< ot "16 THE MICHICAN DAILY I'TEDT'E5DAY, PER, 16, 1 o B THE MICHIGAN DAILY hours later he was recalled and asked, in a resolu tion adopted by the Regents, to resign. He then asked that the Board's charges be put in writing and that he be given an opportunity to reply to them. "His answer Is m. -is answer is in," Butler shouted. The case was closed, and attempts to reopen it on the part of the victim's friends were halted by the Regents. Regent Snyder, the only member of the 1917 Board still a Regent, who cast the only dissenting vote on the exoneration resolution, declared he would resign rather than review the case. Professor Schaper's friends have always blanied his liberal political views rather than his pacifism for his treatment, asserting that the Regents, al- lies of the reactionary section of Minnesota poli- tics, merely used his opposition to the war as a means of ralroading him. _ In any case, the incident can be taken as dem- onstrative of what becomes of academic freedom in war-time, when men of the Pierce Butler stripe are endowed with the immense power of an aroused chauvinistic public opinion, and when democratic civil rights are suspended in favor of patriotic war-fever. Joseph Gies. H-eywood Broun MIAMI, Feb. 15.-Sonja Henie is here with her own ice and her manager Mike Jacobs. Of course, it is Miss Henie who does the skating, but in this case the manager is important. At any rate, Mr. Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Stude* Publications. Pubashed every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session. 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 ights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. .:.n'red atthe Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second Mlass mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, 84.00; by mail, $4.50. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38 REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY Nationa AdvertisingServiceInc. College Pulisers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEw YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO BOSTON . LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO ' Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ..............JOSEPH S. MATTES hMITORIAL DIRECTOR...........TUURE TENANDER CITY EDITOR.................WILLIAM C. SPALLER WS EDITOR .... ....ROBERT P WEEKS OMEN'S EDITOR...............HELEN DOUGLAS SPORTS EDITOR ......................IRVIN LISAGOR Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER ..............ERNEST A. JONES CREDIT MANAGER ....................DON WILSHER ADVERTISING MANAGER ....NORMAN B. STEINBERG WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER........BETTY DAVY WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES NIGHT EDITOR: JOSEPH GIES The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The Commerce Committee's Investigation SENATOR ROYAL S. COPELAND, as head of the Senate Commerce Com- mittee, has recently been conducting an investi- gation into union activities in the maritime in- dustry. Last Wednesday one Joseph P. Ryan, head of the International Longshoremen's Union appeared before the committee. Ryan's union is affilated with the AFL, and is, through its leadership, avowedly anti-CIO. Ryan, who has attacked the CIO and its leadership numerous times before, continued along his usual bent before the committee.. The resourceful Ryan began by giving his tes- timony for the deportation of Harry Bridges, a.. power in the western branch of the National Maritime Union (CIO sponsored), then broad- ened and increased his denunciation to include Joseph Curran, head of the CIO union, also men- tioning John L. Lewis in the same manner. As a fitting climax he attacked the National Labor Relations Act, which guarantees labor the right to bargain collectively, and advocated in its stead the Copeland sponsored bill (said to be approved by the shipowners), which infringes upon this right in the maritime industry. Despite the fact that Ryan had hurled grave accusations at Bridges and Curran, Senator Cope- land permitted neither of these men to appear before the committee to answer the charges. Also, the committee has approved Copeland's request for $50,000 to investigate union activities further. Thus Copeland places himself in the position of a tool of the shipowners to revoke the collective bargaining, and also uses a noted labor turncoat to give his hearings an air of impartiality. He uses the "investigation" as a witch hunt to screen the actual purpose of the bill. The Commerce committee should be called on to give Curran and Bridges a hearing. Dennis Flanagan. Professor Schaper Is Exonerated... NOTHER of the notorious academic incidents of the 1917-18 