I Vr1.r1f I T il T i~iiLX _____________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________ I - More Than $6,000 Contributed TiJ~brShlasi ud New Extension FOR THE SMILE OF HEALTH: I A - I IJ! j ,!1 to l 4,11.111 :.11.i. thim I sand dollars for the current semester has been amassed by the Bomber Scholarship fund to date, with con- tributions still on the way from func- tion already held. Stockwell Hall heads the list for the past few weeks with the grand total of $1010.42 added to the Bomber fund. The money was raised by the girls in the dormitory who have been doing all their own work this semes- ter, because of the shortage of help. Second on the list was the Man- power Corps with $88.17 from '42 Finale, New Year's Dance held in the Intramural Building. Other contributors were Acacia, Allen-Rumnsey House, Alpha Gamma' Delta, Alpha Klappa Rpsilon, Alpha Kappa Delta, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Xi Delta, Chi Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, the League Undergraduate fund, and the League Dance Class members. Also on the list were Mosher Hall with two separate contributions, Mrs. David Kobak of Chicago, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Sigma Delta, Pi Lambda Phi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Chi, and Venley House. IN FACT, WE JUST 1on1t Give a Darn!. BEFIUTIFUL / . DREfiMER Lovely rayon crepe gowns in shell pink, maize, and light blue. Sizes 32 -36. 3.95 -It-, .' . . 8 N ICKELS A RCADE .....:......... ............ Center To Cp i 11i'anph of Ji4u. To Be at Grand Rapids Establishment of a western Michi- gan branch of the University Exten- sion Service was announced yester- day by President Alexander G. Ruth- ven and Arthur Andrews, president of Grand Rapids Junior College. The new extension center, using the facilities of the Grand Rapids Junior College, will begin courses for the first time next September. It will op- erate along the lines of the University branch in the Horace N. Rackham Educational Memorial in Detroit, of- fering extension credit and non- credit adult education classes. In addition to adult education courses, the new center will be used to expand the Engineering, Science and Management War Training pro- gram In the Grand Rapids area and will provide non-credit courses in in- surance, real estate, child training, modern books and plays, secretarial work, advertising, and marketing. Offices for the branch will be opened July 1. Entries Due By Tomorrow For Hopwoods All manuscripts for the 1942-43 Hopwood contest' must be in the English Office, 3221 Angell Hall, by 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. The contest, which offers prizes in drama, essay, fiction and poetry, is endowed by the late Avery Hopwood, '05 and prominent American drama- tist. Since the inauguration of the contest in 1931 over one hundred prizes, ranging from $250 to $2,500, have been awarded. Thirty-nine of these were of amounts over $1,000. No other university in the world offers such large prizes to its stu- dents in the field of writing as does Michigan through the Hopwood awards. The Hopwood contest is national- ly recognized as a means of uncover- ing new talent in the field of writing. Several winners of major awards in fiction have received national ac- claim for their published novels. Among these, "November Storm" by Jay McCormick, "Loon Feather" by Iola Fuller and "Whistle Stop" by Maritta Wolff are the most recent to receive recognition. AAUW To Hold Meeting in Detroit A convention of the Michigan di- vision of the American Association of University Women will be held on April 30 and May 1 at the Statler Hotel in Detroit. The Detroit i ranch of the AAUW, under the direction of Dr. Alice Crathern, a Mt. Holyoke graduate and chairman of the De- troit board, will have charge of the convention. Meal reservations, $1.50 for the two luncheons to be given on Friday and Saturday, and $2.50 for the ban- quet to be held Friday evening, must be sent before tomorrow to Mrs. John S. Foley, 343 Merriweather goad, Grosse Pointe. By PAT CAMERON To the uninitiated entering pa- tient, the Main Dental Clinic. School of Dentistry, with its 180 chairs, may seem to be a dental assembly line. In fact, it is "one of the largest dental clinics in the world under one roof," Dr. Paul H. Jeserich, director of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation In- stitute, said. Modern equipment is provided each of the 89 junior and senior students in the School of Den- tistry who operate in the clinic. The patient who has an appoint- ment at the dental clinic for the first time perhaps is troubled by the thought of his pearly gems being in- vaded, excavated, or extracted, by one of these students. His teeth needn't be set on edge, however, be- cause accuracy of work and comfort of the patient are insured by the previous training and experience of the student and the careful super- vision of the