THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Fans Brave Cold To Cheer Team
iculties.
everal delegates announced -Daily-James warneka
r intention to picket the FOUR WOLVERINE FANS braved the cold of an Ann Arbor autumn to watch Michigan beat
ise Committee on Un-American Illinois 8-7 last gaturday. The family sat through 35 degree weather to cheer the local gridders
ivities when it meets in Los on to victory. Throughout the game, a snow storm threatened to dampen the spirits of the fans,
eles. but failed as the inspired play of the team kept spirits high.
BOWLINGIy JOe
ANN ARBOR RECREATIOtN A AAAA A n "Aa . AA* A£AA s _.oA A A AA .._sAA£
ST Ua" EN:SDTTE(EDITOR'S DOTE: On the House will be discontinued after today's col-
umn. Too few organizations submitted inormation on their sociaAEevents
MODERN - AUTOMATIC to warrant continuing this feature.)
505 E. Huron NO 2-0103Prescott House. East Quadrangle, will hold Candlelight Club
tonight from 9 to 12 p.m.
Phi Sigma Sigma sorority will hold an open house tomorrow fol-
lowing the football game with Indiana. There will be entertainment
by a group from MUSKET.
LO'NDOkN RE CORDSChallenge Colloquium
NOVEMBER 18-20
Students Set
For Voting
A t Berkelely
University of California stu-
dents at Berkeley will vote Tues-
day on a referendum and two
amendments to the student body
constitution regarding the Daily
Californian.
The Executive Committee of the
Associated Students of the Uni-
versity of California decided at
its last meeting to submit these
issues to popular vote.
The first proposed amendment
was initiated by petition. It in-
volves removing control of Daily
Californian finances from the
Executive Committee and pro-
vides for a new consultative board
for the newspaper.
The second amendment, pro-
posed by the Executive Commit-
tee, maintains the committee's
control of Daily Californian fi-
nances and provides for a con-
sultative board similar to the one
in the other amendment.
The referendum proposes rein-
statement of the former senior
editorial board of the Daily Cali-
fornian. The board resigned in
October, protesting Executive
Committee criticism of its sup-
port of a student government
candidate.
Since its resignation, the for-
mer editorial board has been pub-
lishing an off-campus newspaper,
the Independent Californian. An
Executive Committee - sponsored
staff is putting out the Daily Cali-
fornian.
Besekirsky,
U' Vi olinist,
'Dies in N.Y.
Prof. Wassily W. Besekirsky of
the music school, 80 years old,
chairman of the violin department
from 1930 until he retired in 1944,
died Tuesday in East Windham,
N.Y.
Born on Jan. 3, 1880, in Moscow,
Russia, Prof. Besekirsky became
a naturalized American citizen in
1922. From 1915 to 1919, Besekir-
sky was on tour as concertmaster
and soloist with the Russian Sym-
phony Orchestra, playing in 70
cities in the United States.
Besekirsky appeared several
times in the palace of the Tsar
of Russia. He gave concerts in all
the principal cities in that coun-
try and throughout Europe.
The funeral is expected to be
at East Windham, N.Y. Besekirsky
is survived by his widow, Marie St.
John 'Besekirsky.
Poets To Read
Works Tonight
By JUDITH OPPENHEIM
"We would like to encourage
University students to submit
their writing, particularly good
fiction, to Arbor magazine for
consideration," Robert Dunn of
the English department and Arbor
editor said.
Dunn remarked that while Ar-
bor is "receiving poetry by the
bushel-basketfull" the magazine is
in need of quality fiction. It cur-
rently receives contributions from
all parts of the country and even
from places, as far away as Tokyo
but the bulk of the manuscripts
are submitted locally.
Founded by Students
Arbor was started last year by
a group of University students and
has published two editions to date.
The latest one, Arbor 2, appeared
on the campus last June and was
distributed again last week when
it was sold out in bookstores with-
in one day.
Arbor 3 will be printed late this
month or early in December,
Dunn said. Innovations in format
are being considered and may in-
clude facing translations of for-
eign poetry.
The magazine's aim, Dunn said,
is to present the works of young,
beginning writers; it does not sup-
port any particular school or
group of writers, but desires a
variety of ideas, styles and forms.
Non-Campus Publication
Although the magizine is staffed
chiefly by University students and
teaching fellows from the English
department, it is not meant to be
a cp0 us i
-"lf" tA'% " *
..
mitted comes from outside Michi.
gan, but, "the best is from Ann
Arbor," Dunn commented.
In the past three months, the
magazine has accepted only three
poems and two short stories, both
of which were written by-Univer-
sity students.
from sales are put into improve-
ment of the magazine, Dunn said.
