7 H--- MICHIGAN DAILY M1'RSDAY, DECEMBER THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, DECEMBER Ex-Soldier Tells Escape Story. Today By ALLAN STILLWAGON Today's presentation of "The Tunnelers" on WUOM and WHRV at 4:45 p.m. will tell an exciting story of danger and adventure that was found right on campus. This week Prof. Andrew Ehren- kreutz of the Near East depart- ment will appear in person to tell his story with Ed Burrows. Prof. Ehrenkreutz, born in East- ern Poland, joined the Polish forces resisting Hitler in France in 1939. In January 1941, after a year's bitter fighting, and having been captured by the German in- vaders, he was imprisoned in Sta- lag 4B in Muhlberg, Saxony. He volunteered for duty in a special agricultural work camp which pro- vided a better opportunity for es- cape. There Ehrenkreutz and three other prisoners resolved to escape and walk 3,200 miles to Poland in order to rejoin the Polish re- sistance forces. They evaded the camp guard and began a twenty- three day run for life. Without food, but not daring to appear in the daylight to steal any, not having time at night, they evaded capture by a series of sheer miracles. On the twenty-third night Ehrenkreutz and his com- panions crossed into Poland, al- most reaching their destination. But the nearness of success caused them to let down their guard, they stopped to sleep and attempted to get food. After walking more than three thousand miles, crossing some of Europe's widest and most treach- erous rivers without setting foot on a bridge, living like the hunted animals they had become, all four were captured while trying to steal a chicken. Thi lives of all of the men were undoubtedly saved through their capture, since they would almost surely have been killed in the massacre of Polish underground forces which occurred later, but at the time the appearancel of six German troops meant only utter defeat. In 1945, during the collapse of the Axis' resistance, he escaped again, this time forced to flee double fqes. His guards sought to kill on sight all those who attempt- the Russian army was bearing down on Pole and German alike. This second race with death was cessful when. he reached safety. 'WORLD IN MINIATURE': Museum Donates Gift to Public By BILL HANEY "The World in Miniature" is this year's Christmas gift from the Henry Ford Museum to the gen- eral public. "The museum is again stressing the unusual in its presentation of an elaborate collection of minia- tures and models collected by the Fords through the years," said David W. Krupp, Museum public relations official. Though the museum has had most of these miniatures and small scale models several years, this Christmas is the first time they have ever been displayed as an or- ganized collection. The models are mostly repro- ductions of full-scale attractions of the five major categories of the Museum: agriculture, power, trans- portation, architecture and design and fine arts. Highlighting the agricultural section are scale model reapers, sowers, cultivators and plows. Most of these models were made by in- ventors for the United States Pat- ent Office. "Regulations at one time re- quired that a working model of an invention be submitted along with the request for patent," explained Krupp, "and many models later presented to the Museum are in- cluded in this year's show." The focal point of the Yuletide exhibit is a large, doll-house-like model of Richmond Hill, the Ford plantation in Ways, Georgia. This one-inch to one-root scale model was specially built to show the late Mrs. Henry Ford how her Medical Essay .Prize CGiven. "The Story of Ether and Chloro- form and the Struggle for Accept- ance," an essay by John A. Burns, has won first prize in the Eliza- beth Sargent Lee Medical History Essay Fund. Second prize went to Steve G. Manikas, '56, for his essay, "The Evolution of Orthopedic Surgery," and third prize was awarded to William A. Caro, who wrote "Ty- phus Fever and its Influence on the Course of History." Established by the late Prof. Al fred O. Lee to encourage an inter- est among prospective doctors in ,medical history, the fund awards prizes every two years for the best essays submitted on that general subject. This year's judges were Prof. Bruno Meinecke of the classical studies department, Dr. Frederick A. Coller of the medeical school, and Prof. Franklin B. Newman of the English department. Four Teams Debate Case In Contest The best four teams