THE MICHI~GR DAILY Spring Concert To Be Givei iby Bantl Thitrsdlay , Will Present Gould's 'American Salute,' 'Ritual Fire Dance' The University of Michigan Band's annual spring concert, to be given at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Audi- torium, will feature a variety of in- teresting numbers. The overture to the opera "Ober- on, King of the Fairies", by the early nineteenth century German com- poser, Carl von Weber, will imme- diately follow the National Anthem, which opens the program. The sec- ond movement of "Symphony in C minor", by Ernest Williams, will be the third number. Composer Wil- liams has made a notable contribu- tion to the extremely limited amount of music written originally for the modern concert band. Two Wagnerian selections to be played are "Wotan's Farewell and Magic Fire Music" from "Die Walk- ure", and the Introduction to the Third Ace of "Lohengrin". The first selection is the scene in which Wo- tan bids farewell to his favorite daughter, Brunhilde, and commands the sleeping girl to be surrounded by a ring of fire. The music from Lo- hengrin is that which is played at the wedding of Lohengrin and Elsa, and includes the familiar "Wedding March". Rimsky-Korsakov's colorful "The Sea and Sinbad's Ship", first move- ment of "Scheherazade", will be a number familiar to many persons in the atidience. "Ritual Fire Dance", by Manuel de Folla, was written originally for ballet. George Roach, graduate stu- dent, became interested in the num- ber and 'has arranged it for bands. He will conduct his own arrange- ment Thursday night. William Fitch, regular student conductor, will con- duct Rube Bloom's "Song of the Bayou", a number telling in music the story of old Negro plantation life, warm summer nights, and the dark, twisting bayous along the Gulf of Mexico. I G. E. Holmes's latest composition, "March Courageous", is dedicated to the United Nations. Also particularly timely is Morton Gould's "American Salute", based on the tune, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home". Talented and promising Morton Gould.is popular with the Univer- sity of Michigan Band not only be- cause of his widely recognized work, but also because he has been in Ann Arbor in recent years and has ex- pressed keen interest in the work of the band. Brazil, Vargas To Be Subject Of Talk Today Latin-American Club To Sponsor Lecture by Dr. Eduardo da Cruz Dr. Eduardo Guidao da Cruz, Grad, of Brazil, will speak on "The Political Situation in Brazil and President Vargas' Main Accomplishment: So- cial Insurance", at 8 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre under the auspices of the Latin-American Society. Before coming to the University as a fellowship student in Actuarial Sci- ence last November, Dr. da Cruz was a member of the Board of Actuaries of the Ministry of Labor in Brazil. His last position in this connection was to supervise the liquidation of the German and Italian banks and insur- ance companies in Brazil when the government cancelled their authori- zation. Dr. da Cruz, a graduate of the Law School and the Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Schools of the University of Rio de Janeiro, has also done considerable work in the promo- ,tion of the social insurance plan in Brazil. Dr. da Cruz's lecture is the second in a series sponsored by the Latin- American Society to acquaint the stu- dents, faculty, and townspeople with aspects of the cultural, social, and political accomplishments of Latin- America. Col. Hume Calls War a Disease "War is a traumatic disease and is treated as such by the medical department," stated Col. Edgar Ers- kine Hume, Medical Corps, U.S. Army, in a lecture on "The Health Activities of the U.S. Army in Wartime" yester- day. "The work of the medical depart- ment (which includes the medical, dental veterinarv. and nursing corns) PART-TIME STUDY: U~iirsity Extension serviice 1 i~ jre ar nmiie Iucation junter alenf, r i943 Discussion oh Se So~n Orientation Period By PAUL SisLIN "Religion, morality and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged." A major premise of an ordinance passed in 1787 is being fulfilled today by the University Extension Service in the Horace H. Rackham Educa- tional Memorial in Detroit. Without a winning football team or beautiful coeds, the school has been able to attract 2,200 to 2,500 stu- dents a week in its peak season. These students in income and interests rep- General To lBe Guest of Judge Advocate School Student Officers To Be Reviewed Today in Law Quad by Gen. Dillon Brigadier-General Joseph V. de P. Dillon, commanding officer of the military police training center at Fort Custer, will be the guest at the Judge Advocate General's School today, an- nounced Col. Edward H. Young, com- mandant of the school. A special review of the student offi- cers, which may be attended by the public, will be held in his honor at 5:30 p.m. today in the Law Quad- rangle. Gen. Dillon, who served with Col. Young on the faculty of the United States Military Academy at West Point, will address the ninth and tenth classes of the JAG school on "The Organization of the Provost Marshal General's Department" with