f tea i%1 i t- H 1i 7, A l L u L L.L' . -.I 11 I-- tB x X -. .w~ 4. z '.; ~ S ~ .~1.~i .~ .U ~ 3 .......... ....... _ .... __ ..... ._ _ _ _._ .. ..._. _ _ ... - -- - - .-_ _ _ . _ ._ _. ....... _ _ ..... _. _........... . .. ......... _ - -_. _ _ _.. __ ... _ . _ U Z, lb" 'Minute Men' Increase Army War Bond Tota l Soldiers contribitte Portion' of Pay C0ltek To Special Salesmen The total of war bonds purchased by Army units stationed on campus jumped to $28,081.25 Monday when "minute men" were on duty at pay tables to give each man a chance to invest part of his pay check. Company A is in the lead, accord- ing to latest figures, with a total of $12,150. The station complement is second with $5,000 and Company G third with $4,781.25. JAG Results Unknown Results are not yet available from. a drive conducted in the Judge Ad- vocate General school on payday yes- terday According to an audit taken yester- day morning, the county has now sold a total of $2,666,529.75 worth of all type bonds. A large amount of this sum came from a sale of $745,000 reported by the State Savings Bank. "Bond Belles" will be an hand from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight in Hill Auditorium to sell bonds during the lecture by Lt. Tom Harmon. Novel Bond Peddling Reports of novel ways of selling war bonds are coming in from all over the country. In New England 100 citizens got a preview of the ex- pected war guilt criminal trials when each bought $10,000 worth of bonds for the privilege of forming a jury in an International Court rehearsal trial in the case of the United Nations ver- sus the Nazi war guilt criminals. Many refugees from the countries ov- errun by the Nazis appeared as wit- nesses.. Minneapolis came up with a blind ,man volunteer worker for the Fourth War Loan Drive when his neighbor- hood disclosed a shortage of woman workers. The "Prandmothers War Bond League" was officially inaugurated in Washington Monday when Mrs. George C. Marshall bought war bonds for each of her three grandchildren from Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Morgenthau, Jr. Dressings Unit Will Be Closed Until further notice, the Surgical Dressings Unit making cotton pad- ding at the Rackham Building will be closed, since the unit has made its quota for this particular dressing. However, the League unit will con- tinue to be open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. According to Harriet Fishel, '45, head of the unit, Panhellenic has decided that pledges and women bound to the various houses will not be counted on the records as being part of the sororities. Their indi- vidual houses or dormitories will re- ceive the work credit. Specially invited houses this week are as follows: Wednesday-Betsy Barbour, Day House, Zimmer House and J. C. Wilson House; Thursday- Martha Cook, Geddes House, Bertha Wilson House and Wilcox House, and Friday- Stockwell, Ingalls House, Vogt House and Van Benschoten House. ... ......... - r .,... _. _ Dog Saves Life of Boy Trapped in Cave I Mickey, a black and white mongrel, who is credited with saving the life of a 15-year-old boy trapped in a collapsed cave, is proudly exhibited by his owner, Robert Harris (right). Mickey drew attention to the plight of Fred Michaelis, 15 (center), who was covered with thousands of pounds of dirt. The dog caused Robert and Charles Harris (left) to investigate near their Jacksonville, Fla., home and with the aid of neighbors, succeeded in extricating young Michaelis. ENJOY BLIND DATES: Turkish Students Find U.S. SceneryLike Own Country "We are very much at home here, for our country looks very much like this," Ozcan Draman and Peridun Dogu, the two students who arrived in Ann Arbor last month from Istan- bul, said recently in an interview at the International Center, They said, however, that the blind date was something quite new to them. "I had never heard of this," Draman said, "but it worked out very well for me." He said he was also surprised when a man gave him a booklet containing U' Approves FM Application The administration yesterday au- thorized the University Radio Sta- tion to increase the power asked in its application now pending with the Federal Communications Commis- sion for a FM license from 1,00,1 watts to 50,000 watts. The University was among the first educational institutions in the state to support a proposed -plan that would create a chain of educational FM broadcasting stations through- out Michigan. The change in the application ask- ing greater power came as a result of supplemental information obtained at a recent meeting of FM Broad- casters Inc. in New York by Profes- sors Joseph Maddy and Waldo Abbot. A meeting is scheduled in Lansing today, called by Superintendent of Public Instruction Eugene B. Elliot to bring together education leaders interested in the new program. religious propaganda. "That would not be allowed in our country," he explained. The trip from