THE MICHIGAN DAILY SVNDAYk, lMiR:U &6,19491 BETTER LODGINGS: 'U' Officials Quit AngelII Hall, Move Across Street4 . . .... ......................... . ......................... ...... .. . .... . ........... .. . ............. -1 COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Science Club Craze Fires Deeper-Thinking Students Moving day is almost over for President Alexander G. Ruthven and other high University offi- cials. For the past four days a steady stream of secretaries and moving men has been shuttling back and forth between Angell Hall and the new Administration Building carrying books and files, off ice equipment and assorted knick- knacks. PROVOST JAMES P. Adams and Vice-President Marvin L. Nie- buss are also making the shift to new offices on the second floor of the Administration Building. The new Regents' conference rooms are ready but the Re- gents will have to wait until their March meeting to use the new facilities. The office spacesvacated in An- gell Hall will be used by officials of the literary college. Some of these rooms will have to undergo remodeling before the new occu- pants move in. * * THE OCCUPAT1iN of the Ad- ministration Building is now com- plete except for the offices of the University Broadcasting Service and Station WUOM. They will not be ready for use until later in the espring. President Ruthven has a four- room suite in the southwest cor- ner of the building. His office and library feature large win- dows and walnut paneling. The furnishings follow a modern style with bright colors of red, yellow and green combining with the simple design to pro- mote a dignified atmosphere. The Regents' conference room is also paneled in walnut. Indirect light streams down from recessed ceiling panels on a specially de- fsigned banjo-shaped cherry con- ference table. Y, * By PHIL DAWSON The intense modern interest in expanding scientific knowledge is powerfully reflected in the many societies (or cults) that flourish in universities, carrying on nu- merous esoteric investigations. In fact, college campuses are the most fertile spots for scientific (and pseudoscientific) activities, judging by what students read about them in their newspapers. NUTRITION research at Har- vard resulted in the discovery of a possible way to give the thin man a new lease on life by injecting fat into his blood. To do this, the fat had to be broken into small particles first to prevent blood- clots. The trouble with the scheme is that it only works on rats-hu- mans who got the shots only de- veloped a fever and had to be hospitalized. Until this problem is solved by discovery of a satisfac- tory stabilizer, the method will prove "a tremendous bonanza for undernourished rats," the Crim- son reported. Also at Harvard, the Society for Parapsychology was busily work- ing in psychokinesis, armed with several sets of dice, thousands of plant spores and a collection of neurotic paramecia. * 1* * THE IDEA is to find out whe- ther mere mental concentration can make physical objects do things they otherwise wouldn't have done; the society attemptsI to think dice into coming up all sevens, spores into growing faster and paramecia into moving to left or right. The other part of the society's job is extra-sensory perception, which they're working on in co- operation with a group at Duke University-with little success so' far. Meanwhile, at Southern Cali- fornia an alumnus of the univer- sity told a Daily Trojan reporter that a scientific machine for com- munication with the dead is not only possible-it's probable. Maintaining that this is the "fi- nal problem of human endeavor," he said men in a number of top- flight laboratories are working in- tensively on it. Psychic