were chosen in the Henry M. Campbell Compet- ition of the Law School yester- day. The winning eight students were picked from sixteen entries that comprised the teams of appellants and appellees debating a partcu lar case of monopoly restriction in- volving the Sherman and Clayton anti-trust acts. The winning students, who are all juniors, are Robert W. Steele, Edward C. Adkins, John A. Beach, Edwin S. Taylor, Richard B. Mad- den, Norman E. Garr, Charles B. Renfrew, and Richard Benson. After the initial formality the debaters presented their cases with a 15 minute period allowed for each. "As was seen in this case there was no lessening of compe- tition . . ." was a familiar phrase heard as they argued pro and con the relations between the whole- saler and the dealers of a product regarding territorial price fixing. The students presented their cases before four moot courts which were presided over by three chin-in-hand judges of the faculty. In this pretended appeal to the Supreme Court the debaters were required to think quickly many times to answer the dogmatic questioning of the judges, "The sixteen contestants in the competition will all be senior judges .next year, irrespective of the fact that they won or lost," Roger G. Kidston, Spec. said. The debate is an extra-cirricular activity that nearly all law stu- dents enter, he explained. It is a continuing process from year to year along the class level. The entering freshmen hold fall and spring competitions whereby they accrue points on the basis of their performance. When the students become jun- iors the top sixteen contestants with the greatest number of points are selected to compete in the quarter final debate, Kidston said. Hope COLCHESTER, England (A')}_ Celebrating her 141st birthday, Mrs. Emmeline Nicholas plant- ed a batch of seeds to grow auricula, a type of ' primrose. In,this climate the plant takes two years to flower. Diamond Named SBX Manager Bill Diamond, '56E, has been named general manager of the Student Book Exchange, the Union student offices announced recent- ly. There are still openings for five paid assistant managers, who with the manager will form the Book Exchange committee. Interested persons may contact ]diamond. The February exchange will be held on the third floor of the Union addition. By DONNA HANSON Some bachelors go to extreme lengths to meet women. Ed Poindexter and Joe Manda- rino, who call themselves dis- gruntled bachelors, are minerolo- gists who work in a visually ac- cessible laboratory in the base- ment of the Natural Science Build- ing. One day, as these two bachelors sat in their lab staring out of the window at the many passing co- eds, an idea occurred to them. Why not attract the attention of these passing women with a sign? So, combining their ingenuity with their knowledge of electronics and physics, the two men con- structed a box with a red light bulb inside. Cut out of the front of the box was the word -"HI." Now, by merely applying a slight pressure upon ,a button, Poin- Minerologists Find Sign New Way To Attract Passing Coeds dexter and Mandarino can attract the attention of all passing coeds. "Actually," Poindexter s a i d, "we're doing voluntary research for the benefit of all men. We dis- approve heartily of the mixer sys- tem we have here. At a mixer, you can meet a girl easily, grab her and dancehwith her. If you do the same thing in a drugstore, you get your face slapped." The men said that their system really works. According to the bachelors, most girls wave back and smile at them. Although these two men per- fected the sign, "at least a dozen men come down and buzz it." Now, the bachelors are working on a portable "HI sign" the size of a cigarette case. "The good thing about this," Poindexter said, 'is that if we can perfect it, we can sell it." I U .0 -Daily-John Rirtzel HENRY FORD MUSEUM GUARD WATCHES OVER VALUABLE COLLECTION IN MUSEUM'S CHRISTMAS DIPLAY, "THE WORLD IN MINIATURE." new southern mansion would ap- pear after construction. The tiny interior furnishings for the miniature kitchen of the man- sion are based on Greenfield Vil- lage's Clinton Inn. The scale mod- el 18th century dining room and the kitchen are both furnished with miniatures from Mrs. Ford's personal collection. A unique one-quarter scale working model of the first suc- cessful Benz car highlights the miniature automotive section. Items from the famous Charles Brady King collection of minia- tures, on