THE MICHIGAN DAILY mHS.. IULY 0, 1" I F Nazi Flier Testifies At Treason Trial Map Course For Women To Be Given National Defense Course Begins Monday; Gives Practical Experience The National Defense mapping" course for women begins Monday under the auspices of the University of Michigan as a .part of the Engin- eering, Science and Management De- fense Training Program sponsored by the U.S. Office of Education. This 13-week course in surveying, topo- graphic mapping, and photogram- metry is designed to train women for supervisory positions in five Fed- eral agencies. Only 8 of the 27 registrants are Ann Arbor residents. There is still room for 13 more students before the quota is filled. The course requires 33 hours of work per week in the classroom, la.b- oratory and field. Persons success- fully completing the program are assured of positions as supervisors in the national mapping program at $1,800 per year. Any woman citizen having had three and a half years of general study and having had training in trigonometry is eligible; or any stu- dent having two years of college training in architecture, chemistry, engineering, forestry, geology, or physics is also eligible. Applications from men over 45 or having a draft classification of 4F are also being accepted, with the same prerequisites as for women. National Rent Control Now In Ef fect Here In accordance with national re'nt controls which went into effect yes- terday University students who live in rooming houses will have their rents stabilized at some point below or at the legal ceiling price. The rent must be no higher than on March 1, 1941, the date set by Federal law as the standard by which ceilings on all prices and rents have been established. Ann .Arbor-in the middle 'of a defense district-ishsubject to all, federal regulations of rent and en- forcement of such regulations will be carried out by officials from the Office of Price Administration. Vestral Choir Rehearses Drawing its talent from all schools of the University, the Summer Fes- tival Choir will begin rehearsal today at 7 p.m. in the Lane Hall audi- torium. V~fojol*- -iic~t Eonomi Competition Blamed For RIacial Prejudice By White Hans Peter Krug (center, in uniform), 21-year-old captured Nazi flier, is flanked by FBI agents and a Canadian army officer as he enters Federal court in Detroit to testify in the treason trial of Max Stephan. Stephan, a German-born, naturalized Detroit restaurateur, is charged with aiding Krug in the young flier's escape from an Ontario concen- tration camp. * * * * Ste phan To Face Jury Today Witthout Benefit Of Witnesses (Continued from Page 1) caping from an internment camp at Bowmanville, Ont., arriving here by rowboat across the Detroit River early on Saturday morning, April 18. Stephan gave him money -and clothing and on April 19 bought him a bus ticket to Chicago, Krug testified. A jury of six women and six men will be given the case late Thursday, Judge Tuttle said, following summation arguments by both sides. Most of the government witnesses told of having seen Stephan and Krug together in various places in Detroit - oJer A e 4th , SLACK SUITS offer the ideal solution to hot weather dressing. All indications point to a scorching July 4th week-end. Be Comfortable, be Cool - in easily tailored slack suits of light weight cottons, rayons, gabardines, or celanese. $4.95 and up Separate All Wool Slacks $8.95 Separate Sport Shirts $2.50 VTC'IYJRrY i 1TEd IJY TATF9 FFF NSF ONS AND TAMPS during the fugitive's admitted 36- hour stopover. Krug arrived in Detroit dirty, hun- gry, ragged-like a "hunted animal,'' Mrs. Bertelmann said today, in the most dramatic testimony of the sec- ond day of the trial. Uninterrupted save for once when she broke and sobbed into a hand- kerchief, she told her story. swiftly in a high, nervous voice: "The doorbell rang that morning and when I answered there was a ragged stranger asking if I had any carpenter work he could do, "He asked me if he could have a drink. He said he was terribly thirsty. I invited him in and he talked in German and told me he had come from the Bowmanville camp. "You mean you are a German prisoner? I asked. "He said yes. I felt faint and thought my knees would buckle, "You shouldn't have come, I said- you can't stay here. "But he stood there looking at me, dirty, scared and like a hunted an- imal. "Then I called Max Stephan by telephone and told him to come over, Something terrible was wrong; I said. In about 10 minutes he arrived. "Go out into the kitchen, I said. There's 'a prisoner of war in there. "Why, you're shaking, Max told me. What's wrong with you?" Mrs. Bertelmann, whose address Krug obtained from a package she sent to his camp, testified that Ste- phan, after meeting the disheveled, 22-year-old fugitive, said to Krug: "Why don't you give up and go back to the camp?-you haven't got a chance?" r And Krug replied, according to Mrs. Bertelmann, "I can't go back; I've got to try to escape because of the treatment of the prisoners in Canada." Throughout his testimony Krug insisted ithat he had two reasons for trying to escape: to return to his military duties in Germany and to have information sent back to his government relative to what he called "bad conditions" in Canadian internment camps. EZ G 521 East Liberty Michigan Theatre Bldg. I '1 1. I I Oct l .A~/ ~a A cool dip in the,'... Union Pool THIRSTY? HOT? Cool, delicious I drinks ct the Union Soda Bar HUNGRY? Good Food The best social worker on campus will answer your q Uestions. I I I Ii ii I I