THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, Y 19, 1943 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 18, 1943 Guard Soldiers' Rights, Cramer Tells JAG s You Don't Have To Chase Them For Autographs Any More JUST A ONE-WAY TRIP: Curious Ann Arborites Ogle At Jap Suicide Submarine Army's Chief Judge Advocate Declares Justice, Fair Play Must Prevail in Service Curious Ann Arborites and Univer- sity students lined up two deep for designed strictly for a one-way mis- blocks yesterday to ogle the Jap sui- sion. "You must remember that you are not the prosecutor of the soldier, but rather the guardian of his rights and liberties," Maj.-Gen Myron C. Cram- er, the Judge Advocate of the Army, said yesterday in his graduation ad- dress to the 11th Officers Class of the JAG School. "Officers of our branch returning from foreign duty report on assign- ments little dreamed of when they left," he said, "from the instruction of troops to action as diplomatic agents to potentates of distant lands." Justice Prevails in Armed Forces' He pointed out that the graduates must remember that the American sense of justice and fair play prevails in the armed forces just as it does in other phases of our national life. Approximately 12 men out of the class of 67 will have assignments for foreign duty. Other assignments will be to the Judge Advocate General's Office in Washington, D. C., various Army headquarters, ports of embark- ation, service commands and troop units. Four University Men Graduate Four University men were in the graduation class. Maj. Norman D. Lattin, JD '24, was a professor of law at Ohio State, and Maj. Cedric W. Clark, '22E, former judge and prose- cuting attorney of Meigs County, O. Other law University graduates were Capt. F. Roland Sargent, JD '31, Saginaw City Attorney, and first assistant prosecuting attorney of Saginaw County; and Lt. Marvin G. Goodwin, '28L, member of Tennessee legislature, and Mayor of Lenoir City, Tenn. for seven years. Receive Military Education In the 12 weeks of their training, the officers received a military legal education in military justice, govern- ment contracts, claims by and against the government and military affairs. Staff functions, weapons, chemical warfare and use of gas masks, map reading and minor infantry tactics instruction was included on the mili- tary side. Other speakers on the graduation program included Brig.-Gen. Thomas H. Green, Assistant Judge Advocate General. Col. Edward H. Young, Commandant, and E. Blythe Stason, Dean of the Law School. ..... .... Military Justice, We Assume A diller, a dollar, I'm a nighty poor scholar Not a man to preach to my teacher But I have beyond question a corking suggestion Regarding the following feature: When you bring us a test which you think is your best And pass it around in the room Each one of us fellas requests that you tell us Just when and where not to assume. You give us the facts regarding some acts Out in Reno, Nevada, one night And ask us to find with juristic mind The charge that is proper and right. When we finally refused to charge the accused You said, with Bostonian sneer "Why, you were assuming that young love was blooming, But we do no assuming in here!" After leaving the hussy to discuss Private Bussey You toot a new tune on your flute: "He was gone an hour and hid in t bower You assume he eluded pursuit." Now the Pretzel Bell crowd argues strongly and loud On the question of what one should do The habitues who always make A's And the sons of habitues too. I'm just a bit leary of raising the quaere For my grade is already low But when to assume or not to assume Is something I really must know My darkness is Stygian, I coo like a pigeon I shake like a prospective groom I think I'm a daisy, I'm a little bit crazy 'Cause I never know when to assume. -Candidate Kirk Jeffrey Judge Advocate General's School DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN cide sumbarine captured at Pearl Harbor. Portholes were cut in the now in- famous sub by the Navy to show its interior. Figures of Japanese sailors are placedat the controls and in the en- gine compartment, indicating the po- sitions of the two doomed men. The officer under the conning tower must stand in the 5'1" clearance while the engineer can neither stand nor sit but must recline. The circumference in only 6' in the widest ;spot. The cruising distance of the 81' sub is only 150 miles. It is powered by storage