E* T THE MICHIGAN DAILY ii Y: ', iUARIi'H 17; ISM: ETWO TUESThiT. MARCH 11~ 1942 I .I i1 I SRA To HearI Last Address Rev. Bradford Abernathy To SpeakAt Rackham The Rev. Bradford S. Abernathy, secretary of the Federal Church Commission to Study the Bases of a Just and Durable Peace, will con- clude the Student Religious Associa- tion's spring lecture series with a talk' on the "Bases for a Just Peace" at 8:15 p.m. Friday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Mr. Abernathy was appointed to his present post in September. He is a graduate of Haverford College. He received his Bachelor of Divinity degree from the Colgate-Rochester Divinity School in 1933 and has stud- ied at both Oxford and the Univer- sity of Edinburgh. As head of the peace commission, Mr. Abernathy is in charge of pre- senting to the church the issues in- volved in the task of post-war re- construction. , I IP If t t t t I 1 c 1 1 T Y t Local Civilan Vo To Send SOS F Spurred on by Fire Chief Ben Zahn's observation that Ann Arbor's present force of 26 auxiliary fire- fighters isn't "half enough" to com- bat either bombs or fires, the local Civilian Defense Volunteer Office will send a special SOS for 26 more volunteer firemen beginning today. The firse chief announced that all I volunteers must be American citi- zens, preferably below 50 years old and capable of hard physical exer- tion. He wants no "squeamish fire- men" because everybody's got to have e his fingerprints taken. To enroll new volunteers, a special staff of registrars will be on duty at the Armory daily. Office hours are Sfroni 9 a .m. to noon and from 1 to 51 p.m. The drive will end in a week. The firemen will all go through an intensive program of training, after which they must pass the standard R 20-hour Red Cross first-aid course and complete a set quota of hours devoted to fire-fighting instruction. The present staff of 26 men -are WPB Ban Hits Jukes WASHINGTON, March 16.-(A)- The War Production Board tonight ordered the shut down of all manu- facture of juke boxes, weighing ma- chines, pinball games and other amusement machines on May 1. The order affects an industry of about 30 companies, mostly in the Chicago area, employing about 10,000 per- French Group To Hear Talk ByProf HamI Attempts at humor and other oddi- ties occurring in a wide variety of medieval French texts form the basis for the seventh in the series of lec- tures sponsored by the Cercle Fran- cais, which will be given at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow by Prof. Edward B. Ham of the Romance language department., In considering these "Curiosities Medievales," Professor Ham will at- tempt to indicate that the medieval comic spirit was less naive than has long been popularly supposed, and that the medieval Frenchman was much less credulous about what he read than modern critics usually ad- mit. Among the materials he will use as illustrations are the bestiaries, fabliaux, medieval books of manners, short poems, proverbs and the "epic- grotesque." lunteer Office or More Firemen already in training and have been divided into two groups, one of which has finished its first-aid course. Even full-time members of the fire de- partment are learning a few things about bandages. The chief has ordered 25 sets of rubber cats, boots and helmets to be used by the auxiliary corps of fire- fighters. Close cooperation between the "volunteers" and the regular fire department is expected and all fire- men will be subect to short-notice call. 'La I nd epend enia' "i Ofered Tonight "A bit of old Spain" will be carried into Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre t 8:30 p.m. today when La Sociedad Hispanica will present "La Indepen- dencia." A costume play dealing with the manners in Spain in the eighteenth century, "La Independencia" is an unusually large offering for a lan- guage club. Shooting and shouting, abandoned babies, arevolution, hi- larious situations and romantic en- tanglements prove that the author, Manuel Breton de los Herreros, made the action abundant and fast-mov- ing. H' Quartet- 'To he Shores Of Tripoli' Ball Proceeds To lie Dottated To Inter-Club Tickets for the International Ball,. whose proceeds will be donated to the Emergency Fund for Foreign Students will go on sale at the end of this week, Robert Klinger, presi- dent of the Inter-Club Board and assistant counselor to foreign stu- dents, announced yesterday.