particular reference to the military police. Gen. Dillon is a graduate of the United States Military Academy and of Georgetown University, where he received his bachelor's and master's degrees in law. Rabbi Adler Will Lecture On Marriage Rabbi Morris Adler of Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Detroit will open the third annual Marriage Lecture Series with a speech on "The Prob- lems of Jewish Marriage" at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Hillel Foundation, This talk is the first in a series of four lecures to be presented this month by leading authorities in their respective fields. On Tuesday, April 13, Dr. Rudolf Dreikurs, Professor of Psychiatry at the Chicago Medical1 School, will discuss "Romance in Wartime". The following day a lec- ture by Dr. Dreikurs on "The Prob- lems of Canteen Hostesses and Ser- vicemen's Wives" will be given. On Wednesday, April 28, the topic for discussion will be "Medical As- pects of Marriage". The speaker will be announced later. No admission will be charged for the series. Alumni Conference Will Be Saturday The fourteenth Alumni Conference of the School of Business Adminis- tration will be held at 2:15 p.m. and 6:15 p.m. Saturday, April 3, at the Michigan Union. In the afternoon session to be held in the Terrace, Carman G. Blough, Ex-Officio member, All-Price Ad- justment Boards, will speak on "Re- negotiation". John Airey, president of t-e King-SeeleyCorporation, will speak on "Some Aspects of Post- War Problems". The evening session, which in- cludes a dinner ,will feature Dr. Arthur Secord of the speech depart- ment in an address entitled "Funny Filosofy". resent a cross-section of Detroit. Their average age ranges between thirty and forty. Their interests may vary from Casualty Insurance Cover- ages to Semantics and Sane Think- ing. The curriculum is patterned largely after that established by the Univer- sity. The term lasts fifteen weeks with classes meeting once a week. Students working for degrees carry two to four hours credit per semester, as full-time employment prevents them from taking more subjects. Directed at the part-time student, those anxious to secure degrees, or those simply motivated by the desire to learn, the curriculum is limited only by demand and college stan- dards. In step with the war effort, non-credit courses for training vital skills have been established. The three semester academic year is mod- eled after the University's, The two million dollar Rackham Memorial was first opened Jan. 28, 1942. Before the center was built classes were held in anything from libraries to high schools. The build- ing is divided into two wings, the larger of which is devoted to the Ex- tension Service. Besides classroom facilities the building contains a ban- quet hall, an auditorium seating 1,000, and a branch of the University Li- brary. Of the twenty-five to thirty credit courses offered, subjects never given at the University are available to the students. Two hundred and fifty to three hundred students are working for advanced degrees. Japanese and the engineering program are among the courses pertinent to the war ef- fort. Popularity of some of the non- credit courses mirrors current inter- ests as sessions in war and post-war problems are heavily attended. Cur- rent books, interior decoration and music appreciation also engage 'the students' attention. Recital To Be Given Today Palmer Christian Will Open Semester Series The first organ recital of this se- mester's series will be given at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium by Pal- mer Christian, University organist. Bach's "Fugue in E-flat" will start the program. This famous Fugue has come to be known as "St. Ann's," due to the similarity of the opening phrase to the English hymn-tune of that name. The second number on the program is an organ prelude, "0 Mensch, be- wein dein' Sunde gross", also a Bach work. Other numbers to be played in the organ musicale are "Symphony for Organ" by Weitz; "In the Church", by Novak; "In Paradisum", by Daniel-Lesur and "Tu es Petra" by Mulet.. The schedule for the remaining re- citals is: April 7, April 14, and Good Friday Afternoon, April 23. The re- cital of April 14 will be played by Frieda Op'-Holt Vogan. ICC To Farm Victory Garden' The victory garden drive was given another boost yesterday when John MacKinnon, '43BAd, president of the Inter-Cooperative Council, an- nounced that the ICC this summer will farm a five-acre vegetable gar- den. Mrs. Byr F. Bacher, Assistant Dean of Women, has loaned a por- tion of her 30-acre farm near the Fair Grounds to the ICC for the garden. Plowing and planting will begin as soon as a soil test is com- pleted according to Dianne Turk, '44, chairman of the ICC Farm Board. In the garden the ICC plans to grow crows which are suitable for canning or storage and thereby pre- pare for the strict food rationing next winter. June 7, Monday .... ........... .................... .Term begins July 5, Monday ........................For Fourth of July, holiday September 18, Saturday .................................Term ends SUMMER SESSION June 7, Monday........Summer courses in the School of Forestry and Conservation, Camp Filibert Roth, Golden Lake, Iron County, begin June 14, Monday ... . Field courses in Geology and Surveying at Camp Davis, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, begin June 24, Thursday .......... Registration in the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies June 24-26, Thursday, Saturday .........Registration in other Schools and Colleges June 28, Monday .......Session begins in Schools and Colleges, at the Biological Station, Douglas Lake, Cheboygan, and at the National Music Camp, Interlochen July 5, Monday ......................For Fourth of July, holiday August 6, Friday ......Session ends in the Medical School .