rAGF. 017 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEB. Z. 2945 4 PAGE SIX FRIDAY, FEB. Z 1945 I C, I r \ Fi j I #Ilk J ,4 U. S. F I C H T E R S F 0 R R U S S I A--U. S. planes are lined up at Ladd Field, Fairbanks, Alaska, waiting to be ferried across Siberia by Russian pilots. Ladd is terminal field in a chain reaching from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Benefits for Veterans To Be Discussed Speakers Address Conmnity Forums "Federal Services and Benefits to Veterans" will be discussed at three neighborhood community forums to be held simultaneously at 8 p. m. Thursday at the Tappan, Slauson and Jones Junior High Schools under the joint sponsorship of the local Adult Education Council and the city Coun- cil of Veterans Affairs, it was an- nounced yesterday. Clark Tibbits, director of the Uni- versity's Veteran's Service Bureau, will address the meeting at Jones School, with Edwin Oakes, faculty member of the Jones school, as chair- man. Cy Newcomb, supervisor of the United States Employment Service in Detroit, will be speaker at the Tappan School meeting and John Al- lison, teacher at Ann Arbor High, will preside. E. A. Jones, chief of the rehabilitation office of the United States Veterans Administration in Dearborn, will speak at the Slauson School while LaVerne Taylor, mem- ber of the Ann Arbor high faculty, will preside. These meetings are the first in a series of three forums designed to prepare the community for the re- turn of the war veteran. Tibbits heads arrangements of the first meet- ing, Dr. Raymond Waggoner, chair- man of the University psychiatry de- partment, will arrange for the sec- ond meetings to be held simultane- ously on Feb. 15 on the subject "How Shall We Meet the War Veteran?" The third group of meetings, con- cerning "Community Reception of the War Veteran," will be arranged by Rev. H. o. Yoder, pastor of the Trinity Lutheran Church for Feb. 22. Littell To Speak At Hillel Today SRA Director To Talk On Religious Discipline Franklin Littell, Director of the Student Religious Association, will speak on "Achieving an Effective Re- ligious Discipline" at 7:45 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. In his talk, Littell will discuss the importance of religious discipline to the working of society. Littell attended Cornell College, Iowa, where he received his A.B. degree. He received his B.D. degree at Union Theological Seminary, and later studied at Yale University, where he did work toward his doc- toral degree. Minister of Youth at the Central Methodist Church in Detroit from 1940 to 1942, Littell also spoke at Youth Conferences in Europe and Mexico. He came to the University to serve as Director of the SRA at the beginning of the fall term. WLB To Hear Edison Dispute DETROIT, Feb. 1-(P)-Production employes of the Detroit Edison Com- pany, whose vote has authorized a strike that would cripple war pro- POST-WAR MILITARY CONSCRIPTION: Prevention of Rearmament Requires' Large Army of Occupation--Hopkins A T T A C K B O M B E R.-- The Army Air Forces new attack bomber, the A-26 Invader, flies over undisclosed territory. This ship is made in several models for different theaters. By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Feb. 1.-Only a "per- petual army of occupation" would be able to prevent Germany and Japan from rearming eventually, says Har- ry L. Hopkins in the March "Ameri- can Magazine," in urging compulsory military training after the war. Hopkins has "no doubt that pow- erful forces in Germany and Japan are preparing even now for their next attempt to conquer us." ] "We don't know what new wea- pons will be developed . . . before] such an attack, attempts will be made to cause us to become carelessI and complacent . "Our country is the one thatj marauders most want to conquer.1 Group T'o Study Improvement of, RaceRelationts Unitarians Plan for Conuinlnity Institute Improvement of race relations will be the subject of the next two ses- sions of the Adult Study Group of the First Unitarian Church, the first of which will be held at 10 a. m. Sun-' day, with Douglas Williams, execu- tive director of the Dunbar Civic Center as guest speaker. "Improving Race Relations Among Children" will be his topic and dis-; cussion to be led by Mrs. Chesterc Powers, Ypsilanti, will center aroud the Public Affairs Committee pam- phlet, "The Races of Mankind." The second session on Feb. 11 will be an address by William Morse of the Adult Education Division of the School of Education whose subject1 will be "How Shall We Teach ourl Children To Develop Wholesome Ra- cial Attitudes?" The discussion lead- er for that day will be Mrs. Clark Tibbitts, Ann Arbor. The purpose of the two sessions is preparation for Unitarians who are planning to attend a community-wide Race Relations Institute which is to be held Feb. 23 and 24 in Ann Arbor., Cities Require Higher Taxes LANSING, Feb. 1---W)-D. Hale Brake, State Treasurer, said today analysis of testimony to date in a series of hearings on financial needs of Michigan cities indicated that at least the larger cities "cannot fh-I ance government adequately while1 they are under the 15-mill tax lilni-I tation." "The evidence indicates that in a large 15-mill city the people either must do without services they have a right to expect, or they must have some other source o~ income," he told newsmen. Brake said he hoped the legislature would provide some new source of income for these cities, contending that they otherwise were likely to have the constitution amended to provide some inflexible plan of re- lief. He said testimony from spokesmen for Saginaw, Flint and Muskegon disclosed "practically every branch" of their city government needs more What a