THt .mMI ICAN ALLY 3'N7DA ', D IVIBER 12, ~1948 TH.. ,ANDIL ..Ii~~2,14 U.S., Russian Students Will Correspond Plan Arranged with Soviet Youth Agency As Russian mailmen trudge thru the Soviet snows this winter, along with their regular load they will be carrying letters f rom American students. The Correspondence Bureau of NSA has suceeded in contacting a Russian Youth Agency which will supply the names of Soviet stu- dents interested in corresponding with Americans, according to Dor- ianne Zipperstein, chairman of the bureau. "THIS EXCHANGE of letters is1 probably the only method avail- able to students to keep the doors to eastern Europe open," Miss Zipperstein said. "The Correspondence Bureau offers an invaluable opportunity for Michigan students to get a first hand picture of life in other countries," she added. Many other countries are also included in this program. Corres- pondence arrangements have been made through the Interna- tional Union of Students enabling Americans to write to people of more than forty countries throughout the world. ** * WE HAVE already received many letters from German stu- dents, who are especially interest- ed in this program, "Miss Zipper- stein said. "A German youth recently explained that since Germany has so long secluded herself from the rest of the world, a free exchange of views would be very helpful to us," she de- clared. University students who intend to go abroad will find this ex- change of letters very helpful in planning their trips, Miss Zipper- stein explained. _ Anyone wishing to write to for- eign students may contact Miss Zipperstein by calling 2-2591 or sending a postcard to her at Helen Newberry. Rich Australian Grazing Land Scorched by Great Drought PROGRESS IN SINGAPORE: Malay Women Slowly Gain Freedom By RICHARD S. MARRIOTT Brisbane-(P)-A great drought is scorching some of Australia's richest grazing country. It has caused the biggest mass migration of sheep and cattle in this Dominion's history. At least 2,000,000 sheep and 500,000 cattle have been moved to places where they can find grass to eat and water to drink. THE PARCHED country is nearly half of Queensland State's 670,000 square miles. In a tri- angular area as large as Texas, the cattle and sheep population has been reduced about nine- tenths. The drought area stretches from Longreach in the Central west to Winton and beyond in the North, and to within 100 miles of the Pacific at Rockhampton. In this area sheep men are driv- ing up to 100 miles each week to buy their meat supplies from town butchers. They don't have any sheep left on their properties to kill. The butchers are carting their meat hundreds of miles from the lush coastal fringe. EVEN the birds have deserted this dry country. No useful rain has fallen in the area for two years, but the present situation is the culmination of a series of poor seasons before 1947. Even artesian wells are cut- ting out. This is because there has not been sufficient rain in many parts of Western Queens- land. Sheep and cattle losses, how- ever, are not as great as in pre- vious droughts of less severity. By MARGARET BOWES Singapore,-(IP)-Malay women compelled for centuries to live sheltered, self-effacing lives as semi-slave wives, are moving to- ward the freedom and independ- ence enjoyed by their sisters in other parts of the world. On conservative Singapore Is- land the symptons of the new way have become increasingly evident since the war. The career girl concept is foreign to Malay cul- ture, but it is being accepted grad- ually. SOME MODERN parents en- courage their daughters to buck tradition. More do so all the time. No longer does a Malay girl at 14 marry the man of her parent's choice. Now she waits a few years, does her own choosing and mar- ries for love. Nor does she veil her face. The Malay veil-scarf has be- come a glamorous aid to co- quetry rather than a dictate of custom. Malay women in Singapore ad- mit that their Chinese sisters have led the way for them. "We have been backward," said one girl, "but no more." * * * TYPICAL of the new Malay wo- men is Miss Salma Binti Ismail, first Malay girl ever to earn an M.D. degree from Singapore's King Edward VII College of Medi- cine. Now she is practicing at Alor Star General Hospital in up- country Kedah State. Miss Hasmah Binte Mohamed Ali, 22, is a first year medical student at the same college, the lone Malay girl in a class of 87 men. "When I'm through," she says, "I'm going to specialize, probably in children." Hasmah decided to become a doctor during the Japanese occu- pation, she says. "The people in the Kampongs (Villages) had no one to take care of them." HASMAH'S family worried about her Kuala Lumpur home, but her mother encouraged both her and her older sister, Saleha, to study. Saleha now is in England studying social science on a gov- ernment scholarship. At Raffles College the femi- nine "revolt" has a staunch ally in Mrs. P. C. Khew. She looks after girl students in residence at old Flagstaff House. Of her 30 girls only two are Malays. There are only five in the whole col- lege. But 10 years ago there were none. were none. It- CLASS IN MUSEUM-School children sketch armored knight at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Civil Service Positions Open To Upper Class U' Students Sophomores and juniors who t -- ,.. I ga 4 I - * -m v/ i will have completed all required courses by June 30, 1949, are eligi- ble to take two student aid exami- nations for positions in various bureaus of the United States Civil Service. Students qualified in engineer- ing, chemistry, mathematics, met- allurgy, physics, meteorology and geology are being accepted in the Public Buildings Administration, Bureau of Aeronautic, and Ships, the Geological Survey, Federal Power Commission, and the De- partment of the Army and other government agencies. METEOROLOGIST positions with the Weather Bureau are also open. Under the Student Aid plan, successful candidates will fill trainee positions with yearly salaries ranging from $2,498 to $2,724. To qualify for these trainee po- sitions, applicants must pass a written test APPOINTMENTS are usually made for employement during va- cation periods in which the stu- dents gain on-the-job training, after which they will be granted leave to return to college. Having completed four years of appropriate study and the training programs, they may be promoted to full time posi- tions without further written tests. Information and application forms regarding these posts may be obtained at the regional Civil Service office or from the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Wash- ington 25, D. C. Application must be on file not later than Feb. 1, 1949. It's MEN'S F 7 ,!"1 Ct ,y .~Ny /} - #- l Ti ati c Right: Leather Briefcases from $9.00 Lef Per at' Gifts for that engineer from Wahr's WAHR'S Left: Right: The ideal Bookends from $5.00 1. ". Christmas Gift, Pen and Pencil Sets from Wahr's Right: We also have a nice selection of Desk Sets, $3.50 and up 00LO 00 .v ' 0e 0 .a A, ob 6 F/ r \ ' U11 I Ft: Y 'r)Lqujre.,Inc. What Every "CHRISTMAS EVE" v sonalized Stationery Wahr's Right: Every type of wallet at Wahr's, from $1.00 and up A R iy , O / 'SIh)oal kinowvi. 0 Men prefer gifts from men's shops. There are few better shopping centers for men than Ann Arbor's State Street. Be sure to shop at WAGNER'S... This is their 100th Christmas season! OPEN MONDAY AND TUESDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. Books, Subscriptions To Their Favori Magazine, and Art Supplies, Make the Perfect Christmas Gifts. te U