PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JAN, 40, 1937 PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, JAN, 40, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY M Member 1937 Associaed Colle6iate Press Distributors of Cofe6te Wiest Published 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 E second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.5C. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AV. EW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO NBOSTON SAN FRANCISCO Los ANGELES - PORTLAND * SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR...............ELSIE A. PIERCE ASSOCIATEEDITOR...........FREDWARNER NEAL ASSOCIATE EDITOR........MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Departmental Boards Publication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; James Boozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving $. Silver- man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, Mary Sage Montague. Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman; Fred DeLano and Fred Buesser. associates, Raymond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Heper. Richard La- Marcs. Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JEAN KEINATH Business Assistants: Robert Martin, Ed Macal, Phil Bu- chen, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Newton Ketcham. Robert Lodge, Ralph Shelton, Bill New- nan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layhe, J. D. Haas, Russ Cole. Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Maron Baxter, L. AdaSko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crawford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy, Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinsk, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers Jack Staple, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager: Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM SHACKELTON The Governor's Message. ... GOV. FRANK MURPHY'S message to the legislature Thursday was an encouraging preamble to what many believe will be one of Michigan's most liberal and suc- cessful administrative terms. The governor gave no indication that he intended to tie himself to the apron strings of the Roosevelt administration, On the contrary he gave indirect assurance that he would urge his comprehensive program of labor and social legislation to completion, irrespective of the success or failure of similar national ventures, when he asked the repeal of the provision which would suspend the Michigan Social Se- curity Act should the Federal Act be ruled un- constitutional. This proposed program of social legislation deals with such important matters as collective bargaining, workers' wages and hours, child and woman labor, and old age pensions. The members of the University have a direct and intimate interest in the recommendations that Michigan's loyalty oath for teachers be abandoned and that teachers' insecurity be re- lieved by a tenure law. Educators should not neglect the fine opportunity they have to urge and secure the passage of both these proposed laws. Of great interest to Ann Arbor, too, was the recommendation to enact the model civil ser- vice bill prepared by a committee of which Prof. James K. Pollock is the head. There seems little doubt that this bill will be passed. The Murphy program is not assured of enact- ment, but, considering his past record in public life, we are confident that the governor will support the liberal orientation of his views with aggressive executive leadership, and make his administration the superior of those which have been unable to combine wisdom and initiative, and sometimes possessed neither. The DeJoinge Case... T HE RECENT DECISION of the United States Supreme Court re- versing the judgment of the State Supreme Court of Oregon on the DeJonge syndicalism case is as reassuring as it is paradoxical. It is reassuring because it comes at a time when the prestige of the Court has been called into doubt and paradoxical because the courts of Oregon, generally considered one of the most progressive states of the Union, had adopted a strongly reactionary attitude on the case. Dirk DeJonge was arrested, along with several decision, according to such a view "however innocuous the object of the meeting, however lawful the subjects and tenor of the addresses, however reasonable and timely the discussion, all those assisting in the conduct of the meeting would be subject to imprisonment as felons." Under this law DeJonge was sentenced to seven years in prison, for "advocating industrial or political revolution by force," even though no word of sedition or revolutionary propaganda had been used at the meeting in question. The law was declared by the Supreme Court unconstitutional as applied to this one case, incompatible with the Fourteenth Amendment. "These rights" (freedom of speech, the press and assembly) the Court's opinion reads, "may be abused by using speech or press or assembly in order to incite to violence and crime. . . . The people through their legislatures may protect themselves against that abuse. But . . . the rights themselves must not be curtailed." And further: "If the persons assembling . . . are engaged in a conspiracy against the public order, they may be prosecuted for their conspiracy ... But it is a different matter when the State ... seizes upon mere participation in peaceable assembly and a lawful public discussion as the