batteries laid the length of the sub which cannot be recharged, which means that the submarine is Ir1 Its thin shell offers no protectio4 against shell fire, and it is capable of submerging only 15', too little to avoid depth charges. Since it can dive only when in mo- tion, it rises helplessly to the surface when the batteries are exhausted., On its mission, it is carried to its target area by a "mother" ship. The sub carries out this mission by pulling alongside a target and setting off 300 pounds of nitroglycerine. The sub also carries two torpedoes which are to be fired before the 'suicide blow is struck. While the sub has been touring the country it is credited 'with selling more than $22,000 worth of war bonds for every hour it has been on display. 4 War style autographs-Film stars, Ann Ruthefo rd and Harry Carey autograph the cast on the leg of Seaman John W. King, Jr. of Harrisburg, La., at Mare Island Navy Hospital. i ---- _. .M . .Wichiyan I(en at ka' r-_______________________________________ per feet patle Irving Jaffee, of Passaic, N.Y., re- cently received his commission as ensign in the U.S. Naval Reserve, upon graduation from Abbott Hall, midshipman's training school, in Chicago. Ensign Jaffee, active in campus affairs, was the former editorial dir- ector of The Michigan Daily, Secre- tary of the Summer Parley in 1941,1 President of Brandeis House, and member of Phi Eta Sigma, honorary! society. Ensign Jaffee .is now sta- tioned on the East coast. Staff Sgt. Clayton Dickey, for- merly night editor of The Daily, and member of Delta Tau Delta, is now visiting Ann Arbor on leave. Sgt. Dickey is an aerial gunner at Orlando, Fla. Second Lt. Arthur V. Allison, of Detroit, is now stationed at Tinker Field, Okla., establishment of the Air Service Command for the main- tenance and repair of aircraft and the training of air depot groups. Lt. Allison received his bachelor of sci- ence degree here in civil engineering. Capt. John C. Munn, who grad- uated from the University previous to the first' world war, and who was a second lieutenant in World War I, has been assigned to duty at the Army Air Forces Technical Training Command at Kearns, U. Capt. Munn was a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity and par- ticipated actively in football and track. Cadet Burton B. Hendricks, of Kalkaska, arrived at Grand Rapids recently where he -is enrolled as a student in the Weather Training School of the Army Air Force Tech- nical Training Command. Upon suc- cessful completion of the course a commission as second lieutenant in the Army will be granted the cadet. Pvt. Robert A. Cummins, of Ann Arbor, has been transferred from the Carlsbad 'Army Air Field, Service Men Fall Victim to Racket Romance in Ann Arbor is be- coming an expensive affair as shakedown artists invade the Ar- boretum and demand a price to go away. Operating in the daytime these public nuisances, aged eight or nine, attach themselves to wander- ing couples and refuse to budge until bought off by nickels. Find- ing the racket quite profitable, the youngsters discovered that the servicemen were their most willing victims.' "It's a nickel, or we won't move," is the slogan of the group. Carlsbad, N.M., to Salt Lake City, U. Pvt. Robert L. Catlin, of Cleveland Heights, 0., recently arrived at the Army Air Forces Bombardier School, Big Spring, Tex., where he will enter training as a bombardier cadet. Upon satisfactory completion of the course, he will receive his appointment as an officer in the Army Air Forces and his wings as a bombardier. Pvt. Catlin attended the Univer- sity until 1941, the time he entered his cadet training. A member of Delta Upsilon, he received his letters in track and basketball and was a member of a dance band. Pvt. Richard D. Andrade, of Birmingham, has been assigned to the Pomona College campus for training in Japanese Area and Language under the U.S. Army Specialized Training Program. Stu- dies are under the supervision of the Pomona College faculty, and military instruction is coordinated with this. program under a staff of Army officers. Pvt. Andrade joined the Army March 5, 1943, and trained first at Camp McCoy, Wis., and Camp Ellis, Ill., before being assigned to special- ized training at Pomona College. At the University, he was a member of the Interfraternity Council and also of the University Orchestra. Sailor Living In West Quad Pleads for .iron "I wish some kind-hearted coed would