PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TF[Ti'RgDAY, N(}WNMER 21, HI PAGE SIX TTT1JT~4DAY, NOVFMBETt 21, 1946 I I Public Administration Course Lauded b Graduate Students -A I Moonshine Will Oust Sunshine Ini Saturday MorningEclipse By CINDY REIGAN Complete satisfaction with the or- ganization of the Institute of Public Administration has been expressed by students now enrolled in this new- DAILY OFFICIAL1 BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) tonight in the Union. Pledge Initia- tion. Veterans Organization meeting at 7:30 tonight, 3rd floor, Union. Elec- tion of Officers. The Foresters' Club meeting at 7:45 tonight, Rm. 2039, Natural Sci- ence Bldg. Radio Club meeting at 7:30 tonight, Rm. 220 W. Engineering. Gilbert and Sullivan 7:00-9:00 tonight, League. rehearsal, Kappa Phi Club meets 5:30 p.m. today. Guest speaker, Mrs. Induk Pahk of Seoul, 1Xorea. Leadership Training conferences, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., today, Fireplace Room, Lane HMall. Hillel Foundation: Tryouts 3:30- 5:30 p.m., Fri., Nov. 22, for persons interested in acting in the dramatic plays and radio skits. Coming Events Graduate Outing Club ice-skating and hiking party at 2:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 24, Outing Club rooms, Rack- ham Bldg. Lutheran Student Married Group will meet for dinner at 6:00 p.m., Fri., Nov. 22, at the Center. For Res- ervations call 7622. Dr. Stewart Allen, visiting surgeon at the University Hospital, will speak on "China at the Crossroads" at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Nov. 22, in Robert Owen Cooperative House; auspices of the Inter-Cooperative Council. Everyone is cordially invited. Refreshments. Ann Arbor Library Club meeting at 7:45 p.m., Fri., Nov. 29, Rm. 110, General Library. Dr. Wallace A. Bacon of the English Department will speak on the writing of his play, "Savonarola." Hindustan Association: "Cultural Exhibits from India," will be present- ed on December 6-7 in the East Con- ference Room, Rackham Bldg. Send contributions to Mrs. B. Parikh. "Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp" will be presented by The Chil- dren's Theatre of the department of speech Friday at 3:45 p.m., and Sat- urday at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are on sale at the Theater box office from 10-5, daily. est graduate division of the Univer- sity. These students, coming from seven different states, are working for their masters degree in public administra- tion in accordance with the idea that "democracy will be scuttled unless the people get efficient administra- tion of the laws passed by their elect- ed representatives." Institute Trains Administrators Put into operation in July, the In- stitute coordinates all University fa- cilities so that students can better prepare themselves for roles as ad- ministrators in government. Some students trained in professions which will inevitably lead to public service, supplement their professional work with study of governmental admin- istration. Now, after three semesters of study and one semester of field work they will have had the opportunity to ob- tain knowledge of administrative methods through classes and sup- plemented by instruction by public officials brought to the Institute to lecture and discuss operating prob- lems with them. "Administration is divided into two parts," Betty Myerson, Vassar '43, pointed out: 1)nGathering information on which to plan, and 2) Actually doing the planning and the job. Government Needs Business Skills "Government requires the same kills as business,"she explained,"only they are even more specialized. Since the 'thirties with the rise of career people in governmental offices, ef, fective administration requires not only putting the people into office but seeing to it that they possess the techniques necessary for the job." "I hope professional training for government will spread," she com- mented, "and I think it will." War experiences in particular have led to increased interest in the prob- lems of effective administration, Donna Werback, a graduate of Mich- igan State College, said. Her service with the WACs during the war leads her to believe that "The problems faced by private or public adminis- trators are the same as those running all through the Army." No Institute Courses Given The students generally approved the Institute's system of allowing election of any course in any school subject to the approval of the execu- tive committee of the Institute. Although ihere are several other universities in the country offering programs for graduate students, Harding Hughes, University of North Carolina '44, chose to study at Michi- gan because of the close relationship which he found existing between the Institute and local government pub- lie officials. "Special recognition should be made, of the value of the Bureau of Government library for us in the In- stitute," Oliver Comstock, ex-news- oaper publisher, said. "Because of the research constantly being done, the library is filled with live pam- phlets and newspaper clippings which are certainly more interesting to the student ofdadministrative problems than a dead text." SILENT LEWIS SITS IN SOLITUDE-While an apprehensive nation girded itself for the rigors of a possible extended soft coal strike, United Mine Workers Chief John L. Lewis sits quietly and alone in the lobby of a Washington hotel, readjig a newspaper bannering coal crisis story. 