PGIX*I~ ~ ____ - -- THE MICHIGAN )AIY :AAR-Ci 17, 1942 War Training Class To Hear Army_ Officer Electronics Training Plan To Be Featured In Talk By Lieut. Zimmerman Dutlies Explained Lieut. F. A. Zimmerman, repre- sentative of the Chief Signal Officer of the War Department will visit Ann Arbor today to consult with students enrolled in a special war training course in the theory and use of Ulra- High frequency waves. Lieutenant Zimmerman will dis- cuss with members of the class, both as a group and individually, the op- portunities open to them in the Sig- nal Corps, Aircraft Warning Service. Although many graduates of this and smilar war training courses have already accepted positions in indus- try, Professor Holland director of the course has repeatedly stressed that industry cannot assure them exemp- tion from military service. Enlist In Reserve Corps Students enrolled in the course have been urged to enlist in the Re- serve Corps and it is with those who have already enlisted that Lieutenant Zimmerman is particularly interested in speaking. He will explain to these students how they may best serve the war effort when and if they are inducted into military service. The Electronics Training Plan, which is to be explained by Lieuten- ant Zimmerman, makes students who fulfill its requirements eligible for application for a commission as sec- ond lieutenant, for duty with the Sig- nal Corps, for Aircraft Warning Serv- ice, or for membership with the elec- tronics training group. Commissions Expected It is to be emphasized, however, that students enrolled in war-train- ing courses are, not necessarily obli- gated to accept a commission al- though they are naturally expected to do so. Students who have a degree in Electrical Engineering, who are 21, unmarried and physically sound are eligible for a commission and upon acceptance will not be subject to call as draft selectees. Successful applicants will be sent to England to receive special instruc- tion in the design and operation of secret devices for airplane detection. CLASSIFIED DI RECT ORY LAUNDERING LAUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c LOST and FOUND LOST-Pair of rimless glasses on campus. Please call Sacriz, 2-4231. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. 6c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c "REACH FOR A lucky number in- stead of a sweet" at the Blowout. HENDERSON'S HENCHMEN, Lo- cal No. 701. TAILORING and SEWING STOCKWELL and Mosher-Jordan residents--Alterations on women's garments promptly dlone. Opposite Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. 3c TYPiNG TYPING: L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., phone 5689. MISS ALLEN--Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. WANTED TO BUY MEN'S AND LADIES CLOTHING, suits, overcoats, typewriters, musi- cal instruments, ladies' furs, Per- sian lamb, mink, watches, dia- monds. Pay from $5 to $500. Rhone Sam, 5300. 229c (,h,,es ~iideittelsOf War' A"d ASSOCIATED P C T U R E PRESS N EWS Sigmund Cohn, '42F&C, publicity director of the World Student Service Fund, and Paul Lim-Yuen, '43, speak to Jordan Ha1l girls about Chinese war relief. Around the table are, left to right, Miss Esther Colton, house director, Virginia Chandler, '45, Miss Maxine Boone, dictician and Nita Everson, '45. Corps To Get Awards Today Certificates Of Red Cros_ Will Be Presented A banquet at 6 p.m. today in Lane Hall will celebrate the completion of the training period for the first Emergency Service Corps. Ten Boy Scouts have finished their training, and will be presented arm bands and Red Cross First Aid Cer- tificates by Dr. Elmer Townsley of the physical education department. Dr. R. Clyde Ford of Ypsilanti will be guest speaker for the evening. Mayor Leigh D. Young and Mr. Harz rison Caswell, head of civilian de- fense in Ann Arbor, have also been invited to attend. Recently organized, the Emergency Service Corps is under the direction of Dr. Townsley, Dr. Richard Boys of the English department and Officer Mayfield of the Ann Arbor .police force. The corps is designed to train Boy. Scouts, between the ages of 15-17 in emergency work. Instruc- tion in first aid, firemanship, finger- 'printing, public health, messenger work and other emergency jobs is offered. Hobbs To Give War Lecture 'South America And War' To Be Topic Sunday Recently returned from an exten- sive survey of sub-Equator nations, Prof.