!-'Z 1-E MiI ;ALN A 1 0X lY SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1936 Ut ~ p.fl~ THE MICHIGAN D~AILY. Publisned every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions dluring regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. T HE FORUM] Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. New Note To the Editor: In the announcements given out by the Univer- sity concerning the new system of registration for the coming semester, certain Freudian elements are apparent to him who examines the list. For example, on Thursday, February 13th, from 2:00 to 2:15 a group charmingly known as "Wil to Woo" will register. This puts the official approval of the University upon the practice of wooing, although it seems deplorable that this essential ac- tivity should be confined to a mere quarter-hour period. On Wednesday, February 12, from 2:30 to 2:45 another group known as "Kom to Lap" will register, an invitation which in most cases it would be difficult to ignore. I am writing on this subject only for the pur- pose of calling to general attention this new, strik- ingly modernistic note in what in former days was merely a dull and dry listing. An element of romanticism has invaded University Hall. --A..J. As Oher Se t rThe Conning Tower] CONNECTICUT TRILOGY THESE ROADS that run from Redding Ridge to Kent, Up Greenfield Hill or down by Muddy Brook, Were tangled trails where wandering cattle went, Or lovers in the twilight April took Through laurel fields or homeward through the snow. There by the fire, too diffident to kiss, They sighed for love, yet when the hearth burned low, Bundled to bed and thought it not amiss. So simply is a rado begun: a lane To wander deep in mint or meadow rue:; A trail in autumn lost in leaves and rain; Faint as the phantom trace on snow and blue As hillside mist - where in the starlight hush, The dark fox trailed his silver-feathered brush, II More lovely than autumn in Connecticut Is winter, when the great snows thickly fall. The granaries are filled; the barns are shut. Here is a world reversed! Here snow is all! From a drowned land washed white, there bleakly lift Dark crooked boughs like spars, a wave-swept stone; A roof top stranded on the sleeping drift; Or ragged creeper where a wall went down. On nights of windless moons the great elms cast Their shadows on the snow in lengths of lace- Blue dreamy boughs, mysterious and vast, But upward in the trees' majestic grace, High on the black and naked heaven, far swung, On every bough, a blazing star is hung! III *A Washington BYSTANDER I EDITORIALIDEPARTMENT Telephone 4925 BOARD OF EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR ..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR ...............JOHN J. FLAHERTY ASSOCIATE EDITOR...............THOMAS E. GROEHN Dorothy S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS Publication Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman; Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, Bernard Weissman. Reportorial Department:NThomasrE. Groehn, Chairman; Elsie A. Pierce, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Editorial Department: John J. Flaherty, Chairman; Robert A. Cummins, Marshall D. Shulman. Sports Department: William R. Reed, Chairman; George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred DeLano, Raymond Good- man. Women's Departmen,.: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman; Dorothy Briscoe, Josephine M. Cavanagh, Florence H. Davies, Mario. T. Holden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN PublicatIon in the uIetin ki conMtrot ite nOtice to all nembexr; of 111 Uni stil y. Copy received at teyudaiyec. fth i ta ntto the President untll 3:30; 11:00 am. on iSatfIuIrday, BUSINESS DEPARTWENT The Relief Problem (From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER............JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ....MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ...ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS 'ocal Advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joite; Accounts, Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Adver- tising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica- tions, Lyman Bittman. NIGHT EDITOR: BERNARD WEISSMAN It Is Up To The Fraternities. 