'JU AI I ItiGAN( iD AILY Bureau To Plan Effienr Us e Of Manpower April 30, May 1 Set As Meeting Periods For Annual Parley Assembled for the purpose of con- sidering the most efficient use of man and woman power today, the third in the annual series of meetings sponsored by the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information will be held April 30, and May 1, at the Rackham Build- ing, Mr. Luther T. Purdom an- nounced yesterday. In consideration of the problem the meeting will emphasize four fac- tors of major importance: 1. Opportunities in the types of work which are in greatest demand during the war. 2. Abilities and training required for employment, promotion, and suc- cess in those jobs. 3. Demonstrations of tests, and techniques for the measurements of the required abilities and training for placement in defense jobs and the armed services. 4. Practical guidance programs which the public and vocational schools can adopt that will be of most direct assistance to those they are training. The meeting which is held in re- sponse to the defense industries, gov- ernment agencies, and schools, who are continually calling on the Bureau for assistance in their selection and placement problems, will bring to- gether high and vocational school principals, in additionato guidance councilors from all over the state. The second meeting sponsored by the Bureau, which will be a luncheon and afternoon conference on April 16, will discuss teacher supply and demand in Michigan, 1942-43. Exhibit To Feature Islamic Metal Work An exhibition of metal work from Islamic countries of the Middle East opens tomorrow in the Exhibition Gallery of the Rackham Building un- der the auspices of the Institute of Fine Arts. Several museums and collectors in the United States and Canada have contributed to the show which con- tains many pieces of artistic and technical interest. Among these rare articles is a money safe dating from 1197 A.D., which has a four dial number com- bination. This is the earliest example known of that type of lock. There are also a very large number of silver inlaid brass and bronze pieces included in the collection. The exhibit will be open to the public for two weeks every afternoon except Sunday from 2-5 p.m. There will be a short meeting of 'the Gargoyle Editorial Staff at 4 o'clock today. All tryouts are invited to attend. A general meet- ing of both the Editorial and Business Staffs will be held at 4:30. It is important that all members attend. IT'S OFF THE RECORD0 O O .",a Rho 'aIcwWildl ih e lly Traisrytion.i for hirul inu Fiery arguments with a non-re- sponsive recording may not coincide with the old-fashioned conception of debating, but debates by transcrip- tion are the most recent device cre- ated to combat wartime shortages. The plan as evolved by the mem- bers of Sigma Rho Tau, engineering speech society, seeks to escape gas rationing restrictions by holding "record debates" with their newly- founded chapter at Houghton. Each squad will transcribe several speeches and a neutral judge will de- cide the winner. Professor Robert Brackett, founder of the society, said that this is an entirely new procedure and he hopes that it will stimulate debate between the other nine chap- ters throughout the country. The idea of these long-distance de- bates was decided upon at Tuesday's meeting which was devoted to reor- ganization plans for this semester. The following officers were elected: Millard Griffiths, president; Jerry Goldman, vice-president; Paul Hilde- New Members Named to IFC Junior Staff Twelve Juniors were named to the Interfraternity Council Junior Staff yesterday, according to Jack Hooper, recently elected president of IFC. They are John Kennedy, '45E; Lawrence Neuman, '45E; Richard Andrade, '45; Bradford Keith, '45; Bob Mulligan, '45E; Avemn Cohn, '45; Carl Engel, '45E; Hal Anderson, '45E; Bill Ruzicka, '45E; Dave Upton, '45E; Harry Jackson, '45; and Herb Moore, '45. For the first time second-semester freshmen will be eligible for member- ship on the council, and all houses will be asked to send one underclass- man to the first meeting of this staff at 5:30 p.m. Monday. All petitions for permission to ini- tiate ineligible men, including fresh- ,men, must be submitted to the IFOC offices by 3 p.m. Friday. Speakers' Bureau Names Chairman Virginia White, '44, speech major in radio, has been appointed co- chairman of the Student Speakers' Bureau to work with Nancy Filstrup, Prof. Kenneth G. Hance, faculty ad- viser of the Bureau, said yesterday. A member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Miss White ' has also been active in Athena, honorary speech society, and in League activities. The Speakers' Bureau was organ- ized last winter to furnish student volunteer speakers for various so- cieties and groups interested in hav- ing war and post-war problems dis- cussed. At present there are twenty- five active members of the Bureau. Activities of the Bureau are coor- dinated by the Board of Directors, which includes representatives of the three honorary speech societies, Athena, Zeta Phi Eta, and Alpha Nu, the Post-War Council, and the Union. brandt, treasurer; and Coral DePries- ter, recording secretary. Prof. Brackett, of the engineering English department, said that while Sigma Rho Tau is a comparatively new organization, it is already one of the largest of its kind in the country. Hillel ToHold Forum Friday Maier and ParrE To Discuss War One of the psychological aspects of war will be discussed by Rev. Leonard Parr and Prof. Norman R. F. Maier of the psychology depart- ment in a forum at 8:30 p.m. tomor- row at the Hillel Foundation. The subject of the forum-"Will Victory Come Through Hate?"