" FEBRUARY i1,1N42 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Crisler Heads All Sports Activities As Regents ReorganizeAthletics ASSOCIATED PRESS By MYRON DANN "All this talk about me being made a czar is nonsense," Fritz Crisler said yesterday in explaining the reorgan- ization of the University's athletic and physical education departments. "The only real changes the Regents made at their recent meeting was in the separation of the athletic and physical education departments from the School of Education, and the creation of academic rankings for all coaches and assistant coaches in my departments," Crisler added. Crisler has been called czar in many newspaper stories that re- ported the regents' new ruling con- cerning the athletic department. Previously the coaches and their staffs were connected with the School of Education while all inter- collegiate sport activities were under the jurisdiction of the old Board in Control of Physical Education. Un- der the new by-laws of the Regents, passed January 30, the Board in Control is replaced by a Board of In- tercollegiate Athletics. All sport and physical education activities are now under the official control of Crisler, subject to the ap- proval of the new board. This action clarifies certain loose relationships International Center Starts New Activities Seven Language Classes Will Train Translators For Government Work Following the lead of the Univer- sity, the International Center has re- vised its semester program to meet the needs of wartime. Language classes which are de- signed to aid in the fulfillment of the government's demand for translators and interpreters will be conducted. Training will be .offered in Spanish, French, German, Italian, Russian, Chinese and Japanese. Foreign women students and the wives of foreign students are invited to participate in the weekly knitting and sewing sessions -at the Center. Contributions will be made to the In- ternational Red Cross and the Amer- ican Friends' Service Committee. The Center is also prepared to as- sist any American or foreign group in relief projects. Already several ben- efit programs have been scheduled, the proceeds of which will be donated to specific war reliefs. A round table will be organized for the discussion of peace after the war. The Center is also providing foreign student speakers to satisfy the num- ber of calls made on the University Extension Service for speakers on in- ternational affairs. The regular recreational and social program of the Center will be con- tinued. The Thursday teas, Wednes- day evening music hours and the Sunday suppers are again planned for the second semester. The Center's athletic program will be enlarged and correlated with the physical fit- ness program set up by the athletic department. Student Violinist Will Give Recital WithSymphony Italo Frajola, violinist, concert- master of the University Symphony Orchestra and soloist with the Little Symphony will present a recital at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Frajola who is giving this recital in partial..fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music will present the following pro- gram: Sonata in D major by Arcan- gelo Corelli, Concerto in D major by Johannes Brahms, Sonato pour vio- lon et piano by Guillaume Lekeu. Frajola's piano accompanist will be Prof. John Kollen of the School of Music faculty. Before coming to Ann Arbor from his home in Gilbert, Minn., Frajola studied under Nicholas Furjanick and since then has been a pupil of Was- sily Besikersky. He has appeared as a soloist already this season with the University Symphony Orchestra on Jan. 27 in the Serenata Notturna of Mozart's under the direction of Thor Johnson. Frajola is also a member of Phi Mu Alpha, music fraternity. CPT Applications OpenTo Feb. 16 Applications will be accepted until February 16 at Room B-47 East En- gineering Building for the second semester Civilian PilothTraining course. Although the age limit has been lowered to 18, the other requirements remain the same. The applicant must have attained his eighteenth but not his twenty-sixth birthday prior to that had existed in the University's athletic program. As before WAA, IM, men's and women'sphysical edu- cation, will be within Crisler's super- vision. The personnel of the new board will probably be made up of the same faculty, student and alumni repre- sentation as its predecessor. By being raised to academic rank- ings coaches and assistants will be given a security that most college coaches enjoy today. The coaches will have tenure and the right to take leaves for further education to step up their rating. The regents will decide in the near future the exact rankings to be used. The board of intercollegiate ath- letics is not prevented by the new rules from making shifts in the de- partment, but the coaches may have the alternative of taking other posi- tions