PAGE EGHT THE MICRIGAN D AILY SUNDAY, MARCH 33 Defense Courses To Begin Science, Management Trammg ASSOCIATED PRESS * Plans for the spring series of En- gineering, Science and Management Defense Training courses took more definite shape yesterday when Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the engineering college revealed that final arrange- ments had been made for a total of 33 courses to be begun the week of April 13. As in previous series, Detroit will again get the majority of these courses designed to turn out tech- nically trained men for work in de- fense industries, a total of 25 having been assigned to that city. Three For Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, given two courses in the winter series, will take on three this time, a course in Advanced Machine Drafting superseding a course in De- scriptive Geometry offered previous- ly, while Product Supervision will be new to the list. Prof. M. B. Eichel- berger of the engineering drawing Hillel Plans For Passover Announced Plans for the traditional celebra- tion of the eight day long Feast of Passover, beginning 6:30 p.m. April 1, including observance of the special diet, were announced yesterday by David Crohn, '43, student director of Hillel Foundation. Meals in the ritualistic tradition will be served at Lane Hall. The first two nights of the feast will be cele- brated by the Seder, the ceremonial, dinner signifying the events at the time the Israelites escaped from the bondage of the Egyptians. Services will be lead by Rabbi Je- hudah M. Cohen, director of Hillel Foundation, Mr. Samuel Levy, David Crohn and Jack Lewin-Epstein, '43. The Hillel Choral Group conducted by Donna Weiss, '43, will sing at the services. Reservations for the meals or the department will again conduct his course in Mechanical Drawing. Other cities participating in the new series will be Flint, Dearborn, Grand Rapids and Jackson. Ecorse and Royal Oak, represented in the last series, have been dropped this time, while Grand Rapids is the only newcomer to the list. Facultymen To Instruct Instruction for the courses, most of which will last for eight weeks, will be given largely by College of Engineering facultymembers, though men obtained from outside indus- tries will assist in several of the sec- tions. Also included in the ESMDT pro- gram is the course in Ordnance Ma- terials Inspection now being given by the College of Engineering. This course, running 12 weeks, now has an enrollment of about 130, in two sections, and a third section is ex- pected to start study early in A ril. A course in Ultra-High-Frequen- cy Techniques, currently being taught selected senior and graduate electri- cal engineers by Prof. L. N. Holland of the electrical engineering depart- ment, is also a part of the program. All courses scheduled for the spring series will get under way either April 13 or 14, except a course in Aerial Bombardment Protection under Prof. Glenn L. Alt of the civil engineering department, which will be opened in Detroit April 16. Longer Course In contrast to the usual eight-week schedule, Jackson will have a 16- week course in Industrial Safety En- gineering, present plans indicate. Sponsored by the U.S. Office of Education, the ESMDT program courses are implemented by the Uni- versity Extension Service, Prof. R. H. Sherlock of the civil engineering department doing the coordinating. Transportationi Club Will Witness Movies D. NEWS +k F LAVOR ED TO A SAl# LOR'S TASTE -- Gobs aboard one of Uncle Sam's new cruisers find all the luxury of the corner drugstore in this fountain wh ere a soda can be had for the asking. Seder will' be taken at Hillel Foun-. The transportation club of the En- dation until March 26 for the whole gieerng College will meet for the week. The prices are available at first time this semester at 7:30 p.m. Hillel Foundation. on Wednesday in the East Engineer- The observance of Passover will be ing Building to see a motion picture sponsored by Hillel Foundation with concerned with shipping on the Great the aid of the Michigan Synagogue Lakes. Conference. The picture, entitled "The James Rand in Action" shows the opera- tion of a Great Lakes cargo steamer. Detroit On 24-Hour Vigil Sanford Stone, '43E, program chair- DETROIT, March 21.-P)--De- man of the transportation club, ex- troit's air raid warning center, part plained .that the picture is of un- of the city's secret $22.000 bomb- usual interest because the "James proof and gas-proof control center Rand" was the first self-loading secretly located, will be operated on cargo steamer on the Great Lakes. a 24-hour basis starting Monday, A short business meeting will fol- Glenn C. Richards, newly appointed low the movie. Plans for a field trip city commander of the Citizens' De- to Ford's Greenfield Village will be fense Corps, said today. discussed. i A T O 3 A-Controversy over his draft reclassification-from class IA to 3A-follows Ted Williams, 23, American league bat- ting champ, right down to the Red Sox camp at Sarasota, Fla. He hit .406 last year. Williams, who joined Boston & 1939, says he wants to play this year to help his mother and to pay out on some annuities. Current salary is reported at $30,000. FACE F A C T S-Swedish army motorcyclist, on duty in the bitterly cold north, wears a chamois mask that gives him this ghost-like look. He's a dis- patch rider. R OS E I N R I O-Pretty dancer in Rio de Janeiro giving out with the carioca was only one of thousands of carefree Brazilians who staged their annual pre-Lenten carnival -with a zest that erased all war-fostered gldomniness. ,,;4 , ) 5 A \) { ~' ,.* -4 r , .~R EA O N-Lowell Mellett, director of office of government reports, told congressional * economy committee that $600,- S I T U A T I O N U N D E R CON T R 0 L-Tiny cardboards sticking up from a diagram repre- 000 building he asks for, in capi- ,senting an aircraft production factory deep underground "somewhere in England" tell these observers tal, is to make it easy for pers exactly where each unit of work is, how fast it progresses, and whether there's a "bottleneck" need- sons to "obtain direction and ing immediate attention. This coitrol room keeps constant check on workshops farther below. Information" in Washington. I~.C.*-- I A If% a ,_________ , ,--..v 1 nr "~