'I v Tilt: MICITIC-AN DATTV VlrVDN'T,"S;nAAl'- -TTTVV. Ail' -10112 a -'. A a.'.l . V '11 1'1R-W l .J A. L..AA' dE4 i V)i4 , 11043it Union To Clos Dining Room To Civilians e i ON THE OIL TREK: Two 'UGeolcogists Search for, New Michigan Oil Resources Germans Harness Dogs On Front A FARCE F ACTORY: Laboratory, Designi Course Gives Engineers Experience Bal Room Has Been Converted into Mess Hall for Servicemen Possible places in which one coul get a meal in Ann Arbor were de creased by another rear casualt when the Union closes its main din ing room for the duration nex Thursday. Hungry civilians will indulge them selves for the last time on Unio prepared and served food when cook and waiters go to work serving 20 additional soldiers instead of hungr students, visiting parents, and loca citizens. More than 900 soldiers will be eat ing at the Union which will com pletely absorb the output of th single kitchen. Discrimination wi continue in the cafeteria, however, a it continues to cater only to th whims of a fortunate masculine pub lic. Union Manager Franklin C. Kuen zel said yesterday that the Unio could no longer handle the man: customershbegging for food. Beside cl~ing the dining room the Unio will cut down on the serving of pri vate parties. No longer the scene of campu dances, the ballroom has becomea high-ceilinged, lavish mess hall fo Army and Navy men on campus. Last night the civilian restauran problem remained little improved and students ate at odd hours t avoid the rush or waitedpatientl in long lines for a bit to eat and a place to eat it. SlossonGives First Lecture Reviews Events on Home, War Fronts In the first of his weekly summer lectures in the Rackham ampitheatre Prof., Preston Slosson discussing the recent developments in current events said yesterday that he con- sidered a second front this summer "highly probable." Prof. Slosson divided his speech into two parts, one on foreign affairs and one on domestic affairs. In con- sidering the possibility of a second front this summer he discussed the balance of advantages of the Italian route, the Balkan route, or an attack in northern Europe. . Under the last head he discussed the revolt of Congress agairist the authority of the President. Instances under this were the dispute over price administration, the passing of the anti-strike bill over the Presi- dent's veto, and the attack on the of- fice of war information. "On the strike matter Congress and the President had the same end in view-the suppression of strikes- differing only as to the means. The Congressional vote was aimed even more as a rebuke to labor than as a rebuke to the President," Prof. Slos- son said. "With regard to price administra- tion the most important thing is to prevent inflation because if the cost of living goes up wages will have to go up too and it would be impossible to hold workers to their contracts." - "Elmer Davis of the Office of War Information who holds the same po- sition as George Creel did in the first World War runs into similar diffi- culty and. unpopularity with the press, but is really doing as good a job as could reasonably be expected." Oil Ban Is Nation-Wide WASHINGTON, June. 29.-(,P)-- Secretary Ickes, as petroleum ad- ministrator, tonight made nation- wide the ban of delivery of fuel oil to householders or industrial users for consumption in new oil-burning installations. No exceptions will be granted any- one after next July 22, Ickes warned. Two University of Michigan geolo- gists are studying rock formations in the Mackinaw Cit St. Ignace area searching for ne' oil resources in Michigan for the State Department d f Conservation. d -Prof. Kenneth K. Landes, chair- y man of the University's department - of geology, and Prof. George M. Eh- t lers will spend three montns in ex- amining the field and the remainder of the year compiling a report on n their findings. s Rocks Will Be Mapped 's The purpose of the study is 'to map y the oil-bearing rock formations of northern Michigan which, while they - League Surgical i Dressing Unit >s Q To Open Soon Bandage Rolling Unit y Will Be Open During s Eight Week Session The Red Cross Surgical Dressing Unit which has operated during the s past year at the League will open a for business again from 1 p.m. to 5 r p.m. just a week from today, Jean Whittemore, '44, chairman of the t unit, announced. , Emphasizing that the work of roll- o ing bandages is of great importance, the chairman' added, all women y on campus, undergraduate and grad- uate, summer session and summer term students, are asked to take part. "Since the unit is open only for eight weeks, we want the summer term students to realize that and plan to fit the work into their first eight weeks," she said. Two consecutive hours of work are asked of the students, and the unit will be open