T~&~E E~C4IT THE MiCLHIGAN DAILY 1 -*' Pr~es. Hannah 1' Soldiers 1k Cautions Students To Prepare as Leaders In Post-War Affairs SIjc47FqSElJL WEEK Inui rs ,te T owarreats it First Siep Toward Victory t By GLENN BARB Associated Press Correspondent One of the war's most brilliant tac- tical successes ushered in last week on a note of high hope which was EAST LANSING, April 3.-W)-I sobered somewhat by the weekend. President John A. Hannah, of Michi- The Mareth Line was reduced, Rom- gan State College, formally welcom- mel was beaten again but he and his ing soldier-students assigned to the Afrika Corps survived to fight an- college for training, cautioned them other day and apparently the long in an address today: process of pursuit and bringing him "When this war is won, let it be to bay was all to be done over again. your business to see to it that our public servants at home and abroad preserve in peace what we now fight for. Unless you men who now fight our battles have vision, foresight and leadership to assume that responsi- bility, your sacrifice may have been in vain." Straight from Hannah to the sol- diers, who are members of an Army Air crew training detachment, came the injunction that uniformed stu- dents would be bound by the same re- striction as civilian students, and that this means there could be no smoking on the campus, save in certain build- ings. The soldiers are under quaran- tine to check an outbreak of colds and influenza. He assured them they would re- ceive full credit toward a degree for their studies here, would have all the privileges of civilian students but would be bound by the same restric- tions. Society Plans Study Series" The Karl Marx Society has sched- uled a series of classes to be held on alternate Sundays throughout the rest of the semester in the Union. The first discussion group, which is to meet today, will center around the topic "The Nature of Fascism." Factors which will enter into the dis- cussion are Britain's world front and the nature of imperialism and cap- italism. The meeting on April 18 will dis- cuss the "Nature of the Soviet Union" and the next meeting, scheduled for May 2, will consider "Labor's Role in the War." The series will be con- cluded with a discussion of "The NA- tional Question" on May 16. Nevertheless there was nothing to indicate that the Allied schedule for clearing Rommel and Von Arnim out of Africa as a preliminary to invasion across the Mediterranean had been disarranged. Rommel's next haven almost certainly must be his last on African soil. Eisenhower Expresses Satisfaction General Eisenhower, the American Commander in Chief, summed up the week's achievements with a declara- tion that the British, French and Americans under him "are working in complete harmony and unison not only toward immediate victory on this front but also toward eventual complete defeat of all our enemies." On other fronts there was little surface evidence of the progress of the United Nations program but neither were there any setbacks. Allied planning for victory and for post-war problems made obvious progress. Anthony Eden, Britain's Foreign Secretary, ended a visit to Washington which President Roose- velt said produced agreement on 95 per cent of the ground covered. United States officers from the three major Pacific commands were re- turning to their posts after Washing- ton war councils which promised the early unfolding of action to confound the Japanese. United Nations confer- ences on food and currency problems were announced for the near future. Rising Intensity in Atlantic Scant bits of news from the Battle of the Atlantic, which the Allies must win if they are to snatch victory in 12 Hurt in Elevator Fall OMAHA, April 3.- (A)- Twelve passengers, all women and children, were injured when an elevator fell, about 25 feet at the J. C. Penney de- partment store in downtown Omaha this afternoon. the other battles, indicated it was rising to a new pitch on intensity. The Germans made their monthly boast of U-boat and submarine sinkings, 926,600 tons. That, properly discount- ed, was not alarming! Allied spokes- men gave assurances that the margin of new building over sinkings was being maintained, perhaps even in- creasing at a rising pace. Annual Honors To Be Given At Convocation The twentieth annual Honors Con- vocation has been scheduled for 11 a.m. Friday, April 16, Mrs. Fanni Kaufmann, Assistant to the Registrar, announced yesterday. Dr. Waldo Gifford Leland, director of the American Council of Learned Societies, will deliver the convocation address on "Scholars In Govern- ment." Senior students who have attained at least a "B" average and hold rank in the highest ten per cent of their classes in the various schools and colleges of the University