r.G THE MICHIGAN Dilu& IT N PART OF A DAY'S WORK- Blizzard Hars Ski Troopers 0 41-1 --^ - Chosen Surgeon, General A (Editor's Note: The following article is the first in a series of seven depict ing the life of ski troopers.) By CAPT. HAROLD W. SULLIVAN Judge Advocate General's School "Howling blizzards and avalanch- ing mountainsiofrsnow are all part of the lot of mountain infantry," declares Lt. Larry W. Lougee, now being trained as a staff officer at the Judge Advocate General's School. Fresh in from Colorado, where he was on winter maneuvers with the famed 87th Regiment of Moun- tain Infantry, famed ski troops, Lt. Lougee described-the daily life of the ski soldier on an eleven-day maneuver. Already the 87th is the most pub- licized unit training in this country. Their maneuvers are conducted at an altitude of 12,000 feet or higher and a blizzard is considered a break for furnishing ideal tactical condi- tions under which to practice. Lt. Lougee was born at Moosehead, Me., the paradise of fishermen, hunters and skiers, and duty with ski troops for him was a natural. In his own words, Lt. Lougee gives us an hour by hour account of dusk to dawn of WOMAN'S ARCH-ENEMY! Don't let the devastating moths lestroy your precious fur coat this summer. Don't be one of their victims. Don't contribute to the millions of dollars in damage they cause. Hogan-Hayes, Michigan's Lar- gest Exclusive Furriers, will store your fur coat in their scientifically protected cold storage vaults at very little cost. Our thorough gas fumi- gation and sterilization process completely destroys all germs and moth eggs. Don't delay! Call 2-5656 right now for bonded messengers. No charge for pick-up and delivery. Ex- press charges paid both ways for out-of-town customers. $3 for coats valued up to $100. HOGANHAYES u j201 SOUTH MAIN. each of the eleven days on the trail. "Tuesday night we received or- ders that maneuvers would start in the morning. At 4:30 a.m. Wednesday we were up and ate at five. It was snowing hard with a light wind. By 8 a.m., a real bliz- zard howled down on us from the north, swirling snow in every direc- tion. Our battalion was formed into three columns, and on the dot of eight, the first man started out for Homestake Lake, Colo., twelve miles distant. We had 780 men on skis and each man carried his own rations. The packs were heavy. There were to- boggans to carry various equipment. Two medical detachment troopers brought up the rear. All told there were several thousand men in the column, all on skis, each carrying his own rifle, pack, and a pair of snowshoes. "We had not gone more than 100 yards when it became obvious that a few of the men who had joined my unit only a day or two before could not make the grade. They were not seasoned to such altitude and to carrying such a load. We were then at 12,500 feet above sea level. After one soldier had fallen many times, I finally sent him back. In the next hour, I sent sev- eral more back. While men must be conditioned, the officer in charge must always keep the safety of his men in mind as a prime con- sideration. "After skiing down a long hill we reached the Rio Grande railroad tracks at Tennessee Pass. Our diffi- culties really began there. Three long freight trains made it necessary to half our columns as long as half an hour each time. Meanwhile, each section of the column that had passed kept on going. I learned a lesson from that which I shall al- ways remember, which is the reason for maneuvers. That column did not come together again for three days, because of the minor separa- tion caused by the passing of trains. I kept my platoon together, however, and it was fortunate I did. Many skiers tripped on the rails and we were busy helping them with their heavy loads. "We learned many lessons from that first maneuver. From the very start, our toboggans gave us trou- ble. They were weighted with hun- dreds of pounds of supplies. We discovered that even five men on skis could hardly move them up a, slight grade. We changed to snow- shoes instead of skis, and this worked better. Several times, how- ever, the sleds turned over on steep slopes. "It was still snowing hard, and by noontime we had covered only two miles. Our commanding officer stood at the crossroads and directed us to head for Homestake Mountain. We halted for an hour. The men took our their ration boxes. Some lighted their stoves and made hot soup. I ate a Hershey bar and two apples. Soon it was time to get under way. The snow was very deep in the woods. I once stepped off my skis and went clear up to my hips. "The rest did