THE MICHIGAN DAILY TT FIM Y, NOV. ,R, 1M: - --,NO . ,192 .. r Full-Time Aircraft Inspeiction Training Will Be Given Here Trainees Will Be Employes of Army Air Force, Will Receive Pay, Stay in Service for Duration Railroader Pinned Under Wreckage An aircraft inspection training course will be begun here Nov. 16 un- der the sponsorship of the Engineer- ing Science and Management Pro- gram, Prof. R. H. Sherlock, coordina- tor of the program. announced yester- day. Emphasizing that there is an imme- diate need for filling aircraft inspec- tor positions in industry, Professor Sherlock explained that persons tak- ing this new ESMWT course will be given training and instruction in the inspection of aircraft material to de- termine its acceptability in accor-' dance with required specifications. Trainees will be employes of the Hillel Building Is Dedicated Lecturer Emphasizes Training of Leaders Speaking before an estimated 700 people at the dedication of the new Hillel Foundation Sunday, Dr. Abram Sachar, National Director of B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations, stressed the importance of training leaders for the future. Dr. Sachar pointed to the example of Prime Minister Winston. Churchill, who months ago, in the face of oppo- sition, sent 600 young flyers to Can- ada for training. These pilots will aid materially in the winning of the war. Similarly, it is necessary that the youth of America be prepared now to take their positions as leaders in the post-war world, he said. Dean Alice C.. Lloyd, speaking in welcome to the guests at the dedica- tion, read a message from President Alexander G. Ruthven, congratulat- ing the Foundation. "Under intelligent leadership and with enthusiastic cooperation from its student membership," President Ruthven wrote, "the Foundation has throughout its history been a con- structive agency in the religious, in- tellectual. and social life of our cam- pus." Rabbi J. D. Folkman, President of District Grand Lodge No. 6, praised the courage and confidence of B'nai B'rith leaders for acting at this time.1 Army Air Force and will riot be per- mitted to hold other positions during the period of training. This ruling, Professor Sherlock said, was made because it will be a full-time course, meeting 8 hours a day, five days a week, for a 10-week period. Eligibles who are selected for em- ployment will be given the title of junior procurement inspectors train- ees and will receive a salary of $1,440 per year. They will also be paid $2.50 per day during the, entire training period. After completion of the course they will be required to sign a statement that it is their intention to remain in service for the duration of the war. Trainees who are eligible will then be assigned as Junior Procurement In- spectors at a salary of $1,620 per year. Subsequent advancement will depend on individual efficiency and1 ability.I It is expected that most of the en- rollees will be women. Questions re- garding the course may be addressed to the Central Air Corps Procurement District, in care of Capt. T. B. Hunt, 8505 W. Warren Ave.. Detroit. TOday's ANewsI OCampus... Debate Clinic Ope.s The University Men's Debating Team will hold its first debate clinic of the year at the. Bayside Central High School today. The two teams which are being sent will give a demonstration debate for the benefit of the local high school debating squads on the topic, "Re- solved: That A Federal World Gov- ernment Should Be Established." The next clinic to be held will be in Ann Arbor at the Rackham Build- ing on.Saturday, Nov. 14, and will be attended by high school teams and debating coaches from all over the state. lAS Meets Todaya Pinned beneath the wreckage of a freight train at Washington, D.C., J. M. Clements, railroad flagman, died before rescuers could get him out. He was in the caboose of the train which was struck in the rear by another freight. HERE'S THE STORY: Movie Struck GirlTells Detai on Witness Stand in Flynn Case Nelsen Orders Greater Control wVer Materials New Plan Will Force Careful Budgeting of Scarce War Supplies WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.