PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY OPTICAL INVENTION: Skeptical Students Deny New Eye Fatigue Gauge Gadget ALLEY CATS, BEWARE: Father, Son Collect Felines for Laboratory By PAT JAMES Maybe the president of Tufts College can prove that six hours of continuous reading doesn't tire the eyes, but Michigan students are still skeptical. As one coed put it, "If your eyes didn't get tired after reading for ;ix hours, our professors would be giving us a lot more bluebooks." Measures Fatigue The Tufts College president has been experimenting with a gadget which is hooked onto the reader, and is supposed to show how fa- tigued his eyes become. Prof. Francis Appears In National Magazine Prof. Thomas Francis, Jr., of the .public health school, will be featured on the "Interesting People" page of the December is- sue of a national magazine. Interest is focused on Dr. Fran- cis because of his development of a flu vaccine procured from fer- tile nens eggs. The only flaw with it is, that at the end of the experiment, the device registered several people's eyes as not being tired, but the subjects claimed they were. The inventor declared it was just their imagination, but several of the subjects suggested that the gadget was having optical illusions. Reading or Study Michigan students queried about the device were inclined to be doubtful about its accuracy. "Even if my eyes weren't tired after reading that long, the rest of me would be," asserted one lanky law student, who seemed to be having trouble finding a comfortable reading position. Others wondered if the gadget made any distinction between cas- ual scanning of pages and inten- sive concentration, or what is theoretically done just before bluebooks. "I could read the fun- nies all day without tiring my eyes," several students comment- ed. IT DIDN'T GET AWAY-This 37-pound Kamloops Rainbow trout caught in ten feet of water in Idaho's Lake Pend Oreille tops by a pound the previous world record for the largest trout Wes S. Hamlet of Coeur d'Alnc, Ida., caught the finny m onster after writing the previous titleholder, Clin- ton Shepherd, of Rathdrum, Ida., that he intended to beat his record. Here hamlet holds the prize catch. ;r.. . c W RT J Continuous Daily from 1 :30 P.M. TODAY and MONDAY A MAN TO RECKON WITH!f l ________________________ Panel To Discuss Religion (lasses A discussion of the problem of weekday religious education will be held at 4:30 p.m. today over WPAG under the sponsorship of the Ann Arbor Citizens Council. Rev. Henry Lewis, rector of St. Andy ew's Episcopal Church, will act as moderator for the discus- sion of whether children should be released from school to attend weekday classes in religion. Speakers on the panel will be Prof. William Clark Trow, of the education school, and Prof. Don- ald Katz, of the engineering col- lege. Meat First in Kiddie's Food Preference, Survey Shows By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 29-Be- lieve it or not, ice cream ranks only No. 4 on the dietary hit par- ade of kids under five. Given a free choice of diet, says Dr. Harry Bakwin of the pedia- trics department, New York Uni- versity College of Medicine, young children rate foods in this order: 1. Meat. 2. Butter. 3. Fruits. Plus! CAMPUS FUN ON THE RUN-.. A MON?:,;:*$ f Ri~ s $lyy{it .r. n' '' 1PAyc PICTURE Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday "I WONDER WHO'S KISSING HER NOW" June Haver Mark Stevens plus Richard Dix "THE THIRTEENTH HOUR" I + Classified Advertising +* <*2 LOST AND FOUND FOR SALE FEATURE STARTS -PRICES 1:00 - 3:07 Weekdays 90c to 5 P.M. 5:14 Sunday and Evenings 7:21 -9:27 P.M. $1.25 incl. tax STARTS TODAY K KI{/Iff/I/e/11ffsj' 3| In all stage, °eot,/raf 't history no play / -f has brought so much joy to} so many people. (.4 (tMfie/oest f ~Srdge run ever kA'70Z / Now the picture out-happies the play! What coulp be n ar more wnderfu ? z C1 . I GQ40 L S AWaG hK o WL t LOST: Will person who found slide rule in men's room, 2nd floor. West Engineering, Friday, please call Glen Majors, 5206. Reward. )27 LOST: Glasses in red case and Schaef- fer pen. Phone 2-2823. )111 BLUE OVERNIGHT case with initials BET, a woman's black velvet suit jacket and a wedding picture. If found call 24561. Room 364. Reward. ) 33 LOST-Ladies gold Bulova snake-chain band. Between Library and League. Call Mickey, 506 Mosher. )10 GRAY Parker 51 lost on Washington St. 27th, noon. Reward. Pizano 28418. )18 LOST-Rhinestone bowknot pin. 300 blk Main St. or State and Liberty on Nov. 17. Liberal Reward. Phone 2-1120. LOST: Girls' Bulova wrist watch with gold chain last Thursday. Call Mosher Room 527. )40 LOST: P-51 pen with initials "K.R.W." and 5 in. slide-rule with my name on it, in Chem Bldg.. Wed. afternoon. Reward. Call Ken Wheeler, Ypsilanti 9213. )105 HELP WANTED THREE STUDENTS desiring enormous profits selling plastic gift aprons. Call 2-6760, 609 E. Ann after 6:00. )9 STUDENT for part time work at soda fountain. Swift's Drug Store. Phone 2-0534. 