six rilE ,MIdil-AN jjyTUJRADA lY, IEEEmBZR 2, 19.45 I. HIGHLIGHTS ON CAMPUSI EXTENSION SERVICE: 'UProgram Educates 50,000 Workers II I" Hobby Night Program ... Combining with the Hobby Night Program sponsored by the S.R.A. at 7:30 p.m. today in Lane Hall, the Ann Arbor Youth Hostel will present a program of American Folk Dancing, led and directed by Scott Colburn. After the dancing, refreshments will be served., The Youth Hostel meeting, sched- uled for Thursday, Dec. 27, has been cancelled, Janina Neidbala, chairman of the Folk Dancing Committee, an- nounced yesterday. * * Phone 6019 410 Wolverine Building i1 YOU ARE NOT LATE AT ALL, YOU LATE SHOPPERS... Stop and Choose, a GIFT from Our Complete Selection. Fritzie s "Gifts of Character" Shop OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS) MICHIGAN THEATRE BUILDING 607 EAST LIBERTY PHONE 6938 Cancel Forestry Party .*. The Christmas party which the forestry school had planned for today in the Rackham Assem- bly Hall has been called off be- cause of the extension of the Christmas holiday period. According to Dean and Mrs. Samuel T. Dana, it is hoped that a forestry party can be held later in the semester. Party at Lane Hall . The council of Lane Hall will hold a Christmas party for all SRA coun- cil members at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Lane Hall, despite the change in Uni- versity plans. There will be games, singing, a special Lane Hall quartet, and Santa Claus. All members unable to go home are invited, ** * Flying Club Plane* ... Plans to order a plane this week were made by the Flying Club atI their meeting last night.I This plane will be kept at the Ann Arbor airport, -where club members will take flying lessons. Warren H. Curry, president of the recently organized flying club, read the Club By-Laws, and Joann Bochnek was chosen flight super- visor at the meeting. IRA Office Filled .,. Maxine Spencer was elected secre- tary-treasurer of the Inter Racial As- sociation at a meeting yesterday. Plans weie made for A. K. Stevens to give a lecture and show the film "We Are All Brothers" Jan. 16. A motion was made for immediate ac- tion and a stand to be taken on the movement for student government. Helen Alpert Elected.. .. Helen Alpert was elected treas- urer of the SOIC Executive Council yesterday, succeeding Bobbie Si- monton who is leaving for Andover Newton Seminary, Newton Centre, Mass. Big Four Misters Confer Fourth 'Tme MOSCOW, Dec. 19-R')-The for- eign ministers of the United States, Russia and Great Britain, conferring on the multiple problems facing the world, met for the fourth time today in a session lasting one hour and 15 minutes. A fifth session will be held tomor- row, but indications were it would be short, too, for V. M. Molotov, Soviet Foreign Minister, sent out in- vitations today' for a formal diplo- matic reception Robert Shutz Returns Robert J. Schutz, AMM 1 c, USNR, son of Mrs. Ann -Kamosis, of 360 Ev- ergreen Pl, Ann Arbor, returned home last week on the USS Freemont, and will receive his discharge. The USS Freemont, one of the more than 250 carriers, battleships and attack transports in the Navy's famed "Magic Carpet" fleet, brought 1,650 high-point Navy veterans home last week. By FRANCES PAINE At a moderate estimate, more than 50,000 Michigan laborers have been reached by the experimental.program in adult education for worker groups, which is sponsored by the University Extension Service, Mr. A. K. Stevens, assistant co-ordinator of the pro- gram, said in a recent interview. Begun in 1944 under the stimulus of President Alexander G. Ruthven, who had observed the success of the Workers' Educational Association in England, the program, first in Amer- ica designed to reach the rank and file, had an approximate enrollment of 30,000 by the end of April, 1945. Its aim is, according to Mr. Stevens, to "equip the worker to take a responsi- ble part, along with his fellow work- ers, in the functioning of society, and give him an understanding of the problems facing society as a whole." Mr. Stevens explained the method by which the services of the program are presented to the union workers. First "spot lec- tures" are given at the central or- ganization of the AFL or CIO u- ions in each community. Talks and discussions, or educational movies, are given at each meeting. Then the delegates attending the central council meetings request the same kind of service for their indi- vidual unions, and talks and discus- sions on the same topics are given at the union meetings. Both at the cens- tral councils and at the union meet- ings, Mr. Stevens stressed, the topics presented are those which the men themselves ask to be informed about. "The topics requested usually have this sequence," Mr. Stevens said, "First they ask about the functioning of the labor laws now on the books, as for example, workman's compen- sation and social security. Then they request explanations of bills at the time before Congress or the state leg- Medal Asked For Alumnus Sgt. Kainis Rescues Drowning Jap Boy Sgt. Leonard A. Kamins, a gradu- ate of the University, was recom- mended for the Soldiers' Medal for rescuing a three-year old Japanese boy from drowning, it was announced by Fifth Air Force Headquarters at Irumagawa, Japan. The recommendation states that while Sgt. Kamins was driving through Kawagoe, near Tokyo, he noticed two -.Tapane children, obvi- ously very excited, playing on the edge of a canal. Investigation re- vealed a third child floating face downward in the muddy water. Div- ing into the canal, Sgt. Kamins brought the boy to the bank and after reviving him by artificial res- piration returned the child to his parents. Sgt. Kamins, who lives in Long Beach, L. I., will return to the states soon, after serving three-and-a-half years in the Army, eight months of them in Leyte, Luzon, Okinawa, and Japan. For Peace and Prosperity- Victory Bonds-To Have and To Hold TYPEWRITERS- Bought, Roted nepaired islature, such as, at present, the Full Employment bill or the Wagner- Murray-Dingell bill for the extension of social security. "Finally they. inquire about so- cial, political and economic prob- lems in general." One group want- ed to know about labor's obliga- tions to society, which Mr. Stev- ens considered a significant indica- tion. "The University assumes that la- bor organizations will continue to be a fundamental part of society. As such, they constitute a continuous challenge to the adult education fa- cilities of the state. "The University does not in any way extend unionism, Mr. Stevens said, since it is already present when the work is begun. The field of sub- ject matter covered by the work does not include the primary negotiation of contracts with management and the program is therefore unaffected by labor-management controversies." The program also includes classes on any specific topic or problem re- quested. Classes are given in public speaking, parliamentary law, col- lective bargaining, time study, stewardship training, history of the labor movement, labor legislation, labor journalism, union. adminis- tration, and even photography. The classes are given for a period of six weeks, one evening each week. "We are especially proud," Mr. Stevens pointed out, "of the work be- ing done in giving the union stewards better acquaintance with the terms of the union contract and training in the methods of presenting griev- ances to the foremen. This can pre- vent much of the preliminary ten- dency toward work stoppages." Seaiwon , ree ] Learn to fly during your Christmnas holiday. Certified, experienced instructors . Well-kept planes . . . Reasonable rates. IdleyFyng Service Dealer for Aeronca - Bellanca - Commonwealth. Municipal Airport - 4320 South State, Road Ann Arbor Phone 25-8825 ANNOUNCEMENT Our new location will he 707 PACKARD STREET after Jan. 1, 1946. THE PAINT POT 320 E. Liberty Phone 3533 We've Won the War-But the Cost Goes On-Buy ftt Sea on A qeei niR ) COLLI*- £4f at Ma'ynuardl Greetings Thte Man's Magazine Get the big January issue at your favorite newsstand now STORY EXCLUSIVELY IN "If I'm missing, don't believe it. "Pappy's" famous Black Sheep I'll turn up to buy the drinks in SquadronofMarineflyersjustabout San Diego." But "Pappy" van- decided that even" Pappy" couldn't ished on his last flight, the day make it. But he did, and here's his after he had become America's top story-his first magazine piece- ace. Twenty months of silence written for True and you. It's dragged by, and the boys in unique reading- I'll Buy the Drinks, Boys by Lti. C. Gr.pory ("Pppy") syinrfag, USMC w I I' NAS HORSE LAUGHS 11. Allen Smith is a funny man. He gets paid for it. He writes best-selling humorous books. This is his first magazine article in more than a year. Mr. Smith tells why he has given up playing the geegees-well, almost given up. There's a Chinaman in his story. You'll like and laugh at No Horse Can Do That to Me by H. AIle, Smith MYSTERY SHIP IN NEWYORK HARBOR! A floating palace of gin and sin, the big New York newspaper said, and proceeded to give a reporter's eye-witness low- down on the high sinks aboard. Eye-witness, your eye! It was a hoax. It's one of the notable newspaper hoaxe bundled together to amuse you in News Out of Their Hats ar.v U - am IS THIS PEACE JUST A PAUSE? Will Oursler. TRUE's Pa- cific correspondent, says the Japs know they lost. Lost what? They don't think they lost the war! In this amazing Report to the Editor, Will Oursler tells the hard, cold truth that this country had bet- I 1 A beautiful reproduction of Dean Cornwetl's remarkable original oil paintinig of Ernie Pyle "Peace - Christmas, 1945" painted for only in fw And of course Another original Petty Girl only in rr..