THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA -- Pep Rally for Indiana Game Will Usher In Football Season The first of three pe > rallies to be sponsored by the Varsity Committee will be held Friday, Sept. 28, preced- ing the Michigan-Indiana football game. The Marching Band will lead a student parade to Ferry Field where the cheer leaders will take over by the light of a giant bonfire. By arrangement with Ohio State University, 1,000 tickets for the Mich- igan game at Columbus, Nov. 23, have been reserved'for Michigan students, and will go on sale the first three Prices... (Continued from Page 1) The board further declared that grain price trends are downward and "are expected to level off at ceiling levels." The board found "some instances" in which prices of milk and milk products have exceeded the June 30 ceilings, plus the subsidy. "In most of these cases, the excess has been small," the board's state- ment added. "In some cases the ex- cess was unreasonable." Will Watch Milk The board announced it intends to watch prices of milk and milk pro- ducts, and that it has "arranged to receive additional reports on price developments since June 30." When this information has been received, the Board will reconsider its decision to allow dairy products to ' remain ceiling-free "if evidence ap- pears that price increases since June 30 are unreasonable." Explaining its dcision to restore meat ceilings, the Board said that price increases since June 30 had ranged in the case of livestock from 20 to 50 percent, and in the case of wholesale meat prices, from 35 to 80 percent. Increases Reported "Corresponding increases have been reported in the case of retail meat prices," the statement noted. Saying that part of these increases were due to lapse of subsidies, the board said': "For the most part prices reported were beyond question unreasonably above ceilings plus subsidies." The supply of meat "has been and will continue to be short in relation to demand at reasonable prices," the board declared. Statements Reeived Many statements were received, the board continued, regarding en- forceability and practicability of meat price controls. Saying that these statements had "disclosed the failures that have occurred in the past.. .," the board added: "Nevertheless, it appears that the Government has at hand adequate. techniques to enforce these regula- tions, including the -overriding ceil- ings on cattle." With respect to subsidies on live- stock and meat, the board directed that on or before.next July 10 sub- sidies must be reduced by 50 percent. "This reduction," the statement said, "will provide the consumer with a more gradual transition to removal of the entire subsidy on April 1." Congress Stipulated Congress stipulated that no food subsidies may be paid after that date. In ordering continued decontrol of nearly all grains, the board cited three reasons why "it failed to find that the public interest would be served by their regulation:" 1. The estimated supply of the de- controlled grains after the harvest of the current record corn and wheat crops appears to be adequate to meet the estimated demand. 2. Increases in the parity price for these grains would have required higher than June 30 ceilings, if con- trols had been reestablished. 3. Although grain prices "rose sharply into unreasonable levels" in July, since early this month "prices have been returning rapidly to more reasonable levels." Cottonseed oil, also recontrolled, "increased in the neighborhood of 25 percent above June 30 ceilings," the board said. days of the fall term. A special train 'has been chartered for the conveni- ence of students attending this game. A full program of activities for the football season has been planned by the Varsity Committee, newly-form- ed branchof the Student Legislature. The pep -rally to be held prior to the Army game will coincide with the final judging of a Michigan Yell con- test. This contest will be conducted during the first two weeks of the fall semester. The traditional home- coming /weekend will be held Oct. 26, the date set for the Michigan- Illinois game. It will again feature the house, display contest, and will conclude with a name band dance after the game. All students planning to purchase tickets for the Ohio State game, are urged to do so early, since the sale of these tickets must be completed by Sept. 25. Literary ... (Continued from Page 1) ;tudents during each of the three lays of the registration period, Sept. 18, 19 and 20. Students are urged by the regist- ar 's office to obtain their registra- tion material as soon as possible af- ,er Sept. 11, it will be available. Stu- lents are also urged to see their ad- visors at least a day before they are >cheduled to register, to insure their Iaining entrance into the gymnasium at' the proper time. Students in the summer session are eminded by the registrar's office tc confirm the address to which they vish their blueprints to be mailed since they will not be allowed to see their advisors without one. The blue- rints will be sent out the first week in September. Students who do not take ad- vantage of their place in the regis- tration time schedule will be allow- to register only on Saturday, Sept. 21, between 8 and 10:30 a.m. They will find themselves at a disadvant- age if they follow this latter course, however, according to Edward Grosbeck, assistant registrar, since many courses will have been com- pletely closed by that time, due to the large number of registrants. Late registration will not be per- mitted except in the case of veterans who were not in residence in the sum- mer session. An innovation in the registratibn system will be introduced this fall. whereby statistics will be