-was brought to the fore recently by arti- cles in thb New York Times Maga- zine Section written by Ehlya Ehren- burg, Russian war correspondent, and Rex Stout, American novelist. Prof. Maier received the American Academy for the Advancement of Science award for the best contribu- tion to science in 1937 for his work on neuroses in rats. Rev. Parr is pas- tor at the Ann Arbor Congregational Church. The forum is the second of the semester in Hillel's Friday evening, discussion series. It was arranged by the Forum Committee under the chairmanship of Hannah Katz, '44. The forum will be followed by an informal question and discussion period. 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 serv- ices will be conducted by Lewis Sing- er, '46, and, Elliot Organick, '44E. NLRB Acquits' Ford Company WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.-(/P)-The National Labor Relations Board, re- versing a trial examiner's findings has ruled that the Ford Motor Com- pany's distribution of allegedly anti- union pamphlets at its Chicago plant in 1937 did not constitute unfair la- bor practice. Dismissing a complaint by the CIO United Automobile Workers, the board noted that the pamphlets were distributed almost six years ago and since then the company had signed a bargaining contract with the union. The distribution, the Board held, "does not warrant a finding of inter- ference, restraint and coercion" un- der the National Labor Relations Act and "the trial examiner's finding to the contrary is reversed." The Board upheld the trial exam- iner in ruling that the dismissal of certain employes at the Chicago plant was not an unfair laor prac- tice. Churchill Ill; Critics Seek Special Cahinet LONDON, Feb. 24.- ()-- Prime Minister Churchill's illness, now re- ported for the first time as pneu- monia, has again brought out the suggestion that a small, office-free war cabinet should be established. Edgar Louis Granville, one of Churchill's most persistent criticps, indicated today he would raise the question in Commons, arguing that if the Prime Minister had been ill for a long period it would have been of the utmost importance that such a war cabinet be ready to take over the reins. .evastopol PENINSULA : No ossisk With the capture of Krasnograd and Pavlograd Tuesday the Red Army yesterday and today pushed nearer Dnieperopetrovsk (1), a key point in Nazi secondary defense. Other Soviet forces pressed upon Orel (2) and drove above Rostov (3). Southward, the Red Army closed in on Novorossisk (4). Shaded area is German-held. berr yBook Dii Is Slor-I Of IAst Year Students and faculty of the Uni- versity contributed about one thou- sand books of first rate quality to the Victory Book campaign conduc- ted on campus last week, Prof. W. G. Rice, University chairman of the drive, said yesterday. Over 11,000 books were collected in Ann Arbor. This is a decrease of five thousand when compared to last year's figures. The University de- crease is even greater for the contri- butions last year amounted to five thousand of the total. Prof. Rice said the books given this year were far more suitable for rec- reational reading than the ones col- lected last year. The books that are not suitable for the camps are a few children's books which will be sent to Ypsilanti library where the library facilities are badly taxed. The drive was officially closed last Saturday, but books may still be left in the cartons in the General Library or may be taken directly to North Hall. The books will be collected by the CDVO and will be apportioned among surrounding Army camps. Stamp Society To Hold Annual Show Saturday The Ann Arbor Stamp Club will hold its annual exhibition from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday at the Un-, ion, Prof. Philip Bursley announced yesterday. There will be no banquet or speak- er this year, but a small auction of stamps will be held, and proceeds will be donated to the Red Cross. All lots for the auction have been con- tributed by individual collectors. The exhibition will include' collec- tions of the twenty members of the club. All students and townspeople who are interested in stamp collecting are invited to attend. . Ann Arbor Man Reported Italian Prisoner of War Glenn (Pat) Wilson, Ann Arbor man with the RCAF, who was shot down over Egypt Nov. 6, is a prisoner of war with the Italian government, the Canadian government informed his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Wilson. Pat Wilson joined the RCAF in January, 1941, and was a pilot officer at the time he was reported missing after an air battle over the Axis lines about 75 miles west of El Alamein. He is 23. t4t Wal- Lieut. George I. Ruehle, '41, has been named assistant post director of physical training at Scott Field, Ill. Well known at the University for his athletic ability, he starred in bas- ketball and baseball for three years, playing first base on the team that won the baseba' Hconference cham- pioriship inl 191t. Inducted a month,0 after he graduated writh a B.S. de- gree in education. iul Ruehie was commissioned Mlast yat Chanute Field. Marshall Darrow Shulman, '37, former editorial director of The Daily. rceently won 1!k wings as a. glitter plilot int the Army- Air Corps and was advanced to the rank of flight officer at Victorville Army Flying School. Victorville, Calif. Shulman was a reporter for the Detroit News and took post-grad- hate work at H1arvard before enter- ing the Air Corps last May. Graduating in the same class at Victorville, Harvey Elmer Harring- ton has also just become a full- fledged glider pilot and flight officer. He entered the University in 1929 and became a charter member of the Glider club organized that year. Second Lieut. Ralph E. Smalley is one of the "Iel from Heaven Men" who hatve Just graduated in the class (the largest in the history of the Army Air Forces) composed of men from the three schools of the West Texas Bombardier Tri- angle. Lieut. Smalley. who trained at Big Spring, Texas, attended the University of Michigan from 1933 to 1935. Former 'M' A thlete AnSwerS Army 'call Lt.