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FRID f:'Y', SE '"1"'EM BE1 2'7, 196
THE MICT-ImAN DATTY
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 27. 194~
Interfraternity Registration is
Surpassing Previous Records
Surpassing all previous figures with
the exception of the record set in
1942, registration with the Interfra-
ternity Council for fall semester rush-
ing was boosted to approximately
650, IFC president Harry Jackson an-
nounced yesterday.
"If the 'last minute rush' rule holds
IlnleyTo Be
New Secretary
Prof. Frank L. Huntley, of the Eng-
l1th department, has been appointed
secretary of the Barbour Scholarship
Committee by the Board of Regents.
This position was formerly held by
the late Prof. Carl W. Rufus, of the
astronomy department, who passed
away last Saturday. The Barbour
Scholarship for Oriental women was
endowed by Levi L. Barbour, well-
known benefactor of several Univer-
sity buildings, in 1917. Over a dozen
Barbour scholarship students are now
on campus.
Prof. Huntley has spent a large
portion of his life in the Orient. He
has been with the English depart-
ment since last fall.
Willow Villagers
Hoald Dance Today
An informal record dance will be
held from 8 to 11 p.m. today at West
Lodge, Willow Village, Everett Chap-
man, recreation director for the
lodge announced yesterday.
Chapman also announced that
there will be a record concert at 3
p.m. Sunday in the lodge with a com-
mentary by Weldon Wilson, who has
one of the largest collections of rec-
ords in the University.
UNSIGHTLY HAIR GONE FOREVER
"New Short Wave Method"
Faster - Permanent - Safe
ELECTROLYSIS
GOLD MIRROR BEAUTY SHOP
First National Bldg. Ph. 6373 or 7767
Today and Saturday
"THE ,HU~iRRICANE
with Dorothy Lamour-Jan Hall
- and-
"BORDER BANDITS"
with Johnny Mack Brown
true again this year, we may break
:he 900 mark established in 1942
when men were faced with the pros-
rect of long service in the Armed
'orces," Jackson said.
Registratiqn To Continue
Registration with the IFC which
'egan Monday afternoon, will con-
Jinue until 5 p.m., today, in the IFC
>ffices on the third floor of the Un-
ton. Rushing lists and copies of the
1946 rushing rules will be available
nor each fraternity on campus at 5:30
3.m. today. .
Two amendments to the published
rushing rules were made at the recent
meeting of the council: a ban has
been placed on the serving of meals
to rushees during the first week of
rushing, and the rushing deadline has
been extended to 9:00 p.m. during the'
:irst week.
San Meals for Rushees
The ban on meals is the first such
ruling ever to be made by the coun-
sil, and is a result of the present food
shortage. Meals will be served during
Uhe second week of rushing which
ends Oct. 10.
"Registration places the student
under no obligation, but no student
nay be pledged to a fraternity until
he has signed with the Interfrater-
nity Council," Jackson commented.
"Those who signed up early in the
week may now obtain the booklet,
"Fraternities at Michigan," which
contains the rushing rules and infor-
mation and pictures of each house on
campus."
Rushing Opens Sunday
Rushing will begin Sunday, with
all chapters holding open houses for
'ushees. Rushing dates after the first
Sunday of open houses will be invi-
tational.
All undergraduate students may be
pledged, but initiation will be depend-
ent upon final grade reports at the
conclusion of the semester in which a
man is pledged.
Greece To Welcome King
ATHENS, Greece, Sept. 26.--(AP)-
Greek authorities made elaborate
preparations today to welcome King
George II back to his capital in a
grim atmosphere of watchfulness.
The king was expected to return
Saturday from his wartime exile in
Britain.
FREE LAND:
Brazil Admits
Only Farmers
As Immigrant8s
Convinced that a sound agricul-
tural basis is essential to its prosper-
I ity, Brazil is now accepting only
farmers as immigrants.
