TTHE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY Nila Magidoff Will Address RWR Meeting Wife Of Writer Will Tell Experience At Moscow In *ight Against Nazis With the good news from Russian War Relief headquarters that U.S Steel had donated $75,000 to the cause comes the word that Mine. Nila Magidoff, wife of Robert Magi- doff, Associated Press correspondent in Russia for the past six years, will be guest speaker on Ann Arbor's RWR program at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the League. Mme. Magidoff, herself an active participant in the Russian stand against Nazi invasion, will tell of her experiences, including wielding a spade along with other women as barricades were thrown up last sum- mer and fall around Moscow. A business meeting preceding Mme. Magidoff's talk will deal with the organization of a new RWR proj- ect, wherein 1,000,000 signatures, along with 10 cent contributions, .will be "presented to Russia's am- bassador, Maxim Litvinov, as greet- ings to Russian youths from their United States counterparts," ex- plained Harry Stutz, Grad., chairman of the student RWR unit. This plan, designed to reach the younger element in America, has been endorsed by such celebrities as Alfred E. Smith, Pearl Buck, Charles Chaplin, John Garfield, Thomas Mann and Dorothy Thompson. More than 500 faculty members received subscription blanks on which to pledge contributions to RWR in a drive inaugurated last month. To date, 85 have responded, donating a total of $450. The remainder will now be contacted sometime in the next 10 days by messengers, who will collect the rest of the cards. Faculty members wishing to contribute but unable to do so.at present may have until June 30 to act. Local RWR offi- cials predict that a sum of $1,000 will be attained. Bicycle Thefts Rise; Padlocks No Guarantee Padlocks are no guarantee against the series of bicycle thefts that has surged up in the wake of the recent freezing order, the Police Department reported today. "Locked oi' not locked, they still are stolen," warned the department's full time bicycle investigator, Walter Schmidt, who seriously recommends first, the registration of all bicycles at the City Hall, and second, not mere padlocking, but chaining of all bicycles to trees or posts. There are over 6,000 bicycles in Ann Arbor, Schmidt estimates, and 55 per cent of these belong to Uni- versity students. So urgent does he consider the need for complete registration, he and his fellow officers will begin next week to ticket every bicycle owner without a license and remove unreg- istered bicycles to police headquar- ters. Schmidt, who says finding a stolen bicycle is twice as hard as finding a stolen- car, believes tagging of every bicycle will facilitate police work to a large extent. With 169 stolen bicycles now on file, he has some degree of confi- dence of finding the licensed ones. But even if machines without a licenie are found, owners will have a hard time establishing their claims. Anticipating an upswing in the number of bicycles they will be asked to find in the future, police have established a thorough file and check system. Every patrolman is given a description of each stolen bicycle which he compares to the ones on his beat. Those lacking identification, he takes to the station. Special investigators, working atf night, comb the whole city watching for stolen property. An average of one stolen bicycle a day was thus recovered last month. Bicycles this year will not be sold at auction, but will be kept indefinitely until the owner appears, Schmitz said. Nurse's Training Course Opened To College Girls Designed to give college girls the essentials of nursing education, the American Red Cross, in cooperation with the Office of Civilian Defense, will offer a Nurse's Aides Training course in Detroit during the summer. The course, part of a nation-wide program, will help relieve the in- creased burden placed upon civilian hospital staffs by the absence of grad- uate nurses in the armed forces. The course will provide sufficient train- ing for college girls to perform rou- tine hospital duties. The training course is 80 hours in E ngineering College Revamps Curricula In New War Move P - Cr U-1 -F NEWS War Ieniands Metallurgy, Chidcal Course Change To Facilitate Graduation The University's accelerated war program had a drastic effect upon the Department of Chemical and Metal- lurgical Engineering recently when, under the direction of department officials, the undergraduate courses were entirely rearranged. Reasons for the change in the cur- riculum