send me an iron or offer to do my washing," Burton Siegel, mem- ber of the V-12 program, lamented yesterday. "You see," he explained, "I've been washing my undress whites in a washbowl in the West Quad and the pressing situation is pretty tough; I have to wait for hours to get dibs on one of the several irons on our deck." "The washing situation isn't so good either," he said laughingly, "the chlorox and soap flakes are hard on my hands!" "We've worked out quite a system for washing our whites," Siegel ex- plained. "First, we soak them for ten minutes in water, then for fifteen minutes in chlorox." After that a scrub brush is applied to the more than soiled spots. It is important to rinse all chlorox out as chlorox and a flat iron produce a ma- jor catastrophe," he continued, "the result would be something like yel- lows, not whites." Chiang 's Friend To Give Talk On Post, War China Post-War Council Will Sponsor Address of Christian Missionary Dr. George W. Shepherd, who was an adviser to the New Life Movement in China and who has been in close association with Chiang Kai Shek for six years, will speak under the spon- sorship of the Pbst-War Council on "Which Way China in the Post-War World?" at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Known as one of the Generalissi- mo's closest friends, Dr. Shepherd has been a missionary in China for 20 years and since 1933 has been par- ticularly a c t i v e in rehabilitation work. John Gunther in his book, "Inside Asia," mentiohed the fact that Dr. Shepherd had done fine work in Nanking and had become one of Chiang's best friends. Believing that the only sure and lasting foundation of a newand bet- ter world is to be found in building spiritual understanding between ra- ces, Dr. Shepherd has declared that "missionaries are the true scientists in the realms of human relations." Following the lecture there will be a question period with faculty mem- bers who are experts on the Far East participating. Included will be Dr. Esson Gale, director of the Interna- tional Center, Dr. George Kish of the geography department, and Prof. Decker of the history department. Elizabeth Hawley, '45, chairman of the Post-War Council, will introduce the speaker. Open Meeting To Be Held By Quarterdeck Society Quarterdeck, oldest campus hon- orary engineering society, will hold an open meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomor- row in Room 311 West Engineering Building. There will be a discussion on the new 327 foot Hamilton class cutters. Undergraduate naval architecture students and members of the RO- NAGS are especially invited to at- tend. lipstick ... in a dreamy, (Continued from Page 4) rose-red plastic case. Prettiest-and most prac- Page Hall or go directly to the Peir- sol backyard and the group going tical of all the war babies! from Page Hall will meet you at the Hurry...get yours now! fireplace. You are invited to Page Hall at 3 p.m. to listen to the Sym- phony before going on the picnic. On Wednesday morning at 8 a.m. there will be a celebration of the America's Holy Communion in the church. beat-loved lipstick First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St.: Wednesday eve- ning service at 8:00. Sunday morn- 600 & & 1 ing service at 10:30. Subject: "Life". Sunday School at 11:45. Free public Reading Room at 106 E. Washington St., open every day except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. until Q u r y 5 p.m., Saturdays until 9 p.m. On State The Lutheran Student Association will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at At Head Of North -U_- the Zi6n Parish Hall, E. Washington and Fifth. The discussion program WE DELIVER will be held at Dorothy 'Wiedman's home. ATTENTION, COEDS! FALL CLOTHES are beginning to arrive at our front door, and we especially invite the Michigan Coeds to look over our very pretty things. o o o It's wise to plan your Fallf wardrobe early.f L r Servicemen t4 , # 0*0 j ... Here's the answer to your SUPPLY problem. i i i We have a11 the things you've been wanting - IT STAYS ANCHORED designed especially for Servicemen - in neat and on the diaphragm! White "ALPHABET9' Bra Fine white batiste with a firm grosgrain band to hold the bra firmly at the rib-line. compact packages. Money Belts Sewing Kits Magic Slates Air Spotter Cards Aircraft Spotters Guides 4 New Testaments V=Mail Blanks Signalcards (International Flag Code) Pocket Games Military Stationey uuii1131 1113111