basis for a criminal charge." This view of the case is so sane, in fact so obvious, that it seems hardly necessary to com- mend it. But in view of the surprisingly ada- mant conservatism of the Oregon courts in the matter, it is genuinely encouraging to find that the Supreme Court is still capable of stand- ing between American citizens and the blind persecutions of senseless reaction. Editor's Note The first sentence of the last paragraph of yesterday's editorial should have read: "The people who now determine the educational policies of the University are not the faculty, but housewives, a physician, a labor leader, etc. ... (THE 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 more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. A Pastor's Indictment To the Editor: The following statements by Rev. John Haynes Holmes are contained in a book: "Naziism: An Assault on Civilization." (Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, N.Y., 194) 1. The Nazis have destroyed self-government, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of petition, and all the civil rights of a free people. 2. They have abolished all political parties, and made it a crime to organize any new po- litical group. 3. They have pursued and persecuted, witil fierce ferocity, all Socialists, Communists, paci- fists, free-thinkers, and other radicals antag- onistic to the iron regime of a totalitarian state. 4. They have liquidated the trades unions, confiscated their property, bank deposits, print- ing presses and headquarters, and exiled, im- prisoned, and in some cases killed their officers and leaders. 5. They have abrogated the social legislation of the Reich-the insurance, pension and other protective systems built up by the workers through a half-century of struggle and sacrifice, and long since become the model for our western world. 6. They have transformed a collapsing cap- italism into a new economic feudalism dominated by industrial lords and served by proletarian serfs. 7. They have inaugurated a persecution of the Jews more terrible in its rigor than anything known since the Middle Ages-a ".dry" pogrom of political disfranchisement, social outlawry, and economic ruin which dooms Israel to ex- tinction or the ghetto. 8. They have outraged the church, both Cath- olic and Protestant, in a deliberate attempt to subdue the conscience of Christendom to auto- cratic rule and pagan ideology of the Nazi state. 9. They have ended the emancipation of women, returning one-half of the human race in Germany to the subjection of ,an older and darker day. 10. They have withdrawn the writ of habeas corpus, exposed homes to invasion and persons to arrest without warrant, and decreed ex post facto laws for cruel and unusual punishment of crime. 11. They have re-established duelling, re- stored the medieval rite of execution by the headsman's axe, and honored assassination. 12. They have made war on science, art, lit- erature, and culture. 13. They have burned books, torn down mon- uments and buildings, and defamed and defiled the names of immortal Germans. 14. They have turned universities into train- ing-schools, colleges into military academies, and a world-famous public school system into a re- gime of Nazi discipline. 15. They have prostituted opera houses, sym- phony orchestras, art galleries; learned societies, laboratories libraries, museums, and research institutes to the base uses of party propaganda. 16. They have dismissed, degraded, insulted, herded in concentration camps, and driven into exile the intellectual and spiritual leaders of the nation. 17. They have driven writers, artists, actors, musicians into a so-called Chamber of Culture, controlled and censored by officials of the Nazi government. 18. They have infected an entire people with the virus of Aryanism, and with all its attendant WEEK IN REVIEW NATION AL Which Union, If Any? As heavy industry hailed a new year and a new prosperity in America, more than 80,000 auto- mobile industry workers were on strike, many of them encamped in factories, demonstrating for the first time in this country the power of the "sit-down" strike. Center of the strike was the General Motors Fisher Bodies plants in Flint, where, early in the week, about 500 sit-downers refused to leave the factories despite an injunction ordering them out. The main issue of the strike is whether or not General Motors shall recognize "any union" as the sole bargaining agency for its workers, to the exclusion of all others. President Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., of General Motors has thus far been firm in insisting that all bargaining must be done with individual plant managers by rep- resentatives of all workers, while Homer Mar- tin, president of the United Automobile Workers of America, equally firmly stands for his union's demands for central collective bargaining. Attempting to break the deadlock, Department of Labor conciliator James F. Dewey and Mich- igan's Governor Frank Murphy have conferred with both camps, but the situation has in no way been relieved. Tenseness and fear of widespread violence grows in Flint, and President Sloan, pre- dicted that next week will see 135,000 men in the automobile industry idle. President's Message On Wednesday, President Roosevelt delivered his annual message to Congress, addressing him- self more sharply to the Supreme Court than at any time since his famous "horse and buggy" statement to the press