14 19i T il T x x VXA ,IL XIUtAP r ~ ,Z)L 'r £a~ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Air Raid Shelter At Ford Rouge Plant j (Continued from Page 4) speak on "Experiences in the Petroleum Industry" with special reference to hydro- carbons under high pressures. Refresh- ments. Public is Invited. The Annual French Play: "Le Monde ou l'on s'ennuie", by Edouard Failleron, will be given on Tuesday, April 27, at 8:30 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. One-Act Plays: Under the auspices of the Department of Speech, a one-hour. program of one-act plays, directed and put on by advanced, students in Play Production, will be presented at' 7:30 p.m, on Tuesday, April 20, in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. There will be no ad- mission charge. Senior Society will hold its initiation on Monday, Aprl 19, in the League Chapel. All 1943 graduates will call for their ini- tiates and report at the League at 8:45 p'.m. Archery: For all those who are inter- ested in archery, there will be a meeting of the Archery Club at 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 21, at W.A.B., fair wea- ther or foul. Churches The First Baptist Church: 10:00 a.m.: The Roger Williams Class will meet in the Guild House to study the Epistles of Join. 11:00 a.m.: Sermon: "Hosanna", by Rev. C. H. Loucks, 7:00 p.m.: At the regular meeting of the Roger Williams Guild at the Guild House, Mr. Loucks will lead a summary discussion on "Our Responsibility in the Establishing of a Just and Durable Peace". Puitarian Church: 11:00 a.m. Church Service. Sermon by Mr. Redman on "Seasonal Faith." 8:00 p.m. Liberal Students' Union. Dis- cussion of the promise and limitations of "Cooperative Democracy." First Church of Christ, Scientist: Wednesday evening service at 8:00 p.m. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "Doctrine of Atonement." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. Free public Reading Room at 106 E. Washington St., open every day except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. un- til 5:00 p.m.; Saturdays until 9:00 p.m. 3tyrst Methodist Church and Wesley Founiation: Class for people of student age with Professor Carrothers at 9:30 a.m. Subject for discussion: ",Livin* Intelli- gently When Successful." Morning Wor- ship Service at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "Ride On." Wes- leyan Guild meeting beginning with re- freshments at 5:45 p m A + - - - gram. Mrs. Welthy Honsinger ishe V11) speak on the subject: "Can North and South America Unite?". Bach's Oratorio, "The Passion of Our Lord acccrding to St. Matthew," will be presented In the sanctuary of the First Methodist Church by the Senior Choir under the direction of Hardin Van Deur- sen, with Mary McCall Stubbins, or- ganist, on Wednesday evening, April 21, at 7:30 o'clock. Soloists will be Thelma von Eisenhaur, soprano, of Detroit; Maur- ine Parzybok, contralto, of Chicago; Clar- ence R. Ball, tenor, of Toledo; and Fred Patton, bass, of Lansing. John Challis, of Ypsilanti, will play the harpsichord. The public Is invited. Lutheran Student Chapel: Sunday at 11:00 a.m. Regular Service in MichiganrLeague Chapel. Sermonby the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Taking an Attitude toward the Crucified Christ". Sunday at 4:00 p.m. Communion Ves- per Service at St. Paul's Student Club, for Lutheran Students and Service Men. Sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Faithfulness". Supper Meeting at 5:30 p.m. Zion Lutheran Church will hold services at 10:30 a.m. Sunday with the Rev. Fred- erick A. Schiotz speaking on "Sir, We ,Would See Jesus". Trintity Lutheran Church services will begin at 10:30 a.m. Sunday with the Rev. Henry 0. Yoder speaking on "The Marks of True Christian Fellowship." The Lutheran Student Association will meet for a fellowship dinner and program at 4:30 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Frederick A. Schiotz, Executive Secretary of Student Service for the American Lutheran Con- ference, will talk. First Congregational Church: At 10:00 a.m. in the assembly room, Symposium on "What I Think". Colonel Ganoe will speak on "What I Think About the Making of Tomorrow". 10:45 a.m. Church service. Dr. L. A. Parr will speak on "Art Thou a King?" At 5:30 p.m. Ariston League will discuss "Christian Beliefs." 7:00 p.m. Student Fellowship and Disci- pies Guild. Dr. Mary Van Tuyl will discuss "Student Attitudes Towards Religion." 8:30 p.m. Luchnokala, "Lighting of the Lights", will be held on Sunday. The pub- lic is invited. First Presbyterian Church: Morning Worship-10:45. "Out of the Depths", Palm Sunday Sermon by Dr. W. P. Lemon. Westminster Student Guild: Supper and fellowship hour at 6:00 p.m. followed by a Vesper Program of special music. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 11:00 a.m. Junior Church; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and 3ermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. D.D.; Unity: Mrs. Russell Slimmon, Assistant 5:00 p.m. Choral Evensong; 5:45 p.m. H- to the Director of the Dearborn Unity Square Club, Page Hall; 6:00 p.m. Rector's Center, will be the guest speaker Sunday Question Hour, Tatlock Hall; 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan League at 11 o'clock. The Canterbury Club for Episcopal students, Monday night study group will meet at darrs Hall. Panel discussion (student 8 o'clock at the Unity Reading Rooms, 310 speakers) on "What I Believe". S. State St. Visitors are welcome. HAND-LOOKJYxy I - --- -- - Beauty hand i lRux ric on Fre bFw ........ ............ K and service go in hand in this ins gown of Ray- neh Crepe. "Singing Bird"-high note of charm in the contrasting piping and embroidery with dainty cutout birds of net to add a touch of true or- iginality. Tiny stitches for great durability and that "Hand-Look." Sky blue on white. White on sky blue. Sizes 32 to 40. Gown $3.95 Slip $2.95 This is the entrance to an air raid shelter at the Ford Motor Com- pany's River Rouge plant. Industrial firms throughout Michigan have made extensive preparations in event of air raids. 'GOOD NEIGHBORS': Pan-American Celebration Stresses Demato v n- u i7~VAN BUREN. S~o 8 NICKELS ARCADE -- 1 J~dYi)jA1 I w1~ (((l By VALERIE ANDREWS "Caramba la fiesta linda!" and "Que bien lo estamos pasando!" were the order of the day when the Latin American students and instructors gathered at the American Legion Home Friday night in celebration of Pan-American Day. Edward Franzetti, graduate engin- eering student from Chile and presi- dent of the program, expressed the essence of the meeting in, "We feel that great leaders such as Lincoln, Bolivar, Washington, and San Mar- tin were symbolic of the liberation of all countries, and tonight we have tried to express here formally this basic unity of the democratic spirit in the Pan-American countries." The first half of the program con- sisted of speeches by representatives of the republics of North, Central, and South America and the Carib- bean, who in discussing the history of their. countries emphasized that the Americas are united now by the same ideals of democracy and lib- erty, of culture and mutual coopera- tion.- Dr. Raul Olivera was Master of Ceremonies while Mr. Aloysio Pimen- ta was the representative for Brazil, Mr. Francisco Villegas for the Carib- bean republics and Cuba, and Dr. Jorge Simonelli for Argentina, Ura- guay, and Paraguay. Miss Gloria Bracho, representative of Mexico, Columbia, andVenezuela, and Dr. Jorge Vallarino, representa- tive of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chile, gave a lively Ecuadorian dance which brought many smiles of ap- preciation from the audience. Professor Avard Fairbanks of the Institute of Fine Arts displayed a small study of his bronze statue of Lincoln, which was recently sent to Hawaii, and said that "Lincoln was the representative of not only North America but rather of the ideas of the Americas and is therefore a sym- bol of this meeting to celebrate the free spirit of the Pan-American countries. His great political and philosophical ideas are an expression of all the nations which are fighting List of Honor' 0 # Students Given (Continued from Page 6) today against the opposite philoso- phy of enslavement." The second part of the program was devoted to refreshments and dancing in which the two hundred Latin-Americans mingled in the Conga and Fox-trot and Rhumba. In a concluding remark, "Hurra, nuestras naciones estan unidas de polo a polo!" Edward Franzetti ex- pressed the hope of all for unified democracies from "pole to pole." Amendment For Incentive Pay-ment Killed by MINX MODES . . . . . ....... CD WASHINGTON, April 17.- ()- The House voted today to bar the use of funds in the $707,040,844 Agricul- ture Department appropriation bill for payment of so-called incentive payments to farmers for producing crops. This prohibition was contained in an amendment offered by Chairman Cannon (Dem.-Mo.) of the Appro- priations Committee, who contended farmers want "no government hand- outs, but fair prices at the market place." When some members suggested that the department might still re- vive the Incentive Payment Program and use funds from an approved $300,000,000 benefit payment item in the bill, Cannon offered his "safe- guarding" amendment and the House adopted it by a standing vote of 131 to 27. Crippg-led Plane 4 Returns Safely Fortress Fights Two Airships, Downs One LONDON, April 17.- (AP')- A Fly-1 ing Fortress with only one engine working well and with only two guns4 and little ammunition left fought offI two enemy planes and knocked down one of them in its fighting return to England after the raid on Lorient and Brest yesterday, U.S. headquar- ters announced today. "I still can't believe we are here," was the first comment of the bom- bardier, Lieut. James E. Montgomery of Maud, Okla.' Like other members of the crew, he warmly acclaimed the pilot, Lieut. James M. McDonald of Hamlet, N.C., who brought the craft over the chan- nel only 20 feet above the water. "We were well out to sea and on the way home," Montgomery said. "One engine was gone and two others were damaged. All but the two top turret guns had been jettisoned and there were only about 50 rounds of ammunition left. "Then two Focke-Wulf 190's spot- ted us. Inside the ship, we were all set for a crash landing in the water. We thought it was curtains for us." As the two yellow-nosed fighters dived at the apparently helpless bomber, Staff Sgt. J. E. Brunskatter of Saginaw, Mich., turned the top turret guns on them and shot one into the sea. The other fled. Exam for Navy V-1, Marines To Be Held (Continued from Page 1) dents) unfit for further training, the British, French Cut into Enemy .00 Line in Tunisia Eisenhower Warns That Advances Will Be 'Difficult and Costly' ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 17.