-Col. Donald Duricanson, former University athlete who received his A.B. here in 1913, was ordered to ac- tive duty and left, yesterday for Washington, D.C. Col. Duncanson has been a mem- ber' of the Army Officers Reserve Corps since World War I. He re- ceived his first commission in the Army as a second lieutenant in 1917, and reached the rank of captain during the war. Col. Duncanson won his "M" at baseball and also participated in football and basketball. He is a past president of the "M" club. A PAIL OF EGGS PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 24.-('- Mrs. Frank Graf, a rancher, bought a pail of old eggs to feed her hogs. Other chores diverted her from the hog feeding. When she returned to the eggs, they were hatching. Now Mrs. Graf has 30 healthy Rhode Is- land chicks. Conant Believes Liberal Arts Will Continue (Continued from Page 1) when one asks the following ques- tions: "1. Would you want to be one of these young men reserved for spe-, cial study throughout the war? "2. Would you want your son to be one of those men? f3. Would these young men, in fact, be leaders in a post-war world among contemporaries who had run the risks and faced the hardships of a bitter war?" Replying to those who "have been so concerned (about liberal educa- tion) that they have questioned the need of the Army for boys of 18 and 19 years of age," Dr. Conant found it "hard to see how such questions can stand in the light of the War De- partment's evidence as to the crying need for young men to lower the average age of the combat divisions." Although a note of confidence in the future of liberal arts was struck throughout the article, Dr. Conant, who is also chairman of the National Denfense Research Committee, em- phasized his conviction that the country would be endangered if lib- eral arts were destroyed, He expressed his belief, however, that "the primary concern of American education today is not the development of the appreci- ation of the 'good life' in young gentlemen born to the purple-it s th infusion of the liberal and humane tradition into our entire educational structure. If we are to retain our liberty," he main- tained, "we must cultivate in the largest possible number of our future citizens an appreciation of both the responsibilities and the benefits which come to them be- cause they are Americans and are free." "Sarely it is not the liberal edu- cation or the lack of it among the 10 per cent of each age group who nor- mally study arts and letters in our colleges which will determine the future of our freedom," he said. Nazis Harried Without Rest (Continued from Page 1) Rommel's retreating columns twist- ing through the hills and out of the Kasserine Pass southwestward to- ward Feriana. American armored forces had hammered back his thrust westward through the Kasserine toward Tebes- sa, which lies inside Algeria; British and American units together had in- flicted heavy casualties in the battle for Thala. Rommel had burst through to within three miles of that tactical- ly important point before his attack began to collapse, and with it the whole of his offensive to the west. With the coming of daylight yes- terday, Marauders, Mitchells, Bos- tons, Hurribombers and even the great Flying Fortresses began to strew explosives upon the retreating German columns under cover of Spitfires, Airacobras and Lightnings. Rommel had been badly mauled in an action which might well become one of the turning points of the Tunisian war. The AP reports America's wars-2 .' For Fostority i. i 4 49 RU C4 6,, Xi6Ae?7 M? (I Coati 70 s1ek/w, (o vo ' Thpough -I -priny I /; REVERSIBLES (left) In tweed and shetland with nat- ural gabardine lining. 21.95. 14.95 to PELL-MELLS The Punch of all three , t l Ideal for spring showers. natural, white, blue. 7.95 10.95. DIM-OUT COATS In to Asomber Abraham Lincoln stood on the sta- tion platform at Springfield, Illinois, and looked down on the faces of the thousand friends and neighbors gathered to bid him goodbye as he left for Washington on Feb. 11, 1861. Removing his hat, the President-elect asked for silence and began his historic farewell address. A young Associated Press correspondent, Henry Villard, was traveling with Lincoln and as soon as the train had started told Lincoln that he had made an extraordinarily moving address that should be preserved for posterity. He asked that Lincoln write it out, whereupon the President- elect took the correspondent's paper and pencil and set the speech down in his own hand, giving Villard the manuscript to telegraph at the first sta)tion. authentic story of the Union policy toward the South to the flash on Lincoln's death. The govern- ment itself, lacking adequate telegraph facilities, commandeered the AP system. In the 12 years since its founding the AP had grown up so that a New York Herald man wrote: "The special corre- spondents of the several New York papers are nearly if not quite as numerous as the agents of the AP." One of the agents, as AP reporters were then called, Lawrence A. Gobright, in Washington, summarized an AP man's creed. He said: "My business is to communicate facts; my instructions do not allow me to make any comment upon the facts. My dispatches are sent to papers of all man- ner of politics. I therefore confine myself to what I consider legitimate news, try to be truthful and appears in the PAN-AMERICAN ., : ;.' ' :, :;; t >> s :... A novel idea in ,reversible gab- ardines. Navy, brown and red G Il l