research isn't con- ducted through dark seances and ouija boards, he said, but "involves Wilson cloud cham- bers, extremely high freq uencies and voltages, ultra-sensitive re- cording devices and a thousand other items of modern science's paraphernalia." These devices have nothing in common with standard brain wave apparatus like the electroenceph-# alograph, he pointed out. "Those who believe that the mind and the brain are one and the same see no point in speculation concerning psychic phenomena; this crudely materialistic interpretation seems to me so utterly inadequate that it may become a bottleneck," he said. DRIVE CONTINuES: Local Bed Cross Funds Help Student Veterans A considerable portion of the "IN TIIESE ae the Red Cross Red Cross funds collected this Home Service advances what is month in Washlenaw Coity will again be used for assistance to needed and tlen uses all avail- veteran stuclents, according to able facilities to speed up the de- Herald Hoffman, Director of the layed check," Hoffman said. Red Cross Washtenaw Home Hoffman listed other services Service, offered veteran students. They in- The national Red Cross driv elute assistance in developing started March 1. will continue claims,; establishing service-con- throughout the lnioith, and will nected disability, securing medical add to county funds. The Univer- evidence to obtain more adequate sity quota is $7,800 of which $1,800 rating on claims already estab- has been assigned for students. lished to be service-connected and converting term insurance to a RED CROSS Home Service is permanent type. a special funtilon of the Red Cross which exists solely for the I purpose of assisting veteras andl , Jay ; lI active servicenmen and their fam- iles. The Seice interviews about ('.i--rIdI . 60 stutlent veterans from the Uni 4II v0erlltttloil!le ' sity eve l'ymnlt h, IHof fnu- - said. Roles for ther Student Players "In the last year, loans and next production, "Boy Meets Girl", grants to veteran students Will be cast from 2 to 5 p.m. today amounted to $3114," loffina l in thec Union. said. "Most of this amount was Parts of the (1o, chauffeur, borrowed and the students have Yon oin11, studio officeraufis paid it bCyk."tti modne, udv a n, ir. Majo- Typical of the fintlcial proh- Tosolnl. Green. Sade, and ra- lemns, according to hoffmnaln, are di) atoiltner will b~e chosen. those which occur at the begin- Two male leads. Robert Law and ning of the semester when lie vet- J. Carlyle Benson, will be case eran's subsistence check hits fail- ;from 7 to 10 l i. today in the ed to arrive. Union. ''He ofiten eed funds to get, tThet parts, of Pgyanti the t we his belongings from the express nurses wx'ill be selected from 7 to office, and he may need funds to 10 Il.l. Monday in the League. pay his rent or iieed emlergenvy All interested are asked to try out medical aid for his family," Hoff- or call Lee Sunshine, at 2-4591, man said. 203 hayden House. B EAD THE CLASSIFIEDS Personals? Transportation? Sales? Housing? Classifieds solve your problems! Herbert Agar To Talk at Hill 'England-Today' Will Be Topic of Author Herbert Agar, noted political commentator, author, editor and diplomat, will lecture on "Eng- land-Today" at 8:30 p.m. Thurs- day in Hill Auditorium as sixth guest of the Oratorical Series. Author of "The Land of the Free", "The Pursuit of Haptiness" and "A Time for Greatness", Agar won the coveted Pulitzer Prize for his book "The People's Choice." As editor of the Courier-Journal in 1940 he advocated more active participation of America in the European War. He also served as special assis- tant to American ambassadors in Europe. In 1943 he became chief of the British Division of the Office of