-i r~ M1I111 IC . AtN It A l -V 10A ink ____AA._______AVkKqt-___Xs__A_" I-V J AJ J*-, t4-1 L IF X ... .I..... .... ......... rAZ'rm R~ ny r n .° .. _) Soldiers Help Out in Christmars ;Ru , ,' -- , - 1: L a# n ( r i pppp i if .... ,.-......e,.-.. ... (_ \Tich f3 i mdusupervised, is 11 u u'neucey,"he de- Afte 1 . ~~'~"h a enaal discus- , O c i' ); i hich youth leaers( ~s~s ier views on the p~olci (. uim Irintheir own en- ," ,)aI(;,t Ssin, Rose Al- ;.,, P Pilow Run Rec- reta (or~oUopne the panel dir us'un id lg pansfor diver- Prof ~u loa. d%. McClusky of t~i S'1O(,y epatmntwas the gerliulana arforthe day and- poined;o_:' cal dta of the con- ferece ouhloc adeavailable to the ru'r fight ai_. toti engthen )OdS Our Two Cr {ontest Soldiers from F ort Sheridan, near Chicago, wi:ho wr rne three-day passes, help get the mail through ,at a Chicao alra r- urinal as postal authorities find it difficult to get enough c ifian help ;« to handle the early volume of Christmas mail. "Soldiers arec paid. th e usual civilian rate. l'ehinn i lenedincreative writ- ingiv> ' ,ug wo(mnths in which to ('moee _ J Ioptwood rmanu- Thee cy a otiS ay be in the fiel of< ypeeSN"r prose fiction, or inl b ors The limit set for esa :3;OOx rdS and 10,000 forprs bi';o more than ten roe ; my.b .s.mited by a single ;ncn f hr fields ten prizes of 50.$30ao td? ireoffered. Fresh- mentakng ~ogichcomposition in thelierrcllg or the engineer- ing ~ ~ ~ wl cconclude litil~ chppl. FatherP~ A O aConorlofthe the toedabrera held auall pan teeyahe hewlhl o rp('ia Ix"e~ jg fo all coeds. HATE PROPAGANDA : Student-Faculty Parley Ei'f Post-War Council Conferen *i ce ,r ..;.: ;,, C :: \MUUMO w ll I AX '1, K 5< ',t ' Y ',/., .. i .. '~ 13 ' ' I'>I ' 7:~-'L% Concluding its two-day annual) conference, the Post-War Council yesterday held a student-fclypr ley in the Union. The parley was organized into two discussion groups-one dealing with "The Place of Education and Propa- ganda in World Organization"~ and the other with "Types of World Or- ganization." Discussion in the first session of the parley followed the general out- line: A-Is "hate propaganda" neces- sary? B- Should the churches, schools and government begin now to counteract hate and teach respect for our enemies? C-To what extent does the opinion of the people affect governmental policy? The outline of the second parley was as follows: A-Discussion of Culbertson's plan. B-Should we have a stronger or weaker plan? C-Should the gov- ernment officially adopt a plan and offer it to the enemy in lieu of un- conditional surrender. In the first session discussion cen- tered around the theme that frus- trations are most easily epressed in hates, and that the frustration of defeat in war is frequently a deter- mining factor in the cause for new war. It was suggested that, as prop- aganda techniques have been de- veloped and can be utilized to relieve frustrations and channel them in the right direction, such methods be used to create a peace with a minimum of frustrations. The need for as strong a world or- ganization as all countries will accept was debated in the second session of the parley. It was agreed by most ilere's what he re ceivyes when you give hint a Dobbs for Christmas! :.. A Gift Certificate for a fine Dobbs Hat and a cute Jeep Topper-both tucked away in this co- orful Jeep Box. After Christmas he has the peasure of choosing the right hat for himself, NEW!