THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLfTIN 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 Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). Notices FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1948 VOL. LVIII, No. 95 Washington's Birthday: In ac- cordance with the decision of the deans of the several units, Mon- day, February 23, will not be ob- served as a University Holiday. Frank E. Robbins Assistant to the Presldent Users of the D.O.B.-Because of the inordinate length of the Daily Official Bulletin the Editor is obliged to warn users of the Bul- letin that no notice will be printed more than twice and, furthermore, that the Editor expects to use his own judgment in reducing unrea- sonably long notices to reasonable length. Frank E. Robbins Assistant to the President Students, College of Literature, Science & The Arts: No courses may be elected for credit after to- day. Graduate students may not elect courses after February 21. Courses dropped after this date will be re- corded as "dropped." Courses may not be dropped after the end of the eighth week of the semester. Graduate Students who expect graduate credit for courses nor- mally carrying undergraduate credit must make application dur- ing the first two weeks of the se- mester on the standard- form of- tainable in the Graduate School offices. Courses not appearing in the current Announcement of the (Continued on Page 3) We print 'em all, No Job too large or small. Programs - Tickets Stationery - Announcements ROACIH PRINTING 209 E. Washington Ph. 8132 At MICHIGAN GEORGE WETTERAU smokes CHESTERFI ELDS He says: "Because I s woke for en- joyMent and Chesterfields of- fer me more satisfaction than any other brand." A nation-wide survey shows that Chesterfields are TOPS with College Students from coast-to-coast. New Memorial Fund Set Up, ' 'A.nnounces Will Promote Peace Challenges to Youth Establishment of the Clark Schorling Memorial Fund at the University "to promote the peace- time equivalents for the chal- lenges that war activities provide for some youth" was announced yesterday by President Ruthven's office. The fund was established by Prof. and Mrs. Raleigh Schorling in honor of their son, Clark, who was killed in Germany shortly be- fore V-E Day. An initial payment of $2,000 to establish the fund was accepted by the Board of Regents. Prof. Schorling is a member of the School of Education faculty. Work done by veterans in that school prompted Prof. and Mrs. Schorling to specify the purposes of the fund. "The shocking fact seems to be that some persons and communi- ties are better in war than in peace," Prof. and Mrs. Schorling wrote in a letter accompanying the gift to the University. "Something is lacking in the experiences of a goodly fraction of students in high school and college when they pursue conventional programs in times of peace." Prof. and Mrs. Schorling believe that creation of a world of good will will come only through edu-, cation and they doubt that a "world free of the horrors and suf- ferings of war will stem from con- ferences of diplomats and minis- ters." V aughan House Officers' The newly-elected officers of the Vaughan House Council are: David Howe, president; Tom Ber- ry, vice-president; Don Pohlman, treasurer; William Collins, Roger Carden and Roger Demerit, sports co-chairmen; and Milton Nelson, publicity chairman. ORIENTAL CHARM: New Campus Organization To Study JapaneseCulture HEAD FOR DOWN UNDER-Four-year-old twins Jorn (left) and Henning Petersen, from Kolding, Denmark, stand in life preserver aboard liner Batory on arrival at New York. They are en route with their parents to Australia. WHY BE EDUCATED ? ColgNerssFound High HERE'S YOUR CHANCE! to pick up a little extra money. This ad was run in The Daily yesterday. "ROYAL Portable Typewriter for sale. $50." The typewriter was grabbed up quick. If you have one you'd like to sell--you'll get quick results in The Daily. No ads taken over phone Try and Use Daily Classifieds Just because you've taken a few psychology courses don't feelj smug about your mental health, because according to statistics,j neuroses are more common among college students than among the population as a whole. Statistics compiled over the past thirty years show that one out of every five students enter- ing the University is given an un- satisfactory rating in mental hy- giene on the entrance health ex- aminations. But don't despair. It has been found that neuroses are usually more prevalent among highly in- telligent people than among their brethren with lower IQ's. So even if you're emotionally unstable. you may be a genius. And if you're laboring under the delusion that coeds are more prone to be neurotic than their male class-mates, you're due for ......._..._ .... t =..... ... .. 