___ _E__=_-G__ THE MICHIGAN D A ILY SAWRD AY' MAY 1, 1937 'HE MICHIGAN DAILY I -' v . ' ." five to four decision that such a blow to civil liberties could be struck. Here is the score of the Court in the past on civil liberties and the protection of minority groups: the case of Anita Whitney vs. California (274 U.S. 356) upheld the criminal syndicalism law of California which was a definite curtailment'of freedom of speech; in (92 U.S. 214) U.S. vs. Reese the United States Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a law passed by Congress which prohibited disenfran- chisement of ;Negro voters; the case of Sacco- Vanzetti which the Court refused to consider. Even after the DeJonge case of a few months ago which reversed the decision of the State of Oregon on the ground of improper procedure, mere membership in the Communist party is liable to ten years in prison. It was under the organized pressure of millions of Americans from all walks of life, particularly workers, campaigning for Angelo Herndon's life, that the Supreme Court acted. The Court as a bulwark for human rights, as it has been called, behaved as it did because there was an enlight- ened public interest focused on the case, an ele- ment indispensible to the eternal fight for the preservation of civil liberties-even in Ann Arbor. ac" " Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authox ity of the Board in Control of tusdent Publications. Published -every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session y n 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. Al Jri ts ,of republication of all other matter herein also iraserved .~ Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as aemcond ,class :mal matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. eMember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37 REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING OBY National Advertising ServiceInc. I. ? " College Publsers Reiresetaiv' 42OMODISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON 8 gAN FRANCIgc;o' LOs ANGELES . PORTLAND SEATTLE Board of Editors EAAGING EDITOR............ELSIE A.PIERCE EL1ITOIALDIRECTOR ..-MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins NI IGfT EDITORS: Josph Mattes, WilramE. Shackleton, Ir'ing Slvermnan, William .Spller, Tuure Tenander, '1obert Weeks. . PORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, chairman; Fred DeLano, Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman, Carl Gerstacker. 'WOEN'S :DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wuerfel chairman; rĀ„liabeth .M-Andersons, Elizabeth Binglan, :elen fDaulas, Barbara J. Loveli, Katherine Moore, Betty &trickroot. Business Department '-BUSINESS-MANAGER .......... .....JOHN R. :PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER .WILLIAM ARNDT .WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ....JEAN KEINATH BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy' Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Robert Lodge, Bill Newnan, Leonard Seigemnan, Richard Kowe Charles ,,:Coleman, W. Layne, Russ Cole,.Henry Homes, Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy, Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence diehlinsi, Evelyn - ripp. Departmental lanagers J..Cameron Hall, Accounts Manager; RichardCroushore, National 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: TUURE TENANDER A Greeting To High School Vistors .,.. HE UNIVERSITY student body 5 extends its welcome to high school students visiting the campus today. The University of Michigan has probably given us our most happy period in life, and at the same time our most profitable period intellectually. Michigan will not be on parade today. We trust that you who visit us today will realize that the scenes you witness represent our regular activity. Today it is up to you'to decide whether Michigan will be your home fpr four years, whether you will like the informality and democ- racy of whic'h we are proud. Public Vigilance- The Highest Court .. .. HEN THE- CAT (vigilance to pro- tect civil rights) was away the rat (antiquated Georgia Slave Insurrection Law) played with the life of a young Negro, Angelo Herndon. But early this week the cat came back. On Monday the Supreme Court, naively con- sidered the "indispensible bulwark" for the pro- tection of minority rights, handed down a grat- ifying decision reversing the conviction of Angelo Herndon to the Georgia chain gang-otherwise known as a living Hell (as quoted from the Bible). A new road is thereby opened into the South for the march of labor organization, for the achievement