TWO THE MICHIGAN D A TLY THURSDAY. NOVF F'R. 14t 14,10 THE ICH(ZAN1IATV TTIP~fl 'V?.JIVI~l~U'U) A 1IA f T LPE~AR.A22 ris: i .V V { L' : LISL' n 14, 1, Howard Bjork Will Address AICEToday Chemical Engineer Talks At Engineering Building; Lowell Moss Presides Howard Biork, chief chemical en- gineer with a solvent corporation, will address members of the student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers at 7:30 p.m. to- day in Room 1042, East Engineering Building. The meeting will be opened with a questions contest, the winner of which will receive a chemical engi- neering handbook. A short btsiness meeting will precede the talk, and refreshments will be served later. Lowell Mass, '41E, will preside. Fac- ulty adviser is Prof. Donald L. Katz, of the department of chemical engi- neering. Mr. Biork received his engineering degree here in 1931, and spent some time with the Leader Industries Inc. before affiliating with the Sharples Company. His topic is unannounced. Read The Daily Classifieds! MICH IGAN THEY MADE HIM FAMOUS ..HE MADE THEM MEN!I I New NROTC Department Termed r , Don Cossack Conductor Schleider Attends Conference 'Second Home' To Its 120 Students By A. P. BLAUSTEIN The University's newest depart- nent, the Naval Reserve Officers' Training Corps, has in the short period of six weeks transformed it- self from a mere classroom to a "second home" for its 120 students. Located in the basement of North Hall, the department's headquarters are divided into 10 rooms, each of which has been carefully designed to create a "navy atmosphere." Two of these, the library and the "Ward Room", have been set aside for the use of students. The latter is well known in navy circles . as the officers' mess and aboard ship is devoted to the various leisure activities of the vessels' com- manders. In North Hall it has be- come the students' "play headquar- ters"-a place where they are per- mitted to smoke, play games and en- ter into any sort of "bull session" they choose to. Room Furnished Modernistically The "Ward Room", which has on one of its walls several examples of old cutlasses, has recently been fur- nished in a modernistic manner by an undisclosed donor. Capt. Lyal A. Davidson, commander of the local' unit, revealed,"however, that the fur- niture had been received through Re- gent Harry G. Kipke. Although the library is newly es- tablished the NROTC has already been able to gather several hundred books on the sea and offers many magazines such as "The Log", "Our EVERY TELEGRAM'IA RUSH TELEGRAM AT CHARGES FOR TELEGRAMS EPHNEDIN APEAR ON YOUR Navy" and "The Army and Navy Journal", to- its students. The li- brary is also headquarters for the newest publication on the campus, The Michigan Polaris, which is de- voted to all NROTC activities. In keeping with the "naval atmos- phere" each of the rooms are given a name similar to that which they would be called at sea. The one, classroom, for example, is known as the "Chart House" and is equipped with special tables for map work. Novel Relics On Walls The offices of Captain Davidson, Lieut. Commander Wells L. Field and Lieut. Robie E. Palmer are all kept nautical with relics of the navy and :he ships on which they were former- ly stationed. On Commander Field's c fice wall is a diploma admitting aim to the group of those who had -rcsd Athe equator and in Lieutenant Palmer's office is another signifying hat he had been in a submarine nat was 200 feet under water. Both are signed by "Old Man Neptune." Rifles, a Browning light machine gun, fixed and separate ammunition, an aircraft bomb and a Lewis ma- chine gun are all stored in the Arm- ory, which will soon contain in addi- tion a four-inch -m and a mine. The torpedo belonging to the unit is housed in the hall. Expect Uniforms Soon Other rooms include the depart- anent office where tet oot are loaned to the students: the bos'n's Locker where the signal flags are kept: a locker room. and a special oreroom for umiforms. Blue uni- forms for the students are expected n the near future and white ones will be kept there for use during the summer. Next year when courses will be 3pen to two cl i-ian group formed during the World War. They will be presented here at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill auditorium as the third feature in the Choral Union Concert Series under the aus- pices of the University Musical So- ciety. The only changes in personnel have been the death of three; the com- mittment to a rest sanitorium of a fourth; the loss during 1926 of a chorister who settled down as a farm- er in Austria: the loss of one to Hol- lywood: and the resignation of one singer who was offered the director- ship of the Brooklyn School of Music. Conductor Jaroff selected Cossack singers, as replacements, from the come Don River Valley in Russia, singers aoete o famous for their "reckless horseman- -hou.ahere" ship and wild songs and frenzied Who urchases the thstemua. dances." Whodby te daneededp by eBell System' Jaroff, formerly an officer in the 2. productsn de- Imperial Russian Army, found him- akei tutor can oa9 self expatriated at the time of the What distric aval most f 3. hone supplies quiky avlae revolution. Gathering a group of sing-. p ing soldiers about him, most of them almost anywhere encountered in a military prison * lep necentralf camp, they sustained themselves sing- 4. Whoinstallstelepo ing in a masque, later widening their Western Electric, Western audience range. They are famous at The answers are' WesteElect the present for their rendition of mil- - Western but the itary songs, religious music, and Cos- 9 ..the answers, perhap, sack chants. jontafOU job, never! aso h eehone Ehrm nn o T lk illng he day to day needs of the telephobe EcrpannsToTalkg elpin them to meet and has To Hillel Group emergencies caused by ir5e st never lost its kick"in58yeas "The United States and the War So Western Elec telephone service the in Europe" will be the subject of an toward making your telphon address to be given by Prof. Howard twrgecnmalorld s best and mast -cal. M. Ehrmann of the history depart- ment to Avukah, student Zionist or- ganization, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Hillel Foundation. President Eve- lyn Sislin, '41, announced yesterday. Discussion will follow the talk which is to be preceded by the con- servative Sabbath services beginning at 7:30 p.m. Hurray, Hurray, oh happy day The little children all are gay The B.M.'s all laugh and play GARGOYLE'S coming oni TODAY! MulQ 11 II l