Dr. G. Cantuaria Guimaraes, who,
as head of immigration and coloniza-
tion in Brazil, is visiting the United
States to study our immigration pro-
cedures, explained yesterday that this
policy will be followed until Brazil has
enough farmers to adequately support
the rest of the population. "The cost
of living," he said, "is the direct re-
sult of the production of the land."
In order to encourage the immigra-
tion, Brazil is continuing its policy
of giving free agricultural equipment
and transportation within the coun-
try to farmer-immigrants. After the
immigrant has shown evidence of be-
ing completely established, Dr. Gui-
maraes continued, the Brazilian gov-
ernment will not only grant him the
land he has developed, but will also
help to pay the expense incurred in
coming to the country.
The land apportioned to the immi-
grant varies from 100 to 200 hectares
(a hectare is about 2.5 acres), de-
pending on the 'size of the family.
Families of less than 4 are not ac-
cepted, he said.
Dr. Guimaraes, who was in Ann Ar-
bor yesterday to visit with students of
his own country, is making an ex-
tended tour of American immigra-
tion centers. He pointed out that the
United States is the world's model in
matters of immigration and coloniza-
tion.
Bus A d Professors To Go
To Atlant icC'ity Meeting
Prof. Herbert F. Taggert and Prof.
H. E. Miller, of the business adminis-
tration school, will attend the annual
meeting of the American Institute of
Accountants Monday through Thurs-
day in Atlantic City, N.J.
Funds Needed by Colleges
LANSING, Sept. 26 -(p)- The
"Little Legislature" was called by
Governor Kelly today to meet Octo-
ber 11 to provide funds for additional
teachers in four state teachers col-
leges and the Michigan College of
Mining and Technology.
ART IN WATER COLOR:
American Painters Featured
In Opening Exhibit at Series
Basie Courses
To Be Initiated
In Law School
4
TO RECEIVE INDIAN ACHIEVE-
MENT MEDAL - Evelyn Yellow-
robe, great granddaughter of Sit-
ting Bull, will receive the 1946 In-
dian achievement medal of the In-
dian Council Fire in Chicago. She
is conducting a class at Vassar
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y., where
she is an English teacher. She
is a native of Rapid City, S. Dak.
Conc l Meeting
The Graduate Student Council
will hold its first meeting of the
semester at 7 p.m. Monday in the
Rackham Building. .
The council, one of two student
legislative bodies on campus, is com-
posed of members elected from each
department in the University on a
prorata basis.
Plans will be discussed for the
general elections to be held in de-
partments of the Graduate School,
Oct. 4. In addition, final arrange-
ments will be made for the coming
Graduate Openhouse to be held
Oct. 9, honoring the new dean of the
school, Dr. Ralph A. Sawyer.
Dallas Hawkins, president of the
group. expressed the hope that a
large active council membership
would be obtained for the coming
term "in order to meet the many
demands made on student govern-
ment by the crowded conditions in
Ann Arbor."
Water colors by two contemporary
American artists will constitute the
initial offering in the series of art ex-
hibits to be presented this year by the
newly-created University Museum of
Art.
The first exhibit, which features
the work of Don Kingman and De
Hirsch Margules, will open Thursday
with an afternoon reception and tea
and will continue through October 26.
Galleries >Remodelled
The recently remodelled galleries
on the second floor of Alumni Memo-
rial Hall will house all the exhibits,
which are under the direction of Prof.
Jean Paul Slusser, chairman of the
Department of Drawing and Painting
in the architecture school. The month
to month exhibits will be shown in
the West Gallery, while the two
smaller galleries will be hung with
some of the choicest art works from
the University's collection.
Highlignt of the series will be an
exhibition, Nov. 6 through Dec. 1, of
tapestries representing Flemish, Ital-
ian, Spanish and English weaving art
of the fifteeneth through eighteenth
centuries. The tapestries, which were
selected by Adele Coulin Weibel, Cur-
ator of Textiles of the Detroit Insti-
tute of Arts, are being loaned by lead-
ing New York dealers.
