Pacr CWQ ii. iiT .. . i -- - - ~ - ~- -.-.-- - - -- - -~ WSSF LIFTS MORALE: Prisoners of War Make Urgent Plea for Books 4 - - -___ Fire Seven Jap fBonbers LIFE IN T HE WlLDERI\ESS: Botanist Seeks Quinine in Ecuador "Prisoners need two things, an! interest in life and the knowedge that they have not been forgotten," writes a British prisoner of war in Italy. , Designed to alleviate these needs, the campus World Student Service Fund campaign for more books to be sent to prisoners of war all over the world has stepped into its second Week with 70 books contributed up to date. Four Receptacles Placed Receptacles for the books have been placed in the League, the Union, the International Center and The Daily. Sponsored by Pan-tllenie, Wo- men's War Council, the Union and the International Center, the local drive will continue through to the spring semester to permit students to contribute this semester's books. Created by American students as a means of expressing their solidar- ity with their suffering fellow stu- dents all over the world, the WSSF operates priiiarily in the colleges universities, preparatory and theo- logical seminaries of the United States. The book collection has become an important part of the WSSF appeal. Last year the organization sent more than 100,000 textbooks to prisoners of war in the various thetres of action all over the world. Letters Express Gratitude Many letters have been received from the recipients of these books, expressing their gratitude. An Amer- ican prisoner in a German hospital says, "Amidst the rumblings of war, your parcel of books has been re- ceived with eternal gratitude." Allied prisoners of war are not the only recipients of these books. Axis prisoners interned in Allied camps may also benefit from this generous fund. "Thanks to your organization, thousands of people who are without means and separated from their Engineers Set Elect jon A .I.head Voting To Be After Opening of Semester Because of uncertainty over the number of positions which will be open on the Engineering Council election of representatives for the coming term will be held shortly aft- er the opening of the Spring semes- ter. . The following people have filed pe- titions for class representatives: freshmen, Robert Dolph, Charles Walton and Salvatore 'Sorice; sopho- mores, James Martin, Pvt. Ray Hulce USMCR, Witold Malinowski and Rog- er Hotte. Francis X. Nutto, who sub- mitted the only petition for the junior class, is automatically elected. Newly elected officers of the En- gineering Council for the coming semester are, John De Boer, presi- dent; Frank Abrams, secretary; and Al Bek, treasurer. Ensian Staff Meting All Ensian staff members must attend a meeting on Friday, Feb. 18, at 4:45 for distribution procedure. WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE Continuous from I P M NOW jz, , THEY CALLED HIM YOU'LL CALL IM R with TOM NEAL EVELYN KEYES BRUCE BENNETT JOHN HUBBARD JEFF DONNELL Extra Added -_ Dribble Puss Parade Magic Carpet in Color Terrvtoon families are able to cuiI tivate their knowledge,' a Spanish student in- terned in Africa, writes Morale Is Major Problem The major problem nof a prison camp is one of morale. "How do you expect us to begin again when the bottom has dropped out?" This cry of a prisoner of war gives a clue to the despair that lays hold upon men who, perhaps after only a few hours or days of fighting, are taken as pris- oners by the enemy and interned for Ithe duration. In order to lessen this inevitable despair, schools have been operat ing in many of the prison camps. In these so-called "universities of captivity," work of full university grade goes on, instruction being provided for me from those among their own number who were formerly professors or graduate students. Tyre work done in prison camps has been of a very high caliber aca- demically. Many universities send examinations into the camps, and many degrees are awarded to men for academic work done behind barbed wire. Expressions of gratitude from numerous camps where such educa- tional activities are already in full swing have been pouring in daily. Goal Is 200,000 Books "Your books have been received as a perfect godsend in our prison camp school," a British educational officer in a German prison camp writes. "I wish to assure you on behalf of all those who benefit from your gener- ous help that we are most grateful to you for what you are doing for us." With the increasing demand for more textbooks, this year's goal for the WSSF has been set at a figure of 200,000 books. "A university of this size should be able to make many valuable contri- butions to this cause," Mary Jane Hastreiter, president of Pan-Hellen- ic, said yesterday. "We should all rummage into our stockpile of books and see what books we can easily donate." College textbooks which are