FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JAN. 9, 1938 THE MICHIGAN DAILY " ' 1, -l ID - : - , ,' j t11--W ~I4~T~CV NT0 t NI X....IK 11 MKIW A xAR8IK NP a u al aiU Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Studer" Publications. Pubunshed 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; All rights of republication oftall other matter herein also reserved. En..sred at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second viass mail matter.. Subscriptionsduring regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY NationaAdvertiingService, Inc. College Publiskers Reresentative 420 MADWSON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON - LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR...............JOSEPH S. MATTES EDITORIAL DIRECTOR..........TUURE TENANDER ~ CITY EDITOR.................WILLIAM C. SPALLER NEWS EDITOR ....................ROBERT P WEEKS WOMEN'S EDITOR................HELEN DOUGLAS SPORTS EDITOR...................IRVIN LISAGOR Busines 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: ROBERT PERLMAN The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. General Motors And The Recession. W ILLIAM KNUDSEN, president of General Motors Corporation, told the Senate Unemployment Committee Thursday that it is better to curtail production than to work off inventories through reduced prices and thereby displayed the kind of economic logic which has served to intensify and prolong depressions throughout the history of the industrial era. This cellophane argument of Knudsen's should be judged by the effects of curtailment of pro- duction and maintenance of prices on general psychology of businessmen and consumers and mass purchasing power. General Motors laid off 30,000 men Monday morning. By that step it reduced the number of potential buyers not only of its own cars but of used cars, furniture, houses, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners and other commodities by such propor- tions of that 30,000 as were considering these purchases. Not only did it directly cut the pur- chasing power of 30,000 people and their families but indirectly it affected everyone in the country in such a way that unless he is totally unaware of the fact that there is a recession he will tend to cut down on almost all purchases that are not absolutely essential. G. M., among other companies, will suffer, for there will end to be less demand than ever for-its cars. Mr. Knudsen said he believed the slump will be short-lived and that his company was making plans accordingly. These plans, judging by the concrete things already done, included laying off 30,000 men and shortening the working hours of those workers that were retained to twenty-four hours a week. If G.M. really thinks that this re'cession is short- lived, then their laying off the men is inconsistent with this belief. Laying off the men necessarily implies that the huge inventory which, Knudsen says, makes essential curtailment of production' will not be absorbed by purchases because of direct and indirect effects on purchasing power aecause of that lay-off. Not only will that pres- ent inventory not be taken care of, but the cars produced on a shortened production schedule will not all be absorbed, so that G. M. will have tolay off more men, repeating the first cycle'of lay offs, resulting in further reduced purchasing power and, less demand for G.M. cars with more and more disastrous results. If G.M. believes this is going to be a long depression, not only is its president perjuring himself, but the same disastrous consequences are bound to result as in the first case -from the policy upon which it has set out. General Motors cannot of course be blamed for prolonging the recession. Its case was cited, because it illustrates the near-sighted and cir- cular reasoning that governs heavy industry as a whole, and which may be prolonging this depres- sion. This reasoning postulates the maintenance of prices when demand falls off and immediate curtailment of production, even though demand more than likely has fallen off but temporarily. Whatever the immediate causes of this reces- sion, heavy industry has intensified it needlessly; though not necessarily deliberately. In General Motors' case sales were going strong through October and to the last ten days in No- vember. Sales dropped then to 70 per cent of the figure for the same period last year. A shortened production schedule was immediately considered. In the second period in December sales dropped to 45 per cent. General Motors thought it necessary to adjust its working force UNDER 4 THE CLOCK with