jT Ito &m 1 Z '4.*4E? Taft To Speak. Here Today On Willow Run : Allied Ship Blows Up Knox To Speak U-BOATS ADD THRILLS: Here Monday Chilean Engin '1 * 'n ers Make Safe Congress Seeks AbsentLee Curb (Continued from Page 1) These afternoon forums will be opened by Prof. Kenneth McMurry, chairman of the geography depart- ment of the University and consultant of the Michigan State Planning Com- mission. Arriving here early today, Mr. Taft, who is the son of the former Presi- dent of the United States, will confer with local, state, and national lead- ers on community problems in addi- tion to touring the- Willow Run bomber plant and the surrounding residential area. Governor Kelly is also expected to attend along with 12 federal officers and 11 state officials who are con- lems. cerned with health and housing prob- These state officials include Dr. H. Allen Moyer, commissioner of State Health Department, R. H. Thie- hoff, acting director of State Health Department. George Ross, director, State Planning Commission, John O'Connel, State Welfare Department, and Frank' Welsh, Detroit, Govern- ment Housing Commission. The list continues with George Hepler, State Department of Health, G. Robert Koopman, assistant direc- tor of Department of Public Instruc- tion, Henry Ponitz, Department of Public Instructioh, Walter Berry, State Defense Council, and Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services,E Clarence Ramsay, State Welfare De- partment, and N. B. Gibbs, State Department of Labor and Industry. Ilacors Attend Council Dr. Ollie L. Backus, acting mana- ger of the Speech Clinic, and Dr. Dell Henry, staff physician, returned from Indianapolis last night where they were attending an International Council for Exceptional Children. Dr. Backus and Dr, Henry were mem- bers of a panel discussion on "Speech in Wartime." INITIATION ANNOUNCED Phi ,Gamma Delta announces the recent initiation of the following peo- ple: Robert Allen, '45E, Herb Beyer, '45E, Clark Barton, '46, Dan .Gardi- ner, '45E, Tom Gattle, '46, Charles Rolland, '46, Bill Hollinbeck, '46, Bob Kerr, '44, Gurney Gutekunst, '46, Dean Firth, '46E, Bob Grandy, '46E, Jim MacDonald, '46E. SSmoke and sparks shoot skyward from this ammunition ship which blew up after she was blasted by a bomb from a Nazi plane attacking a convoy of Allied ships carrying lend-lease supplies to Russia. The attack occurred several hundred miles off the northern European coast. i Thrty Sailors Leave Graud, Join DeC aulle HALIFAX, Feb. 26.-UP)--Eager to enlist under the banner of the Fight- ing French, about 30 sailors from the giant battleship Richelieu and other French war vessels nowdin United States ports have arrived here en- route to Britain to join the forces of Qen. Charles DeGaulle. The sailors who included a lieu- tenant and three junior officers, left their vessels after they arrived in American waters following a stormy, submarine-threatened passage from Dakar in French West Africa. They chose to throw in their lot with the DeGaullists rather than re- main with the other French faction now headed by Gen. Henri Giraud. They did this even though the French war vessels are to be refitted to join the United Nations in the sea war- fare. About 34 merchant seamen also have arrived here from New York qnd other harbors of the U.S. They too, were headed for Britain to join the merchant fleet of the Fighting French. The seamen gave the impression that they disapproved of some of their former officers. The lieutenant in charge simply shrugged. "It's best not to say much about it," he said: "The thing is done now, and it will do no good to make trouble. There is trouble enough al- ready between the two French groups, and after all. we are in the same fight now." Name Regent (Continued from Page 1) would fight "right down the line" to block pending legislation designed to abolish the elective job he holds and supplant it with a "Republican-filled administrative authority." The Democratic ticket nominated today: For Highway Commissioner, Reid. For Superintendent of Public In- struction, Edward W. 