MUARY 18, 1942 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I .. ._ 1 a e' Andre Morize, French Writer, To Speak Here Noted Teacher To Discuss * French Reconstruction After Struggle Of 1$71 "Le Reconstruction de la France apres 1871" will be the subject of a talk by Prof. Andre Morize, profes- sor of French literature at Harvard University and director of the Dlid- diebury French Summer School, to be given ati 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Recognized as one of the outstand-, ing French writers and authorities of the day, Professor Morize at the be- ginning vf the present war was made director of the cabinet at the Com- missariat a l'Information to serve under Jean Giraudoux, one, of the best known writers of contemporary French dramatics. The purpose of the organization was to formulate propa- ganda and counter-propaganda -to serve the French cause in the war. As a result of Professor Morize's close observations at this time he wrote, upon his return to this coun- try, an impartial description of con- ditions he found prevalent in France in a book "France Ete 1940." Here he presents many of the questions and answers that the intellectual Frenchman carried in his heart in the summer of 1940.I Professor Morize's lecture will be given under the auspices of the Cercle Francais and is a part of the series of programs given annually by the club. The talk will be given inFrench and is open to all interested upon presentation of a season ticket. These tickets may be purchased from the secretary of the romance languages department, Room 112, Romance Languages Building, or at the door before the lecture. Holders of the tiekets are entitled to admis- sion to all lectures; and a small ad- ditional charge will be made for the annual French play. University Course In Ordnance Inspection Enrolls 100 Trainees Class Begins Tomorrow; Students To Be Listed On Government Payroll By CHARLES THATCHER, The University will open a war production line of its own at 8 a.m. tomorrow'when the first 100 trainees to be enrolled for a 12-week course in ordnance materials inspection hold their initial class. Sponsored by the U.S. Office of Education under the Engineering, Science and Management Defense Training program, the course will be the only one of the 34 courses cur- rently open under the EMRST which will have its trainees on the govern- ment payroll. A full-time course, the program calls for eight hours of class a day, five days a week for the 12 weeks of instruction, and during this period those enrolled in the course will be paid $125 a month. Similar Programs } One of 13 similar programs now being launched in other ordnance districts in the country, the training course is designed to supply inspec - tors to the Detroit Ordnance Dis - trict, already feeling the pinch of insufficient numbers of inspectors. Under the terms of the program a second contingent of 100 men will arrive oncampusnext month, and will be followed by a third 100 in March, until the quota of 300 is reached. These groups will be grad- uated at monthly intervals for as long as the course is continued. Instruction in mathematics, blue-t print reading,, industrial materials, procedure manufacture, machine tool operation,,visits to industiy, inspec- tion practice and laboratory inspec- tion will be offered in the course. Admission Requirements Requirements for admission to the course provide that the applicant shall be credited with a minimum of one year at an engineering col- lege or a minimum of two years in a literary college, and that he shall agree to work as an ordnance in- spector for a specified length of time following his completion of the course. Teaching the course will be engin- eering faculty men assisted by stu- dent instructors. Dean Ivan C. Craw- ford of the College of Engineering is the University's representative with the education office, and Prof. R. H. Sherlock of the civil engineering de- partment is coordinating the courses. Opened during the past week were 32 other training courses under the EMSDT program. A course in traf- fic control under Prof. R. L. Morri- son of the transportation engineer- ing department will be opened Thurs- day in Flint. Pianist To Feature Chopin In Recital Featuring the works of Beethoven, Brahms and Chopin, Harold Fish- man, pianist and a member of the senior class in the music school here, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. The recital will be given in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Fishman, who appeared in a joint recital earlier this season, is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman and makes his home in Denver, Colo., where he studied with Edith R. Mills at the Mathews' School of Music. He has won scholarships for work with Dalies Frantz and E. Robert Schmitz, Infantile Drive To Try Double Collection Plan 'March Of Dimes' To Start Tomorrow; Tag Day Scheduled For Feb. 3 With the slogan "Join the army warring against the country's fifth column-disease," the local infantile paralysis campaigners, under co- chairmen Mrs. A. M. Waldron and Mrs. Roger Bailey, are sponsoring a drive starting tomorrow and ending Jan. 31, to collect an excess of last year's $4000 total. Foremost among the methods of collecting money for the cure of par- alysis victims is the "March of Dimes" campaign, led by Mrs. Glenn Mc- Geouch, with Mrs. Alexander Barry. This year boy scouts assisted by the Motor Carps and Red Cross, will dis- tribute the cards, which permit $.60 contributions in dimes. Ann Arbor High School Washington Club boys will