PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, APRIL - 17, 1946 PAGE TWO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 194w I I Inflation Catches Coeds; Alarming Spread Is Noted Michigan coeds may have fallent prey to the peculiar post-war infla-t tion that has added two inches to the average hip measurement credited U' Scientists. Attend Meeting In Pittsburgh r Dr. Laurence C. Stuart, Dr. Nor-t man E. Hartweg and Rodgers D. Hamilton of the Museum of ZoologyI will present papers at the three-day1 convention of the American SocietyY of Icthyologists and Herpetologists which opened yesterday at the Car- negie Museum in Pittsburgh. Dr. Stuart will speak on Guate- malan reptiles and amphibians; Dr. Hartweg will discuss the effect of the Mexican volcano, Paricutin, on rep- tile life; and Mr. Hamilton will des- cribe growth and variation in a sala- mander. Others attending the meeting are Dr. Reeve M. Bailey and Dr. William A.Gosline of the Museum of Zoology and Dr. Karl F. Lagler of the Labora- tory of Vertebrate Biology. Dr. William H. Burt, Curator of Mamals, and Dr. Enmet T. Hooper, Assistant Curator of Mammls in the Museum of Zoology, will attend the meeting of the Ameriacn Society for Mammalogists for three days beginning tomorrow, also in the Car- negie Museum. Post Graduate Course Offered Med, School Sponsors Three-Day Program The University Medical School will offer a post-graduate course to ap- proximately 60 ophthalmologists to-. morrow through Saturday in the Rackham Building, acording to Prof. E. Bruce Fralick, chairman of the department of ophthalmology. Thisannual course, in addition to a three-day course in otolaryngology to be given next week, is arranged for physicians especially interested in these fields. The courses include a re- view of fundamental principles through lectures, demonstrations and operative procedures. Prof. A. C. Furstenberg, dean of the medical school, will be in charge of the latter course. Guest, lecturers will include professors from the Univer- sity of Minnesota, the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and the Uni- versity of 'Tennessee. Reuther Favors Vigorous Policy CHICAGO, April 16 -(')- Walter P. Reuther of the CIO United Auto Workers, in his first report as presi- dent, pledged "vigorous" action to- day against "outlaw" strikes. Reuther, discussing a program which he presented to the Union's 22-man International E x e c u t i v e Board at the start of closed sessions, also recommended promotion of in- dustry-wide agreements and "think- ing in terms of, wages, prices and profits." In answer to a newsman's ques- tion, Reuther said he never had read a union responsibility clause in the Ford Motor Company's contract with the UAW, and that it had been ad- mitted as "an expedient" to meet "a particular situation." Dr. Jay To Speak Dr. Philip Jay, associate professor of dentistry, will address a meeting of the Michigan State Dental Society today in Detroit. This is the group's 89th annual convention. Diamonds U and Wedding SINCE RINGS 717 North University Ave. i) f t)C t) t) f) > to junior misses all over America by the Associated Press. Several Ann Arbor corsetieres agreed yesterday with the New York fashion stylist who reported that Miss America's hips have bewilder- ed girdle manufacturers by con- siderably out-growing the pre-war model. Wasp-waists still are the vogue in campus corset shops, but trim hips may be a disappearing curiosity if this girth-gaining continues, add' these local stylists. Michigan coeds, they say, have managed to keep their svelte waist lines, but fitting the buxom modern misses into girdles of pre-war mea- surements is becoming a real tussle.' Before this seam-popping ten- dency began, one local fitter called 26-34 the average coed waist-hip proportion. But now, she said, 26- 36 is a more accurate figure. The University Health Service was a little reluctant to accept this growth as a feature of the post-war world, but Dr. Margaret Bell conjectures that if true it may be a good thing. Expanding hips wouldn't neces- sarily be due to a growth of fatty tissue, according to Dr. Bell. It might mean a development of worthwhile muscle or even an increase in bone structure. "If it's due to good muscular de- velopment," she said, "it should in general accentuate the desirable feminine figure." From the professional standpoint, on :the other hand, the doctor would welcome a growth in girth, for she said "it would be fine for child-bear- ing." But Dr. Bell would deplore the gain if it resulted just from an abundance of fat. She warned "the soft little beauties of 18" that this expansion may only be the first sign that their shapes will be a lot different at the age of 40. For coeds who may fit, the latter category, she recommended the Uni- versity's athletic program which she said could take two or three inches off the right places. DAILY OFFICIAL] BULLETIN Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the university. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). WEDNESDAY, April 17, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 116 Notices Notice to Faculty Members regard- ing Termination of Veterans' Book and Supply Order for the Spring Term, 1946: Faculty members must specify all books and supplies required in their courses not later than May 10 in or- der that the University may meet the deadline for filing invoices with the Veterans Administration by the end of the term. Seniors: College of L. S. & A., and Schools of Education, Music, and Public Health: Tentative lists of seniors for June graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in Room 4 University Hall. If your name is misspelled or the degree expected is incorrect, please notify the Counter Clerk. Applications for Combined Curric- ula: Application for admission to a combined curriculum must be made before April 20 of the final preprofes- sional year. Application forms may be obtained at 1220 Angell Hall and should be filed with the Secretary of the Committee at that office. The Announcement of the Sum- mer School at the National Univer- sity of Mexico has arrived. Copies may be had in the Office of the Summer Session, Room 1213, Angell Hall. Alumnae of the past teni years, who would be interested in acting as hostesses at the Vitory reunion on June 20, 21 or 22, please get in touch with Mrs. +wendolyn Dunn Allen any afternoon this week in the Alumnae Council Office of the Michigan Leaguc. Phone 23251. If you cannot F ContIinuedt oil Page 4) New Course For Instructors To Be Given Summer Classes Are Offered Art Teachers Prof. Wells I. Bennett, dean of the College of Architecture and Design, announced yesterday that a new course will be given for teachers of art during the summer session in the architecture school. Sponsored by the Carnegie Foun- dation and the American Institute of Architects, the course will run for six weeks and will be taught by Mr. Nor- man Rice, former dean at the Chi- cago Art Institute. The program, to consist of lectures and laboratory work, concerns archi- tecture and the applied arts. Not open to students of art, it is intended primarily by the sponsors to attract are teachers both within and without the state. This is the first time that the Uni- versity's architecture school has been chosen to offer the course. Other schools chosen in the past to offer courses of a similar nature are the universities of California, Pennsyl- vania, Texas, Cincinnati and Oregon -the last being one of the first to offer such a course. Frequently schools which have been chosen to offer the course may be selected to continue it during successive sum- mers. Alumni Plan For Henderson ouse Changes Top subject on the agenda at the recent meeting of the Alumni Council was the remodeling of Henderson House, cooperative dormitory pur- chased by the Council last year. The house wil be open to the public during the forthcoming Victory Re- union, and it is hoped that the re- modeling plans will be on the exhibit at that time. The 60 councilors attending the meeting chose Mrs. Lois Tilly Schnei- der, '30, currently of Ann Arbor as a new member of the Board of the Alumni Council. Selected for renewed terms on the Board were Mrs. Julia Henning Conger, '14, of Grand Ra- pjids; Mrs. Delcia Gilbert Deming, '20, of Detroit; and Miss Mildred Hinsdale, '95. Mrs. Lola Jeffries Hanavan, '12, of Detroit and Mrs. Ethel Jocelyn Watt, '18, of Birmingham were elect- ed to the Board of Directors of the Alumni Association. Price Review On Milk Sought DETROIT, April 16 --()-The De- troit Milk Dealers' Association today asked the National Wage Stabiliza- tion Board to reconsider its refusal to allow them full price relief for the 18-cent hourly pay raise recently giv- en the concern's dairy workers. The Board held in a recent decis- ion that only 10 cents of the amount could be taken into consideration in the dairymen's efforts to seek price adjustments to compensate them for