Overseas Marriages Collapse From Homesickness, Youth NEW 'YORK, Aug. 10-(MP-Not all of the marriages between Ameri- can servicemen and women of other nations were made in heaven. Some of them already have cracked up. The chief cause, says Eileen Pat- terson of the English Speaking un- ion, is that many American soldiers married too young to realize what responsibilities they were incurring. The best available estimate of the number of wives who have gone home is about five per cent, a figure obtained from New York agencies who have close acquaintnce with the Army Air Force Asks For Officer-Specialists The Army Air forces lacks suffi- cient volunteers to fill its require- ments in certain fields and has issued a request to former officer-specialists to make themselves available for re- call, the Army Air Forces Military Personnel Division has announced. New shortages have arisen in the following categories: Chaplain, avia- tion ordnance officer, air transport officer, weather officer pilot, sani- tary engineer, cryptographic security officer, military intelligence and in- telligence staff officers. girls and their problems. The Army has brought about 45,000 overseas wives to the U.S. but has no idea how many have returned. Homesickness has been a factor in driving brides home. Others have discovered that their husbands told tall tales about their home environ- ment and, disillusioned, they give up and go home. Some case histories present tragic- comic situations. One Engish girl whose husband's home is in New Jersey found the mosquitoes so diffi- cult that he had to take her on a vacation to get her mind off them. When British girls insist on going home, their American husbands can- not accompany them. England, hav- ing a difficult time with food and basic comforts, does not welcome im- migration. The wives agree among themselves on some things: 1. They are baffled by simplified spelling used in their husband's let- ters (nite for night, etc.) and in our newspapers. 2. They are surprised by the amount of makeup American girls wear and the young age at which they start. 3. They don't like, having name badges pinned on them at teas. 4. They don't like being called "war brides" or "GI brides." AMG Reports Church Revival In Germany New Vitality Results From Lifting of Bans Imposed by Hitler \BERLIN-UP)-A general upsurge of religious feeling in Germany af- ter 12 years of church persecution under the Nazis is reported by the Religious Affairs Section of the American Military Government. "It is a more quiet development than the noisy American revivals with which we are acquainted," a spokesman said, "and the fact that it is so widespread demonstrates that the churches have emerged from Nazi suppression with greater strength and vitality than ever be- fore." No statistical data on the strngth of the churches are available. (Six- ty per cent of pre-war Germany be- longed to the Evangelical faith and 33 per cent was Catholic. The im- pact of war and the influx of dis- placed persons probably have changed that picture.) In the American, British and French zones of occupation the con- fessional schools, which Hitler closed, are free to operate; religious instruc- tion is allowed in the public schools on the basis of voluntary attendance. In the Russian zone, the interpre- tation of freedom of religion doesn't go as far. - While services may be held freely, confessional schools have not been allowed to reopen nor is religious instruction permitted in the public schools. The Jewish communities, practi- cally wiped out by the Nazis, slowly are being reconstructed. Reports from the American zone said that many synagogues have been repaired provisionally so that services can be held. There is an acute shortage of trained Rabbis, prayer books and other religious articles. To help relieve the shortage of priests and ministers, clergymen and theological students were released quickly from prisoner of war camps and the majority of the theological institutions reopened. the shoe with the beautiful f 4 the oxford you never have to tie' so easy to slip into - yet foot-hugging for smooth graceful fit . . a delight- ful walking shoe in Russet calf. $795 BROOKINS' Smart Soei 108 East Washington Phone 2-2685 ,JUULLFL L.mLU WENT TO DENTIST EARLY-Mrs. J. J. Roche, of Pittsburgh, holds her 9-day old twins, John Paul and James Joseph, who were born with two front teeth -each, and had to have them extracted. Johnnie's ap- pearance indicates discomfort.t ,I i ______ __ _ .______--____v ______________---lidit II S'cieqce ;Htt ~eOie&' Kienert s MATERNITY GIRDLE Light weight with lastex back medium and large sizes. . . Small/ Priced at s350 By KEN HERRING MaySalvage Oil... The use of the atomic bomb may lead to the salvaging of petroleum supplies heretofore locked in shales deep within the bowels of the earth. A West Coast petroleum expert has described the existence of solid oil deposits which have escaped the liquefying action of volcanic heat. By releasing atomic bombs at the bottom of drill holes, the vast liber- ated heat would carry widely through the shales by conduction. Thus oil would be available in the required li- quid form. , Other methods of heating have been successfully applied, but the cost has made their use infeasible. The use of atomic heat may forestall the inevitable exhaustion of our oil resources. * * * Mechanical "Brain" .. . A new mechanical computing ma- chine has been delivered to scientists at White Sands, New Mexico, for use in tests destined to introduce com- mercial rocket transportation with- in the next few years. This device cuts to a fraction the time required in determining velocity, trajectory, altitude, and range of flight through space. The machine makes short work of the 100,000 fig- ures involved in these calculations, and promises to shorten the time re- quired to learn the characteristics of rocket flight at various altitudes. Automatic Street Lights... The use of a photo-electric unit for individual control of multiple street lighting has been announced. This device will turn on lights when the north sky illumination is re- duced to a value of %2 to 6 candles. The lights turn off when the morn- ing light reaches a point 2 candles above the turn-on position. Read and Use The Michi an Daily Classifieds JIe VAN BUREN stoh !I 8 NICKELS ARCADE -- ry\ t ' low% 000 jlt u~ r' C., 3 .? f;E: ": : Sv '? 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