-(P)-War P oduction Chairman Donald M. Nel- scn today ordered unprecedented con- t ol over America's scarce materials ' o that they will be used where they Iwill make the maximum impact on the enemy" and predicted that Ameri- ca's war production would reach its peak by the middle of 1943. Materials will be allocated under a system called the "controlled materi- als plan." or CMP. Nelson said that as the plan is put into effect grad- ually between now and July 1, 1943, it will force the most careful budgeting of the materials that go into nearly every military and civilian article of manufacture. By eliminating excessive or badly- timed use of materials, he told a press conference, it should increase pro- duction appreciably. By smoothing out production schedules and avoid- ing temporary shut-downs of some war plants for lack of materials, as happened this summer, he added, the plan ought to provide steadier em- ployment for labor. U'Medical Course T urnmss Army Kett Toa 'tie-luan Labs' Seventeen United States Army 'medical officers are training 44 hours each week in the University medical school classrooms and laboratories in a special course of laboratory meth- ods and training designed to develop them into "one-man laboratories," it was disclosed yesterday. Dr. Howard B. Lewis, chairman of the department of biological chem- stry and director of the college of pharmacy, is heading a staff of eight professors handling the special train- ing course. Three groups of officers will be sent to the University for 12-week instruction periods. The officers now in training are the first of these and will complete their course on Dec. 19. The second class will arrive on Jan. 4. It will consist of 27 Army physi- cians. No date has been set for the arrival of the third group. Latest developments in laboratory training and methods will be taught the Army doctors, Dr. Lewis explain- ed, so they can perform any ordinary type of laboratory procedure if they are established at an isolated army post. Medical officers trained here all hold commissions as first lieutenants or higher and are college graduates with medical degrees. POST-WAR: Professors Will Discuss Peace Plans Beginning its public activities for this semester, the Post.-War Council will hold a meeting at 8 p. m. tomor- row in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. The program will be devoted to a discussion of the need for post-war planning and what is being done about it. The speakers will be Prof. Preston Slosson of the history depart- mect and Prof. Howard McClusky of the School of Education. In his talk, Prof. Slosson will deal with that phase of the general topic involving the necessity of planning now. Professor McClusky, who has just returned from Washington where he studied youth movements, will tell what the national government is do- ing and what it intends to do in the way of planning for a post-war world. Following the speeches, there will be an open discussion period. Girl's Parents Held ByJaps Parents of Agnes Day Internees in Manila A War Department communique yesterday listed the parents of a Uni- versity student, Agnes Day, '45, as being among 137 American civilians interned by the Japanese in the Phil- ippine Islands. Miss Day's father, Kenneth B. Day, was vice-president and general mnana- ger of the Philippine Refining Com- pany for five years before the out- break of the war. The Day family has resided in Manila since 1915. Mr. and Mrs. ' Day are reported to be interned on the campus of'dSanto Tomas University in Manila where Mr. Day is chairman of the informa- tion center in the "self-governing" community established by the inter- nees. A 1911 graduate of Harvard University, Day has twice served as Philippine delegate to Republican na- tional conventions. Last year Miss Day left her parents to enroll in the University. She is a member of Alpha Phi sorority. 'Her mother and her grandmother, Mrs. Dean Worchester, attended the Uni- versity and were members of Colle- giate Sorosis. 'Cercle' Will Meet Today Getting acquainted will be the theme of the second meeting of "Le Cercle Francais" at 8 p. m. today in the League. Jack Vaughn, '43, will give a brief summary of his trip to Mexico, and the rest of the evening will be spent in singing and informal discussion groups. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 2.