THE MICHIGAN DAILY FkMAT, gov. 10, 14 Miss Ma rtinson To Give Talk At Lane Hall Speaker Will Explain New Political Party Mary Moore Martinson, of the Detroit office of the Michigan Com- monwealth Federation, will speak on the Federation, newly developed po- litical party, 12:15 p.m. tomorrow in a luncheon meeting at Lane Hall sponsored by the Student Religious Association. MissMartinson has been a leader in the Rocky Mountain Student Christian Movement and the Na- tional Council of Methodist Youth. The Commonwealth movement is strongest in England and Canada, and at present constitutes the chief opposition party in four provinces in Canada, SRA spokesmen said. At- tracting liberal and labor groups, the Federation's program is more popu- lar control of the national economy through cooperatives, land reform and social ownership of the large industrial "national" monopolies. Tickets will be available to faculty and students upon reservation made by calling Lane Hall. INVEST IN VICTORY BUY WAR BONDS & STAMPS Sorority Plans Open House for U' Veterans All veterans on campus have been invited to attend an open house held by Kappa Alpha Theta sorority after the football game tomorrow, Laszlo Hentenyi, president of the Veterans; Organization announced today. The invitation states, "We hope that every veteran will come, and that those who are married will feel free to bring their wives, right after the game Saturday." Doughnuts and cider will be served. "On behalf of the Veteran's Or- ganization and all veterans on cam- pus, I wish to extend my hearty thanks to the members of Kappa Alpha Theta for their kind invita- tion," Hetenyi said, "and it is my hope that all veterans on campus will respond to this invitation." The KAT house is at 1414 Wash- tenaw Avenue, south of South Uni- versity avenue. Square Dance To Be Held At Presbyterian Church An old fashioned square dance will be held after the pep rally today by the Westminster Guild at the Pres- byterian Church. Howard Leibee will call the dan- ces. During the evening cider and doughnuts will be served. U. S. PILOT AIDED FROM PLANE AFTER MANILA RAID--With brakes and landing gear shot up on a sortie over Manila, Philippine Islands, a Yank fighter pilot crash landed on a U. S. carrier. His plane lost its tail and flight deck crewmen lifted the injured pilot from the cockpit. AEF MEN POLITE: Officers Remain ';entlemuen, By Self-Control, Congress Act Szell To Direct At Semester's Second Concert Cleveland Symphony To Play Here Sunday The Cleveland Orchestra, which will play here at 7 p. m. Sunday at Hill Auditorium for the.second Chor- al Union Concert under the direction of its guest conductor, George Szell, is familiar to radio listeners on five continents. The Orchestra has presented net- work broadcasts frequently in the past, and last season, it presented a series of twenty-seven broadcasts which were carried over stations in United States and Canada, and by short-wave to Central and South Am- erica, Africa, Europe, and the Paci- fic war front. Concert To Be Broadcast Sunday night's concert will be broadcast over a nation-wide and short wave hook-up at 7 p. m. Ev- eryone is asked to come on time, since no one will be admitted after the concert begins. George Szell, who made his debut as a conductor at the age of 11 in Vienna, is a conductor of interna- tional fame. Since his arrival in the United States four years ago he has appeared as guest conductor for the orchestras of Boston, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Detroit, and at the Metropolitan Op- era House. Szell received his training under Richard Strauss, when he served as assistant conductor at the Royal Op- era in Berlin. He was principal con- ductor of the Court Theatre in Darm- stadt and the Municipal Theatre in Dusseldorf from 1921 to 1924. From 1924 to 1929 he was chief conductor of the Berlin State Opera and of the Berlin Broadcasting Symphony Or- chestra. Simultaneously he was a member of the faculty of the Hoch- schule fur Musik in Berlin. Has Conducted in Europe He has also conducted the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic and Vienna Symphony, the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, the London Philharmonic Symphony and the BBC Orchestra. Sunday's program is as follows: Overture to "A Midsumer Night's Dream" ........... . Mendelssohn Symphony No. 6 in F major. .Beethoven Symphony Metamorphosis of Themes by Von Weber........ ....Hindemith "Till Eulenspielgel's Merry Pranks," Opp. 28.................. ... Strauss "No," said the northerner briefly. The Third Division lieutenant got up, pulled on his gloves, turned to leave. "Well," he said, smiling again. "I'll see you in the spring." There was a moment's pause, then both lieuten- ants grinned at each other like offi- cers and gentlemen. Following upon a highly successful talk by Prof. Newcomb two weeks ago which drew a crowd of more than 200, the second in a series of fireside chats, conducted by Prof. John W. Lederle of the political sci- ence department on the topic, "American Government, Reform or Revolt?" will be held at 8:30 p.m. today in the Hillel Foundation as- sembly hall. Prof. Lederle will discuss the ques- tion of Congressional cooperation with the President, a problem which becomes increasingly important as our. governmental system of checks and balances threatens to bring na- tional legislation to a stalemate. After receiving his A.B., M.A. and LL.B. at this University, Prof. Lederle went to Brown U., where he taught in the political science department and served as an assistant dean. He received his Ph.D. at the Providence, R.I., University in 1942. In his undergraduate years at Michigan, Prof. Lederle was a mem- ber of the varsity tennis team and served for two years as president of the Union executive council. At the conclusion of the fireside discussion, refreshments will be serv- ed by Hillel senior hostesses Mrs. Isaac Nagler, Mrs. Herman Kroter and junior hostesses Betty Korash and Carole Lieberman. Students, servicemen and towns- people are invited to attend. Religious. Services To Be Held at Foundation Chapel Religious services conducted by A- S Eugene Malitz and Sam Krohn. '44D, will be held at 7:45 p.m. today in the Hillel Foundation chapel. The services, in Hebrew and Eng- lish, are open to the public. I __ _ _ _ REFORM OR REVOLT? Prof. Lederle To Discuss U.S. Government at Hillel Today Again in Stock! THREE SUPERB RECORDS CIGARETTES are hard to get, but we have By the Greatest Pianist of them al- ART TAqTUM I The new soapless creme shampoo that has the whole town rayve-ins. Perfect for every member of the family. Just a tiny dab quickly forms a creamy, long-lasting lather that thoroughly cleans both scalp and hair. Re- veals true hair highlights, removes ugly dandruff faies. Leaves hair soft, easy to comb and'arrange. NO EMPTY TU1BE NEEDED 59C THREE TIMES AS MANY LUXURIOUS SHAMPOOS WITH THE AEF IN FRANCE, Nov. 4.---(Delayed) -(/P)- It's wonderful, the self-control an act of Congress sometimes instills in men. Take the case of the two lieuten- ants. Both were officers and gentle- men. One was from the Army that had fought its way up from the south. The other was from an outfit in the north. They were very polite and courte- ous as they sat in the French road- side cafe: And at first their conver- sation was quite friendly. Then the lieutenant from the northern unit, having discovered to which division the lieutenant from the southern outfit belonged, asked: 'Third . . . third. Oh yes, the Third Division was in Italy quite a while, wasn't it?" The southern Army soldier care- fully set down his glass. "Yes," he replied slowly. "And before that it was in Sicily. And before that, it was in North Africa. I understand the papers back home gave it quite a play." "They probably did," agreed the lieutenant from the northsquite pleaseantly, "but the British pa- pers didn't mention much about individual American divisions. You see, we were in the U.K. (United Kingdom) then, pretty busy train- ing." He offered the Third Division man a cigarette. Prof. Price to Play AntiLems f on Carillon Prof. Percival Price will give a special carillon recital, featuring an- thems of the United Nations, in honor of the United Press Club of Michigan meetings being held' here at 4:45 p.m. today. The Men's Glee Club under the direction of Prof. David Mattern will give .its first performance of the season at the Press Club dinner meeting to be held at 8 p.m. today in the Union. The Glee Club will also sing Michigan favorites at the inter- mission of the homecoming dance to be held tomorrow at the Union. "Good thing, too. We really need- ed that training. D-Day I came in with the 29thhDivision.Guess you heard about the rough time we had on the beaches." "Sorry," thessouthern soldier smil- ed politely but shook his head, "we had just taken Rome a couple of days before. You know how it goes." He smiled again. The ;northerner smiled back, then tried a new tack. "Understand you had it pretty easy coming in on the Riviera beaches. Didn't hit much resistance, did you?" "No," said the southern Army man promptly, "it was nothing like Sicily, and it damn sure wasn't like Anzio. Then, warming to the subject, he continued, "It wasn't like Africa either, or those behind- the-lines landings in Sicily." The 29th Division boy knew when to concede a point and try a new serve. "Anzio must have been rough, all right," he agreed, "must have been something like our hedgerow cam- paign after the Normandy landings. They almost cut us to pieces then." "Yes," said the Third Division doughboy, a faraway look in his eyes, "it was like that for us at Anzio. "Of course," said the 29th Division lieutenant, softly slipping in the needle, "of course, we managed to keep going, however." The southern man stiffened. With careful control, he got out his cigarettes and lighted one. Finally he spoke: "Yes, we've found it easier, too, to keep an attack going in spring and summer. Let's see . you fellows haven't had a winter's. campaign yet. Have you?" 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