DISRAELIL (This column is written by Robert "Bojangles" Perlman) When you take the subway at Fifth Avenue and 51st Street and emerge a few minutes later from the Second Avenue station on New York's East Side, you leave one world of fashionable shops that have the conservatism and substantiality of the New York Times, and enter another world of dirty red brick tenements and narrow side streets, where Jews (mostly without money) buy and sell from pushcarts, sit in delicatessens and argue over coffee, read their daily newspapers printed in Yiddish and generally create that melding of Old and New World culture that is the East Side'. Second Avenue is the Broadway of the East Side, where troupers speak their lines and sing their songs in Yiddish, that mixture of Ger- man, ancient Hebrew and the languages of the countries where Jews have lived in the past few centuries. During the late vacation, we went to see one of the big musical comedy hits of Second Avenue, "My Malkele," with Molly Picon, one of The Stars of the Yiddish theatre world, which has its own set of customs and criteria for both sides of the footlights. Some Difficulty About Seats We had hardly taken our seats in the balcony, when the woman seven rows ahead turned, around and good-naturedly told us, "My seat is way over there, but I don't like to sit on the side." Three minutes after the curtain rose, the crowd was really beginning to come in and among them was the man who had bought the seat the woman was occupying. Their argument over who should have the seat drowned out the voices of the actors and ended only after the usher was. called in to arbitrate. He decided that the woman should move; but the whole business started all over again when she got to her right- ful seat and had to dislodge the man sitting there. All this time the crowd was pouring in, greet- ing their friends warmly, discussing the last time they saw Molly Picon and generally milling around so that the actors could be neither heard nor seen. But the playwrights of the Yiddish theatre know the informal congeniality of their audiences and so they are scrupulously careful to see that nothing whatever happens on the stage for the first fifteen minutes, which is just about the time it takes for one half of the audience to shush the other half. The crowd finally settled down in its unsettled way to watch the play. The show, "My Malkele," seems to have been written primarily to give Miss Picon every op- portunity to use her real ability as a mimic and to allow Aaron Lebedeff, another big timer, to strut his stuff. (Incidentally, speaking of actors, Paul Muni and Edward G. Robinson are twc alumni of the Yiddish theatre.) The story opens in a small Polish town; the next scene is in Vienna, the next in Flatbush, Long Island, and then in Hollywood-only the war seems to have stopped them from continuing to the Orient.- What there is of a story is about Malkele, who marries the man her mother was not allowed to marry, in order to come to America to marry the man she loves, who becomes the husband of a Hollywood actress-anyway Malkele finally comes to the conclusion, "What was good enough for my mother, is good enough for me." As Many Dialects As Actors No two actors, by the way, speak the same brand of Yiddish; some use the Polish dialect, some the Russian variety and some merely speak New York American with a phrase from the Old Country thrown in now and then to convince the old timers that it's the real McCoy. Sort of the "You say either, I say eyether" stuff. One might suppose that the rather racy, earthy comedy lines and situations show the American influence; but the old men with dimming sight seem to have heard some of these on the Other Side and they relish the new ones with what appears to be a decidedly unreligious air. But then, we heard a very orthodox person from the Old Country remark, "If you want to know God, you must know men." Getting back to the show, the drawing room sets feature quite blinding green, pink and silver walls with chromium chairs and busts of Beetho- ven scattered about. And the more green, pink and silver there was, the more the fellow next to us leaned over and said, "Beautiful scenery I know. I'm an actor," in a whisper that was undoubtedly meant for his brother-in-law twenty feet away. Swinging The Old Tunes As for music, they've got some catchy tuhes that combine the emotional character of old Jewish melodies with swing, a la "Bei Mir Bist du Schoen." One of the high spots is when the black-robed Talmudic students, off the boat a few weeks, take up gum-chewing, full dress suits and trucking to these tunes. But