will be hon- ored. Junior, sophomore and freshman honors are awarded to those students who have attained an average equiva- lent to at least half "A" and half "B" grades. Honors will be given for graduate school students selected for distin- quished scholarly work in special fields. Various awards will also be given for outstanding work in special fields, including chemistry, Latin and Greek, and metallurgical engineering. Invitations for the convocation are being sent to the students and their families this week. Church Holds Aptitude Test Due Tuesday 'U' War Board Asks Students To Return All Blanks to League Application forms distributed over the weekend for the all campus apti- tude test to be given April 13 must be. returned to the War Information Of- f ice in the League by Tuesday, the University War Board said yesterday. These examinations are the first of their kind to be given by the Univer- sity and are designed to give to each student a comprehensive objective measurement of his basic abilities. The test will be written at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 13, in Hill Auditorium. The examination period will run for three hours. Students who did not enter the Un- iversity as freshmen-transfer stu- dents, will be asked to write a second test the following Thursday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The battery of aptitude tests were designed by University faculty mem- bers and are being administered with- out cost to the students. The complete results will be made available to each student so that he may use them to best judge his proper place in the armed services or in war industry. Vogyan To Give, Organ Recital Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, of the School of Music faculty, will be pre- sented in a program by the Chicago Club of Women Organists at 6:15 p.m. tomdrrow in the First Congregational Church of Oak Park, Illinois. The program will begin with the "Psalm XIX" ,py Marcello, which will be followed by the "Concerto in D Minor" by Vivaldi-Bach. Else Har- than Arendt Seder will assist in the program and will sing the solos from Bach's Cantata No. 151, "Susser Trost." Other numbers on the program will be "Fantansie and Fugue in C Minor," byBach, Vierne's "Symphonic No. 6," and "Two Nocturnes" by DeLamater. This will be Mrs. Vogan's. second Chicago appearance this year. Last June she played for the district con- vention of the American Guild of Organists. She will repeat the pro- gram here April 14 in Hill Auditori- um. Di dlw PUCTURE NEWS AS S OCIATED PRESS o C E A N P AT R 0 L-Ready to drop shattering depth charges, Coast Guard planes soar over an , outward bound merchant ship while their crewmen xwatch the water below for Axis subs. Special Service CLOTHS inMPrints Pure linen, cotton, or spun rayon cloths in charming do- imestic-looking prints. We have them in all sizes with or without napkins. GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 Nickels Arcade Always Reasonably Priced := >o<==>o=>o<==>o<::= >o< --->o=>o<==>o<;=> o<=:;>o<;;;;=<=>o<=; Lutherans To Celebrate Golden Jubilee Today Two special golden jubilee services will be held today at Trinity Evange- lical Lutheran Church in celebration of its fiftieth anniversary. Dr. Elmer E. Flack, Th.D., S.T.M., dean of Hamma Divinity School at Springfield, 0., will preach for the regular Sunday service at 10:30 a.m. on the subject "The Stability of the Church." The Rev. Claudius Jensen, president of Michigan Synod of the United Lutheran Church, will speak at the vesper service beginning at 6:30 p.m. Trinity Lutheran Church is largely the product of a University professor's ideal. Prof. Carl W. Belser of the Se- mitic Languages department, became interested in establishing a Lutheran Church conducted in English. The first regular church service was held on Easter' Sunday, April 2, 1893. During the past ten years the church has been served by the Rev. Henry 0. Yoder who has also acted as pastor for the Lutheran students of the University. CALLED HALT -Gov. John C. Vivian (above) of Colo- rado ordered the state's selective service to stop Induction of farm workers in the state, charging "chaotic confusion" In situation. BLOOD FOR BATTLE LINES -An attendant loads one of the refrigerated Church containers used to ship blood do- nations to the laboratories where it is processed into plasma for treating casualties in the U. S. armed forces. The containers pre; vent changes in temperature, thus facilitating Red Cross program for 4,000,000 donations this year. * THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION * VOL. 1, No. 25 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN APRIL 4, 1943 their dining rooms within the next week, unless they can devise some