PAGE TWO TINE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 5, 1946 PAGE TWO SUNDAY, MAY 5, 194G State Cities Await Brownout Orders. Ordinances To Be Effective Only If Coal Strike Persists, Officials Say (oggeshall To Return ToPublic Health School By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 4-Detroit and 45 other Michigan communities served by the Detroit Edison Co. today awaited emergency "brownout" ord- inances propsed by the company to conserve the state's dwindling coal supplies. Edison officials said the ordinances would be completed early next week, but emphasized that they were de- signed to become effective only if the national soft coal strike continues. The Detroit City Council will con- Business School To Hold Annual Meeting Here The Sixteenth Annual Alumni Con- ference of the School of Business Administration will be held Saturday in Ann Arbor, with an expected attendance of 400. Speakers for the general session to be held from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the Rackhan Amphitheatre, are Frank W. Fetter, Chief of the Division of Investment and Economic Develop- ment of the Department of State, and Sumner H. Schlicter, Lamont Univer- sity Professor of the Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University, who will speak on "In- ternational Economic Relations," and "Industrial Relations," repsectively. sider an ordinance at its regular Tuesday meeting and other commun- ities are expected to consider similar ordinances later in the week. The Detroit ordinance would re- establish the lighting "brownouit, in effect during the war. It would darken all theater marquees, show windows of stores and all other dec- orative and non-productive lighting. Industrial and business executives here inclined to take a concerned yet optimistic autlook toward the coal emergency. Some felt that federal action to ease the situation might be near. The Solid Fuels Administration has under consideration coal consump- tion curtailing directives similar to those now operating in Chicago and adjacent counties in Indiana, re- stricting industrial operations to 24 hours a week. Dr. Kaplan Will ,Ar Speak.Tesa 'Courage To Live as Jews' Will Be Topic Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan will lec- ture on "The Courage To Live As Jews" at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Dr. Kaplan, who will speak under the joint auspices of the Student Re- ligious Association and Hillel Foun- dation, is the founder and leader of the Society for the Advancement of Judaism and the originator of the idea of Jewish Centers. He served as professor of education at Hebrew University, Palestine, from 1937-39. After three years service as a Cap- tain in the Navy, wnhere he served as medical director of a Marine hospi- tal in Klammath Falls, Oregon, Dr. Lowell Coggeshall is returning to the University to resume his position as chairman of the Department of Tropical Diseases of the School of Public Health. Dr. Coggeshall, who came here in 1941 from the Rockefeller Founda- tion in New York, was instrumental in initiating a program of drug test- ing and malaria research in the School of Public Health laboratories. During the war, over 3,000 drugs were tested for their effectiveness in combating and relieving malaria. At the Marine Hospital, Dr. Cogge- shall was in charge of the study of tropical diseases among returning veterans. His principal task was to try to find a substitute for quinine as a drug for the relief of malaria. In- cluded in his clinical testing vas a study of SN 13276, newly reported drug which reduces the number of relapses of malaria. His investigations of the possibility of complete cure for malaria closely paralled those conducted at the School of Public Health, Dr. Richard Porter, who has been working on the research project here, reported. It Full Impact Of Coal Strike Barely Felt Yet Truman Calls Lavo A 'National Disaster ' By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 4-President Truman issued a report today call- ing the effects of the coal strike a "national disaster" and warning that its full impact has only "barely be- gun" to be felt. The report came as the Senate rang with demands for government action and denunciation of John L. Lewis. Whether it was designed to lay a basis for government seizure of the mines became immediately a matter for