0 F RATERNITIES are composed of human beings with human inclina- tions,, and so it comes as no surprise that they tossed overboard the many rules set up for them by other organizations and supplanted them with a set of their own making. But, even considering this, this year's Interfra- trenity Council deserves credit for determined action. We hope they will not lapse into their traditional/lethargy of former years now that they have done something. Members of the council who realize the real significance of their new freedom should be aware of the tremendous responsibility that they, as in- dividuals, and their houses face in this freedom. No longer is the University a disciplinary body. The executive committee of the council is the judiciary body for infractions of their own rules, and the University is a bystander; but, we sus- pect, if things go too far amiss, the University will lose no time in restricting the independence of the council. So the responsibility is placed squarely on the shoulders of every fraternity man on the campus. He must take it upon himself to conduct himself within the council rules. The president of the house is sworn to report any infractions of his brothers to the executive coimittee of the council. No matter how em- barrassing his action might be, it is unmistakably- his duty. Without his whole-hearted support, the council will not only fall short of its aims, but it will be shorn of its power to an extent that will be hard for fraternity men to bear. Then the executive committee will have the odious task of dealing stringently with any offen- der. The final power rests with them and if they do not use it wisely and definitely the whole system will fall down. Fraternity men took a step, a progressive step that warrants praise, but without the support of everyone concerned they will find that the step has been far too big for them. Minding Other People's Business.. . T IS TYPICAL of Americans that years of bitter experience, new laws, and strong statements from their high officials should not serve to prevent their interfering in foreign affairs. Crossing the Atlantic during war time was no more dangerous to the neutrality of the American people than attempting to advise Adolph Hitler on how to run his own government. Yet it has been revealed that less than a month ago, the Rev. John Haynes Holmes, Bishop Francis J. McConnell, Sherwood Anderson, Norman Thomas, Upton Sin- clair, Lincoln Steffens and others sent a telegram, to Hitler protesting the execution of Rudolph Claus, German labor leader. Of the group named above, only one, Norman Thomas, actually had a definite reason for pro- testing to Hitler, for, as a leading socialist, it is his duty to protect a member of his own party. The telegram called the beheading of Claus a "horrible reversion to barbarism." It also de- manded - the words used were "vigorously urge" - the release of a number of other leading So- cialists. Though it is true that a commendable spirit of human sympathy must have prompted the sending of the telegram, it is also true that such action as this lead to the ill-feeling between nations, and is T HE PROBLEM of relief to the unemployed is to the fore again. This is not to say it has been in reality any less of a problem in recent months. It is only that other perplexing matters have taken public attention from the continuously pres- ent enigma of a permanent relief program-. The present crisis - and where a crisis has not already arisen one is impending --is precipitated by the recently announced policy of the national government to end direct Federal relief. As an- nounced, it was the plan of the Federal admin- istration to provide enough WPA jobs to take care of all employables on the relief rolls. Under this plan, the responsibility for the unemployables - those who through age or illness or for some other reason cannot work on such projects - was returned to the states and local communities. If we may believe state relief authorities, it has not worked out this way. In Illinois, for example, the WPA, according to Gov. Horner, has taken only 158,000 families off of relief rolls, leaving the state to care for 260,000, including 65,000 unemployables. Here in Missouri, the situation is only less grave because the number of persons involved is smaller and the funds will hold out for a somewhat longer period, possibly until the first of April. But a month and a half is a short while, and recogniz- ing this fact, the Missouri Relief Commission has put the problem up to the Missouri delegation in Congress. Senator Truman has conferred with Administrator Hopkins of the WPA and the report is that immediate consideration will be given Mis- souri's relief crisis. What will the answer be? When Illinois found its relief funds running low a few weeks ago, Gov. Horner and Senator Lewis appealed in person to President Roosevelt. They were rejected on the score that no exception could be made to the gen- eral rule of no direct Federal relief. A subse- quent request for additional WPA funds was also