- DOBBS (// G W G ~'#/ $4> i people attending that the problem of international security is an imnmedi- ate one. However, there were diver- gent opinions concerning whether or' not it is possible to eliminate war without solving the deep-rooted e o- nomic causes for war. It was sliges ted that an attempt to raisethegen- eral standard of living, togethe1(" t presence of a strongly constructe:d world federation might make loos- sible the simultaneous attainment of both political and, economic collec- tive security. Professors participating in t1e p;ar- ley included: Prof. Claude heShologEuaio.U ro man R. F. Maier of the y(hiy department, Prof. James K.Polk oft e pltclsine r rProf. Herewald Price of' the Engl-ish department and Max Dresden of the_; physics department at the firste- sion, and Prof. Preston Slosson (f1h history department, Dr. E. W. Bae man, Religious Counselor:;lDr. Jan1 Hostie, lecturer for the Univer ity War Training Program. Prof. Wlu Humphreys of the English :dept--,,- ment and Prof. Marks Hance .h speech department at the secornd. Student boards for the two pa.r-I leys included John Condylis, Barbara, Greenberg, Pat McGraw. Nancy Richter, Lorraine Naum, Ma rtin Sha- pero, Joyce Siegan, and Harvey Weis- berg. - Be A Goodfellow - 1,000 C0oo rai W ll Be Disp'v~ A public display of 1,000 prints of color reproduction representative of the Artext Print. Inc.. dealers in; color reproduction, will be held from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., tomorrow in Room B of the Alumni Memorial House. The reproductions will consist of postcards and small and medium prints of paintings from all the schools of Italian and French art and j collections of oriental and m.ediev'al art objects from the Brit'ishi Museum, lieceirhmy nine eeks intensive lrly P al. miitaryT and academic in- sruction at Maxwell Field. Alabama, alre three former students of the Uni- ver5;iti now avition cadets. They &ac W lliam V,. Brooks, who attend- (1 the University in 194 0-43, Gilbert Eans and Robert J. Shirkey, who a'ndeu in 1942-43. TI'is I rainin- is preparatory to Uctuai liflit training at a primary it fil school in the Army Air 'Force:E.[astern Flying Training Ma~jor Frederick H-enry Feilmann, of San Diego. Cal., was recently pro- ailot-ui from the rank of Captain. In 1937 he received the degree of Do- for of Rtedicmne at- the University whore he was a member of the Galens C]ib. Alpha Kappa Kappa, an hon- 1c1"are chemistry fraternity, and was pr esidnt of the Se4ior Class of 1937 Maj or .Fe lmnann was commission- ed as Captain en September 7. 1942, ad beore' being assigned to Head- 1 lal'teYs,. Army Ground Fore s in Wai-hmn;° on, D. C.. served as an as- ; i~xt h ost surgecon and evacuation cff'ia-'. Hfis military education in- clu des stlliv at e Command and' General Staff School Fort Leaven- sw;orti h, Kansas. Secod Ia Margaret B. Sastrom, of Rekbord, tit., recently arrived at For t Sheriban to assume duties at the ation Hospital. A grfd- tic of St. Anthony's Hospital in Rockford in 1936 she was a visiting nurse in that city before entering the service. She attended the Uni- versity of Michigan where she studied public health education. Aidin A. Ratti of Ann Arbor, was recently appointed a Naval Aviation fCadet and was transferred to the Naval Air Training Center, Pensa- eola. PFla., for intermediate flight training. Prir to entering the Naval s; rvice, he attended the University for two years where hie was a mem- ber (It the Kappa Delta Rho fratern- ila Upon completion of the intensive course a the "Annapolis of the Air" UQadet Ratti will receive his Navy i Wings of Gold" with the designa- " tion of Naval Aviator, and will be coiioSlned an Ensign in the NavalE jTReserve or a Second L. in the Mar- inc, Corojs Reservtc. IAviation Cadet Frank W. Jor- gensen, of' Toledo, Ohio, recently reported for duty ait the Big Spring dBombardier School, where hie will