the group good, and replenished their energy. We rotated pulling the toboggans. From here on it was gruelling; up- hill all the way. That was a ter- rific job dragging heavy toboggans and, at the same time, carrying a heavy pack on the back. But the soldiers carried on cheerfully. "I told the men to walk slowly and rest whenever they felt it necessary even though they had gone only a few feet. I did not wish a single one to overdo at such an altitude, even if it took us a whole week to get to our night's destination. I felt it was preferable to get there with my pla- toon intact rather than with a group of cripples. The men appreciated this. "Four p.m. was a sight you would have remembered. A small column struggling along uphill in a blinding snowstorm. It was clear to all we had to select a bivouac for the night. I sent the platoon sergeant ahead to locate a good place to pitch our camp and bed down for the long night. It would soon be dark, and the fires should be started while there was light to gather wood and select spots for tents. "There was a good grove of fir trees. We turned off the trail. In no time, little white tents sprang up all around. I pitched mine in the cen- ter where I would be equally near to all the men. The wood detail brought the wood in on the double. The camp fires blazed merrily in a jiffy, and the aroma of food in that clear air was like Christmas Eve per- fume. The snow ceased, but it was getting colder. The icy wind breathed furiously at the happy camp fires, with an air of masculine domesticity pervading the camp. I checked to make sure each man had a hot meal and had his sleeping equipment in good order for the night. Then I was free for a moment to get my own food ready. "I tried out my stove for the first time. It worked well. I filled my mess kit with snow and set it on the stove. It took several fill- ings to melt enough snow to get cooking water. It was difficult to bring the water to a boil because of the altitude. When the water came to a boil, I plunked in some dehydrated baked beans, flicked in some chunks of butter and add- ed a dollop of sugar. They sizzled for ten minutes, and were really a delicacy. "Some of us made tea. It took seven fillings of snow to make enough water for a pot of tea. That tea hit the spot. On the trail, tea is an excellent stimulant. Even the Yu- kon gold miners learned the stimu- lating qualities of tea. Intoxicating stimulants, according to the trail blazers of the Arctic, overheat a man and cause death. Tea on the trail will see one through every time. It is light and a little will last for weeks. I saw each man was bedded down for the night and pulled out a bar of concentrated chocolate for dessert, put my equipment away, un- rolled my sleeping bag in the tent, and covered up my rucksack against snow. That night I slept well in the bag. At times I could feel the cold from under the tent, but I knew that fir boughs would remedy that. The temperature dropped to 15 below zero as we fell off into the long, soft slumber." ':aiiu [iC liCd iia hii Wcri-jf liisll._M-l will gaduate 37 and 47 trainees, re- spectively, at 2 p.m. today in Room 348 of the West Engineering Build- ing. Diplomas bearing the University seal, and small identification cards will be presented to the Ordnance graduates by Prof. O. W. Boston, general superviser of instruction, and to Aircraft graduates by Prof. Arn- Graduate Toda 1i' i n 1 1 iOfi o aircraft inspeCtIM. CoI. ienry W. Miller. general admin- istrative officer, will preside. Ordnance graduates will then re= port to the Ordnance representative of Detroit, and Aircraft trainees to Captain Thomas B. Hunt of the Central Procurement Office in De- troit, to receive orders. They will be sent to defense factories ranging ge- ographically from Michigan to Ala- bama to work on inspection. FCANCES DENNEY Brig.-Gen. Norman T. Kirk (above), 55, was nominated by Presi- dent Roosevelt to be the Army's new Surgeon General. He is sitting at his desk at Percy Jones Veterans Hospital, Battle Creek, Mich., where he has been commanding officer. PERFUME ~6 'WHAT'S IN A NAME?' Battleship Earns Unique 1itle While Knocking Off Jap Planes <'-- - - - - -- - -- No Mother's Day gift could be more acceptable, no compliment more unmistak- able. The moving fragrance of FRANCES DENNEY WHIRLWIND expresses better than words the tender sentiments of this occasion. (Editor's Note: This is the first of a series of articles about the "Big Bas- tard," a United States battleship which protected American carriers in the South Pacific from aerial attack.) NEW YORK, May 3.