denied. As a result, Gov. Horner has convened the Illinois legislature in special session and a bill appropriating $2,500,000 from the general revenue fund has been passed by both houses. It is esti- mated that this sum, together with funds from the sales tax, will carry the relief load only from Jan. 15 to Feb. 15. When the middle of the next month arrives, Illinois will have to face the problem anew. Gov. Park and his aids at Jefferson City should take this as a warning to Missouri. The truth is that while no one plan can be made to work in every locality, and while some form of Federal help will be required, it is high time for the states to face the realities in the matter. In one breath we have the states complaining that their rights are being invaded by the centralization of authority in Washington and in the next we hear them asking for whatever amounts they need to meet the costs of relief. There is an almost con- tinuous parade of state officials or "ambassadors" to Washington. If it is true that the Federal Gov- ernment has stepped into spheres of activity here- tofore considered the province of the states, it is also true that the states have openly invited en- croachment by shirking their responsibilities. Take the case of Illinois. Last August, the Fed- eral Government supplied $8,690,215 in relief funds. At the same time, only $1,495,593, or 14.5.per cent of the total, was appropriated by the State. Local governments contributed the relatively insignifi- cant sum of $89,467, or under 1 per cent of the total. Elsewhere the situation is substantially the same. After all, the fact of the debt accumulated to meet relief payments is no less real because it is as- sumed by the Federal government and not the states. Unless the states are willing to assume permanently the status of mendicants, they will recognize the problem of relief as the responsi- bility which it is. Whether it means increased taxes or bond issues or what-not, is for the states themselves to decide. Federal help will have to continue, but the Federal government cannot go on bearing the whole burden, or virtually the whole of it. When the governors or their agents stand in line in Washington with tin cups in their hands, the cry that state rights are being invaded has an unmistakably hollow ring. These hills were ancient when the ark went forth On her strange watery errand on the world; This stone the oxen brought to build my hearth Was shagged with moss before the Pequot hurled His flinty death along the Saugatuck. Not strange-on this unyielding soil that man Grew stern or measured Sunday by the clock, Who dragged their hearthstones down from Devil's Glen, Or harnessed rock to bound an orchard by; Accepting April with a mind austere; Grappling with winter lest the cattle die - Men, prudent, sturdy, of a character Akin to rock or cedars straitly grown, Unshaped by winds, whose roots were deep in Stone. LEILA JONES. Well, of course, when we taxpayers read that $200,000,000 was about to be returned to us by the government we felt happy and wealthy. The min- ute we saw the headline we smoked another cigar. We looked again and saw it was a hippopotamus. And that the money was to be given back to the processors. We paid the processing tax, but we won't get back the money. So we are out whatever we paid in taxes and one 17-cent cigar. Our apologies to our Representative, the Hon. Schuyler Merritt, for having called him Stephen. And not only did our Mr. Merritt vote against the bonus bill, but he is on record as being in oppo- sition to the Townsend plan. Whatever Ward and Vokes show it was that Miss Mary Boland appeared in - Ambrose Glutz thinks it may even have been "The Governors" - Percy used to ask Harold "Did you take a bath this morning?" and Harold would say, "Why, is there one missing?" And "There's a man down there with a wooden leg." "Tell him that we don't care for any today, Percy." And many more, says Mr. Glutz, of the early Groucho Marx period. To us the funniest of the Percy and Harold shows was the one in which the clumpety-clump of horse's hoofs was heard. Harold entered, call- ing, "Boy, hold my horse till I come out, and when I come out you can have him." It seems to us that the Townsend plan's age is arbitrary. A man should be eligible the minute somebody offers him a seat in a public conveyance, and five years after a man of twenty-five or more years calls him "Sir." Our chief interest in this Republican National Committee radio program, "Liberty at the Cross- roads," is not in the freedom-of-the-air thing at all, largely because our guess is that there is mighty little of it, according to our notion of freedom. But we wonder who wrote