in cur- rent use are requested. Language study books for any language, and books for professional subjects such as law, medicine and theology are also needed. Clean books are preferred, but books with markings are also accep- ted. Truk... (Continuec from Page 1) flight to nearly 2,000 miles over en- emy waters. Enemy fighters zoomed into the sky but never got near the daring marine planes. Neither of them were damaged. Great Risk Involved The attack on Truk involved great risk for our naval forces-from en- emy land based and carrier planes and from submarines. The possibility of wreaking further damage on the already crippled Japanese fleet as well as on installation at Truk ap- parently was considered a worthwhile gamble by American leaders. The attack on Truk involved a courageous stroke extending far past Eniwetok, Kusaie, Ponape and other enemy airbases. Recent bombard- ments of those atolls evidently were the forerunners for the Truk assault. Important to Japs Truk's airfield, in Japanese hands, could mount raids against our newly- seized Kwajalein bases in the Mar- shalls, less than a thousand miles to the east. From Truk warplanes were ferried to the Solomons, Rabaul and the Marshalls. The bastion was the supply depot for all kinds of equip- ment for Japan's island outposts. (1 (. R eqiiests Skis For Weekly IDrills Members of Company G of the 3651st Service Unit are looking for snowshoes or skis, which they will, use in their weekly drills on Palmer Field whenever there is snow on the ground. Wednesday afternoon the fellows had to wade through a foot of snow on the Field while they were drilling.' "Snowshoes would be very helpful," stated Captain Samuel Riezman, company commander. Anyone who knows where about 300 pairs of snowshoes or skis can be obtained should contact the orderly room of Company G. Co. G To Have Furlough All dental students of Company G of the 3651st Service Unit will leave on furlough next week. The medical students of the company will receive their furloughs in' March. SNUlT a NIBBL E By l IAU(ClA 1'EI1LMAN lose iIs alkaloid 'i ocutn nless Itrca t- Breafkin g Atlsnhougli1 foes- ecar'fully." on teslop ofIheAndes o Uder what you might tains, eating guie pis, fightinig call minimum conditions," he said. rain, mud, and disease lve been tiie "'We work at an altitude (i, about life of Prof. William Steere of the 10,04)) feet. and it is usually cold aInd stet. Boots cause us a lot of Botany department since October, trouble because they' rot rapidly, 1942. aind our feet are always wet.' A member of the Cinchona Pro- "Supplies and diseases are our curement Unit of the Board of Econ- sain worries, however. We use pack omic Warfare, Professor Steere has anmamalswh.nwen. Wan, but Often vel been on the front line of the econo- must take men alon with us pust to mic battle to supply quinine for the cay supplies. We need ony jfive men fighting in the South Pacific. men in a party on horseback, but it Professor Steere is in general takes 15 men if we go on foot, each charge of a group of seven Ameri- 'arrying a 50 pound load" cans stationed in Equador, whose Idia s Prove helpful job it is to find the vital quinine- "Sanitary conditions are poor, es- bearing Cinehona trees and to get pecially the water supply. We never the bark harvested, which is then drink water unless it has been boiled, shipped to this country for proces- Five of the seven of us have beeni sing, seriously ill; four with dysentiary anld He recently returned to Ann Atrbor cne with mnalar ia.' on business, and left here Monday to The Indians of Equador' have been resume his work in Equador. of invaluable aid to the Cinchona Life Is Primitive Unit, Professor Steere said. "They "It is just a day to day affair of are a very picturesque people, and are slugging it out with the rain and mud simple, friendly, honest, and coopera- and cold, and with people who don't tive." want to work and mules that won't "Most of them speak Spanish, go," Professor Steere said. and their culture is mainly Span- "We live almost entirely with the ish. Concerning the war, they have Indians. We sleep in tents, eat a vague idea that the Japanese guinea pigs and corn, and drink ! have invaded America from the tea, boiled water or beer." West, and the Germans from the "Our base in in Quito, the capital East." of Equador, but we don't get in there "There is very little chance for nmore than once every two months. them t~o learn about the war. F'ew of We work in parties- --each of us takes them can read, and those that cann a group of natives and we go out read see a newspaper only once every from the camp for about two weeks two or three months." at a time. We try to open up as much Despite the hardships of his work, territory as possible-it is like a big Professor Steere said that he enjoyed selling campaign." Because the Cinchona trees must be cut in order to get the quinine out New School Is of the bark, the men must keep mov- ing out into the wilderness as the y trees are cut, PI'ofessor Steere ex- '.'