PAGE TWO THE Mii-,Rif . AN BAHN .. ...... ...... ,__... .._... +. .aa a.:i 1ri i. l..' ,t 1. 1 l3 ri . i \ L l'a. 1 L 1 CCf.11 ':i,1; 1Vla 4l v3 1 11 FBI Arrests Ward Officjal for Removing overumer it Sign ;;w State Group To Begin Attack On Delinquency Local Youth Guidance To Be Helped by Four Major Committees LANSING, May 4.-(A3)-The State Youth Guidance Committee moved today to stimulate attacks on juve- nile delinquency among the cities and rural areas of Michigan. Hearing from Governor Kelly the Statement, "Now we are ready to move on to the most important part of the program- instrumentalities for taking the program into local compmunities," the Committee en- dorsed the creation of four major committees to help local Youth Guid- ance Committees press the campaign harder at the grass roots. Recommendations Made Among the recommendations made by the Committees were: Increased facilities for training and treating handicapped children, espe- cially special community recreational programs for those physically unable to participate in normal programs. * Greater emphasis by state law enforcement agencies on intelligent enforcement of juvenile laws, includ- ing the distribution of guide manuals for local police and sheriffs, juvenile court workers and visiting teachers, including in-service training insti- tutes for local police conducted by county prosecutors. ControlpofsTourist Camps Stricter control of tourist camps and a requirement for the registra- tion of occupants. Greater public willingness to report and demand action against condi- tions contributing to delinquency. Stronger penal laws for adults re- sponsible for delinquency. More frequent and strict inspection of- dance halls, beer gardens, pool rooms and similar public recreational places, and more restrictive licensing of those places. Eddeation Programs Asked Kelly urged the Committees to undertake educational programs by radio, through the parent-teacher organizations and by short movies to improve parental controls and family ties. The governor declared adequate and sufficient school buildings and sufficient competent teachers were necessary to improve the lot of young people, and urged tha.t full use be made of school buildings after school hours and in vacation periods. He suggested that local laws which might affect the welfare of children, including control of public entertain- ment, might be strengthened as the legislature recently did with state child laws. HIGH WATER-Two jeeps crawl over a temporary bridge constructed over a low spot on Guadalcanal to keep U.S. military traffic moving. Swirling waters of the rainy season underminded this bridge before it was finished. WITH FORCES IN ITALY: Task of Keeping Soldiers from Getting Hardened Is Dif ficult WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! Day or Night Continuous from 1 P.M. Weekdays 30c to 5 P.M. Today and Saturday By KENNETH L. DIXON Associated Press Correspondent WITH THE AEF IN ITALY, April 27 (delayed).--"We try to keep the boys from getting hardened," the lieutenant said, "but it isn't easy. You can see that." A weapons carrier had just brought a new load of dead soldiers up to the little shack which serves as graves registration headquarters for the cemetery. Wooden-faced, the sergeant and his three helpers unloaded the re- mains of six men. Occasionally they looked up without interest. Their faces were as blank and expression- less as night shift workers homeward bound on a dawn streetcar. They laid the bodies and pieces of bodies in a row on the grass in front of the shack. Each was ac- companied by a triangular wooden stick with the man's identity writ- ten on it, his temporary marker until the white cross is prepared. The Italian grave diggers who had stopped to watch resumed their dig- ding. The four men returiled for the last"body. They all had been badly mangled, but this was the worst. It was only half a body, the upper half. One of the privates started to reach for it, stiffened and turned away. The sergeant and one of the others stepped up, brushed by him. The sergeant. picked ip the head and shoulders, the other private the torn torso. They all wore gloves. They laid the half a body carefully beside the others, their movements mechan- ical but not ungentle. "We watch to see that nobody ever starts tossing the bodies around," the lieutenant said. "There isn't much need to, but once in a while you get a boy who has to do something rough to keep from going nuts. But otherwise they're always careful." The private who had turned away from the last body was bringing out the mattress covers or bed sacks in which soldiers are buried. The oth- ers were down on their knees, me- thodically making the last of several searches of the bodies. They found a few papers, a few personal items. "Those things that don't have blood on them or aren't torn up will