THE MICHIGAN DAILY sA A Graphic Survey Shows AS TP Men on Campus Training for Technical Duties International Center To Hold Coffee Hours Ikejiani To Be Speaker; 'West Africa and War' Topic of Discussion A reception, a discussion and a coffee hour have been planned for today and tomorrow by the Inter- national Center. Okechukwu Ikejiani will discuss "West Africa and the War" at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Center. Ikejioni, who entered the Univer- sity this semester, is the first stu- dent from Nigeria ever to enroll here. He is studying bacteriology and ex- pects to use this knowledge in com- bating tropical diseases in West Af- rica after the war. He will discuss tomorrow the changes made by the war in the West African colonies and the past these colonies play in the winning of the war. Nigeria now supplies tin, rubber and manganese to Britain. Before coming to the University Ikejiani studied at Cambridge, Eng- land, the University of New Bruns- wick, Canada, and at the University of Chicago. A reception in honor of Eduardo A. Salgado will be held at 8 p. m. today in the Rackham Building. Salagdo, a native of the Philippine Commonwealth, is now showing an exhibition of Mexican paintings in the Rackham Building. The exhibi- tion will last through Nov. 30. Invi- tations have been sent for the re- ception. Lt. James Miller Receives Promotion Lt. James Miller, Company C, re- ceived a promotion Thursday from second lieutenant to first lieutenant, Capt. Richard S. Campbell, Company C commander, announced yesterday. Lt. Miller has been on furlough in- Chicago and, previous to his return last night, had not heard of his pro- motion, Capt. Campbell said. He is being transferred to the Air Corpa. In praise of Lt. Miller, one of the officers here said, "his popularity. with his men knew no bounds." r Lt. Miller received his B.S.: degree. from Northwestern University and worked for awhile as assistant mana-. ger of a Chicago firm. He graduated from Officer Candidate School at Gainesville, Fla., in February. Studen Church Groups Make Week-end Plans Campus Servicemen Are Invited To Attend Variety of Programs Students and servicemen will find a wide variety of activities planned for their spare time this week-end by the student church groups. The Presbyterian student group will hold an open house from 9 p.m. to midnight today at the church. At 6 p.m. tomorrow students and ser- vicemen are invited to attend a sup- per and fellowship hour, after which Lyle Albright will discus "The Christ- ian's View in the Post-War World." Dr. Hopkins Is Guest The Congregational-Disciples guild will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Congregational Church to hear An- drew Kuroda speak on "Japanese- Americans in a Post-War America." A special guest at the meeting will be Dr. Robert M. Hopkins, president of- the United Christian Missionary So- ciety. Students who attend St. Mary's Catholic Chapel are invited to the informal open house to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight today at the cha- pel club rooms. At 2:30 p.m. Sunday they will meet for a hike out to Ged- des and along the Huron River Drive. A supper to be held at 5:30 p.m. has been planned by Mary Driver, Ann Maloney, Dorothy Callahan, Sue Babcock and Moreen Ryan. The 4 Canterbury Club (Episcopal Students) will hold a discussion on the church's plan for post-war peace, to be led by the Rev. Henry Lewis. All students and servicemen are in-. vited to attend the meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow in Lane Hall. Gamma Delta To Meet Gamma. Delta (Missouri Lutheran) 'Will. assemble at the University Luth- eran Chapel, 1611 Washtenaw, for its usual supper and fellowship hour at 5.3 '-p.mn.tomorrow. Mr. Theodore 'Markwood, a student in the law school, will be the speaker for the Sunday program of the Lutli- Bran Student Association. The meet- ig wil 'open at 5:30 Pm. for a fel.. loWship lIur' and dinner. Unitar.ianstludents and servicemen will, meet- at -9 p.m. today at the churcli for an informal evening of sdcial gaimes and dancing. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN'S WAR CONTRIBUTION A R M Y .T N 'A "2831 TRAINEES4 EE5 MARINE CORPS U ---2 FACULTY MEMBERS IN Cli LiAN -- WAR WORKERS WAR RESEARCH " 0.e ':OY "ta.1 nR' z n 3 5-o S4 n - a y j - -- ,4 -1. A UNIVERSITY IN WAR TIME: Newsmen Observe Trainees at Work ighlights On Campus... Faculty Recital Scheduled Joseph Brinkman, pianist, and Wassily Besekirsky, violinist, will be guest artists in the second Faculty Recital, to be presented at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre., Three Brahms sonatas will be played. The performance is open to the general public without charge. Club To Hold Dance ... The: Graduate Outing Club will hold a country dance tonight at Grange Hall near Saline, and ar- rangements for transportation can be made by calling John Hoffman, 2- 2448. Ally graduate and professional stu- dents and alumni are invited to the regular meeting at 2:30 p.m. tomor- row at the club's quarters in the Rackham Building. The meeting will include'hike to Saginaw Forests. Resale Desk Open... The ticket resale desk for the Ohio State game will be open from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. today at the Travel Desk in the -lobby of the Union. All regular tickets can be ex- dhanged except faculty, student -and I'M" Club tickets. In exchange for their tickets persons who make use of the-'service will be given receipts which should be returned to the Un- ion Student offices no later than Dec. 4, and either the money or tickets will be sent to the owner. Speakers Schedule Smoker The Stumpspeakers' Association will hold a