the increased wages. Carl F. Burger, assistant secretary of the Association, contended that the regional WSB at Detroit had ap- proved "more than 300 applications in the 18-cent range involving 450,- 000 employes in the Detroit area." The applicants declared there is "a definite relationship between the auto and milk industry and that the 18-cent pattern has been definitely established in the Detroit area." VO Party To Be Held A party for veterans and their guests will be given by the Veteran's Organigation at 8:00 p.m., Saturday, in Schwabin's Private Hall. Continuous from 1 P.M. } ANNR OP NYSTftAWY SUGAR FROM CUBA The first sugar shipped into Miami from Cuba since the end of the war is shown being unloaded in Miami, Fla. The cargo consisted of 2,409,000 wounds which is the first shipment of a total of 30,004,000 pounds. I ASKS SIX WEEK EXTENSION: Senator Johnson Condemns 'Muddleheaded' Army's 'Arrogant Demands' for Year's Draft Winners Picked In Fellowship Essay Contest Didier, Taylor Receive First Prizes of $100 Calvin W. Didier and Robert L. Taylor were named winners of the $100 first prizes in the Michigan Christian Fellowship Essay Contest on "Why I Am a Christian" and "Why I Am Not a Christian." Taylor discussed "Why I Am Not a Christian." Other winning essays on this subject were written by Betty Nancarrow, awarded $25; William Penoyar, $15; N. E. Huntley, $10 and Jo-an Kleynenberg, $5. Second prize of $25 on "Why I Am a Christian" went to Faith Sadowski, $15 to Richard Thomsen, $10 to Mor- rison Ismond and $5 to Donald De Graaf. The prize checks will be awarded at an open forum meeting at 8 p.m. April 25 in Lane Hall. The two first- prize winners will read their essays and the meeting will be spent for discussion of the two topics. Franklin H. Littell, director of Lane Hall, will be the discusion chairman. The judges for the contest were Dean Erich A. Walter of the English department, Prof. William Frankena of the philosophy department, and Prof. Palmer Throop of the history department. Return of Low t rCost Clothing Is Progressing WASHINGTON, April 16- (IP) - r John D. Small, civilian production z administrator, today reported "sub- , stantial progress" in the last 90 days - in restoring low-cost clothing to re- - tail stores. s Small said cloth was set aside for 2,350,000 dozen men's shirts to re- tail generally under $3, while an es- timated 2,500,000 to 2,800,000 men's suits were made, under similar set- asides, to retail for less than $35. Last week Small's textile division director, Herbert Rose, reported that e the output of men's suits "was far t short of the government's goal." Sta- e bilization Director Chester Bowles on r Saturday said the low-cost clothing s program reflected "no credit to either the industry or the govern- y ment." - Moderately priced cotton and n rayon clothing for children, women's dresses and underthings, and men's shorts will niot appear in stores for periods of several weeks to some months after manufacturers place their orders for the priority fabric, Small said. By The Associated Pressj WASHINGTON, April 16-Senator Johnson (D-Colo) demanded today that War Department "muddle- heads" drop their "arrogant demand" for another full year of the draft and settle for a six-week extension. He wrote Secretary of War Pat- terson that six weeks of the draft beyond May 15 would provide all the men needed "with something to spare" and provide replacements for fathers and combat veterans still in uniform. He said the bill passed by the House yesterday CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional five words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional five words.) Contract Rates on Request LOST AND FOUND LOST: Grey and Silver Parker "51" pen. Name on pen. Call Wm. Mar- vin, 2-5553, reward. LOST: Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority pin. Engraved initials on back- R. J. M. Reward. Phone 2-2281. FOR SALE FOR SALE-Tuxedo, size 36, excel- lent condtion. 1111 White. Phone 5117. PRECISION DRAFTING INSTRU- MENTS, made by "Dietzgen, for sale. 10 genuine Dietzgen drafting sets of 10 pcs. each. In original case. with locking device. 