after the invalidation of the NRA. Not once referring to the Supreme Court as such, he asked that judiciary get into step with legislative and executive branches of the gov- ernment, adopting a more liberal view of the Constitution. The President hinted that he wanted no change in the Constitution, but a more liberal interpretation, and suggested no way in which he might force the Court to fall into step with his administration, should they disregard his demands. Other recommendations in the message were for immediate Congressional consideration of the Spanish embargo, passage of a deficiency bill to cover relief for the current fiscal year, conversion of tenant farmers into land-owners, broadening of the services of the social security system, curb- ing of speculation, reorganization and a solv- ing of the problems which the NRA attacked. Goodbye, Mr. Frank Dr. Glenn Frank, president of the University of Wisconsin, was ousted Friday from his position, which he has held for the past 11 years, by an 8 to 7 vote of the Board of Regents. Calling the action a "fitting climax to the deception, intrigue and dishonesty" of which he felt he had been the victim, Dr. Frank accused the family of Gov- ernor Phillip La Follette of using their political influence to oust him. The Board's reasons for firing Dr. Frank had previously been expressed in a 47-page report which stated that he had been an incompetent financial administrator, that he had permitted egregious inequalities to exist in faculty salaries, that he had violated an agreement to drop newspaper syndicate work and lecturing for a fee, and that he had made an extra $18,000 a year out of these activities while failing to pay proper attention to his university work. . FOREIGN Stroking The Lion's Fur,. As the Spanish forces continued in a dead- lock at Madrid, the government of Great Britain and Italy Monday announced a Mediterranean accord which disclaimed for both parties "any desire to modify, or, as far as they are con- cerned, to see modified, the status quo as regards national sovereignty of territory in the Mediter- ranean area," and which "is designed to further the ends of peace and is not directed against any other power." Following this declaration, an exchange of notes between the Italian and British envoys an- nounced that the two nations would respect and protect the sovereignty of Spain. Throughout negotiations leading to the agr'eement, France has keep well informed, and French Foreign Minister Yvon Delbos Delbos has announced that his government finds it most agreeable, since both powers concluding it are friends of France. And Pulling Its Tail In contrast to this move for peace was the announcement yesterday that Great Britain will concentrate 105 warships in the near Spanish waters. This move was made by the admiralty after the cabinet heard reports of German mili- tary activity in Spanish Morocco. Despite denials by German officials, both Brit- ain and France were worried by reports that Ger- man engineers were supervising construction of fortifications in the Moroccan territory con-. trolled by Gen. Francisco Franco, whose govern- ment has been recognized by Germany. The attitude of Germany, meanwhile, seemed to indicate that it does not desire to be drawn too closely into the affairs of Spain, and on Fri- day the foreign office announced that Germany will take part in a non-intervention pact if all the other European powers join it. At Madrid, the center of all Europe's troubles, the insurgent forces gained ground in the north- west, continuing a heavy bombardment. THIEATR e Two French Movies By JAMES DOLL LAST SEASON we were given a chance to compare an American screen version of a great novel with a foreign version to the discredit of the home product. The Hollywood Crime and Punishment was almost ludicrous in contrast to a picturiza- tion of the Dostoievsky novel made in France. On Wednesday and Thurs- day of this week (afternoon and eve- ning both days) the French version of Les Miserables will be shown at the Mendelssohn by the Art Cinema League. Whether the difference be- tween this production and last sea- son's Hollywood version of the same novel will be as great as between the two versions of Crime and Punish- ment remains to be seen. The French picture has Harry Bauer as Jean Val- jean (He was the police commis- sioner in Crime and Punishment). Charles Laughton and Frederic March were starred in the Hollywood version which did not attract a great deal of attention. According to Frank Nugent in his review of the French Les Miserables in the New York Times,- it depends less on the work of individual actors than on the direction, interpretation, and ensemble playing. He said of the picture, in part: " . . . we shall have a different recollection of this new Les Miserables. There will be no spotlight of memory playing on one or two characters, but a warm glow gently suffusing an entire, well- rounded production ... Beyond ques- tion, the French Les Miserables has its faults, but only the hypercritical could be blinded by them to its equal- ly unquestionable excellence." Johnny Johnson: Review The Group Theatre presents JOHNNY JOHNSON. a legend. Play by Paul Green. Music by Kurt Weill. Staged by Lee Strasberg. Settings by Donald Oenslager. Costumes by Paul Du Pcnt. At the Forty-Fourth Street The- atre. New York. SHERE have been a few experi- ments in new forms in the theatre in recent years-but very few -which parallel