*. ..A as U..ITAU. Lt F A . M 1.' Z.F 1. ~.1. Z ... VETERANS'ISlosson Claims Truman Not NOTES Free legal counseling service is now available to all veterans in Ann Ar- bor through the courtesy of members of the American Bar Association. Veterans in need of legal counsel- ing should apply to Karl Karsian at the Ann Arbor Veterans Counseling Center, telephone 8204. They will be put in contact with a lawyer in the city who will render legal advice without charge. Should any legal action be necessary, ser- vices will be rendered on a minimum fee basis. If the "girl you left behind" is still at her home overseas she can now be brought to America with a minimum of effort. Recent legislation has .authorized the Department of Immigration to admit veteran's fiancees into the U.S. on a visiting (non-quota) basis. The matrimonial - minded veteran needs to supply his bride-to-be with four documents; 1. a photostat of his discharge papers; 2. a copy of his birth certificate or naturalization papers; 3. a letter stating his intention to wed; 4. and an affidavit that he will support her upon arrival until the marriage. When the fiancee presents these to the American Consulate she will be placed on a. special quota list and shipped henceforth. If married within three months after arrival she becomes a perman- ent resident; if not she will be ship- ped back to her home. Meyerhoff Says U.S. Must Keep Foreign Market Helped by Cony President Truman's coming freshI from Congress to the White HouseI had much less effect on the legisla-r tion passed by the 79th Congress than4 was anticipated, Prof. Preston W.I Slosson said yesterday. Truman had neither more nor less influence with Congress than other officials who have left congressional9 ranks to step into the Supreme Courtt or the Capitol, he declared in his weekly analysis of the news. Although the President was a "rea- sonably clubable fellow," building a7 good number of friendships and alli- ances while in the Senate, once he left congressional ranks he was no longer a member or even regarded with the esteem accorded an old alumnus by members of Congress, Prof. Slosson said. A unique harmony did exist be- tween the Administration and Con- gress, he said, in the field of foreign relations, but the congressmen knew they were safe behind the calendar; that they could oppose the Admin- istration as much as they wished so long as they pleased their local con- stituents, and they did so on domes- tic matters. In spite of noteworthy agreement with Mr. Truman on each major piece of legislation on foreign affairs, com- mented Prof. Slosson, the Congress held back various measures personal- ly plugged by President Truman. The Army-Navy merger, perma- nent military conscription, the Fair Employment Practices Commission, a ,large program of social legislation, and the question of succession to the presidency-whether it should pass from the vice-president to the Secre- tary of State or to the Speaker of the house-were all defeated and left open to the decisions of the 80th Congress. On the credit side of Congress- Administration cooperation in do- ress Friends V mestic affairs goes the passage of ap-} propriations to the extent of $6001 million for emergency housing; the G.I. Bill of Rights; enormous ap- propriations to carry on federal pro- grams; the streamlining of Congress with added pay; certain reorganiz- ation proposals; the anti-racketeer- ing law and other minor acts, as the anti-Petrillo bill. Thus, the closing of the 79th Con- gress was the significant domestic, news event of the week for America, Prof. Slosson concluded. Educator Urges Improvement Of High Schools Quantitative and qualitative chan g- es in American high schools must re- place the "cold storage concept" of education which is now prevalent, John W. Studebaker, U.S. Commis- sioner of Education asserted Monday. Speaking in the lecture series upon the social implications of modern science, he said that emphasis in the future should be placed upon "leaxn- ing" instead of "teaching" systems in the secondary schools of America. Qualitatively, the high schools must meet the needs of a world changed by science by improving their offerings in physical education, languages, mathematics, science and practical arts and by strengthening the civic and ethical .elements of their pro- grams, Studebaker said. Selective service rejections during the war point to the need for better physical and health education, while military demands also demonstrated that insufficient attention has been given to classes in mathematics and science. "All high school courses should train the student"for critical listen- ing and thinking," Studebaker de- clared. "Critical listening is an art much needed in a world in which radio broadcasts are heard daily by millions, while critical thinking is our only democratic safeguard against the domination of our think- ing and feeling by various organs of mass communication. Quantitative changes needed in the high schools are consolidation of rur- al school districts, better buildings, more instructional aids such as radio and films, and more scholarships and fellowships, Studebaker said. He pointed out that the American ideal of free and universal schooling is short of achievement especially in rural areas where often no'more than half the youth of high school age are actually attending schools. Duo-Piano Team Is Scheduled To Play Tomorrow Vronsky, Rabin Plan Program of Classics Vitya Vronsky and Victor Babin, famed two-piano team, will present a concert under the auspices of the Uni- versity Musical Society at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Their program will include "An- dante and Variations," Op. 46, by Schumann, "Strains from Far-off Lands," by Babin, Busoni's "Duet- tino Concertante, after Mozart," Milhaud's "Le Bal Martiniquais," and "Variations on a Theme by Haydn," Op. 56B, by Brahms. Linguistics Society President To Lecture in Rackham Today A lecture on the "Restrictive and, Non-restrictive Forms of Expres- sion" will be given by Prof. E. Ade- laide Hahn, president of the Linguis- tics Society of America, at 7:30 p.m. today in Rackham Amphitheatre. The first woman ever to hold the presidency of the Society, Prof. Hahn is chairman of the department of Willow Village Citizens Council To Meet Today The newly-formed Willow Run Citizens Committee will hold its first mass meeting at 7:30 p.m. today at North Community Building. Although this will be primarily an organizational meeting, Mrs. Cath- erine McKean, temporary chairman, said that the agenda included plan- ning a program for registration of voters and hearing a report on a pro- posed day nursery to benefit working mothers. Tenant problems will also te discussed. All interested persons living at Wil- low Village, are urged to attend. Cuban To Address, Sociedad Hispanica Dr. Isabel Morandeira de Guerra, of the University of Havana, will be the principal speaker at the meeting of the Sociedad Hispanica at 8:00 p.m. today in the West Conference room of the Rackham Building. Dr. de Guerra who will discuss the progress of education in Cuba, is one Qf the leaders in the field of second- ary education in her country. {)O=}Q{3=>U<=U =>m and .. Wedding stca 717 North University Ave. ym>eo