PAGE TWO Enrolling Ends For New Aid CourseToday Qualified Civilian Women Given Final Opportunity For Red Cross Training Ending a three-day period of reg- istration for the newly formed Nurses Aid course sponsored by the Red Cross, qualified women will have a final opportunity to enroll from 9 to 12 a.m. today at the Civilian Defense Volunteers' Office in the Armory. Restricted to 30 members, the ap- plicants for the course must satisfy 'three requirements, according to Mrs. Merle Maline, Red Cross Exec- utive Secretary. Only women be- tween the ages of 18 and 50 who :can pass a physical exam and have a high school education will be al- lowed to enroll in the course. Designed to provide registered nurses with trained assistants dur- ing the present emergency and in times of peace, for work in public health, hospitals and other nursing fields, the seven-week course will offer 80 hours of practical training. Classes are expected to start April 1. The. Nurses Aid course is being offered in Ann Arbor for the first time and will be financed by the county chapter of the Red Cross. Instruction will be given by regis- tered nurses with the cooperation of the University and St. Joseph's hop- pitals. At the completion of the course, Red Cross certificates and pins will be awarded the members. Royon Warns Of Disasters To War Youth "Among the children of Europe today,, there are more mental casu- alties resulting from evacuation than bombs," Dr. Andree Royon, Belgian child psychologist, declared in an address on behalf of the American Save the Children Federation yes- terday in the Rackham Auditorium. "There are 130,000,000 children in Europe, and not a single one leads a normal child's life," Dr. Royon claims. "Privation and now apathy are everywhere." The war has brought a marked in- crease in delinquency, stinnilated by disorganization of families and schools, and aided by blackouts. "The effect of the tempo and ten- sion of war on 'young minds pro- duces a nervousness and inability to settle down," Dr. Royon asserted. Children under two stay with their mothers, while those over five years of age a'e evacuated with their school units. It has been the evacua- tion of the two-to-five-years-olds in- clusive that has given the British government the most grief. 'here are 3,000,000 under-fives in England, and consequently the need for nursery shelters, such as those spOinsored by SCF and a sister branch in England, is tremendous, Dr. Royon ethphasized. But 28 months of ex- perience has proven that this is the only solution to the problem of child health and security. CLASSIFIED DIR ECT ORY LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c FOR SALE CANARIES, Hollywood singers, Par- rakeets, Lovebirds, Cockatiels, bird supplies. Mrs. Ruffin, 562 . S. Seventh. Phone 5330. 266c MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 ,S. State. 6c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- 'Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. :- Killns Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c DON'T STAY AT HOME and be a flat tire. Blowout at the Union on March 20th. ANN ARBOR RAIN- COAT AND RUBBER COMMIT-. TEE. 273c TAILORING and SEWING STOCKWELL and Mosher-Jordan residents-Alterations on women's - garments promptly done. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. 3c WANTED TO BUY CASH for used clothing, men and ladies.' Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c THE MICHIGZAN DAILY SATURDAY. MARCH 14. 1942 A-F I IL A JLd JL Maj. Richard H. Carmichael (above), U. S. Army air corps, com- manded eight heavy American bombers which raided Japanese shipping at Salamua, New Guinea, the Army announced. Two ships were sunk. Men's Council Guides Manyr Organizations (Continued from Page 1) gress, Interfraternity Council, The Daily, and the Dean of Students. (A suggestion which seems to be gaining weight calls for a Men's Ju- diciary Council made up of the stu- dent rhembers of the selection com- mittee, with one or two possible ad- ditions.) Another criticism of Men's Judi-' ciary for which it cannot be entirelyI blamed, is a lack of interest within the council itself. Proposed reme- dies for this include granting of judi- siary powers similar to those now exercised in elections. Some sources of opinion advocate more responsi- bility and proper prestige for council members as a possible solution. According to Slocum (who is con- tinually receiving letters addressed to the "President of University of Mich- igan Student Body") only the council president and$ secretary have enough duties to warrant a full-time job. Slocum is attending a convention at Purdue University at the end of this month to see how student gov- ernment works at other schools. He also plans to propose a reorganiza- tion of the present Men's Judiciary. Present