PACV TWO THlE Mf! N-A 'I 7D:1S'._ l1AI ,CfI.12,. 134 PM~I ~TWO fI~IDAY,. MAI~Cfl 2,J9A~ SOY BEAN CU: Special Rites Reeves Conducts Experiments Will Continue U .S. I;01Iliers Score Jl~ts on Naples Highlights On Campus ... Prof. Titiev To Sipeak T o Re-Flavor Chinese Food - lThrtitjcoh ILent By JEAN RICHARDS A food on the market which could be flavored to taste like almost any other substance and which would contain morc protein than any food now known to Americans is the aim of Dr. Ccra Reeves, who is carrying on experimemns in her room in the basement of the Natural Science Building. Dr. Reeves, who taught schbol for 25 years in China, says that "When and then grind the mash to get bean milk. After bringing this to a boil Churches To Observe they add gypsum which precipitates Season with Classes, a protein material resembling cot- 'pS tage cheese, called in Chinese "tou- Speakers, Suppers fu." This tou-fu may then be cooked in Nine Ann Arbor churches, initiat- any cne of several ways, including ing the traditional observance of drying or .smoking, or cooked in corn- Lent with Ash Wednesday rites, have bination with other foods, for flavor. announced plans this week for spe- Government Intrcsted cial services to continue throughout "The Dangers of Patterned Think- ing" will be the subject of a talk by Prof. Mischa Titiev of the anthro- pology department at 8:30 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. The talk will be followed by an in- formal question and discussion peri- od. Refreshments will be served. The meeting is open to the public. Preceding the discussion, conserva- tive religious services will be held in the chapel of the Foundation start- ing promptly at 7:45 p.m. The ser- vices will be conducted by Lewis Singer, '46, and Elliott Organick, '44E. * * * 4 people began talking about meat shortages, I started about what fur people had protein source, Tn China little meat because there cattle. From five to seven live on the space required one cow." Taught in China food and to think for their there is are few men can to graze Dr. Reeves explained that the gov- ernment has been experimenting with the soybean as a protein source, but she believes that it has not proved popular because pamphlets published recommend the use of vinegar to pre- cipitate the curd, sometimes leaving a sour taste. At present the food is being distrib- uted for sale around Ann Arbor. "Several merchants in town have said that they will sell or serve it when it is ready," Dr. Reeves said. "A customer in one restaurant agreed to taste a sample which I took in, and liked it very much." the Lenten season. Included on the list are two Cath- olic groups, St. Thomas Catholic Church and St. Mary's Student' Chapel, three Lutheran churches, St. Paul's Evangelical, Zion Evangelical, and Trinity Evangelical, St. Andrew's Episcopal parish, the First Methodist Church, Bethlehem Evangelical and Reformed Church, the First Pres- byterian Church, and Bethel A. M. E. Church. All of the churches will hold mid- week services during the entire Lent- en season. Gather Lucian Heber, archdiocesan director of the Sodal- ity, Detroit, will be the guest speaker at St Mar's Catholic Student Coriad Will Lecture Dr. Reeves taught biology at the Ginling College for Women at Nan- king, the president of which is Dr. Y. F. Wu, who received her doctor's degree in zoology at the University of Michigan about fifteen years ago. She explained that a common Chi- nese food is made from soy bean curd, and served for dinner several times a week. It is, she believes, the only common complete vegetable protein food known. There are ten amino acids which are vital to the building of body cells, and while Americans usually eat a variety of foods to gain their necessary food value, the Chi- nese find them all in the single food. Experiments With Flavors As a result Dr. Reeves has been preparing the curd in her laboratory. and experimenting with various fla- vorings which she believes would suit American taste. Since the protein is soluble in water, the Chinese soak the soybeans C A WigID a V1)LViWTi% 1u VUU41. Proi. waite Begiins DJutisChapel. The First Methodist Church As WPB ConMuissioner will hold special neighborhood prayer meetings at 7:30 p.m. every Wednes- Prof. John B. Waite of the Uni- day during Lent. versity Law School held his first Three Lenten suppers on alternate hearings Thursday and Friday in Thursdays have been planned by St. Detroit in his new position of Re- Andrew's Episocopal parish. Speak- gional Compliance Commissioner for ers will include Miss Bernice Jansen, the War Production Beard. former missionary in Japan, and "The purpose of these hearings" Mrs. David Covell, social worker at Prof. Waite said, "is to ascertain the the Episcopal City Mission, Detroit. guilt of industries that WPB investi- The Westminster Student Guild of gating officers believe to have vio- the First Presbyterian Church will lated WPB crders and to make rec- hold special Lenten program meet- cmmnendations ranging from dismis- ! ings each Sunday evening and Lent- sal of the cas to indictments by the en Bible classes on Fridays. In federal court." addition there will be five family pot-luck suppers and Lenten serv- ice on Thursday evenings. The Lenten season will be climaxed