'AGE FOUR :r Air VVWPO 46 4 hJ J 'U' Band Will Open Program On Food Today Meeting Will Be Public Recognition of Work Of County Farmers. The University Concert Band, con- ducted by Prof. William D. Revelli, will open the program of the food mobilization meeting for Washtenaw County at 8 p.m. today in Hiil Audi- torium. 1. L. Anthony, Dean of Agriculture of Michigan State College will speak on the problem of food production in 1944, its relation to the home front, our armed forces and our allies. The meeting will also be a public recognition of the fine work which Washtenaw County farmers have done in spite of war time regulations, ..thy shortage of labor and farm ma- chinery. Other speakers include Miss Fran- ces E. Wilson, home demonstration agent for Washtenaw County, who will talk on "Farm Women and Girls in the War Effort"; Capt. Longneck- er of * the State Selective Service Board, who will explain the new ag- ricultural questionaire; and Lt. Will- iam H. Cooper, Jr., who was wounded in service in Guadalcanal with the 1st expeditionary forces in the South Pacific. Free tickets for admission are available at the League, the Union, The Daily, Business Men's Lunch- eon Club, Chamber of Commerce and Women's Clubs. Sergeants Promoted Both Co. E and Co. G of the 3651st S.U. have new First Sergeants. Sgt. Nashawaty, former company clerk of Company G, has become the company clerk of Company E. First Sergeant Engle of Company E is now the First Sergeant for Company G. Second Music Faculty Concert To Be Offered Prof. Ross, Miss Titus To Present New Piece Tomorrow in Recital Prof. Gilbert Ross, violinist, and Miss Helen Titus, pianist, will pre- sent a recital in the School of Mu- sic faculty concert series at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Highlight of the program will be the first Ann Arbor performance of Ross Lee Finney's "Duo for Violin and Piano," written in 1943 and ded- icated to Prof. Ross. The composer is professor of mu- sic at Smith College. He was win- ner of the 1937 Pulitzer Prize for music and in the same year was also awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship1 for composition. Prof. Ross, former music professor at Smith, is a comparatively new member of the music school faculty, having become a permanent member at the beginning of the 1943-44 fall term. His outstanding Ann Arbor public appearance was in a popular series of Beethoven sonata recitals presented in August, 1942, while he was here as a visiting professor. In addition to the Finney compo- sition, tomorrow night's program in- cludes Tartini's "Concerto in D mi- nor"; Caporale's "Adagio"; Scarlat- ti's "Sonata in E major"; Mozart's "Sonata in E minor," (K. 304); Franck's "Sonata in A major"; Szy- manowski's "La Fontaine d' Areth- use" and De Falla's "Ritual Fire Dance." TilL1 7L~fU-r.miI4 rtjt y £ . IM lpA14 Honieymoon in Counity Jail SPONGING ALLOWED: Delta Gamma Announces You Have To Pay at Michibomber Two young couples, sentenced to ten days in the county jail at Rockford, Ill., on charges of falsifying records, smile as they look at empty jail food kits. The two couples admitted they falsified their ages in obtaining marriage licenses. Left to right: William Cramer, 17, Naomi Rocket Cramer, 16, both of Mount Vernon, Ill.; James Berg, 17, of Rockford, and Dorothy Horton Berg, 16, of Rochelle, Ill. The two couples were married in a double ceremony. Editor's note: This is Chapter 11 in the story of Mitchell Bomber, micro- scopic airplane who is building the Michibomber carnival, which will take off Saturday, March 11, in Waterman Gymnasium. The Delta Gamma's are going to make people pay for sponging on them, so at the Michibomber the DG's are setting up a booth where IRichia /Jeh A1t 7War Fourteen former University stu- dents were among the thousands of graduating pilots of the Army Air Forces who recently won their silver wings at 11 Advanced Pilot Schools in the first graduating class of 1944. Following on the heels of a year of peak production of combat flyers, this latest graduation of new fight- ing pilots, from every state in the Union and from foreign countries, was the largest group yet turned out at one time by these eleven fields. Graduating from the bomber pilot schools at Blackland Field, Brooks Field and Lubbock Field, Tex., and Altus Field, Okla., were Lt. Ulric O. Allen, Lt. Robert J. Orr, Lt. John D. Van Veen Jr., Lt. William J. Lalley, Lt. Kenneth L. Kardon, Lt. John H. Blumenstock, Lt. Robert H. Bellairs and Lt. Charles W. Decker. Graduating from the fighter pilot schools at'Foster Field, Moore Field and Aloe Field in Texas were Lt. Benjamin S. Bricker, Lt. Milton F. Coulson, Lt. John R. Corson, Lt. Kenneth J. Finlayson, Lt. Dean D. Willard and Lt. Arnott F. Tait. customers can throw wet sponges at girls. Mick was flying around the DG house one day when he suddenly ran into what on the outside looked like a large brown cloud, inside looked like catacombs, and actually was a sponge. Mick had always avoided sponges because like an apple-pol- isher they were mushy and like Mick's publicity agent they were all wet. And he was no match for a big sponge, because he was only a little squirt. Inside of the sponge Mick met the soupiest weather in his career, and soon, having turned himself into a combination airplane - ship - subma- rine he was able to keep the motor going, but he couldn't navigate out of the sponge. The entire Michi- bomber depended on Mick's getting out of that sponge . . . will he make it? (To be continued.) Prof. Remner ls T'ransferred Prof. C. F. Remer, who has been serving in Washington as chief of the Far Eastern division of the Office for Strategic Services, has transferred to the Department of State where he will continue work with Far Eastern relations, according to Dr. Z. Clark Peterson, actinghead of the econ- omics department. The