of greater social and economic equality for the tenant farmer and share cropper. The victory won by the decision should spell a new and freer day for the Southland which song writers and romantics forget, the Southland of lynchings, the Southland of illiteracy, the South- land of Negro and white oppression, the back- yard South. Vicioustanti-Negro feeling and a concealed hatred for the downtrodden accompanied the case from its early days in'1932 in the Atlanta courts!up to the United States Supreme Court. For the crime of organizing a successful protest meeting of unemployed white and Negro working people in Atlanta asking for relief from starva- tion, Hevndon was arrested on the charge that he attempted to incite to insurrection. A grim hu- mor is attached to the drama that saw an 1861 law dug up from the musty Georgia statute books -a 'drama that our local government has been emulating clumsily in recent weeks-on which to convict an apparently innocent person. After five years of traveling between the courts of the unhappy state of Georgia and the mighty high court of the land, the conviction of Angelo Hern- don was ruled a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Criminal syndicalism and insurrection laws,. however, remain untouched by the decision which may even be construed as a form of aid to such laws. The majority decision of Justice Roberts says, "So vague and indeterminate are Ut _ -,... i...a..-. 41....,'. .'cut +to ,.a nra fnm C'flflflfh THE FORUM Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinon of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential u son request. Contributors are ,asked to be brief, the edtltors reserving the right to "condense all.letters of more than 300 wards and to accept or reject ,letters upon the criteria of .general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Whdm Works For Who To the Editor: Professor Slosson took occasion several days ago in a letter called "Who Works For Whom" to object to the prevalent student attitude of unen- lightened selfishness. As he saw it, we are cheating ourselves when we cut class or skip on homework; and we incorrectly view teachers as persons trying to oversee us, rather than as persons who try to serve us. Such a view is very interesting; and, needless to say, uncommon among students. May one student suggest why we possess this strange de- lusion and why we view teachers more as over seers than as guides? First of all, if our instructors are only con- cerned with our welfare they seem to be taking the long way around to achieve this end. Only infrequently do we find a professor concerned with and capable of making his course interest- ing. If the educational system sat up nights worrying about the welfare of the students, it might be, expected that able research workers, able scholars, would be given a salary and a chance to study while the students were given capable and interesting lecturers. We have too many scholars and too few teachers at present ahi it is not that our instructors have shown no concern over the matter of interesting stu- dents but that they have shown so little ability to do so. Secondly, in most cases the employer has the right to help determine what task the employee shall perform. With all due respect to the mature. understanding of professors and curricula mak- ers, is it too much to ask that a similar condition prevail in the university in a milder form? Might the students indicate what subjects they believe should be covered in the various courses? Per- haps some of the elementary history students would not care to cover 3,000 odd years of as- sorted historical happenings in one fell swoop. Perhaps if the basic political science courses dealt with the problems rather than the mechanisms of political participation the students would show more interest. Has the worker, concerned as he may be about his job, done anything much to allow his employer to voice his wishes? Of course it will be said that background courses are needed to give the basic facts-quite oblivious to the fact that no empirical determin- ation of the amount of such background re- tained has ever been made. The reply will also be made that papa knows best-especially when papa represents the combined knowledge of sev- eral hundred mature men deeply concerned with matters of educational policy and possessing the cumulative knowledge of educational problems resulting from years of experience. Would it be rude to retort 'That's what you say!'