collect the money. Tag day scheduled for Feb. 3 will be another important phase of the drive, with local high school and University girls volunteering for the posts. ,1 Wardrobe Fresheners Revised Examination Schedules ENGINEERING COLLEGE Time pf Exam Subject 8 - 10 German, Spanish, EM 1, 2; CE 2 Thurs., Jan. 29: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 11 2 - 4 Tues. at 9 8 - 10 Tues. at 10 ,Fri., Jan. 30: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 1; English 1, 2 2 - 4 Mon. atl10 8 - 10 Tues. at 11 Sat., Jan. 31: 10:30 - 12:30 Tues. at 3, Economics 53 2 - 4 M. E. 3; Dr. 1, 2 8 - 10 Mon. at 9 Mon., Feb. 2: 10:30 - 12:30 Tues. at 2, EE 2a, Phys. 46 2 - 4 ;French, Surv. 1, 2, 4 8 - 10 M.P. 2,3, 4 Tues., Feb. 3: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 8 2 - 4 Tues. at 8 8 - 10 Mon.at 3; Dr. 3 Wed., Feb. 4: 10:30 - 12:30 Mon. at 2 i 2 - Tues. at1 LITERARY COLLEGE Time of Exercise Time of Examination Mon. at 8 Tues., Feb. 3, 10:30-12:30 Mon.f at 9 Mon., Feb. 2, 8 -10 Mon. at 10 Fri., Jan. 30, 2 - 4 Mon. at 11 Thurs.,, Jan. 29, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 1 Fri., Jan. 30, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 2 Wed., Feb. 4, 10:30-12:30 Mon. at 3 Wed., Feb. 4, 8 -10 Tues. at 8 Tues., Feb. 3, 2 - 4 Tues. at 9 Thurs., Jan. 29, 2 - 4 Tues. at 10 Fri., Jan. 30, 8 -10 Tues. at 11 Sat., Jan. 31, 8 -10 Tues. at 1 Wed., Feb. 4, 2 - 4 Tues. at 2 Mon., Feb. 2, 10:30-12:30 Tues. at 3 Sat., Jan. 31, 10:30-12:30 Local Church To Celebrate Anniversary By BETTY AWREY Seventy-five years lie between the tiny meeting house formerly at Fourth and Ann streets with the "tre- mendous" congregation of 22 mem- bers, and the flourishing Unitarian church of today. The Normandy stone structure as we know it was built in 1882 to house the congregation that grew with the town and the University, but once more an expansion to take care of the larger service is being proposed. Evidently the Midwest was con- sidered lacking in religious education, for simultaneous with the sending of Rev. Charles Brigham in 1867 to Ann Arbor by Eastern Unitarians, local Methodists were collecting funds ,to send "missionaries" to Kansas. Eight ministers have served since then. Rev. Harold P. Marley, the present minister, came in the spring of 1929, and though the 13 years fol- lowing have been filled with the de- pression, social problems and war, he has kept up the high ideals of the church. Dr. Frederick Eliot of Boston and president of the American Unitarian i Association, will open the church's anniversary week by preaching at 11 a.m. today in the church. At the Liberal Student's Union former stu- dents of the University will return to lead the 'meeting at 7:30 p.m. on the question of "T4e Place of the Uni- tarian Church in Student Affairs." Speech Contest To StartToday Seventeen To Participate In Elimination Test Seventeen members, representing all the Speech 31 sections, will par- ticipate in an elimination speech contest to be held at 4 p.m. tomor- row in Room 4203 Angell Hall. Contrary' to the elimination con- test conducted earlier this semes- ter, this meet will be extempor- aneous. Contestants will be given three minutes to arrange their speeches. They will have three topics to choose from. These topics are concerned with national or interna- tional affairs, local events; or an al- ternative of a "single word stimulus" subject. From this contest, six speakers will be chosen to participate in a finals meet which will be held on Wednesday. The faculty members of the speech department will judge this elimina- tion contest. They will also choose the chairman and judges for the finals. Education Meeting ScheduledSaturday Wartime educational problems and ever present questions of educational principles and, technique will be dis- cussed at the annual winter confer- ence sponsored jointly by the School of Education and the Bureau of Ap- ,pointments and Occupational Infor- mation in the Rackham Building Saturday. The educational meeting is com- bined with the annual guidance con- ference with all faculty members and administrative officials of the Uni- versity invited to attend. r 11 I' / f -k PASTEL SEPARATESf NEW BLOUSES' SKIRTS and SWEATERS from $3.00 each / that take you into sptirig! Pastel sheer wool jersey and crepe DRESSES from $8.95 Pastel print DRESSES with plain wool jackets to $29.95 I DRESSES to c hold it . . catc a' z 4 ; catch ; ch his s a man's eye and hZrt and hold it, too! So exciting- ly different, from dresses you al- ready own. Sizes from 9-17 and 10-20. 11 German 1, 2, 31, 32 Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32 Music 31 } Pol. Science 1, 2, 51, 52 Zoology 1 Botany 21 Psychology 31 Music 1 aFrench 1, 2, 11, 31, 32, 41, 71, 111, 112, 153 Speech 31, 32 English 1, 2 Thurs., Jan. 29, 8 -10 Sat., ' Jan. 31, 2 - 4 Tue'., Feb, 3, -10 Mon., Feb. 2, 2 - 4 Fri., Jan. 30, 10:30-12:30 Sat., V Jane 31, 10:30-12:30 IL 'r .~. l > Cy I Econ. 51, 52, 53, 101 I I 19: io~ PASTEL UNDER COAT Suits of beautiful twills, plaids and her- ringbones. Soft blues, maize, rose, greens and beige. Classic tailors and dressmaker types. from $16.95 Sizes 9-17 and 10-40. PANTIE STYLED BY HICKORY 14 inches of pleasant, "easy" two- way stretch control, -smoothly self-edged at top and bottom. It's "easy" to smooth your curves and keep active-stride control. "Easy" to wear for sports or dress, thanks to detachable garters. "Easy" on your purse, too. Small, medium and large sizes .. 32- i':. l r . r ,, , ..d 1. 'ii'i il.. 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