1 EXCLUSIVE TERRITORY NOW OPEN FOR PIERCE DICTATION WIRE RECORDERS An opening in Ann Arbor now exists for one and possibly two under- graduates with sales ability to represent us in the selling and distri- bution of the famous government-approved Peirce dictation wire recorders. Some of these machines now are in use by the University of Michigan. The earnings potential is impressive and the com- missions are excellent. Only one with some engineering background or knowledge of electrical equipment will be considered. Interviews Saturday from 8:30 A.M. to 2 P.M. For an appointment write, phone or wire THE TRUE RECORDER CO. 701 Donovan Bldg, 2457 Woodward Ave., Detroit 1 Telephone: Randolph 5944 SEE OUR SHADOW BOX most unusual -most beautiful Plastic Ear Bobs - Clips PQ y - $Q Q$ - Pins-Purse Pulls Keppel's anderaft Mart 802 South State Street - Near Hill o<==so<= {)==>o==:oc=><== oc=">o<==.oc>0<--o<---- o q * Classified Advertising +* !' 11 TUTORING PIANO STUDENTS taught by Music School graduates now accepted for new semester. Beginners and ad- vanced. Phone 2-0779. )3 HELP WANTED YOUNG LADY for work at soda foun- tain full time. No evenings or Sun- days. Swift's Drug Store, 340 S. State. Ph. 20534.,')4 EXPERIENCED men and women coun- selors for Jewish co-educational sum- mer camp in Michigan. General and specialty counselors. Phone 2-8439, evenings 5-9 p.m. )20 FOR SALE BLONDE MAPLE double bed, springs, mattress $25.. Electric hotplate $6. Phone 25-9931. )94 FOR SALE: Complete office furniture and surgeon's instruments, including brand new examination table and complete set of Clayton's splints- $500.00. Call Bay City 2-1037 or write Mrs. F. T. Andrews, 506 S. Wenona Ave., Bay City Mich. )92 FOR SALE: Model A Coupe, 1930. In excellent condition. New rebuilt motor, new battery. One new tire and four good tires. Original finish. $295.00. Write Box 60, Michigan Daily. )91 FOR SALE: Detroit Symphony Mon- day night. Two tickets, first balcony front. Call noons 2-5644, or 2-2181 after 9:30 p.m. Tom Dickinson. )108 PORTABLE Cinderella washing machine and wvringer. Excellent condition. Call 2-1735, preferably after 6 p.m. )104 FOR SALE: 1941 Buick Super Sedan, heater, radio. Excellent condition throughout. Come over between 6 P.M.-10 P.M., Apt. 6, 710 E. Ann St. BUESCHER ALTO SAXOPHONE. Colo lacquer. very good condition. Tom Stuck. Phone 4494. )101 BUSINESS SERVICES THINK OF HILDEGARDE'S when you think of spring. Let us give your last year's wardrobe that new look. Alter- ations a specialty with prompt serv- ice. Custom clothes and re-styling. Hildegarde Shop, 109 East Washing- ton, Telephone 2-4669. )87 DEVELOPING AND PRINTING 8 Exposure Ronl...... 35c 12 Exposure Roll ...... 50c 16 Exposure Roll ...... 70c 20 Exposure Roll ...... 85c 36 Exposure Roll...... 1.50 In and Out in 1 Day Guaranteed Work a let-down. The figures prove the equality of the sexes in so far as mental health is concerned. Krueger Will Conduct Here onday Nioht Karl Krueger will conduct the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in his third annual concert on cam- pus at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. The concert will mark the four- tieth time the Detroit Symphony has played to a University audi- ence under the sponsorship of the University Musical Society. In former years the orchestra has appeared 26 times under Ossip Gabrilowitsch, seven times under Victor Kolar, twice under Karl Krueger, and five times under guest conductors. Featured on the program will be Beethoven's Symphony No. 8 in F major, Opus 93. Also includ- ed are: Prelude to Wagner's "Par- sifal"; Rondo from Strauss' "Till Eulenspiegel"; excerpts from De- bussy's "Martyrdom of San Se- bastian"; and Roumanian Rhap- sody No. 1 by Enesco. A limited number of tickets are still available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower. GUILD NEWS A Leap Year Party with an un- predictable program, to be di- rected by the whims of the coeds attending, will be held at the Lu- theran Student Association at 8 p.m. today. The event is open to all students. * * * Roger Williams Guild will hold a Work Party at 8:30 p.m. today at the Guild House to sort cloth- ing for Europe, paint a classroom and repair toys. Representatives of campus or- ganizations will join the Unitarian student group to hear Dr. Rensis Likert, director of the Survey Re- search Center, at 6:30 p.m. Sun- day at the Unitarian Church. Dr. Likert will describe how sur- vey techniques used at the center could be applied to campus polls. The Unitarian group is planning a survey of promotion methods used by liberal campus organiza- tions. * * * Birthday Ball, celebrating Hil- lel Foundation's 21 years at the University, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the Union. The affair will be semi- formal. EDITOWS NOTE: This is the second in a series of language club profiles. By FREDRICA WINTERS Most homesick college students don't do much about being home- sick, but there's a group on cam- pus who are homesick, not for home, but for Japan, and they've done something about it. Kindai Nihon Kenkyu Kai, or- ganized this year, is compose mainly of veterans of the recent war who spent the greater part of their army time in Japan, and while there fell under the strange fascination of the Orient. The club is the brainstorm of Dick Bray, its president, Ken My- es Bill Dickerman, and Tm Wiles, all of whom returned to campus last semester with a hank- ering to meet other people who shared their interest in modern Japan. Not all the club's 30 members have been in Japan, but the ma- jority of them are intent on visit- ing there either on business or pleasure sometime