~I1.~ AI .. as they go, but it is estimated that it±Educate Adu ts will take ten years for the forests to f grow back. One of America's newe c Seven of 14 Jap twin-engine bombers, caught on Engebi Island Air Field by fighters and dive-bombers from an American aircraft -carrier, are blasted and burned before they can rise. The rest of the bombers not in picture also .were destroyed. SORRY, FISHERMEN: Poor Fishing Is Predicted as Smelt Disappear from Lakes it and felt that he was doing some- thing essential ill the war effort. He said that it was good to get bailk to Ann Arbor for a while and added that. "it is good to i:sie I-1ome cooking again." Professor Steere took his doctorate here in 1932, and until October, 1942, lie taught in the Botany Department. His work as an exchange professor at the University of Porto Rico and experiences on botanical expeditions in Yucatan gave him valuable back- ground for his preseilt work in Equa- dor, and he was called to Washington and asked to joinm the Cinehona Unit in August, 1942. McKayRelri Sen. Ferguson8,1t MIAMI BEACH, Fla Feb. 17.-(/P) -Lashing backst; <,Senator Hoiner Ferguson, (Rep., Mich.) and others who seek his retirement as Republi- can National Cormmit teeman from Michigan, Frank D. McKay in a statement here today said it was "less an issue whether there shmll be a 'boss' than who that boss shall be." "I am not answerable,",he said, "to any individulal who seeks to set himself up as a desp ot dictating who shall be purged or liied or"who shall be placed inl, ~)wcr. Good of the Party "If and when I conclude to be a candidate to succeed mnyself my deci- sion will be made to the proper officials of the party, with most of whom I have wvorked in hiarmiony many years, and not to an individual like Judge Ferguson." Ferguson at Washington Tuiesda y demanded McKay resign "for the good of the party." Previously a group of Michigan county Republican leaders had start- ed a move to oust McKay from his post. The Grand Rapids politician in his statement issued from his winter home here, said: Subterfuge for Plot "A leader of this Wayne faction has openly asserted that they are out to organize the entire party from governor down. Their attack upon me with Ferguson serving as their messenger boy is merely a subterfuge for their plot to grab control of the whole state Republican organiza- tion." "Forgetting entirely my own po- litical fortune," McKay said, "I say it would be a tragedy if the rank and file permitted such usurping of its rights and powers." McKay's statement continued: "This recent sudden rise to eminence may have given him (Ferguson) an exaggerated appraisal of himself. It is doubtful whether Michigan Re- publicans feel special need to substi- tute their judgment with that of a junior senator." Amateur fishermen, who used to flock to the streams at the spring spawning runs of the smelt, will be filled with disappointment this year when they find that most of the smelt are gone. Great Lakes smelt, visited by a mysterious disaster a year ago, when the smelt run was a complete failure, I will likely be absent from the lake tributaries this spring, the Office of the Coordinator of Fisheries reported yesterday. Dr. John van Oosten, Area Co- ordinator of Fisheries for the Great Lakes, and Director of the Fisheries English Paper Is Sent Here Brumm Gets Edition Of London Daily Mail The transatlantic edition of The London Daily Mail, the latest experi- ment in international journalism, was recently received here by Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism depart- ment. The paper contains a digest of one week's issues of The Mail. News, columns and editorials which will be of the most interest to American readers are printed. It is hoped by the publishers of the paper that in printing it they are bringing a message of good will from one newspaper in England to the ones which shape opinion in America. The transatlantic issue is set up in England and photographed on micro- film, reducing the entire edition to the size of a dollar bill. The film is then flown to New York, re-enlarged, printed and then mailed. The entire process requires only two or three days. New Officers Elected New officers for Tau Beta Pi, Engineering Honor Society, have been elected. The president and vice-president are, respectively, Bud Burgess and John De Boer; corre sponding and recording secretaries, Julian Bulley and Bill Chapin; cata- loguer, Dan Ling, and Engineering Council Representative, Henry Schmidt. MICHIGAN Double-Feature Program Institute in Ann Arbor, has reported the only smelt catch of which he has heard this winter was that of a single