TUESDAY, SEPTEMB ER '24, 1946 THE MICHTCAN T)ATT.Y PACT TNiR.TF.FN' T1 -1 L 141M l_1; V a 1" _Yf'11 YPA Tm Pua1 - . £ 1 .c.l3Vt:CE 1 11ii 1 C G LV Engine School Faces Overcrowded Years No Relief Expected Until New East Engineering Addition IsCompleted ,; ...: a., :.,.SELF-ED U CA TION : r: , t School by M 'ail' for Armed }' } 'Forces To BeaContinu ed by U' Laboratory and classroom facilities in the engineering college will be at a premium this fall with school offi- cials faced with an unprecedented enrollment. Figures released Saturday revealed that 3,584 students had registered in the college. This figure, which does not include late registrants or gradu- ate students, represents a 59% in- crease over last year's record enroll- ment. Early 'reports showed 29% of all veterans on campus enrolled in the engineering college. Plan Two Assemblies During the summer, enrollment in the college was closed to all but for- mer students. Nevertheless two as- semblies forfirst-semester freshman will be held this fall to accommodate the unusually heavy enrollment. Dean Ivan C. Crawford attributed the incre ,sing interest of veterans in engineering to their contacts with engineering during service and the fact that their studies are being fi- nanced by the government. He point- ed out that many veterans received Bond Accepts Carleton Post N Dr. Floyd A. Bond, former instruc- tor in the economics department, has accepted the position of associate professor of economics at Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. The past summer Dr. Bond was in charge of the combined Economics 52 (literary college) and Economics 54 (engineering college) lecture sec- tion in the University. ST ENOGRA P H ERS TA BU LAT I NG OPERATORS COM PTOM ETE R OPE RA TOR Apply KA ISE RFRAZ E R CORP. Willow Run, Mich. technical training in service that will form a background for their theoreti- cal work in school. Lab Space Scarce No relief from the shortage of lab- oratory space is expected until next fall when the addition to the East Engineering Building, now under construction, will be completed. The addition will provide classroom and laboratory space for the electrical and aeronautical engineering depart- ments and will allow oxe redistribu- tion of space in West Engineering Building. The completion of the engineering addition will enable the University to enlarge its programs in the field of electronics. It is planned that the top two floors and the roof of the build- ing be devoted to electronics. At present the electronics laboratories are located in a one story wooden building behind West Engineering. Dean Crawford reported that most of the engineering faculty has re- turned from wartime work and that competent new members and teach- ing fellows are being added to com- pensate for the increased enrollment. Business Specialists Shortage Reported Demand for men and women with specialized business training far ex- ceeds supply, records of the Univer- sity's Business Administration School placement service indicate. "By far the largest demand is for accountants," Prof. Charles L. Jami- son, director of the placement service explained. "We've three times as many requests for accountants. as we can fill, and next on the list are the calls for teachers of business sub- jects." Most businesses want employes who not only have special training, but who also have a definite inter- est in the type of work the job offers, he said. Converting Insurance Veterans should hold their Nation- al Service Life Insurance until they know what their income is going to be, the Veterans Administration an- nounced. "No veteran should convert his policy until he knows what he can afford and whether a 20-pay life, 30- pay life, ordinary life or an endow- ment plan would best suit his re- quirements," the announcement said. American service men and women from Guadalcanal to Corsica have been encouraged to continue their education through United States Armed Forces Institute course ad- ministered by the Correspondence Study Department. The University, in cooperation with nearly 100 other colleges and univer- sities throughout the nation, will con- tinue to make these courses-by-mail available to armed forces personnel for several years, according to gov- ernment plans. During the war, USAFI courses were sent from the University to al- most 4,000 men and women in all branches of the service-the eighth largest enrollment in the country. Many of the students completed the courses in which they originally en- rolled and have elected new ones. Some of them are now continuing their education on the campus. Both high school and college cre- dit courses, including basic courses in languages, riathemathics, social studies and science, are listed by the department. Another wartime product of the Correspondence Study Department is aid to veterans. Since January 1, the department has been providing courses to veterans under the GI Bill of Rights through a contract with the Veterans Administration in Washington, D.C. The department has 26 full or part time instructors, most of whom also teach on campus. lFarch of Dimes Reports An audit of the 1946 March of Dimes shows that $8,184,595.80 was raised by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis to carry