the audience is really three quarters of the show. One man munches apples from a paper bag that he rattles incessantly. Another hisses the singer and immediately has a fist shaken at him by some one eleven rows in front. Opinions on the condition of Molly Picon's voice are given by the experts; and everyone is an expert. Most characteristic of the audience is their desire to participate in the show. They almost get on the stage. Lebedeff capitalized on that when he had the crowd sing, whistle and clap in time to his song, which of course got five encores and almost killed the other actors. All that was missing was a spotlight for the balcony. i fe eiiz lo Me Heywood Broun Goodby to all this. Not for many months at any rate, will there be any more reports about life along the New England frontier. Already the chariot which we hope will get us to town is skidding. around the drive- way. I know that readers will hardly mourn the cessation Df country correspondence in these columns. My only ex- "?cuse has been that to a street urchin the sights, sounds and the sting of winter out where the pavement ends has a quality of excitement. It is an experience to meet snow, particularly when the introduction comes in middle life. Of course, I cannot speak quite from the point of view of a South African pygmy. Even before this I have seen snow from the taxicab window, and on some braw mornings the bartender has passed a remark about the elements outside and the possibility of a blizzard. But it is only with the last few weeks that I have had snow down my neck and up my nose. The Duty To Be Serious To be sure, the nose of a commentator ought to be kept close to the grindstone of current events. In a world of war and rumors of war and struggle and crisis it is, I guess, a kind of slackerism to spend even a single contribution upon the razzle-dazzle of a sky all trimmed with candles or to attempt to stop the presses with the news that snow under strong sun is not white but more gaudy than a peacock's tail or a Caribbean beach. I am aware that painters have made this dis- covery years before I got around to it. Even so, I had a feeling that these men were the "art art- ists" of whom Mayor Hylan spoke. Until I saw for myself I had no faith in the purples, yellows and vermillions which are to be seen in the ob- servant records of the landscape man. Yet till the day I die I will remember a morning of just last week in which from across the lake my eye followed the spectrum as it splashed its show on ice and snow and on the stone walls of a familiar house. These are the same effects which a boss light- ing man can get upon a concrete dome in a theatre, but With far greater intensity. And, like the man who looked upon the Medusa, I was struck to stone by the impact of more beauty than I had ever known. Nor were the reckless males of mythology altogether fools if their last conscious impression before annihilation was one so piercing and profound. Perseus, perhaps, was overcautious in seeking to see wonder only through a glass darkly. Whatever came to him in later life one-half so precious as a fine free look? Less Snow And More Politics But as the anthem of "Pins and Needles" says, "Sing me a song of social significance." It will be my vow and mission to follow that advice from now on in the writing of columns. I will try to stay away from Miami this winter, even though I see by the papers that a horse at Tropical Park won at odds of 285 to 1. Of course, I might not have had it. The jockey, Schlenker, was unknown to me. Still, when I. discussed the matter with Connie she said, "I don't see how you could have failed to bet on it. One of my cousins married a man named Schlenker." But I must put aside childish things and hie me to Washington, where truth is truth and men are Congressmen. Still, there ought to be some social significance in beauty, and some day there will, because, according to the poet, that is the other thing we need to know. Syncopation By TOM McCANN The Hot Record Exchange in New York City has sent many of us of late romping through the old record collection at home, at grand- father's, at the cottage and even under the rugs at Aunt Helen's, looking for ancient waxings, many of which this infant corporation will now give you from one to twenty-five dollars for. Most cherished among these musical antiques are those that have the work of Red Nichols, Joe Venuti and the late Bix Beiderbecke and Miff ( Mole. Some of the more valuable discs come under rather deceiving names such as "The Red Heads" and "The Charleston Chasers" (Red Nichols), and others will merely tell the name