Modern Prirnitives
Prints by Rouault, the work of the
contemporary French artist, and sev-
eral pieces of Negro sculpture, con-
stitute a joint offering to be shown
Dec. 4 through 21. The sculpture,
mostly of black polishec4 wood, is the
work of modern African primitives of
the Gold Coast.
A second double offering will be
featured in January. This display,
consisting of Gothic paintings, and
photographs and models of the work
of the modern French architect, Le
Corbusier, will be shown Jan. 8
through Feb. 2.
Modern prints loaned by the De-
troit Institute of Arts and represent-
ing the work of French, German,
Mexican and American artists, will
be on display Feb. 10 to Mar. 2.
Other Exhibits
Other exhibits will feature water
colors by George Grosz, paintings by
the modern French abstract artist,
(Continued from Page 1)
all visitors to park their cars in the
areas about the city nearest their
departure routes.
Parking To Be Restricted
Counter-measures against a traffic
jam in the stadium area will be park-
nig restrictions for five blocks in
all directions.
"No parkng" signs will be posted
on the following streets:
Division street from W. Huron 'to
Hoover; S. Main street from the rail
road crossing to Stadium boulevard;
Snyder, Berkley, Potter and Keech
streets from Main street to Edge-
wood; Hoover, Davis and Hill streets
from S. Main to the Ann Arbor rail-
road crossing; Green and Brown
streets from Hill street to the
stadium.
All local citizens are requested to
walk to the stadium in order to
avoid congestion. The state high-
way department will place directional
signs on roads near the city to help
visiting drivers reach homeward
routes.
Special study of the plan will be
made by state police in aircraft.
They will spot congested areas and
take remedial steps for future large
football crowds.
Fights Mark Film Strike
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 26-(IP)-A
strike punctuated by flurries of vio-
lence and several arrests broke out at
Hollywood's major film lots today as
the AFL Conference of Studio Un-
ions threw out picket lines in its jur-
isdictional dispute with the rival In-
ternational Alliance of Theatrical
Stage Employes.
MIChIGAN
Ending Saturday
pHNALL" KEENAN WY N
uNIC O
' A
Paul Klee, sculpture by the modern
French sculptor, Maillol, paintings of
Pedro Figari, the Uruguayan artist,
and an exhibit of the works of the
Vanguard Print Group, representing
the work of a group of young radicals.
Occasional gallery talks by experts
will interpret the displays for the
public. The dates of these lectures
will be announced in The Daily as
they occur.
Research Office
For Grad Work
Supported by a $20,000 annual
grant which began in July, the Uni-
versity's Inter-Departmental Semi-
nar has set up a research bureau in
Flint which will combine graduate
training with community service,
Prof. Amos H. Hawley of the soci-
ology department, chairman of the
seminar, announced today.
The grant, provided in part by the
city of Flint and in part by the Uni-
versity, will be used to support a
research office with a full time di-
rector and to provide six $1,000
fellowships. Oily students with at
least a year of graduate work to
their credit are eligible for a fellow-
ship, Prof. Hawley announced.
The Flint office is at the service
of all members of the project, and
the line of work pursued depends
upon the interests of the individual
student and the counsel of faculty
members of the seminar. Subjects
studied cover a wide range, includ-
ing population problems, industrial
movements, and organization of mu-
nicipal services. The work is done
in the interests of science, and the
project is an unusual research op-
portunity due to the excellent facil-
ities and the benefit that will result
for members of the community, Prof.
Hawley stated.
A former undertaking of the semi-
nar's, located in Flint, was the Voca-
tional Guidance Project of several
years ago. Before.,the recent grant,
the seminar had leen carrying on
its studies in Detroit.