experiments in the other arts. Some of the most in- teresting have been the productions of The Living Newspaper unit of the WPA Federal Theatre which have been patterned on the radio March of Time and on documentary movies. Johnny Johnson the new play by Paul Green with music by Kurt Weill is another experiment and a success- ful one too. As produced by the Group theatre it is not only a play which brings fan- tasy, poetry, music, and movement to a satiric treatment of the prob- lems of war but a blending of these elements into a merry if sometimes bitter harlequinade. More than that it is pure theatre which makes de- mands on the imagination of the au- dience rather than letting the spec- tators sit back and watch a realistic portrayal of. everyday life. Lee Strasberg, the director, has conceived it as a kind of vaudeville or revue and the play has some of the faults of both but with all the merits these theatre forms have at their best together with the applica- tion of the comedy of fantasy and satire to an important problem. It is a kind of rambling, impromptu charade bubbling over with energy which seems entirely appropriate to the material supplied by Paul Green and Kurt Weill. Rather disjointed scenes of un- equal merit are joined together by the central charcter, Johnny John- son, an idealist who cannot see the sense of war and the war psychology. He is weak, led along without much pretest to go to the war but with a growing disbelief in the saneness of what he sees around him. The more common sense arguments he brings to his case the more insane he seems to the rest of the world until at the end in a poignantly moving scene of great pathos, he is regarded as simply a half-witted seller of toys on a! DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. (Continued on Page 2) gram. Music - Joseph E. Maddy. A Hobby I Have Found Interesting - Donal H. Haines. Suomi Club: A meeting will be held this afternoon at 2:30 in the Upper Room, Lane Hall. Sunday Forum: Prof. Lawrence Preuss will lead the Union Sunday Forum at 4:30 p.m. on the subject of "American Neutrality." Members of the student body and faculty are urged to attend. The Second Inter-Faith Sympo- sium will be held today, Jan. 10, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Grand Rap- ids Room of the Michigan League. Representatives of the threeitradi- tions: Oriental, Jewish, Christian, will lead the discussion, "Can Right and Wrong be Abolished?" Everyone isin- vited. Ann Arbor Friends' Group: The iAnn Arbor Friends will meet today. Jan. 10, at 5 p.m. in the Michigan League. Meeting for worship will be followed by a talk by Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk: "Tosto vs. the Dic- tators." Everyone interested is cor- dially invited. Harris Hall: The regular student meeting will be held at 7 p.m. The Rev. Henry Lewis! will be the speaker. All students and their friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church-: Services are: 8 a.m., Holy Com- munion; 9:30 a.m., Church School. 11 a.m., Morning prayer and sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. 11 a.m., Kindergarten. Stalker Hall: 9:45 a.m., Student class led by Prof. Geo. Carrothers on the theme: "Certain Shifts in Religious Em- phasis." 6 p.m. at the church. Union meet- ing with the Hi-Alpha Deltas. Fel- lowship hour and supper followed by Dr. Harold Carr of Flint, speaking on the subject: "Some Personalities I Have Known." All Methodist stu- dents and their friends are cordially invited. First Methodist Church: Morning worship service at 10:451 a.m. Dr. Harold F. Carr will speak on "By 'Beautiful Larden'." St. Paul's Lutheran Church: Carl A. Brauer, Minister. The morning service will be held at 10:45 a.m. The Student Club has re- quested Bible students on two Sun- day evening each month for the rest of the school year. The "Book of Genesis" will be discussed this Sun- day evening at 6:30 p.m. at the first in the series of "A Survey of the Books of the Bible." The pastor will lead these discussions and the public is invited to attend the entire series. The Lutheran Student Club will hold its regular Sunday evening meeting in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30 p.m. A student discussion on "The Contribution of the Lutheran Church to the World" will follow the supper hour. All students are wel- come. Trinity Lutheran Church, Sunday: Church services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Rev. Henry Yoder will preach the first sermon in a series of sermons on the Beatitudes. Students are cordially welcome. 1 Church of Christ (Disciples): 10:45 a.m., morning worship, min- ister, Rev. Fred Cowin. 