period which come to light from time to time was expunged last week at the University of Minnesota. Prof. William A. Schaper, formerly of the Minnesota political science faculty, was exonerated by the Board of Regents from the charges which brought his dismissal in 1917, awarded the title of pro- fessor-emeritus and $5,000 in reparation for sal- ary lost in the year following his discharge. One of the most illuminating and alarming aspects of the case from a national point of view is the part played in the dismissal by Pierce Butler, then a Minnesota Regent, now a member of the United States Supreme Court. In Septem- ber of 1917 Professor Schaper was called before the Regents to answer charges of being "a rabid pro-German." The chief basis of the accusation was a telegram which Professor Schaper, along with several other citizens of Minneapolis, had sent to President Wilson in March, a few weeks before war was declared, urging the President and Congress to keep America out of war. Regent Butler took the lead in a bullying inquisition of the mild-mannered professor, according to an account in the Minnesota Leader, who said that he could not "boost for the war" because he had relatives in both the German and American armies. He added that he believed all war-time laws should be strictly obeyed. "Don't you believe the Kaiser, the.frown Prince and the other Hohenzollerns should be wiped out root and branch and the government of Germany I _t. :- - . i.a .,.,- A - 11 ^ - + Q y- Y ' Jacobs did have the acumen to recognize Miss Henie's value as an entertainer long before she went to Holly- wood. This I know, because four years ago I was trying to pro- mote a benefit at Madison Square Garden with the help of Jacobs and Bill Farns- THEATR:E By NORMAN KIELL Calendar This Week. The Cass Theatre in Detroit relights with Room Service, the hilarious show that found its way once before to the Cass last August. It's about a collection of actors, actresses, and di- rectors stranded in a hotel where their behavior is more agreeable to the audience than to the management. This is the show that George Ab- bot, its producer, had clocked for laughs-to the tune of 463. As a matter of fact, the Marx Broth- ers have thought it so funny that they are going to use it in their next starring vehicle on the screen. As is their custom, the Marxes will take their version of Room Service on the road, in tabloid form, to get audience reaction before they startfilming. Feb. 18 and 19: The Art Cinema League brings to the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre the Grand Prix Paris Award, Peter I. The N.Y. World-Tel- egram says of it that its magnificent acting is so superior to anything from Hollywood that the comparison isn't even funny. This view is upheld by William Dieterle, the director of "Zola" who claims it is one of the finest films ever made. Feb. 27: The 1937 Pulitzer Prize Play comes to the Cass for a full week. It is, of course, "You Gan't Take It With You, by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman and is under the aegis of Sam H. Harris. The acting company hails from Chicago. March 1. Arms And The Man, George Ber- nard Shaw's comedy, will be the next attraction by the dramatic unit of the Detroit Federal Theatre, at the Cinema Theatre. The Shaw production is under the direction of Verner Hal- dene and has Alma Brock, Ray Rawlins, and Ruth Whitworth playing the leads. Sets and costumes will be by James Doll. March 4 and 5: Again the Art Cinema League brings a great foreign film to Ann Arbor. This time it is the French feature, The Golem, sta ring Harry Baur. The Golem is based on the -istoric legend that originated in medieval Prague concerning the creation of a figure endowed with the breath of life which served as the protector of the ghetto of Prague. March 17 and 18: The Hillel Players are bring- ing to the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Edith Whitesell's drama, Roots, which won the major Hopwood award in playwriting last year. The Hillel Players are attempting a major feat in this production inasmuch as it is entirely of student composition. Its director will be Harold Gast, '39, its general production manager, Louise Sa- mek, '38, and scenic designer, David Goldring '40. Included in the cast are Murray Davis, '38, Doris Wechsler, '41, Jane Sanger, '40, Madeline1 Betty Myers, '38, and Miriam Szold, '40. March 23-26. The annual Junior Girls' Play this year is The Mulberry Bush, "a mythical com- edy" by Jean Keller and Russel McCracken, and is directed by Sally Pierce. Jean Keller was a Hopwood winner in 1934 and that same year she also wrote "The Gang's All Here" for JGP. Mc- Cracken directed JGP for three years as well as the Children's Theatre