2 ten inch pro- portional dividers for planes, circles, solids and lines; micro-adjustment and lock. 1 seven-inch proportion- al divider. "Same as above." These are all new PREWAR instruments. Phone 3778. Ask for "Frank." WALNUT FINISHED STUDY DESK. Has drawer over kneehole and bookshelves on one end. Lt. T. H. Purcell 4961 Packard Rd. SAVE 25% ON TENNIS RACQUETS, Strings, repairs. Just arrived, H. C. Lee frames. McClusky and Dare, 417 8th street. Ph. 2-7360. FOR SALE: Handsome large library table, 6x 3 ft. mahogany, colonial. Ideal for fraternity house. Miss Mary Kane, 1731 Longfellow Ave., Detroit, Townsend 5-2877. FOR SALE: Suit, 2 pc. summer wt., 38 long, dark gray chalk stripe, single breasted, pre-wai', $14.95, El- gin, Room 110, Dorm 2, Willow Run. FOR SALE: Man's pre-war 3-piece blue tweed suit, size 38. Excellent condition. Call 2-6478. HELP WANTED E[ELP WANTED: Fountain help, top pay, hours to your convenience Apply in person to Mr. Lombard or Mr. Benden. Witham's Drug Store, corner of S. University and Forest. WANTED-Experienced waitress for part time work. Apply Mr. L. W. Anderson, Willow Run Bowling Al- leys. 1065 Midway, Willow Run Village. Phone Ypsi. 1852. HELP WANTED: Young man or wo- man: Do you need money to help the college budget? A few hours a day taking orders for Avon Pro- ducts will bring you a nice income. For particulars write Zada Norris, manager, 325 West Washington, Jackson, Michigan. WANTED MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib- erty. We have rebuilt used bikes for sale. Your bike can be expertly repaired also. WANTED: May Festival tickets. 3 for Friday, single or together, one for Saturday afternoon. Call 2-4547, Nancy Tressel. MISCELLANEOUS RENT A JUKE BOX for your party! $12.00 including records. Ph. 22878. ATTENTION all S.M.A. grads: Please write Herb Greene, Box 764 W. Lodge Ypsilanti or call Ypsilanti 9390. Object: Get together! WORK AS A WAITER at Phi Sigma Delta fraternity. Delicious home- coked meals. Apply 1811 Washing- ton Ave. or phone 26313. would not provide for these needs. The House measure would ban any further inductions until Oct. 15 at least, while continuing the act itself for nine months, and impose other restrictions which the services op- opposed. "Instead of driving for a six weeks extension of the draft, which would have provided the men for all thei presently anticipated needs with something to spare," Johnson wrote "the War Department arrogantly de- manded a year's extension of the Se- lective Service, but their argument to support it were rainwater weak The result is the House bill." The Senate, whose military committee recommended a one- year extension with no suspension of inductions, is expected to act next week. There was no immediate respons from Patterson to Johnson's letter bu he and other military officials hav expressed their views on a one-yea extension in numerous appearance before Congressional committees. Patterson told the Senate Militar Committee March 21 that "this coun try cannot afford to take chances o manpower for the army." On the same day General Dwight D. Eisenhower asked for indefinite continuance of the draft "until the job" of winding up the war and securing the peace "is done." It was officially announced the next day, however, that the Chief of Staff favored a one-year extension. Patterson and Eisenhower agree to some of the restrictions impose by the House bill-limitation o draftees' service to 18 months, a ba on drafting fathers, and a 1,070 000-man ceiling on the strength ( the Army by July 1, 1947. But the opposed the ban on drafting 18 an 19-year-olds which the House vote and which Johnson also favors. 'U' Band To Give Hartland Concert d d of n ;y d d Buy Easter Seals! MIChIGAN NOW THE 'WOLVES' HOWL.-- AND SHE HOWLS BACK! i t I HUNGRY? ... for yooQ ooQ!.. . The University of Michigan Con- cert Band is giving a concert tonight at the Music Hall in Hartland, Mich. This is the first semester since the war that the band has been able to give out-of-town concerts, and this will be the fourth one presented this semester. This, however, is just one of their many activities. They also give local concerts, broadcasts, and MARShA H T*JOI CAR "LL play at various University functions. Caj tei 'r Don't sit home and pout, let's go out and shout, for the "eBunny Hop" is coming with all its craft and cunning. SDON'T MISS THIS ANNUAL AFFAIR presented Er Box Chicken " " " " i " " LI i AT 'L ye i~e~r n ' Aev'brjit ,+.'tr ~ 'Fp r oof tb - ofiiC ART CINEMA LEAGUE Presents c, s Hamburgs (with everything!) S 0 0 Hot Dogs . s " " " " " " s Bar-B-Q's (with french fries!). Coffee (per cup) . . . . . Milk (including bottle deposit) Cold Drinks . . . . . . 5cto 50c 15c lOc 25c 5c loc 1c f 'U I lI It InddpU to n'litems f l .: I I 111htd111 1 iI I II I e!4