'I I3E MIG IIGAN D A TT.Y FRTTIAV'_ TTTNF R. 7 AA.t", THE MlCH1~AN T)AIT.V - 'W'~AE.~ ~, ~ U~ .L~JtL E1i 111L3.t} a1U.Lr b 1541 L Engine School To Cooperate With Defense Special Courses To Train High School Graduates Here During Summer CollegesWill Assist As part of the Engineering Defense Training Program of the Federal gov- ernment, engineering training classes for qualified high school graduates will be offered this summer by the- University in cooperation with other educational institutions in the state under the sponsorship of the United States Office of Education. The courses, which will be given through the University Extension Ser- vice and under the supervision of the College of Engineering, are designed to provide an elementary engineering. training -for high school graduates who plan to enter industry.f Eight-Week Session Classes are scheduled to open June 23 for an eight-week session. Courses to be emphasized are applied mathe- matics, engineering drafting or de- scriptive geometry, industrial mater- ials and shop theory. -The public colleges and junior col- loges which have been invited to co- operate in this program are located in Port Huron, Muskegon, Jackson, Highland Park, Grand Rapids, Iron- wood, Dearborn, Flint, Bay City, Yp- silanti, Kalamazoo, Marquette and 1Mt. Pleasant. Faculty members of these colleges who will serve as instructors will hold a conference at 10 a.m. Saturday in Room 305, West Engineering Build- ing. Prof. Robert H. Sherlock of the engineerirng college, University coord- ilator of the Engineering Defense Training Program, will be in charge. Certificates Issued Although work in the courses will be given on a non-credit basis, the University will issue certificates to the students who complete the program satisfactorily. Instructional costs of the program will be paid by the Federal govern- ment. The only costs to students will be for textbooks, drawing instruments and class material. * NOTICE Unused manuscripts Which have been submitted to Perspectives may be called for at the Publications Building during the afternoon either today or tomorrow. BOX P6 1 t Original Boys' Town' To Ask Contributions Here Tomorrow "There are no bad boys" may represent a rash statement from some points of view, but with Floyd Starr, it is a law, and since 1913 he has been engaged in proving it to everyone. For it was in 1913 that Floyd Starr, barely three years out of Albion Col- lege, gave up his savings and a f am- ily inheritance to purchase a farm three miles outsde of Albion for his experiment. The result - Starr Com- monwealth for Boys. More Than 1,000 Helped Since that date, more than 1,000 boys have come from the streets, from the courts, from unfriendly fam- ilies to Starr Commonwealth to live with other boys in a spirit of co- operation and friendliness. Since that date, also, like projects have appeared over the country. The now-famous Boys' Town was germinated in the mind of its .builder, Father Flana- gan, only after he had heard Floyd Starr speak on "his boys." Today the Commonwealth, "the world's most unique character fac- tory," boasts of nearly 800 acres, with i40 acressoffcampus, 125 students, a sizeable staff and an almost 100 per cent success record of its graduates. The school was supported almost entirely from contributions. Its lat- est requests made possible the con- struction of a much-needed barn to house the 52 cows providing milk for DeMolay Club Will Establish ChaptertHere Mason-Sponsored Serviee Organization To Hold Meeting In The Union A campus DeMolay Club, repre- senting the Mason-sponsored DeMo- lay organization which has chapters all over the world, will be established here this month, according to Dick Naumann, '44, leader of the group which is founding the club. The Order of DeMolay is essen- tially a service organization, one of the world's strongest youth groups. Working with Naumann in founding a Michigan chapter are Bill Eas- ton, '42, Robert Swartz, '41, and Paul Youngdahl, '42E. There will be an important meet- ing for all student DeMolay members this Sunday at 4:30 in the Union. Faculty members of Masonic bodies are urged to attend this organization meeting. There are other college chapters of DeMolay, led by the University of Oklahoma chapter of 200-odd members. The founders of the Mich- igan group feel that the University's chapter should not lag behind this membership total: "on top in DeMo- lay as in everything else," is their slogan. the boys. And recently there appeared a new "cottage," with room for 35 newcomers, paid for mainly through the generosity of James Inglis of this city, chairman of the board of the National Bank of Detroit and named in his honor. New Kitchen Needed Now the boys are voicing the need for a new kitchen. With more than 450 meals prepared daily, it has be- come almost an all-day job to prepare even one meal using the present facilities. Two boys must work two hours to peel potatoes for dinner, and washing dishes has been as great an inconvenience. They ,are asking for an enlarged CentralaKitchen with tiled, washable walls, and equipped with electrical refrigeration, ,a large power mixing