were explained by Prof. G. G. Brown, instructor of chemical en- gineering, as two: a desire to increase the flexibility in the sequence of courses required of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering students, and a wish to improve the curricu- lum by including more chemical en- gineering design and an undergradu- ate course in thermodynamics. Professor Brown declared concern- ing this revision, "The new curricu- lum not only streamlines the program so that students -may be graduated more easily in three years or less, but also constitutes a real improve- ment in modernizing it to meet the requirements of modern industry." In elaborating upon the causes of Pool Supplies War Speakers To State Clubs Mills ToH ead Local Unit; Professors, Students Aid In Keeping Morale High With the duty of keeping up the morale during this war, the Victory Speakers Bureau of the Michigan Council of Defense is now functioning throughout the state, supplying speakers to various clubs and or- ganizations. Washtenaw County has its head- quarters here at the University and is under the direction of Dr. Glen E. Mills of the speech department. As Director of Local Speakers Bureau, Dr. Mills enlists the services of well- informed citizens to present speeches to the clubs which are seeking speak- ers who are versed on some phase of current affairs. Dr. Arthur Secord also of the speech department is participating in this work. His position in the state council is that of Director of the County Speakers Bureau. Many professors and some students have enlisted in this war work. Through Dr. Mills they are on call to deliver speeches to county groups on such topics as civilian defense, interpretation and clarification of war issues, and the application of social sciences to present conditions. "There is a need for a concerted war effort at this time," Dr. Mills de- clared, "and the people must be made aware of the international responsi- bilities they have assumed in this war. Because of the complacency and isolationism of a great number of the citizens, our Bureau is trying to erase these sentiments through the mes- sages of our speakers." "The Bureau is planning now a more aggressive campaign," Dr. Mills continued. "Instead of waiting for requests from the county organiza- tions, we are going right out and making these groups realize that it is their responsibility to engage speakers to address their members on issues to which they have not yet given their fullest cooperation." This Victory Speakers Bureau is but one of many such organizations located throughout the country, and they are all under the general super- vision of thre Office of Civilian D- fense. At a national meeting held re- cently in Detroit, it was discovered that Michigan is probably leading the country in the maturity and organi- zation of their Speakers Bureaus. the change Proessor TBrownsaid "When it becomes necessary to teach three full terms per year with the same staff as was formerly occupied with two semesters, it is desirable to allow a certain leeway in the pre- requisites. This has been accom- plished by a rearrangement of the undergraduate courses, making it pos- sible for a student who has a high avrage du ing his first term to elect qualitative analysis in his second term instead of waiting for the third term before starting the required se- quence in chemistry." Courses Renumbered Most significant changes, Profes- sor Brown reported, were the elimina- tion of Metallurgical Engineering 2a, and Chemical Engineering and Metal- lurgical Engineering 12 as required courses for the Bachelor's degree. A number of the chemical and metallur- gical engineering courses has been renumbered, and all courses in the department are known as Ch.-Met. instead of being subdivided into the chemical engineering (Ch.E. and Metallurgical Engineering (Met.E.) classifications. In detail the changes are as fol- lows: for the chemical engineers the new course Ch.-Met. 6 and 13 re- place Ch.E. 9a; Ch.E. 9b is renum- bered Ch.-Met. 15; Ch.-Met. 11 and 16 replace Ch.E. 12 and Ch.-Met. 34, 25, 29, and 17 supersede Ch.E. 4, 5, 29, and 3. Other Revisions For metallurgical engineers Ch.- Met. 6 and 13 replace Ch.E. 9a and 9b; Met.E. 3 and 3a are now com- bined into Ch.-Met. 27; Ch.-Met. 29 and 44 replace Met.E. 12; the other courses, Met.E. 6 and 8 are renum- bered or changed into courses Ch.