0 .", .GE FgtT i+ THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUG. 2a, 1949 PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, AUG. 20, 1043 Co. A To Present Repeat of Hit Musical, 'Nips in the Bud' Revue To Be Sponsored By 'U'Bond Committee Show Will Be Given Sept. 29 or 30; May Also Be Put On in Detroit; Bonds To Be Tariff War Factory Queens Share l oy (Continued from Page 1) the present plan of one or more Ann Arbor performances. Among the veterans who will be featured in the new version are the two stars, funny-man Pvt. Al Acer- no and romantic-voiced Pvt. Allen Beach. Private Acerno and Pvt. Gordon Cotler, the droll redhead, who stole so many scenes in the original "Nips," write most of the gags which are rife throughout the skow, and they've had four months to dig up new material, most of which is satire, subtle and other- wise, but always funny, on the various phases of Army life at college, Private Yudkoff said. Company A's well-known Soldier Choir will also be a main feature of the show. The forty man chorus has recently completed a five week broadcasting engagment over WJR, Detroit, and their concert at Hill Auditorium last Sunday, was termed "one of the best I have ever heard," by Professor Hardin Van Deursen, head of the Univesrsity School of Music voice department. Both Private Beach and Pvt. Arthur Flynn, form- er concert singer at Town ,Hall in New York, who made solo appearance in Sunday's concert, will be featured in the chorus. French Group To Try Pucheu For Treason The group which joined Company A in June has yielded several new performance probably chief of whom is Pvt. John Boucher, formerly of Stanford University, who has a bag of comedy skits that ,keeps the boys in the barracks laughing. Company A has had an oppor- tunity to try their new version of "Nips" in rough form. The unit went on the road, though not far, about a month and a half ago, when they were requested to en- tertain' the Air Force group sta- tioned at Willow Run. The cast put on two shows on one Saturday under the worst possible theatri- cal conditions. The "stage" was an upraised altar, generally used for religious services, and the curtains were four or five sheets, commandeered from the Air Force. No lighting and very few props were used, but when the show was over, the Army audience went away with real guffaws. Lt. Spence Convinced This test was enough to convince the producers and Company A's gen- ial commanding officers, Lt. George Spence, that with some polish and right staging, "Nips" was well worth displaying to the public again. The sponsorship of the Bond Committee is the logical culmination of the idea. The show is run by a five man committee headed by Private Yud- koff, and Private Cotler, and Prvt. Gerald Stoner and Pvt. Richard Malkin, who write all the music. The latter two have revised the score of "Nips" to include new songs and lyrics. Promotion and stage production is hndl dV b P vt Miltnn AL it. r Fellow workers at a Salt Lake City war plant selected these beauty queens for "their ability to get along with fellow workers" as well as for their shapeliness. Left to right are Pat Young, Helen McDermaid and Dol Lee Chandler. BUT ONLY ON PAPER: Hospital, Ambassador B ridge Hit as Bombers Raid Detroit Air Corps Band Will Present Concert Sunday Chaplain Hour To Be Held on Library Steps For Students, Residents A fifteen minute concert by the Air Corps band preceding 'The Chaplain's Hour" to be held at 4 p.m. Sunday on the library steps, has been added to the program planned by the Army Air Force Detachment. The band, which has appeared in numerpus civic parades, will open the concert with the "National Emblem," to be followed by the "American Pa- trol." Cpl. Wachelz Directs The 33 piece band, which is direc- ted by Cpl. Edward R. Wachelz, will then play "The Missouri Waltz" and "Semper Fidelis." Dr. E. W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education, will give the invocation, followed by a welcoming address from Master of Ceremonies, Pvt. Gerald T. O'Brien. The 50 man chorus of the detach- ment, directed by Pvt. Robert W. Whitmer, will then lead in group singing of the "Army Air Corps Song." Following the singing, Chaplain Francis P. McVeigh, Lieutenant, U.S. A.A.F., will speak on "The Duties of an Army Chaplain." The band, which will be making its last concert appearance of the year, will then do a specialty number, "Trombones on Parade." Chaplain Samson Will Speak "TheServiceman's Place in the Post-War World" will then be dis- cussed by Chaplain