- EIGHT" THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 19 51 THE MICHIGAN DAILY COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Students Ask for Wage Boost on Two Campuses By ZANDER HOLLANDER Pinched by the high-cost-of-liv- ng, students were making them- selves heard last week 'on at least two college campuses and seemedI to be getting results. On the University of California's Berkeley campus, a student coin- mittee recommended to the local merchants association that the "fair bear" wage of working Cal students be hiked from 90 cents BASIL L. WALTERS * * * Noted Editor Will Lecture Basil L. Walters, executive edi- tor of Knight Newspapers, Inc., will lecture to a journalism de- partment assembly at 3 p.m. today in Rm. 2003 Angell Hall. Besides a full reporting and editing career Walters was a mem- er of the Executive Committee of the Associated Press, and he served as president of that group from 1941 to 1943. He was secre- tary of the Directors of The American Society of Newspaper- Editors from 1942 through 1944, and a member of the Allied News- paper Council in 1943. Knight Newspapers, Inc., to which Wal- ters was made executive editor in 1944, is made up of the Detroit Free Press, Chicago Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal and the Miami Herald. His lecture will be followed by an informal coffee hour at 4 p.m. in the Department of Journalism news room where he will answer the questions of students. This evening Walters will ad- dress members of the professional Delta Chi, at their initiation ban- quet. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION National Lutheran Council 1304 Hill Street Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor SUNDAY- 9:10 A.M.: Bible Class at the Stu- dent Center. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Services in Zion and Trinity Churches. 5:30 PM.: LSA Supper Meeting in Zion Parish Hall - program fol- lowing at 7:00. The Rev. Donald R. Heiges, Exec. Sec. of Student Service of the National Lutheran Council, will speak on "The Call- ing of the Christian Student." to $1 an hour. The merchants agreed to consider the pay raise. AND AT the University of Washington the proposed jump was even greater-from 75 cents to $1 per hour-with bitter feel- ings on both sides of the contro- versy. Bob Mucklestone, chairman of the operating committee at the Seattle institution insisted that there was nor "dissatisfaction among.., workers." But- a student representative, recalling his truckdriving job at 70 cents an hour, said "there is no justification for small wages like that." The hubub resulted in an in- vestigating committee to report to the student assembly on the ad- viseability of a' wage increase. AT THE other end of the west coast, controversy rose over ap- pointments to UCLA's student newspaper, the Daily Bruin. Striking back at the student executive council's "hemming and hawing" over approval of the present senior staff's recom- mendations for next semester's editor and managing editor, the Bruin decided to publish a ros- ter of new appointees anyway. Approved appointees were listed as such, but in place of the usual photographs of appointees to the positions in question the Bruin ran large, black question marks, titled "abstract qualities" and "unknown quantities." Inviting all students who wanted the positions to apply for them, the Bruin then ceased publication for the semester. Aleutian Trip Slated for TV The University's weekly televi-. sion hour will feature a visit with the recently returned Aleutian Is- land Expedition on the broadcast at 1 p.m. Sunday over WWJ-TV, Detroit. Ted Bank, research assistant in the Botanical Gardens and field 'director of the expedition, will ex- plain some of the groups activi- ties;. Dr. Karl Lagler of the zoology department will present the les- son "Elimination of Wastes" on telecourse one, "Man in his World- Human Biology." The Photography telecourse will deal with "Exposure" this week, with Philip Davis, design instruc- tor, teaching. Horowitz Date Still Undecided No new date has been set for the Vladimir Horowitz concert which was postponed last Tues- day because of illness of. the pi- anist, according to the University Musical Society. The concert, scheduled for 8:30; p.m. today in Hill Auditorium, was called off when Horowitz's doctors suggested that he forego any concerts for at least a week. Draft Racket Revealed in Detroit Area DETROIT-- (P)-A draft eva- sion racket in which youths es- cape army service by using mari- huana or other narcotics was dis- closed here yesterday. Joseph Bell, District Supervisor of the Federal Narcotics Bureau, told reporters that "a vicious racket is beginning to blossom here and in other cities." He said the racket was designed "for the sole purpose of beating the draft." Prospective soldiers, he said, are told by sympathizers or dope peddlers to try a few marihuana cigarettes or shots of narcotics and tell the army about it when called. Draftees who establish a "fake history" of dope addiction to evade the draft can be prosecuted, and if convicted they face a maximum of five years imprisonment and $10,000 in fines for false state- ments to avoid army service. A series of courses in family liv- ing will be offered next semester to men and women of junior and senior standing, according to James H. Robertson, assistant dean of the literary college. Because of a widespread need for such a program the courses will be open to students of, all schools and colleges in the Uni- versity, Robertson said. Courses available under the new program will cover courtship "and marriage relations, child develop- ment and adjustment, .nutrition and family health, the economics of family life, and design and fur- nishing of the home. Two hours of credit will be offered for each course and no' prerequisite will be required. However, the courses probably will not satisfy the group re- quirements of the literary col- lege. The courses have been organiz- ed as a result of a study conduct- A LAUNDRY SERVICE BOOK EXCHANGE BUSINESS-Jo Grill, '52, (right) fills out the necessary forms to give her books to the Student Book Exchange for sale. Meanwhile Abbey Funk, '52, (standing) asks Margey Boos, book exchange agent in the Pi Beta Phi house, about the IFC- sponsored service. For the first time, the Exchange is picking up books from students at individual residences.' for men I - Student Bundle Professor of German Will Retire Soon The familiar figure of Norman