smoker at 17:30 p.m. Mon- day in Room 302 of the Union for old members and engineering and archi- tecture students. This undergraduate branch of Sig- ma Rho Tau offers training in pro- fessional speech. In previous years. freshmen have been eligible, but this year only outstanding freshmen may become neophytes, the first step of "stumpspeaking." JGP Nets $100 in i-i- n Prom.Tickets Are Avadable At Union Desk Tickets for the Bomber Scholarship Dance to be held from 8:30 p.m. to midnight today at Waterman Gym, will be on general sale from noon on today at the Union Travel Desk. Glen Gray and his Casa Loma Or- chestra will be the featured enter- tainers for the Fall Prom and have promised continuous music eliminat- ing many of the intermissions which have heretofore characterized the gala affairs given. Preceding the dance, Glen Gray and the orchestra will give a nation- wide broadcast from 6:30 to 7 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. Capt. Richard Cas- sidy, USN, will speak at the broad- cast. All proceeds from the dance will go to the Bomber Scholarship Fund. General chairman of the dance is Roy Boucher, '45; John Clippert is in charge of publicity; Rupert Straub, '44E, tickets chairman; and Jean Bisdee, '44, arrangements. Mayfield Gets Commisso10n Company B Engineer Is Made Lieutenant Pfc. Allen D. Mayfield, Company B, received a commission as second lieutenant by telegram direct from the War Department in Washington Thursday, Lt. Charles Peakes, Com- pany B commander, announced yes- terday. Lt. Mayfield, a native of San An- tonio; is a graduate of Georgia Tech. He is a sanitary engineer, special- izing in malaria control. His training has been extensive with two years of junior ROTC, three and one-half years of senior ROTC in the ordnance department, three months in the Coastal Artillery Corps, six months in the medical corps and several months of ASTP. He was stationed at Corvalles, Ore., before being assigned to this area and was a private for 14 months. ICC Representatives To Attend Co-ops Convention At the Inter-Cooperative Council By STAN WALLACE A major university, alive with ac- tivity, geared to the urgencies of war-this was the picture unfolded yesterday for the more than 30 newspaper editors and radio men who toured the campus as guests of the Army Command nere. The tour was arranged and guided by executive officers of Army Head- quarters' as part of a nationwide program to present first hand ob- servation of the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP) at work. The tour included first hand in- spection of Army trainees in class- es, at work in the Intramural Building, at home in the East Quadrangle, and at mess in the Union. The ASTP program was officially begun March 1 this year and the University of Michigan is one of the pilot schools in the country in utilizing its facilities for specialized training. Of the Army's program of 16 dif- ferent courses designed to produce technically trained men for every branch of service, 15 are in progress here. At present, there are more than 3,800 uniformed men on campus in- cluding both the Army and Navy programs taking courses ranging from language study to sanitary en- gineering. Even before any ASTP units came to campus, the facilities of the Uni- versity were being used for Army training. In September, 1942, the Judge Advocate School was moved wholly from Washington and set up in the Law Quadrangle. At that time there were some 80 men in the unit, all officers. It was expanded last spring into an Officer Candidate School and is the only one of its kind in the country. Having gained experience from ad- justing a course of army training to its regular functions, the Univer- sity was prepared and ready to in- augurate the most diversified ASTP training set-up in the country last March. The first group of men to come to campus was a contingent of 140 students assigned to engineering training. Prof. Clarence Kessler of the Col- lege of Engineering pointed out at a luncheon for the press men held at the Union that "this initial group presented many problems, for we immediately found men who didn't want to be in college." "After an initial period of trial and error adjustment fitting the fac- ilities of the engineering school to the speed of the program, we worked out a method of using our facilities efficiently," he stated. Now the engineering school is teaching more than 700 uniformed men each day the rudiments of ba- sic and the details of advanced engineering in every department of the school. Col. Fred Rogers, commander of Army forces in Ann Arbor, in dis- cussing ASTP at the luncheon, said that "in the beginning the Army was in a bad way for technically trained men in every skilled field. In the. ASTP program we are refining tar'y tactics each week, as well as six hours of physical education. In connection with the Army pro- gram, the University has introduced several innovations. For the first time in University history, the engineering college had to incorporate into its pro- gram regularly scheduled study classes each week to give extra aid to students. Another first in University history was the establishment of a curricu- lum known as sanitary engineer- ing. The course is te result of the Army's realization that "it must pro- vide for the general welfare of the foreign lands in which it is operat- ing," Prof. Kessler pointed out. Dean Lloyd S. Woodbourne of the literary college declared that "the degree of success that we have at- tained in our ASTP program can be attributed to the cooperation of every unit in the University." Every man in ASTP is afforded the best in housing and messing facili- ties. The bulk of the Army men on