PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY Student BIoo Donors Need to Fill Quota Registration to Exiend Through SaLr hy As Drive Nears d d In contrast to an expected imnedi- ate student response, registration for this semester's third blood drive is proceeding at a slow pace, reports showed yesterday. Registration will continue from 121 to 5:30 p.m. today. Men are asked to sign up in the lobby of The Mich-I igan Union and women may register at the League. Schools' Problems tiring War Period Tackled at Meeting LANSING, Dec. 3- (A"')- TheI Michigan Secondary School Associa- tion, holding its annual meeting here today, tackled problems of war cur- ricula described by Harlan C. Koch of the University of Michigan as "confusing" and requiring "full meas- ure of educational statesmanship." While approximately 200 principals of high schools from throughout the state expressed uncertainty as to what steps must be taken in face of imminent induction of 18 and 19 year olds, Koch declared that pre- vious estimates that 65 per cent of all Nazi Tanks Lead Troops in Invasion of Vichy WAR BOOM TOWN ANALYZED: Maladjustment at Willow Run Is Studied in Institute Survey Persons who find it inconvenient men drafted must become technicians to register today will have an oppor- had been raised to 85 per cent. tunity to do so tomorrow from 9:30 a.m. to 1 .m. "With war production in full swing, Blood will be taken next Tuesday the army is becoming more and more and Wednesday in the largest blood mechanized," Koch said, "resulting in drive in University history. The cam- a corresponding increase in} the de- pus committee has pledged 200 pints mand for mechanically skilled sol- of blood to The American Red Cross. diers." Two previous drives on campus have netted the Red Cross 250 pints, American armed forces all over the each of which was conducted this world. semester. Registrants may indicate a time In the first two days' of registra- preference when they register. Ap- tion only 55 people have indicated pointment schedules will be made out that they will give blood. to satisfy this purpose. Persons un- All blood donated to the Red Cross der 21 are asked to obtain their par- is directed toward emergency use by ents' consent slips as soon as possible. ifyou've said to yoursef.. d.: .4YOU'L FIND A German tank rolls down a street in Toulouse, France, during Nazi occupation of Vichy territory. Tou- louse is in southwestern France, west of Marseille and Toulon, not far from the French-Spanish frontier. This picture reached London from neutral Portugal. (AP photo via radio from London) , STUDENT SEES NO SUBMARINES ALL SUMMER: Gun C lain Gives oe Seltzer Description of ourmansk Tri alon Hell's 1ighway' o f M-r- ---- . By EVELYN PHILLIPS Willow Run, "typical disorganized community with inadequate schools, lack of ordinary facilities for fire protection and health protection and poor housing," is the subject of a research project being conducted by the Michigan Child Guidance Insti- tute. Mr. James E. Stermer, field sociol- ogist for the Guidance Institute, who is directing the study, said, "The point is whether from such an area there will be more maladjusted chil- dren than from an ordinary organ- ized community." Attacks Problem In an interview concerning the project Mr. Stermer said, "This study is attacking the problem of delin- quency from the standpoint of caus- ation, assuming that the individual must inter-act with his environment and that if environment -is disor- ganized, we can expect to have an individual who will not be able to adjust himself to the ordinary expec- tations of society." The first step of the project, which has just been completed, was carried through by 46 student volunteers from the sociology classes of Prof. Richard Fuller, Prof. Lowell Carr, PRE-HOLIDAY SALE You still can choose a flattering hat in a variety of colors today and tomorrow. VALUES to 4.95 / Velvets at ,2.00 Others at 2.50 THE HAT BOX 719 North University director of the Child Guidance In- stitute, and Mr. Richard Myers, all of whom are acting in advisory ca- pacities for the study. Made Trips Throughout the semester the stu- dents have made regular trips to the Willow Run area chosen for the work. The area, composed of trailer homes and permanent dwellings, was cov- ered in a house-to-house canvass in an attempt to construct a directory of - the people living in the area, so that important statistics concerning the people and their social attitudes might be determined. The problems of Willow Run are not unique in that defense com- munities all over the country are springing up and are constantly be- ing faced with the same problems. klCH EL IE U V S THE PEARLS that have lustre and beauty. Stunning for your black dress or sweaters. Reason- ably priced at $2.50. Phone 4887 345 Maynard ~ oA (Editor's Note: Here is the final in- stallment of Hoe Seltzer's yarns of his experiences on a convoy this summer. Seltzer is a former Daily sports night editor.) This gun captain knows what he's talking about. He hasjust returned from a trip to Murmansk and tells me what'a jolly time he had. They call the stretch between Scapa Flow and Russia Hell's Highway and the only criticism of the appelation is its quality of understatement. 