with observance of Maundy Thurs- A Dday, Good Friday, and Easter, April 25. Smoke wours skyward from fires on docks at Naples, Italy, after a} raid by U.S. bombing pilanes. Hits were scored on a number of vessels, a military barracks, a fuel dunp and other targets on the quays and in the city. This is a British Air Ministry official Photo. Nazis Repulsed itler Orders In New Attack Greater Effort On Allied Posts B His Allies Philip A. Conrad, who has served for the past two years as director of the American Friends Service Com- mittee office in Lisbon, Portugal, willy speak at a public meeting tomorrowI at 7:30 p.M. in Lane Hall on "Lisbon, Crossroads of Europe." Anyone interested is invited to at- tend. Dutch Club Will Meet The Netherlands League, an orga- nization for students of Dutch des- cent, will hold its first monthly meet- ing at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 23, in the Grand Rapids Room of the Women's League. This club and its purposes were formulated by John Sherwig, '44, who felt that students with this common bond of national j origin should become better acquaint- ed both with each other and with the Netherlands. War Movies To Be Shown er Sunday Films Will Acquaint Students with' Present Activities ofColleges The first evening program of war ictivities movies will be presented by he University Extension Service and he Michigan Union at 8:15 p.m. Sun- lay in the auditorium of the Kellogg Dental Building. The films are 'being given in an effort to acquaint the campus and community with the type of movie being circulated by the Office of War information, illustrating war activi- ties being carried on in the country today. Four movies from the Bureau of Visual Education film library will be shown. "Campus on the March," which is one of the movies to be shown, pic- tures war activities in more than 500 colleges and universities in the United States that are devoting their re- sources and facilities to the war ef- fort. Negro colleges have also gone to war and a film, "Negro Colleges in War Time," has been chosen. This features activities at Tuskegee, Prai- rie View College, Howard University and Hampton Institute and the train- ing of technicians, radio men and doctors. "Maflpower," the third movie to be shown, presents the problems of manpower-labor pirating, the short- age of skilled labor, living conditions of workers and the training of wo- men to enter war industries. The other movie which has been chosen for the first program is "Bat- tle Is Our Business," which follows a Canadian soldier through the basic training to battle drill. Dr. Ad(imnall To Lecture About Vitamins Today Dr. C. R. Addinall will speak on the importance and industrial de- velopment of vitamins at 4:15 p.m. today in Room 151, Chemistry building. Dr. Addinall is director of the Li- a t t . CLASSIFIED RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of )c for each additional 5 words.) $1.00 per 15-word insertion for 3 or more days. (Increase of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request M~m H"C TODAY AND SATURDAY I I ~~ * - .9 LAUNDERINGI LAUNDRY - 2-1044 Sox darned. Careful work at low price. TYPING MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. WANTED WANTED: Ticket for Slide Rule Ball. Price no object. Call John Haberland, 5472. WANTED: Used clothes. Best prices paid. Ben the Tailor, 122 E. Wash- ington St. Phone 5387 after 6 p.m. LADIES light-weight touring bicycle wanted. Will pay good price. Box 2197. Michigan Daily. LOST and FOUND LOST--Chi Phi pin. Reward. Phone 4324. WOULD the fellow who borrowed red bike from the front of Angell Hall please call Don Rendinell, 2-4401 and tell me where he left it. Reward. MISCELLANEOUS WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112. j TYPEWRITERS of all makes. Of- fice and portable models. Bought, rented, repaired. Student and Of- fice Supplies. O. D. Morrill, 314 South State St. Phone 6615. II Continuous from P.M. WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE NOW PLAYING i q. ,- 0S too 4 , --F Nurses' Aides Give Help at } Health Servicej Health Service, already suffering a help shortage because of the war, found it necessary to ask the help of student Nurses' Aides this week as six members of the regular staff have bden placed on the infirmary list with severe colds. The girls who have been helping, out, working both afternoons and evenings, are Marjorie Smith, '43, Mary Pfender, '43, Jeanette Ray- mond, '45, Fran Hall, '43, and Mary Alice Hahn, '45. Praising the work of the Nurses' Aides, Miss Faith Angell, head nurse, said yesterday, "I honestly don't know what we would do without them. They have been so generous I with their time and work that I can't say enough in thanks and praise." As for the students, their only comment is, "Do we like it? I'll say we do!" Speech Contest Wil Be Held Registration for the National Dis- cussion Contest, open to all full- time undergraduates who are candi- dates for bachelor's degrees, must be completed at the Speech office or with Prof. Kenneth G. Hance by March 22. Written manuscripts on the sub- ject, "How the American Republics Are Cooperating in Winning the War," will be due March 29. Manu- scripts are not to exceed 1,000 words. The two contestants who are piiked to