OF TWO ITII E MICA ' CAA DAITY SATURDAY. MAhCH" g. 1941 'THE MICHcAN bATT gAT~knY. MI~E~l i,_,1 IL %aJLW 4-AA$ "r.IdC iitiiE Off' 1D'tl t R Lieut. Bergren WillInterview Students Today Recruiting Division Officer To Explain Requirements Of Marine Commissions For the benefit of those studentsj wishing to obtain second lieutenant + cdmnissions in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, Lt. Orville V. Ber- gren of the Marine Corps Recruiting Division will be at the Naval ROTC headquarters, North Hall, from 9 a.m. today and Monday to explain the requirements for applicants. Lt. Bergren gave an illustrated talk on the purposes and organization of the Marine Corps yesterday in Nat- ural Science Auditorium. Applicants who meet requirements; are given three months training at the Marine Barracks, Quantico, Vir- ginia, as enlisted men. After receiv- ing the second lieutenant commis- sion in -the Reserve, they are given three additional months training at Marine Corps schools at a total' monthly income of $183. The officer enters active duty with troops fol- lowing this training for the dura- tioni of the national emergency. Stipulations require that the ap- plicants for training haave four years' of college credits, are native-born hale citizens of the United States between 20 and 25 years of age at the time they receive their commis- sions, pass the required physical ex- amination, are unmarried, present dharacter references, and have no previous military training. Lt. Bergren stressed the point that a commission in the Marine Corps Reserve might be especially inter- esting to some of the men who are about to be called into service through the Selective Service Act. He will return to Ann Arbor some time between March 25 and April 10 Deferred Students Will Be Examined Students with low draft numbers who have been deferred from select- ive service until July are now receiv- ing letters from their local draft boards asking them to make arrange- j ments for physical examinations dur- ing the coming Spring Vacation, Harold D. Gold, a member of the Ann Arbor draft board, explained that according to original plans, stu- dents were to be examined here dur- ing May and June, but since the local officials could not handle the large number of potential draftees, it was decided that examinations were to be taken in the towns where the stu- dents. resided. I Music Faculty Early Engineering Apparatus Will Perform To Be'Shown Here March 29 t Third Recital " d Re1874 Ladl Generator ce ted by a photo electric cell and amplified through a loud speaker. IoH rD e s tei Ehobs Featur The Department of Electrical En- ASdM riFsbun xty s 'eceivet gineering i also panigto ho An Mary Fishburne. how steel wool will burn without the Prof. ilardin V an D euOsenoSi t Ehe aribist ece ivf e di ne rn s as p a n n o s o IWill Play Tomorrow One of the earliest pieces of engi- application of heat, how short wave >s._neering laboratory equipment pur- radios work, how the stroboscope Prof. Hardin Van Deursen, bari- chased by the University, a Ladd functions and how various electrical Generator built in 1874. will be dis- color effects are obtained. Mary , pianist, and played at the College of Engineering's IWind Tunnel Exhibit Prof. Ava Comm Case, accompanist, ninth Open House exhibit Saturday, Among the exhibits of the Depart- will unite musically to offer the third March 29. School of Music Faculty Recital of Approximately 60 exhibits have ment of eronical Engeerng thesemste at4 :5 pm. omorowbeen received from various depart- I will be the University's large and the semester at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow be eevdfo aiu eat small wind tunnels, various types ments and student technical socie- of wings a demonstration of the in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. ties during the past month, it was winseatdmta in ofsthe Their program will comprise four announced yesterrday, and more than way sheet metal wrinkles when .ompositions by Bach and three by 100 engineering industries are ex- stiessed, pectd t suiti~~t~addtioal dsplys ngdears. Debussy as well as selections by Beet- foete to exhibition in theo near future.displays Examples of many different mili- k ,h tary weapons will be shown at Open hoven. Mednikoff. Koeneman, Tschai- Include Edison Generator House by the Army Ordnance depart- kowsky and Dorothy James. Included among the features of ment here, in addition to a collec- A graduate