plans for council reorgani- zation ill be based both on systems already in use elsewhere and on con- ditions here. Film To icrease Student 'Bomnber First Service Corps Invited To Lane Hall Ten Scouts Will Be Given Red Cross Recognition At Banquet On Tuesday Completion of training of the first Emergency Service Corps will be cele- brated by a banquet to be held at 6 p.m., Tuesday in Lane Hall. Dr. Elmer Townsley of the physi-' cal education department will pre- sent arm bands and Red Cross First Aid Certificates to the 10 Boy Scouts who have finished their training. Guest speaker for the evening will be Dr. R. Clyde Ford of Ypsilanti. Mayor Leigh D. Young and Mr. Harrison Caswell, head of civilian defense in Ann Arbor, have also been invited to attend. The service corps was organized by Dr. Townsley, Dr. Richard Boys of the English department and Officer Mayfield of the Ann Arbor police force. The course consists of train- ing Boy Scouts, between the ages of 15-17. for emergency work. Instruc- tion in first aid, firemanship, finger- printing, public health, messenger work, and other emergency jobs are offered. Meetings are held every Saturday afternoon for three hours in Waterman Gymnasium. Require- ments include a physical examina- tion, parental consent, and the at- tainment of First Class Scoutsman- ship. The second training period will be- :gin immediately, and Dr. Boys urges freshman boys to attend to act as' leaders. The Emergency Training Corps is integrated with the national defense program, and has been de- scribed as "an essential unit" in civil- ian defense. French Group To Hear Talk Prof. Ham Will Discuss MedievalWritings Gullibility vs. genuine humor will be the topic under discussion when Prof. Edward B. Ham of the Depart- ment of Romance Languages pre- sents the seventh lecture in the Cer- cle Francais series at 4:15 p.m. Wed- nesday in Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Drawing from some of the "Curios- ites Medievales" that he has studied, Professor Ham will show two aspects in interpretation of these strange tales from medieval literature. Until recently, students of medieval writing were of the opinion that they were constructed to cater to a gullible~con- temporary public, but in the past few years the idea has come forth that perhaps, after all, they were directed merely to the readers' sense of hu- mor. Conspicuous among the stories in question are the unique narratives of the life habits of animals. Col. Ganoe To Lecture At International Center A talk by Col. William A. Ganoe, Commandant of the University ROTC unit, entitled "How to Handle Men," will be given at 7:30 p.m. to- morrow at the regular Sunday night supper meeting in the International Center. Colonel Ganoe, author of the most authoritative military history of the United States and a former profes- sor of history at West Point, is also one of the most noted authorities on' personnel management in the coun- try. March 27, 281 Drs. Carl And Gerty Cori Will Present Lectures On Organic Substances Three lectures in two days by Drs. Carl and Gerty Cori of the Depart- ment of Pharmacology, University of Washington Medical School, will be presented March 27 and 28 under the auspices of the Biological Chem- istry Department and the Medical School. First of the talks, all to be pre- sented in the Rackham Amphithe- atre, and illustrated, will be given by Dr. Carl Cori at 4:15 p.m. Friday, March 27. His topic will be "The Role of Enzymes in Carbohydrate Metabolism." The second in the series will be giv- en at 8:15 p.m. the same day by Dr. Gerty Cori. She will discuss "The Isolation and Properties of Some En- zymes Concerned with Carbohydrate Metabolism." Last Lecture Saturday Last of the lectures will be offered at 11 a.m. Saturday, March 28, by Dr. Carl Cori. His subject will be "The Enzymatic Conversion of Glu- cose to Glycogen." Drs. Cori, a team of husband and wife, were born in Prague, Czecho- slovakia and came to this country in 1922. Bth received their M.D.'s at Prague in 1920. From 1922 to 1931 they served as biochemists at the State Institute for the Study of Malignant Diseases in Buffalo, N.Y. Since 1931, the Coris have been associated with the Medi- cal School at the University of Wash- ington. Dr. Gerty Coi is a research associate in pharmacology in the same department as her husband. Outstanding Team The Coris are considered one of the most able husband and wife teams in the country, distinguished in this respect much as are Drs. George and Gladys Dick, noted for their studies of scarlet fever and the "Dick" test. Noted for his studies on the syn- thesis of glycogen, the reserve carbo- hydrate of the body and the fuel for muscular exercise, Dr. Carl Cori was elected in 1941 a member of the Na- tional Academy of Sciences. The lectures will be open to the