War Information and in 1946 he became Counselor for Public Af- fairs and chief of the U.S. Infor- mation Service in London. Tickets will go on sale Wednes- day and Thursday at the box of- fice of Hill Auditorium. Lane Hall Meeting Roger J. Voskuyl, scientist who worked on the Manhattan project of the atom bomb, will speak in an open meeting at 4:30 today in the Fireside Room at Lane Hall on "Christianity and/or Science?" AT THE NORTH end of the room three is a large white marble panel with the seals of both the University and the State of Mich- igan superimposed. Underneath the two seals is inscribed the same quotation which adorns the lintel of Angell Hall. The passage is an excerpt from an act providing for the disposi- tion of the Northwest Territory passed by Congress in 1787. To Hold World Union Panel Among the outstanding local radio programs to be broade'ast during World Government Week will be a roundtable discussion at 8 p.m. Tuesday over station WHRV. Phillipps Ruopp, contributing editor of Common Cause, Prof. Russel Fifield of the political sci- ence department, Prof. Richard Musgrave of the economics de- partment and Prof. Preston Slos- son will discuss the subject "Would the United States Find Membership in a Revised United Nations an Asset or a Liability." Catholic Marriage Talk To Be Today The first in the series of mar- riage lectures sponsored by the Newman Club will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the clubrooms of the chapel. The speaker of the evening will be The Rev. F. Herbert Weir of Detroit. FOR RENT BACHELOR APT. for 2 men. Private bath, entrance. Garage. 2-7886. )9F For good accommodations bring your overnight or weekend guestsnto the PIERCE TRANSIENT HOME 1133 E. Ann Phone 8144 FOR SALE COMPLETE Ski Equipment. Excellent condition, $20. 4141, 6-7 p.m. )66 MATCHED) tails and tuxedo, size 39L. Excellent quality and condition. Dick Schultz, 2-3256. )65 Juilliard Washable Corduroy Suits!! In Twelve Shades Of Spring Skirt $8.95 Jacket $16.95 COUSINS ON STATE STREET )1 IT'S COTTON PICKING TIME Every Style. Color, and Fabric you could wish for. Delightfully Tubbable. Considerately priced $8.95-$25 THE ELIZABETH DILLON SHOP 309 South State Street )2 35 M.M. PROJECTORS $32.50 Model made by VOKAR While They Last-$9.95 About 40 In Stock CALKINS FLETCHER DRUG CO. )7 SPECIAL AT SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington Navy T Shirts 49c Army Officers "Pink" Shirts $6.75 Pink Trousers 100%1 Wool $14.95 )8 You'll be amazed if Ansco flash kits satisfy. $22.49 bulbs included. PURCHASE RADIO and CAMERA SHOP Church and South U. Phone 8696 )20B MODEL A FORD 1931, new differential, seat covers, new battery and tires. $150. Call 8859. 1052 Baldwin. )60 TELEVISION RADIOS SERVICE AERO RADIO SALES & SERVICE Phone 4997 )7 '36 CHEVROLET Standard Sedan. Good mechanical condition. Price asked, $200.00. Call John Slater, 2-9318 or 2-6500. )55 BABY Parakeets and Canaries. Bird supplies and cages. Moderate prices, 562 S. Seventh. Phone 5330. ) a' SHERIFF JOE with his pair of hounds couldn't get the results of a LOST and FOUND. Call1 23-24-1 to order CLASSIFIEDS BOOKS BARGAINS IN OLD BOOKS On All Subjects - Good Browsing 5c and up on the Mezzanine OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 South University 16 REAL ESTATE BUY NOW-One acre or more. Terms if wanted, good safe investment. A de, sirable scenic spot to build your fu- ture home. Information, owner, 25- 0656. )M PERSONAL SMOOTH! DANCE MUSIC Chuck Downer & Orch. Ph. 25-0031 )20P SOCIAL CHAIRMEN: The Mack Fergu- son Trio is now booking spring dates. Leave calls at 2-4183. )13P MERRY-Go-Round. Peter Pan Bras- sieres. Sizes 32-36 ABC Cup. Randall's 306 S. State. )1oP LATIN American student desires tu- toring in English (conversation). Con- tact Alvaro Pardo, Rm. 5, Cooley House, East Quad, Ph. 2-4591. 