of Northwestern, Pro- the Open House 'will be an Edison tion of medals of honor, gas masks. Lincolnrouiluin,128, (abovelfessor Van Deursen received his M.M. generator. built i 1881. which will field glasses, fire control instru-i Lincoln Borglum, 28, (aove)d at Uibe used to light one of the inventor's ments and ammunition. son of Gutzon Borglum, famed old incandescent lamps. T sculptor who died recently, plans ing to Ann Arbor. he was a member Other exhibits will include a dem- .The Ordnance group is also plan- to finish his father's masterpiece, of the music department at the Uni- I onstration of how sound is trans- nig to demonstrate different firing the gigantic Mount Rushmore Me- versity of Wyoming and later head of I mitted by means of a light ray inter- cn o am uiion. marian con, 'eff sof arvingsand the voice department at Albion Col- ~~~~ ~ More than 6,000 alumni of the College of Engineering, now residing Theodore RooseveltR in the Black lrge. At present be is also director of Cg r in Hills of Soutd Dakota. the Methodist Choir here. in the Detroit area, have been in- Miss Fishburne, a graduate of the vited to Ann Arbor for a one-day Tts rers conference on March 29, which is AAes tNew York Conservatory of Music. being held in conjunction with Open CAA Approves was formerly chairman of the piano House. " ~~ department at the Mary Baldwin,".,,ValagnrTSpk UJse Of Airport School in Virginia.Shebegan her idle Team Vanquishes Hs an Wagoner To sak Us ip r ]graduate work at Harvard nd re-847.1819 An address by Gov. Y'urray D. gd wr- W sconsin,1847-1819 Van Wagoner on 'T11e Engineer in ceived her degree here four years Public Life" will highlight a lunch- Flight Training Course l ago. Back into the winning column after eon meeting during the conference Will Be Nxt W ek Before joining the University fac- dropping a match to Purdue two at which alumni will hear a talk by _gineXt ee ulty, Professor Case was a member weeks ago. the University ROTC Ri- Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the Col- of the Huron College, South Dakota, fle Team defeated the University of lege of Engineering on "Engineering Official approval of Ann Arbor's staff. She is a graduate of the School Wisconsin squad 1847 to 1819 in their at Michigan." President Alexander airport for continuation of the CAA's of Music and did her postgraduate match last week. Verne C. Kenne- G. Ruthven will also speak. flight training program for Univer- study with Schnabel in Italy. dy, Jr.. "42E, captain of the team, Citations will be presented during sity students was received yesterday For her part of the program Miss announced yesterday. the Open House program to 10 alum- Fishburne plans to play the Debussy Satishlction will probably be short- ni for distinguished service in the rom . F.R ,D compositions, "Two Satirical Dances lived, however, as last week the team field of engineering, copstos iS , ? r," To aiia a1 S Campus Hillel Seeks Orator Representative To Compete In National Contest A representative to compete in the National Hillel Oratorical Contest will be selected in a contest March 16 to be held at the local Founda- tion. The requirements are that the con- testant limit his talk to eight min- utes and his topic must be of Jew- ish interest and original. The winner will receive a ten dol- lar prize and go on to compete in the district eliminations for the priv- ilege of appearing in the finals in Chicago. Prof. Louis Eich of the speech de- partment and.William Muehl, '41, of the varsity debate squad; have been I selected to judge the contest. Students planning to participate in the contest should call the Foun- dation. Undergraduates and first- 1 year professional students on com.- bined curricula are eligible to par- ticipate. Auto Thief Is Sentenced Eddie Jones, the 20-year-old youth who stole nine cars last weekend, was sentenced yesterday by Judge George W. Sampleto two to five years in Jackson prison. Jones pleaded guil- ty. Sample recommended that he serve for two years. .Ca mpus Setters Knos the Value V of a Treatment at A0HflJR SHOP v (Formerly Di Mattie) ii 338 S. State Phone 8878 1tc oC acc>0 cc I-... TON IG HT at 8:30 HILLEL PLAYERS PRESEN A BROADWAY HIT BY JOHN HOWARD LAWSON LiA ENId)E L S S OIPN Ii .Friday and Saturdoy-8:3Q P.M .ri t E A T EIR Tickets: 50c ! vctor c Ifor e i v .ii v AImn tronauc Li Administ ration. Dwight Reynolds, co-operator of tie Ann Arbor air serVice, announced that instruction