'McFarland, of Detroit, Wayne University ProfessorI and former chairman of the State Liquor Control Commission. For two seats on the State Board of Agriculture, Joseph Carey, Mt. Pleasant Educator, and James J. Jak- way, Benton Harbor incumbent. For State Board of Education, Bernard T. Foley, also of Benton Harbor, a school teacher. Justice Bert D. Chandler was re- nominated and Probate Judge Frank L. McAvenchey, of Flint, nominated for the two supreme court seats at stake. To stocky, personable Earnest C. Brooks, former State Senator from Holland, the Democrats assigned the task of guiding them on the come- back trail from November's disastrous election reverses, electing him Chair- man of the State Central Committee to succeed Charles S. Porritt, who did not seek another term. They elected Mrs. Minnie Schwinger, of Saginaw, Vice-President, succeeding Mrs. Elizabeth L. Belen, of Lansing. who was not a candidate. Shakespeare Will Be Top~ic for Dis~cusion1 Professor R. S. Knox of the Uni- versity of Toronto English depart- ment will discuss "Recent Shakes- pearian Criticism" at 3:15 p.m. Mon- day in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Known as a distinguished Shake- spearian scholar; Prof. Knox will talk on the problems and methods of the criticism of the last two or three generations. The lecture is sponsored by the English department under their plan of exchange lectures with four other universities-Toronto, Cornell. and Western Reserve. This plan, which was established in 1938, helps to acquaint members of the English faculties of the sev- eral schools with one another. Every year each department sends a member of its staff to lecture at one other institution. This year the University of Michigan is sending Professor H. T. Price to lecture at Cornell on March 8. Among those who have appeared here in former years are Prof. J. Holly Hanford of Western Reserve, previously a member of the Univer- sity of Michigan faculty, and Prof. Herbert Davis, formerly professor of English at Cornell and now Presi- dent of Smith College. Prof. Knox will also speak Mon- day evening to graduate students and the staff of the English depart- ment on the contemporary Scotch poet, Hugh MacDiarmid- Scholarships Are Available For Students Application blanks for scholar- arships offered and includes the re- available in Room 1208, Angell Hall, Dean Lloyd S. Woodburne, head of the scholarship committee, said yes- terday. These blanks, which will be con- sidered for the next summer term as well as the fall and spring terms of 1943-44, must be returned by April 1. Many private individuals have do- nated scholarship funds to the Uni- versity, stipulating that they be em- ployed with regard to various racial and regional factors, he said. How- ever, the Faculty Scholarship Fund, supported entirely by contributions of faculty members, is awarded solely an the bases of mental aptitude and academic merit. Dean Woodburne advised prospec- tive candidates to consult a special booklet, obtainable .in Room 4, Uni- versity Hall, before filing their appli- cations. This booklet lists the schol- arships offered and include the re- strictions applicable to each one- Avukah Gives Musicale Avukah, student Zionist organiza- tion, will sponsor a musicale starting at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Hillel Foundation. The Hillel-Avukah Study Group, under the direction of Max Dresden, will hold their second meeting of the semester at 8:30 p.m. Monday at the Foundation. T-rip 1Thnrougn Dangerous Jeas By PAUL HARSHA Thirteen special engineering stu- dents from Chile left home on a sunny midsummer's day, and arrived in the United States last week, 43 days later, in the middle of a cold North American winter. They set sail while Chile still was continuing diplomatic relations with the Axis, and they arrived a month delayed in New Orleans after a zig- zag dash across the ocean, with their country strictly neutral. Dodging and ducking lurking sub- marines, they came to a land where winter falls in the summer months, and the centigrade thermometer is unheard of except as a laboratory instrument. The group of thirteen smiling, ur- State Will Get. Army Air Force Cadets *in March Officers, Enlisted Men To Take Over Spacious' Jenison Field House EAST LANSING, Feb. 26.- UP)- Michigan State's newest wartime ad- ministrative staff has found its cam- pus niche and is making ready for the influx of hundreds of aviation cadets for "pre pre-flight training." Approximately 50 officers and en- listed men, mainly from Gulf coast training units in Texas, have estab- lished headquarters in spacious Jeni- son Field House where they will di- rect activities of the aviation pro- gram soon to get under way. Maj. Raymond S. Risien, who will be commanding officer of the detach- ment here, said first arrival of air rookies was expected around March 27. He said fewer than 1,500 youths were anticipated "at the start." Col- lege officials previously had estimat- ed between 2,000 and 4,000 cadets would be assigned here. Maj. Risien explained that cadets sent here substantially will be youths recently called to active duty from Army Air Force Reserve Corps whose training at Michigan State will prime them for future training at regular pre-flight centers. "Reserves who have studied the basic subjects to be offered in this program will be by-passed directly to