21P IF YOU SEE a man walking around the campus wearing a big raccoon coat. and waving an Illinois pennant, it's our missing salesman. He carries five Royal typewriters under that coat. Office Equipment Co., 1116 So. Uni- versity. )IB Continuous From 1:30 P.M. WANTED TO BUY SKI BOOTS Wanted! Size 9. Will bnty or exchange for size 10. 314 Strauss, 2-4591. )3D -TYPING TYPING WANTED-Rapid, accurate, at i reasonable rates. Phone 2-3357. ) 1W TYPING, accurately, promptly, expertly done by student veteran's wife, Thesis term papers, tax problems, legal briefs, Hopwood manuscripts, stencis. etc.1Free pick-up and delivery. Ph. 2-4155.)3 ROOMS FOR RENT WEEKEND rooms available in private homes. Call Student Room~ Bureau., 2-8827, 11:30-12, 6:30-7:00. )R PLEASANT front room for two male students on campus. Phone 2-2052. 37R QUIET well furnished large double room for male students. Ph. 8746. ) 38R SINGLE ROOM-Man. 300 ft.. from the Engineering arch .Ph.23201 days. 39R BUSINESS SERVICES Electric Shaver Parts and Service MOSLEY TYPEWRITER CO. 214 E. Washington )23B DRESSMAKING ALTERATIONS TAILORING Orders Taken for Any Type of Uniform Reasonable Rates 2-2020 )3B PIANO INSTRUCTION - Popular and classical. Mrs. Hazel Wolfe Bross, 813 Hillcrest Drive, A.A. Beginners a spe- cialty. Phone 2-6227. )22B LAUNDRY - Washing and/or ironing. Done in my own home. Have stretch- er for wool socks. Free pickup and delivery. Phone 2-9020. )2B LEARN TO DANCE JIMMIE HUNT DANCE STUDIOS 209 S. State St. Ph. 8161 )5B CUSTOM CLOTHES. Restyling. Alter- ations. Prompt service on all altera- tions. Hildegarde Shoppe. 109 E. Washington. Phone 2-4669. )4B WE PLAN TO BUILD several exceptionally nice 3 bedroom homes on beautiful ?z and 1 acre sites. Only 3 minutes drive from campus. Some will be for sale, others for rent. For details address Michi- gan Daily, Box 180. ) 16B LOST AND FOUND LOST--Ci e' r('tte lighter. Call 2-4401, :317 A(Ians. Ask for Ken. Reward. ) IL BLUE FABRIC WALLET lost in Burton Tower on Feb. 28. Contents needed desperately. Reward. Mary Hanound. Ph. 2-7328. 1014 Vaughn St. )8L LOST - Ladies gold Hamilton watch, black elastic hand, (Ii ,raced - Mary Lou Scanlon 6/21 /47. C di2-3839. 2L HELP WANTED SHOE SALESMAN -Experenced,fr part time and Saturday selling. (all 2-6326. )131 _w -- - The UNION PEh'IR A P R E SE N T S It's 29th ilhsical (ion,,ed March 23, 24, 25 MICHIG AN rfilEAII 8:30P.M. ER UNION DESK Tues., Fri., 5-9 P.M 1Ch 25, SOLD OUT sday, Thursday $1.20 $1.80 A DOUBLE "SISTER ANGELIC) o00 MARCI BOX OFFICE OPENS TO Lydia Mens THE DEPARTMEN presents BILL OF OPERA B WEDNESDAY through SATURDAY T OF SPEECH Y PUCCINI "GIANNI 00 SCHICCHI" /0 - 8 P.M. )__ CD/0o _ i I U p TICKETS ON SALE ATI Mon., Wed., Thurs., Sat., 1-5 P.M -- $1.80 TICKETS FRIDAY, 31A1 Best seats available for Wedne Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. - I Now- NOW PLAYING MCHIGAN- in conjunction with the School of Music H 9, 10, 11 and 12, 1949 Tickets $1.50, $1.20, 90c (tax included MORROW 10 A.M. - PHONE 6300 e sson Theatre Continuous From 1 P.M. I "BETTER THAN HAMLET,' 'SIERRA MADRE,' or 'SNAKE PIT' " -National Board of Review. A terrifying insight into WITCHCRAFT, RELIGION, and ADULTERY. Weekday Matinees 25c Today & Evenings & Sunday Monday! 35c ALL ABOARD... F ROMANCE, * ~MUS IC and FUN ~1 MIMW DAY of Ri TH "Compared to "Day of Wrath,' 'Symphony Pas- torale' is another cheap novie-Tomorrow Mag- azine. "One of the Most Remarkable Pictures in Recent Years"-Life. Cominq this weekend to aa k A ORS BE% * ~A MNXWELF G O RE SC H AY In Cha rge of P o ct O -7 , E