means of cutting expenses to the bone. * * * MICHIGAN PROFES- SORS shine in politics too. . . . Prof. Leigh J. Young and Prof. John L. Brumm are competing against each other for mayor of Ann Arbor in the election to be held Monday . . . Prof. Young, Republican incum- bent, is professor of silvi- culture in the forestry school . . . Prof. Brumm, Democratic candidate, is chairman of the journal- ism department. * * * STUDENT GROUPS on campus are finding more and more that they can do for the war effort . . . They are going to be or- ganized next week to ful- fill the University's part in a national drive scheduled to begin April 12 to loan the government money to meet the emergency loan drives ... Gordon Griffith, business staff, said that it was the intention of the faculty committee to ask students to contribute to the drive . . . His commit- tee, which was appointed by the Ann Arbor War Finance Committee and is made up of Prof. Leigh J. to a dreary day of rain and stuff.. . Tennis rack- ets, shirt sleeves, bicycle trips, baseball games and other signs of spring have been increasingly evident during the past week . . . Then the weather broad- cast for Friday said "prob- able snow flurries" . . . It snowed, and snowed and snowed. "LOOKING TOWARD Victory" will be the topic of the semi-annual Post- War Conference sponsored' by the Post-War Council April 9-11 . . . Prof. Pres- ton W. Slosson of the his- tory department will give the keynote address on "International Govern- ment" . . . Panel discus- sions will be the order of the day with many phases of the post-war world be- ing studied. * * * PLAY PRODUCTION of the speech department did it again, ending their per- formances of "Caste," Eng- lish comedy by Thomas W. Robertson, Saturday night at the Lydia Mendelssohn. .. .Janet Stickney played the lead of Esther, the daughter who marries into society and John Babing- ton was cast as her father Eccles, crafty and lazy ... Just another point for the Ilyny"O" +nTT t. - +-I that a common occur- rence? . . . Campus capers cut loose in a gala fun day . . . Coeds appeared for dinner in night shirts, shorts, slacks, pajamas and other such dress that just "ain't nice for dinner" ... In fact paper bags from Goldman Bros. Cleaners did for some of the Jordan "bags" . . . Mosher gals decked themselves out in that there old traditional Health Service style, com- plete with the "angel robes" and even wings ... The waitresses at Helen Newberry behaved in un- ladylike fashion, retiring to the sun parlor for a little poker game . . . All in all quite a time .. . But the girls have all settled back into their usual lady- like selves. * * * MORE THAN 500 Uni- versity students participa- ted in the largest exam- ination program in the country when they wrote the combined Army-Navy examination in the Rack- ham auditorium . . . The exam was part of the na- tion-wide program to se- lect students for both the Army's A-12 and Navy's V-12 college training pro- grams . . . After the tests are graded, those men who passed will be informed was contributed to the Red Cross by patriotic resi- dents of Washtenaw Coun- ty in a one-month fund campaign which ended of- ficially Wednesday . . . Campaign Chairman Chas. R. Henderson revealed that Ann Arbor alone had contributed $53,928.37 of this month's total . . . This amount does not include the amount contributed by some of the individual townships. * * * PLANS ARE UNDER- WAY to increase the pres- ent obstacle course for PEM students here . . . The object is to make the course plenty tough but safe enough to prevent in- jury . . . The present ob- stacle course is 120 yards long and 16 feet wide --- It will be increased to 350 yards with the addition of new obstacles . . . Michi- gan men are waking up every morning with a new muscle staring them in the face ... But word from a former Michigan State athlete says that PEM and Army exercise for the men has nothing on the train- ing that the WAAC is go- ing through . . . He said that they do twice as much exercising and stand up under it twice as well as you Army men there . FOR YOUR HAIR % 9AL S'Z6CP CREMM-SET Moon light sparkle on your hair-waves - quicksilver magic for your ringlets - here's what you've been looking for! Harsh, dry, bleached, or dull hair re- sponds instantly.The merest touch transforms brittle ends into satiny curls that keep well-groomed all day or evening. A boon for the "up" hairdo, to keep stray wisps in place. Can be carried in your bag. 75c - $1-25 (ADD 10% TAX) B R A Z I L I A N M A R I N E S-These are Brazilian marines-soldiers of the land and sea. They will help defend the Americas against threats of Axis aggression. -- w~N::;~*;.x;.~.~;:.:.- . ....................:.::;:::::::::;*.*;;..:.::~:::.:.:.:. ~y..!.:.s-