rather than being eliminated altogether. Some of the coaches have had aca- demic rankings for some time now, with Crisler holding a professorship and Ray Fisher, Varsity baseball coach, an assistant professorship. The Regents have asked the new board to make recommendations to the University War Board concern- ing the expansion of the physical education and intercollegiate ath- letic programs for the coming sum- mer. Crisler concluded by saying, "plans are already under way for a broad physical education program for the so-called 'third-semester' but it is extremely difficult yet to arrange for an intercollegiate athletic schedule. "As soon as the University com- pletes its summer academic program the athletic department will attempt to arrange for intercollegiate com- petition. I feel confident that if we have a summer intercollegiate pro- gram Michigan will maintain the fine reputation that it has built up during the past." RLOTC Adopts Doubled Drills, RatingSystem Marching Activities Move To I-M Building; Course In Photography Offered Visible in the doubled drill period and the recent addition of efficiency stars in their uniforms, the reality of the war has increased its effect on the University ROTC for the new semester. Facilities for extended order drill and scouting and patroling will be afforded in the Sports Building, to which the drill activities have been moved. In addition the schedule has been condensed to a choice of two days a week for two hours. Added advantages of the consoli- dated drill program will be the possi- bility of well-proportioned units within the regiment, with accom- panying improvement in the leader- ship training afforded cadets of the advanced course, and the increase in esprit de corps introduced by the element of competition. Cadets of the Signal Corps will be able to receive instruction in photog- raphy through special classes ar- ranged by Pi Tau Pi Sigma, honorary Signal Corps Fraternity. Photogra- phy, although within the scope of the Signal Corps in the Army, is not pro- vided for in the ROTC course. As soon as the semester is well under way, the regiment of cadets will have a permanent staff of cadet officers appointed and a special company of picket cadets will be formed. Booth Chairman Says Adieu To Date, Dough Still wincing from an aftermath of the week-end, James Snodgrass, '43F&C, chairman of booths for J-Hop, is "on" several people's cuffs today, but a little wiser. Sunday afternoon he took his J-Hop date, Martha Wood of Cincin- nati, to the railroad station, saw her safely to her seat and placed her luggage on the rack. After the proper adieux and a farewell kiss, he pro- ceeded to get off the train. Jim, be- ing a forester, didn't realize the swaying of the car was the engineer's effort to reach Detroit on time. Well, Jim was confronted with a situation, for he, like most J-Hop- pers, was broke. He put the touch on his date for a couple of bucks to cover his unexpected trip. In Detroit he again saw her to her train, this time Cincinnati bound. But goodbyes were enacted on the platform. He arrived in Ann Arbor by a late bus yesterday with a penny left. Michigan Alumnae To Hear FPA Head Vera Micheles Dean, Research Di- rector of the Foreign Policy Associa- POCTU'RE NEWSV N *k T H E S IN G IN G K ING1--To oblige his master, N.Y. Fire- man George Donnelly, King gives out with a canine song perhaps to say he's ready for the Dalmatian firehouse competition at the annual Westminster Kennel Club show. King won it last year. P R O C R E S S T O W A R D A P I L L B O X-Flat on the ground lie two U.S. army engineers, shielding themselves as the bangalore torpedo they brought up explodes in barbed wire protecting an "enemy pillbox" under attack. Demonstration was at Fort Belvoir, Va. Once a way through the wire was cleared, soldiers used flame-throwers at the gunport and pillbox entrances, plus explosives. S E N T R Y --Behind the door of P R IOR IT Y--In her pale blue this vault being guarded by Corp. cotton lace gown, pearl-em- Leon Gauntt, a Texan, at the broidered and enlivened by bombardier training school in cerise cotton roses at the neck-, Albuquerque, N. Mex., is the line, N. Y. Showgirl Lois Janu- secret bomb sight used by army ary isn't worrying about war- bombing planes. The sights are time bans on silks. The roses also taken out for training flights. trim her blue cotton gloves., Y A N K E E C U S T O M-There must be some American ap- petites in the neighborhood when a hamburger sign appears. This one is somewhere in England where Yanks are assembling U.S.-made planes. Some wag added sign chalked up in Japanese. B O S S-William H. Collins, standing at the sand-bagged en- trance to the power plant of the Fore River shipyard of Bethle- hem Steel Co. at Quincy, Mass., is general superintendent of the yard that's busy turning out ships for Uncle Sam, ......... ... .. ... ... ..........