and Mimes' Opera, and is now an assistant in the Speech Department. Syncopation By TOM McCANN If not the greatest it will be one of the greatest trombone artists, Tommy Dorsey, who will lead a brilliant swing combination the night of Feb. 22, at the Yost Field House in a concert which promises to be one of the musical highlights of the current year. Ranked by many as being a more polished trombonist than either Jack Teagarden or Miff Mole, Tommy Dorsey is certainly a name in mod- ern dance music that will go down in musical history. Our first recollection of the present Tommy Dorsey band was his rehabilitation of one of the Joe Haymes groups whose first engagement of any importance was with the old .French Casino in New York. Emerging from this first combination has come the Clambake Seven, Jack Leonard, Edythe Wright, and the present Tommy Dorsey band, which has just completed its sec- ohd yearat the Hotel Commodore. Hitting the swing trail, Tommy will make brief stops at Syra- cuse University, Lehigh, Ohio State, the Univer- sity of Cincinnati and Miami University before the all-important appearance at the Field House. Becaus the Tommy Dorsev groi can nlav worth. The notion in my mind was, naturally enough, that Mike and Bill could dig up a couple of second rate fighters who could be thrown into the ring to help a first rate cause. But Jacobs dissented "You shouldn't get yourself mixed up with the fighting racket even if it is for a charity," said the austere president of the Twentieth Century Sporting Club. "I'll give you something high class and dignified." I stole a line once uttered by Bernard Shaw and replied, "Mr. Jacobs, you seem, to be inter- ested only in art, while I, by a strong coincidence, am interested only in money. What have you got which is high class and dignified and also ex- citing enough to fill the Garden?" But Mike Didn't Get Her "I've got a skater," said Jacobs. "Or at least I think I can get her." The suggestion left me very cold. "I don't see how you're going to get many people to turn out to see a girl skate," I said. Unless you mean to get a herd of elephants and a symphony orchestra to go with her." "This girl doesn't need any elephants," Mike replied. "I'm talking about Sonja Henie. She can pack the Garden all by herself. She's in Norway now, but she's got a date to appear here in about a month in an amateur skating ballet. "That's the only hitch. Colonel Kilpatrick may not want her to appear in a show of her own before the ballet. That's your job. Go and try to get his permission." I went and failed completely. The Colonel said, logically enough, that it would take the edge off the ballet if Sonja made a previous appearance. Mike Jacobs was disappointed when I brought him the bad news. "It looks as if we were licked, Haywood," he said. "But there is one chance. I'll cable to Miss Henie,, and ask her if she wants to turn profes- sional. That would bar her automatically from the Ice Ballet. But I'm afraid there isn't much chance. I don't think Sonja Henie is rich enough to be able to afford giving up her amateur status." Mike was right, and we didn't have the show. Later California induced the Norwegian girl to make figure skating a professional career. And How She Packs 'Em In Her pictures have been extremely successful, but even so, her box office draw, when she ap- pears in person, has been greater than anyone but Jacobs could possibly have anticipated. Of course, she carried a rather elaborate show along with her, but the patrons come wholly be- cause they want to see Miss Henie. She could do the performance as a solo in a pinch. I think it is accurate to say that right now Sonja Henie is the greatest single box office draw in America. Fighters have filled the Garden, but it takes two of them to make a performance. And sometimes you don't get an exciting evening even with a dozen pugilists. Nobody would pack an arena to see Joe Louis get up in a ring and shadow-box all by himself. Moreover, unlike the fighters, nobody can come forward with the suggestion that a gorilla could better the performance of Miss Henie. It isn't just the fact that she is a magnificent skater. Some of the male pros can execute more difficult stunts. But Sonja has a great theafrical sense. She knows how to put her stuff over. And, like many of the stars, some curious mir- acle occurs whenever she steps out before an au- dience. Something of additional radiance is add- ed. Uncle Heywood Hunts Autographs Mike Jacobs gave a cocktail pyty for Miss Henie when she arrived in Miami. Of course, she didn't have her skates on, which might have been a handicap. But I doubt if anybody would have picked her out of the room full of people as the most glamor- ous of all the girls. She was