PAGE, SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY mommommmm POSITIONS OPEN: Union Urges Eligible Men To Attend StaffMeeting Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their Union. The Michigan Union has announced a htld Sept. 23, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 3B in staff tryout meeting to bej the Union. ELIGIBLE SECOND SEMESTER freshmen and sophomores may apply for positions on all Union committees: Social, House, Publicity, Campus Affairs, Student Relations, and Planning and Personnel. Union President Bob Holland and Secretary Keith Jordan will be on hand to greet staff aspirants and to preside at the meeting. Committee chairmen will also be present to describe the functions and activities of their respective groups. Publicity Cochairman Dick Hitt, urged all interested men to attend the meeting "Although interests and talents are greatly varied, the Union is one place where you can apply all your abilities and increase your interest in various fields," he pointed out. * * * * TYPICAL OF THE FUNCTIONS of the Social Committee is the staging of dances and parties. The House Committee arranges for the appearances of out- standing figures in such sports as pool, conducts bridge tourna- ments, resells football tickets, and puts up lobby displays. The Publicity Committee uses posters, and works through the Daily and the Union News to accomplish its objectives. Personnel and Planning includes keeping records, outlining proj- ects, and conducting staff meetings. Coffee and doughnuts will be served at the meeting. Welcome for Taylor Planned: Borden Award Presented to Wyngaarden Grand Rapids Doctor Gets $500 Prize The Borden undergraduate award of $500 was presented to Dr. James B. Wyngaarden, '48M, Grand Rapids, during the 98th opening ceremony of the medical school. The annual award, made pos- sible by the Borden Foundation, was given to Dr. Wyngaarden for his "original and meritorious re- search in the field of pharmaco- logy. Dr. Wyngaarden is serving his internship at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Speakers at the ceremony in- cluded Dr. Haven Emerson, a di- rector of the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, and visiting lec- turer to the public health school; and Dr. Albert Furstenberg, dean of the medical school. Dr. Emerson asserted that medi- cine is an instrument of social progress, which should not be jeo- pardized by what he termed ob- vious incompetence of government. Local health departments, he said, should be considered the frame- work of medical government. Closing the ceremony, Dr. Fur- stenberg pointed out that the Uni- ted States has more doctors per capita population than Britain, Sweden, and Germany had before the war. He went on to say that the dif- ficulty is not the number of phy- sicians but the inadequacy of dis- tribution and the utilization of services. ' Marking the tenth anniversary of the establishment of Interna- tional Center, the annual fall se- mester reception for hundreds of newly arrived students from other lands will take place at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the ballroom of the Michigan League. The occasion will also mark the fifteenth year since the appoint- ment of the Counselor to Foreign Students on campus. THE PRINCIPAL ADDRESS will be given by Dr. Francis J. Colligan, Chief of the Division of International Exchange of the Last Chance To Get X-Ray New students who failed to re- ceive chest x-rays should go to Health Service for their examina- tion as soon as possible, Dr. War- ren E. Forsythe, Health Service director, announced yesterday. Students who have free time during class hours should go di- rectly to the second floor of Health Service for examinations or ap- pointments. Those who will not be free dur- ing class hours should arrange to take the examination between 5 and 7 p.m., according to the fol- lowing schedule: Women: A-K, September 22, L- Z, September 23. Men: A-E, Sep- tember 24; F-L, September 27; M-Short, September 28 and Shoup to Z, September 29. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: International Center Presents Tenth Anniversary Reception Department of State. In a speech that willbe broadcast, Dr. Colli- gan is expected to make an im- portant statement on the federal government's policies in the field of international exchange. The program of the evening will be preceeded by a dinner with President Alexander G. Ruthven and Foreign Student Counselor Esson M. Gale as hosts in honor of Dr. Colligan. Invitations have been issued to various cultural attaches of the Washington embassies, consuls and others concerned with intercul- tural relations. CONCURRENT with the recep- tion will be an exhibit graphically illustrating the far flung activities of the University's international orientation organ. Among these will be a large colored map of the world with lines from every corner converging upon Ann Arbor. A huge multi-colored disc will picture in proportionate seg- ments the many different serv- ices and activities for which the center is responsible. Another part of the decoration: includes a miniature replica of In- ternational Center itself. Movies of the second annual Foreign Student Pacific Coast tour will be shown. President Ruthven will review' the University's ten-year foreigr educational program and specia' guests will be presented. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1948 IFC Reports Rushees Rush InRegistration One hundred eighty-seven men registered with the IFC on the first day of a three-day regis- tration period. Jim Ely, IFC Rushing Chair- man, urged those who intend to sign up for rushing to come in early to avoid a last minute stam- pede of the IFC office. Rushing will continue this afternoon and Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. on the third floor of the Michigan Un- ion. A special meeting of all rushees 1 will be held at 7:15 p.m., Thurs- day in the Michigan Union Ball- room. Assistant Dieqn of Stu_, dents Rea will speak and the SAE Glee Club, last year's IFC Sing winners, willsing. The purpose of the meeting is to insure that the rushee under- stands the rushing rules, accord ing to Jake Jacobson of the IFC. Bus. Ad. Reaches Peak Enrollment With enrollment figures reach ing the highest peak in its his- tory, the Business Administration School now accommodates over 1,- 200 students. The record registration is at- tributed in part to the greater emphasis placed upon a business career