nation to loot! The final conquest of North America would make a dozen defeats worthwhile to the pillagers, and if we ever again are so weak that they have a chance to defeat us, World War III will loom on the horizon. Still- "If this nation works as earnetly for peace as it is working to win the war, I believe we can have peace." Hopkins writes, "but I believe, at the same time, that to do this we must have a powerful military force that will discourage the predatory ambi- tions of our potential enemies." Hopkins urges Congress to pro- vide for one year of compulsory military training in peacetime for every 18-year-old boy. iHe suggests that thorough consideration be given to the measure and that it be "exactly the right kind" of bill. "Once the plan fails," he warns, "It can never be revived again, until the bombs begin falling upon our cities. And that will be too late." Hopkins points out that approxi- mately 100,000 boys reach the age of 18 each month, 1,200,000 subject to training each year. He believes that Dr. Enoelke Praises Public Health _Nulrses "No one can compete with the skills of the public health nurse in caring for the sick, and in educat- ing families in good health habits," declared Dr. Otto K. Engelke, Di- rector, Washtenaw County Health Department, in his speech yesterday in the School of Health Auditorium. The topic of Dr. Engelke's speech, presented at a celebration of Public Health Nursing Day, was "The Pub- lic Health Nurse-What She Is and What She Does." Speaking on the same topic was Miss Helene Buker, Director, Bureau of Public Health Nursing, Michigan Department of Health. Dr. Engelke emphasized the value of the public health nurse's work in teaching mothers to feed, bathe, and perform other such necessities in the care of a sick individual. "The skill with which she uses her hands may mean the difference between life andl death," he concluded. Miss Buker stressed the urgent need for public health nurses. "At present we have only 821 in the state, which is one nurse to every 6,550 members of the population," she said. "At least 250 more are needed now to meet minimum standards, but if bedside care as well as education is to be included, there must be at least one nurse for every 2,500 people, or 1,300 more than at present," Miss Buker concluded.j Labor Situation I City Surveyed A nation-wide survey recently con- ducted by the National Association of Manufacturers reveals that "there is no critical manpower situation in the Ann Arbor Area." Lawrence Hamberg, local U. S. Em- ployment Service director reaffirmed this statement yesterday, but said 4F's should be included in the plan, explaining that there are thousands of jobs in the armed forces that can be handled by men whose physical ratings are below par. Hopkins says a year's military training will add, rather than take away, a year cf a boy's education, and that it will raise the general health of young men. "The moment the bill passes," con- cludes Hopkins, "it will be America's notice to the world that no aggressor nation or group of such nations can ever aspire to conquer us-to all the people of the United Nations, banded together to secure the peace, it will be a bright, inspiring signal of hope." State Bitll Will Provide Slow Time March 17 LANSING, Feb. 1.-O)--TJ he House State Affairs Committee today re- leased an already Senate-approved bill declaring central war (slow) time the only legal time standard in Michigan, effective at midnight March 17. The committee acted after hearing testimony by Paul B. Valle, deputy director of the power division of the War Production Board, that his ag- ency was "frankly worried" because it feared the setting back of Michi- gan clocks would lead other states to do similarly, and that this would have an unfavorable effect upon the war effort. He said if all states abandoned "fast" time schedules ordered fed- erally as a war measure, electric power plants would have to expand their generating facilities and use enough copper to turn out 2,530,000,- 000 rounds of .30 calibre ammuni- tion, or enough to provide all the copper parts for 140 destroyers. Rep. Maurice E. Post, Rockford Republican chairman of the state affairs committee, and Rep. Joseph F. Nagel, Detroit Democrat, said set- ting of the March 17 effective date was "to give the Irish an extra hour to celebrate St. Patrick's Day." Nagel was reported to have cast the only vote in the committee against re- leasing the bill. The measure is scheduled for de- bate in the House Monday night, and a final vote possibly Tuesday. Gould, (Continued from Page 1) man, was recently appointed to suc- ceed the late Carl Engel as director of publications for G. Schirmer, a position which he will assume when the term at Sarah Lawrence College (where he is music director) closes this spring. A former pupil of Roy Harris, Schuman derives his source of style from this famous musician as well as from jazz for which he showed an early interest in Tin Pan Alley. Not until he was 19, however, did the young musician become interested in symphonic music, leaving Broadway in 1935 to study conducting in Salz- burg. Large Number of Works His works include orchestral, chor- al, chamber, piano, stage and band music numbers. 4 VALE NTINE - Marjorie White, Walt Disney screen dis- covery and winner of 38 beauty awards, displays a valentine she designed in response to a re- quest from Yanks oversea. F R E N C H M A N F L E E S --With all his possessions loaded into a covered wagon, a French farmer leads a team of oxen away from his home to escape a German shelling of his town located in the northern sector of the west front, A Y 4 1 A I -1 14 I :": f :::.,,: ... .: "r rz.::y. , . ,::d: .. _ xq.,E .. r::..:a,...ws.