PACE err TII1E ICIAN DAIY TT-J SD AV, MAY 9 11MW Phonie Union Sees S"ik MedicalkSehool Will Give Prickri~ ,o Stifr4 ri wiland UI:phi aliO is hti' atifliiS'iOtl, Ileal e i1or,; Atlen ipt Allihet C. I i rst tilbei, of the Mcd (i- 0PrCntSwil ca] cho,,advised pre-medical stu- Hle reported that. the Medical 14o Pr(t'Ve11t Walk-ut dent81;, .in the literarey college yesterday School has received 1,600 applications r) tobe 't,.o pa;rticuilar abouit the for 1"0 place; in the newcls start- D R iT, MaY 8 (/1 ' Otfi ;1' l:c C ia 8AmeYs siioYu slei''ig extf 1.l I ad s sii+ ,(:,r iat su Stf t'l. (,lhe j;i 1"l M irtir'o Bd 'I l~itio(uitvl:il'l:t n-i \i l'M e ia' , I \V Ii ui i to StudY mdicltine ftollOv ii, 011-Itic Ifirstile "O r el] 4 U*)(l~ui-;itih5 ~to the nuatt( 1 t,(chool 1)c-zn fi titsteiberg Spokesme 11cn forte Michigl;an T 'le- j - The second literary cohlge lecture phn mlyc'Aoitinth.nIellI V_ ciI+ on. opportunities and training in the confirmed the agreement, hut said l Professionzs will be delivered by Dean no announcement would be mnade C Rus:.ell1XW. Bunting, of thre School of of~~~~~~ anhnei ln o h _~i r Dentistry, at 4:30 p.m. t oday in Rm. ut untLi1thc e Dw contract terms a (x1025 ,Angel Hall. signied, probahily lato r tonight. (CoaI of , ._5 r , idApo-i-ic-tons Flock in oAi Atreenwp ut Reit aht'c " Dean Furstenberg said that 70 per Comanyoffcias sid heSo44 by SLiIIIIIS 'cent of the University's Medical nnrer 1 ri rc ralrri arc..rwr~f xifii -- - _---.__ jSchool graduates specialize in some Pr of. Crosby To ('eve Russel I~eu~'eTodfly Prof. FEli;,ab th C. Crosby, a inem- berq of the anatomy department and an internationally recognized author- ity in the field of neuro-anatomy, will speak on "The Neuroanatomical Pat- terns Involved in Certain Eye Move- mnents" at the annual henry Russel I sect or-e at 4:15 pm. today in Rack- tuan Amphitheatre. At, the lecture, announcement will be made of the recipient of the Henry Itussel Award, which goes each year to the faculty member of the rank of assistant professor or in- structor whose achievements in schol- arly activities and whose promise for future accomplishments seem most meritorious to the award committee. Prof. Crosby will be the first woman to deliver the annual lecture since the series was established in 1925 by an endowment from Henry Rus- sel of Detroit, a graduate in the class of 1873. She has specialized in the study of the nervous system, the nu- clear masses in the brain and the fib- er connections of the cell groups. Dr. Crosby has been a member of the University faculty since 1920 and has held the rank of professor for the past 10 years. Socil1 Make~up of the Fam ily Cb ihibli II Keluled) Says8, DYING INSTITUTION: The lauiy is jjt,.,;iilt out of huzutmi society, Dr. Cla re nce 1H. Kennedy, professor of zooiogy and entomology at Ohio State University, declared yesterday in a lecture sponsored by Phi Sigma, honorary biological. fra- ternity, and the Graduate Councttil, in Rackham nipmphit ]i tea tee. ; About all that is,d t'o the(1c family; is a little teac~hing oit the children AVC (onveiitioii To Be Disecussed Discussion of the national Ameri- can Veterans Committee convention, to be held this summer, will high- light the meeting tonight of the Uni- versity AVC chapter. Harold Stassen, Henry Wallace and cWalter Reuther will head the speak- ers list for the convention, which will be held in Des Moines, Iowa, June 13 through 16. The iocal chapter will send ten delegates to the convention. Following the business meeting, [the chapter will decide what stand it will take on the Murray-Wagner- Dingell Bill. I i),,iY i,,o r~it U UIi( (z i-r (anentic i t I t the uniion on net wclauses (:overinf7 both (eild;oye s and clerical workers.f Ear-lier, Mrs. Smith had said Y1.at 3,000 Detroit (p)(rators and clericali workers would be called off their jobs to "attend a union meeting" unless there were "unexpected devel- opments." She said workers were "displea.sed" with the progress of negotiations. Agreement Reached The cmpany, in a statement, said that "agreement has been reachedI with the exception of a few minor1 items upon which negotiations have been pi oceeding satisfactorily." A wage settlement reached last March called for an increase