Paul Samson, Captain, U.S.A.A.F. The program will close with "The Victors," played by the band, and group singing of "The Star Spangled Banner." "The concert and lectures, spon- sored by the Chaplain's Committee and the Student Religious Associa- tion, is our way of saying thanks to Ann Arbor," Pvt. Stanley Diamond, program chairman, said yesterday. "Many of the men in the detachment will be leaving within a month, and we wanted to show our appreciation for all that has been done for us while we were here." Members of the committee besides Private Diamond are Pvt. Bruce Cooke, Pvt. Gilbert Koch, Private O'Brien, Pvt. Dwight Smith and Pvt. Gilbert Steiner. USO Dance Is Open to Officers Naval Attendance Has Been Officially Okayed Naval officers may attend the Uni- versity USO dances to be held from 7:30 to 9:45 p.m. today in the League. According to Nancy Upson, presi- dent-elect of Mortarboard society for the remainder of the summer, per- mission for all naval officers on cam- pus to attend the affair has been 1 granted officially. As always the non- commissioned men will be welcome. The policy of allowing both offi- cers and enlisted men to attend the USO dances will be continued for the rest of the summer, Miss Upson added. There will also be a USO dance from 7:30 p.m. to midnight tomorrow. There will be dancing to the mel- odious tunes of a nickelodeon in the Grand Rapids Room and those who do not care to dance will find check- ers, bridge, bingo and other mis- cellaneous games awaiting them Sailor-patients at the U.S. Naval Convalescent Hospital at Yosem- ite, Calif., enjoy a view of the valley from Inspiration Point. PEARL HARBOR VETERAN: MP Sham Battle Sounds Like Cap Pistols to Lti. Rousch Convalescing and Sight-Seeing Sailors naniea ay rv. . on zanize , Many Ex-Executives while stage management and equip- To Be Investigated ment fall to Pvt. Dick Snyder and Pvt. Joseph Bothwell- As Axis Collaborators Yudkoff also stated that more def- inite information about the new pro- ALGIERS, Aug. 20-RP)-A storm duction would be released very short- of excitement, unsurpassed in French ly when all arrangements have been legal annals since the Dreyfus case, completed with the various commit- has arisen here over the impending tees interested in backing it. trial of former Vichy Interior Minis--} ter Pierre Pucheu on charges of C rs a i treason. h ita iy T A new "purging" committee is pre- paring to present evidence which is Be Discussed certain to indict the former official, working from a detailed dossier of B Dr Hart Pucheu's actions which has been col- lected over many months. More Arrests Probable Believing that the Christian need A large number of other former not dig down 1900 years into the past executives, military and Navy offi- for the revelation of God's relation cers, professional men and even busi- to man, Dr. Hornell Hart, professor ness executives have been similarly of sociology at Duke University, will investigated, and.probably will be ar- discuss "The Nature of Liberal Chris- rested shortly. tianity" at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the The "purging" committee was or- Rackham Amphitheatre. ganized to investigate the actions of Dr. Hart, who will speak under the men suspected of collaborating with auspices of the Student Religious As- the Axis after the armistice and to sociation, is a member of the British determine the extent of their respon- Psychical Research, and has contrib- ibility for such collaboration. uted to The New Republic, Forum, There are numerous instances of the New York Times Magazine, and Frenchmen being jailed, tortured and the American Journal of Sociology. held without trial throughout the In 1930 Dr. Hart was appointed to empire for the political "crime" of a committee to study social trends having refused to cease fighting, by President Hoover. Pucheu Arrested Early A second lecture to be sponsored The formation of the French Com- by the S.R.A. will be given at 8:15 mittee was the first concrete step p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 15 in the taken' by any of the United Nations Rackham Ampitheatre by Dr. Char- to bring retribution to its own Quis- les C. Morrison, representative of the lings. Pucheu was the first to be ar- neo-Orthodox group in Christianity. rested. Editor of the Christianity Century, The question of whether the trial Dr. Morrison believes that the es- should be public also is deeply agi- sence of the liberal tradition is op- tating French opinion, position to authoritarianism, and