rACE S THE MICHIGAN DAILY ITIAY, DECEi M 7, 1945 PAGE SIX F RIDAY, DEOEMBEIL 7, 1945 .ww New Tuberculosis Hospital for Vets To Be ButHere Pres. Truman Approves 500-Bed Project To Be Located Near Hospital TiCket Sales Open for Play "What a Life" Play Production Offers Henry Aldrich Comedy Tickets for "What a Life," to be presented by Play Production Dec. 12-15, may be purchased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office starting Mon- day. The famous Henry Aldrich comedy, written by Clifford Goldsmith, is the hilarious account of Henry's trials and tribulations in High School. Pro- tecting himself in a hostile world of teachers and parents, Henry gets so involved in complexities that he be- comes a source of wonder to every- one that knows him. These crises of High School life provide side-splitting comedy and a touch of nostalgia which makes an audience sympathetic to the adoles- cent. Having endured three acts of youthful frustration, Henry finally discovers that a sympathetic school principal is on his side and will help him to settle his problems. A special all student rate for the best seats will be offered for the Wed- JOBS AVAILABLE War's End Has Not Solved Problem of Nurse Shortage Plans for the erection of a 500-bed tuberculosis sanatorium to be located near University Hospital were an- nounced today by the Veterans Ad- ministration, which said that Presi- dent Truman had approved the proj- ect. The spokesman for the Veterans Administration also disclosed plans for the building of 200 bed units at Grand Rapids and Saginaw. The new hospital here will be larger than the state institution at Howell which has a capacity of 444. Although Dean Albert C. Fursten- berg of the medical school had been questioned concerning the feasibility of obtaining the services of staff members in the event that such an institution should be built here, the announcement came as a surprise to most university officials. Maj. Gen. Paul R. Hawley, acting surgeon gen- eral' of the Veterans Administration told Furstenberg "you might someday have a big veterans' hospital in Ann Housing... (Continued from Page 1) unit ...................... $1,000 Rent income per year per duplex unit ............... $ 600 Yearly cost of maintenance and utilities ............... 300, "The shortage of nurses is still acute, despite the fact that the war is over," Miss Rhoda Reddig, director of the School of Nursing, declared yesterday. Nurses who served in the war are now on terminal leave, some of them planning to remain off duty for over a year, and though the problem will be a little less pressing when they re- turn, it will not be solved, she stated. The cadet nursing program, which at- tracted a great number of girls dur- ing the war, terminated Oct. 15. Only those registered at that time will be allowed to complete their training at government expense. Demand Heightened The demand for nurses has been heightened since the end of the war, with the opening of new veterans' hospitals and the expansion of public health programs, Miss Reddig pointed out. "In the way of responsible posi- tions," she emphasized, "the nursing profession has definitely something to offer. Teaching and administrative positions are available in hospitals and schools throughout the country, especially in Washington." 'Excellent Facilities' Miss Reddig said that there are excellent facilities available to stu- dents of the School of Nursing. The school ranks high scholastically, and it is affiliated with the University hospital and with a large research center. Students in the literary college need only sixty hours of credit to apply, the only specific requirements being six hours of English, eight hours of chemistry, and four hours of zoology. Upon completion of the course they receive a degree from the University. Arbor" and the dean assured him that the medical school would be glad to cooperate with the administration. Authorization of the new Michigan hospitals is part of a federal build- ing program which will provide 29 new institutions for veterans in 20 states. It's The Dog-gonest Thing We've Seen A dozen students stopped near the Natural Science Building yes- terday afternoon in various poses of attention watching a medium- sized black and white dog. The dog, poised and motionless, seemed completely unaware of his audience. The object of his atten- tions-one brown squirrel. The dog seemed ready to pounce, and he did-after the squirrel was half- way up the tree. The audience laughed. Pauli's Work To Be Honored Former 'U' Professor Is Nobel Prize Winner Profs. Walter F. Colby, David M. Dennison, and Otto Laporte of the physics department will attend a din- ner in Princeton, N. J., on Mon., Dec. 10, honoring their former associate, Nobel Prize winner Prof. Wolfgang Pauli. The Swedish Royal Academy of Science awarded Dr. Pauli, summer session lecturer at this university in 1931 and 1932, the Nobel Prize in physics. His latest research concerns "the binding force" which holds the nucleus of atoms together and pos- sibly prevents the whole world from exploding. He is an expert in quantum me- chanics which Time describes as that "nightmarish never-never branch of science where solid matter begins to dissolve into waves and neergy." Dr. Pauli, a Viennese, has been as.. sociated with Princeton's Institute foi Advanced Study since 1940. However, the ceremonies will honor only his work done prior to the war, since war work is still necessarily