} The Inter-Club Board, which is sponsoring the ball to be held on Friday, April 17, will present all the profits to the emergency fund. Do- nations to cut the expenses of the ball are being accepted by the board. The Emergency Fund for Foreigni Students was established by Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson to aid students with acute financial difficulties. The war has increased student difficulty in obtaining money from their homelands. The loans, which may be paid back whenever the bor- rowers can afford it, have added fur- ther burdens to the already limited r'esources of the emergency fund. A long period of emotional repres- sion in childhood may be the cause1 for many periodic headaches experi- enced by adults, Dr. Floyd 0. Due, instructor in psychiatry, hypothe- sized in an article in the March issueI of the University Hospital Bulletin.1 These psychogenic headaches, Dr.. Due explained, may begin with aI continued subconscious presence of anger or hostility, begun in relationI to family conflicts or' rivalyy with other children in the home, produc- ing an emotional "set" which may persist through adulthood. With the addition of another fac- tor, such as an allergic sensitivity, he pointed out, the attack of a head- ache might be set off. But allergy alone is not responsible for such an attack, he added. Of extreme importance in the diag- nosis of a headache is the method of description used by the patient himself, Dr. Due asserted. The hys- Child's Emotional Repression May Result In HeadIaches Later By HOWARD FENSTEMAKER terical type can often point out de- -Daily Photo by Will Sapp Shown as they took their oath of enlistment in the Marine Corps Reserve last week are (left to right) Dale Chamberlain, '42, George Callens, '43, Al Darling, '42, and Jack Vaughan, '43. They are aspirants to the rank of second lieutenant in the Corps. The program is similar to the Navy's V-7 Reserve Plan. finite areas of attack, often drama- tizing the extent of suffering; the borderline psychotic or early schizo- phrenic is usually unable to describe his headache; and patients who ex- hibit anxiety frequently experience headaches wit ha constricting band- like sensation around the head, he explained. A complete history of the patient's life situation, wtih a correlation of attacks with changes in internal and environmental situations will usually throw light upon the most puzzling problems of diagnosis, according to Dr. Due. Such a complete history, however, is often difficult to obtain in one interview because of a natur- al resistance to the admission of dis- turbing conflicts, he commented. The study of headaches must be approached as a totality rather than as a single anatomical r physiologi- cal concept, he emphasized. Fre- quently, he pointed out, an illness or symptom such as a headache may be seen as the patient's attempt to solve an intolerable situation. Instructions For World Student Service Fund Collectors Instructions to people on posts for W.S.S.F. Drive: 1. All questions are cleared through Lane Hall (4121-Ext. 2148). 2. Do not leave post until someone comes to relieve you. If you have to leave before Ch e next person comes, call Lane Hall. 3. Last person on the post, return the bank to Lane Hall, State Street. 4. Every few hours, sokneone will replenish your supply of book marks, and empty you r bank. POST Front of Alumni Hall Front of Angell Hall Front of Library Romance Languages Bldg. East Engin'ring Bldg. Front of League East Quad West Quad Unionwalk N. back of Angell Hall Arcade Entrance Engine Arch North U. and State Street Walk East of Waterman Law Quadrangle In Front of Union 8 J. Weinstein M. Lovejoy M. Englehardt M. Moore R. Summerhays S. Field W. Todd D. Orcutt B. Walker L. Warner D. Schaible R. Schoel J. Boult 9 D. Levy D. Zollner R. Schulze E. Root' B. French III M. R. Teller Titus N. Norris R. Leshine L. Morrison D. Hendricks S. Churchill V. Rohr R. Coe R. Teesdale E. Gutekunst F. Aaronson G. Zrrnack F, Vyn L. Cunningham 0. Johnson B. Partetiselder B. Geltmer N. Filstrup 11. Almdale J. Ramsay A. Drake B. Matthews I. Stevenson 14 Nelson V. Purdorn 0. Shimmons J., Burnham R. Scott H. Seltzer it. Shuey E. Luckhaml S. Greene J. Johnson C. Lauzoil M. Kendall 12 J. Cooper M. Elkins M. A. Dewey B. Kefgen A. Wilkie V. White M L. Ewing ,J. McKinnon J. Manwaringf I. Aronstein