THE MICHIGAN DAILY E'RMr-T NV 9,1 0 Seminar Study, Is Proposed Post-War Council Will Discuss Peace Issues The Post-War Council, at its first business meeting yesterday, an- nounced plans for a seminar study group on post-war problems under the direction of Max Dresden of the physics department. The group, Ruth Daniels, '44, chairman of the Council, announced, will undertake a detailed study of specific post-war issues. The first organizational meeting of the study group will take place at 5 p.m. Tues- day in the Union. The membership will be limited to those who are able to take active part in discussion and activities. Those interested in join- ing may contact Mr. Dresden or ap- pear at the meeting on Tuesday. Chairman of the various Post-War Council committees were also an- nounced at the meeting yesterday. They are, as follows: publicity chair- man, Nancy Rechter, '46; program chairman, Harvey Weisberg; editor- ial director, Barney Laschever, '45E; program moderator, William Muehl, '44L; polls director, Julia Slocum, '47; personnel chairman, Shirley Field, '45; and co-conference chair- men, Paula Brower, '46, and Gloria Rewoldt, '47. 'U' Graduate Rated WAVE Specialist, Virginia Treeva Moore, of the Wo- men's Reserve, USNA, who took grad- uate work at the University in 1937, is the first woman reservist to have been named a specialist, the Navy announced today. While here she acted as soloist for various choirs and glee clubs and sang soprano leads in operettas and musical productions. OPA Action Is Not Legal, Hunters Told The Detroit Sportsmen's Congress announced Thursday night that it was distributing handbills in St. Ig- nace advising returning hunters that they were not required to tell OPA agents how they had used their gaso- line coupons. "The OPA has no right to search these hunters and ask them to in- criminate themselves," said Walter Kelly, a member of the legal commit- tee of the Congress and president of the Michigan' United Conservation clubs. "We think the action of the OPA is unconstitutional." Kelly said he had asked Harry Gaines of Grand Rapids, executive secretary of the United Conservation Clubs, to protest OPA action against deer hunters suspected of gasoline rationing violations to U.S. Sen. Ho- mer Ferguson and Michigan con- gressmen. The OPA's checkup of hunters crossing the Straits by ferry had re- sulted Tuesday night in the suspen- sion of gasoline allowances for 17. Approximately 60 cases had been heard by OPA officials in Mackinac City, about a third of the hearings resulted in dismissals. Fred W. Lind- bloom, OPA district enforcement of- ficer from Detroit, said other cases were referred to local rationing boards. Lindbloom said most of the viola- tors had been pooling gasoline or were using accumulated gasoline, of- ten carried along in containers. SALESMEN TO MEET There will be a meeting for all persons interested iniselling stu- dent directories at 4 p.m. today at the Ensian business office, Student Publications Building. Midget Sub From Italian Fleet Turned Over to Allies NEW WAR COURSES: Ciass In Detroit Will Cover Sei5enUi e inspectionMethods Approximate perfection - quality control to within one one-millionth of an inch-is the aim of a new course called "Application of Statis- tical Methods to Quality Control" which the University will offer Dec. 11 to Dec. 18 at the Rackham Build- ing, Detroit. It will be an intensive study, run- ning seven hours a day for eight days, Hillel Conducts Services Today Strong units of the Italian fleet, including a midget sub (foreground), ride at anchor in Taranto Harbor before their transfer to Malta. With torpedo tubes on its sides, the submarine looks like a motor torpedo boat. (AP Wirephoto from USN). WAR NEWS INTERPRETED: Turkey Rumrored Ready" To Join. .United Nations Forces by Spring By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Associated Press War Analyst Events apparently are stirring in the Aegean-Eastern Mediterranean theatre calculated to off-set Nazi re- capture of Aegean islands from Brit- ish-Italian-Greek defenders. For the first time a tight-fisted Turkish censorship has passed a flat unofficial forecast of early Turkish entry into the war as a British ally. It came from William B. King, Asso- DAILY ,OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) tant Dean E. A. Walter (1220 Angell Hall.) Except under very extraordinary circumstances no petitions will be considered after the end of the third week of the Fall Term. The Administrative Board of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Doctoral Examination for Edward Willard Lauer, Anatomy; . thesis: "The Nuclear Pattern and Fiber Con- nections of Certain Basal Telecepha- lic Centers in the Macaque." Today, 10:30 a.m., in Room-4558 East Medi- cal Building. Chairman, E. Crosby.. By action of the Executive Board, the chairman may invite members of the faculties and advanced doc- toral candidates to attend this exam- ination, and he may grant permission to those who for sufficient reason might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet today at 4:00 p.m., in Room 319 West Medical Building. "The Meta- bolism of the Estrogens" will be dis- cussed. All interested