ALI, Detroit AluIni Sponsor Dinner For Students Michigan Club Entertaniis Campus Leaders; Faculty Members Also Attend The University of Michigan Club of Detroit entertained eight Univer- sity students yesterday at its annual Campus Leaders Dinner, held in the University Club. Student guests were Thomas B. Adams, '40, president of the Inter- fraternity Council; Warren Breiden- bach, '41, star quarter-miler; Ismail R. Khalidi, Grad., of the Interna- tional Center; Paul Oberst, Grad., chairman of the West Quadrangle Student Council; Carl Petersen, '40, manging editor of The Daily; James S. )Rogers, '42, president of Lloyd House; Donald H. Treadwell, '42L, president of the Union; Philip F. Westbrook, Jr., '40, president of Con- gress. Three faculty members from Ann Arbor attended: Profs. Carl G. Brandt, Karl Litzenberg and Charles H. Peake, all of the English depart- ment. T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association, and Robert O. Morgan, assistant sec- retgry of the Association, also were present. Representing Detroit alumni was Mayor Edward J. Jeffries, Jr., of Detroit. Harry Kipke represented the Alumni, and Judge Guy A. Miller was toastmaster. Intramural Teams To Debate Sunday Resumption of the intramural de- bates under the direction of the Michigan Union, which were post- poned for Easter Week, was an- nounced by Charles Kerner, '41E, of the executive staff. Two debates will be held Sunday. Sigma Alpha Epsilon will argue against Fletcher Hall in the only semi-finals event Sunday, and Sigma Nu will contest Sigma Chi in a tilt that was postponed. Allen Rumsey Dormitory, holding a semi-finals po- sition, will debaterthe winner of this match at a later date. All teams are arguing the statement, "Resolved That Michigan men of today lack the resourcefulness and hardiness of their predecessors." SHERIDAN'S RIOT "has the whole campus roaring in laughter." Presented by PLAY PRODUCTION Department of Speech University of Michigan Thursday, Friday, Saturday at 8:30 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Box Office Open Now Reserved Seats 75c, 50c, 35c Phone 6300 for reservations Swarthmore Faculty Men VisitCam pas Two members of the faculty of Swarthmore College, Prof. Scott Lilly of the division of engineering and Prof. Taylor Anderson of the depart- ment of history, visited the University Monday in the course of a trip during which they are inspecting schools maintaining honor programs of a type similar to that in effect at Swarthmore. During their stay here the men visited a number of group meetings of the Honors Program students and lunched with the Board of Tutors. Various similarities and differences of the system as employed here and at Swarthmore were discussed. According to the visting professors, the system here does not necessitate as narrow a specialization as the Swarthmore plan, but they pointed on the other hand to the benefits derived by having examiners entirely external to the college at Swarthmore rather than in the University but ex- ternal to the Board of Tutors as it is here. Tracy Asked To Talk For Law Institute Prof. John Tracy, of the Law School, has been invited to speak at the Grand Rapids Bar Association Law Inst. April 3 in a program de- signed to bring to the practicing lawyers of the Grand Rapids vicin- ity latest developments in law. Last June the Law School spon- sored a similar Institute here which lawyers from all over the state at- tended. Series of lectures and class- es were held, and according to Pro- fessor Tracy the Institute will again be held this year. Spanish Society Prepares To Give Famous Comedy "Zaragueta," annual presentation of La Sociedad Hispanica, is in its final week of rehearsals in prepara- tion for its performance at 8:30 p.m. Monday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play, a favorite amateur pro- duction in Spain for the last forty years, is concerned with the misad- ventures of a student who seeks to get money from his uncle and aunt without revealing to them that he is in debt. Faked faintings, misunder- standings, threatened gunplay and dousings add to the general hilari- ousness. Director of the play Charles Stau- bach of the romance languages de- partment is assisted by Joseph Edel- man, '42, in charge of properties; Frances Johnson, '41, in charge of costumes; Harold Barnes, Grad~, make-up and Earl Thomas, Grad, stage. Properties for the play which have offered problems to the production staff include a shotgun, a portable garden pump, quantities of food to be consumed by a hungry character, Spanish provincial costumes, and sound effects ranging from cluck- ing hens to splashing water. f Irl sh Union Idea Striengthened By War, Prof. Bromage Says, BY S. R. WALLACE England's participation in war atl the present time has given Eamon de Valera, prime minister of Eire, bargaining power for the union of Ireland, although, obviously, all of Ireland cannot agree on the heatedly debated subject, Prof. Arthur W. Bromage of the political science de- partment declared yesterday in an interview. Although there are many problems confronting the former Irish Free State, Professor Bromage pointed out that politically de Valera still con-, siders Ireland's partition the major issue, and that although it is now constitutionally impossible for Eng- land to force southern Ireland to aid her in war, the livestock and live- stock products which Eire is supply- ing to industrial England are ex- tremely valuable and may well form one aspect of the negotiations for union. Opposition Complicates Matter The situation is complicated, how- ever, Professor Dromage asserted, by the fact that the Protestant ma- jority in four of the six northern counties of Ulster is vigorously op- posed to the united Ireland desired by the Catholic-Nationalists. The opposition to union is being led by the determined Lord Craigavon, prime minister of the government of Northern Ireland, whose policy is to "yield