THE MICHICAN DAILY, FMAT. DEI THE MICHICAN DAHY' AL.IAYa r.v flI ir "' L (.r A ' .,.. _. ..,.._...__ _ . _ I ! REORGANIZATION LAW: Congressmen To Receive Pay Boost, Pension Plan Benefits C'3 WASHINGTON, Dec. 19-(A)- Starting in January congressmen will get higher salaries: And for the first time they will be eligible for pensions when they retire or are defeated. Move Overdue The pay and pensions program is part of the reorganization law enacted last August-the most popular section of the law as far as most legislators are concerned. Even if some changes are made in the measure, most observers ex- pect the part dealing with con- Bowling Club Wins Contest The University's WAA Bowling Club, was yesterday announced the winner of the National Tele- graphic Bowling Tournament. Jeannette Britton, Patricia Brenzer and Beverly Haddon placed fifth, eighth,-and tenth re- spectively among the ten high scorers for the individual two- game series. Michigan was the only participating school with more than one representative in this group. SEE US! After Christmas At our new address RIDER'S 115 West Liberty 7 Block beyond Main Street gressional pocketbooks to be re- tained. Sponsors of the act say the move toward greater compensa- tion for congressmen has long been overdue. They declare that in the past few years many able men have quit because of the com- paratively poor pay. They expect the new law to attract better men to congress. Under the new program sena- tors and representatives will get $12,500 yearly instead of $10,000. The bill also makes permanent the $2,500 tax-free annual expense fund for each member. Pension Requirements The law boosts the yearly salar- ies of the Vice President, who pre- sides over the Senate, and House speaker from $15,000 to $20,000. The pension plan will make congressmen eligible for benefits now given other federal employes. To get a pension they will have to make regular contributions equiv- alent to six per cent of their basic salary. Before they can draw any bene- fits, the legislators will have to accumulate six years of service and be at least 62 years of age. Their annuity will be 2%/2 per cent of their average annual salary, multiplied by years of service. Navy Will Enroll V=6RecruitsI oday A.U.S. Naval Recruiting Unit will be in the Union from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today to enroll veterans of all services and former Waves in the Naval Reserve V-6 (inac- tive duty) program. Veterans who wish to join the program must present their hon- orable discharge certificates. For- mer Navy personnel must also bring Form 553.- Former Army personnel should bring one of the following forms: 615-360, 615-362, 615-365. When you've done your work faith- fully each day, you can zip through final exams like a breeze. And when you complete your secretarial train- ing at Katharine Gibbs, you can enter any business office with confi- dence. Personal placement service in four cities. College Course Dean. KATHARINE GIBBS NEW YORK 17......................230 Park Ave. BOSTON 16.............90 Marlborough St. CHICAGO II..........720 N. Michigan Ave. PROVIDENCE 6....... .............. 155 Angel St. COLLEGE A School of Business-Preferred by College Men and Women 4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSE SECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATES A thorough intensive course-starting June, October, February. Bul- letin A on request SPECIAL COUNSELOR for G.I. TRAINING Regular Day and Evening Schools Throughout the Year. Catalog President, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D. Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A. THE GREGG COLLEGE Dept. NW, 6 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 2 r 4 Q 1 Bunyan Dance Will Feature Strong's Band Bob Strong's orchestra will play for the annual Paul Bunyan For- mal, to be given by the forestry school from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Jan. 11, in Waterman' Gymnasium. , Bob Strong started his musical career by working his way through Kansas State College by conduct- ing his own band. After college, Strong's band played regularly for coast-to-coast radio programs, in- cluding the "Uncle Walter's Dog- house," "Avalon Time" and "Col- lege Humor" programs. An