the sketch or sketches? Who wrote "a series of skits pre- pared by the Republican National Committee?" Mr. Henry P. Fletcher says that when Mr. Wil- liam S. Paley, of the Columbia Broadcasting Company, says "appeals to the electorate should be intellectual, and not based on emotion, pas- sion, and prejudice," that, "in view of the impas- sioned appeal made to class prejudice made by the President in his Congressional broadcast on Jan- uary 3," is almost funny. It strikes us that to try to make an unemotional appeal to the electorate is impossible; also that the President of the United States, whatever his party, may have the utter freedom of the air to make any appeal he wants to. All Mr. Fletcher has to do is prove this to get his man elected next November. Our guess is that the Republican National Com- mittee will be permitted, even welcomed, by the broadcasting companies to say anything untreas- onable they like. Public opinion is strong against3 the apparent denial of the right of expression. Our only hope is that when Mr. Fletcher is per-' mitted the air's freedom he and his broadcasters will begin at or before 7 p.m. The President kept us up until nearly ten o'clock that night, and we are still dead for sleep. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt said that dema- gogues coin slogans and ride on them to power. mThrP icP ishni,,o ini +ii c voXr'nt+i f.i ih irdA + By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. - But for his own certainty that an ad- verse Supreme Court ruling on AAA hung over his head as Congress as- sembled, President Roosevelt probably would have reserved his "no retreat" campaign battle cry for the Jackson Day dinner. That was a more na- tural and logical setting for it than his dramatielly delivered state-of- the-union message to Congress. Without the advance notice of the message, attuned so closely to the same theme, the Jackson Day ad- dress would have reverberated more thrillingly not only in party but in popular ears. Having that speech in mind, as he clearly has had it ever since the hostility to his policies in organized business and financial cir- cles became so mai'ked at the late summer and autumn national con- ventions of various groups, Jackson Day and the "Old Hickory" parallel must have loomed to the President as an appropriate time and vehicle for his answer. THE JACKSON DAY campaign- launching strategy obviously was settled upon long ago with this in mind. Its twin objective of recruit- ing for the party war chest was no less important. An unbalanced party budget is a closer-up party political problem than a national deficit with a presidential campaign opening. All these considerations argued for reserving presidential heavy artillery for a Jackson Day barrage. It fel- lows that only most urgent reasons in Mr. Roosevelt's mind prompted the state-of-the-union message departure from plan. What brought about the final decision, no doubt, was the Su- preme Court's almost unprecedented change in its Christmas recess sched- ule which made its AAA pronounce- ment possible before Jackson Day. * z* * THE PRESIDENT was too close in timing and substance on Jack- son Day to his message delivery to avoid an anti-climax flavor in his dinner speech. He was also too close to the AAA court crash to tell his Jackson Day listeners what they most wanted to know, what specifically he was going to do about it. He could only repeat and elaborate on the message; yet exactly what parts he chose for that repetition invite at- tention. What he repeated - aside from the "no retreat" slogan he has coined for the '36 campaign -was the same drive beyond party lines for popular support he launched in his nomina- tion acceptance address in Chicago in '32; and that "gang-up" phrase to describe the attitude of a "minor- ity" in big business and high finance toward his New Deal objectives. And that last, unquestionably, is taken from the Hutton magazine article later lamented by its author. There you have the form and sub- stance of the Roosevelt re-election campaign plan, whatever the specific issues may be. SATURDAY, JAN. 18, 1936 VOL. XLVI No. 79 Notices Graduate School: All gradute stu- dents who expect to complete their work for a degree at the close of the present semester should call at office of the Graduate School, 1006 Angell Hall, to check their records and to secure the proper blank to be used in paying the diploma fee. The fee should be paid by the end of Jan- uary. Registration forms for the second semester will be available in the of- fice, 1006 Angell Hall, this week. Graduate students are urged to fill out the forms in advance of the regu- lar registration period, which will