obtained in the gymnasium at the time of regis- tration, by a punch-card system. This method is used by several of the larg- er colleges and universities in the country, including Michigan State College. It has been used here by the registrar's office a week after the registration period, but has never before been used at the time of regis- tration. The new system will facili- tate the work of the registrar's office to a large extent in both time and effort. It makes possible and auto- matic tabulation of class lists, indi- vidual students' curriculum plans, and other necessary statistics. Michigan Polio Cases Reach.Total of 280, LANSING, Aug. 20. - P) - Michi- gan's polio caseload today reached 280 when 15 new cases were reported to the State Health Department. DAILY OFFICIAL SOMETHING NEW IN HEAD- GEAR - President Truman, on a visit to the Naval Air Station at Quonset Point, RI., during his va- cation cruise, peers out from under the brim of a smart white cap, made especially for him. Trumn'j Trip Sa Journey To N owhere', WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN SOMEWHERE IN THE ATLANTIC, Aug. 20. - UP) -President Truman cruised southward tonight on "a journey to nowhere." Switching vacation plans which had called for the yacht Williams- burg's movement up the coast of Maine, the President decided to go south instead in search of warmth and sunshine. Presidential Press Secretary Charles G. Ross radio-telephoned the news to reporters trailing the yacht aboard 'he Navy ship Weiss. "We have changed course," the voice of Ross came casually over the loudspeaker. "We are going south today. The Boss decided last night to go into warm waters. We are just moving around heading in a general southern direction with no fixed destination. At the moment, it's a sort of journey to nowhere. It's just a vacation and he can frolic around in the Atlantic if he wants to." Co-op Members Planning To Hold 'Reunion in N.Y. Present and former Michigan Co- op members will hold a reunion in New York on September 14. Interested Co-op members and their friends should call Dave Plevin at Jerome 7-8230 in New York before that date to make arrangements for the meeting. r te4 FDITORIS NOTE: This column is de- signed to provide veterans with infor- mation of specific information to them. All veterans are encouraged to submit questions or topics for consideration. By TOM WALSH Don't forget to make some defin- ite arrangements to pick up your final check if it is due to arrive- here: after you leave. The VA Guidance Office here says that all unclaimed checks will be sent back to Cleveland for redirection, which will probably mean an extended and unnecessary delay before the checks are finally delivered. If you are planning to go to some other school this fall, arrange with the VA before you leave to obtain a Supplemental Certificate of Eligi- bility. This certificate must be ob- tained from the school where you first enrolled under the GI Bill. The experience of many veterans who have transferred to Michigan from other schools has shown that waiting until you enroll at another school to apply for' the' certificate often entails a delay of several months in securing subsistence payments. A new and more convenient meth- od of purchasing books and supplies will be inaugurated for veterans this fall. Books of blank University re- quisitions will be issued to each vet- eran next term. The white book and equipment requisitions to be filled out as usual will be acceptable at any of the accredited bookstore or theStu- dent Book Exchange operating in the Michigan League. The colored supply forms in ythe back of each book can be used at the bookstore plus certain other cooperating stores in the campus area. Dir. MeClusky Talks at Parley Dr. Howard McClusly of the Edu- cation school was one of some 40 authorities participating in a con- ference yesterday on "how labor and management can be best brought to- gether in the interests of a better economic future." Dr. McClusky served with top ex- ecutives from all over the country in answering questions of 37 student businessmen meeting in a confer- ence organized by a national busi- ness educational organization, Junior Achievement, Inc. The students, aged 15 to 21, were organized into miniature "compan- ies" for practice in business opera- tion. Yesterday's conference was first of a three-day session at Black Lake Ranch, Onaway, Mich. World Youth Conclave Held This Month EDITOR'S NOTE: Charles Bernstein, former member of The Daily staff who is now attending the University of Geneva, Switzerland, will cover the World Students Congress to be held at Prague. By CHARLES BERNSTEIN Special To The Daily GENEVA. Aug. 12, (delayed) Dele- gates from the many Swiss univer- sities to the World Students Congress are leaving for Prague, Czechoslo- vakia, tomorrow where they will ei- ther approve or amend the proposed constitution for what is to be called the "International Union of Stu- lents." The Congress, meeting from Aug. 17 to Aug. 31, will be composed of student representatives from 64 na- tions including four or five from the United States and many more from countries that were occupied during the war. These formerly occupied countries regard this free and inter- national meeting of peoples as evi- dence of their new and strange op- portunity to express themselves. Aims Expressed The aims and motivations of the World Student Congress as expres- sed in its previous meetings and its provisional constitution so much ex- press a feeling rather than a con- crete program that I will not at- tempt to outline its formalized state- ments of aims such as to "promote" . . . "further" . . . "demand" such things as "culture, education, free- dom, peace, security, scholarships, the