staff. Each student has had a minimum of two years in literary school before entering the dental school. Under the accelerated war pro- gram, the dentist-to-be pursues med- ical and dental class and laboratory study for four successive semesters. In the dental laboratory he works on a "typodent," a model of a mouth, and thus gains technical skill and operative experience. It is only after this training that he is allowed to operate in the mouths of clinical patients. In his fifth se- mester he begins with simple work in the clinic and progresses through a definite program of clinical dental procedures until he is qualified and permitted to accept the more diffi- cult cases. Before each bit of work is done the student has consulted with his instructor or several of them, and has had approved similar work coin- pleted on technic models. The em- bryo dentist, then, has performed the same thing satisfactorily many times before beginning on a human tooth. The actual work is supervised and checked by professors in the clinic. It is done to the best of the dentist's Post-War Council Will Sponsor Panel "The Arts for Peace" will be dis- cussed in a panel sponsored by the Post-War Council at 8 p.m. Wednes- day in the League. Prof. DeWitt Parker of the philos- ophy department, Prof. Glenn Mc- Geoch of the music school and Mr. Emil Weddige of the architecture school will take part in the discussion. The panel will try to discover just what contribution the arts of music, fine art, philosophy and literature can make in helping to create a :ost- war world which is truly interna- tional. Sedorim Reservations Must Be in Tomorrow Reservations for the Passover Sed- orim services to be held at 6:30 p.m. April 19 and 20 must be turned in by tomorrow. Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen will officiate at the services, which are to be held under the auspices of the Bnai-Brith Hillel Foundation and the Beth Israel Congregation. ri ~ el1.~. I IEIIIIC#I ability because he is graded on the final production of his skill and CC judgment. In the second and third years. work in the dental clinic is comparable to a doctor's internship. Most of the students in dental school are practically in the army now. They are deferred as second lieutenants in the Medical Admin- istrative Corps until graduation, after which they become first lieu- tenants in the Dental Corps. Others have commissions as ensigns in the Navy H-V (P) division and will be commissioned in the navy upon graduation. The war has not decreased enroll- ment in the dental school, as this year's class of 80 is the largest in many years. War Movies To Be Shown Films Picture Canada, Mexico, Great Lakes The Michigan Union and the Uni- versity Extension Service will pre- sent the fifth public program of war movies at 8:15 p.m. today in the audi- torium of the Kellogg Dental Build- ing. The films, taken from the Bureau of Visual Education film library, are being given in an effort to acquaint the campus and community with the type of movie being circulated by the 3ffice of War Information and simi- lar war departments. "Peoples of Canada," one of the movies to be shown tonight, deals with Canada'sanswer to Hitler's doc- trine of race superiority. It shows men of many races with different backgrounds cooperating to build a unified nation. The action of the movie is concentrated in Quebec and among mixed populations of the Ca_ nadian West. Portraying the main stream of shipping down the Lakes and an out- line of the industries along the shore, "Great Lakes" is the second movie to be shown. "Mexico Builds a De- mocracy" will also be shown. The last movie program in the cur- rent series will be given April 18. The movies to be shown are "Treas- ure Trove of Jade" and "Western Front." )ME WITHOUT YOUR SHOES, WE Don't Give a Darn! " A MESSAGE FROM TO ALL HER CLIENTS Come in and talk person to person with my Salon Assistant." You can learn new make-up . . Come and visit in our Toilet Goods Department this week. ~4j-vt'nj DciirjH IIi C IteI mlmmw GARGOYLE 11tLEIZI- All petitions for positions on the tulriiz i r. by i-L. acih. ;;-- tlxigii uiiisi be i id eu~s 7he uarp, ON STATE AT THE HEAD OF NORTtl UNNERSITY WE DELIVER li I 11 1 2.j qolaValu 9eV'(ic tov'q There's no need to have a monotone wardrobe. And there's no need to spend a young fortune to have an exciting one. Just let yourself go in our "separates" shop. You'll find that with a handful of skirts, jackets and blouses. you'll have a closetful of combinations. These are the kind of values that give you variety and help you save for victory! IV! MONDAY ONLY Irregulars ~ Z.,.. S"Regularly $135 45 GAUGE4 75 DENIER . It would take an expert to detect the slight irregularities in these sheer, clear and ultra- beautiful hose. Here's a chance to make *an important saving. III n ew Sweatern Slacks Shirts. Skirts . s . 3.50to 12.95 . . . 3.95 to 10.95 . . . 2.25 to 10095 .0 0 . 3.95 to 9.95 II III III