ex- tend from Wednesday noon to Satur- day noon, Feb. 12, 13, 14 and 15. Fees must be paid by Saturday noon, Feb. 15, to avoid payment of the late regis- tration fee. C. S. Yoakum, Dean. Sophomore, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Please be sure to bring with you the print of your record which you received last sum- mer when reporting to advisers for approval of second semester elections. J. II. Hodges, R. C. Hussey, Sophomore Academic Counselors. Student Loans: The Committee on Student Loans will meet in Room 2, University Hall Monday afternoon, Jan. 20, and Thursday afternoon, Jan. 23. Students who have already filed applications in the Office of the Dean of Students should make an appointment at once to see the com- mittee on one of these days. The Bureau of Appointments ad Occupational Information is asking all students who have not yet re- turned registration materials. taken out in November or later to do so at once. This material must be re- turned whether or not the student concerned has decided to complete his registration. Please take care of this matter before Jan. 25. Office hours, 9:00-12:00; 2:00-4:00, except Saturday. Gilbert and Sullivan's Ruddigore: Clarawanda Sisson, '36, will play Rose Maybud, and Warren Foster, Grad, will play Richard Dauntless at the matinee performance this afternoon at 2:30. Jean Seeley, '36, and Maur- ice Gerow, '37, will play these same roles in the evening performlance at 8:30 in the Mendelssohn Theatre. Applications will be received for Earhart Foundation Scholarships for the second semester not later than Jan. 25. Eligibility for these scholar- ships requires an average grade of not less than "B," willingness to de- vote one day per week in field in- vestigation, registration in Sociology 206, a Pro-seminar which meets Mon- day from 3-5. Application blanks may be obtained from the Sociology Department Offi- ce, 115 Haven Hall. Academic Notices Psychology 39: All those who ex- pect to elect this course second se- mester, please leave your names with the departmental secretary, Room 2125 N.S. If there is a sufficient number of students, another labora- tory section will be added. Economics 171: Rooms for exam- ination Monday, Jan. 20: A-F,25 A.H. G-o, 1025 A.H. P-Z, N.S. Aud. weather. Supper will be served for approximately 35 cents. All grad- uate students are cordially invited to attend. Comn in.vents Varsity Women Debaters: The Women's Debate Squad will meet Monday evening at 8:00 o'clock, 4206 Angell Hall. Phi Tau Alpha meeting Sunday, Jan. 19, 3 p.m., Michigan League. Moving pictures of France and Italy will be shown by Miss Gertrude Gil- man. All students and faculty of the classical department are cor- dially invited. Harris Hall: The regular student meeting will be held Sunday evening at 7 o'clock in Harris Hall. The speak- er will be The Right ReverendHer- man Page, D.D. He will speak on, "The Relation of the College Stu- dent to Public Life." All students and their friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Church: Services of worship Sunday are: 8:00 a.m., Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Church School; 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten; 11:00 a.m. morning prayer and ser- mon by The Reverend Henry Lewis. Stalker Hall, Sunday: 12 noon, class led by Rev. L. L. Finch on "Was Jesus Religious?" 6:00 p.m., Wesleyan Guild meet- ing. Prof. Heber D. Curtis will speak on "Science and Religion." 7:00 p.m., Fellowship Hour and Supper. First Methodist Church, Sunday: Morning worship Service at 10:45, Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "My Life -- How Find It?" (Palmis- try? Numerology? Astrology?) First Baptist Church, Sunday: 10:45 a.m., Rev. R. E. Sayles, min- ister, will preach on "The Uplook on Life." 9:30, Church School in Church. 9:45, Dr. Leroy Waterman's class in Biblical literature, at Guild House. Roger Williams Guild, Sunday: 12:00 noon, Students will meet as special group at Guild House. Dis- cussion, "Achievements of the Church in America." Rev. Howard R. Chap- nlan, minister of students; will be in charge. 6:00 p.m. (prompt), Mrs. E. R. Hardenbrook, who has traveled widely in the near and Far East, will give a moving picture travelogue on China, using reels personally taken. cures shown of eastern part of China from Peiping and the Great Wall to Canton and Hong Kong. Church of Christ (Disciples) Sun- day: 10:45 a.m., Morning worship, Rev. Fred Cowin, Minister. 12:00 noon, Students' Bible Class, H. L. Pickerill, Leader. A continuation of the study of therLife and Significance of Jesus. 5:30 p.m., Social Hour. Fifteen cotr supper served. 