PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY UNIONS AND WAR: Mark Starr To Discuss Organized Labor in US Church News POLAR EXPLORATIONS: Danish Refugee from Nazi ContcCtrationi Camp To Speak Cspi - PeterFreuchen Dlanish -p- "Organized Labor in the United States" and its relation to the war effort, contemporary society and the post-wareconomy will be discussed in an address by Mark Starr, Educa- tional Director of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, at 4:10 /p.m. Wednesday, in Rm. 101, economics building. Starr, who is speaking under the Haitian Will Give Lecture Francis Duvalier, native of Port- au-Prince, Haiti, will speak on "La Culture Haitienne" at 4:10 p. m. Thursday in Rm. D, Alumni Memor- ial Hall. Author of "Les Cendances d'une Generation," Duvalier is collaborat- ing with Lorimer Denis in prepar- ing an original Haitian literature. He is the former co-editor of the Scientific and Literary Revue of Haiti, and is specializing in Public Hygiene here. The lecture series, sponsoredby Le Cercle Francais, is open to the pub- lie. auspices of the Department of Eco- nomics, is being brought to Michigan for a week as part of the program recently set up by the Workers Edu- cational Service of the University's Extension Service. 'Soul' of the Union Called the "soul" of the Union, the I.L.G.W.U. Educational Department, of which Starr is director, provides for the intellectual and emotional life of the workers. The "body" of the union secures better pay and physical needs for the workers. I.L.G.W.U. Holds Classes Classes in currents events and la- bor history are conducted at almost every I.L.G.W.U. center. Professors are called in to speak at union meet- ings from time to time, to explain such questions as the relationship between wages and prices and the reasons for business recessions. Pub- lic speaking classes, classes in Eng- lish and training in conducting meet- ings help develop more efficient un- ion leaders. "Labor in America," a basic text on American labor history, was re- cently published by Starr in collabor- ation with Prof. Harold Faulkner of Smith College. iliai r__ -___________ ______-- __- ,f_____________________ il 6 $ r4 -h HELENA RUBINSTEIN LUSH NEW MAKE-UP COLOR A deep, intense red, borrowed from yesterday, to make you lovelier here and now. Perfect with the plum and purple tones you'll wear this fall and winter... superb with black. Plush Red Lipstick, 1.00; 1,25, 1.50. Plush Red Rouge, 1.00Pueas iSheHQuarrsy On Slate at the Hlead of Noi!h University UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL PATIENT-Arvo, age 9, is one of the many infantile paralysis victims cared for by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. He has been a patient at the hospital since Aug. 15, 1944, and is shown here at work on one of the jig saws in the Galens workshop. -Photo by John Horeth Dime Daily Student Posts INSTRUCTIONS TO DIME DAILY SALESMEN Any questions or difficulties should be reported immediately to the Dime Daily Chairman, Jim Plate, 2-4431. Dailies can be picked up at 7:30 a.m. at The Daily office (420 Maynard.) Posts may not be left until a successor appears. Materials are to be turned over to him. The last salesman leaving the posts at 3:30 p.m. should bring his remaining papers and receipts to The Daily Office. Three dances and a "white ele- phant" bingo party will highlightI the Saturday programs planned by several church groups on campus. THE CANTERBURY CLUB of St. Andrew's Church is sponsoring a dance at 9 p. m. tomorrow in Page Hall. "Winter Frolic" is the title of the dance to be given by the WESTMINSTER GUILD at the Presbyterian Church student cen- ter tomorrow from 8 p. m. to mid- night. Games and refreshments will also be included. Members of the ROGER WIL- LIAMS GUILD of the Baptist Church will have members of the CONGREGATIONAL - DISCIPLES GUILD as their guests tomorrow at a square dance at 8:30 p. m. in the Baptist student center. Prof. Howard Leibee will call the dances for the group of Baptist and Con- gregational members present. Each person will bring a "white elephant" with him tomorrow at 8:30 p. m. to the LUTHERAN STU- DENT CENTER where members of Gamma Delta will hold a "white