340 S. State St. )17 POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE in long- distance operating for which we will train you. Good starting rate with steady advancement. Pleasant fellow operators and many other advan- tages are yours. 'Apply at 321 East Washington. )80 WANTED NICE GENIAL COUPLE to live Pitts- field and baby sit 2 1-2 year girl - spring vacation, April 3 through 12. Write 2617 Pittsfield Blvd. )87 WANTED TO RENT STUDENT VETERAN and wife expect- ing baby in February, must have furnished apartment by February. Phone 5841. Ask for Mrs. Harrison. )15 WANTED: Small apt. or room with pri- vate entrance for single faculty mem- ber. Permanent man. Box 35, Mich. Daily. )51 LADY'S SKI-BOOTS and white hockey shoe skates, size 7-8. Excellent condi- tion; reasonable. Also professional model wood clarinet. Phone 2-2035. )12 FOR SALE: Leica Camera, Model III with case. F2 summar lens. Perfect condition. Sacrifice at $175.00. Value $225. See it Saturday. Rickoff Apt. 101, 402 S. 4th Ave. )73 ARGYLE BABY booties and socks, handmade to order. Sizes infant to three years. Ypsi 3596J4. )78 120 BASS International Accordian. 2 treble and 1 bass shift. Call 2-6989 after 7 p.m. Monday - Thursday. )8 ALL COLORS, canaries and parakeets, finc es, bird supplies and cages. Mrs. Rufflns, 562 S. Seventh. )108 COCKER SPANIEL puppies, AKC reg- istered, 6 weeks old. Reds, blacks, 1638 Tully Court, Willow Village. )7 FOR RENT FOR RENT: Vacancy for 3 men stu- dents. Call 2-0646 Mrs. Field. )44 BUSINESS SERVICES HOOVER SPECIALIST, SERVICE and sales. Buy through Goodyear store. For service call A.A. 2-0298. W. O. Taylor, 1612 Brooklyn, Ann Arbor.)32 BECAUSE OF AN enlargement in our personnel, we can now offer prompt service on your alterations. Tailoring, dressmaking, formal restyling a spe- cialty. Hildegarde Sewing Shop. 2- 4669. )301 TRANSPORTATION MED STUDENT wants ride toward Den- ver, Colo., Dec. 19 or 20 and return. Will share expenses. C. M. Bowen. Ph. 2-3179. )138 MOVING something west? Will ex- change use of large trailer for holi- day rides to Western Iowa. 25-9931. )102 WANTED: Ride to or anywhere near Omaha, Neb., for Christmas holi- days. Can leave anytime during va- cation. Will share driving and ex- penses. Call Jim Smith, 2-1940. )38 WANTED: One passenger, preferably University employe. Leaving Decem- ber 26, for Rose Bowl. Call 2-5180. )84 ROSE BOWL BOUND? Ride a new car. Minimum Charge, $115.00. Call 9795 Sunday for reservations. )13 4. Ice Cream. 5. Milk. Their attitude toward vegetables "differs just as does adults'," he says, and "raw vegetables are of- ten preferred. Cereal is the food most often refused and it may be safely omit- ted from the diet." Bakwin discusses ways and means of dealing with cases of 1"poor appetite" in pre-school youngsters in an article in the Journal of Pediatrics. Parents frequently complain about such a situation, although sometimes they themselves are at fault. One of his hot tips to parents: "There should be no insistence on this or that food. The food likes and dislikes of children should be respected just as in ad- ults." Psychologist To Talk Dr. Clifford T. Morgan author- teacher in the field of psychology, will discuss some of the material in his forthcoming book in a lec- ture to be given at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. SERVING HOURS: 11 A.M.-1:30 P.M. 5-7 P.M. ".Known for Good Food" The TAVERN CAFETERIA 336 Maynard Street . KNALD \o YOUR HOST ON "FAVORITE STORY" a STOR Y Every Sunday Afternoon at 2:30 P.M. WPAG WPAG-FM 1050 KC 98.7 MC "74 1, lt$l I . i S for ANN ARBOR MONDAY NIGHT-7:30 MASONIC TEMPLE :94e 7'hepe a Sermon by Dr. H. H. Savage H W. Skinner - Songleader - Soloist