'SPIRIT OF MODERN FRANCE:' 'U' Student Group Will Attend Art Museum Exhibit int Toledo If the- sun won't be dimmed by Ann. Arbor's chronically cloudy wea- ther Saturday, at least part of its light will be temporarily obscured by the new moon passing between it and the earth. The eclipse will begin about 10:30 a.m., reaching a maximum at high noon when about fifty per cent of the sun's disk will be covered, Hazel Losh, of the astronomy department, said yesterday. By 1:35 p.m., the sun will be fully visible again if the clouds have not taken over. Miss Losh recommends that sun glasses be used to obtain good results in ob- servation. Partial eclipses of this sort aren't Center To Start Sunday Supper Reviving a pre-war custom, the In- ternational Center will again serve Sunday night supper to foreign stu- dents and friends beginning this week and every week following. Supper will begin at 6:30 p.m. There will be a charge of 50 cents per person. Approximately 80 people will be able to be served. The regular Sunday evening program will follow at 7:30 p.m. and will be open to the public. David Hildinger, boogie-woogie pianist, will present selections on this week's program to be held in Rm. 316 of the Union. A film on the de- velopment of American Music will also be shown. unusual, Miss Losh pointed out. Prom two to five are visible in various parts of the world every year, but total eclipses are much rarer. Total eclip- ses of the moon are niuch more like- ly to occur because of the much greater size of the earth's shadow in comparison to the moon. Besides total and partial eclipses of the sun, there is also what is known as an "annular eclipse" in which the disk of the moon is too small to com- pletely cover the sun's face. These only occur on rare occasions when our satellite is at its greatest dis- tance from the earth at the time of the eclipse. In ancient days, eclipses were con- sidered bad omens. For example, if the Ohio State-Michigan game were being played in 150 B.C. instead of a Saturday afternoon in 1946, Ann Ar- bor sports fans might not be too happy about it. Hold Those Bonds! Adams Cites Ways To Meet New Challenge Special To The Dally CHICAGO-A warning that mod- ern challenges to education cannot be met by rearranged curricula, en- larged physical plants or the devel- opment of new educational gadgets was issued by Provost James P. Ad- ams yesterday. Provost Adams spoke on "New Challenges to Education" at a dinner meeting of the University Alumnae Club of Chicago. "The new challenges will be met by the high faith and zeal of those who search for truth and teach, and by the earnest purpose of those who come to learn," he declared. "Our success will depend upon the extent to which we can make dis- coveries of truth," Provost Adams explained, "and upon the vitality of our teaching and its influence in the lives of our students." Education will succeed only if stu- dents leave the campus with a "com- pelling urge to continue their asso- ciation with the realm of ideas," Pro- vost Adams asserted. The second group of University art students to visit the Toledo Museum of Art "Spirit of Modern France" exhibit will go to the museum Sat- urday to study the paintings there. Already thirty-five students of the French painting class from the Uni- versity history of art department have been among the thousands of art enthusiasts who have enjoyed the exhibit, Blake-More Godwin, director of the Toledo Museum, said last Sat- urday. These French works of art are on loan to the museum from Paris, France, two Canadian communities and 12 American cities. The paint- ings depict the reactions of French artists to the past 200 years of their national history encompassing three Alumni Plan Dinner in Ohio Michigan alumni activities before the Michigan-Ohio State game Sat- urday began with a smoker yesterday in Toledo and will continue with a dinner tomorrow night in Columbus, according to T. Hawley Tapping, gen- eral secretary of the Michigan Alum- ni Association. Tapping, hockey coach Vic Hey- liger and ballplayer Dick Wakefield were speakers at the annual Toledo smoker. Prof. Ralph Aigler, of the Law School, who recently returned from a west coast athletic conference, will speak at the University Club din- ner in Columbus. invasions and great economic and political upheavals including the Re- volution. Under the sponsorship of the Tor- onto Museum and Art Gallery, the exhibit mnarks the first joint Canad- ian-American effort to put on an art show of this kind. Church News Several meetings are planned by the student religious guilds today. The Congregational-Disciples Guild choir will meet at 5 p.m. at the Con- gregational Church. Members of the guild will meet for a supper discussion at 5:30 p.m. at the Guild house. An open Kappa Phi meeting will be held at 5:15 p.m. at the Method- ist Church. Reservations may be made on the bulletin board in the church. The Wesleyan Executive Council will meet at r :15 p.m. Officers of the Newman Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the club rooms of St. Mary's Chapel to discuss plans for the "Western Dance" to be given Nov. 29. Read and Use The Daily Classifieds 12-13-14 r "_°P3 - icecv'd7ote: Beat your way to our door for your "Juke Box Jems" . ..Harry James trumpets forth in "If I'm Lucky" and "One More Kiss." You'll like "For You, For Me, Forever More" and "A Kiss in the Night" done as only Goodman and Lund can do it ... Stan Ken- ton's latest, "Intermission Riff," and "It's a Pity To Say Goodnight' is strictly all right. There's a nice one, "It's All Over.Now" and "Either It's Love or It Isn't" in a Frankie Carle way . . . Merle Travis' "Divorce Me C.O.D." is on the list of favorites, too . . . Krupa knocks out "There's No Breeze" with "Aren't You Kind of Glad We Did?" . . . and you'll be kind of glad you came in to hear the rest of our popular, jazz and classical selections. See You at RADIO AND RECORD SHOP 715 North University, Phone 3542 North End of the Diagonal - Ann Arbor BOOK MATCHES . . . for . . . CHRISTMAS Can be mailed to your friends like Christmas cards. PERSON- ALIZED with your own name on them. So new, so different, and economical, too! (We fur- nish U.S. approved mailing con- tainers.) Ramsey -Canufield, Inc. 119 EAST LIBERTY 11 i I RMH 'S ad a1 cher's I .I TONIGHT 8:30 P.M. Avoid Rough, Dry Chapped Face and Hands ... DRUGS - COSMETICS -GIFTS Clearance of OPA-Priced Merchandise FRIDAY and SATURDAY, NOV., 22 and 23 OPA Price $6.10 ELECTRIC TRAVEL OPA Price $4.85 ELECTRIC TOASTERS OPA Price $5.50 ELECTRIC HEATING PADS $3.95 IRON $4.95 $2.95 11 OA Price $7.95 ELECTRIC OPA Price $2.50 ELECTRIC CURLING HEAT LAMPS $5.95 U. ofM. SEAL STATIONERY 60 SHEETS 50 ENVELOPES $1.00 IRONS $1..59 FISCHER'S LANOLATED CREAM LOTION Prevent dryness and you prevent chap. Contains pure Lanolin. 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