not Proponents of closed sessions fear the rejection of the unique features repercussions throughout the empire of Christian theology. as well as in metropolitan France In 1937 he was a delegate to Ox- when the evidence against the ac- ford and Edinburgh Ecuminical Con- cused official is unfolded. ferces and in 1939 he delivered the The opposite view is that convic- Lyman Beech Lectures at Yale. tion at a closed trial would leave Dr. Morrison has written several suspicion that he was crucified by books including "The Christian Cul- political enemies. tus" and "The Social Gospel." WINOT WITH BILL SAWYER AND HIS BAND AT THE MICHIGAN LEAGUE ni i t-N/f"\NA A LANSING, Aug. 19 -UP)- De- 1 troit and Flint were attacked by enemy bombers today; the Ambas- sador bridge was hit; a wing of the Ford hospital in Detroit wast demolished, and upwards of 2,000t casualties were reported. But it was all done within one room and thet blood was all on paper. The room was the basement of the new state air raid control center, de- scribed as the first in the United States. It was placed in operation today by Capt. Donald S. Leonard, State Director of Civilian Defense. Location Is Secrett Leonard emphasized that for sev- eral months an emergency control center has been functioning in Mich- igan while the full-dress center was being prepared. Its location a secret, the construction center was delayed by scarcity of materials. While most major cities and many counties have local control centers to receive reports of bomb damage from block air raid wardens, Leonard ex- Victory Vanities Tickets on Sale Eliminations To Be Tuesday, Wednesday Tickets for the second Victory Vanities to be held at 8 p.m. Satur- day, August 28, will go on sale today at the Union, the League and at State Street bookstores. Eliminations for the Vanities will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. The top eight or ten houses offering skits will stay on for the finals, Doris Barr, League chairman of the joint Union- League sponsored project, said yes- terday. Added attractions to the Vanities, who will not compete for the war bond prizes to be offered, are Com- pany A, 3651st S.U. which will of- fer a scene from their hit revue, "Nips in the Bud," the Naval Chorus and the Navy-Marine Band. Company A will also present several other skits. Organized along the lines of the Victory Vanities held last February, short skits from various campus houses and organizations will make up the competing acts. A number of campus houses and several individu- als will offer talent for the program. Co. A Will Invade Arboretum Tonight The men of Company A will invade the Arboretum again this evening in a little "after dinner" exercise. Officers of the unit are taking the men out for night maneuvers, and any bombs seen bursting in air will not mean that Ann Arbor is being invaded. They will have an oppor- I-- '.-- 4". .---4 ..... . t, 4-- n- 4 i..1 plained, the State Control Center acts to receive requests from local and district control centers for ad- ditional assistance and to dispatch that aid from neighboring communi- ties. In addition, it coordinates vari- ous governmental agencies to insure obtaining maximum use of available equipment and services. Newsmen See Mock Attack With the chiefs of the State Citi- zens Defense Corps Division at the key posts, Leonard today ran through a mock bombing attack for newsmen in a control room lined with maps of the state and with panels picturing the results of the bombing attack. The attack, on paper, inflicted 10 fatalities, 100 gas attacks, 200 fires, 60 road blockades, 2,000 cases of incendiary bombs, 500 high ex- plosive attacks, the crash of two bombers-but it all went smoothly from an official standpoint. De- troit drew on medical and fire de- partment equipment from neigh - boring communities, Saginaw, Bay City and Midland sent help to Flint, the State Highway Depart- ment diverted traffic from the danger areas and other simulated problems were solved. Leonard said frequent tests have proven that an air raid alarm now can be flashed to every community in Michigan in 10 minutes and to every hamlet in Wayne county in three minutes. 