secret. AT PEARL HARBOR HEARING-Lt. Gen. Leonard Gerow (left), War Plans Chief in 1941, testified at the Pearl Harbor inquiry that he is "willing to accept the resnonsibility" for the War Department's failure to send Lt. Gen. Walter C. Short (right), former Army commander in Hawaii, additional warnings to put Hawaii on full alert before the Japs attacked. VICTORY CARAVAN Original Surrender Documents To Be Shown on Special Train nesday and Thursday evening formances. per- DORM CASUALS GENUINE DEERSKIN PADABOUTS Deposited in reserve fund ... . $ 3001 On the basis of these figures, the reserve fund for 500 units will be built up at the rate of $150,000 a year. Estimating that these units will be used for three years, a total reserve fund of $450,000 will be available at that time. Contingent upon expendi- tures involved in dismantling the units, it is believed that a major por- tion of this fund will be available for return to the State of Michigan. We consider the following points to be pertinent to a consideration of this program: 1. Use of these units at Willow Run has two specific disadvantages: a. The returning veteran will have the same type of barracks life that he has been forced to live in military camps. It makes it impossible for him to participate in community life or to obtain the kind of social recreation that he and his family have been look- ing forward to. b. It means that the veteran will spend two hours a day traveling back and forth (at a cost of $6.00 per month) and that he will be unable to take full advantage of university life and facilities. 2. Housing veterans in these units will help to relieve the housing short- age in the State as a whole by drain- ing off 1,000 families from individual communities throughout the State and locating them in Ann Arbor. CFURRENT PROGRAM 1. We need assurance from the State government that funds will be made available. 2. We need allocations from the Federal Housing Authority for 500 units for this purpose. 3. The Ann Arbor City Council has indicated a willingness to provide sites if the units are allocated and the money is made available. Veterans Organization of the University of Michigan. University of Michigan Chapter, American Veterans Committee. DAILY OFFICIAL I NewMethods Of Education 4W Seen in Future "Immediate results of the Army and Navy training program will bring more and- better aptitude tests and educational designs to make the school day and the school hour more interesting," Prof. Raleigh Schorling, of the School of Education, said yes- terday in a lecture before education students. The future will bring a great de- mand for self-instructional books and volumes containing more subjects closer to'young people to avoid "stuf- finess and dry treatment," Dr. Schor- ling continued: More audio-visual educational de- vices are in store for children as a result of the armed services' exper- ience in training 12,000,000 men, he said. Dr. Schorling declared the future lines of interest would be directed toward the study of culture of foreign people, their languages and customs for functional purposes, because we are now only 40 flight hours away from our neighbors anywhere in the world. Dr. Schorling predicted a greater demand for books on music, physics, and industrial arts on the basis of the most popular books requested by servicemen. Original Japanese and German surrenders documents, signed in Tokyo Bay and at the capitulation of Germany, will be displayed on a special Victory train, to appear in Ann ArborSaturday, Dec. 15. The display train, sponsored by the Navy, Marine Corps., ground forces, Treasury Department and the nation's railroads, will be open for exhibition from 3 to 9 p.m. on the New York Central railroad from the freight house west toward Main St. To Sell Bonds A special booth, attended by veter- ans in uniform, will be set up for the sale of bonds in connection with the city's victory bond drive. The Ann Arbor Veterans of Foreign Wars are in charge of arrangements for the display. The surrender documents will be shown in specially built cases and will be guarded by 23 personal agents. Latest Infantry equipment, including flame throwers and bazookas, a Med- ical Corp collecting station and a field kitchen will be included in the display. Captured Equipment Also featured will be captured Jap- anese and German equipment placed in a position that will enable spec- tators to compare it with our own equipment. Other equipment to be shown will be a Sherman tank, Black Panther Howitzer, and an eight hundred mil- lion candle power searchlight, used in the defense of strategic cities. Personnel will be headed by Col. Donald C. Clayman, graduate of Cor- nell University, who was present at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Col. Clayman fought in theAsiatic thea- tre, was observer in Gen. Montgom- ery's Eighth Army and fought in France and Germany. He has been awarded almost every American dec- oration including the Distinguished Service Cross, the Silver Star and the Bronze Star. The personnel, selected for their ability to discuss and demonstrate weapons, volunteered for the work despite their eligibility for discharge. HIGHLIGHTS ONB CAMPUS Bennett in Chicago . . Professor Wells I. Bennett, Dean of the College of Architecture and Design, is participating today in a discussion of the policies relating to architectural education at Chicago, * * * Navy Show Try-Outs .. . Girls who wish to try out for