are invited. The special short course in speeded reading will be given for students who wish to improve their reading ability. Those interested will meet Tuesday, Nov. 23, at 5:00- p.m. in Room 4009, University High School Building, School of Education. At that time the course will be explained and time of meeting set. If you are interested and cannot attend the organization meeting, call Mr. Morse, Ext. 682, for further information. There is no charge for this non-credit course. tA the Etizateth DitIlonShop 'round the Corner on State "MONDAY, TUESDAY, ALWAYS" Bacteriology Seminar: Saturday morning, Nov. 20, at 8:30 in Room 1564 East Medical Building. School of Education Students: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, Nov. 20. Students must re- port all changes of elections at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall. Membership in a class does not cease nor begin until all changes have been thus officially registered. Ar- rangements made with the instructor are not official changes. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be elected for credit after the end of the third week of the Fall Term. Nov. 20 is therefore the last date on which new elections may be ap- proved. The willingness of an indi- vidual instructor to admit a student later does not affect the operation of this rule. E. A. Walter Students; College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Students who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week, even though' they have registered and have . attended classes unofficially, will forfeit their privilege of continu- ing in the College. E. A. Walter Make - up final examination in Physics 25 will be held in the West Lecture Room Monday afternoon, Nov. 22, beginning at 2 o'clock. Concerts Choral Union Concert: Yehudi Menuhin, violinist, and Adolph Bal- ler, accompanist, will give the third program in the Choral Union Series, Tuesday evening, Nov. 23, at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. A limited number of tickets are available for all remaining concerts in the series, ex- cept for the Boston Symphony and the Don Cossack concert, for which standing room tickets only remain. These tickets, as well as those for the "Messiah" performance, Dec. 19, and the Chamber Music Festival on Jan. 21 and 22, will continue on sale as long as they last, at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. Charles A. Sink, President Faculty Recital: Joseph Brinkman and Wassily Besekirsky of the School ciated Press correspondent at Ank- ara. "A few weeks ago," he cabled, "I was convinced that Turkey would not enter the war before spring; but now I am convinced she will be in the war by spring." If that is true, British reverses in the Aegean, which General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson said were worth their cost in disproportionate casual- ties inflicted on the foe and in their diversionary effect, may be quickly overcome. From bases in nearby Tur- key, Allied air power could turn the tables on Nazi garrisons of all Aegean islands, including Crete and Rhodes. The Ankara forecast is highly sig- nificant for that reason, and also because early Russian-Allied military decisions to implement the Moscow policy agreements are widely expect- ed. Secretary Hull hinted at that in his unprecedented report to a joint session of Congress on his mission to Moscow. Hull said the time is nearing when Germany and its "remaining satellites will have to go the way: of Fascist Italy." He expressed, pleasure in reporting that a "com- petent" United States military commission under General John R. Deane is now in Moscow. Establishment of that military liai- son and its counterpart in London is an initial step toward the military coordination of Soviet and Anglo- American attacks on Germany. It would be the function of such mili- tary groups to prepare studies of offensive operations for final decision by higher authority. Turkish adhesion tothe United Nations' cause under her alliance with Britain, or even the granting of operational bases in Turkey, as Portugal made available vitally im- portant bases in the Azores, would utterly change the war map in the Aegean - Eastern Mediterranean theatre. It is conceivable that German re- capture of Leros Island will prove the sparkplug for such developments even earlier than had been antici- of Music faculty, will present a pro- gram of Brahms' sonatas for piano and violin, at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, Nov. 21, in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. Open to the public without charge. Events Today (TheCongregational-Disciples Guild will sponsor a Friday-Nite Frolic, 8:00-11:00 p.m., in the recreational rooms of the Congregational Church. There will be games and dancing. Servicemen especially invited. The Hillel Foundation will conduct its regular Friday evening services tonight at 8:00. Mr. Fred Butzle of Detroit will be the speaker. pated in London, Washington. Ank- ara or in Moscow. The massive Russian offensive spreading west of the Dnieper from the Pripet cinfuence to the Black Sea is reaching its c ulminating phase to threaten Rumania. A col- lopse of Nazi Balkan