fisherman who took two pounds -about 20 fish-from his nets. Last summer, van Oosten said, no smelt was found in the stomachs of Lake Trout. Smelts are the favorite food of trouts. In previous winters large numbers of smelt have been taken through the ice. No clue to the disappearance of the fish has been found. The reasons for the sudden death of most of th( smelt remain unknown. The fish, however, are not extinct. They have merely thinned out, said Dr. van Oos- ten. Whether some have escaped les- truction and will.again re-stock the lakes, remains unanswered. Co. G Seniors To Graduate Saturday Fourteen Dental Seniors of Com pany G of the 3651st Service Unit will graduate at commencement exer- cises on Saturday morning in Hill Auditorium. After graduation, the Dental stu- dents will leave on a field trip. Wher they return from the trip, they will be given commissions as Second Lieu- tenants in the Army Dental.: Cpl. Krug Wears Third Uniform in Eight Years SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 17.-(P)- Corp.Bernaid T. Krug of the Salt Lake City Air Base is wearing his third different military uniform in eight years. He enlisted in the Marines in 1936, served in China, and after his dis- charge joined the 'Royal Canadian Air Force. Later he asked for and received his discharge to join the U.S. Army Air Force. s 1 l t Extra Service Is Furnished They have to furnish "extra serv- ice" in connection with their work, Professor Steere said. "We furnish machetes and water-proof blankets, and have to do quite a bit of educat- ing while we work. We teach the In- dians how to dry the bark, which will Engineers State Alumini Plants Three Classes of '444 Will Form One Group At the meeting of the class of 44E Wednesday, it was decided that all classes graduating during the year 1944 will be consolidated into one al- umni group. This action was taken to prevent the forming of three dis- tinct classes which would mean three separate reunions. Also at this meeting it was an- nounced that a class picture would be taken Saturday afternoon, Feb- ruary 19, at 1 p.m. in front of the East Engineering Building. All mem- bers of the class, whether graduating or not should be on hand for this picture as it will be the only one tak- en this year of the group. Following the taking of the Class picture a party will be held. to provide a social get together before many members leave school. has organized an extension depart- ment to educate adults in the pfob- lems of winning the war and peace. It is the Abraham Lincoln School in Chicago, which was established a year ago to help adults meet the problems of living in the modern world. The only entrance requirements in this skyscraper experiment is an in- terest in the world. Included in the wide range of subjects are such courses as labor problems, the significance of Teher- an and language classes in Russian and Spanish. There are two basic extension courses offered at present. One, on "Understanding the World Today," is of a general nature, while the other, "Wartime Trade Union Prob- lems," is to help the trade unionist meet present-day labor problems. At the Lincoln School, classes are held both during the day and in the evening, to accommodate people who work at all hours. I Sell All Your BOOKS C ASSIFIED ADVERTISING for CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request WANTED WANTED-Undergraduate girls for room and board. Good meals and pleasant rooms. Call 26205. WANTED- Two passengers for Ca'l- ifornia via Indianapolis, St. Louis, Albuquerque. Leaving Feb. 25, aft- ernoon. Phone Ned, 6768. WANTED -- Women's second-hand luggage. Phone 2-1146. BOX 15 has been doing pretty good. I would like a date for V-Ball, but a gal! Have the ticket but can't break this Michigan ice. I wear khaki but am not whacky! Box 51. MEDICAL student wants boy's bicy- cle. Call 4821 after 6 p.m. WANTED TO RENTI CASH or Exchange at c* R KO ,withl TOM CONWAY an V JEAN BROOKS- RITA CORDAY " AMELITA 'WARD "ISABEL JEWELL * CEO ACE CIVIJI Also RICHARD ARLEN in LOST and FOUND LOST-Brown leather wallet con- taining valuable papers, not inter- ested in money. Initials A.M.C. on inside. Reward. Call Leonard J. Cohen, 4049. LOST last Sunday-A high school class ring. Muskegon, '41. Doug Froelich, phone 2-1336. LOST-Last Sunday, man's identifi- cation bracelet near East, Quad. Return to Daily. Reward. LOST-Pair shell-rimmed glasses, be- tween Ulrich's and Engine Arch Feb. 15. Finder please notify Bet- ty Updegr'aff', phone 2-3225. MISCELLANEOUS_ -xsrwrr ryg xt # a- va~wt fIl SERVICEMAN 5 ft. 6 in., wants to rent skis, poles, boots, size 7. Phone or write Mich. Daily. FO LLETTS at State and North University i 0 BRINGING THE WORLD TO YOUR DOOR- "NORTH AFR ICA" Perfect Pictures - Properly Projected PRESENTED BY THE FAMOUS WORLD TRAVELER BURTON HOLMES I I I