THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRID AY, TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIflAY~, On te %JIoIje 42 - as aa a a as aaa..44aaa a ss s aa a a a . . N By JUDITH OPPENHEIM Sigma Phi Epsilon's party at the Social highlight of the weekend house tomorrow night. will be Alpha Sigma Phi's pledge+ formal, a dinner dance tomorrow Toga-clad guests will arrive at at the Washtenaw Country Club the Theta Xi house at 8:30 p.m. with music by the Ray Louis or- tomorrow. They will sit on the chestra. floor to eat their dinner of chick- * * * en, fruit and long loaves of bread to the accompaniment of Al Blas- Tomorrow night will see a er's music. strange conglomeration of sinister r«m * underworld characters assembled Members of Phi Rho Sigma and at Sigma Mu's Untouchable Party.te besfwihdancemtoande The hoods and their dates wil their dates will dance to the be attired in traditional double- Dixieland music of the Boll Weev- breasted "gangster suits." ils tomorrow night. * * * They will engage in such whole- Bob Elliott and his band will some recreations as gambling,BoElitanhsbndwl operatinga backroom still whose play at the Phi Epsilon Pi party product will be drunk in a make- tomorrow evening. shift speakeasy, and reenacting * * the famous St. Valentine's Day Members of Delta Chi and their murders. dates will dance to the music of IThe Kingsmen will provide mu- the "Men of Note" at the frater- The ingmenwillproidemu-nity house tomorrow evening. sic for the cheery occasion. ny u t r e i Tau Delta Phi will be the scene Johnny Harberd and his band of a "Wild West" party tomorrow will be the main attraction at night. Guests will visit a gambling casino and a covered wagon in 0 T f17 which Western movies will be V iew s UI ihWsshown. Dance music will be pro- vided by the band of Larry Kass. Aud o A4rea Dick Tilkin' and his band will play at a semi-formal party at Phi Sigma Kappa tomorrow evening. By MAME JACKSON * * * The audio room at the Under- Andy Anderson will play sooth- Thgemusdc for the PUi Deta graduate Library offers students ing music for the Phi Del and faculty the opportunity to' Thetas and their dates at a pa- hear carefully-selected tapes and jama party at the house tomor- recordings under most favorable row night. * * * listening conditions. Williams House of West Quad Seventy-two separate booths are is rushing the season with a available where students may lis- Springtime in Hawaii semi-formal ten through individual ear phones dance tomorrow, featuring the to a wide selection of class-re- music of Dave Juillet.u quired or pleasure recordings. * *. Each booth contains two sets of The Fresh Air Camp will be the earphones and a selector dial scene of Tau Epsilon Phi's first which allows a choice among the annual "Trademark Ball" tomor- 14 prepared programs broadcast row night. After a riotous bus from the control room. ride-there will be dancing at the Most of the channels are used camp to the music of an or- for course-required recordings for chestra. ' music literature, English litera- * * ture and foreign language litera- Phi Mu Almunae Club will hon- ture classes. or the new Delta Xi pledges with "However, we like to have one a tea at the chapter house from channel reserved for the Univer- 3-5 p.m. Sunday. During the get- sity fm radio station, WUOM. and acquainted period, each pledge two channels reserved for specially will give a short biographical prepared concert programs," Mar- sketch of another pledge instead garita Anderson-Imbert, librarian of introducing herself. in charge of the audio room said. * . « Concert programs, arranged by Alpha Xi Delta will hold an Charlotte Lyddell, Grad., musicol- open house from 3-5 p.m. Sunday ogist, are always posted in the in honor of its new pledges. audio room. Often there are so Everyone is invited to attend. many required music literature * *.« records that the desired channels This year's edition of Alpha cannot be devoted to pleasurable Epsilon Pi's annual Toga Party concerts will be held tomorrow evening. "The Library could easily use Togas imported directly from two more channels," Mrs. Ander- Rome will be worn to this tradi- son-Imbert said. tional affair, which is always held "Every care is taken to make shortly after the Ides of March. the music from the control room + * * as nearly perfect as possible. Our Alpha Kappa Lambda will hold equipment produces very good a "Supressed Desire" party begin- sound; this is necessary because ning at 9 p.m. tomorrow. Cos- poor quality would irritate the tumes representing the wearer's sensitive ears of trained music secret ambition will be worn. students," she added CALIFORNIA PROFESSOR: Tells Origins of Russian Intelligentsia By ANITA PETROSHUS "The Russian inteligentsia orig- inated in the fusing of the young gentry, who broke away from the official class," Prof. Martin Malia of the University of California at