unit, a vegetable peeler, a dish wash- ing machine, pressure cookers, can- ning equipment and a steam table. Tag Day Tomorrow To this end they will be n Ann Arbor ,tomorrow, many of them, to ask the help of citizens here in their annual Tag Day project. Boys will be stationed on campus and at var- ious posts downtown with red flags for contributors who believe, as Floyd Starr does, that "there is no such thing as a bad boy." games To Give Address Speaking on "A Geographic Back- ground for the Study of Latin Ameri- can Affairs," Prof. Preston E. James of the Geography department will ad- dress the Latin American Institute to be held at Connecticut College June 23 to June 28. Union Presents Merit Awards F1Ve Student WorkerS Win em ester Scholarships Five student workers at the Mich- igan Union are richer today because they have successfully combinedf scholarship, popularity and proficien- cy in their past year's work at the Union. Fifty dollar Union Merit Awards - presented each semester - were awarded to Edward Watrasevich, '43, and Martin growning, '43, at a Union meeting yesterday. Melvin Bowman,' '42L, Robert DeWitt, Grad., and Ron- ald Faust, '41F&C; each received $25. The scholarships are awarded 60 per cent on the basis of the quality of work as rated by department heads, 20 percent for popularity among other student employes and 20 per cent on scholarship records. To be eligible for the scholarships a student must be a Union employe for at least two semesters. Judges for the selection were Frank M. Kuenzel, acting Union manager; Prof. C. O. Eisler; Robert Sibley, Union president,sand Dean of Stu- dlents Joseph Bursicy. - Schmeling Recovering From Stomach Ache New York, June 5.-UP)-Max Schmeling is recuperating from a stomach ache and parachute fighting in Crete in a ward on the ground floor of the former American college (just outside Athens, Harry W. Flan- nery, CBS correspondent, said in a broadcast from Athens tonight after an interview with Schmeling. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCHEDULE oF EXAMINATIONS June 7 to .June 17, 1941 NOTE: For courses having both lectures and quizzes, the Time of Exercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the Time of Exercise is the time of the first quiz period. ..Drawing and laboratory work may be continued through the ex- amination period in amount equal to that normally devoted to such work during one week. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted be- low the regular schedule. All cases of conflicts between assigned exam- ination periods must be reported for adjustment to Professor D. W. MeCready, Room 3209 East Engineering Building, before June 2. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each student should receive noti- fication from his instructor of the time and place of his appearance in each course during the period June 7 to June 17. No single course is permitted more than four hours of examir. tion. No date of examination may be changed without the consent of the Classification Committee. Seniors Given Reduced Rate On lumnus' Seniors need not leave college be- hind them when they are graduated! They can keep up with persons, places and events in Ann Arbor almost as easily as if they were here, if they subscribe to The Michigan Alumnus. And to make this even easier, the editors are offering a year's subscrip- tion to every senior at a 50 per cent discount. In other words, for $2, each member of the graduating class will be assured of receiving 26 issues of the magazine. Of these, five are week- ly, five are fortnightly, 12 arrive monthly and the remaining four come at three-month intervals. There are 920 pages in all, giving news of alumni 'and campus events and personalities. The weekly issues at the first part of the year Dave in them reviews of the football games and of the initial events of the school ,year.' The Quarterly Reviews contain art- icles upon various subjects, written mainly by members of the University faculty. Research findings, and com- mentary evaluations are among the types of work done for these issues. Seniors wishing subscriptions to The Michigan Alumnus are asked to place their orders at once at Alum- ni headquarters in Alumni Memorial Hall. I)oait, Ericksoi Win Cheiistiry Awards Two chemistry scholarships of $200 have been awarded to Jack P. Doan, '42, and Charles E. Erickson, '42, for the coming school year according to a statement from literary college offices yesterday. The Paul F. Bagley Scholarship, awarded to Doan, and the Gomberg Scholarship awarded tp Erickson, are both designed for worthy students in the field of chemistry. Foresters Obtin Summr~ner Work Through out .S. Summer jobs for students of the School of Forestry and Conservation have shown a sharp increase this year, Prof. Shirley W. Allen of the department announced. Students of the forestry school will work in several different states, pro- tecting forests from fires and con- trolling diseases. Four men have been stationed in California, seven in Washington and Oregon, eleven in Idaho and Montana, and others scattered throughout the country. Professor Allen attributes this