pre-flight centers," he said, "so our personnel probably will be boys just out of high school or college men in need of refresher courses. Actually, we will conduct a pre, pre-flight school." bane graduate civil engineers from I the University of Chile, came to the University of Michigan to study un- der a grant from the Kellogg Founda- tion and are now living in the West Quad. Guillermo Tores, whose first name means William in English, tells of their ship, a day's voyage out of Panama, receiving word that Chile had elected to tread a separate path from the Axis. Swinging about in the choppy Caribbean they steamed back to Panama, to wait two weeks for a convoy escort to Cuba. From Cuba they dodged their way without convoy to New Orleans, has- tened by radio reports of two ships sunk. by submarines in the same waters. From Panama on their ship played a constant game of hide and seek with underseas craft. "Every time our boat turned, we seemed to see an- other sub in its wake," members of the group say, smiling with their feet on solid ground once more. Navy Officers Tour Campus An inspection of the facilities of the University was completed yes- terday by Lieut. D. W. Beste and Lieut. B. W. Steanczak of the Ninth Naval District Training Office, Great Lakes, Ill., in connection with the Navy Specialized Training Program scheduled to go into effect July 7. "The purpose of the trip here was merely for inspection, not to nego- tiate any contracts or to make any commitments," Prof. Marvin L. Nie- huss, coordinator of emergency training, stated. The officers arrived here Wednes- day morning and left yesterday aft- ernoon. Aircraft Inspectors Graduate from 'U' Graduation ceremonies were held' yesterday for fifty more University- trained aircraft inspectors at the West Engineering Building. Now trained for their jobs after a ten week course in the fundamentals of aircraft inspection on a program approved by the Army, the graduates will hold junior procurement inspec- torships at various plane manufac- turing plants throughout the nation. Representatives of the Army, the civil service, and the University at- tended the ceremony at which dual diplomas were handed to each grad- uate, one from the Army Air Force and the other from the University. Action Follows Work Stoppage at Boeing (Continued from Page 1) increase in the new contract to be negotiated with coal operators next month. Pittsburgh Mine Idle One soft coal mine in the Pitts- burgh area meanwhile was idle for a third straight day as miners contin- ued a walkout protesting the draft deferment of unmarried Walter E. Chaffon, 27. Thomas G. Ferguson, mine superintendent, said that Chaf- fon operates a $10,000 mechanical coal loader and that no one is avail- able to replace him, but Peter DsFil- lippo, union secretary, contended that other men "could easily. take his place." The mine normally pro- duces 4,700 tons of coal a day. The union protest meeting which led to a temporary production stop- page yesterday at the Boeing Aircraft Co. in Seattle was met by Dean Wayne L. Morse of the War Labor Board with the statement that the board would continue its considera- tion of the union's request for a start- ing scale of 95 cents an hour instead of the present 62% cents but that it refused to be coerced into a decision. Wallgren Condemns WLB Senator Wallgren (Dem.-Wash.) commented to interviewers at Beth- page, N.Y., that the WLB had been "sitting on its hands in the last few months" and that the public "should not be too willing and ready to con- demn those labor boys." "The WLB should have made'some decision long ago," he declared. "If they can't make such a decision, they should fold up and go home." The district council union presi- dent, Harold J. Gibson, said at Seat- tle that "there will be no work stop- page and no strike" Monday when the deadline expires on the union de- mand that the WLB decide the wage case. He warned workers .ot to leave the job and said the scheduled 24-hour protest meeting could be at- tended during off hours. Thomas Distorts Steel Formula As the WLB considered the aircraft wage case, R. J. Thomas, president of the CIO United Auto Workers and a, labor member -of the WLB, declared that Vice-Chairman.George W. Tay. for is "fostering a distorted version of the little steel formula." Thomas maintained that cost .of living increases are permissible under the formula whereas he said Dr. Tate for has been interpreting it as a wag* freeze after workers receive a 15 Pei' cent increase over their rates of Jan, uary, 1941. GU I OMAR PNQVAIES BRAZILIAN PIANIST CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING COME TO I CLASSIFIED RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) $1.00 per 15-word