Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 17, 1968 Page Six THE MICHiGAN DAILY 1 i THOMPSON'S PIZIA announces CHICKEN DINNERS -Free Delivery- HALFACHICKEN, FRENCH FRIES ROLL and HONEY-$1.75 761-0001 Daily C lassifieds Get ResulItsI DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN'T The Daily Official Bulletin is as official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan ialy assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be publisheda maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only, Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. SUNDAY, MARCH 17 Day Calendar School of Music Recital - Susan Nelson, Bassoon: School of Music Re- cital Hall, 2:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital -- Nancy Wilson, Piano: School of Music Recital Hall, 4:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Robert Thompson, Organ: Hill Aud- itorium, 4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild - Jacques Demy's Lola: Architecture Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. (Continued on Page 10) COMMUNIST HOLD DISSOLVING: East Europe Challenges the Old Order WASHINGtON (P)-Communist East Europe is entering a new and critical period of political unrest which probably will erode further the Kremlin's once strong hold on the bloc. This is the opinion of U.S. ex- perts who, with great interest and considerable delight, have been watching the wave of challenge to the old order sweeping through Czechoslovakia and Poland. Resembles '56 Ferment The scene in some ways resem- bles the 1956 ferment which erupt- ed in bloodily suppressed revolts in Hungary and Poland, but U.S. observers expect change to come more peacefully this time. From Czechoslovakia, reports tell almost daily of bitter infighting among Communist leaders as a more liberal minded faction fol- lows through on its victory last January in deposing hard-liner President Antonin Novotny as par- ty boss. Czech Maj. Gen. Jan Sejna, a Novotny associate, fled to the United States at the end of Feb- ruary. He was the highest ranking Communist ever to defect to the West. Last week's developments included the announced suicide of another pro-Novotny general, Deputy Defense Minister Vladimir Janko, and dismissal of the in- tenor minister and attorney gen- eral. U.S. specialists rate the Prague contest as primarily a power struggle in the party leadership rather than a surge by rank and file Czech citizens. And they be- lieve the new leadership at this stage is interested more in liber- alizing domestic reforms than in any foreign policy change. Washington observers are di- vided over what may happen in Poland. University youths are en- tering their third week of riotous rallies and classroom boycotts in cities across that land. One theory here is that student defiance of the Gomulka regime will result in a crackdown, with The Week To Come: A Campus Calendar SUNDAY, March 17 3 p.m.-Edward Page, founder and president of the Socio-Eco- nomic Institute, will speak in the third Challenge '68 lecture series in Aud. E, P&A. Reactor panel will include Professors Robert Angell, Steven Tonsor and Ann Arbor businessman Sam Harmon. WEDNESDAY, March 20 8 p.m. - Prof. Horace Crane, chairman of the physics depart-' ment, will deliver the Henry Rus- sel Lecture on "The Changing World of Physics and Some Ad- vantages Therein" in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. 8:30 p.m.-The University Sym- phony Band will present a pro- gram in Hill Aud. THURSDAY, March 21 7:30 p.m.-Prof. John Platt, di- rector of the Mental Health Re- search Institute, and Prof. Law- rence Slobodkin of the zoology de- partment will give an Honors Council "Dialogue on Utopia" in the Rackham Aud. 8 p.m.-The Music School opera will be Smetana's "The Bartered ----------- 0A / ---,. --- > > DELI * HOUSE Bride" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. SATURDAY, March 23 8 p.m.-The Music School opera will be Smetana's "The Bartered Bride" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-The University Men's Glee Club will give a performance in Hill Aud. FRIDAY, March 22 8 p.m.-The Music School opera will be Smetana's "The Bartered Bride" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-The San Jietro Or- chestra of Naples under Renato Ruotolo will play in the Rackham Aud. SUNDAY, March 24 4:30 p.m.--William Rusher, pub- lisher of National Review, will give the Honors Council "The Disillu- sioned Society and Visions of Utopia" in Aud. A. 8 p.m.--The Music School opera will be Smetana's "The Bartered Bride" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Resumes- SUNDAY at 5:30 P.M. The Newman Social Action Committee Presents: A BBC Documentary on the War in Vietnam hard-line Communists tightening their governmental control. This forecast stems from evidence that Polish workers, who joined rebel- lious students in the 1956 uprising, are not aligning themselves with the youths this time. Allow Liberalization But others here speculate that the Warsaw leadership will allow some liberalization to accommodate the students, whose demands are relatively limited. Whether the current unrest in Poland and Czechoslovakia will spread to Communist Hungary and East Germany depends on whether the Warsaw and Prague governments can solve their prob- lems speedily, it is believed here. Romania already has adopted a foreign policy course independent of Moscow, while mantaining tight authoritarian controls at home. Most observers here do not expect serious internal dissent by Ro- manian liberals. Bulgaria and Albania Bulgaria and pro-Peking Al- bania, two other members of the formerly monolithic Red bloc, are regarded as less politically ad- vanced . than their Communist neighbors and unlikely to feel the contagion of liberalization soon. The Kremlin has so far kept out of the Soviet press news about the spectacular political happenings in Czechoslovakia and Poland. And U.S. experts have come across no evidenceasyet of a Kremlin desire to' intervene with troops and tanks, as it did in 1956. They think Moscow's leaders would prefer to get along with the ultimate winners in the political struggles. 4 $1.00 members 1429 HILL STREET $1.50 others ALL WELCOME I II Sunday, March 17 at 7:30 P.M. NEWMAN-331 Thompson Something from your jeweler is always something special, and this is nevertruer than when you select from our fine collection of precious gems and jewelry accessories. Further, you have the assurance of selecting from a jeweler who has cared enough to qualify for membership in the American Gem Society-a select organization of only some 1000 firms in the U.S. and Canada. Let us give you the proper information and guidance when you are purchasing that important gift for that important person. Petitioning for SGC Membership Board Extended through March 20 (3 .Student Members) PUEBLO INDIAN CROCKERY and Pottery Dishes - pitchers, figures, bowls, even a bird. On a terra cotta clay base, simple designs are painted and etched on the surface. A new shipment of sheepskins has arrived-they're cuddly under your toes. In four colors:sliqueur glasses from Korea. Four of these slim glasses can hold your liqueur for $1.80. I U .4 literary school steering committee announces Petitions Available MRS. SAMUELSON petitioning for membership Pick up forms in 1220 Angell Hall MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY Must be in by March 20th BAYS Arcade Jewelry Shop 16 NICKELS ARCADE Especially Interested in Both Affiliated and Non-Affiliated Men and Women 402 MAYNARD--662-4540 Open from 9:45 till 5:30 Monday through Friday (usually) 4 k: Enjoy Yourself - Join The Michigan Daily Today! or THE MICHIGA N ME 'S GLEE LUD SPRING iS CONCERT Saturday, March 23 Hill Aud. 8:30 P.M. 4' From The Manila Times, Friday, June 9, 1967 "Within the Philamlife Hall last night, all was cozy cheer as the some seventy-strong University of Michigan Glee Club poured song after song from a wide repertory mainly dis- tinguished by its bright American character. "Of the college glee clubs that have come here-Harvard, Yale, Cornell-the boys from Ann Arbor, Michigan, appear most representatively American in their program and style. "The men from Michigan sing a style reflectively American -bright, positive, humorous, utilizing only a soupcon of cnrtmtnt--nnA nhnov nal lnnnna preciselv in the nursuit "This was most admired in the numbers sung a copella (al- most half the program), where the unaccompanied voices traced assigned parts with transparent clarity and diction. "Their tone is virile but youthful, meltingly melted in a tight but malleable discipline. And the boys were obviously picked as much for their own American looks as for vocal talent. "The American assertive brand of optimism was a feature common to most numbers. Democratic ideals got its share of the spotlight in the musical setting of portions of Carl Sand- burg's The People, Yes. "When the stage boomed with the varsity songs, one re- called football weekends in the Fall, with leaves crackling underfoot and the cold, crisp wind fluttering pennants, scarves, and raincoats. And when the choir struck up the Alma Mater, true-blue sons of Michigan in the audience stood up. "Their director, Philip A. Duey, is obviously an exacting director to get such results. And the one distinctive thing about him I'll always remember is his podium manner-so unobstrusive and so unrestrained. He looked as if he just stood there, in all his rangy six-foot frame, and drew music from the boys through sheer force of will, without moving his arms! 11 "American humor. irresoressible and boasting an original