satellites at this juncture would certainly accelerate a fresh German debacle in Russia of unpredictable effect on the dura- tion of the war. It is beyond ques- tion that Soviet-Allied joint plan- ning is aimed at that as well as at expediting other contemplated at- tacks, and that Turkey's place in the anti-Axis fellowship and the role she is to play from now on must come under urgent reconsideration. Jap Fanaticism Delays Peace Cmdr. Pettyjohn Says Nips 'Won't Surrender' "We can't make peace with the Japs because they don't expect to come back from the war and won't surrender,"' Cmdr. Elmore S. Petty- john, former University professor, said recently. Home on leave after eighteen months' service in the South Pacific, Cmdr. Pettyjohn told how the Amer- icans on Tulagi set fire to a hut filled with Japs and the fanatical enemy soldiers roasted to death rather than give up. In September, 1940, he was called from his position as associate profes- sor of chemical engineering to active duty with the Navy. He served in the Atlantic as a gunnery officer on a transport and in 1942.was transferred to the Naval amphibious force sta- tioned on an attack transport. Among his service awards is the Navy-Marine Corps medal awarded for heroic conduct on Tulagi, as well as the South Pacific-Asiatic ribbon with two stars for service at Guadal- canal and a Naval Reserve ribbon and star representing twenty of his twenty-six years in the Naval Re- serve. Friday evening services conducted by Harvey Weisberg, '44, and Elliott, Organick '44, will be held at 8 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. Following the services, Mr. Freder- ick Butzle of Detroit will speak on "The Present Crisis and Jewish Uni- ty." The speech will embody a report on the recent American Jewish Con- ference held in New York City at which Mr. Butzle was- a representa- tive. Mr. Butzle was a member of the Mayor's committee to investigate race riots in Detroit, a founder of the Detroit Community Fund, and is the Michigan chairman of the Jewish Welfare Board. A discussion period and social hour, of which Thelma Zeskind, '44, is chairman, will follow the talk. Re- freshments will be served. Laing To Address Ohio Conference !Assistant Professor Lionel H. Laing, of the Department of Political Sci- ence, has been invited by .the Car- negie Endowment for International Peace to address the Regional Con- ference of International Relations Clubs for the Ohio Valley at their meeting to be held at 1:30 p.m. today in New Concord, O. Professor Laing will speak on "The British Empire in Retrospect and Prospect." "p Q!. rA " . l ,. ,+ : 7..,}, .}Kti": :. 4 .2 ::' t "' j yz. ; ' ' JUMPERS pretty, and, practa Mimi has that all-around fav- orite-jumtper in corduroy, gab- ardine, and velveteen... Wear your jumper to class and on dates. Open 9:30-6, Monday 12-8:30 345 MAYNAR D ST --- and is open only to those in super- visory, administrative or engineering positions connected with inspection work. 'U' Professors To Instruct Among the instructors will be Prof. C. C. Craig, of the mathematics de- partment; Prof. 0. W. Blackett, of the School of Business Administra- tion, and Prof. C. B. Gordy, of the mechanical engineering department. Quality control involves applying scientific Inspection methods to in- sure the uniform manufacture of various items. An example of the need for uniformity is the tiny ball used in the bombsight of a Flying Portress. If it varies more than 1/1,000,001 of an inch, the bombar- dier may miss his target by several hundred yards. This course will teach the use of control charts and sampling tables as the basis for a system of inspection, Another Course Offered Another course under the Engi- neering, Science and Management War Training program which is to be offered at the Rackham Building, De- troit, is one in war contract termina- tion, beginning Nov. 23 and continu- in# for five weeks. Representatives of industry and .of governmental contracting offices will rmake up the .class. Included in the subject matter will be governmeit contracts, legal aspects of termina- tion, presentation of charges, and termination procedure. Fromr the University's Business Ad- ministration school Prof. E. S. Wola- ver will speak.on contract law, and Prof. 1M. H. Waterman will discuss financial problems raised by contract termination. lailt Strike, FDR Says WASHINGTON, Nov. 18.- P-)- President Roosevelt late today or- dered an end of picketing and a re- turni tQ work lby employees on strik0 at t6 leather and bansing plants in the Salem-Peabody, Mass., area. A SUPER COLLECTION of Wesleyl night at' leader. Foundation: Bible Class to- 7:30. Dr. C. W. Brashares, -S TheWiseBuyer / IS te E arly Shoppe'r You'll get a better selection, will enjoy your shop- ping more, and will earn the thanks of our s$le force if you SHOP NOW ! ° ~GLOBES, Atlases, BOOKS to suit G Maps of 01 types every literary taste STATIONERY by Crane, Eaton, Montag and others Buy Your Gifts at 4 mIll SKIRTS .. . Beautiful 100% wool plaids and solids, from $5.00 to} $10.00, SWEAT E RS. Top style classics in pull-} overs and cardigans - every color you can think of - A ~ .. 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