just a somewhat shy and chunky little blonde. To be sure, my opinion may have been influenced by the fact that she gave me the sharp edge of a somewhat frigid manner. My assignment was unfortunate. I had to come up and say, "Miss Henie would you mind giving me your autograph?" She wrote her name out, but in the languid manner which must become inevitable in the case of those stars who are harried by the hounds. I didn't want it for myself. It was a request from a little girl in school. Heavens knows I have plenty of ways of mak- ing myself a pest without taking up the collection of autographs. Delegates to the annual congress of the Na- tional Student Federation of America met recent- ly on the campus of the University of New Mex- inn + m in,. e...nlrnh1P inz a c.t+en .anl a of Common Sense Organized labor has made two ine appelrces in the week's news. First, the action of the Executive Committee of the American Federa- tion of Labor in urging Congress to repeal or modify the undivided pro- fits tax and the capital gains tax. Second, the agreement entered into between the Unted States Steel Cor- a poration and the Committee for In- t dustrial Organization in the amic- o able atmosphere of around-the-table'P discussion. a It is no exaggeration to rank the t statement of the A.F. of L.'s com- w mittee to Congress as an important "state paper." The necessity for the w recommended tax revision was pre-t sented in lucid argument. Busine, ' big and little, had filed objections to P the taxes in question, pointing par- C ticularly to the actual financial dif- R ficulties imposed by the undistributed o profits tax and its adverse psycholo- e gical influence. Topping the arraign- a merit was industry's sudden and swift a decline, with the rising tide of un- employment-3,000,000 persons, as S Mr: Roosevelt estimated in his mes- sage Thursday, thrown out of work S in the last three months. b W That is the condition gloomily for-~o tifying the demand for tax revision. e In adding its voice to the chorus, the a A.F. of L. has made the demand prac- d tically unanimous.. Labor's statement goes beyond the s immediate facts and thir distress-i ing consequences. As the spokesman for relief for business, labor truly says: t The real remedy for unemploy- t ment is the creation and mainten- ance of work opportunities for work- V ing men and women in private in- dustry.m( That is, of course, fundamentally A sound doctrine. It is so accepted by everybody who believes in the Ameri- can form of government and in the c American form of economy. They are both fruits of the same constitu- 0 tional tree of representative democ- racy. They survive or perish togeth- 0 er. It is a heartening pronouncement ir that labor has made, one that shouldM drive home to Congress the vital truth that our Government and our f industry are not, and cannot be, ene- mies; that, on the contrary, they are bound together by a community ofU interest. Not in a competitive, butD in a cooperative, spirit,bthey must meet and solve their problems. Gov- ermental policies that cripple indus- try must necessarily cripple labor. That is labor's announced position. y It is the gospel of common sense. And the gospel of common sense c has been given a practical demon- stration by United States Steel and the CIO in negotiating the new con- tract to replace the agreement which will expire on Feb. 25. The present wage scale will continue in effect, with provisions foi' readjustment or e reconsideration should conditions re- quire. What a happy and auspiciousa contrast is this procedure to the re- a sort to force! For two generations or more, Big u Steel resisted the unionization of its v plants. A new management *took c charge, with a new policy which re- sults are vindicating. Industry anda labor, in this instance, seem to h/;e s come of age. The shining virtue of common sense! It is not a panacea. It paints 1 no Utopian mirage on the horizon.C But it is an indispensable attributed in all leadership-governmental, in-o dustrial, labor. .E St. Louis Post-Dispatch. C bSnow White' K "Snow White and the SevenC Dwarfs," which is Walt Disney's firstc completed full-length picture, has already broken a record and un- doubtedly will break many more be- fore it has run its course. It is in its fifth week at the Radio City MusicC Hall in New York and has been seen by more than 800,000 persons. Mr. Disney, it seems, is now in the bigk money-and for the first time. Mr. Disney has also made himself eligiblef I for another sheaf of laurels. More important than either 'gie cash or the kudos that "Snow White" will earn for its inimitable, creatcr is the effect it will have on future motion picture entertain- ment.) One of the complaints made against the moving