has been grant- ed, Brandt explained, to enable stu- dents who have not yet completed their entries to finish their papers over the weekend. Additional prizes, consisting of two tickets to the All-Engineering Ban- quet, will be awarded for honorable mention, Brandt revealed. First and second prizes, a radio and an electric clock, are on display in the Instru- ment Case on the Fourth Floor of the West Engineering Building above the Arch. Limited to the subject "My Inter- pretation of the Honor System," the contest is open to all engineers. Essays submitted must be typed and double spaced on one side of the paper only, with a preferable length of 500 to 700 words. Scandinavian Club Will Visit Detroit Howard Almdale, '42, president of the Scandinavian Club, has urged all members to make reservations with him before noon tomorrow for the organization's trip to Detroit. The club will meet at the Engin- eering Arch 5:30 p.m. tomorrow and leave for the Stockholm Restaurant in Detroit. Plans for the joint meeting to be held with the Suomri Club, organi- zation for Finnish students, will be discussed at the Stockholm. 38 Engineers, Are Assured Electrical Jobs Prof. One End A. D. Moore Sees Call Per Senior By Of This Semester Although almost two months of school are yet to come, Prof. A. D. Moore, who is in charge of place- ment for the electrical engineering department, announced this week that already twenty percent of the graduating electrical engineers are assured positions in industry upon graduation. To date 38 calls have come for seniors from firms representing a cross section of American industry in the East and Middle West. In addition to this encouraging report on seniors, 32 calls have been made for students already out of the Uni- versity; however, the number of available graduates is so low that only a small number of the calls could be filled. Previous years have shown that the coming two months generally bring a marked acceleration in the job-finding rate, - and Professor Moore estimates that by June the average will be well over one call per senior. The figures already given do not include those from Civil Service and numerous assistantships in colleges and universities, which would, at a conservative estimate, bring the av- erage up to over one call per senior. Dr. Bruce Will Speak Dr. James D. Bruce, chairman o, the Department of Postgraduate Medicine in the School of Medicine and chairman of the University's Division of Health Sciences, will speak April 17 on an as yet unan- nounced subject. Student Loan Fund Offered Galens Newsstand To Aid Needy Medical Students A loan fund to be available to students in the Medical School will be established by Galens, Honorary Medical Society, Robert Plumb, '40M, president of Galens, announced yes- terday. Money for this fund, which is to be established by grants of $800 a year for six years, will come from the income of the Galens News Stand, situated in the lobby of the Univer- sity Hospital. The Dean of the Medical School is to be in charge of all loans. Any full time, needy medical student is eligible to receive a loan. No loan is to ex- ceed $100 per person per year, at 1 per cent interest per year. Loans must be paid back to the Fund with- in a period of five years after the stu- dent leaves Medical School. Repayment of all loans will be reg- ulated by the Dean of the Medical School. I I a ion, they will present current tion, Dean Edward Kraus of the on teaching problems. literary college, Dr. G. E. Carrothers, club will also attend the an- Dr. Willard Olson, and Dr. Irving honors convocation following H. Anderson of the School of Edu- speeches. For the afternoon cation. ns the convention will divide Dr. Charles A. Sink of the School wenty-one conferences featur- of Music will be the chairman of the >ecial programs led by various Music conference meeting in con- educators. nection with the Michigan School Jon M. Trytten of the Univer- Band and .Vocal Associations,. to ligh $chool will act as chair- witness a choral band and orchestra for the Administrative Teachers clinic and festival. rence while Dean James B. An evaluation of secondary educa nson of the School of Educa- tion will be made at the Education vill direct the eleventh annual Conference from the viewpoint of ence on teacher education an educator, a parent,'a college ad- z will consider new concepts ministrator and 'a psychologist. At man development. Participat- the Conference of Deans and Advis- 1 this same group of lectures ors of Women Miss Thyrsa W. Amos lso be Dr. Eugene B. Elliot, of the University of Pittsburgh will rintendent of Public Instruc- speak. CLEAR. PURE. REFRESHING I h IA HANDY SERVICE IR'hEcrrOY i .. Handy Service Advertising Rates Cash Rates 12c per reading line for one or two insertions. 1We per reading line for three or more insertions. WANTED-TO BUY-4 I BEN THE TAILOR-More money for your clothes. Open evenings. 122 E. Washington. 329 HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 ANY OLD CLOTHING-Pay $5.00 to $500. Suits, Overcoats, furs, minks, Persian lambs, diamonds, type- writers and cash for old gold. Phone Sam-6304. Sunday ap- pointments preferred. 359 TRANSPORTATION -21 I 11 -I11 I i !i I. I ' THE PRLMfl BECH a I t