L. Willey, professor of German, will no longer be a part of the campus scene this coming semes- ter. Prof. Willey is retiring after 30 years of teaching at the Univer- sity. * * * BORN IN Afton, N. Y., Willey began his college career there. After attending Syracuse College for three years, he decided that "the outside world needed him," and set sail for South America. After five years of wandering, Willey returned to Syracuse where he received his bachelors degree in 1908. In 1909 he completed his masters in Latin and Greek at Harvard. Taking a job as a Latin teacher, Willey continued his studies with graduate work at Princeton and the University of Chicago. Then finding a temporary interest in law, he took courses along this line at three Washington colleges. He also continued studying Span- ish and German. It was in the capacity of a Spanish instructor that he first came to the University. Once here he continued his graduate work and in 1925 received his doctorate degree from the University. Prof. Willey's present courses include Gothic German, Nor- wegian and contemporary Scan- dinavian literature. The Scandi- navian literature course will be taught by Harry Bergholz next semester, Henry Kratz, Jr. will teach Norwegian and Prof. Herbert Penzl will handle the course in Gothic German. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Consistently one of the better programs on television, NBC's "Garroway at Large", continues to give TV viewers a varied and uni- que program every Sunday night at 10 p.m. over WWJ-TV. Garroway shifts from one scene to another in his variety show with an ease which is really re- freshing for the baby-monster tel- evision. With the aid of a new camera crane, he is pioneering in- to some very interesting photo- graphy. This, coupled with the fact that he has a good regular staff of singers and dancers, plus visit- ing notables now and then, makes Petitions Due for Posts oni Council Today is the last chance for engineering students to petition for a post on the Engineering Honor Council. Any scholastically eligible en- gineering student except a first- semester freshman may turn a written petition in to Rm. 321 W. Engineering Annex or to any member of the Honor Council or Engineering Council. )OK and LISTEN with Harry Reed for a week. top notch program every "American Forum of the Air" will have Mr. Republican Bob Taft and Democratic Senator William Benton of Conn. discussing "A Foreign Policy-What's the Ans- wer?" this Sunday evening for stu- dents who still have time to worry about such things with finals looming. so close. The program is aired over WWJ at 10:30 p.m. Originating in Washington, this program has previously fea- tured Illinois' Democratic and Republican Senators Paul Dou- glas and Everett Dirksen on the same subject, and promises to provide a good half-hour of senatorial wrangling and horn- locking. Broadway show fans might get a kick out of relatively new TV program "Say It With Acting" which pits teams from current Broadway hits in a fast moving program fashioned after the par- lor game charades. This week Sam Levene will captain a team from "Guys and Dolls" against a crew of "Call Me Madam" performers who downed a "South Pacific" gang last week. This one can be caught at 6:30 p.m. Saturday over WWJ-TV. Social Revolt Changed Art, SachsClaims The rising tide of social revo- lution in France greatly influ- enced the turn from baroque to naturalistic forms of art in the eighteenth century, Curt Sachs, music consultant for the New York public library, said yester- day. Speaking on "Music and the Eighteenth Century," Sachs traced the growth of naturalistic art and music in the 1700's, illus- trating hs talk with slides and records. Before the late 1700's, he said, the arts were influenced by the personality of Louis XIV, and artists and musicians produced in a gentle and unemotional style. But beginning in 1760, a feeling developed for art as an expression of nature. "There were four new criteria put forth," he said, "nat- uralism, simplicity, passion and truth." "The feeling for naturalism, emotionalism and the bourgeois emancipation worked inseparately on music," he concluded, "and the results were not imitation. The music of the period was moved by the same forces that determine movements of human spirit. It was dependent upon civilization and on the minds of men." ed during the past several years by a special faculty committee. The group was headed first by Prof. Robert C. Angell, chairman of the sociology department and now by Dean Robertson. After deciding that such a program would meet a real stu- dent need, the committee in- vestigated similar programs at other universities. The five courses included in the program are: 1) Marriage and Family Life (Sociology 60), which analyzes dating and courtship behavior as well as married life in general. 12c each additional pound All your clothing laundered, FLUFF DRIED and NEATLY FOLDED ----LOW EXTRA C H ARGE--- for finishing these articles SH I RTS, additional ....... ... .17c (Full dress shirts and silk or wool sport shirts slightly higher) HANDKERCHIEFS............ 3c SOX pr.. .. .. .. . ... .. .. . ..... 3c lbs minimum 50C 2) Parent-Child Relationship (Education C-78), which acquaints the student with the role of a pa- rent. 3) Family Health (Public Health Practice 176), which deals with factors essential to healthful liv- ing. 4) Economic and Financial Problems of the Family (Econo- mics 91) with much attention de- voted to better "buymanship". 5) The Home in the Community (Design 106), which is an elemen- tary course for those interested in. the design and organization of the home. This course will probably be given in the fall. MARITAL MANAGEMENT: 'U' To Offer Courses in Family Living Just Phone 23-123 I Varsity Laundry will PICK UP and DELIVER I J-HOP SPECIAL formal * and street length petticoats o in black & white rayon crepe or 7_ satin, plain or Pace trimmed elas- C~ ticized waist or back zipper clos- ing. VV S-M-L 3.95 to 5.95 Shown 3.95 1 <> coo o oo o o i deft 0t # Have you bought your 1951.Ensian, "The Rose Bowl " Special" BUY NOW! $5.00 'iil February, 28. just right' for winter slopes I "When do 1get regular pajamas like the other kids?" I I Modeled by-Ronnie Raider Photo by Jack Bergstrom 7:30 TO 9:00 DAILY 7:30 TO 5:30 SAT. This heavy wool ski sweater with its gay Swiss design is only one of the many lovely styled winter togs featured by J. H. Cousins. 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