picture by the more sensitive practitioners in the Hollywood studios is that the me- dium itself is made up of so many rigid elements that it cannot be artistically unified. The true-to-na- ture settings, the necessity for rap- idly changing camera angles, the registered personality of so many of the actors, all tend to create a for- muia that can be disregarded only at the risk of producing something that the public will not pay to see. Whether this is a valid complaint or not, it is nothing that need dis- turb Mr. Disney. He creates his own world with its own weather and pop- ulates it with whatever creatures suit his fancy. There can be no problem of inflexibility where one mind cre-, ates, as well as controls, all the ele- ments with which it is concerned. And now that it has been dem- onstrated that Mr. Disney's animated fantasies are just as acceptable in full length as in abbreviated form, it mav he ascuend that "Snno DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the ofice of the Assistant to the President until 3.30; 1 ;00 a. on Saturday. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 16, 1938 c VOL. XLVII. No. 96 e G Apparatus Exchange: The Regents d t their meeting in Marcn, 1927, au- horized an arrangement for the sale1 f scientific appratus by one de- fc artment to another, the proceeds of U ccount of the department from o he sale to he credited to the budget L hich the apparatus is transferred. t Departments having apparatus' hich is not in active use are advised F o send description thereof to the o: niversity Chemistry Store, of which rof. R. J. Carney is director. The hemistry store headquarters are in P oom 223 Chemistry Building. An f ffort will be made to sell the ap- aratus to other departments which c re likely to be able to use it. In b ome instances the apparatus may be a ent to the University Chemistry d tore on consignment and if it is not v old within a reasonable time, it will i e returned to the department from hich it was received. The object f this arrangement is to promote t conomy by reducing the amount of t nused apparatus. It is hoped that s epartments having such apparatus 'ill realize the advantage to them- elves and to the University in avail- g themselves of this opportunity. i The Bureau has received notice of i he following United States Civil t ervice Examinations: F Agronomist (Soil Conservation), 1 3,800 a year; Associate Agronomist Soil Conservation), $3,200 a year; ssistant Agronomist (Soil Conser- 1 ation), $2,600 a year; Soil Conser- ation Service, Department of Agri- ulture. P Junior Scientific Aid (Parasitol- V gy), $1,440 a year; Bureau of An- 1 nal Industry, Department of Agri- :ulture. Senior Scientific Aid (Preparator s n Pathology), $2,000 a year; Army g fedical Museum, War Department. Printer-Proofreader, $1.32 an hour 40 hour week); Government Print- ng Office. 5 Physiotherapy Aide, $1,800 a year; A . S. Public Health Service (Treasury p )epartment), and Veterans' Admin- 11 stration. Junior Engineer, $2,000 a year; enior students may apply. L Customs Examiner's Aid, $2,300 a h ear; U.S. Customs Service, Treasury p )epartment. For futher information, please all at the office, 201 Mason. Hall. w University Bureau of Appoint- t ments and Occupational Infor- mation. T Extra-Curricular Activities: TheI ttention of all- students interested in R xtra-curricular activities is called to r he change in procedure recently Ldopted by the Committee on Stu- ent Affairs with reference to the t nethod to be followed by the idi- i idual desiring to take part in extra- i urricular activities and by the chair- F nan and managers of these activities. 'F At the beginning of each semester ;nd summer session every students hall be conclusively presumed to be t neligible for any public activity until o hs eligibility is affirmatively estab- V ished (a) by obtaining from' the s chairman of the Committee on Stu- I lent Affairs, in the Office of the Dean of Students, a written Certificate of Eligibility and (b) by presenting the F Certificate of Eligibility to the chair- i man of manager of the student activ- t ty in which he wishes to participate. The Chairman or Manager of any student activity shall file with thet Chairman of the Committee on Stu-r dent Affairs, before permitting the student or students involved to par- ticipate, the names of all those who1 have presented Certificates of Eligi- bility, and a signed agreement to ex- elude all others from participation.i The issuing of Certiicates of Eli- gibility for the second semester will be greatly facilitated if each applicant brings' with him or her a record of first semester grades. Second semester Certificates of El- igibility will be required after Mar. 1. Textbook Lending Library: Stu- dents who would like to borrow books from the Textbook Lending Library, at the Angell Hall Study Hall must 1 be recommended for the privilege by Professor Arthur D. Moore, Dean Joseph A. Bursley, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, or by any one of the academic counselors of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts. Students may leave requests for books not now in the Textbook Lend- ing Library with Mr. Van Kersen, Assistant in Charge of the Angell Hall Study Hall. Such requests will be printed in The Michigan Daily so that donors of books may have the opportunity of satisfying specific needs. The Bureau has received notice of the following Michigan Civil Service Examinations: Social Work Classes, $100 to $250 a month; for all classes. Conservation Classes, $100 to $140 a month; Forest Fire and Conserva- tion officers. Automotive Operation Classes, 55c and 60c per hour; Truck Driver, Highway Equipment Operator, etc. Foods and Standards Inspector, 4110 .n n19R anth hanged at the J-Hop of last Friday vening should be reported to Mrs. riffin, Office of the Dean of Stu- ents, Room 2, University Hall. Books on the required reading list or Political Science 52 and English 02 are available to all students with- ut charge at the Hillel Foundation ibrary and may be withdrawn on he same terms as books from the eneral University Library. The oundation is located on the corner f East University and Oakland. All Independent women who have etitioned for a committee position or Assembly Ball must go to Room 2 rniversity Hall and get an elegibility ard from Miss Scanlan and then ring it to the Undergraduate office t the League next Monday or Tues- ay between 3:00 and 5:30. This is ery important and should be done mmediately. J-Hop: J-Hop tickets are available o those students who wish to secure hem by calling at Room 2, Univer- ity Hall. Academic Notices Notice to Seniors: The examination n foreign languages (French, Span- ;h, German) for the New York State eacher's license will be held Friday, eb. 18, at 1:15 o'clock, in Room 100 Z.L. Anthropology 32 will meet in Room 025 Angell Hall instead of Room 231. Anthropology 152, The Mind of rimitive Man, will meet in Room 035, Angell Hall, instead of Room 6. Bus. Ad. 104: Tabulating Practice tudents will meet in Room 225 An- ell Hall Wednesday, Feb. 16 at 2 p.m. A. D. Meacham. English 190: The class will meet at p.m., Thursday, Feb. 17, 2215 A.H. ny student unable to keep this ap- ointment will kindly report to the nstructor. English 232 (Studies in Elizabethan Literature) will meet to arrange ours on Wednesday, Feb. 16, at 4 .m. in 2213 A.H. English 300E, Seminar in Criticism, ill meet Thursday, 3 p.m., hours for he semester to be arranged then. Students who elect French 202, Jethods and Tools, will meet on Thursday, Feb. 17, at 4 o'clock in Zoom 110 Romance Languages to ar- ange for hours. Mathematics 248, Thory of las- icity. For those who are interested n this course, there will be a meet- ng to arrange hours on Wednesday 4eb. 16, at 3 o'clock in Room 20 Eas~t Hall. M.E. 33 and 38: Students electing hese courses will meet at 4:30 p.m. n Wednesday, Feb. 16, in Room 209 Nest Engineering Annex. Laboratory schedules and all semester arrange- ments will be made at this time. Naval Architecture 2. Will meet in Room 336, West Engineering Build- ng instead of Room 222 as given in he announcement. Psychology 34L, 36, 38: All labora- tory sections of these courses will meet this -week at 1 p.m. in Room 3126 N;S. on their respective days. Students Who have not yet arranged laboratory sections and students in 34L who have not arranged their dis- cussion section should do so at once in Room 2122 N.S. The regular place of meeting for 34L is Room 1139 N.S. on Wednesday at 1 and Satur- day at 11. Concerts Choral Union Concert: The Roth String Quartet of Budapest, Feri Roth, First Violin; Jenor Antal, Sec- ond Violin; Ferenc Molnar, viola; and Janos Scholz, violoncellist; will give the ninth program in the Choral Union Concert Series, Thursday, Feb. 17, at 8:30 o'clock in Hill Audi- torium. Exhibitions An exhibition of paintings, draw- ings and drypoints by Umberto Ro- mano is offered by the Ann Arbor Art Association in the South gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall, and an exhibition of etchings by John Tay- lor Arms in the North Gallery, Feb. 14 through March 2. Open '2 to 5 p.m. daily including Sundays, admission free to members and to students. Events Today Research Club: tonight at 8 p.m., in Room 2528 East Medical Bldg. Speakers: (1) Prof. I. L. Sharf- man, "Some basic issues in the movement for public control of pri- vate enterprise." (2) Prof. M. H. Soule, "Leprosy." The Council will meet at 7:30 p.m.