? The identical argument in its more virulent forms is employed to justify more dctatorial procedures. The leader knows best. The head of the educa; tional hierarchy may also kjiow best-but they have given the student little chance to disprove them. The proposal of a referendum on the merits of teachers and courses may be imprac- tical but it is significant that we have never even heard it suggested. The final disproof of this worker-employer re- lationship is the startling lack of any mechanism to carry the complaints of the students to those who work for them. Too little work has been done to make educational problems subject to a combined solution offered by teacher and stu- dent rather than teacher to student. Education should be a cooperative venture, a search to- gether for the truths of human experience with teacher and student helping each other; the student deferring to the mature wisdom of the teacher, when the latter possessesesomething worth deferring to. It should not be a system wherein the student must willy-nilly accept the major portion of what the professor believes. Are we to have understanding or learning? --S.L. S gynappy Sories To the Editor: Since the subject of sex has been broached in a letter to The Daily however trivial.a subject that letter may have been about, I would like to take this opportunity to make another point as re o rd this heretofore tonhv nhipect BJENEATH * * ** --s --iBy Bonth Williams TONIGHT five nervous juniors will toss rest- lessly on their cots experiencing alternate moods of elation and dejection as they speculate with regard to the future. A week from tonight three of those five will be sunk in the depths of morose disappointment, one will appear completely satisfied, one will be next year's president of the Michigan Union- and all five will be gloriously drunk. To the campus at large May brings spontane- ity, .lazy warmth and girls in sweaters, but to the juniors who have worked three years for the recognition that goes with senior positions in The Daily, the Union, the. Gargoyle, the 'Ensian and the Interfraternity Council, May is the month of the jitters. Battling it out for the posts of president and recording secretary in the Union are Fritz Geib, Jack Thom, Bruce Telfer, Murray Campbell and Hugh Rader. To those five men this next week will be a nightmare of perplexing, nerve wrack- ing strain with the same thought constantly in the minds of each of them, "IF I get it." AND THE WEEK AFTERWARDS will see the same mental torture inflicted on the third year men in all three student publications, as they look forward, hope mixed with fear, to the conclusion of the fateful meeting of the Board in Control. That afternoon is never particularly pleasant. The Board, composed of faculty men, students, and outsiders, including Dean Bursley, Professor Sunderland, Lee White of the Detroit News sits in conference in the outer office of The Daily. All afternoon they sit there examining peti- tions, reading recommendations, and discussing the ability of the various candidates for office. An ominous feeling of forboding hangs over The Daily city room as reporters gather in groups, sophomores speculate, and freshmen sit in wide- eyed amazement at the immensity of the thing which is taking place. From time to time furtive eyes are turned to that front room where through the glass the lips of board members are deciding in a few words the destinies of next year's Michigan great. Three years of chasing stories, reading copy, and crawl- ing exhausted into bed at 3 o'clock, and you may be dismissed from consideration after five min- utes discussion. Most of the juniors don't sit around. They stay home and read or go down and drink im- mense quantities of beer, or listen to the ball game. I remember my freshman year when Bill Ferris was appointed managing editor of The Daily, and nobody could find him because he had gone for a long walk in the Arboretum. a ' I*x THE LAST THING in the world I would do, however, is to complain against the system. Every man can be sure that his case has been justly and impartially considered by a group of men who are interested only in the welfare of the publications and of Michigan, and when in the late afternoon of the'15th of MayProfessor Sunderland emerges from the three or four hour meeting with the final list in his hand, you can rest assured that every man will have beeR chosen fairly and without the least concession to campus politics. * ** * One of the most entertaining indoor sports of this particular season is the selecting of the men you favor for next year's important jobs. A group of present bigwigs have even gone so far as to get up a pool. 