B. Sachs R. Clark R. Schwab E Laufer I W. Robinson J. Sollitt P. Brown R. Clark W. Collamore M. J. Chriswell L. Judson E. Hitt H. Organick R. Gustafson D. Harris V. Morse R. Carlson P. Polumbaum T. Johnson H Organick W. Westrate E. Longyer C. Thompson L. Reisman J. Wilkie K. Gladdin S. Maxwell R. Sharpe 2 J. Wiese M. Sellon B. Newman V. Jominy P. Mandel G. Parsons F. McCarthy 4 N. (ild N. Nussman G. larris L. Price A. Holt M. Wallach E:. Ph 5 F. J. M. Hoffman Hooker Radford eishman oldfarb ger Moms lest Gardner M. M. Tobin M. L. Curran A. Grunewald V. Frey J. Hall B. Shott L. Newman N. Church J. Linker P. Lovejoy B. Yale H. Byer J. G W. A J. Th D. W D. Weidman G A H Wills Caughey Heavenrich son ma tia nic pre con int ', ls. Dr. Charles Staubach of the Span- The Board said the shutdown would ish department, who is directing the w_- ke available for war uses substan- production, has announced the main Prof. Eaton To Talk Today [ quantities of copper, aluminum, characters to be: Marian Edgar, '43, Best D ressed Jan O n Cam pus kel and other critical metals, and Emil Hurtik, '45, Mary L. Gunn, '43, On Intelligence Service dicted that it would hasten the Henry Wolf, '44, An Terbreuggen, B Discoveo ts version of the $75,000,000 industry '45, John Falconieri, '42, Bert Ludy, U1v Prof. John W. Eaton, of the Ger- o war production. '42, and Allan Anderson, '44. -_-- man department, will speak on "In- (Continued from Page 1) Still to be held are contests at a telligence Work in the Last War"'at California university and Cornell. a meeting of the Deutscher Verein by two methods. A committee of In a forthcoming issue, Esquire will at 8 p.m. today in Room 305 of the A l Proceeds For campus leaders, later to be selected, run a complete story of this coast to Michigan Union. will nominate 10 candidates on the coast competition, including stories During the first World War, Pro- W.c.t le a of the universities involved and a fessor Eaton was a member of the A iedar e l basis of consistent well-dressed and composite color picture. British intelligence. He now teaches well-groomed appearance. Style set- a course in military German. His ters who have been inadvertently /F Dty o't They Io talk will be given in English and will overlooked by the committee may en- deal not only with German but with ,-. &4 ~~~~ter competition by submitting a pe- Trr5AlTh ia he use of any foreign language in ROM tition endorsing the candidacy and wartime military intelligence. with signed with 25 names to the Student We hear a lot of talk about "Cali--- OVA FYODOROVA Offices at the Union. fornia drivers" but Ann Arbor drivers eWinner of the contest will not be have their off days too. i inr fte ots wl otb av hi ofdysto eroe Women chosen by Esquire, nor its representa- Police received a report that one MCI A at the Front- EXTR tive now on c pushelpinit atman was sleeping in his car on the War Nurses in Action EXTR tiemnow on y n l campus hligwt r street. Upon investigation they found rageensbu b a al amusthe driver had been to a party and Through * Unusual Tiger Hunting in Siberia poll beginning Monday. Michigan'swsringrtha "sbee tof pa r e *Hairless Hector (Cartoon) BDMOC, the man who pulls down he attempted to drive. Police sentW the most votes, the winer, -will be he atmed t d Poi s W sd announced at Zoot Suit Stuff, where him home in a taxi and put his car MENDELSSOHN THEATRE an all male crew will sport local mer- away for him. chants' latest spring styles. Jack Elisfor, 704 Felch, became -. 3 Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8:15 P.M.--39c Box Office operas Wed. 10 AM. Michigan is the ninth university to pretty angry when another car col- BENJAMIN Phone 6300 for Reservations hold a concerted hunt for its lided with his so he stepped out toB A Special Matinee Saturday afternoon 3:30 P.M. BDMOC. Other universities where repimand the other dive He nev BLAKE smoke outs have been held include ei had a chance it was a woman North Carolina, Syracuse, Pennsyl adiver sAllhe could tell police was ART CI NEMA LEAGU E vna icniNrhetrN that she was petty nasty . braska, Louisiana State, n yrA F I'f AND V MANY t : - - A Grand Congratultionsture to the W. S. Butterfield Theatres, Inc. .:Nes WA are pleased to have had the opportunity to decorate this beautifLul theatre, WHO IS IT LAST PERFORMANCE /I ter ry 'iFAr flTTENTION! t KEEP IN STEP! with Gargocoyle 11 III