-(V)- Slashing attacks by British and French troops today in the shell- swept mountain heights of northern Tunisia cut new wedges in the enemy siege line which rings Tunis and Bizerte from a distance of 25 to 50 miles. Meanwhile, Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower, the supreme Allied command- er, warned of hard fighting ahead and declared future advances would be difficult and costly." Slowly and stubbornly, two British brigades exploited their capture of the 2,000-foot Debel Ang and the lower Djebel Tanngoucha slightly to the east. Thrusting forward in strong patrols, the British reached some points only 25 miles from Tunis in this general sector about Medjez-el- Bab. Tackle Difficult Positions Not since the ill-fated campaigns in Norway and Greece have the Brit- ish tackled such difficult mountain Positions as those which tower beside the 13-mile stretch of road to Te- bourba where the plain of Tunis be- gins. The canyons have been sown thickly with mines. Heavy German mortars with a range of 3,000 yards and strong arrays of machineguns defend the approaches to each en- emy strong point. Reviewing the entire North Afri- can campaign at one of his frequent press conferences, General Eisen- hower told how the Germans had been sowing land mines heavily and disclosed that by command ig the mine fields with mortar fire the en- emy had turned the mine into "an offensive instead of a defensive wea- pon." French Concentrate Assaults French troops concentrated their assaults about 30 miles south of Med- jez-el-Bab against the southwestern tp of the enemy's Tunisian defenses in the mountains at the head of Ousseltia Valley. The mountain tops there average about 2,000 feet and the canyons are even steeper and narrower than those near Medjez- el-Bab. Russians Gain At Novorossisk Kill 400 Germans; Destroy Enemy Tanks LONDON, April 18 (Sunday)- Russian troops in a renewed fight to oust the Germans from their re- maining Caucasian foothold around Novorossisk have killed 4,000 of the enemy and destroyed or damaged 17 tanks in the last two days, Moscow announced early today. The midnight communique record- ed by the Soviet Monitor also said that 39 German guns, 31 mortars and more than 100 machineguns had been been destroyed. Soviet forces last were reported only 20 miles northeast of Novoros- sick in the Abinskaya sector, and 30 miles north of the Black sea port in the Anastasevskaya area. In yesterday's fighting the Russian communique said that the Germans used Rumanian troops as a shield in an unsuccessful counterattack which was described thus: "Under the deadly fire of Soviet troops the Rumanians turned tail. Then the Germans opened fire against their 'Allies'-the Rumani- ans. "By a counterblow our men beat the enemy and improved their po- sitions. In this sector alone the enemy left three damaged tanks and 300 dead on the battlefield." Miracle Doctor Faces Justice (Continued from Page 1) diseases and professor of child health in the School of Public Health, said, "Dr. Koch is confusing the effects of his drugs with certain spontaneous changes that naturally occur in diseases which he has claimed to have cured." Although the drugs have never been tested in the University Hospit- al, specific tests In other laboratories have not had the same results as those suggested by Dr. Koch, Dr. McKhann said. "While the medical profession in general does not'deny that the drugs have curative effects, it does feel that these claims made for its cura- tive qualities in place of the life-giv- >1 A CASUALCOAT TO JOiN YOUR SUIT LIFE Tops for smartness through Easter-the casual coat that does clock-round duty over your favorite suits-your prettiest dresses. Every coat is su- perbly tailored for good looks, long, sturdy wear. In beige, red, blue, navy, brown, checks. / Mary Jane Morris, A.B. Humphrey Marshall Peter, A.B. Ernest George Rudolph, A.B., Coli Dickson M. Saunders, A.B. George Tourner Schilling, A.B. Robert Drinan Urich, A.B., Alumni Scholar Mu Phi Epsilon Award Mary Imogene Evans,, James L. Babcock Scholar Charles Lathrop Pack Foundation Prize In Forestry William Lyon Kier James William Meteer William Harold Payne Award Lois Irene Lindsay, A.B., A.M., DK4) Phi Lambda Upsilon Awards In Chemistry And Chemical Engineering Lawrence Sims Bartell, 'FAT Harold Anthony O'Hern, Jr., 4FAT, TBH, 5Z, '4K4, Carl Vagn Orberg, 'FAT, TBIT, Phi Sigma Scholarship Youl! "click" like a camera in this slick Minx Modes suit, so iresh and scrubbed looking with its stitched pique collar, cuffs and pockets, removable for tubbing. Coral, brown or green spun rayon, sizes 9 to 17 and a real favorite with the A, *21 ,95 1P1 Minx Modes College and Career Girl Committee! $9.95 mx Modes Juniors Here Exclusively .qt A,&v / 70r, CA r AID YOUR NATION BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS I