P E THE MICHIGAN DAILY &-TURPAX, App'll, H'. l9l'? Noted Pianist Will Be Featured In Annual Spring Contest Here Pictures From The Associated Press: Bataan Peninsula: here Heroes Died The music will be unquestionably good, but it will be a band with a heritage almost as interesting as its music which will take the stage Tues- day when the University Concert Band presents its annual Spring Con- cert in Hill Auditorium. When the Associated Press voted the band "All-American" last year, it wasn't just an honorary title, for there are no less then 17 states rep- resented in the band, some members coming from as far as Texas, Wyo- ming and even Hawaii. It is probabl that the band has ]dorms Make Preparations For Air-Raids, visited almost all the states repre- sented, too, as during the past five years the Michigan Bands have tra- veled an estimated 15,000 miles, in- cluding trips to Harvard, Pennsyl- vania, Yale and Minnesota. On each shorter trip the band takes a truckload of equipment and a staff of six men to accompany it, while long trips make it necessary to comandeer an entire baggage car. Several thousand dollars have baen invested by the University in band equipment. Proof that music still provides an enjoyable and enlightening avocation to those who do not choose it as a career, almost half of the band mem- bership is drawn from colleges of the University other than the Szhool of Music. (Continued from Page 1) is chief personnel warden. Building warden is Mary Barnes, dietitian for the Quadrangle. The resident adviser for each in- dividual house is the personnel war- den for that house] In addition assis- tant wardens, group wardens and morale and first aid wardens have been appointed. Eighty residence halls staff mem- bers and student officers are en- rolled in official Red Cross first aid courses. These courses are being con- ducted by two residence hall officials: Dr. Homer Howes and Dr. J. Brown Farrior, resident advisers for Tyler and Wenley ho'uses, respectively. Mimeographed sheets with complete instructions for action in the event of an air raid will be distributed to the students and to the appointed protection officials. Uniform instructions for blackouts in each unit have also been given. All the steps to be taken in the actual blacking out of a building and in the reverse process for restoring light af- ter an all-clear signal have been clearly indicated. Precautions against fire and incen- diary bombs are well underway in all buildings. Steel drums containing sand have been placed either in the attics or upper floors of the houses and pails have been provided for handling the sand or for incendiary bomb receptacles. Other fire fight- ing equipment such as rakes, long handled shovels and water hose will be added as soon as it is available, War Courses Will Be Given Defense Training To Start In Seven Municipalities "Education for victory" might well be the slogan when 34 Engineering, Science and Management Defense Training courses, designed to train men for key positions in war indus- tries, get under way Monday, Tues- day and Thursday in seven Michigan industrial cities. Sponsored by the U. S. Office of Education, worling through the Uni- versity Extension Service, the pro- gram will see 25 courses opened in Detroit, three in Ann Arbor, two in Flint and one each in Dearborn, Grand Rapids and Jackson. Already completed are four other such programs, two of which have been run off since the beginning of the current school year. More than 1,800 men have been trained in these two series, and it is expected that en- rollment in the new series will be approximately 900. Also under the ESMDT program is a University credited course in Ultra- High Frequency Techniques, being given to electrical engineering seniors and graduate students by Prof. L. N. Holland of the electrical engineering department. dMeanwhile 75 men were graduated from another ESMDT course in Ord- nance Materials Inspection last night, while two more sections are still in progress. Group Of Experts To Conduct Meeting On Spectroanalysis More than 100 experts from in- dustry and universities will discuss recent developments in spectrochem- ical techniques at the third annual Midwest Conference on Spectro- chemical Analysis to be held here all day today. From 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. illus- trated talks on absorption spectra, photoelectric filter photometers, spectrochemical analysis of stainless steels, the problem of split analysis, and other developments will be given in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The group will then sojourn to the Randall Laboratory of physics where demonstrations and exhibits of com- parators, the electron microscope, the cyclotron and other equipment will be shown until 5:30 p.m. Ranked with the best in the coun- try, the Concert Band, under the di- rection of Prof. William D. Revelli, has been declared outstanding for its accurate intonation and rich tone quality by such eminent musicians as Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Mor- ton Gould, Ferde Grofe and Roy Har- ris. It will be such a band which will appear in the free concert Tuesday to, present a full program of music both by the older so-called 'classical' composers and that of the contempo- rary writers. Featured on the program will be the appearance of pianist Johana Harris as guest soloist for the world premiere of her husband Roy Harris's latest composition, "Concerto for Pi- ano and Band," written expressly for the University Band. A second Harris number to be pre- sented on the program will be "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," while other contemporary composers represented will include Morton Gould, Georges Enesco, William Schuman and Paul Dukas. Lt.-Col. Cleary To Give Talk On Thursday Michigan's chief air raid warden, Lieut.-Col. Owen J. Cleary, will ex- plain mutual responsibilities of air raid wardens and civilians when he presents the second in a series of civilian defense lectures here Thurs- day. He willspeak at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. The lecture is sponsored by the University War Board and the Coun- ty Defense Council and will be aug- mented by a 25-minute moving pic- ture, "Ready on the Home Front." Persons enrolled in the county's protective services will be given credit in generaltraining for attendance at the lecture. All students, faculty members and townspeople are in- vited. The next lecture in the course will be "Precautions Against Aerial Bombardment," by Capt. Donald S. Leonard, commander of the Citizens' Defense Corps of the Michigan Coun- cil of Defense, on April 20. Mr. John Bugas, of the Detroit office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, will speak on "Citizens' Responsibili- ties to Law Enforcement Organiza- tions" on May 11. Two other pro- grams in the series will be announced soon. Labor Survey To Be Taken1 Plans have been announced for a door-to-door survey of the available labor resources of Washtenaw Coun- ty, intended to create a-"reservoir" of men and women for work in war production plants and on nearby farms. Working in collaboration with the Ann Arbor office of the United States Employment Service, the survey will seek to determine the location of available skills usable in the war pro- duction program and qualified labor willing to workon farms. The Em- ployment Service will use the survey to meet the labor needs of this and other communities of the State. The drive will be conducted by local members of the Women's Aux- iliaries of the American Legion, Dis- abled American Veterans and Vet- erans of Foreign Wars. Gertrude M. Nickels, Legion auxiliary leader, and Mrs. Herman Becker, VFW auxiliary commander, will direct the survey beginning April 13 and continuing through April 25. McDowell Appointed To Army Intelligence Prof. Robert H. McDowell of the history department, left Ann Arbor yesterday to report to Washington as a captain of the United States Army Intelligence Service. He voluntarily asked for an op- portunity to serve the country sever- 'ONE-MAN ARMY' ON BATAAN - Capt. Art Wermuth (left), "one-man army" credited with destroying more than a hun- dred Japs during the furious fighting on Bataan Peninsula, is shown with his aide somewhere along the besieged American.-Philippine held defense line. The picture was released by the War Department along with its announcement that the defenders faced death or sur- render. U.S. Army Signal Corps photo. bATAAN FIGHTING FILLS HOSPITAL-- Gas gangrene cases from the fighting on Bataan Peninsula fill this field hospital with casualties o f the gallant defense which apparently ended in collapse. U.S. Army Signal Corps photo. DOUGHNUTS FOR BATAAN'S DEFENDERS-- Thrice-decorated Private Avon Sherman (left) of the U. S. Army Signal Corps and Lieut. H. H. R oberts join a couple of native troolers in a feast of freshly-made doughnuts behind the American- Philippine defense line on Bataan. The War De- partment, in announcing colapse of the gallant dcfinscs, said short rations was a main contributing factor. U. S. Army Signal Corps photo. YANKS AID DYING JAP ON BATAAN - American sol- diers give water to a dying soldier of the invading Japanese forces on Bataan Peninsula during the fighting there. The War 1bepart- ment indicated that 36,853 gallant American and Filipino soldiers faced death or capture in the collapse of their stubborn defense lines. U. S. Army Signal Corps photo. BATAAN BAGAC 4 LKMAY SAYS AIN. PT PAYSAwAN, T, L 's *CAB, N CABE LUZON" PT .. a4 0u FORT"? 0 5C MILES 5II BATAAN DEFENDERS FALL BACK - As the result of the apparent collapse of the stubborn three-month defense of Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines, Secretary of War Stimson indicated in Washington that 36,853 American and Filipino soldiers faced death or capture. Lieut.-Gen. Jonathan M. Wainright reported that the Japanese had enveloped the east flank (1) of his defense lines. General Wainright was at Fort Mills (2), on Corregidor Is- land, which still commanded the entrance to Manila Bay. DEFENSE CRUMBLES defenders of Bataan hadt Washington released this; showing how it had been1 ON BATTERED BATAAN - With its announcement that the heroic collapsed in fare of over whelming .Tap onslaughts, the War Department in as one of the latest pictures to arrive from the beleaguered peninsula battered by Jap air raid ers. U. S. 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