'Each man picked his own winners from the list of entries, sealed it with a quarter and deposited it in the Union safe marked NOT TO BE OPENED UNTIL AFTER MAY 15th. This handicapping of the junior class is great stuff as long as the present job holders keep their ideas to themselves, but this column will gladly offer 20-1 against that crafty judge of psychic phenomena who thinks he can pick all the winners. Every year has its startling upsets. Not upsets in the sense that an undeserving man wins out, but rather that sormeone who has been considered a sure thing because of good grades or pleasing personality, or talented apple polishing finishes up out of the money. This year will be no different than the rest and all I can do is to wish everybody the best of luck and may the best men come out on top. 4 * 4 4- THE ALPHA PHI'S behind the stellar hurling of Betty Lyon, crafty Hill Street left hander, walloped the Theta softball team Wednesday by a score of 12-7. The Alpha Phi's won the game in the first inning when they took a liking to the slants of Betty Ronal, who started on the mound for the Washtenaw club, and belted home nine runs before Mary Gies was called from the bullpen to retire the side. Press showed two bandages on his face. How he was injured is easily understandable and, since the girl involved is the daughter of a po- liceman, probably can be partially excused on the grounds that parental passion is hard to control. However be that as it may. The point I would like to make is that in the truck of Patrick were found a number of sex magazines of the type sold throughout the city. These magazines, pandering to the unintelligent with their pictures of nude women and sugges- tive stories, barely pass the federal ban on porn- ographic literature. In many cities-Newark among them I believe-they have been banned by the authorities. In recent years in Ann Arbor it seems as if al- mnst evrv s ffen hac habn enmmitted ha THEATRE By JAMES DOLL Cercle Francais de L'Universite du Michigan:rRepresentation Ann uelle Theatre Lydia Mendelssohn, Le 30 Avril. La Farce do Cuivier (Anonyme) Direc- tor, M. James O'Neill; L'Ecle des JBeles-Meres par Eugene Brieux? Direc- teur, M. Charles Koella; Un Client Ser- ieux par Geor-es Courteline, Directeur: Personne et Tout le Monde (The trans- lation o fthis phrase is M. Rene Tala- mon}. Three French Comedies This year the French play was three plays instead of one. Starting with a medieval farce' the club skipped through to the present day. La Farce du Cuvier was a high spirited aec- dote, a curtain-raiser, really, directed and acted with a great deal of spirit especially by Rowena LaCoste. It is doubtful if the Brieux play that followed could be made inter- esting by any group of actors. Henri Bernstein's Espoir played in New York this season under the title of promise is the same sort of brand of post-Ibsen. Even with Sir Cedric Hardwicke and Frank Lawton, it was dull. Perhaps it is just that the type is out of style at the moment. However, the play last night was well done. The characterizations were convincing and well sustained. The two mothers (Harriet Shackle- ton and Martha Dynes) had force and a restrained comedy spirit. The young husband (Nicklay Turitzin) was played with spirit, the wife (Marcia Connell) had charm enough to make us easilybelieve in the reconciliation. Misha Chimacoff as M. Graidor handled well the problem of resolving the plot. The third play Un Client Sericurx was the hit of the evening. Members of the Romance Languages faculty played with a sense of sly humor this satire on contemporary court-room practices in France. They were no doubt aided by elaborate Dickens-like make-ups. Mr. Marc Denkinger had mock-seriousness and energy that built the play to a farcical climax. The pantomime of Prof. Arthur Can- field, Prof. Herbert Kenyon, and Mr. Charles Koella, especially, was pure delight. StateDeba:ting Won By lonia Squad Holds Government Ownership Of lectric Utilities Impractical (Continued from Page 1) dividual members with gold wrist-' watches. In the afternoon an exhibition de- bate between members of the fresh- man team on the question of a uni- cameral legislature resulted in a vic- tory' for the negative, which favored a bicameral system. The negative team consisted of Robert Johnson and Jack Sessions, the affirmative of Sydney Davidson and Jack Shuler, Sessions was a member of the Plymouth High School team which lost to Kalamazoo Cen- tral in the state championship de- bate finals here last year. The question was: Resolved, That the State of Michigan Should Adopt the Unicameral Legislature System, has been chosen as the national de- bate question for next year. It is now being considered for the Michi- gan High School Forensic Association question. High School Pupilsj To See Universiy (Continued from Page I) Wells . Bennet, director of the archi- tecture schooi, De an Samuel T, Dana of the College of Forestry and Con- servation, Dr. Earl V. Moore, director of the School of Music and Prof. How- ard B. Lewis of the pharmacy college. The program follows: At 9 a.m.