not an inch." While Eire is designated in its conlitiltion as a "sovereign, inde- pendent, democratic state," it recog- ni'es by statute the English kingi for limited purposes in external re- lations, Professor Bromage explained. The northern counties are governed in local matters by a subordinate parliament within the United King- doni. Conditions have been aggravatedl because of the continued bombings by the Irish Republican Army, an illegal group which believes in union i.y force and which de Valera claims has undone years of his own work based on constitutional methods, Professor Bromage said. Relation Pleases de Valera Nevertheless, an interview granted to Professor Bromage by Eamon de Valera last summer conveyed the distinct impression that the rela- tionshiu which de Valera had estab- lished with the British government was a good one, and yet, according to Professor Bromage, England has adopted a policy of non-intervention' in Ireland's internal differences des- pile full realization of the situation. The net result, therefore, Profes- sor Bromage concluded, is that theret seems to be no immediate prospect of England's war activities material- izing de Valera's dream of union for Ireland, and that the recent resorting of the IRA to violence has, in effect, set back Ireland's progress towards unit y. Rotary Club To Entertain. For Students At Union The Rotary Club of Ann Arbor will hold a luncheon in the Ballroom of the Michigan Union Wednesday, April 24 for all the sons and daugh- ters of Rotarians. According to Dean S. Dana, chairman of the affair,' there are about 150 on campus, all of whom are urged to come. Dr. William W. Bishop will deliver an address with the title of "The Library and Its Treasures." The talk will be illustrated with slides. Untermeyer Ends Talks On Culture (Continued from Page 1) When you begin to influence that declared him to be the foremost which influenced you, Mr. Unter- American musician and his "Rhapso- meyer concluded, you are at the i d inBlu" te fremstAmericanl threshold of cultural maturity._ That, dy Blue the foremost e said, is where American music composition. "The Rhapsody re- is today. fleets the mood of our age," he ex- Mdr. Untermeyer will conclude his plained. "It has seriousness and lecture program here with a talk, suavity and raucous comedy. It outside his scheduled series, on "What cannot take itself seriously for long Makes a Native Culture" before den- at a time, but must break in with tistry and medical students at 4:15 frequent self-interruptions and im- p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Grad- pertinences." uate School. - S C-' FRIDAY MORNING AT 10:15 A.M. THE PREMIERE OF GONE WITHTHEWIN at the MAJESTIC THEATRE DAVID O. SELZNICK'S producdpx of MARGARET MITCHELL'S Story of the Old South GONE WITH THlE WIND IN TECHNICOLOR narrhhg CLARK GABLE as R/ett Butter LESLIE OLIVIA HOWARD * DeHAVILLAND and PreeTimng VIVIEN LEIGH as &arlett o'Hara A SELZNICK INTERNATIONAL PICTURE *Directed by VICTOR FLEMINO Screen Play by SIDNEY HOWARD . Music by Max Steiner. A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Release RESERVED SEATS STILL AVAILABLE While this engagement is limited, "GONE WITH THE WIND" will not be shown except at advanced prices.... at least until 1941 Stationery Sales Fraud Revealed; Solicitor Is Held Those students who contracted for a stationery supply with a salesman supposedly representing the Royal Stationery Company of Minneapolis have been requested by Dean Walter B. Rea to contact him without delay at 2 University Hall. The salesman is in custody at East Lansing for false representation. Although the stationery company is a reputable firm, authorities have been notified that the alleged repre- sentative S. L. Fields is not in its em- ploy. Fields, who has admitted do- ing a large amount of business on this campus, is 35 years of age, five feet seven inches tall, weighs 170 pounds, and is of medium build with dark brown hair. His orders were usually taken for one hundred sheets and en- velopes at $3.75 of which $1.75 was paid to him in cash, the remainder to be paid on receipt of the station - cry. Graduates Plan FutureActivity Council Selects Chairmen To Head Committees The personnel of some of the com- mitttees in the reorganized Graduate Council has been selected, according to Abe Rosenzweig, Grad., chairman of the central committee, These committees have already made plans for future graduate activities, Ros- enzweig added. The committees are: Record Club, Robert Herzog, chairman, assisted by Sylvia Fidoten, and Urie Bronfen- brenner; Dance, Louise Toombs, chairman; Coffee Hour, Jean Brown, chairman, assisted by William Cargo, Frances Elstein, and Justine Schmertz. All are graduate stu- dents. The Record Club committee is planning to hear the broadcasts of the next four Metropolitan Operas. The first in a series of graduate teas was sponsored yesterday by the Cof- fee Hour committee. Elections for various department delegates are now being held, Ros- enzweig said, and the Council should be complete within the next week. Fine Arts Display Of Chinese Prints Shown This Week Examples of Chinese art in the Han dynasty, taken from tombs in Shantung, will be on exhibit in the South Oallery of Alumni Memorial Hall this week daily until Saturday. Taken from the walls of tombs of the family of Wu-Liang-Tz'u in Shantung, the prints illustrate many phases of Chinese culture and show details of daily life, types of archi- tecture, mythology, religion, history, even restaurants, and other facts important to archeologists. These prints, or rubbings, are made by placing paper over the original stone, the latest of which dates from 167 A.D., and inking from the impression made by the stone. Today 2-4-7-9-PM. Last Times Today 'U Eox OFFICE OPEN 10:00 A.M. TO EVENINGS 7:30 SUNDAY MAT. 2:00 ALLI SEATS RESERVED WEEK DAY MATS. 10:15 A.M.-2:15 P.M. 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