of $5 to $7 weekl y for operators, with a weekly m iinum of $31. Stild ,is Witl fnat4AFantasy "The Campel with the Wrinkleds Knee s," three-act play by M~arie Ag- nes F Ioley, will be presented tomor- row and Saturday by dramatics stu- dents, as a Children's Theatre pro- duction, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dramatized from the Raggedy-Ann story by Johny Gruelle, the play deals with the adventures of Raggedy An- dy and Ann in a forest of strange, fairy tale creatures. Matineces are scheduled for tomor- row a(t3:45 p.m. and Saturday at 1:30 and 3:301 p.m. Tickets for reserv- ed seats will be on sale at the box office of the theatre,( from 10 a.m. to S' jJJUi. daily. M :i Iwirs of'tI e B'nai B'rith Hillel field of medicine or surgery following Foundat ion arc conducting the stu- internship, but he said there are dent dtivision of the local Allied Jdew- " great oipp.Ortun ities" in medical re- ish Aipeal drive which started yester- search and in the U.S. Public Health dlay to raise $25,000 in Ann Arbor. Service. APPEALS FOR EXTENSION OF OPA ... Secretary of the Treasury Fred M. Vinson urges a year's ex- tension of OPA in testimony in Washington, before the Senate banking committee. Huphrey Gets Post ire Commerce Departmen t George Magoff in Humphrey, L.L.B. '42 has been appointed 1946 Chair- man of the Business Advisory Com- mittee of the Department of Com- merce. as to w'ther they l sh a111ljt l b eo - crats or R eplublicans and to wha:t. religious groutpstHiey, sh1all belong," he, said, discussing -"The Evo],lution of Society from the Family." Defining. a family as a typle of orgacnizationl InI wh ichI "Otefath ier or mlothe r, or bothl, care for 'the offspritIg#,''li(e maI.de no 1predit(ions ,;as>oIwhtw ou 1,v(ldt r'epalce 11te fam~ilvi tily i l ttuan oiety, D)r. Kennedy eX Ltailw(1thlmssnm of the familyv as being ;dule inl part, to the socialization of medicine, to the control of family protection by police and the Army and Navy, and to thle fact that the handling, distribution and, in many cases, the cooking- of foods is done by persons other thlan those in the family which coinmed the commodities. Transportation 'Factor In an evening talk on '"Time Evolut- tion of Human Tranlsportation ats Shown by the Evolutionl of thxe Auto- mobile, Dr. Kennedy said the evolu- tion of the automobile was parallel to the evolutionary process in ani- mals. "The survival of the fittest is in effect with automobiles just as with animals," he stated, "and car i rovements come about by mental f accident just as mutations in ani- Imals come about by accident." The student goal in the drive is $4,500. About $3,100 was collected in the student division last ,year. Funds from the drive will be dis- tributed to several national and inter- natitonal Jewish organizations. Part of th ; funds collected in the student division will be turned over to the Muriel S. Klcinwaks Scholarship Fund, recently established in memory of a rnenmber of the foundation who was killed last February. The student division is directed by Frances Pearl and Burton Agata. Hil- lel Student Director Sam Rosen will; assist in the student drive.! Osias Zwerdling is over'all chairman of' tie local campaign. In addition to the student chairmen, he is assisted by Prof. Saul Cohen of the School of Medicine, Prof. William Haber of the economics department and Mrs. Reuben Kahn, who are in charge of faculty collections. Mark Ross is chairman of the city drive. Criticizing the exclusion of "cul- tural" subjects from the pre-medical{ curriculum, Dean Furstenberg said the Medical School wants its students to have a "broad background of gen- eral education." in addition to a mini- mum of prerequisites in science. Tau Sigma Delta, honorary fra- ternity in architecture and the allied arts,, has elected the following officers for 1946-46; Chapter-master, Charles Pearmnan; Scribe, Paul H. Coy, Re- cor1derA. Arnold Agree. Repaired STUDENT and OFFTCE SUPPLIES O. 11. MORiRILIJ 314 S. State St. Prhone 7177 Telephone 3008 We Deliver! Open 1 1 :00 a. m. to 1 :00 am. 2 x4 LUNC a Featuring Box Chicken 50C 1-AMBURGS * HOT DOGS GOOD COFFEE * BAR-B-Q's 1319 South University Ave., Ann Arbor HUMOR MAGAZINE t WIT AND HUMOR JOKES CARTOONS --. ~ -