'Bill Suw To PlNay Tontight Playing the newest hit tunes of the season, Bill Sawyer and his orchestra will swing out from 9 p.m. to mid- night in the League today, when coeds, studen ts, and servicemen gather for dancing. Following their usual policy of in- formality, no ties or coats will be necessary, Sawyer stated. Sawyer also said that he would play several of his new arrangements that have been featured at the League dances recently. Engineers To Hold Beer Picnic Soon A beer picnic for all engineering students will be held at 2 p.m. Sat- urday, August 28 on the Island. Departmental baseball games wil be held, with various groups of engi- neers challenging each other. Tickets for the picnic may be obtained fron any member of the Engineering Council. Noise of a sham battle which will be staged at 7 p.m. Monday on the golf course during the Army Salute to Agriculture, Industry and Labor sounds like so many cap pistols to the officer in charge, Lt. Leslie G. Rousch, a veteran of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. 'This Is Nothing' Although land mines, aerial bombs and 75 millimeter cannon firing blanks explode during the mock bat- tle, "They are nothing compared to what I heard that morning on Oahu Island," to quote Lieutenant Rousch. He lived in the Hawaiian Islands 22 years, serving the Army 20 years and working as a civilian two years between enlistments. At the time of the Nipponese blitz he was sta- tioned with the 5th Chemical Com- pany Service Aviation, at Hickham Field, one of the Japs' principal targets. Here's his account of the blitz, in brief: "I was eating breakfast in my quarters on the field at 7:55 a.m. I heard one plane roar overhead, which wasn't unusual around an airfield of that size, then a bomb crashed and I remarked to my wife, 'I think the plane crashed.' I ran out and looked at the land- ing mat on the field, then saw an- other plane, and just then a bomb dropped from it. Then I knew we were being attacked. "That bomb I saw fall hit about 500 yards away. Following closely came a wave of planes which hit our hangars, mostly with incendiary and demolition bombs. I decided to get to my company, which was in bar- racks about four city blocks from my quarters. I dodged machinegun bul- lets and screaming bombs during that race and reached my company commander. Moved Out Immediately "My company moved out immedi- ately, setting up machineguns along. Pearl Harbor channel which borders Hickham Field. And we did all right, too, considering that none of the 62 enlisted men in that company had ever handled a machinegun be- fore. "The second attack came about 9:30 a.m. and consisted of an esti- mated 100 to 150 planes of which United States gunners shot down 42 which were actually counted as positively downed. I was standing on the porch of the company office, having just come up from under the building, when bombs hit the parade ground not 50nfeet away. "I felt something on my, chest, looked down and saw a hole in my shirt. I tore it open and pulled off a piece of bomb fragment. The com- pany clerk who was with me. rushed inside, got an iodine tube, ripped 'It open and swabbed the wound freely. I didn't even go to the dispensary for treatment. 'I Was Lucky' "I figure I was lucky to get off that easy, but in our entire company of 88 there was only one casualty, a soldier who was in the guardhouse was sria iously wounded. The first Jap bomb hit the firehouse at Hickham Field and the guardhouse adjoined the fire department. The second bomb burst the big water main. Those two fac- tors made it tough to fight fires." Lieutenant Rousch, assigned to the 739th Military Police Battalion at Camp Mount Vernon, Ill., is an expert in pyrotechnics and demoli- tion work from his training in the Army Chemical Warfare Service. His job is placing the land mineus aerial bombs and other charges of explosives used during the Arny Salute sham battle. He served two years in World War I, getting a discharge in 1919 and re enlisting in SanaFrancisco in 1921. He was sent to the Hawaiian Islands to join the 27th Infantry, the Wolf Hound Regiment which fought in Siberia during the first World War. After serving three enlistment, a total of nine years, he tried a civilian job as inspector with the transportation company for two years, but rejoined the Army. Foi the last four years he has been in the Chemical Warfare Service. Lieutenant Rousch left the Islands June 5, 1942, in a convoy which, be- cause the Battle of Midway was in progress, required 11 instead of tqe usual five to seven days to cross the Pacific Ocean. The crossing was uneventful. !1 CAMPUS LOVE... Our Famous Heatherton IRuffie4 PP" PULLOVERS 6.95 CARDIGANS 8.95 Nubby Scotch shetland for these sweater classics any gal on any campus would treasure. Wonder- ful color choice ... pink, sky blue, deep purple, cherry, yellow, bronze green, toast, navy! Sizes r IPAl I I