in the future In the meantime, they practice up on their Japanese and have informal discussions of various phases of Japanese life. Meetings are conducted largely in English as Japanese isn't practical for getting business done. Colored slides of, 'Japan have been shown at meetings, and more are promised for this semester. In addition the club has established a file system of Japanese books and books dealing with Japan owned by the different members and available for the use of all of them. The two big events planned for this semester are an authentic Japanese dinner, prepared by some of the Japanese members of the club, to be given tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. at International House, and a dance, American style, later in the term. The club has a growing collec- tion of Japanese records, some traditional and modern Japanese music, some Japanese translations of such American classics as "Home on the Range," "Cool, Legal System Will Be Aired A discussion of "Our' Legal System and How It Works" will be given by Prof. Burke Shartel of the Law School in the five Thom- as M. Cooley lectures to begin next Monday. This will be the second in this annual series which was estab- lished last year in honor of Prof. Cooley, a member of the first fac- ulty of the Law school. Prof. Shartel will treat the le- gal control of individual action, lawmaking and the application of laws, as well as interpretation of laws. Hold Those Bonds! ALL KINDS ORDER NOW for Spring Delivery FRE ESTIMATES > SNOW K L E E' T -w ith- - K 0 0 L V E N I EATHERPROOF " FIREPROOF ('nstallpermanent Koolvents .... and leave themup throughout allseasons. In winter therotet orch e,dw, dos pto H E Y S TA Y U P A LL Y E A R! T HE Y L A ST A L IF ET I ME! Clear Water," and several swing tunes including a jazzed up ren- dition of "Largo al Factotum" by the Japanese Spike Jones. The wistful faces of club mem- bers while listening to these re- cords attest to the fact that re- turn to Japan is foremost in their thoughts. Hillel's 'Corner' Closed Hillel's Corned Beef Corner will not be open Saturday night be- cause of the "Birthday Ball" for- mal, but it will be "business as usual" on the following Satur- day. "AWNINGS Prof. Kiss Will Lecture Here Prof. Ferenac Kiss, internation- ally known anatomist from the University of Budapest, Hungary, will speak in Ann Arbor before a student group Sunday and the Rotary Club Wednesday noon. Appearing under the auspices of Michigan Christian Fellowship, Prof. Kiss will speak on "Evolu- tion and Historic Christianity" at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Lane Hall. At the Rotary Club's luncheon Wednesday he will discuss "Con- temporary Student Life in the Balkans." Prof. Kiss, who remained on the faculty of the University of Buda- pest throughout the Nazi occu- pation, is a specialist in the field of nerve tissues. I with CANVAS AWNINGS to suit your taste in PAINTED STRIPES.. in WOVEN STRIPES.. in SOLID COLORStool e Finest quality materials . superb workmanship.. and distinctive design-all these are yours today. But don't wait - decide now to make this your most joyous summer. Tele. phone us today for an estimate. Fox SPORTING GOODS STORE 624 South Main Phone 2-4407 OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS .1 IF DU SAAR PHOTO SHOP 10 E. Eighth St. HOLLAND, MICH. ) 62 Mum ''N. ' " , 4'Vyr.:ysr."va;.,... ..fix:. n :ai: ..:i+co-ixi. '' BEER DEPOT 114 EAST WILLIAM CALL 7191, .. S;:} :""t :;;: : ?{ }.:; } a : y> fi ':2 "': ' FOR RENT ROOM FOR TWO MEN graduate stu- dents. Across the street from the campus. Inquire 5-7 p.m. 535 Church St. )I MAIN FLOOR single room for man. West of Stadium. One block from busine. Phone 2-1029. )2 FREE RENT of well furnished room with private bath, in exchange for house hold assistance. Prefer one girl who desires campus location. 928 Forest Ave. Phone 2-2839. )93 LOST AND FOUND SO YOU can prove you're me! Who would want to but me? Bring back my identification wallet so I can cash a check for your reward. Ed Kendall. 2-6674. )5 I LOST my purse in Natural Science Building on Monday. Please call 2- 7328 for Wilma Dowling. Contained identification. Reward. )103 LOST: Man's plain gold wedding band Saturday night, Feb. 14, in vicinity of Field House. Call 2-6439. Reward. ) 95 LOST: Rhinestone necklace lost Sun- day p.m. on campus between East Quad and the Michigan Theatre. Re- ward. Phone 3-1511, Ext. 2498. )107 BEER WINE - CHAMPAGNE - MIXERS CONVENIENT DRIVE-THRU SERVICE MICHIGAN - Through Saturday - LOOKING FOR AN ANGLE! "Home of 3-Hour Odorless Dry Cleaning" \CLEANRS 630 South Ashley Phone 4700 I Breakfast is served at 7 A.M. at the Y MIgU g" BABY Parakeets, African Lovebirds, and Canaries. Also Bird Supplies. 562 South 7th. Phone 5330. )36 AUTOMATIC RECORD changer; capa- city, 12 records, both 10 and 12 inch; self-contained ampliyfing unit; original price $45; call 9431 after 7 p.m. Ask for Art. )105 Continuous from 1 PM. Or r - TODAY and SATU LOU/COVSl . . RDAY BBOTT PTELLO rC - The ~ GUI ~preftnts The ~Shakesea" Robert CUMMINGS Brian .y jDON LEVY X: f#Marjorie REYNOLDS IIIe -A * WIDOW OF WAGON GAP In TecJlnicolO #tAkJ ,TOPAX 0nd E m r . i ir-WD Dtti'''" IU I I 11 I W4 "-A MADIAD'It'AAARM