-,9w PAGE SIX TIE MICHI1GAN DAILY I. J1 More Lectures Added To Vocational Course P yr -_ . 11 S The literary college lecture series on career opportunities and training will be resumed next week in res- ponse to student demands for more vocational guidance, Associate Dean Erich A. Walter announced yester- day. The series will reopen Tesday with a panel discussion on "Teaching As a Profession." Panel Members Included in the panel will be Dean Hayward Keniston, of the literary college, chairman, Dean James B.- Edmonson, of the School of Educa- tion, and professors Clarence D. Thorpe, Paul S. Welch and Benjamin Engine1cSchool Plans Revised Phiasties Course Program Will Include New Maials, Study Highpolymers, the new plastic ma- terials which will be used to make automobile uph olitery, draperies, win- dow screens, food wrappings and other articles, will be more intensive- ly studied next fall in the revised plastics course in the College of En gineering. According to Prof. Donald W. Mc- Cready of the chemical engineering department, highpolyners, such as synthetic rubber and nylon, are among the subjects that will be con- sidered in this course. Students will be concerned with the production of plastics from raw materials and the evaluation of their physical proper- ties in the laboratory that accompan- ies this course. Information Releaseld "Highpolymers are the new syn- thetic materials, many of which were developed just prior to and during the war," Prof. McCready said. "Un- til the end of the war they were used exclusively for war purposes. They are now coming on the civilian market and the technical information is just beginning to be released." In addition to the articles mention- ed before, highpolymers will be used for fabrics, raincapes and shower curtains. These plastic materials withstand rough usage and exposure to weather, acids, solvents, and other conditions which normally destroy the materials previously used. Graduate Work More advanced material can be taken up in the plastics course, Prof. McCready said, because a course which will serve as background for advanced courses in the fields of plastics, paints, rubber and paper is being revised on a graduate level. This course will take up the prelim- inary and fundamental material in the field of plastics. F our Foreign Scholarships To Be Given The annual scholarships to the University of Mexico and a new schol- arship to the University of Cuba Summer Sessions will be awarded ata reception to be held by La Socie- dad Hispanica at 8 p.m. today in the Union. The awards will be made on a basis of work done for the club by the winning students during the past year. The three scholarships to the University of Mexico will cover tui- Students interested in going to Mexico may have questions answer- ed and receive suggestions at a meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Rm. 30Ot Romance Languages Build-' ing. Questions will be answered by Ann Sugar, Bunny Brettschneider, Lorna Fleming, and Burt Gavitt. tion for the six weeks session and an additional $50 in cash. The schol- arship to the University of Cuba is being offered by the Alumni Associa- tion of Cuba and will cover only tui- tion. In addition to the awards there will be a talk by Lili Radel on "A student's Escape from Europe in 1941", songs by Barbara Gantz, Helen Anez and Mrs. C. E. Vlisides. Dr. Madero will play typical Mexican songs on piano. The Caribe Quartet, which played at the Pan-American 1i all, will accompany. After the program there will be dancing to Latin American records. l;elresliments will be served. C, *, Service Pay Inc reased WASHINGTON, May 17-(OP)-The onrts inmniPtad islanitive action W. Wheeler, of the literary college's Teachers' Certificate Committee. Prof. John Perkins, secretary of the University's Institute of Public Administration, will lecture on the field of public service Wednesday. Deans To Speak Dean Wells ,I. Bennett, of the Col- lege of ArchitectuiPe and Design, and Oel Ivan C. Crawford, of the Col- lege of Engineering, will lecture on their respective fields Thursday. Piof. Rudolph Gjelsness, chairman of the Department of Library Science, will lecture on "The Librarian" May 27. "Little Known Professional Op- portunities" will be discussed by Dr. Frank Fletcher and Dr. Frederick harris, of the Bureau of Psycholo- gical Service, May 28. .loh4 4for Women Di. Dorothy ,Sherman and Wilma Fldesvald, of the Bureau of Psycho- fogicai services, will speak on "Vo- ,tc(r ;l Olortunities for Women" May 29. he seies will be concluded June 4 by Prof. William Haber, of the eco- iutnivs rparrtmienti Who will discUSs "Occopational T[rends and Job Pros- pects"~ All lectures will be hel at 4:30 p.m. in Rhan 1025 Angell Hall. offic ers Charge Sp11aiX11Secretly Aied (6ermtans MOSCOW, May 17- ).