elephant" and Bingo party. In ad- dition there willbbe singing and re- freshments will be served. The 'Sunday meeting of the CAN- TERBURY CLUB will be at 5 p. m. at which time, -James M. Plumer, pro- fessor of Far Eastern Art, will show slides to supplement his address or "Art and Religion in Asia." Sup- per wil follow the program. Kathleen Kay is in charge of supper to be given Sunday at 5 p. m. in the NEWMAN CLUB rooms of St. Mary's Chapel, and Eleanor Mellert will present sev- eral magic tricks as part of the program. "When the Boys Come Home" will be the subject of a panel discussior to be lead by Dot Cannon, 47SN, ai 5 p. m. Sunday in the LUTHERAN STUDENT CEN'TER. The program will precede a supper. WESTMINSTER GUILD members will continue their discussion of liv- ing religions Sunday at 5 p. m. when Dr. Esson Gale, director of the In- ternational Center, will speak on the "Three Religions of China." Sunday study class at 10 a. m. at the Baptist Church will con- sider the idea of Right and Wrong in a panel to consist of Bill Um- bach, Clothylde Read, Doris Brid- ges, and others. The 5 p. m. meeting of the ROG- ER WILLIAMS GUILD will present Dr. Frank Littell, director of LanE Hall, who will address the group or "Interdenominational Cooperation. 1 Devotions will be lead by Phyllis Eg gleton, and Clothylde Read will b featured in a violin solo. f a 1' Ii r C aj E ar eploer ho ecetlyescpedimprisoned when the Nazis overran; ar explorer who receptly escaped Denmark because of his aid to Ger- from a Nazi concentration camp in man refugees escaping when Hitler his native land, will speak under the came to power. Freuchen was also sponsorship of the University Non- on the Nazi black list for his writ- resident Lecture Fund late in Feb- ings. His six-foot, six-inch figure was easily identifiable and he was ruary at Hill Auditorium, it was re- captured and put in a concentration vealed yesterday. camp. Escaping from the camp in a In a letter just received by Prof. packing case labeled "machinery," Emeritus William H. Hobbs, Freu- Capt. Freuchen came to the United chen wrote, "I escaped from Den- States only recently. Freuchen was mark in May and in November I was lucky enough to get a plane from Stockholm to England. My State Pasoridea was to go to Greenland .. . to i see the military establishments the Til M e t ,eAmericans organized. It certainly would be interesting to look at your old place on the fjord where . . 'i t1 )°atiesanII)I ( there are 200 barracks with space for 96 men each." Will' To Be Discussed The author of "Eskimo," "Arctic Adventure" and "It's All Adventure," "Minorities and Good-Will" will Freuchen is in this country at the be one of the forum topics at the request of the Danish government. Annual Conference of Pastors of He spoke in Ann Arbor in 1934 and Michigan, to be held here tomorrow 1936. through Wednesday. "No ecclesiastical business, as suc, Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, religious " counselor at the University, said.(G uesta ecttat "Here the pastors meet as indivi- duals to study those aspects of our Marian Freeman, Ann Arbor vio- American fe in which there is com- linist, will be guest performer at the mon interest and to discuss the im- second in a series of School of Music plications of the Christian religion, recitals with Prof. John Kollen, pian- al iliatio rleader regardless of ist. at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dr. Louis Wirth, Department of Mrs. Freeman, who is a graduate Sociology, University of Chicago, of the University, studied abroad and and former head of the region for the once was a student of Georges Enes- U. S. Resources Planning Board, co in Paris. will lecture on the "Dynamics of Prof. Kollen studied for more than Democracy" at the banquet Tues- seven years in France, Germany and day evening. Austria. He has appeared abroad ; Y , R} A i ...,.,, ..yi 'A :4 The posts, which are to be mannedW by various campus organizations fol- low: Center Diagonal: Kappa Alpha Theta. Engineering Arch: Kappa Kappa Gamma. Behind Library: Chi Omega. Front of Romance Language Build- ing: Collegiate Sorosis. Alumni Hall: Kappa Delta. Union Steps: Gamma Phi Beta. State Street Entrance to the Ar- cade: Alpha Xi Delta. North End of Angell Hall: Delta Gamma. Angell Hall Steps: Geddes House. Corner of North University and State Street: Day House. Corner of South University and East University: Alpha Phi. North Side of W.A.B.: Stockwell. South Side of Waterman Gym: Alpha Chi Omega. Law Quad: Sigma Delta Tau. University Hospital: Alpha Epsilon Phi. In Front of League: Washtenaw House. North Door of West Quad: Alpha Omicron Pi. East Quad: Alpha Gamma Delta. Corner State and E. Liberty: Zeta Tau Alpha. N.E. Corner of Main and William: Newberry. S.W. Corner of Main and William: N.E. Corner of Main and Liberty: Mosher. S.W. Corner of Main and Liberty: Martha Cook. N.E. Corner of Main and Washing- ton: Jordan. S.W. Corner of Main and Washing- ton: Barbour. Couzens Hall: Pi Beta Phi. Between Clements Library and President's Residence: Delta Delta Delta. Between University High School and Architectural School: Alpha Delta Pi. Fiolr Caish AXwards Four cash awards for dramatic writing are offered University stu- dents in the tenth annual competi- tion of the Dramatists' Alliance -of Stanford University. Awards totaling $275 will be given, for a full-length, serious play, a full- length comedy, a short play and a dramatic criticism. The final entry date is March 25, and students must address all com- munications requesting forms and information as soon as possible to Dramatists' Alliance, Box 200 Z, Stanford University, Calif. and in the United States in recital and as soloist with orchestras. The program will include sonatas for piano and violin by Mozart, Schumann and Brahms. Just Received- A Shipment of PADLOCKS U LRICH"S BjOOKS~TORE ?! 4 4 LtI! : el WONDEFUL 100%ols i ADVANCE _i Stockwell. * THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION * ANN &MtBOR, MICH. SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1945 COACH BENNIE Ooster- baan's basketball squad dropped a heartbreaker to the highly - touted Iowa Hawkeyes Friday night, losing to the league-lead- ers, 29-27, in one of the lowest scoring duels-ever played at Yost Field House. The Wolverines' controlled ball offense played havoc with the race-horse Hawk stye, and it was not until the last ten minutes that Iowa began to move. Be- hind 25-16 at the time, the Hawkeyes went on a scor- ing spree, netting 13 mark- ers while holding Michigan to a pair of free throws. Don Lund paced the lost Wolverine cause with 12 points, while Murray Weir and Clayton"- Wilkinson headed the winners with 11 each. LAST NIGHT the cagers travelled to Columbus to meet Ohio State for the second time this season and went down to defeat again, this time by a lop- sided Q1-47 score. The Buckeyes led all the way and had an easy time of it as Michigan obviously suf- fered a let-down after its all-out effort the night be- other match resulted in a tie, and the Illini swept the others, scoring two, falls. COACH VIC Heyliger's hockey team copped its first win of the season af- ter dropping two previous matches, beating Sarnia, 4-3, in a thrilling contest featured by hard, aggres- sive play, and some fancy goal-tending by Wolverine Dick Mixer. Ted Greer scored all of Michigan's goals, three of them unas- sisted. This output boosted his season total to seven, four more than any other player on the squad. * * WILLIAM KEISSEL, '48, a second semester freshman in the engineer- ing school was elected president and Russell Duff, Navy trainee in the engi- neering school, vice-presi- dent at the meeting of Phi Eta Sigma, freshman men's honor society, held last week in the Union. Other officers are Murray Grant, '48, L. S. and A., a member of The Daily cnnrt - afwown:qPpt_- S-IJIT NE WS fashion bows to suits . . . soft galardines, smooth wools that will carry you thru Spring! Be prepared, choose yours today! ,.: s ', < :. ;> , . . . t rJ , ? 1 W .. } y y.\: t Ci.'" .., Y", t ::t '" ' : .7 .{.. Y. Sweaters Slipovers and cardigans in all the newest shades. And, for that mid-winter pick-up, add one of our brilliant argyle sweaters to your collection. We have all the popular sies. $800 ;< I Skirts, Beautiful soft wool additions to your wardrobe. In all styles, tailored and pleated to perfec- tion. 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