SI Ifi iUItN fEYT ENi g : Nib VETviRER 20, l q45 FOREIGN TRADE: Research Group Explains Latin American Laws 'U' Graduates Participate in. Navy Gun To Defend "U' Four graduate lawyers from Latin American countries are now enrolled in the University Law School, under a program sponsored by the State De- partment in cooperation with the University. Candidates are selected on a com- petitive basis by local committees in their own country. "The purpose of the program," said Prof. Hessel Yntema, head of the project, "is to provide American law- yers and commercial firms with a statement of the law as it exists in Pilot Training In Navy V-5 Program Open The front door to pilot training in the Navy V-5 program is still open to 17, 18 and 19 year-olds, the Detroit Office of Naval Officer Procurement announced yesterday. Lieut. (jg) Dan Baker and Lieut. (jg) George Hough, both combat vet- erans, were on campus yesterday to set up procedures for enlisting stu- dents for the V-5 class beginning March 1. The 58 months V-5 program in- cludes four semesters of training in one of 26 colleges and universities, followed by pre-flight, flying and op- erational training. Lieutenants Baker and Hough urged students interested in Naval aviation to contact their faculty ad- visors or Assistant Dean of Students Walter B. Rea. They said a Meeting for explaining and clarifying the pro- gram will be arranged if sufficient interest is shown. the Latin American countries and to secure a basis for future laws that will affect our international trade." In Native Language Research is mainly along lines re- lating to bills of exchange, commer- cial law, and international trade. The material usually covers from 350 to 800 printed pages when published in text form. It is written in the native language of the student, either Span- ish or Portuguese, but is translated into English by members of Prof. Yntaka's staff. Paulo 'J. Da Silva Pinto, member of the Brazilian Bar Association and resident of Rio, said in an interview that the possibility of unification in the commercial law of the Americas is not only very probable, but it is very acceptable. "Commercial law deals mainly with economic prob- lems," he continued, "and our eco- nomic problems are more or less the same." United States 'Attractive' Outlining his reasons for comning to the United States to study, Pinto said that "to know the law of a country, even superficially, you have to feel the presence of the institutions in which it is applied." He also said that our country is attractive to the foreigner because of the happinessthat our people en- joy and the honesty that he has found to be an American characteristic. "This is the land of the middle class," he declared. He emphasized the fact that by knowing. the people, we know the countries and reiterated that the ties between the people of Latin America' and the people of United States are stronger now than tley ever were. "America is my second home," Mr. Pinto said, "and Ann Arbor's a small paradise." EAlithe d-eearng ifnl o 1 rth Hl i s to ieady place for' the large Early, (hlsson, a Wley - nw 3 c"aliber g"" Which1 " been sem to lis University Navy unit troiu Work at Harvard Lab the destroyer, P. S. S. Endicott. While installed aboard the Endi- Five University graduates have cott, the gun participated in action on taken part in the work of the Radio the c ost of southern France and was Research Laboratory at Harvard Uni- fired so much and for so long a time versity, where important contribu- that the breech mechanism could tions to the advancement of elec- not be operated. tronics for war and peace purposes It has been sent to the University have been made. to be used for instruction purposes. Harold C. Early, '41, Robert L. Within a month Com. Gillette said Ohlsson, '40, and W. G. Madey, '42, that he will lead a group of planes were associated with Prof. William G. from Grosse Isle for practice-sight- Dow of the Department of Electrical ing training. Grad Student Council To Hold Mver Today Pr~iogramn Feat ures A Graduate Student Mixer, spon- sored by the Graduate Student Coun- cil, will be held from 9 p. m., to 12 today in the Rackham Building, Rostislav A. Oaluzvelski, recently named president, announced. Movies from the Michigan-Purdue football game will be shown at 8 p. in. before the mixer. A group of foreign students from the International Center will give an exhibition of Indian and Filipino folk dances during the intermission. Re- freshments will be served. Faculty membes wsho will be present atre Assi7stant D'eain Peter Ok- kelberg of the Graduate School and Mrs. Okkelberg, Prof. Donald Katz of the Engineering school and Mrs. Katz, and Dr. Esson Gale of the In- ternational Center and Mi's. Gale. All graduate students and their friends are invited. Engineering who spent two and one- half years in administrative and con- sulting capacities with the laboratory. Early and Ohlsson, who have Master of Science degrees from the Uni- versity, have' been members of the staff of the Department of Engineer- ing Research. Kraus Antenna Specialist Wadey is a resident of Ann Arbor. Early and Ohlsson are respectively from Beaverton and Highland Park, Mich. In another department of the lab- oratory, Dr. John Kraus, who receiv- ed his Ph.D. in 1933, was an antenna specialist. He joined the staff of the laboratory in October, 1943, after three years in Washington