-' 5 p.m., walks around the campus and a bus tour to the Stadium; 9 a.m.- noon, Engineering Open House; 10 am. -noon, consultation hourswith department heads; noon, luncheon in the Michigan Union, addresses by President Ruthven, Dean of Women Alice C. Lloyd, Dean of Students Jo- seph A. Bursley; 2 p.m., track meet, vlichigan vs. Indiana; 3 p.m., base- ball, Michigan vs. Ohio State; 3 p.m., golf, Michigan vs. Ohio State; 4 p.m., football, spring scrimmage, For the women, 2 p.m., demonstra- tions of sports by the Women's Ath- letic Department, Palmer Field; 2:30 p.m.-4 p.m., social hour, light re- freshhients in the Women's Athletic Association Building. 4:15 p.m., Prof. Wilmot F. Pratt, University caril- lonneur, will play a group of college songs on the carillon. Dental Honor Society Inducts Six Students Six seniors in the dental school were inducted into Omicron Kappa Upsilon, National Dental Honor Fra- ternity, at its annual meeting held Wednesday in the TUnion. Thev President and Ruthven will be May 2, from 4 to tea. Commencement Invitations: The Invitations Committee in the various schools have closed their orders as of 5 p.m. Wednesday afternoon. Begin- ning today and continuing until fur- ther notice the sale of these official class booklets and folders will be handled by Burr, Patterson & Auld Company, 603 Church St. Samples will be provided by this company and orders for any of the Senior class booklets will be taken. All Seniors who have not ordered are urged to do so without delay. W. B. Rea. Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a meeting of the Fac- ulty of this College on Monday, May 3, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 348 West1 Engineering Building. Agendum:{ consideration of panel procedure for election of member to Executive Committee; report on new statement of Nontechniical Electives; routine business. A. H. Lovell, Secretary.( To the Members of the Faculty of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts: The seventh regular meet- ing of the faculty of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts for the academic session of 1936-37 will be held in Room 1025 Angell Hall, May 3, 1937, at 4:10 pm. Agenda: 1. Adoption of the minutes of the meeting of April 5, 1937, which have been distributed by campus mail (pages 331-338). 2. Reports: a. Executive Committee by Prof. John F. Shepard. b. University Council by Prof. Louis I. Bredvold. c. Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs by Prof. Arthur Aiton. e. Deans' Conference by Dean E. H. Kraus. 3. Report of the Committee sn Outside Employment. 4. Announcements and new busi- ness. Edward H. Kraus. Engineers, Sophomores: Rings will be purchased this year instead of the usual class jackets. Three designs have been submitted and are on dis- play on 2nd floor bulletin board, West Engineering Bldg., near Library. Please inspect designs and the one selected by vote will be adopted. These rings, with suitable numerals, will be available for all classes of engineers. Academic Notices Reading Requirement in German for Ph.D. Candidates: Candidates in all fields except those of the natural sciences and mathematics must ob- tain the official certification of an adequate reading knowledge of Ger- man by submitting to a written ex- amination given by the German de- partment. There will be an examination on Wednesday, May 26, at 2 p.m. in Room 203 U. H. Students who intend to take the examination are requested to regis- Iter their names at least one week before the date .of the examination at the office of the German depart- ment, 204 U.H., where information and reading .lists may be obtained. Economics 112: Room assignments for the bluebook on Monday, May 3, at 1f am 0 rn n- cn fallnine DAILY OFFICIAL BUJLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of he Vaiversity. .Copy received at. the oec ao the Assiatazt to the Presidast ltU 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1937 VOL. XLVII No. 150 Noties Mrs. Alexander 0.G home on Sunday,; 6 p.m. for a faculty nourncement of the Henry Russel Award for 1936-37 will be made. University Lecture: Dr. Thorvald Madsen, chairman of the Health Committee of the League of Nations and Director