be sent to the families with the other personal* belongings," the lieutenant said, "but some of the other men will handle them. When you're doing the work these boys do, you have to think of bodies just as bodies, and you can't do that when you start checking over letters and snapshots and rings and draft cards and drivers licenses." One by one the men drew the sack- ing up over the bodies. The faces were the last to be covered. Part of one head had been shot away, but the others were whole. Some of their features were com- posed, some distorted in wild grim- aces. All were jelled in the pallid, spongy immotility of death. The sacks were tied, laid side by side, their identification stakes on top. The sack containing the half body had been doubled up and folded underneath. It looked -grotesquely unfilled, as though death had been given half measure. "The chaplain will be out later and there will be individual services at each grave," said the lieutenant. "I hope the sun keeps shining." Power Plant For Soo Asked WASHINGTON, May 4.-(iP)-Sen- ator Vandenberg and Rep. Bradley, Michigan Republicans, requested a Senate commerce subcommittee today to approve authorization of a new $3,500,000 hydroelectric power plant at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. Vandenberg told the subcommittee the plant would assure power neces- sary for operation of Government locks and dams and for sale to the public through the distribution sys- tems of the Edison Sault Electric Company. The Senator and Bradley ex- plained that the measure met the approval of local interests as a sub- stitute for an earlier proposal to in- stall a large plant which would have forced abandonment of one owned and operated by Michigan Northern Power Company. Two NR OTC Officers Promoted to Lt.-Comm. The NROTC unit of the University has received notification from the Navy Department of the recent pro- motions of two officers. The men, promoted from the rank of lieutenant to lieutenant-commander, are Lt.- Comm. Earl J. Ayelstock, USNR with the Navy V-12 Unit, and Lt.-Comm. Charles J. Hoyt, Jr., USNR with the Reserve Officers Naval Architecture Group. Sowell Ciaims His Intention Is Disregarded Notice Covers .Employe- Management Relations CHICAGO, May 4. - (') - FBI agents arrested an official of Mont- gomery Ward and Company today as he was removing a government post- er in one of the firm's Chicago plants that have been under Federal control for eight days. The official, Paul D. Sowell, assist- ant mail order operating manager of the concern, told reporters he saw the poster-a mimeographed notice that no workers were to be dismissed without the approval of the Federal operating manager-and ascertained that it dealt with employe-manage- ment relations. He added: Explains Movements "Rather than stand in the hall reading it, I was removing the thumb tacks in order to take the poster into my office and read it in its entirety, and abide by it, of course. After all, I have quite a few employes under my direction. Sowell was taken into custody by the agents, who, Richard Hosteny, acting chief of the Federal Bureau of Investigation here, reported, were stationed at the Ward facilities "at the direction of Attorney General Francis Biddle." Hosteny said Sowell was not hand- cuffed when he was taken from the building. He was brought to the U.S. District Attorney's office, and then to the U.S. Marshal's office. His at- torney, James C. Leaton, said he was fingerprinted there "before service of any warrant." Sowell Handcuffed Sowell was handcuffed as he was escorted from the Marshal's quarters to the court of U.S. Commissioner Edwin K. Walker in the same build- ing. He was arrainged there on a charge of "taking, purloining, stealing or injuring property of the U.S. Gov- ernment." He pleaded innocent. He was released on a $250 bond pending a hearing May 11. Late in the day, Leaton issued a statement saying Lowell's duties in- cluded personnel matters and super- vision of the posting of bulletins, and that he wanted to familiarize himself with. the goverment poster because it pertained directly to his work. He added: "Finding it to be lengthy, he care- fully and openly took one down to take to his office for more careful study. In taking it down one corner was accidentally torn. He was seized by three government agents who had been lurking in the hallway." Martin To Join "T' News Staff Jack Martin, former Ann Arbor, Detroit and NewYork City newsman and magazine writer, has been ap- pointed to the University of Michigan News .Service as assistant to Larry Towe, director. He fills the position vacated by James Crowe, who left to join the armed services. Martin, who formerly was em- ployed on the Ann Arbor News, the Detroit Times andiFree Press, and King Features Syndicate in New York City, for the last six years has been a staff writer