PAGE TWO, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1946 PAGE ~WO SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1946 Saturday DeadlineAnnounced For Union Election Petitions i .- Patient Census Shows Rise At'U' Hospital v FEATURE STARTS 1:37 - 4:19 - 7:01 - 9:43 P.M. T ARTADPBSNFiYfT TfATA'E -----STARTS TODAY ---- Election petitions for the offices of Union vice-presidents, senior class officers and co-chairmen of the freshmen, sophomore and junior dances will be due at noon Saturday. Blanks will be availablefrom 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow through Friday in the Union Student Offices. The elec- tion for these positions and for three student members of the Board in Control of Student Publications will be conducted by the Student Legis- lature Oct. 29. Eligibility Cards Required Petitions are not required from candidates for Board in Control membership. Students desiring to run for Board membership may con- tact Terrell Whitsitt, chairman of Former Naval Chaplain Given University Post The Rev. John. H. Burt, former chaplain in the United States Navy, has been appointed Chaplain to Epis- copal Students at the University. Mr. Burt will begin his work to- day, when he will preach at the 11 a.m. service in St. Andrew's Episco- pal Church. Headquarters for Mr. Burt will be at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church where the office of the Episcopal Student Foundation is located. His associate will be Maxine J. Westphal, who for the past four years has served as Counselor to Women Stu- dents for the Episcopal Student Foundation. A native of Pontiac, Michigan, Mr. Burt graduated from Amherst Col- lege in 1940, took a year of graduate study at Columbia University and the New School of Social Research in New York City, and then began three years of theological training at the Virginia Theological Seminary. the election committee, from 3 to 4 p.m. tomorrow through Friday in the Union Student Offices. Candidates for all positions must present eligibility cards. Six Union vice-presidents will be chosen, one each from the literary college, engineering college, law school, dental school, medical school and all other schpools. Each candi- date will be required to present evi- dence of school enrollment. In addi- tion, he must plan to be here for two more academic terms. President To Be Chosen A senior president, vice-president and secretary-treasurer will be chos- en from the literary college and from the engineering college. Petitions must be signed by 50 seniors from the candidate's school and each candi- date must present evidence of class standing. Co-chairmen from the literary and engineering colleges will be chosen for the freshman, sophomore and junior dances. Petitions must be signed by 50 members of the candidate's class. Students Writers Excluded Candidates for Board in Control membership may not hold any posi- tion on the staff of any student publi-~ cation. Nominations for the posi- tions are made by the nomination committe of the student members of the Student Affairs Committee. In order to be eligible, candidates must indicate in writing that they will stand for election and assume the duties of the office if elected. Prof. Lederle Speaks Prof. John W. Lederle, of the politi- cal science department, spoke on "Utilities Extensions" at the first ses- sion of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Michigan Municipal League being held this weekend in Detroit. Prof. Lederle is a staff attorney of the league. Help Shortages Exist 0.I -' r Among Service Staff With a startling upswing in its pa- tient census taxing physical facilities to the limit, the University Hospital faces increasingly difficult conditions this year. The most severe shcrtages in the help situation lie in the service groups, Herbert P. Wagner, business manager of the hospital said. This group includes all those who work with food and in the kitchen, nurses aids, diet maids and any others ex- cept nurses and doctors, who service the patients. There is also a serious shortage in clerical help, he contin- ued. Machinery Handicaps In addition, the hospital is facing machinery handicaps. The lifetime of much of the machinery was over- extended during the war, Wagner ex- plained, and on top of that has had difficulty in getting serviced. When we can order new machinery, he said, delivery dates are set so far ahead that in many cases it might as well be available. Analyzing further the increased de- mand in both in-patient and out-pa- tient departments, Wagner reported that the out-patient clinics are seeing approximately 600 people each day, compared to 400 last year and that the in-patient census has shown a sharp upswing in just the last sev- eral weeks. Hospital Staff Ratio Though increases in this nature are hard to forecast and even more dif- ficult to explain, officials believe that it can be attributed to the state- wide shortage of hospital beds, to the increased participation in health in- surance prcgrams and to a general increase in health consciousness. The desired ratio of hospital staff members to patients is approximately two to one. With 1800 employees serving about 900 patients daily, Wagner said, the figures at fact value do not indicate the shortage. ,4 MODEST GRANDMOTHER.- Mrs. Eleanor Medsker, who thinks the government should help grandmothers preserve their modesty "by al- lowing longer skirts," writes a letter in reply to one she received from the Civilian Production Administration asking "explicit details" on her choice of color and size after the Kansas City, Mo., grandmother protested the OPA ban on skirt lengthening. RELIGIOUS NEWS: Dr. Carl enr Remaking the Modern mdin ' I 4 I'll Dr. Carl Henry, professor of philos- ophy at Northern Baptist Seminary in Chicago, will speak on "Remaking the Modern Mind" at 4:30 p.m. today in Lane Hall under the sponsorship of the Michigan Christian Fellow- ship. Author of "Remaking the Modern Mind," "Such As I Have" and "Suc- cessful Church Publicity," Dr. Henry is also a contributing editor of the "Religious Digest." Dr. Henry, who was a guest at a dinner given yesterday in Lane Hall, received degrees from Wheaton Col- lege and Northern Baptist Seminary, and took post-graduate work at Loy- ola University and Boston University. Several of the student religious or- ganizations will hold supper meetings led by guest speakers today. Rev. Frank Ricker from Colum- bus, Ohio will speak at the UNI- TARIAN STUDENT GROUP sup- per meeting at 6 p.m. today at 1917 Washtenaw. His topic, "The Five Basis of Uni- tarianism," is also the title of a pamphlet which Rev. Ricker has pub- lished recently. Discussion of "Foundations for Reconstruction" by Elton True- blood will be continued at the EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED STUDENT GUILD meeting at 5 p.m. The meeting will be preceded by a fellowship supper. "A History of the English Church" will be the topic discussed by Prof. William Willcox of the history de- partment at the supper meeting of the CANTERBURY CLUB at 6 p.m. at the Student Center. Guest speaker at the meeting of the ROGER WILLIAMS GUILD will be Rev. Eugene Zendt, pastor of Memorial Christian Church. Rev. Zendt will speak on the sub- ject, "Don't Miss the Bible," following a cost supper at 6 p.m. at the Guild House, 502 E. Huron. .........- I i I III I I I i Jil a A love song in scent . . . serenading her to the stars Paris-born Intoxication in the jewel-cut flacon. I. i l i II CNI(LAfl I II U *~"~'& "~ ~ ~ U