THE MICHIGAN DAILY New Role for Helen Constitution Issue Left To Electors (Continued from Page 1) FORMER 'U'-FUB TIE: Value of Terminated Exchange Cited, -Daly--Uary Mcivain "HELENA'S HUSBAND"-Phillip Moeller's historical farce will be the first of the experimental playbill series presented by the speech department at 4 p.m. today in the Trueblood auditorium. Pictured are Dianne Stolorov as Helena and Gordon Lapides as Paris in ~a scene from the story of the abduction of Helen of Paris, arranged by Menelaus to get rid. of his chattering wife. Albert Katz will direct the free performance. ANNUAL DINNER: East Quad Holds Banquet For S hon Facult YMP I 77 By RICHARD CONDON More than 290 students and 66 guests, including members of the Boston Symphony and University faculty, filed into the East Quad- rangle dining rooms for the annual Boston Symphony banquet- University President Harlan Hatcher along' with several of the University deans were present at the banquet. After dinner the Hatchers were shown the East Quad studio of WCBN where one of the orchestra members was in- terviewed for a campus broadcast. Other orchestra members chat- ted informally with the students in the lounges. Organizatton f Notices (Use of this column for an- nouncements o, available to offi- cially recognized and registered or- ganizations only. Organizations planning to be active for the cur- rent semester should register. Forms available, 2011 Student Acti- vities Building.) Ballet Club, Ballet & Jazz Lessons Given, Oct. 22, 7:15-9:30 p.m., Barbour Gym. Chess Club, Regular Meeting, Oct. 22, 7:30 p m., Union, 3rd Floor. Congregational & Disciples Guild, Fre,,hman Discussion, Oct. 22, 7:00-8:00 p.m., 524 Thompson St. y * * * ~Eastern Orthodox student Soc., nl- lustrated tecture, Oct. 22, 8:00 p.m., Lane Hall. Speaker: Rev. A. Missiras, pastor of St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church; "The Sacraments of the East- ern Orthodox Church." Refreshments following' lecture. Graduate Student Coffee\ Hour, Oct. 22, 4:00-5:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg., 2nd Floor-W. Lounge. All graduate stu- dents invited. Graduate Student Council, General Meeting-election of additional mem- bers of the Executive Board will be held, Oct. 23, 7:30 p.m., Rackham Bldg., W. Conf. Rin. * * * I.S.A., Oct. 22, 7:45 p.m., Mich. League, Hussey Rin. Debat "America Would Endanger World Peace by Pursuing a Policy of Defending Quemoy and Mat- su.* La Sociedad Hi1spanics, Tertulia, Oct. 22, 3:00-5:00 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Coffee & conversation. Everyone wel- come. La Sociedad Hispanica, Meeting, Oct. 22, 8:00 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Refresh- ments & dancing afterwards; Newman Club. Panel Discussion, Oct. 22, 8:00 p.m., Newman Club. "Academic Freedom and Revealed Religion," mod- erated by Prof. S Tonsor, History Dept. Young Democrats, Oct. 22, 8:00 p.m., Union, Rm. 3G. Speakers: Mich. Sec. of State James H. Hare and U.S. ,Con- gressional Candidate Robert Hall, "Failures. of the National & State Re- publican Parties.'? Harold Meek, a French horn player voiced some objections to stereophonic high fidelity. He said that he dislikes the, ultra high pitch of violins and other domi- nating instruments as they are presented on a stereophonic re- cording. Likes 'Distant' Recordings His preference is for distant recordings which "remind him less of his work." Meek explained that the orches- tra has engagements the year around except for ashort period in the summer when he takes a vacation from the world of music on his farm in Ohio. The orchestra entails constant traveling but he says that he enjoys this. The orchestra's most embar- rassing moment came in Vienna two years ago; he said. The train carrying the orchestra's instru- ments broke down en route to the famous city. The audience waited patiently for two hours for the instruments to arrive and the con- cert to begin. Plays in Quartets Meek plays in several concerts with quartets each month as he travels with