represent Michigan in the state contest will have their travel- ing expenses paid for the regional contest May 4. First place winner in each regional contest will go to the national finals in New York May 20, where the contest will be held as part of' America's Town Meeting of the Air. The six first place winners will receive as prize a trip to Mexico or an award of $500. Last year more than 2,000 stu- dents in 352 institutions participated in the contest. AAUW Will Offer $500 Fellowship to 'M' Woman Applications for the $500 fellow- ship presented by the Ann Arbor- Ypsilanti branch of the American Association of University Women must be presented to Mrs. Dean W. Myers, chairman of the Scholarship Committee, or Miss Helen Wiley. at the Rackham School of Graduate Study before Monday. The fellowship is open to any woman who has completed one year that pivot and Gabes on the coast the that she will repent, because Ger- Axis is strongly entrenched and the 1 many is determined that her allies Mareth Line lies to the south. The Mareth fortifications of concrete pill- boxes and barbed wire entanglements extend only 40 miles in from the coast, however, and the British Eighth Army apparently was actively engaged in skirting that line in their westward push to Ksar Rhilane., MSC Trains Farm iYouths LANSING, March 11. -U(/P--Inten- sive training of 70 farm youths from Northern Michigan began today at Michigan State College to prepare them for jobs on mechanized farms in southern areas of the state. must collaborate in the fullest sense of the word." King Boris has not yet replied to the note, it was said, and he is re- ported trying to find a means of avoiding meeting the German de- mands, details of which were not disclosed. This report said that Bulgaria is in such a state of disorganization, due perhaps to deliberately bad ad- ministration, that it is utterly im- possible for her to take part in any military activities in the immediate future. A traveller just arrived in Turkey from Germany said the Germans were feverishly preparing a 1943 of- (Continued from Pae ) Force struck a series of damaging blows. U. S. Flying Fortresses escorted by lightning fighters shot down eight Axis fighters during raids on two air- dromes near Tunis, and were report- ed to have damaged 13 other planes{ parked on the fields. Spitfireshshot up Axis vehicles and positions the whole length of Tunisia, and medium bombers also blasted Gafsa which now is being threatened by French ground forces closing in from Metlaoui, 22 miles to the south- west. (Cairo reported Allied fighter- bombers left a dozen vehicles aflame and shot down five Axis planes in operations over the Mareth Line area). Gafsa is Rommel's western flank base above the Chott Djerid. Between ANKARA. March 10. (Delayed)- 01)-- Adolf Hitler in the past few( days has sent notes to all his south-' eastern European allies setting forth( details of Germany's new "total war effort" and demanding that these allies should make similar efforts, according to information received in1 diplomatic quarters here and dis-1 closed tonight. In these notes, dispatched since March 1, Hungary, Croatia, Slo- vakia, Rumlania and Bulgaria have been called upon to contribute sol- diers, workers and economic aid to the Nazi Reich, each nation accord- ing to its capacity. The note to Bulgaria, it was, learned, was addressed by Hitler to King Boris, and was delivered to the; King in Sofia personally by the Bul- garian Ambassador to Berlin. Thep note to Bulgaria, diplomatic sources said, took a threatening turn. It was said to have warned that "If Bulgaria fails to accept sacrifices, her alliance with Germany demands' $1,000 Added to Scholarship Fund Contributions amounting to one thousand dollars were added to the Bomber Scholarship fund last week, bringing their total for the current school year to four thousand dollars. Biggest amounts on the list were $512 from the Goodfellow Daily, $217 from the campus scrap drive, and $63 from Collegiate Sorosis. Other contributors announced were# brary Service Bureau of Merck and Alpha Delta Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Company, manufacturers of syn- Phi, Phi Psi, Delta Gamma, Delta' thetic vitamins. He is an expert in Kappa Epsilon, Delta Upsilon, Greene the field of vitamins, hormones, and i medicinal chemicals. Dr. Addinall House, Kappa Nu, Paul Bunyan For- studied at London and Sheffield Uni- mal, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Sigma Delta, versities and received his Master's Prescott House, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. and Doctor's degrees at Harvard. Sigma Alpha Mu, Stockwell Hall,. The lecture is sponsored by the Theta Delta Chi, Theta Chi, Theta University of Michigan section of Xi, and Zeta Beta Tau. the American Chemical Society. 1i- , Roswell G. Caxr, state farm security 1 fensive against Russia in which they administrator, said the boys were re- i plan to use 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 men cruited from farms on which they in a final great attempt to conquer had been classsified as non-essential. the Soviet. NELSON EDDY r LMF Y! M A N Pr Ii -- Today and Saturday - Oe f; vo +4 L ,I} t a 'K Y lf t \ Ilk. I R N a L D O,' WE:'- t -, IrtV, I, B0 EiNT } I / lr&- E I ~"U It