of the Serum Institute, Copenhagen, will deliver a lecture on "The Control of Whooping Cough" today at 11 a.m. in Room 1528, East Medical Building. Mathematics Lectures: Your at- tention is called to a series of lectures to be given by Dr. Witold Hurewicz of the University of Amsterdam on the subject of "Homotopy and Ho- mology.", The first lecture will be held on Tuesday afternoon at 4:15 p.m. in Room 3011 Angell Hall. The dates of the other two lectures will be announced later, but will probably be on Thursday and Friday at the same hour. Exhibition An exhibition of paintings by Mar- garet Bradfield and Mina Winslow is being held in Alumni Memorial Hall through May 5, 2 to 5 pm. Sun- days, under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art Association. Events Today } Mr. C. M. Goodrich, chief engrer of the Canadian Bridge Company, will talk on the design of Transmis- sion Towers before the class in E.M. 18 today at 2 p.m. in Room 406 West Engineering Building. All in- terested are invited to rattend. Danee for Graduate $tudents and Public Heaih Club tonight at the Women's Athletic Building from 9 until 12 o'clock. Also bowling and ping-pong. The University of Michigan Pub- lic health Club will hold a dance to- night at the Women's Athletic Building from 9 until 12 o'clock. This dance is being held in conjunction with the Graduate School group. Members of the club are cordially invited to come and bring their friends. Members are asked to remember the meeting to be held Wednesday evening, May 5, 1937, at which time Dr. Reuben Kahn of the Bacteriology Department will speak. This ineet- ing will be held in the Michigan League and the room will be posted. Catholic Student's "Hiking Club: A group of Catholic students and their friends will- meet at the chapel at 2 p.m. today for a hike. They will return not later than 5 p m. All students and their friends are in- vited to attend. Hillel Foundation: There will be an informal dance and reception to- night in honor of visiting Chicago students. All are cordially invited. - German Table for Faculty Mem- hers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michi- gan Union. All faculty members in- terested in speaking German are cor- dially invited. There will be an in- formal 10-minute talk by Prof. Hanns Pick. Coming Events Junior Research Club: The May meeting will be held on Tuesday eve- ning, May 4, 7:30 p.m. in Room 2083 N.S. Bldg. Program: The Work of theInsti- tute of Fisheries Research, by Dr. A. S. Hazzard, of the Museum. Soaring Flight, by Dr. Rudolph L. Thoren, Dept. of Aeronautical En- gineering. Contemporary: . There will be a meeting of the entire staff, except for the editorial board, on Monday, May 3, at 4 p.m. in the Publications building. Tryouts will be held at 4:30. p.m. to fill vacant business staff positions. Graduate Outing Club: Bird trip on Sunday morning at 6 a.m.fGroup will meet in the park east of the Museum Building. Breakfast will be served at the.Island at 9 am. All graduate students cordially invited. a, su a.m. are as sos ows A-G, .Natural.Science Aud. H-Q, 25 Angell Hall. R-Z, 1025 Angell Hall. Geology 11: There will be a trip as usual this morning at 8 field a.m. Short Courses in Mathematics: The third of the series of short courses in mathematics will be given by Dr. Sumner B. Myers on the subject of "Calculus of Variations in the Large." These lectures will begin on M1Vonday May 3, and will continue for five weeks. First meeting of the class Monday at 3 p.m. in Room 3201 An- gell Hall for the purpose of arrang- ing hours. , Concerts Carillon Recital: Wilmot F. Pratt, University Carillonneur, will give a recital on the Charles Baird Carillon 'in the Burton Memorial Tower, Sun- day afternoon, May 2, at 4:15 p.m. Lectures University Lecture: Dr. Walter H. Bucher, chairman of the department of Geology and geography, University of Cincinnati, will lecture on "The Hartz Mountain Overthrust}' on Tuesday, May 11, at 4:15 p m., in Natural Science Auditorium. Illus- +roa: p.ThP nnhlit s an lly nv t Acolyte Vleeting ionday, May 2, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 202 S.W. Dr Morris Lazerowitz will read a paper entitled "The Principle of Verifiabil- ity." Anyone interested in philo- sophical debate may attend. Lutheran A Capella Choir: The regular choir rehearsal will be held on Sunday at 4 p.m. Hillel .Foundation: A student symposium led by Ronald Freedman will be held Sunday, May 2, at 8 p.m. Pop Concert: The third in the series of pop-concerts will be held at the Hillel Foundation Sunday, May 2, at 2:30 p.m. The Franck'D minor symphony will be presented.