of the leader, not naming the important artists. Some of these names are the Nichols' "Pennies," "New Orleans Rhythm Kings," "Bix (Beider- becke) and his Gang," Miff Mole's "Little Mol- ers" and Earl Fulller's "Original Dixieland Jazz Band." We attempted to sneak some of these valuable waxings from our granfather's turing the vaca- tion but failed. In the first place, there weren't any, and in the second place the the examin... er, there weren't any. All we could find were some venerable comic monologues, one of which had the intriguing title, "If You Talk In Your Sleep, Please Leave Me Out Of The Conversa- tion." Two other fascinating titles which we once had, but which have been missing from the files now for several years, were recordings by that hottest of all hot colored songbirds, Bessie- Smith. The titles were the pleading "You Ain't Quittin' Me Without Twn Wek's Notice "andi MUSIC By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER "eil Toscanini! By this time there should be no one left within radio-shot of America' who could not name in one guess the biggest musical event of the year. On Christmas night at 10 p.m. after the greatest publicity build-up of modern musical history, the National Broad- casting Company presented to a breath-holding world its long-her- alded holiday gift: Arturo Toscanini conducting the all-star NBC Sym- phony. In Studio 8-H at Radio City an ultra select crowd of more than 1,- 400 be-ermined and be-jeweled not- ables, representing the diplomatic and social as well as all the various artistic worlds, made the event a perfect radio version of the most sumptuous of Metropolitan Opera; openings. Resemblance to a theatre or concert was so striking that some of the guests attempted to leave the studio for the accustomed smoke dur- ing the intermission, but there the re- semblance stopped, for they were po- litely but firmly ushered back to their seats. Then some even tried to smoke in the studio. At the end the pleased and smiling Maestro was applauded for seven solid minutes by the studio 1,400, and applause is still going up from the estimated 20,000,000 who heard but saw not-the largest au- dience ever to hear a musical broad- cast. And, apart from the front-page news value of the event, apart from its unquestionable significance as a forward step in the progress of American music and music every- where, the performance that night was every bit worthy of its adulator3 applause judged from a strictly es- thetic viewpoint. The Vivaldi D min- or Concerto and the Mozart G minor Symphony were superlatively played, but-the Brahms! No musical per- formance ever heard over radio be- gins to approach that night's C minor Symphony in brilliant and thrilling performance. That such a trans- cedent sphere can not be reached every time, even by a Toscanini, wa evident in the still superlative but less breath-taking second broadcas a week later. Technically,, these concerts by thi NBC Symphony are said to be thf most nearly perfect musical broad- casts on the air. Even the matter of noisy paper programs has receive( attention. At first, to avoid disturb- ing crackles, programs were printet on a thick, porous material resemb ling blotting paper. On Christma night, in keeping with the artistic lux. ury of the occasion, a rayon materia was used. The Jan. 1 broadcas- brought out programs printed or sheets of cork, but still the engineer, are not satisfied . . . While they are perfecting this detail, perhaps the, can work out a noiseless clapping. machine for people who simply mus applaud every five minutes during concert and for seven encores at th end.. l ( DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all memb-rs of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. (Continued irom Page 3) tournament for women students will start next Wednesday, Jan. 12. Any Lane Hall. All Campus men or women interested in living in a Cooperative student wishing to play is asked to intresedin ivig n aCooeltiv -leave her name in Office 15, Barbour House next semester are urgently re- Gymnasium by the end of this week. quested to attend this meeting.C r The Christian Student Prayer I Group will meet-at 5:30 p.m. Sunday Disciples Guild (Church of Christ): in the Michigan League. The name 10:45 a.m., Morning Worship, Rev. of the room will be posted upon the Fred Cowin, minister. Michigan League Bulletin Board. All 12:00 noon, Students' Bible Class, students interested are invited. H. L. Pickerill, leader. 