-Charges that the Franco regime "under a mask of neutrality actually par- ticipated in the war on the side of Germany" were made today in a statement caried by Izvestia and at- tributed to two captured Nazi offi- cers who were former military at- taches in Spain. A 10,000-word statement by the two officers, addressed to the Soviet Government, declared that secret plans for military collaboration on a large scale were worked out by the Spanish and German general staffs at the close of the Spanish Civil War. The officers said that a secret plan was devised for the capture of Gibraltar through joint German- Spanish assault, that the Spaniards spied on British and American ship movements for the Germans, that they made Spain's ports and airfields available for German sub- marine and aircraft, and relayed valuable military information to Germany gained by Spanish re- presentatives in London. They said that Field Marshal Wil- helm Keitel and Col. Gen. Gustav Jodl, now on trial at Nuernberg on war crimes charges, took leading roles in making the plans, which in- cluded a secret "Isabella Felix" ope- ration for seizing Gibraltar and wid- ening Spanish possessions in Afri- ca. It was not carried out because Hitler decided to concentrate all his efforts on beating Russia, the offi- cers added. The two captured Nazis were named by Izvestia as Col. Hans Re- mer, former German military attache in Tangier, and Lt.-Gen. Gunther Krappe, former German military at- tache in Madrid. "Due to the nature of our ser- vice activity in the capacity of mili- tary attaches in Tangier and Ma- drid, facts are known to us which show that Spain under a mask of neutrality actually participated in the war on the side of Germany," their statement said. Krappe and Remer said that the "Isabella Felix" plan was supposed to have been carried out in conjunc- tion with a "Sea Lion" operation to capture the British Isles. Remer said he was asked in July, 1940, to issue 50 false passports for German officers assigned to study the fitness of Spanish roads for Nazi motorized armed columns. In August, 1940, the statement add- ed, Spain increased her forces in Morocco from 30,000 to 100,000 men. The next month a Spanish division practicing maneuvers to storm Gi- braltar performed so well their com- mander told the Germans his men "could take Gibraltar in 20 minutes." Prof. Price . . (Continued from Page 1) in occupied countries would hide the bells as long as possible. When they were seized by the Nazis, word would be sent to the British and Americans through the underground to bomb the ships in which they were taken. In other cases, train crews would ihrow them off the trains." About 100,000 bells in all were confiscated. In general, Prof. Price said, the 35,000 which were not melt- ed were not harmed. Careless hand- ling accounted for what damage was done along this line. With the rank of a Lieutenant- Colonel in the Canadian Army, Prof. l Pri c n (cth nly Amnr, .oan maring 1 O L D C E1N E R A T O R W O R K S-Maj. enox n. Lhor, president of the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry, throw s a switch on an old Edison hi-polar dynamo-type generator us the museum piece goes to work for the institution during a dimout. The dynamo, carrying an 1886 date stamp, has been unused for 60 years. A gasoline engine (left) furnishes power. V A C A T 1 0 N S P L E N D O R-Trail riders view a geological phenomenon called "The Sentinel" in Zion National Park in Southern Utah. The park covers an area of 135 square miles. S K I P P E R-Helen Chapman of Hollywood donned this honor- ary merchant marine uniform to celebrate her selection to pre- side during national foreign trade week. B O YS ' H E A D-David W. Armstrong of New York is ex- feutive director of the Boys' Club of America. He began his career in boys' work at Pitt- 1ie , Ma. S W I M CI R L- Stariet Joan Fulton was chosen 1946 motion picture swim girl by al committee of west coast bathing suit makers. She is from Forest Hills, N. Y. Joan, a honey blonde; with blue-gray eyes, stands 5 feet, 71- inches in height and weighs 123 pounds. R A R E B I R D-This rare bird, identified as a wood ibis by Dr. Frank A. Hazard, Wilmington College, Ohio, was captured by Orlando Walker, 0. Dr. Hazard said the last one authentically recorded in Ohio was in 1897. R U B B E R M A N-Hal Newhouser, Detroit Tiger southpaw, takes a mighty stride forward on the mound as he delivers a pitch during a game with the Senators at Washington. . 4., 4 ;:;n ;.; ..:: i ;v am 4