for the Macfadden magazines. Prior to Pearl Harbor he had a roving assignment, seeking material and writing fact magazine articles in all the states and many of the provinces of Canada and Mexico. He is the author of "Border Boss," a biography of Capt. John R. Hughes, famous old Texas Ranger, published in 1942, and his second book will be released by a New York publisher this fall. t' Iopt, - 'n cna nc c. SOTLA, Lodon d.. SOVIET RUSSIA MANN A CAR iA' SPAIN 'Madrid DISPOSITION OF GERMAN FORCES IN EUROPE-Numbers indi- cate divisions of German troops in the indicated areas of Europe, according to military observers. Germany and her satellite nations are estimated to have 319 divisions. Arrows indicate directions of land offensives of Allies. ---------e- -t-- - HOMESICK: Grateful Sericeen Thtnk 'Aunt Ru~tI, for. Dailes-, Letters WASHINGTON, May 4.-(- Call- ing for a free interchange of world news, Chairman Wheeler (Dem., Cnt.) named a Senate Interstate Commerce Subcommittee of five to- day to study international communi- cations with the view to establishing an American policy before the war ends. NOR WAYE ND UTHUAr ib 10s' Alt ///, "Dear Aunt Ruth, the Dailies you send sure make me homesick for Ann1 Arbor," Harold "Tip" Lockard, Mich- igan alumnus now in the Air Corps, wrote in a letter to Mrs. Ruth Bacon Buchanan. Mrs. Buchanan, "Aunt Ruth" to hundreds of servicemen, writes to 1,200 soldiers, sailors and marines, and last year sent 2,162 rolls of Dailies to boys in this country and overseas. Ensign John C. Ward, USNR, said, "You don't know the pleasure 20 of us from 'Ye olde Mich.' get out of reading the Da.ilies you so kindly send us. Although they come in my name it makes no difference to the others, for if I'm not there, they tear them open themselves and ac- cept no protest on my part concern- ing the opening of my own mail-at least where the Dailies are concern- ed." "When the Dailies arrive it isn't long before we have a regular Mich- igan reunion around my bunk, as all the fellows from Ann Arbor come over to see them," wrote Daniel Saul- son, U.S. Navy. The Navy's George Ceithaml said, "The Dailies arrived safely and, boy, did I ever feel in my glory reading / s; j~ them. That's the closest I've felt to Michigan since I left." Ill ieliigauu Return Engagement .at Regular Prices < ,: " <: ;;>: ;tip r ; t : i f } } 5 X t 3 Y w4y MY to THE ARA'AI ': 1 I .,f',! : ;': ,; , Mo ~ 'o 5 S a I - SUNDAY - "MIlACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK" Mats. 30c Eves. 43c Servicemen 25c ,,_ LbL 5/ 'y a Courte~sy TVew '~'Y'orker' z r~t i' "w Co. 4 Spring Concert Ticket Sales To Opyen Tickets for the annual Co. A Sol- dier Choir Spring Concert to be held Sunday, May 14, at Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre, go on sale tomorrow morning, according to Cpl. Stanley Amdurer, choir manager. Local stores will carry a limited supply of tickets. Tickets will also be sold at the Union, League and the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ticket office. Dedicated to the United Nations, the choral program will include folk music of the Allies and choral works of great composers. Featured soloists on the program will be Cpl. Arthur Flynn, popular on campus for his outstanding performance in "Tom Sawyer," and Cpl. Robert Miller, who recently soloed with the Co. A Soldier Choir when they appeared as guest artists on a WXYZ radio show ema- nating from Detroit. U.S. War Policy Sought CLASSIFIED ADVEUTISING I_. ); Michgau One Night Only - Mon., May 8th c/lessrs. 5siiertpresent SIGMUND ROM8ERG'S mostm e/o/s OPERETTA r CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of, 10c for each additional five words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional five words.) Contract Rates on Request FOR SALE BUY YOUR MEATS, groceries, frost- ed foods and beverages at A. H. Turners. 702 Dewey. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING: thesis binding, Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 . State. HELP WANTED FOUNTAIN help wanted-Try your skill at soda jerking. Packard Pharmacy. Call 3709. YOUNG MEN, full or part time, to work in drug store. Phone 9157. Soda Dispensers Openings for several soda dispens- ers. Can use full time straight day employes, also part time help for morning or evening work. CUNNINGHAM DRUG CO. 226 S. Main Street LOST AND FOUND "It's probably just a publibity stunt to et us tonlist." DOil N'E ot, tise r.. he Coast Guard wants a Date with YOU Today! Join the SPA S and let the world see you. The world's toughest little navy, the United States Coast Guard, has a job for you if you are between the ages of 20 and 36, a physically It American citizen, and have two years of high school Qr the equivalent. Smart uniforms, comfortable quarters, good food, and excellent pay all are part of this opportunity to do I' Also - j I I