North Main Opposte Court House
Ends tonight j
"NO TIME FOIG COMEDY" &
"DANGEROUS BUSINESS"
Starts Saturday
"CITY FOR CONQUEST" &
"HEADIN' WEST"
Rudiments
System To
A new course entitled "Introduc-
tion To The Legal System" has been
inserted into the first year Law
School curriculum which will con-
sist of 24 lectures given by Dean E.
Blythe Stason and Prof. Burke Shar-
tel.
The course, required for .all .fib$
year students, is designed as an or-
entation program to explain the rudi-
ments of the legal system. it
will run for four weeks and will be
held in lieu of previously scheduled
classes in Contracts, Torts, Proper-
ty, Judicial Administration and
Crime.
Some of the first four weeks of
classes in the above subjects will be
omitted to allow attendance to
these lectures. They will be held ev-
ery day for the first two weeks,
Thursday, Friday and Saturday Qf
the third week and Friday and Sat-
urday of the fourth week.
Dean Stason asserted that the leC-
ture series and final examination
would be used as a measurement of
the student's ability to comprehend
law and legal terminology. He add-
ed that those who are unable to pass
the examination will be required to
repeat the course or pass aptitide
tests before continuing the study of
law.
Continuous from 1 P.M.
NOW
of Lega1
Be Taught
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
llI
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i +i
i
THE WEATHER IS
FINE ON MAIN STREET
Especially at the
CET RATE
MEN'S HDKFS., 7 for
Fine white cotton handker-
chiefs, neatly hemstitched.
Large size. 10
Special at 7 for $1
MEN'S WOOL SOX
100% wools, also 50% and
73% wools. Crew styles.
Slight irregulars.
3 Pairs $2.75. c
Argyle Plaids and Plain.
RAINCOATS
Plastic. Button 95
front. All sizes.
Officer Style Gabardine
Trench Coat. ,395
$30.00 value.
GABARDINE SLACKS
Brown, blue, 95
Pleats and zippers
WHITE "T" SHIRTS
Small, medium
and large . .. 7
KNIT BRIEFS
Elastic all around Q
Full combed yarn 8
All Wool LOAFER COATS
Assorted color 1 5
combinations up
Get in the habit of
Saving Money at the
CUT RATE STORE
Leather Jackets ... .10.95
Suede Jackets . . .12.95 up
Coveralls and Shop Coats
for lab. work . . . 4.98 up,
FOR RENT
ARRANGEMENTS are being made for the
housing of 8 single male graduate stu-
dents. These accommodatipns will be
ready in approximately one week. For
information call 7715 between 5-6 p.m.
Do not call other hours.
W+ANTED
MEN'S USED CLOTHES wanted. A better
price paid. Sam's Store, 122 E. Wash-
ington St. )14
WANTED TO BUY: 2 Army tickets reason-
ably. Have Dictaphone in perfect condi-
tion for sale. Call 2-7232. )43
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: New pigskin Monson lighter last
Wednesday. Engraved "Ellen." Treasured
family heirloom. Call 317 Mosher. RE-
WARD. )35
LOST: Black leather case including Leica
camera. Lost at Del Hi Island. Identi-
fication: A. D. Engstrom. Reward. Call
Rodi Olson, 2-2521. )34
LOST: Fraternity pin, Zeta Psi, on campus.
Reward. Return to Bob Geiger, 3549. )29
LOST: Black and gold Shaeffer pen during
registration. Initials "ELS''. Call Enid,
9228. Reward. )28
LOST: Parker "51", grey with silver top.
Lost Sunday in State Theatre. Return
to Robert McColley, Rm 111 Allen Rum-
sey. )20
LOST: Glasses (red case), Tues. between
Angell Hall and Kresge's. Return to
Beth Grim 236 S. Thayer, 8930. Reward.