conjecture. "Manufacturing plants are closing down all over the country as result of the month-old soft coal strike," the report said. "And yet the Ameri- can people have barely begun to feel l the full impact of this national dis- aster." The report was prepared for the chief executive by the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion from facts gathered by the Civilian Produc- tion Administration. Presidential Secretary Charles G. Ross said Mr. Truman released it because he desires that "the public should have full information as to the seriousness of the situation." Campus I Forestry Jobs - Forms for Ihysica1 examinations an applications for moke-juinper of the northwest have been received by Dean Samuel T. Dana of the School of Forestry and Conservation. Men wil be trained to parachute in- to the mcuntains to fight isolated fires. Religions Meetng ... Ur. Edward W. B akeman, coun- selor in religicus education, Mrs. Blakenan, Prof. Harold Guetzkow of the psychology department and five students will attend the bi- ennial meeting of the Religious Education AssociAtion of the United States and Canada tomorrow and Tucsday in Oberln. Ohio. T7e 1udents, who are attending the meeting because of their inter- est in graduate work in reigion, are Frances G IodIiow, Barbara Yale, Betty Zwewer, F. Dudley Klopfer and Walter Knyawski. Aerouics Dinner A joint dinner for student branches of the Institute of Aeronautical Sci- ences from Wayne, University of De- troit and the University will be held at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Wardell- Sheraton Hotel, Detroit. Peter Altman, aeronautical engi- neer and designer of small aircraft, will discuss "Design Trends in Per- PR INTING PROGRAMS . CARDS . STATIONERY HANDBILLS, ETC. Downtown: 308 NORTH MAIN ATHENS PRESS [ighlights sonal Aircraft." Twenty-five aero- nautical engineers from the Uni- versity will attend the meeting, aiccording to David Brennan, chlair- mali of the Institute here. Spaniish. ranislation "Thermodynamics," a book writ- ten ;y the late Prof. J. E. Emswiler and revised by Prof. F. L. Schwartz of the mechanical engineering de- partment, is now being translated into Spanish. The university, in cooperation with Michigan State Normal College and the American Foundation for the Blind, will sponsor the annual sum- mer session for workers with the ad- ult blind in Ypsilanti from June 18 to July 26. Courses will be offered in Braille, vrts and crafts, social work, educa- tional psychology, social implications of blindness and ristory and philoso- phy of education of the blind. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Rented Repaired STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. . M RRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 CHAS. HOGAN'S BAGGAGE Phone 2-1721 TRUNKS, PARCELS Small Move Jobs INSURED DR. LOWELL COGGESHALL . ..returns to faculty was found that none of the standard drugs were sufficiently effective. Dr. Coggeshall twice served during the war with Pan American Airways of Africa, Ltd., and was in charge of setting up medical service for the route across Africa. WEEKLY COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Wisconsin Plars BuildingExpansion Read and Use The Daily Classified Ads it 4... . V CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING P., ! FOR SALE LOST AND FOUND The University of Wisconsin, faced with an anticipated record enroll- ment of 15,000 next fall, is planning its first major construction program in a quarter century, with Regents approving a $9,122,250 plan for ex- pansion, according to the Wisconsin Daily Cardinal. The Campus Planning Commission has approved plans for 18 buildings, including 14 classrooms, laboratory, library and hospital buildings and four dormitories, two for men, one for women, and one for married stu- dents. Three emergency projects - a trailer camp, a powder factory and an army air force training field - are now providing living space for 3,926 veterans and their families. Enterprising businessmen of In- diana's Hoosier Hall, men's dormi- tory, having done everything from washing dishes to selling vacuum cleaners to earn a little money, now have tried a new slant. Choos- ing the opening night of the Met- ropolitan Opera's performances in Bloomington, they busily directed cars into their side yard and charg- ed a 50c parking fee. There was one