arts, friendship" etc. The meaning behind these famil- iar words will be made clear during the first few days of the Congress. At the first Congress in Prague, shortly after the liberation, the de- legates from the U.S.S.R. reported the German destruction of Russia's largest and most respected univer- sities. Students from Hungary plan to "justify every single student" so that never again will "the majority of Hungarian universitiy youth be- come the tool of fascism and reac- tion." Polish delegates reported that the wartime prosecution of professors ri- valed that of the Jews, and "despite those terrible persecutions, the ac- tivities of teaching secretly did not stop for a moment." James Melton will inaugurate the Sixty-Eighth Annual Choral Union Series sponsored by the University Musical Society Oct. 10 in Hill Audi- torium. The nine succeeding concerts in- elude Egon Petri on Oct. 30. the Cleveland Orchestra under George Szell, which will make its seventh an- nual visit, on Nov. 10, and on Nov. Restored Meat Ceilinogs NIeai' Jime 30 Levels WASHINGTON, Aug. 20- UP) - Housewives can expect to find price ceilings on most meat restored on Friday to near their June 30 level as a result of the Decontrol Board's de- cision tonight. Price Administrator Paul Porter had announced beforehand that he hoped to restore the June 30 ceil- ings on beef, pork and probably veal. No decision was made on lamb ceil- ings. These were some of the highest retail meat ceilings in Chicago on June 30, by OPA figures: Round steak, 44 cents a pound, porterhouse steak, 54 cents, ham- burger, 28 cents, center-cut pork chops, 37 cents, Grade A bacon, 42 cents, sliced smoked ham, 47 cents, loin lamb chops, 62 cents, sirloin veal steak, 37 cents. At Chicago, the over-riding ceiling on cattle was $18 a hundred pounds on hogs,- the maximum price was $14.10 a hundred pounds on sows and $14.85 on barrows and gilts. On dres- sed lamb, ceilings ranged from $25 a hundred pounds for AA Gradeto $19.25 a hundred pounds for C Grade. The meat subsidies which the board ordered restored were : On beef cattle, subsidies to pack- ers ranged from $1.25 a hundred pounds for utility and canner and cutter grades, to $3 for choice grade animals. Another subsidy of 50 cents a hundred Pounds was paid to feeders for choice and good grades only. Read and Use The Daily Classified Directory 19 Yehudi Menuhin. The Icelandic Singers under Sigurdur Thordarson will be heard Nov. 25, and for the six- teenth consecutive season here Serge Koussevitsky will direct the Boston Symphony Orchestra on Dec. 9. Vladimir Hcrowitz will be heard Jan 17. followed by the Detroit Sym- phony Orchestra under Karl Krueger Feb. 17. and a recital by Lotte Leh- mann Feb. 16. The Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra under Desire De- fauw will close the series March 16 The Annual "Messiah" Other musical events of the year include the annual "Messiah' per- formance on Dec. 15, the Seventh- Annual Chamber Music Festival of three concerts Jan. 24 and 25, anc the Fifty-fourth Annual May Festiva of six concerts May 8, 9, 10 and 11 "Messiah" soloists will be Lura Stover, soprano; Ellen Repp, con- tralto; Ralph Lear, tenor; and Alder Edkins, bass. The University Chora Union, iconducted by Hardin Var Deursen, and the special "Messiah' Orchestra, accompanied by FriedE Op't Holt Vogan, organist. Budapest String Quartet The Budapest String Quartet, com- posed of Josef Roisman and Edgan Ortenberg, violinists, Boris Kroyt. violist and Mischa Schneider, violin- cellist, will participate for the third consecutive season in the Chambe: Music Festival. May Festival concerts will featurE the Philadelphia Orchestra, unde. Eugene Ovmandy, conductor, and Al. exander Hilsberg, assistant conduc. tor, the University Choral Union, the YoutheChorus, directed by Marguer ite Hood, and both vocal and instru- mental soloists. Clarinet Recital TO Be Given Today Carl Wickstrom, clarinetist, wil present a recital in partial fulfillmen of the requirements for the degree o Master of Music in woodwind instru. ments at 8:30 p.m. today in Rack- ham Assembly Hall. He will ba assisted by Mildred M Andrews, pianist, and Arline Burt violist. Selections by Handel, Bar birolli, Mozart, Debussy and voi Weber will compose his program. James Melton To Op Fall Choral Union Set ,1: $Ihippev 4 Inspired by the period of the English dandies .executed with California's matchless casual flair. Jacket, skirt, jerkin, slacks and blouse in blended shades of I STATE STREET gray, from Tabak's collection of interchangeable casuals. In Sutara, a Seaglow success fabric of AriaIiC and rayon. BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) tonight at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, admission free to the public. The play will be staged by advanced students in dramatics as a laboratory production showing the type of play which can be done in the average High School. Ticlets may- be obtained at the theatre box office. -,. 4, I Jacket and skirt ... 25.00 Blouse and slacks .. .22.95 Blouse Jerkin , . 8.95 . . . 10.95 r & &covd 7tude: There are hundreds of stars in the recording world -bat only one Fats Waller, who croons "Your Feet's Too Big" and "The Joint Is Jumoin" in his new album. Perhaps fortunately. there's only one Danny Kaye, too. He rips through four wonderful discs in his zany album. A lot of you 'folks have been asking us to get some of the Keynote Jazz collection. They're here now. "Blues a La, Red" and "I Got Rhythm" are just two of the sides that Red Narvo gets off with his all star outfit featuring Slat Stewart. ( +Y ~.a f' FEATURED IN AUGUST MADEMOISELLE GLAMOUR By Y:' OF CALIFORNIA S. Young Black Magic fn Hats by BETMfR II I