12 noon, Students' Bible class, Dr. Louis A. Hopkins will speak to the class on the Drama of Job. 5:30 p.m., Social Hour and Tea. 6:30 p.m., Dr. Howard Y. McClusky, Reformed and Christian Reformed Churches: Services will be held in the Women's League Chapel at 10:30 a.m., today. Rev. G. Hofmeyer of Grand Rapids wil be the speaker. Corning Events Luncheon For Graduate Students on Wednesday, January 13, at 12:00 Noon in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League Building. Mr. Wilfred Shaw, Director of Alumni Relations, and Author of "The Uni- versity of Michigan" and "A Shorter History of the University of Michi- gan" will speak informally on "Be- ginnings of the University." German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held tomorrow at 12:10 in the Founders' Room of the Michigan Union. All faculty members inter- ested in speaking German are cordi- ally invited. There will be an infor- mal 10-minute talk by Prof. Hanns Pick. Graduate Education Club: The January meeting will be held Wed- nesday, Jan. 13 at 4 p.m. in the University Elementary School Li- brary. Mr. Byran Heise will speak informally on the subject "The Teaching of Cooperation." There will be an opportunity provided for ques- tions and discussion after Mr. Heise's talk. Students taking work in edu- cation, their friends, and those in- terested, are cordially invited to at- tend. The Mathematics Club will have a meeting Tuesday evening, Jan. 12, at 8 p.m., in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Prof. E& W. Miler will speak on "Bi- Connected Sets." Institute of Aeronautical Sciences: There will be a meeting Monday Jan. 11 at 7:30 p.m. in room 348 West Engineering Building. Mr. Francis Wallace, former stu- dent now engaged as a pilot for the United Air Lines will give a talk at the meeting. Chemical and Metallurgical En- gineers: The regular luncheon for staff and graduate students in chem- ical and metallurgical engineering will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 12, at 12:15 p.m. in Room 3201 East En- gineering Bldg. Mr. Harland Dodge will address the group on "Ann Ar- bor's New Sewage Disposal Plant." Mechanical Engineers: There will be a meeting of the Student Branch of the A.S.M.E., Wednesday evening, Jan. 13, at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. George Sandenburgh, City Engineer of Ann Arbor, will speak on "Municipal Engineering." The pro- gram will include moving pictures. Pins and watch charms, and also back issues of ' "Mechanical En- gineering" magazine are available in Room 221 W. Eng. Bldg. Phi Lambda Upsilon: Business meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Room 303 Chemistry Bldg. T-1--C--- -JC Ta__-.., L___- r_'-'-'--I----- street corner. Professor of Education Psychology, But it is the comedy scenes that will address the guild on the subject are most satisfying. The opening"If I Werea Student Again." Op- scene for example shows a mayorf portunty for questions will be given making a dedicatory speech for a peace memorial. The speech grad- ually turns into a pro-war tirade as! the country drifts into war. Music adds to the scene as the words of3 the speechmaker gradually turn into a song. It is this element of amusing combination of action, music, and idea that makes the play the best sort of theatre.I But the performers have not al- ways executed his plan so effectively. There are many perfect bit charac- terizations but as many more are; pompous and sometimes embarass- ingly slip-shod. -Russell Collins in the leading part, seems ineffective at! first, rather out of the picture but he grows in sincerely and with a calm but intense emotional quality as the play gets on. The experiment on the whole isr totally worthwhile. It has poetry, fantasy, satire, exhuberance which does not look back to forms of the past-entertainmentsuch as only the theatre can produce yet entertain- ment with va.lue anm eamning kevedr Ivu1 1l~ig Un- a Arac. iriV progra marks the beginning of a series on the general subject of personality development. First Presbyterian Church : 327 South Fourth Ave. William P. Lemon, D.D., minister. Elizabeth Leinbach, assistant. 10:45 a.m., "Life Abundant-with- out Strain." Sermon by the minister. Student choir and double quar- tette. 5:30 p.m.. Westminster Student Guild. Supper and socil hour fol- lowed by the meeting at 6:30 p.m. Subject: "Is Humanism Enough?" Speaker: Dr. W. P. Lemon. First Congregational Church. Allison Ray Heaps, minister. 10:45 a.m., service of worship, Dr. Howard R. Chapman will be the guest minister. 6 p.m. Student Fellowship, follow- ing the supper there will be an un- usually interesting program. Mrs. Heaps and Mrs. Roselle Knott will Cerele Francais: There will be a meeting of the Cercle Francais at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday evening, Jan. 13, at the League. Professor Knud- son will speak to the group. Notice to Intramural Riding Class: The class will meet as usual to- morrow, Monday, Jan. 11, at the En- gineering Arch at 7:45 p.m. All men interested are invited. For details call the Intramural Department. 1937 Mechanical Engineers: Mr. T. W. Prior of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company will be here Mon- day, January 11, for the purpose of interviewing men for positions. A group discussion will open the in- terviews. This will be at 10:30 am. in room 348. Literature and blanks may be obtained in room 221. A.A.U.W. Junior Group: The monthly dinner meeting will be held on Wednesday, Jan. 13, in the Mich- igan League. Mr. Wilfred Shaw, Director of Alumni Relations of the University, will speak on The Making of an Etching. Reservations may be made at the Michigan League (Phone 23251) until Tuesday night. Les Miserables: Tuesday and Wed- nesday, January 12-13, Matinees both days at 3:15. The box office will open Monday at 10:00 a.m. The Nell Gwyn performance of Fielding's "Tom Thumb" to be given on Tuesday, Jan. 12, in Sarah Case- well Angell Hall. will begin at 9 and not at 8:30 as was previously an- nounced. Faculty Women's Club: The Tues- day Afternoon Play-Reading Section will meet on Tuesday afternoon, Jan, 12, at 2:15 p.m. in the Alumnae Room of the Michigan League. Michigan Dames: The Music Group of the Michigan Dames will meet