insertion for 3 or more days. (Increase of $.25 for each additional 5 words. Contract Rates on Request MISCELLANEOUS PARTY PHOTOGRAPHS and IN- FORMAL PORTRAITS by appoint- ment only. Phone 2-4726. WASHED SAND AND GRAVl- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112. MICHIGAN Ending Today! FRI., MAR. 5, 8:30 (Instead of Detroit Orchestra- Please use Ticket No. 9) EDDY LAUNDERING. LAUNDRY -2-1044" Sox darned. Careful work at low price. TYPING MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935. LOST and FOUND SHELL-RIM GLASSES with straight bows. Lost on campus about Feb.3 15. Call Kaywood, 2-3225. TYPEWRITERS of all makes. Of- fice and portable models. Bought, rented, repaired. Student and Of- fice Supplies. O. D. Morrill, 314 South State St. Phone 6615. FOR RENT FOR RENT-Large suite for 2 or 3 boys. One block from campus. 520 Thompson. Phone 7758. HELP WANTED WANTED-Boy who can drive, to work for room and board. 343 Fifth Ave. Phone 6018. HELP WANTED-Two girls for ho- siery department, afternoons. One girl for part-time bookkeeping. Kessel's Fashion Shop, 217 S. Main, 2-1308. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St., wednesday evening service at 8:00 Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: 'Christ Jesus' 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 5 p.m., Saturdays until 9 p.m. EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Rev. Alfred Scheips, Pastor for Students Sunday at 11:00: Divine Service in the Michigan League Chapel. Sermon by the pastor,. "Stewardship, of God's Mysteries." Sunday at 6:00: Supper Meeting of Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, at St. Paul's Lutheran Church, W. Liberty at Third. Discussion at 7, "Growing in Christianity, followed by fellowship period. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State St. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION sponsored jointly by the Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH E. Washington and S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 a.m. Church Worship Service. "Four Fields and Their Fruits" by Rev. Elmer Christiansen. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH E. William St. and S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 a.m. Church Worship Service. "Can We Inow God?" by Rev. H. O. Yoder. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington St. 5:30 p.m. Social and fellowship hour 6:00 p.m. Supper with program following. Prof. Howard Y. McCiusky, speaker. ST ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Church-306 N. Division St. Harris Hall-State and Huron Sts. The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector The Rev. John G. Dahl, Curate The Rev. Robert M. Muir, Curate George Faxon, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 11:00 a.m. Junior Church 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by Dr. Lewis 5:00 p.m. Choral Evensong and Commentary by Mlr. Muir. FOR UNIVERSITY STUDENTS (at Harris Hall) 7:30 p.m. Canterbury Club for Episcopal Students, Har- ris Hall. Speaker: The Rev. H. L. Pickerill. TOp1C: "The Church and Post-War Problems." Tea, Tuesday and Friday, 4:00 p.m. Harris Half Evening Prayer, Tuesday, 5:15 p.m. Harris Hall Chapel Holy Communion, Wednesday and Thursday, 7:30 a.m., .Harris Hall Chapel Intercessions, Friday, 12:10 noon, Harris Hall Chapel FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. William P. Lemon, DD., Willard V. Lampe, Miilsters. Mark W. Bils, Director of Music Franklin Mitchell, Organist 9:30 a.m. Church School meets in all departments. 11 fl WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! Day or Night. Week Days 25c to 5 p.m. Continuous from 1 P.M. dNNAAB P TNEATiPf I Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and Ralph G. Dunlop Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director: Mary McCall Stubbins, organist 9:30 a.m. Class for University Students. Wesley Foun- dation Lounge. Dr. George E. Carrothers, Leader. 10:40 a.m. Church School for Nursery, Beginners, and Primary Departments where young children may be left during worship service. 10:40 a.m. Worship Service. Dr. Brashares subject is "Where Experts Fail." 6:00 p.m. Wesleyan Guild Meeting for University Stu- dents. 7:00 p.m. Newly-Weds Discussion Group meet in Par- lors. Alfred Muelhig-ovies of Florida. 7:00 p.m. Study Group--Panama and Puerto Rtico. 8:00 p.m. "Dedicated Liyes" presented by ei. Florence Schleicher Teed and the Rev. Ralph G. Dunlop. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 E. Huron St. Rev. C. H. Loucks, minister I Last Times Today "H ITLER'S CHILDREN" Coming Sunday I I RED SKEI :_ AIIT L~ON EE..E.. Anna Lee - Lillian Gish Sir Cedric Hardwicke Robert Coote .1 I III I