intermission program of en- tertainment and group singing is being planned for the dance. The Paul Bunyan formal is given in honor of, Paul Bunyan's annual visit to the Michigan campus, and Paul's famous ax will be displayed on the diagonal the week before the dance. Tickets for the dance will be on sale from 3 to 5 p.m. today at the Union and League. Sales will con- tinue every day after the Christ- mas vacation until the night ofj the dance. Fraternities and other! groups who desire blocks of tick- ets should call Ted Bank at the forestry school. Mike Misfovsky is general chairman for the dance, and com- mittee chairmen are Ted Bank, publicity; Shorty Stiegerwaldt, decorations; and Art Adams, tick- ets. Church News John Craig, program director of Lane Hall, and Allene Golinkin, chairman of the committee on co- operation between faiths, have been invited to attend the Na- tional Conference of Christians and Jews which will be held Dec. 27 in Chicago. Westminster Presbyterian Guild will hold a semi-formal dance at 8:30 p.m. Jan. 10. Buffet supper will be served and favors will be distributed during the dance. The dance is open to the whole campus but admission will be free to members of the guild. The clubrooms of St. Mary's Chapel will be open for those Catholic students who do not in- tend to leave today. r * An open house for Methodist students and their friends will be held at 8:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Wesley Foundation. Caroling, a snowball fight and story telling will be included in the program. Few Vets Unemployed LANSING, Dec. 19-(A')-Only 7.9 per cent, or 40,817, of Michi- gan's returned servicemen are re- ceiving unemployment compensa- tion benefits, the State Office of Veterans Affairs reported today. Mark Funeral Services Held In Cambridae Funeral services for Prof. Ed- ward L. Mark, Class of 1871, pro- fessor emeritus of Harvard Uni- versity, were held yesterday at Cambridge, Mass. A noted zoologist, Prof. Mark died last Tuesday at his home in Cambridge at the age of 99. Con- sidered as having trained the greatest number of zoologists in the country, he has been cited as the "leading factor" in lifting bi- ology in the United States to its present high rank among the sci- ences. Prof. Mark was an instructor in mathematics at the University for the year following his graduation. After receiving his doctor's degree at Leipzig, Prof. Mark began 45 years of teaching zoology at Har- vard. He retired in 1921 as Hersey Professor in Anatomy. Honorary doctor of law degrees were conferred on Prof. Mark by the Universities of. Michigan and Wisconsin. A member of numer- ous zoological societies, he held high offices in several of them. For several years after his re- tirement from Harvard, Prof. Mark directed the Bermuda Lab- oratory of Research which he had helped to found. Active until shortly before his death, Prof. Mark returned to Michigan in 1937 for the Univer- sity's centennial celebation. With all travel restrictions off and renewal of the University's peacetime Christmasnvacation schedule, members of the faculty will attend professional society conventions throughout the coun- try starting next week for the first time since 1941. Representing the University at the American Political Science As- sociation meeting Dec. 27-29 will be Professors Everett S. Brown, Arthur W. Bromage, James K. Pollock, Harold M. Dorr, Lawrence Preuss, Samuel J. Eldersveld and John A. Perkins of the political science department. Science Conference Professors Frank E. Eggleton, A. Franklin Shull, Arthur E. Wood- head, K. F. Lagler, Paul S. Welch, George R. LaRue, Peter Okkel- berg, Avalyn E. Woodward, Fred- erick H. Test and Henry van der Schalie of the zoology depart- ment; Frank E. Eggleton of the education department; Adelia M. Beeuwkes of the public health de- partment; L. R. Dice, director of the Laboratory of Vertebrate Bi- ology; William Hovanitz, Alexan- der H. Smith, Harley H. Bartlett, William C. Steere, William R. Taylor and Rogers McVaugh of the botany department; and Wil- liam A. Gosline, assistant curator of fishes in zoology museum will attend the meeting of the Ameri- can Association for the Advance- ment of Science Dec. 26-31 in Bos- ton. Victor Roterus, resident direc- tor of the Social Science