Egypt to Baltimore took only 32 days. But they had waited three months in Cairo before they could get passage on a ship. That three months was very difficult, they said. "For instance," Dogu con- tinued, "one of our friends missed his chance to come because he had gone out for a cup of coffee when they called him." Before coming here they attended Roberts College in Istanbul where they received B.S. degrees. They are now taking graduate work in me- chanical engineering. Other Turkish students, about 17 or 18 of them, Draman said, are still waiting in Cairo to come to the United States. When asked why they chose the University they said their teachers had recommended it to them for me- chanical engineering. Soldier Sent Cake From Puerto Rico Pfc. Ramon Magrina-Suarez re- ceived a two-layer birthday i cake from his parents in Porto Rico yes- terday, but hasn't had a chance to eat it yet because he is too busy studying. The cake was telegraphed $o, Pfc. Magrina - Suarez of Company G, 3651st Service Unit, for his 21st birthday. The mouths of the rest of the com- pany, to say nothing of Magrina- $uarez's, are watering now in antici- pation of a piece of the cake. ConstructionI Of Gas StationI He I he oii Monday Residents in the neighborhood of South University and Washtenaw will oppose the construction of a newJ filling station on the northwest cor- ner of the intersecting avenues at ar public hearing Monday and a historyN of the lot will be presented.1 The history has been composed by Morse D. Campbell, a resident of the1 neighborhood who is interested in1 preventing the construction of the new station.1 The area is now a residential dis- trict by city zoning laws and includes the Kappa Alpha Theta, Sorosis, Chi- Omega and Phi Delta Theta houses. A dispute arose when A. W. Gallup, owner of the corner lot, requested the city council to re-zone the loca- tion to permit construction of the filling station. Campbell's history of the lot re- veals that construction of a filling station, begun in 1928, was stopped by the city engineer in accordance with a setback line and driveway agreement made in 1923, which guaranteed that the property was not in a class for business use. The present zoning arrangement was then established by the city council, upheld in its ruling by the circuit court. Petitions from persons holding property in the area urging that the neighborhood remain a residential one will be presented at the hearing Monday night. Competition Is Effective, Ec' Goes to Dogs When Professor Palmer of the Economics Department spoke of "ef- fective competition," he thought he was speaking in abstractions. But some ASTP students, over- anxious to get to their three-o'clock class yesterday, decided to make Ec. 52 more practical, so they, gathered in the hallway, at 2:50 started open- ing the door of the lecture room at regular intervals. Prof. Palmer went on with his lecture. The soldiers sent a dog into the room. Prof. Palmer tried to act un- concerned. Even when they pushed a second canine through the door, Prof. Palmer retained his composure, and was determined to finish his lec- ture. He finally gave up when the ani- mals began barking, but the worst was yet to come. As Prof. Palmer stalked from the room with his hands in the air, a member of the ASTP pushed in with the remark that he "always knew the Ec depart- ment was going to the dogs!" Co. G's New Cadet Officers Announced New cadet officers of Company G, medical and dental unit of the 3651st Service Unit, were appointed yester- day by Lt. Samuel Riezman, company commander. Cadet officers are: Company com- mander, Cadet Captain Gorup; ad- jutant, Cadet First Lt. Tawacki; first sgt., Cadet First Sgt. Oren. Platoon leaders are: Cadet Second Lieutenants Pelitie, Feldman, Hodg- son, Winchell, Brown, Gosling, Will- iam, and Fox. Platoon sergeants are: Cadet Staff Sargeants Congdon, Rose, Haas, Tappan, McDedmoid, Gilbert, Worobes, and Drucker. Cooper To Address Scouts Lt. William H. Cooper, Intelligence Officer in the 3651st S. U., will speak on "The Importance of the Boy Scout Organization" at 7:30 p.m. today at the honor court of the Boy Scouts of this district which will be held in the St. Andrews Catholic Church. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Psychiatric Adviser to the Director of Selective Service, will speak on "Some Psychiatric Problems in Mili- tary Adjustments" tonight at 8:00 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. He will show a sound movie of work being done at an English rehabilitation center. Guests of members are wel- come. Kappa Phi meeting today at 5:30 p.m. Pledge meeting at 5:00 p.m. The Association Music Hour will present Faure's "Requiem" this eve- ning at 7:30 at Lane Hall. Everyone interested is invited. n - - - - Coed Assembly Food Subsidies Night Petitions To Be licus4,d1 -e Iife Ti-dcy xi iviiNol ai ' . . "'amass " .,, . ,.. > f _ !re u sLitirj ol w roui h<