5:30 p.m., Social Hour and Tea. Lutheran Student Club will meet in 6:30 p.m., Forum, This will be /he Zion Parish Hall tonight at 5:30 p.m. beginning of a series of discussions on The Rev. Grotefend of Detroit will personal religion. Mr. Kenneth Mor- speak on the "Creation and Evolu- gan, Director of the Student Religious tion." Student choir will meet at 4:00. Association, will speak on "Experi- mental Methods in Religious Living." Hillel Foundation program for Sun- First Sday is as follows: FrtBpitCucSna,1 4 3:30 p.m.-Avukah Meeting. a.m. Rev. R. Edward Sayles, minister 5:00 p.m.-Buffet Supper Meeting of the church, will speak on "The of Hillel Independents. All Welcome. Realism of Jesus." This is the firsi Evening-Open House; recordings; of three sermons on Reality and Re- games. ligion. The Church school meets at r I " W , 0 1 S J r e .t uG Coming Events t German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The regular luncheon meet- ing will be held Monday at 12:10 in the Founders' Room of the Michi- gan Union. All faculty members in- terested in speaking German are cor- dially invited. Botanical Journal Club. Tues., 7:30 p.m., Room 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Harmon Dunham: Relationships of the Flora of the Cumberland Plateau and Cumberland Mts. in Kentucky Arabis in Central North America. Eugene Atkinson: Review of some recent monographs. Reports on the recent botanical meetings at Indianapolis by members of the Journal Club. Mathematics Club Will meet Tues- day, January 11, at 8 p.m., in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Dr. R. M. Thrall, will speak' on "Trilinear Forms and Birational Transformations." The Romance Club will met on Tuesday, January 11, at 4:10 p.m. in room 108 R. L. The program will be as follows: Professor Thieme: Two Recent Bibliographies and their significance. Mr. Koella: Julien Green, roman- cier visionnaire. The Psychological Journal Club will meet on Wednesday, January 12, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3126, Natural Science Building. Professor Henry F. Adams will discuss "The Appeal in Advertising." His talk will include summaries and analyses of recent ex- perimental work in this field. All those interested are cordially invited to attend. Cercle Francais Meeting Wednes- day at 8:00 o'clock in the Michigan League. Free refreshments will be served. Faculty Women's Club: On Jan. 12 at 3:15 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, the Faculty Women's Club will present Play Production in two one-act plays. The Garden Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Wednesday, January 19 instead of Wednesday, January 12. The Play Reading Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Tuesday afternoon, January 11, at 2:15 in the Mary Henderson Room of the Michigan League. Michigan Dames: General meeting, Tuesday, 8:15, in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Rev. W. P. Lemon will speak on Browning's "The Ring and the Book." Graduate Luncheon for Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers will be held on Tuesday at 12:15 in Room. 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. Mr. Harold Gra3 of The Saline Farms will be the 'speaker. 9:30 a.m. Dr. A. J. Logan, superin- tendent. Roger Williams Guild, Sunday noon. Mr. Chapman will meet his student class at the Guild House for 40 minutes. 6:15 p.m. Prof. Preston Slosson will bring a special message on the topic, "Facing the New Year." Students are especially invited. Fol- lowing the address and discussion, a social hour is held, with refreshments. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 So. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject, "Sacra- ment." Golden Text: I. Corinthians 10:16. Sunday School at 11:45 after the morning service. First Congregational Church, cor- ner of State and Williams. 10:45 a.m., Service of worship. Dr. Leonard A. Parr will preach on "New Clothes or a New Mind?" Donn Chown, baritone, will sing the solo "Lord God of Abrham" by Mendel- ssohn and the choir will give "Le- gende" by Tschaikowsky. 6:00 p.m., "Bicycling Through Eu- rope on $110." is the intriguing topic on which Mr. Eric Brown of Detroit will speak to the Student Fellowship Sunday evening at 6 after the supper. Mr. Brown made his bicycle tour last summer and so can speak with en- thusifstic authority on his recent trip. The public is most cordially invited. First Methodist Church: Morning worship at 10:40 o'clock. Dr. Bra- shares will preach on "Intangibles." The service will be held in the Michi- gan Theatre. i Calendar TODAY New York Philharmonic, Georges Enesco conductor and violinst, Mishel Piastro conductor. Bach's A minor Concerto for Violin, Chausson's Poeme for violin and Orchestra, Ex- cerpt from The Redemption by Cesar Franck, Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 in E fiat. 3-5, CBS. MONDAY Choral Union concert, Ruth Slen- czynski pianist. Bach's A minor Fan- tasie and Fugue, Bach-Busoni Organ Toccata in D minor, Beethoven's So- nata, Op. 31 No. 3, in E flat, Schu- mann's Etudes Symphoniques, Noc- turne, Valse, and Balldee of Chopin. 