Research Project at Flint, sponsored by the University, will be in Columbus, 0., Dec. 27-31 for the Association of American Geographers meet- ing. Modern Language Meeting Attending the meeting of the Modern Language Association Dec. 27-30 will be Dean Hayward Ken- iston, Professors Warren E. Pat- terson, E. B. Ham, C. P. Wagner, Paul M. Spurlin, Julie del Tolo, Abraham Herman, and Francis W. Gravit of the modern language department. Professors Robert C. Angell and Theodore M. Newcomb of the so- ciology department and Prof. Renis Likert, head of the Univer- sity Research Survey Center will present papers at the American Sociology meeting Dec. 28-30 in Chicago. Professors Nathaniel Coburn, Izaak Opatowski, Maxwell O. Rheade, William F. Everlein, Leonard Tornheim and T. H. Hil- debrandt will attend the American Mathematical Society, Dec. 27-29 at Swarthmore College Swarth- more, Pa. Law Schools Association Dean E. Blythe Stason, Profes- sors Grover C. Grismore, Russell A. Smith, Lewis M. Simes and Al- bert F. Neumann will, attend a conference of the Association of American Law Schools Dec. 27-29 in Chicago. Attending the Geological So- ciety of America and Mineralogi- cal Society of America meetings Dec. 26-28 in Chicago will be Pro- fessors Kenneth K. Landes, Ar- mand J. Eardley, Thomas S. Lov- ering, Claude W. Hibbard, Lewis B. Kellum, George M. Ehlers, George M. Stanley, James T. Wil- son, Walter F. Hunt and Lewis S. Ramsdell. Prof. Ollie L. Bachus, of the speech department, will attend a meeting of the Speech Association of America, Dec. 30, Jan. 1, in Chicago. Indian Show To Be Given An 'Evening in Hindustan" pro- gram will be held at 8 p.m. Jan. 4 in the Rackham Building in De- troit under the auspices of the Detroit Association of University of Michigan Women. Hindustani dancers from the University, led by Miss Kamla Chowdry, will be featured on the program. The dancers will be ac- companied by flute, drum, and song. i GREETINGS! To the boys and girls of campus town, A And to those of you P that are homeward bound A May v:e express a wish sincere, For a MERRY CHRISTMAS and a hAPPY NEW YEAR! JOHNNY HARBERD and Orchestra a WAR RESTRICTIONS END: e Faculty Members To Attend Meetings _ .. . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) e. Ir i AlI-Wool SWEATERS I SCARFS Wool or Rayon Beau Brummel Ties! COOPER'S SOX CHAMP HATS SUITS and TOPCOATS WALK A FEW STEPSA AND SAVE DOLLARS KUOHN'S .On the Corner... 122 EAST LIBERTY ST. -tea. an, .mem - Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell hal, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays.) FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1946 VOL. LVII, No. 75 Notices League House residents who have to remain until Saturday, Dec. 21, must secure permission from individualshousemothers if they wish to be out after 8 p.m., Friday. Campus mail: Mail going by campus messenger service should carry the name of department in which the person addressed is em- ployed. Room number may be in- cluded but the name of the de- partment is the identifying fea- ture. Women's housing will officially close on Friday, Dec. 20, at 8 p.m. Office of the Dean of Women Automobile Regulation, Christ- mas holidays: The Automobile Regulation will be lifted for the period beginning noon, Friday, Dec. 20, until 8 a.m., Monday, Jan. 6. Office of the Dean of Students All students who have applied or plan to apply for admission to this Medical School in September 1947 must take the Graduate Rec- ord Examination to be given in the Rackham Lecture Hall on January 11, 1947. This is true even though the applicant has already taken the Medical Aptitude Test sponsored by the Association of American Medical Colleges. During the University vacation the General Library will close at 6 p.m. daily, beginning Fri., Dec. 20. and will be closed all day Christ- mas and New Year's Day. There will be no Sunday service. The Divisional Libraries and Study Halls will be closed on Christmas and New Year's Day and will be open on a short schedule Dec. 21 to Jan. 4. The usual hours are 10 a.m.-12 noon, and 2-4 p.m. Exceptions to this schedule are as follows: Engineering and E. Engineering Libraries: 9 a.m.-12 noon; 2-5 p.m. Physics Library, 9 a.m.-12 noon; closed afternoons. Hospital, 8 a.m.