every Wednesday and Thursday afternoon beginning next week. Freshman girls who wish to con- tribute two hours of their time may do so since eligibility cards are not required. Instructors of the unit who have returned for the summer include Betty Carpenter, '45, Nancy Pottin- ger, '45, Kay Brennan, '43, Betty Jones, '45, and Jean Caldwell, '44. WAAC League Booth Closed Indefinitely The WAAC information booth ir the League closed last night for "ard indefinite period" Lt. Barbara Anrc Bethell, recruiting officer,' said yes- terday. Ruth Riemenschneider, CDVO sec- retary, announced yesterday that thet WAAC recruiting office in the Arm-E ory would be closed until July 131 After July 13 the office will be re- opened from 9 to 5 o'clock Tuesdays.k Wednesdays and Thursdays.a Until the time when the Armor office opens potential WAACs will bee referred to Sgt. Eva Matlock at Lan-r sing where officers are conducting s city wide canvas for new candidates 13 Latin Americans Will Study Health Public health experts from fiv Latin American republics will arrice at the University Monday for a pre paratory course in English to precede the investigation of public health questions. The thirteen experts are from Paraguay, El Salvador, Ecuador, Brazil and Bolivia, and they will do extensive research as well as field work. Brought to this country by the Institute of Inter-American affairs the group will work in medical schools, hospitals and clinics with specialists. lie thousands of feet below the sur- face in the present oil fields, rise gradually to the north until they crop out on the earth's surface on both sides of the Straits of Mackinac and on the adjacent islands. By identifying and mapping these outcroppings near the Straits and making similar studies of the onder- ground formiations farther south in present oil-producing areas, the sci- entists expect to be able to map the sub-surface rock strata for the vast areas lying in between. Mapping May Lead'to oil . Several oil-bearing rock structures in the central Michigan basin are known to "pinch out" to the north as they rise with the general contour of the State's rock formations, Pro- fessor Landes points out. The pres- ent mapping program, he explains, may lead to the discoery of new areas of oil production since it is known that formations which thin out and disappear in this manner afford ideal "traps" for the accumu- lation of oil. Oil field exploration in Michigan is greatly complicated, Professor Landes points out, by the fact that the original oil-bearing structures of the State are covered by heavy lay- ers of more recent rock and soil and by other layers of glacial deposits. In some areas,.he says, the latter is several hundred feet deep. The new survey, however, Prof es- sor Landes declares, should be help- ful in guiding future oil' searches in Michigan. By observing the out- croppings of the oil bearing strata in the Straits area and plo.tting the same strata as they appear farther south, by means of cuttings from wells already drilled, it will be pos- sible to make fairly accurate maps of these structures for the areas in between. X-Ray Exams Are Given by The University Health Service completed yesterday the first X-ray examinations ever given to summer students. Due to a shortage of film, the ex- ams were given only t those stu- dents who displayed symptoms of tuberculosis. This brings to the 10,000 mark the number of X-ray exams which the Health Service has given since June 1942. During the same period the Health Service handled 118,331 dispensary galls, filled 13,978 prescriptions and treated 7,394 colds. Dr. Forsythe, director of the ser- vice, commenting on the program scheduled for the summer said: "Of course we have our regular duties, taking care of the health of the stu- dents. Then we have also contract- ed to take care of the medical needs of the Army personnel on campus." Dr. Forsythe stressed the fact that though the University enrollment of 8,000 (including service men) is no larger than the regular peacetime enrollment, the Health Service will be in serious difficulties because of a shortage of doctors and nurses. The Health Service situation how- ever is no more serious than that of most university services. By JANE FARRANT flooring with the two sectional floors Learning the operations and use in between. of various standard engineering ma- One of the best evaporator labor- chine equipment by practical experi- atories for experimental work in the ence, students taking a general lab- countrypermitsathe student to evap- orate ltrlyayhn rm"just cratory and design course in the East plain water" to sludge from a slaugh- Engineering* Building gain technical terhouse which contains "just about knowledge of the sort they will need verything," according to York. after graduation. Students