- Met 19 and 28. Professor Brown went on to explain that the new curriculum is required of all students in the department who enter college beginning with the summer term, 1942, but that students at present enrolled have the option of meeting the requirements of the old curriculum or of the new. The new courses are so arranged that this can be done without difficulty by sub- stituting the courses of the new num- bers for the corresponding old cour- ses as listed above. Speech C4lint To Open Here Siimiuer Course Offers Instruction, Correctioi The Summer Clinic School, under the supervision of the Speech Clinic and Prof. H. Harlan Bloomer will open again this year on July 6 for its usual six-week course, it was an- nounced today. The clinic, which is maintained primarily for children with speech defects, is open for this period dur- ing the summer to take care of school children who are unable to attend during the regular school year. How- ever, training and instruction is also provided for adults with voice prob- lems, speech defects, or who want to learn speech (lip reading, Professor Bloomer said. Instruction in tho summer clinic is available to anyone who makes appli- cation at the Speech Clinic and whom the clinic has the facilities to help. Both individual and group instruc- tion will be provided, and a varied and comprehensive program will be included for children. The six-week school serves as a part of the summer session program for graduate students in speech cor- rection. Bartwe)11 At Conveittiol Dr. John 13. Barnwell, Professor of Internal Medicine, left yesterday to attend a convention of the American Tuberculosis Association being held at Philadelphia this week. "BEST NEWSPAPERMAN in the country" is what Robert S. Allen calls his wile, the Washington reporter known professionally as Ruth Finney. The couple is shown above. Allen is the co-author of the column "Washington Merry-Go-Round" which appears on the Daily editorial page. CO-AUTHOR of the Washington Merry-Go-Round, Drew Pear- son, right, chats with Russian Ambassador Maxim Litvinov at the recent Washington premiere of the motion picture, "Saboteur." The event was sponsored by Pearson and Robert S. Allen. Virtually all of Washington's Who's Who attended the affair. . ARMY'S CANINE P O P U L A T IO N SWOLLEN BY Fl1 VYE-Extra special medicalcare is assured theseflvepups, born in an army infirmary at Camp Wheeler, Ga., where MaJ. Fred E. Brammer says "mother and children are doing well." e Of Nurses - - --t= U N I F O R M-,.Fu tcombat uniform is worn by Maj. Gen. Willis D. Crittenberger, com- manding general of Second Ar- mored Division, now at Ft. Den- ning infantry officers' school. W A R R I 0 R S I N A F R I C A-No one else can ever touch the blades used as bayonets by these fierce South African natives in Capetown area. Troops are not permitted to carry firearms. , The Federal Government needs 50,000 trained nurses between the ages of 18 and 35 and will need great- er numbers in each succeeding war year. Not only is the need acute in the armed forces, but also in civilian hospitals, industry and public and private health agencies. To meet the emergency requirements, every grad- uate nurse available for wartime duty must be replaced by a new student enrolled in a nursing school. Federal grants of $1,800,000 to nursing schools since the passage of the Selective Service Act have pro- vided increased facilities for emer- gency nursing education. However, members of the nursing profession emphasize that the end of the war will not bring an end to opportunity in this field. In a recent article in Survey Graphic nursing was de- scribed as ".. . a profession with a fu- ture. Girls who now embark on a nursing career will have more than the satisfaction of serving their coun- try in an emergency. They will also of employment, have a higher median salary than any other group of col- lege women. With increased use by the public of hospital facilities, the practice of physicians and surgeons in keeping trained nurses, and numerous other new nursing fields, such as industry and airlines, the profession is assured of a steady demand for the services of its members. In the University the School of Nursing offers two programs of train- ing. Girls are admitted from high school to a three-year curriculum in the nursing school which leads to the Diploma in Nursing. A five-year curriculum combines three years of pre-training in the literary school with two years in the nursing school. Upon completion of the latter pro- gram, the degree Bachelor of Science is awarded in addition to the Dip- loma in Nursing. Although other schools and col- leges of the University have had to accelerate their curricula to meet wartime exigencies, the School of t F L A .-. ...: '