)38
LOST: String of pearls between West Phy-
sics and U. Hall. Phone 2-5579. )45I
FOR SALE
MUSIC: As you want it on the portable
electric phonograph. Beautiful tone,
snazzy looks. Call Charlie at 2-4925 4or
demonstration. )8
FOR SALE: Boy's bicycle in excellent con-
dition. Call Mrs. James, 4489. )47
FOR SALE: Phonograph record changer,
good condition. Phone 5204. )48
CROS L E Y FROSTMASTER deep-freeze
cabinet. Brand new, 1946 model, 3.2 cu.
ft., hermetically sealed. $132.00. Call
258566. )51
MISCELLANEOUS
C. & M. TRUCKING CO. Trunks, suitcases
and small move jobs Call 21721 for es-
timates. )2
TENNIS, BADMINTON, SQUASH racquets
restrung. Nylon job now will be just as
good next spring. Phone 2-7360, Dean
McClusky, 417 8th St. )4
SEWING: Alterations and repairs on wo-
men's andgirls' garments. Let me keep
your wardrobe in good repair. Miss Liv-
ingston, 315 S. Division, 2nd floor- front.
)7
FOUNTAIN HELP: Girl or young lady to
work at soda fountain. Full time or
mornings. No evenings or Sundays.
Swift's Drug Store, 340 S. State St.,
Phone 3534. )39
WANTED: Girls for commercial photo fin-
ishing plant. Automatic printers, no ex-
perience necessary.l What hours can
you work? Apply Miss Green 4 to 5 p.m.
Ivory Photo 1030 E. University Ave. )41
MUSICIANS WANTED: Semi-name band
reorganizing. Phone 2-4176 or 7590. )42
CUNNINGHAM'S
SODA FOUNTAIN
Women and girls needed for soda fountain
sales clerks. Day work. Good pay. Meals
and uniforms furnished.
Attention: students and students' wives;
we are in a position to arrange a schedule
to conform with your available hours-
either fullor part time.,
Apply at 226 S. Main St.. Cunningham
Drug Co. ) 26
WANTED: Philippine male student with
dining room experience for part-time &
banquet work. Phone 8656. )55
LIGHT ASSEMBLY WORK: Hours 8 to 5.
40 hour week. Pleasant surroundings.
Good working conditions. VOKAR CORP.
7340 Huron River Drive, Dexter, Mich.
)54
CELLISTS, violinists, violists interested in
contacting1others for quartet playing:
phone 2-6133. )53
ROOM and BOARD plus nominal salary
for girl with nursing experience in ex-
change for care of 3-months' old baby.
Beautiful home in most attractive sec-
tion of Ann Arbor. Close to campus and
bus line. Phone 2-2670. )50
BUSINESS SERVICES
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES * JOHN JADWIN * SERVICE
855 Tappan Ave. Phone 2-7412 )49
Coming Sunday
ALAN LA DD
41Q5 5
4.
F E A T U R I N G
STAMPS 'and COINST
BOUGIH T, SOLD OR EXCHANGED
K E BO STA NH OUSE
516 West Cross Street, Ypsilanti
HELP WANTED
Don't be a flapper!
FOUNTAIN HELP: Top pay, hours to suit
your requirements. Apply in person to
Witham Drug. )32
EXPERIENCED waitresses for part time.
Includes dinner, uniform and 75c an hr.
Call 8656. )30
AVON OFFERS splended opportunity to
earn during the Christmas season just
ahead. Pleasant work, hours to suit your
convenience. No experience neede d.
Write Box 59, Michigan Daily. )3
MAGAZINE EDITOR is seeking secretary
proficient in shorthand and typing. 40-
hour week. Call 7205 for interview. )19
1 fi
FOOTBALL
r
f
Come over and get your
1946 ENSIAN
MICHIGAN VS. INDIANA
PLAY-BY-PLAY BROADCAST by BOB UFER
SATURDAY -1: 50 P.M.
LISTEN TO ''HERE COMES HARMON"
SATURDAY - 1:35 P.M.
Sunday
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