begin his training as a bombarier. C'adet Jorgenson attended the Uni- versity where he received awards in footalsl, baseball, and track and HEALTHY HEADS! ar 'e ssenialistto rc vlans and iex to- me.Xi i Ia imat e o publchalth IBabers ~Xae glad toseve Of State on Liberty 4 MONTH INTENSIVE Secrelstra3 Course for College Studenrts and Graduates A t'Xcrou-h. inenive, eetaial ('(<(e st'-ar'(1tig February, July. Otibei. Reis Cration now open. n(-"' X ir (iw, anl ', veilili school tht..,- ~licut le syear. Catalog. I Schoo o Business Prefe'rred shy College Men and Women Prei;cien','Jchn Robert Gregg. S.CD. Dareccor. Pal M. Pair M.A. t 6i N. Xihigan Ave. Telephone STAte i88i .Chicago, Ill. w x~ "' . - r. .. ; i f yy5 P ,.. s '(} " _ . d V 4. ..' ,. *: 4 . . '. py , ^$ '! " a i r, , 1/ ,4, M' AK2. .'. t K. 3.90 5V .00 Plus Tax was a member of a dneorches- tra. He was also a mnember of the Theta Xi fraternity. Upon completion of tilerigid eighteen weeks training- of inten sive ground school study, discipline and many weeks of night antd day flying over the Texasragcony on practice bombing missions, lie wvill be awarded his silver wings as a bombardier and be appointed a fly- in ; officer in the Army Air Forces. IEvery three weeks the Big Spring, School graduates a new group of highly -trained "hell from heaven"j men, and sends them forth to battle- frcnts all over the world. Each month the bombing planes of the school spend approximately eleven thousand hours in the air and drop an average of .four-and -a-half mil-r lion pounds of bombs on practice targets. Each graduate bombardier leaves the school with the knowledge and experience equal to forty actual cam- , bat missions. Aviation Cadet David Standi- ford,, of Ann Arbor, is now receiv- ing the basic phase of his flight training at the Army Air Forces Pilot School at the Courtland Armay Air Field, Courtland, Ala. Former- ly a student at the University, he was a member of the Phi GammaI Delta fraternity. BUY WAR B3ONDS- INVEST IN VICTORY 1- /' I. { . r : 1 1.s: .iY( ': : t a : ., 9 x _ Wf/i'e W I t OI fl Dl~iIGNL BY AL'I U,1Z Llz3() Step sllardy fro , r .Y wc w+ X34; z_.'s > tr t; <: 3 v . . , c 'y E .: fff r - k f' a : ¢, i t y q -~ r __ K a. -. 037 < ,,1 $ ' i w y,,,x. ti .Y v: ;, >rer 3; , l . , , ,{, 'xa'{ . S x { n, ,; _, x 'L r d 5 a ' ; , Fj A y L< < Y h, ' , ..' $ 'x ';ti: ; . ,}, , P -,~ r r a t ' ; "' ;: t, . ' .z .. ; . s. '' ' , - r r . r ... f r' v s / y . y i7 i L C J t + : . r fem. .'y' ' t > r ; r >. s% ~y a " F C y h. . ' x ' .. , .N t.al , i \ ti dv 1 1M r QuilIts, Crepes, B rocaldes A , ( RI$Tm ASThe Largest Stock in the City 50 for $1.25 and up- printed Beautiful Assortments . . . , 79c and up ULRICI''S BOOKSTO ORE: Opposite Engineering Bldg. Flannels and velvets Memiersh ip IS SetiionicirnPgt Tuesday is the deadline for semes-PulctosBidnat5pm Pti aicnluli~ra-;>r membership in the American So- The Uiest has offered the use ebiety of' Mechanical Engineers,' of a truck for cd lilx eing papers to Maurice Dams, president of the or- dlis'tnpss Chi 'tm~a- baskets in addition to ganization, has announced, mefdical1 care an_"d sutpplemientary food Stu.dent members before gradua- rationsar distributed to needy Ann tion will save $10 when transferring Arbor famz.ilies from the pr~oceeds of to junor meber satusthe driv t e. The money will be divided tojno ebrsauh ad mn th ,Famnily and Children's Those interested may telephone Damis Serv ice, th i Goodwrilil Fund, and the at 6292 or Eric Tysklind at 2=.3849. Tex-tb)o ok Lendings Library. 7 le art and, Home Giis { ' 'WIE STAG o-; seonfor cany secl-~ fr n,y activity. n ditte :Pi,,' Y, SS 9 I r i i i 'HOP EARLY a