public, but will be of special value to students in medicine and the bio- logical sciences. Wolverine To Hold Dance The Michigan Wolverine will swing tonight, and all seven hundred mem- bers of the co-op and their friends have been invited tonattend the rec- ord dance to be held at 9 p.m. in the main dining room. THREE CHEERS - / // for After Show Lunches of Marshall's 1ex 0toth SLATE Theare TOAY VOTED THE BES7 PICTURE OF 1941 Dr. Stan bach Say Is'Tuned In IF By AUDREY RUBENSTEIN "In tune with the war effort" is the description Dr. Charles Staubach of the Spanish department gives to La Sociedad Hispanica's current pro- duction, "La Independencia." Of primary importance is the spe-' cial language experience the mem- Enzyme Talks Will Be Given s Spanish Play SithWar Efforts'I bers of the cast are gaining. Facility in speaking Spanish may enable the students to acquire positions.as in- terpreters, liaison officers or radio monitor listeners, Staubach reports. The play itself is an expression of the principles of democracy, human decency and dignity. The author, ManuelBreton de los Herreros, rein- forces time and again his belief in the very principles for which we are fighting today. The betrayal of the hero is reminiscent of similar situ- ations in totalitarian countries today, and the triumph of the liberal cause echoes our goal. Perhaps it's Mr. Hitler's fault, but La Sociedad is finding it difficult to obtain guns for its revolution scenes! War conditions have made it impos- sible for any of the miilita'y groups in town to lend rifles to the cast. Con- sequently, the property committee is feverishly devising reasonable fac- similes to serve the purpose. Humorously speaking, ten men in the 1-A classification are having a golden opportunity for a little ad- vance military training! They are undergoing a week of intensive train- ing in marching, shouldering arms, and adapting themselves to uniforms. Describing "La Independencia" as its. "biggest and best" production, La Sociedad Hispanica will present it at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. The play is a comedy of manners of the eighteenth century in Spain, and the costuming will re- flect the life of that period. The au- thor was little affected by the Ro- mantic movement, and in "La Inde- pendencia" there are melodramatic touches which suggest that he was mocking the Romantics. Sparkling dialogue, exciting and hilarious ac- tion and outstanding characters in- dicate that "La Independencia" will be an unusual performance. Tickets for the play will be on sale Monday and Tuesday at the box of- fice in the League. Ii _.__ _. ___.__.u.__ ____ _.__.__ _.. _._® n 100 I to CHURCH Scholarship' Platt One of the first contributions to the Bomber Scholarship Fund will be made from the proceeds of "Pro- fessor Mamlock," Russian film to be shown at 8 p.m. today in Natural Science Auditorium. This movie, showing the effects of Nazi rule upon a Jewish doctor in Germany, was one of the first anti- Nazi pictures made and is still rated by critics as one of the finest for- eign films shown in this country. "Professor Mamlock" is being pre- sented by the American Student Un- ion as part of its educational pro- gram and with the desire to help further the plan of providing schol- arships for Michigan soldiers when they return from service in the armed frees. Tickets may be purchased from any. ASU member or at the door. * DIREC LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION sponsored jointly by Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches Zion Lutheran Church, E. Washington St. at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church worship service. Sermon, "Appealing to the Scriptures," by Rev. E. C. Stellhorn. Trinity Lutheran Church, E. William St. at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church worship service. Sermon, "Christ and the Cross for the Crises of Life- When we find it hard to pray His way," by Rev. Henry O. Yoder. Lutheran Student Association, Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington 4:15 P.M. A Cappella Choir practice. 5:30 P.M. Association meeting with supper. Speaker for the evening, Mr. Clement Shoe- maker, vicar of Zion Lutheran Church. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH State Street between Washington and Huron Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and J. Edward Lantz Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director Mary Porter Gwin, organist Ouch: Riflemen Suffer Mass Def eat Disaster overtook the University ROTC Rifle Team last week when in one shooting they lost simultaneous matches to the University of Tennes- see, Montana State University, the University of California, Coe College (Cedar Rapids, Ia.), the University of Wisconsin and the University of Idaho. What little encouragement there was was obtained from the fact that their only victory, over Purdue Uni- versity by a score of 1,836 to 1,678, came where it was most effective-in the fiiing for the Big Ten champion- ships. Led by James Shelden, '45, the University team fired a score of 3,593 for the ten-man matches, and a total of 1,831 for the five-man scoring. Shelden turned in a total of 374 out of a possible 400 as high score. The scores submitted by the other schools were: Tennessee, 3,684; Cali- fornia, 3,760; Coe College, 3,657; Idaho, 3,765; Montana, 1,885 (five- man team), and Wisconsin, 1,853 (five-man team). In the match with Purdue, one of a series of round-robin matches which will eventually pit all Big Ten teams against each other, Richard 0. Jones, '43E, fired the high Michi- gan score, turning in a 362 target. Still unreported are the results of the Hearst Trophy matches fired re- cently, while the team engages In- diana University this week. Verne Kennedy, '42E, is captain of the University squad, while Lieut. L. W. Peterson and Sgt. D. G. Bonnewell of the military science department are coaching. 9:30 A.M. Class for University students in the Wesley Foundation Assembly Room, Prof. Kenneth Hance, leader. 10:40 A.M. Church School for nursery, begin- ners, and primary departments. Young chil- dren may be left in these departments during worship service. 10:40 A.M. Worship service. Dr. T. V. Smith, Professor of Philosophy of the University of Chicago, is being brought by the Loud Lec- tureship. His topic is "Discipline in Our Democracy." 6:00 P.M. Wesleyan Guild meeting for Uni- versity students and their friends in Wesley Foundation Assembly room. Dr. T. V. Smith. will be the speaker. Fellowship hour and supper~ will follow this meeting. 7 :30 P.M. Newly-Weds meet in the Church Par- lors. Prescott Stocking will lead the discus- sion on "The Relationship of the Family In- come and Building." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division at Catherine The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector. The Rev. Frederick W. Leech, Student Chaplain The Rev. John G. Dahl, Curate George Faxon, Organist and Choirmaster. 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M. Parish Communion Breakfast. 11:00 A.M. Kindergarten, Harris Hall. 11:00 A.M. Junior Church. 11:00 A.M. Service of Confirmation and Sermon by The Rt. Rev. Herbert H. H. Fox, S.T.D., Retired Bishop of Montana. 4:00 P.M. Confirmation Tea, Harris Hall. 6:00 P.M. Organ Recital by Mr. George Faxon. COLLEGE WORK PROGRAM--Harris Hall. 7.30 PM .Eiscopal Student Guild Meeting. CHURCH OF NEW JERUSALEM Rev. William H. Beales of Detroit will hold a meeting Sunday evening at 7:30 at the residence of Miss Flora C. Buell, 2014 Wash- tenaw Ave., Ann Airbor. BETHLEHEM CHURCH (Evangelical and Reformed) 423 South Fourth Avenue, Theodore Schmale, Pastor. 9:00 A.M. Service in German. 9:30 A.M. Church School. 10:30 A.M. Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "God's Balances." 6:00 P.M. Student Guild. 6:00 P.M. Young People's League Supper for the Confirmation Class. CHURCH OF CHRIST Place of meeting: Second floor, Y.M.C.A. Building, 110 N. Fourth Ave. 10:00 A.M. Scripture study. Lesson topic: "The Mighty Works of Jesus." 11:00 A.M. Morning worship. Sermon subject: "Approved Unto God", to be delivered by Garvin M. Toms, minister. 7:30 P.M. Evening service. Sermon topic: "Why Must One Be Baptized?" This will be the second in a series on "Christian Baptism." Wednesday, March 18- 7:30 P.M. Midweek Bible Study. Lesson topic: Matthew 8. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Location: State and William Streets Minister: Rev. Leonard A. Parr Director of Student Activities: Mrs. Vera Bucknell Thompson. 11:45 A.M. Special Student Service held in the renovated church. Dr. Parr will preach on the subject "Unturned Cakes." 4:00 P.M. A Student Open House will be held in the church parlors, consisting of a guided tour of the renovated church, followed by a reception and tea provided by the Student Advisory Committee. 5:30 P.M. Ariston League, high school group, in Pilgrim Hall. Clyde Greenfield, president of the Jackson Ass'n will talk on "Questions and Answers about Pilgrim Fellowship." FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Washtenaw William P. Lemon, D.D., Minister Mark W. Bills, Director of Music Franklin Mitchell, Organist 9:30 A.M. Church School. Classes for all age groups. Mr. and Mrs. Class meets in Piggott Parlor. 10:45 A.M. Morning Worship. "Healing for Hu- Mans," Lenten sermon by Dr. Lemon. 10:45 A.M. Nursery during morning worship. 6:00 P.M. Tuxis Society will meet for devotion- als and discussion of recent lectures led by on MJCH IGAN THE CASE OFeat>1 fix, THE DEBUTANTE! W a JOO A° "ha, ICI hfl 2'MORTx T 1 3. / 77 l - .R ch r Liee ly I III 1 1