Berkeley, said yesterday. The intelligentsia were much more than just intellectuals, he' said. "They made an enormous impact on the whole of modern' history, and eventually won in the Revolution of 1917. "They were not just 'conscious- striken noblemen'," he said. "They tI 4, democratic element in a profound- ly undemocratic society-in under- standing what this class was." The universities, seminaries and high schools, modernizing under Alexander the First, provided the meeting place for the young gentry and the "raznochintsy," or "people of diverse estates." Groups Unite These two groups were fused by the 1840's, he said, and the gentry dominated the group until the 1860's when the lower class mem- bers of the intelligentsia gained more influence. "This gave the intelligentsia a more radical and embittered tone," he said. "They had a feeling of apart- ness and superoirity because they believed that they embodied the rationality, humanity and con- sciousness of Russia," he said. In the 1860's when the govern- ment tried to reform archaic and barbaric structures by emanci- pating the peasants, it whetted the appetitte of the intelligentsia; he said. "They demanded the com- plete realization of the universal, rational idea of man," he said. "They demanded social democ- racy immediately, and when they didn't get it they went to the people to stir them up by their conspiratorial activity." In Vacuum Because of the extremely simple Russian social structure composed of peasants and gentry which ex- isted in until the 1890's, the alien- ated intelligentsia existed in a vacuum, unlike the intelligentsia of the West, he said, where in- terest groups lent substance to generalized protests. "After 100 years they made con- tact with the explosive, anarchic base which was 90 per cent of the population," he said, "and from 1890 to 1915 their cohesion was sufficient so they could hold to- gether long enough to profit from collapse when it came In 1917." B'nai B'rith H illel Foundation 1429 Hill Street SABBATH SERVICES Tonight, Friday, March 18, 7:15 in ZWERDLING-COHN CHAPEL Sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Phi Sorority MARTIN MALTA ... views intelligentsia came from every class, and were a cohesive group only in terms of ideology." "It has to be recognized," he said, "that the intelligentsia was a class, and that its sole principle of cohesion was commitment to ideas as opposed to immediate it -- terests." Adopt Idealism The Russian intelligentsia as- sumed distinct characteristics in the 1830's and 1840's, he said, when the young intellectuals of the gentry adopted the German philosophic idealism of Kant. This philosophy assigns an im- portant place to intellect and in- tellectuals, who "dominate the world by thought," because one of its principles is that "the whole structure of the universe comes to a culmination in man's mind." "The adoption of an egotistic philosophical principle marks them as a group hostile and feel- ing itself superior to the rest of society," he said. 'Moral Scandal' "After 1762, for the first time in Russia there was a class of free men," he said, explaining that after that date men were no longer bound legally to serve the mon- archy. "The younger and better educated found submission to au- tocracy a moral scandal." "They generalized, then, from their own sense of individual dig- nity of all men." "They tried out these moral principles in the Decembrist revolt in 1825," he said. "Its failure pre- cipitated the full development of this class of alienated intellectu- als." Prof. Malia also stressed "the importance of the universities and of the school system-the most 0 AF DIAL NO 8-6416 STARTING TODAY She was a special kind of Hell ... men went to her when they sinned, loving her was like walking blindfolded into a jungle! IN HER HANDS MEN WERE PUPPETS . I THE FAR-OUT FOLK are preparing to invade the Ann Arbor Armory on Satur- day, March 19, at 7:30 and 10. "AN EVENING WITH WIN WELLS" featuring sonneteer - commenteer Wells, Jan Winkler (folk- singer) and the Frank Mor- relli Quintet (modern jazz mongers). $2.00 Gen. Adm. -a Dell 'Arte Promotion- Tickets available at CAFE COLLAGE Detroit's newest mecca for music, manna and mania 8670 Grand River (near the Riviera Theatre) TYler 8-6375 Mail orders accepted. DIAL NO 2-6264 "MUST NOT BE MISSED" London Evening Standord I m f I S.G.C. Cinema quild TONIGHT at 7 and 9 LUIS BUNNEL'S "SUBIDA AL CIELO" (Mexican Bus Ride) Grand Prix du Film, Cannes Festival, 1952 Short: Murrow-McCarthy Interview SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7:00 and 9:00 STANLEY KRAMER'S "HIGH NOON with Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly, Thomas Mitchell ACADEMY AWARD I i r-^ NOW ! NO 6290 "Wild fun, in terms of social burlesque and sheer Mack Sennett farce . it has a clear Guinness comic quality!" -Crowther, N.Y. 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