PAGE STX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDIAY, OCTOBER 23, 1946 lillll lliin llililllliin iilln ilin iilln ili linililu li imm m un Carver Urges Passage of City Pensio Plan Passage of the charter arneniment in the Nov. 5 election adding a pen sion and retirement plan for city em- ployees was urged yesterday by Prof. Harry C. Carver of the mathematics department. Prof. Carver, in addition to being president of the Police and Fire- men's Pension and Retirement Board, has acted as adviser to the city coun- cil's pension committee and has aid- ed materially in working out the pio- posed plan. In pointing out that this plan would cost taxpayer.} less money and provide them withs etter servics, Prof. Carver said most people are un- aware ' that city employees do not come under the provisions of the So- cial Security Act. "Without a visible pension plan," he added, "one may be sure that a city is forced to have an invisible plan which raises costs and lowers the quality of the services performed by the city." "This occurs since a city has no other way to reward an old faithful employee except by allowing the em~ ployee to remain on the payroll p~ast the years of his maximrlusr ueful- ness," Prof. Carver explained. Although it will take a few years before the ,full effects of 1-his plan will be felt, Prof. Carver added that it is a necessary step forward toward better government. Veterans May Enlist Il Naval Reserve Navy or Coast Guard veterans who wish to join the U. S. Navy Organ- ized Reserve may enroll at the Naval Armory in Detroit. Veterans who enroll in the Organ- ized Reserve will retain the rate or rank they had when discharged. They will be required to attend one meet- ing a week, and to take a two week summer cruise. Optional week-end cruises will be offered in the spring. The Naval Armory in Detroit is located at Jefferson and Grand Blvd. Veterans who wish to join must pre- sent their honorable discharge cer- tificates. Myers Leaves for Europe Col. Maurice C. Myers, '11 Lit., '14 Law, is now en route to Germany where he will serve as chief counsel of a new war crimes trial commission, according to T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni As- sociation. Prof. John A. Perkins, secretary of the Institute of Public Adininistra- dion, is in New York City tte'd g the National Civil Service Assembly 3f United States an (!Canaoa. Dean E. Blythe Stason, of the law school, is acting as one of the state's commissioners at a National Confer- ence of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws 'which began yesterday continuing through Nov. 1 in Atlan- tic City. He will also attend a meet- ing of the American Bar Association at that time. Dr Walter D Block, assistant pro- fessor of biological chemistry, vill attend a meeting of the Ainc.an F-ederalion for C''iical Research and a meetinw of the Central Society for Clinical Research Oct. 30 through Nov. 1 in Chicago. Franklin H. Littell, director of the Student Religious Association, will attend a Conference of World Stu- dent Service Fund and a meeting of the National Intercollegiate Council Conference Oct. 28 through 30 in New York Cit JoiCn . Caig. oevl1 appointed program diieegtur of IIhe ;tudeim tie- ligio"s A^soca" P"14, wl at tend tie annual mneting of th State Council of Churches Oct. 29 and 30 in Royal Oak. Hol Your Bonds My if f i11WM1 RM6iiN111 VETERANS' HOMES 'MONSTROSITIES'- Superior Judge M. T. Phelps termed these frame dwellings "monstrosities" unworthy of ex-servicemen in ordering abandonment of the half-completed city veterans housing project in Phoenix, Arizona. Officials said an estimated $150,000 already had been spent on the temporary structures, designed for 156 veterans and their families. Faculty Members To Speak at Meetings Rabbi Prawises U.S. Treatment Of Homeless (Coiinued from Page 1) MAKE MINE AiMISIC: Variety of A cts To Be Offered Friday al Band Varsity Night 1lamid 2 aAV edcx fomt Germany, Dr. Wise that they would be returning to "ceineteries." He cited the exam- ple f ttie 80 to 100,000 Jews remain- ing in Poland, out of the 3 million who once lived there. Stating that the partition plan for Palestine will probably be utilized, Dr. Wise asserted that Jews must ac- cept this decision for the present since no other choice is open to them,. Wise Hits At Schools For Discrimination Discrimination in admissions to professional schools is a "nationwide practice, in one guise or another," Dr. Stephen S. Wise, president of the American Jewish Congress, as- serted here yesterday. Dr. Wise, who last spring brought action to cancel Columbia Univer- sity's tax exemption on grounds of discriminatory practices, reported that "it has been interesting to ob- serve that the number of Jewish students admitted to the Columbia medical school has been increasing since the institution of the suit." University musicians will be in the limelight at 8:30 pr. Friday in Hill Auditorium when the University Concert Band presents Varsity Night, traditionally popular variety show. Frank Elsass, music school faculty member, will be starred as a cornet soloist. Elsass formerly was featured in the Goldman Band, a summer group acclaimed as the country's finest concert band. Prof. Andrew B. White, of the music school, who was associated with Fred Waring for two and one-half years, will offer a bari- tone solo of "De Glory Road." A hand-balancing act will be performed by Glenn Neff and Newt Laken, physical education instructors. Soprano Rose Derderian, music school senior, will sing the aria with which she recently won a scholarship with the Philadelphia La Scala Opera Company. Don Moore, grad student, will conduct the Concert Band in one of his own compositions, "Rhythmetic." In addition, Chico Kennedy, a Michigan cheerleader from Cuba, will execute a Russian dance. -i l t: f .y r l . - :H . .;{ i : :i n ? t ,' .' fit. I 3 t S: ' K i t .:'..t .. :. . 0 JacobkAOf>L You are invited to open a Jacobson charge account. 1 The Adaptable Look is a Printzess idea A suit you live in and love, from dawn to dusk, from here to the Himalayas! That's how Printzess Suits look! - Wonderful wherever you go. They dramatize your favorite accessories ... adapt themselves perfectly to every occasion. ,,:,.. 62$./[ 11 . . ballet tor street wear 4 It's the love of your life . .. Sandier's Original ballet shoe in luscious-shaded suedel Tiny-rnaking, young as a giggle . . . soled in sturdy leather. 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