campus are being housed in the East Quadrangle of Residence Halls, a University dormitory originally de- signed for 450 civilian students. At present more than 1,000 men in khaki are being housed there and the dining halls serve more than 3,000 meals each day. In addition to the East Quad, Army trainees are being housed in the Law Quadrangle, Victor Vaughn dormitory, and in more than ten fraternity houses which have been taken over for that purpose. All the men living outside of what were civilian dorms are being fed in the ballroom of the Union which serves 700 men three times a day. Other highlights included in the tour of inspection were the Naval tank-one of three in the United States, and the tropics room of the University Hospital where experi- ments are being conducted to dis- cover the efficiency of human en- ergies in tropical areas. The more than 1,400 Navy V-12 trainees now on campus completes the picture of University facilities geared to war training. The Navy's college training pro-1 gram is four months younger than ASTP, officially beginning July 1 of this year. "The Navy program. is the most democratic program that has ever been devised," Captain Richard Cassidy, commandant'of Naval forces here, said, "and it gives men who would not otherwise have it, the opportunity to come to col- lege." Included in the Navy program are some 300 Marines and Coastguards- men, all of whom are being housed in the West Quadrangle, the largest men's dormitory on campus. All men connected with both serv- ice programs on campus were of one ~ ~ opinion - that specialized training programs are beneficial to the serv- ices supplying much needed techni- cal personnel, that they are a benefit to the nation providing a well round- ed educated generation to take up the burdens of peace, and that they are a benefit to each individual in- creasing his wealth of knowledge. Every classroom, lecture hall, laboratory and instructor connect- ed with Michigan. is geared to the multiple duties of war training. This is the University of Michigan in training for war, for peace. r 'G 1_ __ _ __ __ _ , I - CO-ME JO. I UNITARIAN CHURCH State and Huron Streets Edward H. Redman, Minister Miss Janet Wilson, Organist Saturday Evening: Social Games and Dancing. Sunday: 10:40 A.M. Unitarian-Friends Church School. 11:00 A.M. Church Service with Mr. Redman preaching on "Our Pilgrim Heritage." THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN ANN ARBOR Sunday. Nov. 14a Michigan League, 8 P.M. Wednesday, Nov. 24. - "Mankind in the Cru- cible" by Miss Etha Snodgrass, Member Na- tional Board of Directors. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw (Missouri Synod) Rev. Alfred Scheips, Pastor 11:00 A.M. Divine Service with sermon by the pastor, "God's Vineyard." 5:30 P.M. Supper meeting of Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, preceded by social hour. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 South Division St. Wednesday evening service at 8:00. Sunday morning service at 10:30 - Subject: "Soul and Body." Sunday -School at 11:45. You are cordially invited to our services and our public Reading Room at 106 E. Wash- ington St., Open daily, except Sundays and holidays, from 11:30 to 5:00, Saturdays to 9 P.M.. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. William P. Lemon, D.D., Willard V. Lampe, Ministers Franklin Mitchell, Director of Music and Organist Miss E. Gertrude Campbell, Director of Christian Education 9:30 A.M. Church School Classes. 10:45 A.M. Nursery and Beginner and Primary Departments during the hour of Morning Worship. in-A A .M' Mrnninnr Worshin "Than1s Tivinr" LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION sponsored jointly by Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches Zion Lutheran Church - E. Washington St. and S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church Worship Service. Sermon by the Rev. E. C. Stellhorn. Trinity Lutheran Church - E. William St. and- S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church Worship Service. Sermon by the Rev. Henry 0. Yoder. The Lutheran Student Association 5:30 P.M. Fellowship Hour. 6:00 P.M. Supper with program following. Mr. Theodore Markwood, speaker. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Rev. Leonard A. Parr,-D.D., Minister Rev. H. L. Pickerill, Director of Student Work Wilson Sawyer, Director of Music 9:15 A.M. Church School Depts. 10:45 P.M. Public Worship. A special Thanks- giving service. Dr. Parr will speak on "Let Us Give Thanks." 5:30 P.M. Ariston League for High School Stu- dents. 7:00 P.M. Cong'l-Disciples Student Guild. An- drew Kuroda will speak on "Japanese Ameri- cans and Post-War America." Social hour and refreshments. ST. ANDREWS' EPISCOPAL. CHURCH 306 North Division St. The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector The Rev. Robert M. Muir, Student Chaplain Miss Maxine J. Westphal, Counsellor for Women Students Mr. Philip Malpas, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 11:00 A.M. Junior Church. 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Dedication of New Hymnals. Sermon by the Rev. Philip L. Schenk. 3:30 P.M. H-Square Club, Page Hall, 5:00 P.M. Choral Evening Prayer and Com- mentary by the Chaplain. 6:00 P.M. Canterbury Club, Page Hall (for stu- dents and servicemen); Supper, and discus- sion on the Church's plans for, post-war re- construction, led by the Rector. TUESDAY -0- 10:00 A.(. Holy Communion, War Shrine. W1rDNSDTAV .-. R-:00 AM HoLv Conmmuninn MESH HOSIERY Fashionable and good-wearing fine rayon mesh for dancing or dress at $1.23 are sheer and good looking. Porthole Rayon Mesh at $1.16 is a sturdy stocking for wear and appearance. wl 11