'Five days before reaching port the jamboree starts and continues without interruption until five days out of Murmansk westward bound. The menace is a quadruple one, you don't exactly get your choice but the menu includes mines, surface raiders, submarines and Stukas with the latter having by far the leading batting average. The gun captain tells me hew they operate. On the dive from a low-hanging cloud they strafe the decks to dis- courage opposition. Then they level out abeam of the ship and release their one aerial torpedo. And on' Permanent Federal World Union to be Debated by Team "Resolved, that a permanent fed- eral world union be formed from the United Nations," will be the question on the floor when the men's debating team meets a squad of the University Heights College of New York Uni- versity in its first inter-collegiate debate of the season at 4 p.m. tomor- row in Room 4203 Angell Hall. After a series of intra-team de- bates, Coach Arthur Secord of the speechudepartment has selected Char- les Murphy, '44, and John Muehl, '43, to uphold the negative argument for Michigan in this, the first of two debates with the two literary col- leges of N.Y.U. While'no notification has been received as to who will rep- resent the Washington Square Col- lege on Monday, Irving Gartenberg and Yale P. Joseph will make up the University Heights squad tomorrow. the sweep up over the ship as they pull out they plant a stick of bombs amidships. Three strikes they get and they rarely strike out. All this time the gun crew is trying to chop them down in sub-zero weather that numbs fingers and makes it almost impossible to even shoot the 20- millimeter guns much less aim them. And one final happy note: During the season that the Mur- mansk route is open to shipping it is always daylight. The gun captain tells me he was in a singularly successful convoy. He gives me the statistics of ships lost and these are the sort of, fig- ures they don't print in the papers but they're the sort that give the Russian run the name it has. And when I think I wanted to go to Murmansk. Fools do rush in where angels. This time we run across the Gulf and back but they hold us up to await assembly of a jumbo convoy because Nazi subs are once again knocking them down in the Atlantic faster than Henry J. Kaiser can build them. For a third time we are the flagship and when the commo- dore comes aboard I note that he Police Search for Coed Who Eloped Marjorie Ann Shaw, '45, became a statewide attraction yesterday, but it happened by way of protest for her ow, attraction to an. unidentified Flint man with whom she supposedly eloped. Miss Shaw, a 20-year-old coed, be- came the subject of statewide police search at the request of her mother who objected to the elopement. It was reported that she had disclosed to her friends in Flint that she in- tended to elope. According to information obtained by the Flint police Miss Shaw with- drew $50 from her bank account in Flint Saturday, and then on Monday supplemented these funds with an additional withdrawal of $740, most of which was in traveler's checks. No word has been received from the coed since. brings a friend and word soon reaches us that we have with us select company. This commodore is in a word the commodore of the commodores, an old hand at the convoy game with experience dating back to 1917. His chum bears -the title of submarine expert although I can never quite figure where he fits into the scheme of things un- less it is to say yes commodore that is a submarine that is shooting at us. But in any event we have what may be termed the acme of protec- tion for our northbound journey and indeed I am about to stuff my lifebelt in the bottom of my locker for the rest of the trip when I learn that these same two brothers lost three ships within three minutes on the last convoy they brought down the coast, the very first ship reamed being their own. So I keep my life- belt handy. The boys stage a beautiful come- back however and we pull into New York five days later without having dropped one depth charge. And al- though I have come to love the ship as much as a guy can love steel plates and gray war paint and the rocking, rolling motion, and that is plenty, I have to sign off because they slap big guns on her and send her out on a foreign run and she won't be back till Christmas and I still have that date with medical school early in October. When people ask me what did you do during the summer I say I worked on a tanker and they say did you see any submarines? I would like to comment on that. If I had seen any submarines I would probably not be writing this now and people would not be asking me that question. No, I did not see any submarines. WARM ais TORST... Your heating problems are over with a sweater to keep your temperature at 98.60. For added enjoyment, team it with pleated skirt. 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