catch, however; they had for- gotten to get a concession from the University, and the campus police soon put a stop to the enterprise. Ohio State's fraternities have for the first time initiated new members without the usual procedure of "Hell l' Week", with its paddling, hazing and other forms of physical and mental' torture, according to the Ohio State Lantern. Replacing "Hell Week" was "Greek Week" when the pledges did constructive work such as scrubbing porches and painting ceilings, listen- ed to lectures on fraternity history, and took stiff exams. Members of Skull and Crescent, Indiana University sophomore men's honorary society, attempting to revive the tradition of no fresh- men on Freshman Walk, attacked the one lone freshman man who ap- proached at the zero-hour when their campaign began. Results - two lost watches and one lost pair of pants (the fresh- man's). According to the Indiana Daily Student, that section of cam- pus was filled with spectators who either laughed or turned red when a pair of sky-blue shorts was re- vealed. Following the example set by Northwestern University, the Uni- versity of Minnesota speech depart- ment sponsored a state-wide inter- collegiate mock United Nations Con- ference Friday and Saturday in the representatives' chamber of the Min- nesota state capitol. It provided, according to the Min- nesota Daily, realistic speech experi- ence in discussion of the problems of international relations in a parlia- STARTS TODAY!' mentary setting closely approximat- ing that of the UN. The general topic was "World Peace through World Order". Sub-topics discussed were "International Trade", "The Trustee- ship Question" "The Control of Atomic Energy" and "Specific Mea- sures for World Security". 6 FOR SALE: Set of Bobby Jones reg- istered tournament irons, latest model. Excellent condition. Phone 6620. 6 to 8 p.m. HELP WANTED EfELP 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. CUNNINGHAM'S LOST: Silver identification bracelet; "Emily" on front, "Marge" on back. Call Emily Karch, 2-6989. LOST-Wednesday, Tau Sigma Delta key. Engraved "Marvin Geasler" on back. Call 2-4621'between 5 and 7. BY MISTAKE: Black Chesterfield coat taken from Alpha Phi, Sun- day, April 28. Call 4089. LOST: Barrel of maroon Eversharp fountain pen, between Student Publications Building and Stock- well. Call 2-4471, Rm. 2022. LOST: Brown Ronson cigarette lighter Tuesday afternoon-prob- ably in League. Call 4121, Ext. 358 on weekday afternoons. REWARD. LOST: History 174 notebook Tues- day a.m. just prior to 10:00 class from front table in Parrot. Con- tainsrnotes for whole4year. Very important. Finder call 4595. LOST: Navy blue coat, 4th floor Chemistry Building. April 26. Name tag. June Rose Schouer. Call 4121-Ext. 111. LOST: Softball glove. SouthUniver- sity, State St. area Wednesday night. "U.S.N.-15" printed on back. Reward, phone 27263. LEO "'Me rCA RYS R~ 'hH E NRY TRAVERS WILLIAM GARGAN 4 Produced and Directed by Leo McCarey ra'Screen Play by Dudley Nichol Story by Leo McCarey Need waitresses for soda fountain wofk. Have full time jobs open or part-time week-ends. Meals and uniforms furnished. Good salary. Liberal discounts on purchases. Work in an air-conditioned store this summer. Apply in person at 226 S. Main. f ATTENTION MEMBERS r' PlU KAPPA SIGMA Interested in Local Chapter, please get in touch with JOHN H. BENJAMIN Phone 5887, 1314 Sheehan, Ann Arbor, Michigan If Mr. Benjamin is not in when you call, please leave your name and telephone number. SEVERAL CLERICAL OPENINGS for women. Typing required. Ar- gus Incorporated. Williams and 4th Streets. WANTED: General cook and pastry cook for summer hotel. Good wages. Address D. C. Maltby, Char- levoix, Michigan. WANTED WANTED: Geologist requires a used car to finish Ph.D. field work. Will pay cash. Call 2-1773. Ask for Mr. Freedman. WANTED - Apartment or house. 2- bedroom, furnished or unfurnished. Veteran. Graduate student making Ann Arbor permanent home. Wife, daughter, no pets, smoking, or drinking. Best references. Call 9641, Captain Otto. WANTED: Veteran's widow, student, with school-age child, wants apartmnent within three months. Phone Ypsilanti 3597J4, reverse charges. MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib- erty. We have rebuilt used bikes for sale. Your bike can be expertly repaired also. 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