in the past few years. Not only growing in num- bers, the Business Administration School has also grown in scope and size since 1942. At that date the school was merely for gra- uates. Now it combines both graduate and undergraduate cur- riculums. University students supporting Wallace and Taylor are mobiliz- ing to ring doorbells and meet voters to publicize Sen. Glen Tay- lor's arrival in Ann Arbor on Thursday, according to Al Lip- pett, temporary chairman of the Wallace Progressives. An expected fifty students arm- ed with Wallace buttons and Pro- gressive Party literature and leaf- lets will cover the campus, the town, 'and the gates of 'Kaiser- Frazer as student door-to-door campaigning gets under way. In addition, a sound truck will be used at Kaiser-Frazer and in Ann Arbor Wednesday and Thursday to publicize the event. A motor cavalcade is being or- ganized to accompany Sen. Tay- lor to West Park, where he will speak at 3 p.m. Others will have an opportunity to hear him at the Kaiser-Frazer gates at noon, or at a luncheon sponsored by the Women for Wallace, to be held at 12:30 in the Union, John Houston, chairman of the Taylor Day com- mittee, said yesterday. MARSHALL AND BEVIN LEAVE THREE POWER TALK-Brit- ain's Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin (left) shakes hands with U.S. Secretary of State George C. Marshall in Paris as they leave three-power talks over blockaded Berlin. The American, British and French foreign ministers, in Paris for the third annual U.N. General Assembly session which convened yesterday, got together in the French Foreign Ministry. Arthos Will Head Community Chest Campatgn on Campus I This year's campus Community Chest drive will be headed by John Arthos of the University's Eng- lish department, according to Howard V. Walters, local Com- munity Chest campaign chairman., The campus division of theI t Automobile Repair Service Many Michigan students and faculty members can attest to the satisfactory service at our garage. We make repairs of any kind o any make of car. OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED KNOLL & ERWIN, Inc. HUDSON DEALERS Campus Calendar Roger Williams Guild - Fi weekly "chat," 4:30-6 p.m., Gu House, 502 E. Huron. Michigan Christian Fellowsl -Prayer meeting at 7:30 p.m. a Bible study at 8 p.m., "Up Room," Lane Hall. NSA Open Meeting - 4 p. Union. AVC -- Group discussion, "T GI on Campus-Three Years L er." Nomination of delegates national convention, 8 p.m., U ion. irst ild hip ind Derl community fund drive is respon- sible for solicitation of approxi- majely 2,600 faculty and clerical employees, and 1,600 maintenance and construction personnel. This year's goal of $158,600 for the Ann Arbor area is 15 per cent over last year's target. THE NEW GOAL of the drive was decided upon by the budget committee after an all-summer study of the needs of the fifteen Red Feather agencies. Upon acceptance of his ap- pointment, Arthos said that he hoped that the University com- munity would contribute to the drive as fully and generously as it had in the past. ENROLL for SHORTHAND and TYPING We will arrange classes to fit your schedule ANN ARBOR BUSINESS SCHOOL No need to SOCK THE FAMILY JEWELS to get your watch repaired! THE VETERAN WATCH REPAIR SERVICE will clean your watch and install any needed parts for a maxunum price of THE COST MAY BE LESS depending on the needs of your watch. If your watch is very old or any unusual make, you will be given an estimate of cost of repair work before work is begun.Ij o CHRONOGRAPHS and CLOCKS REPAIRED at new LOW PRICES EIGHTEEN DAYS SERVICE OR LESS ALL REPAIRS GUARANTEED VETERAN WATCH REPAIR SERVICE "pick-up" stations are located at: a STATE DRUG COMPANY, Car. Packard and State St. 0 o WEST LODGE P.X., Willow Run Village. g * "HERBERT," 1099 Conway Court, Willow Run Village. 907 N. Main St. Phone 2-3275 '""""'""" it Are You Interested in an Activity with Last year, he continued, 2,654 m contributors provided 16 per cent of the entire goal, and by doing the so showed that the members of the at- University are well aware of the to vital functions that the Red In- Feather agencies play in the wel- fare of the community as a whole. In Ann Arbor last year, 8,525 - residents were served directly by the Red Feather agencies, accord- ing to a Community Chest spokes- man. Of this number many were cam- pus people who used such services as the Perry Nursery School, which takes care of children of working mothers during the day, and the Family Service, which gives pro- fessional consultation on pesonal and marital adjustment problems, financial assistance, and planning of budgets. VIVIANE ROMANCE A TA . i8:r. 30.,, .. Rm . ,S,1i,.s d by *,Irn #,gba, I eeoinn FRI, SAT. 8:30 P.M.! h. .d1 I A 330 Nichols Arcade k Phone 2-0330 Experience? WEDNESDAY'S SPECIAL at the WOLVERINE DEN Roast Beef Sandwich and FrenchFries 50c The Den is open for Breakfast at 7 A.M. In your country's service, yours is no ordinary future. It's a new career for women, recently established by your representatives in Congress-that of permanent association with the Regular Services. American women won this recognition by their distinguished service with the Armed Forces in the emergency of war. Now they can support their country in protecting the peace. If you're w Your college education is not complete if you have only studied books. The Business Staff of THE MICHIGAN DAILY is interested in training you for circulation, advertising, layout, selling, promotion, general office procedure, accounting, and design. If you are a second semester freshman or above and are scholastically eligible, come over to The Daily tomorrow, September 23, at 4 P.M. Not only does The Daily offer you experience with a future, but it also offers you experience on the country's leading collegiate newspaper. The Daily is one of Ann Arbor's biggest businesses and is completely run by students. 11 !' 'I I I wondering how to put your college knowledge to work in a world that needs so much ... and how to get the job you want, the money and prestige you expect after four years' intensive study, look for new fields in the Women's Army Corps or Women in the Air Force. No matter what your special interests, you'll find you can put your education to work in the U. S. Army or U. S. Air Force. .>. Now your dream job is possible, Plan to Hold Your DANCES &, DINNERS REMEMBERI your future unlimited. Advance- III I inm ... _. _ mE__.E s_______.E__Ut_,... ..:>: a :":^. " ,_.- .2k>:> :[>