-Emeritus William H. Hobbs of the geology department will discuss "South America and the War" in a public lecture at 4 p.m. Sunday in Rackham Lecture Hall. Professor Hobbs, who will speak under the auspices of the Committee To Defend America, was a delegate to the first Pan-American Congress for Mining Engineering and Geol- ogy in Santiago, Chile. He represen- ted the Carnegie Endowment for In- ternational Peace and also the Uni- versity engineering college. During his trip Professor Hobbs was able to observe all but four of the South American republics, and arrived in Rio de Janeiro immedi- ately after a major conference had been called to discuss breaking of Axis relations. The South American political changes wrought by war were also seen by Professor Hobbs on his sur- vey. H A L F A S H I P B E T T E R T H A N N 0 N E-Fore portion of the American tanker E. 11. Blum is tied up at Norfolk, Va.. awaiting repairs-half a ship as the result of damage at sea, which broke the ship in two. Watertight bulkheads kept this half afloat T H E H A L F L E F T B E H 1 N D-Broken off from fore portion, stern end of tanker E. H. Blum wallows in the waves off Nor- folk, Va., after ship broke in two. Watertight bulkheads saved the other half. The E. H. Blum first got into trouble about Feb. 18. New ESMDT Program Slated For Opening Week Of April 13 More T1llal l . -(o!SCAS May Draw "I '401H>_I elt (4 Apgrifii'uaily 900 T'he tipoirarily-idle wheels of the University's dcfense training system will start turning again the week of April 13, when Dean IvanC. Craw- ford of the College of Engineering department will supervise a new series of courses under the Engineering, Science and Manag oment Defensel Training programtn. Even as 30-odd courses begun un- der a sinimilar series come nulnced last January were wound up last week, plans were be in la11id for the new sereis, whici Il'ai Crawford pre- dicts will involve a similar number, of courses ep7ected to draw ,a total enrolminwnt of about 900. 4 Alt bough .ost of te( cou ses will be presented in Detroit,, instruiction will; alsO be offered in Ann Arbor, Flint, Ja ckson. Dearborn and Grand Rapids. Grand Rapids is the only new addition to the list, while Ecorse and Royal Oak were represented in the last series and have been dropped. Present plans, though tentative and as yet ;incompljlete, call for the repetition of some of the courses of- fered under the last series; while oth- ers will be designed to give advance training based on the fundamentals presented in the last series. Several new courses are also contemplated. The final number of courses to be given has not yet been determined, Dean Crawford said, but present in- dications are that between 30 and 35 courses will be started. Meanwhile two sections of a course in Ordnance Materials Inspection, be- gun on campus in January and March respectively, also under the ESMDT program, are continuing, and Administrator Col. H. W. Miller of the engineering drawing depart- ment has announced that 76 men will be graduated from the first section early in April. Plans are now being undertaken to receive still another section of train- ees in Ordnance Materials Inspec- tion, as soon as they can be obtained through the Civil Service Commis- sion, Colonel Miller disclosed. A University credit course in Ul- tra-High-Frequency Techniques, cur- rently being taught by Prof. L. N. Holland of the electrical engineering department to 33 selected senior and graduate electrical engineers, is also part of the ESMDT program. Now well established as a definite success, the ESMDT courses were in- augurated last fall, when the first seriels was run off. Sponsored by the U.S. Office of Education, they are implemented through the University Extension Service and coordinated by Prof. R. H. Sherlock of the civil engineering department. C 0 T T 0 N C U T I E S-The customary slortage that permits the usual visibility of legs, etc., prevails in preview of cotton beachwear at Venice, Calif. Mona Desmond (left) and Frances Brig wear cotton prints created by California designers. C L M B T O F A M E-Now young Bob Smith can tell his pals that he shook the hand of Mike Naymick, 6' 8" hurler at the Bal- timore Orioles camp in Hollywood, Fla. Sports Writer Hugh Tarder gave Bob the boost; Gustav Carlson looks on. . U' / beiwo uo(plea hig gift for ally gilis 1)05 of fine W bit nan's or Gilbert (hoco- a~~2a4 ilaSe or a /ux of big/ NuRs. qualitfy Dotibl'-K bar{ csttl1wsI/i c and SIIJ rh(/h' gbo ofit