- (A)-- A movie struck girl from the middlewest took the witness stand today and, be- fore an intensely-listening court room jammed with women, related intimate details of her alleged seduction by Errol Flynn, gay. dashing hero of a thousand and one film adventures. Miss Hansen said she became ill during the dinner at the Bel-Air home of Fred McEvoy where the asserted attack took place. "After dinner everyone went into the den," she testified. "I went up- stairs with Mr. Flynn. He told the others he was going to take me up and let' me lie down for a nap. We went to the bedroom, and' Flynn locked the door. He told me to lie down." Here Miss Hansen hesitated per- ceptibly, closing her eyes. Then she looked directly at Flynn, and con- tinued: "Flynn took me into another bed- room and sat me on a twin bed. Then he undressed me and himself. He took off all my clothes, and removed all his own except his shoes." They were in the room about half an hour, the blonde girl asserted, and after an alleged act of intimacy there was a knock at the door. "It was Lynne Boyer's voice," Miss Hansen said. Miss Boyer was a guest at the party, and was scheduled to testify. "She said something about wanting to use a telephone," Miss Hansen said. "Mr. Flynn told her he was tak- ing a shower, and that there was a telephone downstairs. At the time of the knock Flynn was in the bathroom putting oil on his hair." Defense Attorney Jerry Giesler took Miss Hansen carefully over her ver- sion of what occurred at the party. "To get back to what happened in the bedroom," Giesler said, "I want to know who undressed whom." "Well, I am' sure he undressed me," Miss Hansen replied. "I remember he threw my slacks over on the other twin bed." Giesler then reminded her that in a statement at juvenile hall she had said she disrobed herself. She admit- ted making the statement, but said it wasn't true. "Have you ever seen Mr. Flynn on the screen?" Giesler asked. "Yes, at home in Lincoln (Neb.) I used to see his pictures once in a while, but I never thought much of him as an actor," responded Miss Hansen. Later today in cross-examining Miss Hansen, Giesler asked if she kissed Flynn or he kissed her just be- fore he left the party. "Well, we kissed each other," she replied. "Was it a long, lingering kiss or a quickie?" "I guess you'd call it a quickie," she answered, and Flynn, highly amused, gave vent to a chuckle. At the Michigap. Based upon the uproarious Broad- way comedy of two Columbus, Ohio, sisters battling for their careers and their honor in the jungles of Man- hattan's Greenwich Village, Colum- bia's "My Sister Eileen" opens today at the Michigan Theatre. Rosalind Russell and Janet Blair play the Sherwood sisters--Ruth and Eileen-who come to New York for fame and fortune and wind up in a basement apartment in Greenwich Village with all the privacy of a gold fish bowl. A big curtainless window at pavement level lets in the noise, the rowdies, the dogs and the cats and all the other excitement of the, Village. A lockless door lets in everybody else-including a "clairvoyant" who' formerly did business at that address, a professional football player (unem- ployed), a magazine editor, a Cos- sack night club doorman and sundry other characters, as well as six Portu- guese merchant marine officers who are bowled over by Eileen's charms and refuse to go home.I E 1 j The Institute of Aeronautical Sci- ences will hold its second meeting of the year at 8 p.m. today in the Mich- igan Union, Jack Edelberg, '43E, president of the society, announced yesterday. The main speaker will be Ralph Brobery, a graduate of the College of Engineering last June. He will discuss "Plywood Construction in Aircraft." Elections will also be held to deter- mine a junior vice-president. This position is generally filled, during the fall term each year and has been considered as preparatory to the of- fice of president of the IAS. Skaters Open Meetings The first general meeting of the Ann Arbor Figure Skating Club will be' held at 8:00 p.m. today in the League. Any University women inter- ested in skating are invited to attend. The senior club will meet for the first time this year from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Nov. 15, at the Michigan rink. The junior club will hold its first meeting from 10:00 a.m. to 12 noon, Nov. 21, at the rink. First of Food Sanitation Classes To $e Held ;Today The first of a series of four weekly} food 'sanitation classes for persons serving food to University students will be held at 8 p. m. today in the W. K. Kellogg Auditorium, the Uni- versity Health Service announced yesterday. Designed to protect student health by acquainting food handlers with the elements of sanitation, the classes will cover public health, storage, re- frigeration, storage and personal hy- giene. ~ii -" MICHIGA NhinI~eSta The hilariously exciting ad- ventures of two small town girls" . battling the amorous pitfalls of Greenwich Village!:'" 1h \N\ -~Wovesatth I ._ . The Department of Speech presents PLAY PRODUCTION in "SUNDOWN" A 11 R 1lS " An lExcU'jij 'r, Drai a .j J(Ia the Sat A NEW PLAY BY JOHN LEWIS BRUMM -~ 'I / / wy Modern If P, Girl ttle Front 11 I 11 i 0i I II .. N m Flit