with the Naval Ordnance Laboratory where he was engaged in the work of demag- netizing ships against mines. Father Is Dean Emeritus Dr. John Kraus is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kraus, of this city. The elder Dr. Kraus is the dean emeritus of the literary college. Miss Barbara Bacorn, '33, was sec- retary to the associate director in charge of relations with the Army, Navy and equipment manufacturers. Miss Bacorn is also a resident of Ann Arbor. on the Maintenance of Professional Standards, and a member of the Committee on Labor Relations. NaZi Leaders See Horror Films at N uernberg Trial NUERNBERG, Nov. 29 - OP) - Twenty Nazi overlords viewed films of the horrors of German concentra- tion camps with reactions ranging from tears to curt indifference at the Nuernberg war crimes trial today. Fat Hermann Goering, mirthful earlier in the day, sat soberly. Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel wiped his mouth with a white handkerchief. LT. GEN. TOMOYUKI YAMASHITA testifies before an American military tribunal at Manila on Nov. 28, in his own defense at his trial as a war criminal. I.. HAVE YOU HEARD? 0 THE YPSILANTI AIRPORT is the place to learn Flying! NEW LOW RATES: $8.00 per Hour Dual Instruction; $5.00 per Hour Solo. Transportation to the Airport will be arranged at your convenience. Phone Ypsilanti: 1384-J3 or write Box 55, Doily office I HIGHLIGHTS ON CAMPUS, SRA To Hold Luncheon .. The Student Religious association will hold a luncheon and discussion tomorrow at 12 p.m. in Lane Hall. Wayne Saari will review Norman Cousin's new book "The Modern Man Obsolete." All students interested should call Lane Hall to make reser- vations before 10 a.m. Saturday. Nesie Art Exhibit . .. A special exhibit of Nisei and relo- cation center pictures and paintings under the auspices of the Japanese AmericanhCitizens League opens to- day in the Rackham Building. The pictures show scenes from the life of the relocation center and are for the most part by the evacuees themselves. Mine Okubo, one of our better known American artists, herself a former occupant of the center, has submitted some of her work, as has Yasue Kuniyoshi, winner of the Car- negie Institute prize in 1944. Hillel 'Oneg Shabbat'. . A special Sabbath Hannukah called "Oneg Shabbat," a festive evening, will be held at 7:45 p.m. today at Hil- lel Foundation. The service, planned by Avukah, student Zionist organization, will re- place the regular Friday night service. Rea Named to Business Post -.or Uusic (roups Assigtant Dean of Students Walter B. Rea has been named faculty busi- ness manager of the University con- cert and marching bands, Women's Glee Club and the Varsity Men's Glee Club. He replaces Herbert G. Wat- kins, new secretary of the University. ulbar Reports Slow Increase In State Crime By The Associated Press LANSING, Nov. 29 - There is a gradual, but not "startling" increase in crime in Michigan, Captain Harold Mulbar, chief of detectives for the Michigan State Police, reported to- day. Mulbar said he based his statement on the number of fingerprints re- ceived by the State Police Identifica- tion Bureau from sheriffs, city police departments and state police posts. Last month there were 600 more arrests than in September, although during July of this year the state had 161 more arrests than in October, fingerprint records showed. The 25 to 34-year age group heads the list of those arrested for all offenses, while people from 35 to 44 committed the most misdemeanors. The major misdemeanor was listed as drunk, or drunk and disorderly.I Seventeen-year-olds and younger persons top the list for larceny, breaking and entering and auto theft, Mulbar said. prof. Allen, Will Of Foresters Prof. Shirley W. Allen of the School of Forestry and Conservation will leave today to attend a meeting of the Council of the Society of Ameri- can Foresters on Dec. 3, 4, and 5, at Portland, Oregon. He will also attend a meeting of the Northern Rocky Mountain Sec- tion of the Society on Dec. 7 at Mis- soula. Prof. Allen is vice-president of the Society, chairman of the Committee Phone 6300 ART CINEMA LEAGUE presents VOICE IN T HE WND" FRANCIS LEDERER "The most outstanding contribution by the independent producer to the American Screen of '44." LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY - 8:30 P.M. I Admission 42c (tax inc.) i' mmmmmmsmwmm NEW TELE PHONES Full speed ahead on our biggest peacetime job T ODAY, conveyors like this at Western Electric are carrying thousands of new telephones for the Bell System. But it takes far more than just tele- phones to provide service. It takes cable, central office equipment and many other complex items that cannot he produced and fitted into the tele- phone system overnight. On these things, too, production is steadily increasing. Western Electric, supply unit of the Bell System, is hard at work on the biggest peacetime job in its history. Furnishing materials and equipment to meet the System's immediate needs - and to carry out the System's $2,000,000,000 post-war program - promises record peacetime volume and a high level of employment. Wonderful and Practical S A hSh n for GIFTS/ too! 0 Buy all the Victory Bonds you can -and keep themlI C ' }l aft a t'.. :Z ,:_ t k { k . a *3 f . 3 .. v':, :. ' 4< . C t ". $i} '' }::. { '' A"_ :,; _Z; _.. ..... 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