(six-week courses) and in the School of Education (six-week courses) August 16-20, Monday-Friday.......Entrance examinations for the fall term August 20, Friday .........Session ends in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, of Architecture and Design, and of Pharmacy, in the Medical School (eight week courses), School of Music, and Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies August 21, Saturday .......... Session ends at the Biological Station and at the National Music Camp September 3, Friday ....................Session ends at Camp Davis September 18, Saturday ......... . Session ends at Camp Filibert Roth FALL TERM September 21-25, Tuesday-Saturday ............ Orientation Period September 27, Monday ..........................Term begins BEHOLD: THE WINNAH! Fifty Fair Coeds Are Loyal To Dauntless Dolph Jaeger 'V - "Mohammedanism and the In flu- ence Which It Exerts on Modern Cul- ture in the Near East" will be dis- cussed by Orhan Barun, Grad, of Istanbul, Turkey at 7:30 p.m. tomor- row at Lane Hall in the first of a series of seminars on Oriental Reli- gion. An argument frequently used by those opposing Indian freedom is that Moslems and Hindus are unrecon- cilably opposed to each other. It is the purpose of these seminars to dis- cuss the validity of this argument in considering independence for India. ( m tis tii Anija A ili' oe Seven 12 gauge pump and auto- matic shotguns have been turned in to the Ann Arbor police department as part of a nation-wide drive to ob- tain these firearms for the War De- partment, Chief Mortenson an- nounced yesterday. The guns are needed to train gun- ners in Flying Fortresses and anti- aircraft gunners. Sportsmen were asked to donate or sell their shotguns to the government because wholesale and retail stocks of these guns, comn- monly used for hunting, had been de- pleted. of a Lif etime! -Dazzling Diamonds . . . in real orange blossom settings . . economically priced to fi/ every pocketbook! NOTHING BUT'T /TILE B'EST' 'T Since 1904....Now at 308 South State L X =-----= - X -- ----X= =0( < X =:OX==X = >() By HARRIET PIERCE' To those who may question the loyalty of the fairer sex, let it be known that last night not one of Dolph Jaeger's fifty dates stood him up. At 8:30 p.m. they crowded into Stockwell's lobby while Dolph took the roll and found that all were pres- ent or accounted for. Dolph's "date" was the result of a statement made to friends at Lloyd House that he could have fifty dates for one evening. They immediately took him up on it, and he set about proving that he was the man to ac- complish this unheard-of feat. Stockwell girls, numbering 54 in all, formed a procession to the League, where cokes were served at Dolph's expense. He will, however, be reimbursed, as his friends lost their wager when, back at Stockwell, roll was again called and the faithful 54 were all found to be present. A little trouble was encountered at the door when some of the losers attempted to blockade the dorm, but "man of the hour" Dolph stepped in and managed to get his women all safely in the lobby. Dolph will just barely make ex- penses, but he would have been set back twelve 'dollars if he had lost. However, he admitted that It was fun. "Thanks a lot, kids," he said Just before he left, "and if I can ever find another good excuse, I'll take you all out again for more cokes," b AS SEEN IN 1VIM NN -";- 1' a- ~j y 00l c in YOU CAN'T PU fT ON APRIL AIRS... WITH A For Beauty's Sake p BELLE-SHARMEER LEG SIZES The same perfect-fitting Belle-Sharmeer leg sizes you lovd in a pre-war world are fittingly yours ... in finest rayoxns. And never have they been so important to the looks of your leps. Being individually sized in width as well as in length, B4lk-Sharmeer rayons literally fit without . wrinkle. Here exclusively in Br. for small legs, Modite for middling, Duchess for tall. ' Belle-Sharmeer Stockings in all kg shun ion - 1 r FEBRI 7)ARY FACE No matter how dashing the outfit or how strik- ing the colors, all is in vain if your makeup does not match the tone of your ensemble. Now is the time to discard distracting heavy winter beauty aids in favor of lighter and brighter cosmetics for this spring season. Have our skin specialist and make-up artist advise you on the new spring shades for your particular complexion and coloring. Revitalize and soften your skin, clear away blackheads . . . with a Mask by Elmo's . Dorothy Gray . . . Tussy. 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