6:30 p.m., George Abernathy, counselor for the Student Christian Association, will bring a report of the Student Volunteer Convention held during the holidays at Indianapolis, Indiana. The report will be followed by a forum on student movements as r'evealed through various gatherings of students during the holidays. Cengregational Church, Sunday: 10:30, Service of Worship and Re- ligious Education. Mr. Heaps will give the third in the series on "Por- traits of Paul." Prof. Slosson will lecture on "The Saint as Patriot- Mazzini," third in the series on "Eur- opean Men of Action." 5:00, Discussion group led by Stu- dent Volunteer Convention Delegates, for the Student Fellowship. 6:00, Student Fellowship. Follow- ing a light supper Prof. Duffendack will speak on "Youth in Germany." There will be special music. St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Sun- day: 9:30 a.m., Church School. 9:30 a.m. Divine service in German. 10:45 a.m., Morning worship and sermon. Subject, "Jesus, The Light of the World." 4 p.m., Student-Walther League skating party at West Park. 6 p.m., Sipper and fellowship hour at the church followed by an informal dis- cussion of a question proposed by at'yone in the group. Lutheran Student Club: Members of the Baptist Student Group who attended the Student Volunteer Con- vention in Indianapolis during Christmas vacation will report on the meetings at the Lutheran Student Club Sunday evening, Jan. 19. The convention was made up of 3,000 students from 450 colleges primarily from the United States and Canada. The meeting will be in the parish hall of the Zion Lutheran Church on East Washington Street at 5:30 o'clock. Bethlehem Evangelical Church, Sunday: 9:00 a.m., Early service (conducted in German). 9:30 a.m., Church School. 10:30 a.m., Morning worship xvri4h cn mnti nmma nr>ti. -h Ten Years Ago From The Daily Files Saturday, Jan. 18, 1926 L ~IJ Unanimous approval of a new sta- dium, seating at least 60,000 persons, was expressed by the University Sen- ate last night, following the reading of the report of the special committee to consider the athletic situation. The committee endorsed the project, "provided the larger stadium is prop- erly located, built with the utmost economy and subsequently filled under a system of ticket distribution which offers substantial guarantee as to the character of the crowd." Hollis Martin's one hand shot with but 40 seconds to play gave Illinois a 31-29 victory over the Wolverine five last night at Yost Field House, bringing Michigan from undisputed possession of first place into a tie with five other schools, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Iowa and Purdue. Communism and the "youth movement" have footholds at Ohio State, Dr. Clarence Maris, Columbia physician and political writer, today declared before the University in- vestigating committee. Both Com- munism and the "youth movement" are subject to orders from Moscow, he said. By a vote of 359 to 1, the House today approved a resolution to au- thorize the appropriation of $50,000 to defray expenses of American dele- gates to the preliminary disarmament conference arranged by the League of Nations. President Coolidge has appointed Maj. Gen. William Lassiter, com- manding the department of Panama, to succeed General John J. Pershing, who is resigning as president of the Tacna-Africa plebescite committee because of ill health. Mr. Heneman's classes Science 51 and Political will not meet today. in Political Science 81 Concerts Organ Recital: Palmer Christian, University organist, will play the fol- lowing program, Sunday ,Jan. 19, at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium, to which the general public, with the exception of small children, is invited without admission charge. The au- dience is requested to be seated on time, as doors will be closed during number. Prelude and Fugue in B minor . .Bach Fugue on the "Kyrie" .... Couperin Prelude ............... Clerambault Prelude on the Gregorian Song ':Pange lingua".............. Boely Choral in B minor ...........Franck Fiat Lux .................. Dubois Dreasm (Sonata VII) ......Guilmant Rhapsody Catalane (based on three Catalonian folk tunes) . . . .Bonnet Adagio (Symphony VI) ...... Widor Finale (Symphony I)........Vierne Mr. Christian will also appear in recital Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 29, at 4:15 o'clock. Exhibitions Low Cost House Designs, Architec- tural Buildifl: Prize and other de- signs submitted in a recent competi- tion conducted by the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects are on view in the ground floor corridor. Open daily, except Sunday, 9 to 6, to Jan. 25. The pub- lic is cordially invited. Events Of Today