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy conductor. Passacaglia by Buxtehude, excerpts from Wagner's Tristan, Berlioz' L'Enfance du Christ, Mendelssohn's A Midsummer Night's Dream, Weinberger's Schwanda. 9- 10, NBC, Blue. TUESDAY Twilight Organ Recital, Palmer Christian organist, Marcello's Psalm XIX, Bach's "St. Anne's" Fugue in E fiat, Sinding-Christian Rhapsody, works by Rameau, Hure, Bubeck, Gig- out, Hagg and Schumann. 4:15, Hill Auditorium. Cleveland Symphony, Artur Rod- zinski conductor. 9-10, NBC Blue. THURSDAY School of Music Graduation Re- cital, Mary Porter pianist. Bach's "French" Suite No. III in G minor, Beethoven's Sonata Op. 10 No. 3 in D, Ballades by Brahms and Chopin, Pre- ludes by Debussy, Gliere, and Rach- maninoff. 8:15, School of Music Au- ditorium. SATURDAY Metropolitan Opera Company in Puccini's La Boheme. Grace Moore, Muriel Dickson, Landi, Pinza, Taglia- bue, Cehanovsky, conducted by Papi. 2:00 p.m., NBC Blue. Chicago Symphony, Frederick conductor. 9:15-10:45, MBS. NBC Symphony, Arturo Toscanini conducting. Tragic Overture of Brahms, Sibelius' Second Symphony, "Rondo Arlecchinesco" by Busoni, "Carnival of Venice" Variations for Orchestra of Tomasini, Nocturne and Scherzo from Mendelssohn's A Mid- Stalker Hall: Student Class at 9:45 a.m. under the leadership of Prof. George Carrothers. Wesleyan Guild meeting at 6 p.m. Echoes from the St. Louis Methodist Student Conference by the delegates. Fellowship hour and supper at 7 p.m. All Methodist students and their friends are cordially invited. First Presbyterian Church meeting at the Masonic Temple 327 South Fourth Ave. until Jan. 23. 10:45 a.m., "Life Without Prece- dent" is the subject of Dr. W. P. Lemon's sermon at the Morning Wor- ship Service. Music by the student choir under the direction of Dr. E. W. Doty. The musical numbers will be as follows: Organ Prelude, "Christ- mas Wir sollen loben schon" by Bach; Anthem, "O Taste and See," by Nikolsky; Anthem, "Build Thou More Stately Mansione" by Andrews. 5:30 p.m., Westminster Guild, stu- dent group, supper and fellowship hour. At the meeting which follows at 6:30, Prof. H. H. Bartlett of the Botany Department of the University will tell of his "Impressions of Reli- gion Abroad and At Home." St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Liberty at Third. Morning worship service at 10:45. The minister, Mr. Brauer, has chosen for his sermon theme: "The Child Belongs to Jesus." The Student Club has arranged for a skating party Sunday afternoon. Students and their friends are asked to meet at the church between 2 and 2:30. Supper will be served at the church at 6 o'clock followed by a roundtable discussion. Trinity Lutheran Church, East Wil- liam and S. Fifth Ave. services at 10:30 a.m. with sermon by the pas- tor on "Living Worthily." Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship today are: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Church School; 11:00 a.m. Kinder- garten; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. Harris Hall: The Episcopal Student Fellowship will resume its meeting tonight in Harris Hall at 7 o'clock. All Episcopal students and their friends are cordially invited to hear Mr. Nowell S. Ferris, choir director and organist for St. Andrew's, who will speak on "Church Music" to- night. Refreshmentsrwill be served. nitaia n hlurc h:First nf series 0 .i I 1 , i i 1 Sigma Xi: The first chapter meet- ing of the year will be held Wednes- day, January 12th, at 8:00 p.m., in Room 206, Burton Tower. Dr. Earl Moore will give an illustrated lecture on carillons, Mr.Wilmot Pratt will demonstrate on the Baird Carillon, and Professor Floyd Firestone will discuss the acoustics involved. Coun- oil will meet at 7 p.m. same room. Phi Tau Alpha: There will be an, important business meeting of Phi Tau Alpha Wednesday, Jan. 12, in the Women's League.. Dr. Sanders will speak about the University of Michigan Papyri. Scalp and Blade: Meeting at 5:30 p.m. today in the Union. Room to be posted. Pledges and members must be present. Men's Physical Education Club: Meeting Tuesday, Jan. 11, 9 o'clock in Room 302 of the Union. Dr. T. Luther Purdom will speak on employment possibilities and Dean Edmonson will also give a brief talk. All members t