in- crease of employment for younger men to the fact that older foresters have been conscripted and also that there is a need to strengthen our na- tional fire control service in the great western forests. Drug May Be Cure For Tuberculosis CLEVELAND, June 5. -()- A new drug which offers a hope, but only a hope, to tuberculosis sufferers was reported today to the American Medical Association. In announcing it and its tentative use on more than 75 patients, Drs. Corwin Hinshaw and William H. Feld- man of Mayo Clinic hastened to warn persons with tuberculosis against expecting immediate cure. Until the drug is proven or disproven they claim nothing. Here Is In Ann Arbor Today's Summary Mayor Leigh J. Young, honorary chairman of the defense bond and stamp committee, has designated to- morrow as "Stamp Day," and citizens are urged to visit the local bankst and post offices or the Ann Arbor Trust Company and Kresge stores where stamps and bonds will be on. sale. Contribution of $580.49, first day's results, combined with collec-- tions yesterday totalled $2,320t and leaders of the local United1 Service Organization campaign to raise funds for clubroom facilities for soldiers, sailors and national defense workers were confident that the goal of $6,000 would be reached, today, last official day of the drive. 1 Fraternities, sororities and dormi- tories have been contacted and col-E lection boxes placed in the Union, League and general library for student contributions. * * Summer concerts in the West Park band shell opened last night with a program by the Ann Arbor High School Band, its last performance of the year. George Roche, director of the band, will be in charge of Ann Arbor play- I grounds this summer for the depart- inent of recreation. er ect on __odes coong. News Degree Given To MeClusky Alumni Of Park College' Honor Psychologist Prof. Howard Y. McClusky, as- sistant to the vice-president in charge of university relations 3n the adult education field, was honored with the degree of Doctor of Laws by Park College, Parkville, Mo., at the an- nual commencement day program re- cently. Professor McClusky, who began his career at Park College, was named president-elect of the Park College Alumni Association at the annual meeting and is scheduled to take of- fice in June 1942. As director of the American Youth Commission, and Professor of Educa- tional Psychology, he has done ex- tensive work in adolescent and mental hygiene, visual education and adult education. ATTENTION STUDENTS Let the Transcontinental Freight' Co. handle your per- sonal effects, and household S goods. Service to all principle cities. Specialists in transpor- tation since 1898. For further information and pick-up call- 7102 or 4491. Matinees 2:00-3:50 . 25c Nights 7:00-9:00 . 40c R Robert Benchley in "Forgotten Man" "Miracles of Hydro," Fox Cameraman PARAMOUNT NEWS "OLD NEW ORLEANS" SHOWS TODAY 2:00-4:17-7:00-9:20 P.M. Now Plaingg TIME OF EXERCISE h MONDAY (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at (at 8 9 10 11 1i 2 3 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 TIME OF EXAMINATION Thursday, June 12 8-12 Monday, June 9 8-12 Wednesday, June 11 8-12 Tuesday, June 10 8-12 Monday, June 16 8-12 Saturday, June 7 8-12 Monday, June 9 2- 6 TUESDAY Monday, June 16 Tuesday, June 10 Thursday, June 12 Friday, June 13 Tuesday, June 17 Friday, June 13 Saturday, June 14 *Saturday, June 7 'Wednesday, June 11 *Saturday, June 7 *Monday, June 9 *Saturday, June 14 'Saturday, June 14 *Friday, June 13 2- 6 2- 6 2- 6 2- 6 8-12 8-12 2- 6 2- 6 2- 6 8-12 2- 6 2- 6 8-12 8-12 RECORD AT ALL PRICES ASK US ABOUT THE N EW Add-a-Lope A LBUM (Complete with Filing System) We carry the' Most Complete Line of RECORD CABINETS In Ann Arbor Victor Columbia ti .y a ., .d E.M. 1, 2;hC. E. 2; German; Spa.nish Surv. 1, 2, 4; Drawing 2 M. E. 3; Drawing I Met. Proc. 2, 3, 4 Economics Drawing 3; French E. E. 2a; ?hysics 45 *This may be used on an irregular period provided there is no conflict with the regular printed schedule above. _ ____________-__ DISHES PRACTICALLY DRY THEMSELVES with the aid of ed*' , "40 *a - Coming Sunday "GREAT AMERICAN BROADCAST" Pour very hot water over your dishes when you have finished washing them. It gives them added sparkle and they prac- tically dry themselves. Dish- washing is only one of many household tasks simplified by automatic ELECTRIC hot water. Ask about this service at any Detroit Edison office- or see your plumber, electrical dealer, hardware or depart- ment store today. The Detroit Edison Company. Here's the . YOU CAN BUY: This electric teakettle leads all others in heating water FAST. A special high-speed elemient does the job in a hurry ... and you simply plug the kettle into the nearest con- For SENIORS ONLY... 50% SAVINGS in Subscription Cost of A YEAR'S 26 ISSUES of T He MIC HIGABN __ ULRICH'S connections with over 600 bookstores throughout the Ulnited .States enables them to buy all your discontinued textbooks at fair prices, and also to give you top-notch prices for the good ones. ALUMNU S Decca Bluebird Okeh i RECORDS / %. ~ Be sure you order your cofies before leaving Ann Arbor, at