Learn All Jobs Under the direction of J. L. York, Students learn both the "vorkings of the machines and calculate its instructor in Chemical and Metal- efficiency during their experiments. lurgical Engineering, engineering Work on the evaporating equipment students learn how to set up and in the past has been started ona operate a wide variety of machines Friday noon and carried through to in the four-floor lab which contains a conclusion Sunday noon, with one equipment ranging from a compara- set of students working in shifts con- tively small stone crushing machine tinuously. The German caption accompanying this picture arriving in the United States from a neutral country by way of London, describes it as showing German shepherd dogs harnessed to a small wagon used by a German unit on the Eastern front. The wagon is used to carry mail, food, ammunition and medicine to front line positions. to a vast evaporator two stories in height. Lab Has Removable Floor Two floors of woven metal work set on a steel framework permit sec- tions of the flooring to be removed or replaced in order to allow suffi- cient room for equipment more than one floor in height. The ground story and the top story of the vast labora- tory are ordinary non-removable A rotary drier gives the student experience in the important work of processing soy beans. The beans are left wet by the extraction of the oil for use as a vitamin concentrate. "By learning the uses and opera- tion of these machines, as well as by calculating their efficiency, stu- dents receive practical experience as well as classroom knowledge," York .said. Initial Meeting Scheduled for Hospital Help 100 More Workers Needed To Fill Posts Dr. Hoste of Belgian Foreign Office To Speak Dr. Jan Hostie, well-known au- hor ity on international affairs, will bring to Ann Arbor a discussion on I "Educa Europe" when ha - V A.k Last Times Today! The required orientation meeting before the Men's Education Clu for all new volunteer hospital work- 7:15 p.m. today in the Mic' ers will be held at 7:45 p.m. Thurs- Union. day in the volunteer cffices of the Dr. Hostie, member of the Be University hospital, the central com- Foreign office and formerly a r sentative for the Belgian gov mittee of the project announced yes- ment at the Paris Peace Confer terday. has also served as Secretary-Ge All interested University women, of the International Commission whether or not they have already the navigation of the Rhine. volunteered for hospital work, are Members of the School of Ed urged to attend this meeting. The tion staff will provide musical e central committee, composed of ni- tainment, and Dean James B. versity sophomore women, has the monson will preside at the ele names of approximately 100 volun- of officers. teers. Fifty-three of this number are-- residents of Stockwell Hall. The i number needed to adequately fill all!Stasone ct posts is 200. The hospital volunteer corps was ' / fL P i tion first organized two years ago by the W LD OS JI ea s ub at higan lgian epre- vern- ence, meral n for duca- ,nter- Ed- ction undergraduate offices of the Michi- gan League. This will be the first year the work has been carried on during the summer term. Final re- ports of the committee for 1942-43 revealed a total number of some 300 volunteers and over 10,000 hours of work. Two consecutive hours a week is the minimum time each volunteer may contribute. Red and blue vol- unteer jackets are furnished by the hospital; white, navy blue, or blackI skirts and white blouses must be furnished by the volunteers. Miss Kathryn S. Walsh, supervisor of all volunteers in the UniversityI Hospital feels that women volunteersI have contributed much toward main- taining the high standards of the hospital during the critical wartime shortage of regular staff members. Information concerning the hos- pital volunteers may be obtained by calling Mavis Kennedy, acting chair- man of the committee, room 2526,1 Stockwell Hall. Need for his services here prevent- ed Prof. E. Blythe Stason, Dean of the Law School and University Pro- vost, from accepting an appoint- ment yesterday as one of the new WLB panel members for the Detroit area. "My duties here at the University will keep me from leaving town," Stason said. His appointment was announced yesterday by WLB Regional Director Edwin E. Witte. JUST CALL ME LEO OMAHA, June 29.-(AP)-Perhaps you've met Leo the cook, in the din- ing car of Union Pacific's Denver- Omaha train. While making out a transfer of po- sitions, clerks in the road's home of- fice here found that "Leo" is just a shortened version of the cook's real name--Lleieusszuieusszesszes Willi- himinizzissteizzii Hurrizzissteizzii. He's a native of Siam. Last Times Today "ASSIGNMENT IN BRITTANY" i~t I _ .; .: ;: :: .. . . w .- ..... ,. : .: z 1>