for the first group of second semester University stu- dents in the primary flight training course will begin next week probably.I The secondary training program is; expected to begin about March 15 for the first class of second semester students. Approval for the airport by the CAA authorities was contingent up- on the city's widening the airport within 60 days, weather permitting. The council last Monday night ap- propriated $2,500 for this purpose. The Air Service, in compliance with a second requirement, will construct a new hangar on the field. by Dorothy James, and Beethoven's "Sonata in A flat. Op. 110". W11heeler Will n r_ 'N r v Give Last Times Today SANNA NEAGLE "NO NO NANETTE" 1 iecttat Tomorrow It League Theater Organist and director of music at Augsburg Lutheran Church in To- ledo, John Wheeler, A41SpecSM, will present a piano recital in partial ful- fillment of the degree of Bachelor of Music at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in thes Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Before entering the University, Wheeler was the holder of a two- year scholarship presented by the Monday Musicale Society of Detroit. He stddied piano for one year at the Toledo Conservatory of Music and at present studying under Prof. Joseph Brinkman of the School of Music. Wheeler will open his program to morrow with Beethoven's 'Sonata, Op. 26" which will be followed by Frank's "Prelude, Chorale and Fugue" and three compositions by Chopin. "Impromptu in F major," "Trois Nouvelles Etudes" and "Fan- l tasie in F minor, Op. 49." Exhil;it Art Collections The Neville collection of Ceramics and Bronzes from Siam is being' shown in the Rackham Building along with a collection of stelae from Kom Abu Billu, from the Univer- sity's excavations. The exhibitions are being shown through March 15. The exhibit is open to the public from 9 to 5 p.m. daily. ishot it out with an undefeated Minn- I esota team, and although scores have ; not been received yet. Kennedy ad- mitted that the chances of victory were slight. Standing in the Big Ten matches, which started towards the end of the first semester and will continue un- til about April 1. place Michigan in sixth place, having won four and lost three. Minnesota heads the list, with Iowa a close second. Following the top two are Illinois, Indiana, Pur- due, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Northwestern, and Chicago, 4 which has yet to win a match. High scores for the Michigan team this week were turned in by Richard 0. Jones, '43E, who shot a 380 for the highest local score of the season, Kennedy, Harry E. Altman, '43E, George D. Hooper, '44E, and Albert D. Engstrom, '44. 9 I _ tip A -7 7 TWO MORE GRAND SHOWINGS TONIGHT AT --- 7 1& 9 o'clock - THE NEW STYLE MYSTERY COMEDY + it's a swell show - Hurry over Today! Also Donald Duck Cartoon AICHI AN Matinees Today - 25c Coming Sunday! 131:N tir IJaia es J lb(Iress Coiinumtiy Forum A review of relations between the United States and Latin America by Prof. Preston E. James of the geog- raphy department will highlight the third Community Forum meeting on the war problem series at 8 p.m. Monday in the Pattengill Auditor- ium of the Ann Arbor High School. Author of "Latin America-Hu- man Geography" to be released in August. Prof. James will discuss the economic and social aspects of West- ern Hemisphere relations, as to raw materials, problems of isolation and solidarity and the present lack of ccmmon sentiment present in this hemisphere. I 9 S t I i I Extra Added -N NEWS OF THE DAY p I I Coming! "TOBACCO ROAD" ~5t'. Here's news wrortliy tof a five-star final. spring is coming S. so now is the time to get your wardrobe going. Ann Arbor merchants have a complete stock of spring clothing on hand. For style information look for the Daily supplement on Wednes- day, March 12. w the fashions "Go Capitalist" r fG "111 i i I # . .... . , ' 1 / (} A..emsA LI /: _ .. I'® - . . I 'antce lo JACK TEAGARIJEN And His Orchestra The CAPITALIi BAL Nothing like a hot bath to pick you up when tired-to remove the last trace of weariness anid fatigue-to bring back the old pep-to make you feel gloriously clean and immaculate inside and out. Widi a gim ato'"ticwaler heater you can be sure of pIlenty of hot water at' all times. Your friends will, tell you that Instant Hot Water is the gratest o' a l home conveniences 'Prove this for yourself-let us install a ya atona~i, a 6 ami -rial. w Follo with 11 rI I 11 I