on its program in research, education and emergency epidemic aid. Local chap- ter's raised $7,797,150.66 for care and treatment of patients, v y.._ .. . .... ,I PARATROOPE1S JUMP - British and American P aratroopers drop from the 1. S. Air Force's latest troop carrier plane in a demonstration at Beaulieu, IHarrpshire, England. Forty-two chutists jumped from twin doors on either side of the plane, known as the Packet. PRECEDENT WAS SET: Wallace Not First To Be Ousted in Cabinet Row 'Ita ~:a. - President Truman's removal of Henry Wallace as Secretary of Com- merce was "unusual," but not "un- precedented," according to Prof. Jo- seph E. Kallenbach, of the political science department. Prof. Kallenbach pointed out that cases where a cabinet officer was re- moved because of disagreement with administrative policy in his own field were more frequent than where the policy in question was in a different sphere, such as foreign affairs. However, he declared, "it is not un- usual for a president to be sensitive to cabinet loyalties in the foreign field." Randolph Removed An early example of this, he added, was the removal of Edmund Ran- dolph as Secretary of State by Presi- dent Washington, because of dis- agreement overt the foreign policy embodied in the Jay Treaty with Great Britain. Prof. Kallenbach expressed the opinion that President Truman made an "unfortunate blunder" in permit- ting Secretary Wallace's speech to in- clude the statement that it represent- ed his view on foreign policy. He "failed to realize the implications of the speech and the importance of this statement." Truman Was 'Foreed' As a result President Truman was "forced to ask Wallace to resign," Prof. Kallenbach declared. "No other action would clearly indicate that there had been no change in the Byrnes policy." To Meet Here A grant of $10;000 from the Rocke- feller Foundation to the University School of Public Health will finance a conference on Preventive Medicine to be held in Ann Arbor Sept. 30 to Oct. 4. Dr. Nathan Sinai, secretary of the Public Health School faculty, said the grant was awarded the Univer- sity because of the Foundation's opinion of the University's outstand- ing work in this comparatively new field. Professors of preventive medicine from every medical college in the na- tion and Canada, together with pub- lic health experts will attend the "five-day conference. rnethin9 Mi {F114.r ( Famous for its CHICKEN IN The elimination of the last cabinet representative of the left-wing inde- pendernt group identified with the New Deal, whicn he inherited from President Roosevelt, will weaken President Truman politically, Prof. Kallenbach contended. This removal makes the cabinet less representative of various shades of opinion. Wallace was important to the pres- ent administration, he said, because Distinguished Scholars Will Lecture Here Distinguished scholars from edu- cational institutions in this country and abroad will be brought to the campus this year, as in many years past, in the University lecture series. Presented as a means of supple- menting the instruction of the class- room these lectures, which are open to the public without charge, are planned by the department heads in the various schools and colleges of the University. They will be an- nounced as they occur, and will be given in the Lecture Hall or the Am- phitheatre of the Rackham Building in the late afternoon or evening. Speakers Listed Tentative plans for this year's series include lectures to be given by Dr. T. Sargent Forence of Birming- ham, England, and Dr. D. K. Lieu of China, to be given under the auspices of the economics department. Dr. Frank Robbins, assistant to the President, was unable to make defi- nite announcement of any other lec- ture plans. LAW AND MEDICAL BOOKS SU PPLIES OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 So. University-Phone 4436 ..1/E i/. 6ion in sto*... *jP' 'tII HENRY A. WALLACE ... meets fate of Randolph "'1 Strike a sharp black note-for 'black is any. thing but dull ... wonder- ful,'wonderful' date dresses ... made to order for your smoothest skin .. . your best jewels .. . your favorite man! of the large number of independent voters with Democratic leanings whom he represents. He was also ex- pected to take a leading part in the corning electorial campaign. It is interesting to note that Secre- tary Wallace was one of the strongest advocators of punishment for party members in Congress who did not support the President's policies. Censorship 'Expected' The cepsorship of opinions of oth- er cabinet officials in regard to for- eign policy is "to be expected," Prof. Kallenbach said. He pointed out that in the field of foreign affairs, there must be a de- gree of joint support by cabinet mem- bers of the administrative policies far beyond that which would be de- manded in domestic affairs. "Unless a country can present the appearance of united government support of her foreign policy, it is weakened in international diplo- macy." ee it! THE ROUGH HEADLINERS . 'Q'. The f ull-topped skirt emerald aqua brown black /1/ k. 9gray Come see our new, dazzling collection of costume jewelry ... chosen with an eye to taste and distinction. AH i 9 t COSme tICS Of Distinction- HENRI BENDEL .. . ... PRINCE MATCHABELLI E