exhibit for the first time, illustrate other modes of transpor- tation. Included in this section are ac- curately - constructed models of clipper ships, two-masted schoon- ers and other ships built by early New Englanders. Working. models- of steam and electric engines, generators, and miniatures from the King collec- tion are included in the powerl display. Exquisite examples of 18th and 19th century craftsmanship in glass, ceramics, woodworking and metalwork come from the Muse- um's Fine Arts collection. The tiny silverware collection is one of the Museum's most valuable acquisitions, according to officials. Two personal possessions of P. T. Barnum's midget General Tom Thumb are also on exhibit. The little general's bicycle and a brougham carriage which Queen Victoria had built for Thumb's world journeys are displayed as a feature attraction for younger visi- tors. "Christmas in Miniature" will be open to the public during the regular Museum visiting hours of 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The show may be seen in the Special Exhibits Area through Jan. 3. r. t'I.' -- There's still ,time to buy the '56 Ensian before the vacation... at the Student Publications Bui lding, 420 Mayna-rd, between 8:00-5:00. Price $6.50 C-,: 1'-- ) t from EVERYBODY at KRAZY JIM'S What's doing at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft I -4 Domestic Travel in the Age of Jet Transports Nowhere else can engineering graduates utilize their training more fully than in the rapidly evolving field of aircraft propulsion. Work is well under way on the development of even more advanced powerplants - jet, turboprop, nuclear. 1'1 L0 Starting in 1959, United Air Lines' flight time be-, tween Los Angeles and New York will be 4 hours - between Chicago and New York, only 90 minutes. By placing the first contract order for jet transports to be used in domestic operations, United Air Lines has upheld its reputation as a pioneer in American air travel. Its new fleet of 30 Douglas DC-8 Clippers will be powered by the most powerful production aircraft engines in the* world, J"57 turbojets, designed and developed by Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. It is only a matter of time until jet transports are standard equipment along the air lanes of the world. The large majority of them will be powered by Pratt & Whitney Aircraft jet engines-an achievement of great significance. A jet-turbine powerplant that develops 10,000 pounds of thrust - or more - involved some of the most com- plex problems of present-day engineering. A glance at the roster of today's J-57-powered military aircraft' is proud testimony to the success with which those problems were resolved by Pratt & Whitney Aircraft engineers. - {S fRS FRONNOW1 What will you have to show for yourself? * F"100 * F-101 * F"102 * FAD - FOU * AWD * 8.52 KC-135 + YOU NAME IT + I SHOP IT + ISHIP IT " FROM BOP TO BEETHOVAN OFF 2 I.%LIST ALL BRANDS All Guaranteed Factory Fresh NMail order exclusivey- Not a Shop)J EVERY MAJOR LABEL Classical " Pops 4 Show Tunes Jazz-in fact, everything in Schwann: R.C.A. * Victor * Columbia London Decca * Mercury Capitol Teefunken Westminister L'Oiseau Lyre Beltona Scottish and Durium Italian Record How much will you have contributed In answer to the pressing demands of an unbelievably exciting period in engi- neering achievement? How satisfying your progress and your rewards? The coming decade is, for you, a time of transition. In whatever field you choose to pursue a career, your record of advancement from neophyte to vet- eran will not depend on ability alone. For . . . without ample opportunities to demonstrate your talents, you can- not prove your potential value in any industry. Today, at Sikorsky Aircraft, the challenge is a mighty one. Solutions to the intricate problems of advanced ro- tary wing aircraft will have great bear. ing on military and commercial prog- ress in the years just ahead. To help provide the right answers, more en- gineers with foresight and vision are needed. Challenging projects, excellent facili- ties, creative freedom, recognition of proficiency, merited promotions and re- wards, liberal company policies in- clined toward family well-being .. . ALL contribute importantly to a young engineer's success. Your career at Sikorsky Aircraft, reviewed ten years hence, would doubtless reveal a most satisfactory record, both personally and professionally. 'a. ; " z, .r - .~IIL ,W. -I