regular department member in charge of foreign investment courses, Prof. Remer has been on leave of absence to do government work in connection with the war. He has spent a number of years in the Far'East, living in China, Japan and the Philippines, and has written ex- tensively on foreign investments in China. Russia To Be Topic of Talk at Club in Detroit Profs. Pollock, Kraus, Wheeler To Appear as Guest Speakers Today "Will Russia Cooperate?" is the topic of an open forum to be held today by the University of Michigan Club of Detroit in the Rackham Memorial Building in Detroit for Michigan men and women and their guests. Special guest speaker for the meet- ing will be Philip Adler of the Detroit News, who was born in Rus- sia and is a graduate of the Univer- sity of Wisconsin. Prof. Benjamin Wheeler of the history department, Prof. James Pollock of the political science department and Prof. Wolf- gang Kraus, also of the political sci- ence department, will lead the dis- cussion together wtih Mayor Edward Jeffries of Detroit, graduate of the Law School in 1923. Questions which will be considered include: 1)-Will boundary problems prove unsolvable? 2)-What will happen inside Germany? 3)-Will isolationism return? 4)-Is Uncle Sam in business to stay? and 5)- How should Germany be governed? This forum is the second in a ser- ies of three such meetings to be held by the Michigan Club of Detroit on vital affairs of the day. Women's War Activities House Chairmen To Meet All war activities' chairmen of independent women's houses will hold a meeting at 4:30 p.m. tomor- row in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League, according to Lee Chaice, chairman of the program committee for Assembly Recognition Night. It was previously announced that the meeting would be held in the Council Room. Doctor Gets Appointmeni Dr. John Barnwell, assistant pro- fessor of Internal Medicine in the' University Hospital, was appointed recently to the Advisory Committee, to the Bureau of Tuberculosis in the, Michigan State Department of! Health. YOU CAN'TLOSE YOU CARRY TRAVELERS CHEQUESI That's right! Because if your Amerikan Express Travelers Cheques are lost, stolen, or destroyed 'uncountersigned, American Express w ill promptly refund your loss. These Clieques are handy to carry, the size of a dollar bill and are readily spendable anywhere. - American Express Travelers Cheques are issued in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100. The cost is aof 1% (75 o eac S t)$0 purchased),minimum 40¢. For sale at Banks, and Railway Express o:ices. AMERICAN EXPRESS .....TRAVELERS CH EOUES WAVES To Return Today Information Booth To Be Set Upa in League Lt. Helen M. Stewart, recruiting officer for the U.S. Naval Reserve returns today to Ann Arbor. Together with Alene Kasten, Sp. (R) 3/c, Lt. Stewart will set up an information booth which will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow in the lobby of the League. The Navy is interested in recruit- ing large numbers of enlisted women and officer candidates from this area. Lt. Stewart and Sp, Kasten are prepared to answer all questions and explain their branch of the ser- vice to any woman who comes in for an interview. Mrs. R tilven Will Entertain at Tea Mrs. Alexander Ruthven will en- tertain the Faculty Women's Club from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. today at her home with a tea in their honor such as she has given in past- years. Guests will be received by Mrs. Willard Olson, Mrs. Clare Griffon and Mrs.'Ruthven. Assisting at the tea table will be Mrs. Wells Bennett, Mrs. Walter Pillsbury, Mrs. Clarence Yoakum, Mrs. Frederick Rogers and Mrs. Richard Cassidy. Tin Cans To Be Collected To morrow A tin can collection will be held tomorrow within Ann Arbor city limits sponsored by the Washtenaw Salvage Committee. Pick-ups will be made by Ann Arbor city trucks from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and housewives are urged to place tin cans on the curbs as early as possible, to facilitate collection, George H. Gabler, chairman of the committee, said yesterday. Post Directors and Leaders of Neighborhood War Clubs have great- ly assisted the Washtenaw Salvage Committee in drives for household fats, tin cans and paper, and their help has added materially to the large quantities of salvage that have been collected, Mr. Gabler said. Detroiter Crowned Scrap Cham pion Mr. Ray C. Baker of Detroit was awarded the title of "Champion Tin Can Collector of Detroit and the Na- tion" Jan. 15, when he contributed 16,037 tin cans, weighing 5,395 pounds, to the War Salvage Drive. Baker, with his invalid wife, col- lected the cans from the apartment building where he lives and from neighboring rubbish piles. He went up and down alleys for weeks putting the cans into a sack attached to Mrs. Baker's wheelchair. They prepared the cans and piled them at the curb in neat cartons. Carl Weinrich Will Give Organ Recital Playing a program consisting largely of Bach, pre-Bach music, Carl Weinrich, organist and choir master at Princeton University, will present an organ recital at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Pupil of Lynnwood Farnum, the country's outstanding organist a dec- ade ago, Weinrich acquired a nation- al reputation as a concert organist for the manner in which he carried on Farnam's work after his death in the early thirties. From 1934 until his resignation in 1940, Weinrich was head of the or- gan department at Westminster Choir College in Princeton. SPECIAL CFEAITANCE -\ I i ____ . 1 e-/ * o III Ilt7 7 1'r Sete j I 1 . ' Above - Gabardine Coat, Wool and Cotton.* Double-breasted, belted model. Full Rayon lined. Slash pockets. Shoulder Straps. Natural shade. 12 to 18 Montil's most important single contribution to skin protection. 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