-(IP)--The "Big Bastard," a United States bat-, tleship, got her nickname in the South Pacific while protecting Amer- ican carriers from aerial attack. She did the job so well that a car- rier admiral radioed to his planes: "Stay away from that big bastard. When she gets through shooting down Japs, she'll use you for target practice." And so the ship has been known ever since. Surface Actions Related This is the story of the ship's first surface action, pieced together from accounts of the ship's crew, by Rob- ert L. Schwartz, yeoman second class and Navy correspondent for Yank, the Army weekly. The action-part of what's known in Naval annals as the fifth battle of the Solomons-began at dusk on Nov. 14, 1942. A task force consist- ing of the Big Bastard and several other battleships and destroyers had cut away from its carrier for a little show of its own. And at Savo Island, just north of Guadalcanal, it fpund a nest of hiding Jap ships .. "Hodgen Otherllo Patrick, yeoman first class, talker on the highest lookout post, remembers seeing the Jap ships come up. He saw the first salvo leave the flagship up ahead. His next recollection is of being thrown against a bulkhead and find- ing somebody's arm, without a body, across his face. "I Am Dead" "'I'm dead,' he thought. 'Here I am dead. This is what it's like to be dead.' But the earthly touch of shrapnel in his knee and hip con- vinced him he was still alive. The two officers lay dead. Seven en- listed men were still. Four wounded looked at Patrick, not knowing what to do next. "Patrick ordered the two least wounded to go below and then put tourniquets on the other two, using their own belts. He applied the same treatment to his own knee . . . then remembered to loosen all three every 15 minutes throughout the night. He hunted a long time for morphine and divided it with the others. As he was about to take his share of the sedative he noticed that several of the men he had thought dead were stirring . . . He divided his share among them. He didn't feel heroic. He didn't even think . . . Patrick was the only enlisted man of the crew who was recommended for a Navy Cross." When general quarters sounded at 9:30, no one aboard the battleship knew the size or strength of the en- emy. But at midnight the bridge sighted three enemy ships in the channel ahead and reported the formation to the admiral's flagship nearby. Fifteen minutes later the admiral's ship fired a nine-gun salvo that set afire the leading Jap battle- ship. sfI2~l / ,! Ii,', L 'The Story of Whirlwind" ., A most unusual gift package, sim- ulating a book, tied with brigt ribbon. Contains Y8 oz..Bottle of Whirlwind Perfume , , $i.00 p m $21 . $500 10" PlusTax * F R A N C E s D E N N E Y suggests new ways to use WHIRLWIND Fragrance. * * * * * * * ihae On Slate at the BUBBLING OVER * * BODY COLOGNE * x.. BODY SACHET . *, * .' $1.0 Plus TAX * * U* * * * * Head of Nor/h University ' t' . } '' , . '_ ,. .} WE DELIVER iT - f ay estival M si Recorded! 'Wetllu , M~3f ~ay 5gti I- il AS SMART & SOPHISTICATED AS ROYAL PARK AVENUE- r / T A ~i#fw-twig 7i7 l y yo / ' I Here they ane, The most exquisite Gabardines of the sea son. Authentically styld.... youthfully designed to put you on the season's smartest foot- ing! Select your pair TODAY' On HER Day-May 9th She'll love a gift of flowers on Mother's Day! It's the sweetest way of letting her know what you mean -what she means to you. ORCHIDS - GARDENIAS POTTED FLOWERS CUT FLOWERS Overture, "Marriage of Figaro" . . . . . Aria, "Dove Sons" from Marriage of Figaro "Die Walkure" Music . . . . . Music from Tannhauser . . . Overture to Oberon . Mozart Arias . . . . . . . . Symphony No. 5 in E Minor . . . Symphony No. 1 in C Minor . . . Overture to Leonore, No. 3 Barber of Seville . Marriage of Figaro . . Three Cornered Hat Suite. Concerto in E Minor Death and Transfiguration (Symphonic Poem) Beethoven Rossini .No'zart DeFalla Mendelssohn Strauss. I~ri day, MNay 3 71I . . . . Mozart Mozart . . . . Wagner Wagner Lily Pons Tchaikowsky Brahms Saturday, May 8th Symphony No. 5, Op. 47 . . . . Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Minor, Op. 23 Islamey . . . MUSIC FOR MOTHER Musical Comedy Favorites, Vol. I and II . Music of Victor Herbert . . . . . . Music of Victor Herbert . . . . . Shikret and' Shostakovich Tchaikovsky Balakiroff-Casetla Kostelanet , Kostelahetz Victor Salon Group Frtz Kreister is Mother's Day r sh)p. My Favorites . . . . . . . . . . MN'1usic, a morale biilder, is a thoughtful gift for mother th Thei music your mother loves is on display at our i I AI I I I I - ,