Authors whose works are pub-
lished, receive as payment three
free copies of the issues contain-
ing their writting.
Anyone interested in submitting
poetry, essays, short drama of
fiction is asked to send his manu-
script to Arbor at Ann Arbor Post
Office box 37.
Arbor
porting,
Self-Supporting
is completely self-sup-
and any profits made
SUMMER TOUR IN EUROPE
with
2539 SAO
Wed. and
MUST BOOK
EARLY
Thurs., 3- 5
;;> ;; t;;;;t;;;O <;;;;;;Yo i}C~o i
DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER,
presents
O TC jndPOTR-
I Friday 8 P.M. Ann Arbor Public Library
Open to DAC member.s Memberships
' at $2 (students $1) sold at the door.
* t
FOR THIRD ISSUE:
Arbor Magazine Needs Good Fiction
Arbor therefore differs
Generation, the University
arts magazine, in having
national circulation and
from
inter-
both
non-
ENDING
SATURDAY
!1 11
mm DIAL NO 8_6416
Tonight :
at 7-9 P.M.
Saturday
from 1P.M.
student contribution, Dunn said.
Fifty per cent of the fiction sub-
WOLVERINE CLUB
OHIO STATE TRIP
NOVEMBER' 18-20
For information
or reservations
call NO 5-8215
between 3 and 5 P.M.
or NO 5-8367 any time
"We recommend it"r"
sorte, ROBERT MORLEY * RALPH RICHARDSON
COMING SUNDAY: "EXPRESSO BONGO"
Speakers:
HENRY STEELE COMMAGER
JUSTICE TALBOT SMITH
MICHAEL HARRINGTON
NORMAN THOMAS
l
i
r
-
i
1
1
I,
1"
t
.I
1
b
Registration: Fish Bowl,
Union Desk, Nov. 14, 15... 9
DIAL
2-6264
Showsat 1:00 -3:00
5:00 -7:05 and 9:10
Features at1A0 - 3:30
5:30 - 7:35 and 9:35
STARTS
TODAY
i, .
,+ .
y .
HELD
nVER I
ALL THE YOUNG WOMEN WILL
! LOVE 'ALL THE YOUNG MEN'!
w. fL'iLr YG1'"NO so 1 .
Dial NO 5-6290
PLEASE see "Midnight Lace" from the BEGINNING
in order to fully enjoy this suspense-drama!
No one will be admitted during last ten minutes.
"First Rate Thriller! Has audiences
holding their breath in excitement!"
-LIFE
"Doris Day might well win an Acad-
emy Award .. . A marvelous picture
from all angles!"
--Dorothy Kilgallen
"Thoroughly entertaining thriller!"
--Petswick, Journal-American
The Dramatic Arts Center will
present a program of poetry read-
ings at 8 p.m. today in the Ann
Arbor Public Library.
X. J. Kennedy, Grad, Bernard
Weldrop, James Kemp, Philip Dis-
kin and Thomas Kind will read
the selections which are mostly
original creations of the group.
Kennedy's poems have appeared
in The New Yorker, Poetry Chi-
cago and Arbor magazines, and
he will publish his first book this
summer. Waldrop has translated
contemporary French poetry for
an anthology and his poems have
appeared in Comparative Litera-
ture magazine. Kemp has won the
Columbia Van Ressnelaer poetry
prize, the University Hopwood
poetry award and is poetry edi-
tar of Arbor.
The program is open to mem-
bers of the Dramatic Arts Cen-
ter and memberships may be pur-
chased at the door.
"A tense new shocker!
Doris Day
switches from sunny charm to stark
terror with virtuoso skill !"
-Arthur Knight, Saturday Review
Bucket Drive Nets
'U' Camp $1,394 ,f
The University Fresh Air Camp tis is th.
will receive $1,394 from this year's moat O Wing,
Bucket Drive, Junior Panhellenic th. most hUs4t
President Cathy Steffek, '62, an-'wbemo
nounced yesterday.
Sponsoring organizations Junior-a Ronads
Panhel, Junior Interfraternity
Council, Inter-Quadrangle Coun-
cil and Assembly Association have
whmn their thanks to studentsJAME
who manned buckets for the drive.' ____________
' ,
4
1
I
M
M;
M
I'
S.G.C. Cilemta quild
TONIGHT at 7 and 9:25 Saturday and Sunday at 7 and 9
A documentary program: HITCHCOCK'S
THE HUNTERS THE THIRTY-NINE STEPS
I
U I 3 Nw'aEAAffEaMwEA~, 1 -~--~ I