the orchestra. He has recorded a special record of the development and the various sounds of the .French horn. He has collected 110 historic instruments, each of which is a forerunner of the present French horn. x ENDING TONIGHT "ONE OF THE FINEST DRAMATIC FILMS- deliberate schedule. The 102 mem- bers of the convention will be elected next April and will con- vene in Lansing next September. Vote on Proposals Proposals resulting from their1 deliberations can be voted on by the people in April 1960, providedE the delegates complete their work and adjourn 90 days before then. If this deadline for submission is not met, the delegates will probably complete their work in time for the November election of 1960. And a revised constitution" adopted by the voters either in April or November 1960 will take, effect January 1, 1961.- In organizing to meet this time-1 table, the delegates pass on the qualifications and election returns for their own members; choose their own officers; decide upon] their rules of order. It is likely that they would divide up into' committees to carry out their tasks. Committees Review Articles the committees. would review the constitutional articles as tewy stand, sounding out the public's views about improvements needed, and then would recommend changes to the entire convention. This body decides as a whole' what to put before the people and how. Its recommendations can3 take the form of anew constitu- tion or of amendmentscto the' existing document. The final decision rests with a majority voting on the question of adopting the proposed constitu- tional' revision. Just as the pro- position of revision may start,. with the people in 1958, it has to come back to them for final ac- tion in 1960. Walter Edits Religious Book "Religion and the State Univer- sity," edited by Erich A. Walter, assistant to University President Harlan Hatcher, will be published Octob'er 31 by the University of Michigan Press. The book, planned by the Cen- tennial Commission of student re- ligious work at the University, is to be a manual of resource ma- terial for all people interested with the problem of religion in a state university. A group of experts composed of a Catholic, a Protestant and a Jew examine the religious question, and leading educators deal with the history and legal aspects of the problem, discussing religion as a way of knowing, with academic freedom and with the role of religion in the teaching of human- ities, sciences and professions. DIAL NO 2-2513 ENDING TONIGHT If you've got a sense of humor (especially about sex) .DON'T MISS MOON W .AZW WDUEO O T!heMtchmker SHIRLYBOM-lAG1IONY UK~N %9IIRL[YMxLWN[-RUL FORD_ By JAN RAHM "Attending the Free University of Berlin gives one a chance for self-directed methods of study, because of the different ways a German university is run," Rob- ert Krohn, '60E, said. Krohn attended the FUB last year under the University-FUB undergraduate exchange program. This program was begun by the two universities by the old Stu- dent Legislature and was suspend- ed in the spring of 1958 by the Student Government Council be- cause SGC felt the exchange was not worthwhile. Krohn said he felt that SGC should continue ' the exchange with the FUB because of the im- portance of Berlin. He explained that Berlin is the only place where one can take a subway from a democratic city into one run by the Communists. Location Fruitful Strong political opinions, many political-issues clubs and much political conversation is the result of this location, he said. Krohn explained that students at the FUB are generally very serious and hard-working. He said that about half of the students are there on scholarships and must work also. "The work at the FUB is as hard as one wants t make it," Krohn said. Normally there is only one examination at the end of four years in order to*get a de- gree, but the scholarship students now have to take exams at the end of each semester so as to keep the grants. Lecture Courses Prominent Most courses are l e c.t u r e courses, with only a few subjects like math having anything simi- lar to our recitation classes. Ad- vanced students frequently have seminars comparable to the ones in this country, Krohn explained. There are no textbooks as such for courses, Krohn said. He ex- plained lecturers outline material and give references, so students. have good opportunitiest do re- search and independent thinking in their particular fields. Because of the hard work the students must do, there is not as much school spirit there as there is here, Krohn said. Church or- ganizations are important and World University Service is very active in Berlin. Well Versed in German Krohn had the equivalent of five semesters of German before going to Berlin, and he explained wnrm ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATER Inc. Presents "LAUGH PLAY OF THE YEAR" OCT. 23, 24, 25 LYDIA MENDELSSOH N CURTAIN 8 O'CLOCK WIsT TO A -SMALL PLANET OM IPL .Swo suss "MODERN AS TODAY'S SAUCERS" BOX OFFICE.OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. to Curtain October 20 through 25 Admission-Thurs. $1.50 . . . Fri. and Sat. $1.65 Lydia Mendelssohn . . . Ph. Nq 8-6300 "See You At The League" Season Tickets Available . . . $5.20 and $5.60 Ph. NO 2-4696 ; DEPT. OF SPEECH presents. THE FIRST IN A SERIES OF FREE - EXPERIMENTAL PLAYS TODAY At 4:00 TRUEBLOOD AUD. (FRIEZE BLDG.) -Daily-Robert Kanner BACK AT MICHIGAN - Following a year spent at the Free, University of Berlin as part of an exchange program between{ the two universities, Robert Krohn has returned to the University to finish his studies in electrical engineering. that after the first week or two he had no trouble understanding the lectures and reading the rec- oimmended books. Courses that he took were his non-technical electives in such subjects as German, history and political science. He took four or five courses a semester and spent about 14 hours a week in lectures. DIAL NO 8-6416 Ending Thursday Daily at 7 and 9 P.M. "DARING AND SOPHISTICATED" -N.Y. Daily News THOMAS MANN'S intimate story German Dialogue English Subtitles Krohn lived in a co-educational home for foreign students run by the FUB. Twelve students from six countries were housed there, along with two counselors and a blind dog. I VMMCOMING ON STAGE IN PERSON THURS., flt OCT. 3 tI Ph:3 DON'T MISS ITS1 PULITZER PRIZE # PLAY N.Y. DRAMA CRITICS AWARD Box Office Priday 1 P.M. to 5:30 P.M. Main Floor $3.50 - $4.00: Bolc. ($3.00 - $2.50 sold out) $2.00 - $1.50 PHILLIP MOEHLER'S ONE-ACT FARCE HELENA'S HUSBAND (ADMIS1IN FREE), was" I INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION DEBATING AND DISCUSSION COMMITTEE presentsa DEBATE on the motion Resolved:. "America-Would Endanger. World Peace by Pursuing a Policy of Defending Ouemoy and Matsu" MICHIGAN LEAGUE-HUSSEY ROOM TONIGHT at 1:45 r ""''" I1 #, _ i THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Invites GRAD UATE STUD ENTS OF OUR TIME!" --Paul Beckley, N.Y. Her. Trib. ONE OF THE GREAT ONES! SIDNEY POlER UNITED ARTSTS Relesd thu * Thursday * "HARRY BLACK AND THE TIGER" I in I Mathematics, Physics and Engineering to On-Campus Interviews October 20,21,and 22 Starting Thursday DANNY KAYE in "Me And The Colonel" PRESENTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH ANNOUNCES THAT A LIMITED NUMBER OF° SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE STILL AVAILABLE. THIS WEEK ONLY- THEATRE BOOTH CORNER OF STATE STREET AND NORTH UNIVERSITY. - OUTSTANDING PRODUCTIONS 5 Nov. 6-7-8 . . . AH, WILDERNESS ! Dec. 11-12-13 * . . THE MATCHMAKER 0A -... . - - I The Jniversity's Institute for Air Weapons Research has chal- lenging positions in the study and analysis of weapons systems. The studies integrate operational, technical, and scientific knowledge to oh taro a mathematical model valid for quantative appraisal of the systems effectiveness. The operations are an assignment from the Air Research and Development Command, United States Air Force. The opportunities for professional advancement and formal or inf mnmn r lnad1n o ti n ar llp t i I 11i 1 11 I