-12 noon; 1-5 p.m. Warner G. Rice, Director A University regulation requires that students leaving Ann Arbor for extended vacation return li- brary books before their depar- ture. The purpose of this regula- tion is to insure the availability of Light Lunches . SOUPS ---SALADS ..SANDWICHES books for scholars who with to use them while the University is not in session. In accordance with this rule, students planning to spend the Christmas holidays outside Ann Arbor must return library books to the Chargi±.; Desk of the Gen- eral Library (or to the Divisional Library to which they belong) o 'z or before Fri., Dec. 20. Special permission to charge books for use outside Ann Arbor may be given in case of urgent need. Arrangements must be made at the Charging Desk fcr books from the General Library, or with Librarians in charge of Divisional Libraries. Students taking library books from Ann Arbor without permis- sion are liable to a fine of $1.00. Warner G. Rice, Director Willow Run Village West Court Community Bldg. Fri., Dec. 20, 8:00 p.m., Classi- cal Music Record Concert, com- mentary by Mr. Weldon Wilson. Lectures University Lectures. Dr. T. C. Lin (Lin Tung-chi), A.B. '28, Vis- iting Chinese Professor of the United States Department of State, will deliver a series of four 0 FLOWERS I for 0 SPECIAL Q XMAS GIFTS -~ WREATHS POTTED PLANTS CUT FLOWERS CHELSEA 0 FLOWER SHOP v <;;;;;> <;;;;;)<;;;;;O;;;O {;;; G SPECIAL DANCE at Michigan League f c a Ii i r i ng ALLAN TOWNSEND AND HIS BAND There will be a floor show Including CLIFF HOFF on tenor sax and other specialty numbers Stags Admitted 9-12 P.M. Soft Drinks Served Friday and Saturday Nights lectures on "The Quest of the Chinese Mind" in the Rackham Amphitheatre, Friday, Jan. 10 at 4:15 p.m., Monday, Jan. 13 at 8:10 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 15 at 4:15 p.m., and Friday, Jan. 17 at 4:15 p.m., under the auspices of the Department of History and the Degree Program in Oriental Civil- izations. The titles of the lectures are as follows: (1) "The Aristo- cratic Antecedent." A restatement of the aristocratic lore of the pre- Confucian feudalism and its last- ing import. (2) "The Enlighten- ment: Prize and Price." Wherein the philosophers of the pre-Ch'in times achieved and wherein they failed. (3) "Humanism or Beyond Humanism?" Why and wherefor the millennial "bella metaphisica" between the Taoists, Buddhists and Confucianists; and who really won out? (4) 'The Emerging Ethos." Will the contact with the West mean China's total intellect- ual surrender or the birth of a new synthesis? Academic Notices History 11, Lecture Group 11 (Professor Slosson) final exami- nation Monday, Jan. 20, 2-5 p.m. Exhibitions Exhibit of student work of the Cooper Union Art School, New York, ground floor corridor, Col- lege of Architecture and Design. The Museum of Art presents Prints by George Rouault, and African Negro Sculpture, in the galleries of Alumni Memorial Hall. Last showing today from 10-12, and 2-5. The public is in- vited. Michigan Takes Shape - a dis- play of maps. Michigan Histori- cal Collections, 160 Rackham. Hours: 8-12, 1:30-4:30 Monday through Friday; 8-12 Saturday. Events Today University Radio Program: 2:30 p.m., Station WKAR, 870 Kc., Michigan Matinee, "The Man Who Didn't Believe in Christmas." 2:45 p.m., Station WKAR, 870 Kc., "The Planets, Wanderers of the Skies," Hazel M. Losh, Profes- sor of Astronomy. 3:30 p.m., Station WPAG, 1050 Kc., Dorothy Ornest, soprano. Roller-skating party. Wesleyan Guild members and friends meet at 7:30 p.m., Wesley Foundation Lounge. Refreshments at the Methodist Church following party. A I '3 I I TO ALL! 'Jery Chriilrnai AND A Ual2 fl ?/e W earo FROM V WAIIR'S BOOK'STOREI VACATION-BOUND? Use TRAVELER'S CHECKS -ATE When you travel, carry 17 TRAVELER'S CHECKS... your money is insured against any loss. ANN ARBOn BANK _ Er 101 SOUTH MAIN 330 SOUTH STATE for easy shopping for PRACTICAL gifts Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation L L I BALL AND THRASHER suggests: FOUNTAIN PENS ... Esterbrook, Shaeffer, Parker, Eversharp DESK SETS, BOXED STATIONERY, RING BINDERS BILLFOLDS, MONOGRAMMED.MATCHES BALL & THRASHER 211 South 4th We pick up and deliver .q": t'*\LY* .'' .' :: .... _MAIL t~vow from E ae Iion sop 4 ./' 402g77