specialty acts for the all-Navy show to be presented Jan. 9 are asked to do so from 3 to 5 p.m,. this afternoon on the top floor of the USO. * * Hospital Appointment .. . There will be no new assistant di- rector of University Hospital ap- pointed to replace Robert G. Greve, who will retire from active duty Jan. 1, it was announced yesterday. Herbert P. Wagner, newly-ap- pointed business manager of the hos- pital, Walso W. Buss and Ernest C. Leatz, recently named assistant man- agers, will divide the duties formerly belonging to Dr. Greve. c"ilisp'arica"Off iceras. b AlAS U. 3.95- Bright colors interlaced on these zephyr soft Indian-style slippers of natural deerskin . . with cushion- like blue kid platform soles! I U UNWANTED COUP D'E TAT: Javanese Uprising Blaimed on Small Group A small group of educated men and some 200,000 half-educated Javanese have caused the uprising in Java, Dr. Maurice Senstius of the geology de- partment, who was born and raised in Java, said in an interview yester- day. None of the princes of the four Javanese principalities have par- ticipated in the uprising, he said. It is known that many of the insti- gators were given special training in Japan, Dr, Senstius said, add- ing that the Japanese were not only lax in letting the natives get hold of weapons, but also had trained a home army m modern warfare. The island of Java occupies only one fifteenth of the total land sur- face of the Malay Archipelago, which constitutes such a vast area that if it were superimposed on the U. S. it would*extend 400 miles east of Long Island. Within the 3,000 or more is- lands which make up the archipelago some 70 million people are living. By far the great majority of these people, Dr. Senstius said, are not tak- ing part in the uprising because they realize that the have better security under Dutch rule than under unre- strained native rule. This is dem- onstrated, he declared, by the fact that the Javanese population, under the security of the Dutch rule, has jumped from five million to 48 mil- lion within the last 125 years. The majority of the people, lie said, feel that the insurgent group would be unable to find a rule to suit the mixture of Malay peoples, since the insurgents are not fa- miliar with the customs and lan- guages of the rest of Indonesia. The Dutch rule, Dr. Senstius said, has been an enlightened one. The Netherland's government from the start appointed native rulers and chieftians from the nobility to ad- minister the country according to the native customary laws, under white supervision. Theroughout the Malay Archipelago some 250 native princes rule with a fair degree of lib- erty. Nor have the hutch abused the privileges of the natives, Dr. Sens- tius said, pointing out that since 1870 no white man has been al- lowed to own land outright in any part of the East Indies. Land is leased from the natives for a pe- riod not to exceed 75 years for the growing of perennial crops and from year to year for annual crops, lie said, explaining that the Dutch regulate land usage in order to prevent famine. Since 1870, he added, not a single cent of revenue has been sent to the Netheralnds. All revenue has been used for the improvement of roads, railroads, education, and like bene- fits. The Dutch have established schools and universities in Java, Dr. Senstius said, adding that, by the end of 1930, about 21 thousand government schools had been es- tablished with more than 2 million pupils, not counting the numerous private schools without govern- ment subsidy. At least one tech- nological school, two medical schools, and one law college of university grade have been estab- lished for the natives, he said, and many students continue their edu- cation in the Netherlands. It is through Dutch efforts that the Malay language is becoming a universal language, he asserted, and that about one thousand free public libraries and a central book pub- lishing and distributing agency have been established for the distribution of literature in the native languages, Newly-elected dad Hispanica president, and treasurer. officers of La Socie- are Burton Gavit, Morris Bornstein, 1 a/ A ~ 'w 141/ PURCHASE RADIO and CAMERA SHOP Announces New Location! i w i BULLETIN (GnUtinued from Page 4) and preparation of the organization's program for 1945-1946. A. 1. E. E.: There will be a meeting of the Michigan Student Branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers on Wednesday, Dec. 12, at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Mr. J. F. Cline of the Electrical Engineer- ing Department will speak on "Tele- vision." A group picture of all local members will be taken for the 1946 Ensian. All students of electrical en- gineering and any others interested are invterd. The Romance Language Journal Club will meet on Wednesday, Dec. 12, at 4:15 p.m. in the West Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Building. Professor W. F. Patterson will talk on "Some Impressions of French Can- . FORMERLY..., 335 South Main Street r so aNOW...a -1 Church Street at South University Phone 8696 We will continue featuring equip- ment and supplies for the Radio S FffI:H lftIlHk NstitEFta ( Essen lbli'tRi AAk IMPERIAL R USSE A fragrance that graced the court of L SAPONIFIED COCOANUT- OIL SHAMPOO Amateur and Camera Fan. old Imperial Russia .. . It was created expressly for an Empress wha wished to be a more intriguing woman, .-When you use it you will understand quickly why it has 0 I ml I I