THE MICHIGAN DAILY s !b " Xf+' '1' ,', Quartet To Present Concerts; Bj oerlit To Open Festival Will Play Program Mozart's Requiem Of Chamber Music Will Be Presented Appearing for the second consecu- ,tive season, the Budapest String Quartet, internationally famous in- terpreters of chamber music, will pre- sent three concerts next Friday and Saturday. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The quartet, which first became prominent in the United States about fifteen years ago, is com- posed of Josef Roismann, first vio- lin; Edgar Ortenberg, second vio- lin; Boris Kroyt, viola; and Mischa Schneider, violin'cello. Selections by Hindemith, Mil- haud, Piston and Schubert will higl ght the Sixth AnnualrCham- ber Music Festival. The extensive "travels of the quar- tet have not been limited to Europe and America. On several occasions they have journeyed to the East In- dies, Australia and New Zealand. Contemporary American Chamber music is included in the extensive repertoire of the Budapest. Quartets by Carpenter, Barber, Nabokov and Jacobi are frequently performed on their programs. A limited number of tickets for the series or for individual concerts are available at the University Musical Society office in Burton Tower. Pianist Will Play Original Compsition. Highlighting the recital by Mrs. Roberta Dresden, pianist, at 8:30 p.m., Thursday in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre, will be an original composition, "Introduction, Fugue, and Variations" and "Allegro molto e dinamico" from Piano Sonata, (1834-36) by Hunter Johnson. The program will also include "Partita No. 5 in G major" by Bach, Mozart's "Fantasy No. 2 in C minor, K. 396," "Allegro inquieto (from Sonata No. 7, Op. 83)" by Serge Pro- kofleff, and the Beethoven "Sonata in C minor." The recital is being presented in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Mrs. Johnson Will Give Piano Recital .Mrs. Mary Evans Johnson, pianist, will present a recital in partial ful- fillment of the degree of Bachelor of Music at 8:30 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The program will consist of "Prel- ude and Fugue in C-sharp minor" by Bach, "Rondo in C-major, Op. 2, No. 3" by Beethoven, "Four Pieces from the Kreisleriana, Op. 16" byI Schumann, and "Sonata" by Griffes. Book Contains; Outfit's fistory Awaiting all 9th Air Force veteransl on campus, and free for the asking, is a colorful book containing over 60 water-color paintings giving the his- tory of their outfit from Egypt, acrossI Africa to Europe, winding up in Ger- many. These "on the spot" paintings were made by Maj. William Max, a gradu- ate of the University of Illinois, at the request of the Army Air Forces. The printing of over 140,000 copies is being undertaken in France. Already 40,000 have been made up and dis- tributed. These books are exclusively for 9th Air Force veterans and can be ob- The first six programs in the 53rd annual May Festival, featuring the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eu- gene Ormandy, will be presented by Jussi Bjoerling, Swedist tenor, at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, May 2, in Hill Audi-I torium. He will perform several fa- vorits arias. Mozart's Requiem The 300-voice University Choral Union and soloists Ruth Diehl, so- prano, Jean Watson, contralto, Wil- liam Hain, tenor, and Nicola Mos- cona, bass, under the direction of Prof. Hardin Van Deursen, will be heard in Mozart's "Requiem" on the first half of the Friday night concert. Nathan Milstein, violinist, will complete the program with Alexander Hilsberg, associate conductor, and the orchestra. American folk songs and Negro spirituals will head the list of attrac- tions on Saturday, May 4. The Youth Chorus, under the direction of Miss Marguerite Hood, and Anne Brown, soprano, are the performers sched- uled for the 2:30 p.m. concert. Sayao To Sing Classical songs and South Ameri- can arias on Bidu Sayao's program will be features at the fourth concert Saturday night. The orchestra will also present several selections. The musical season will reach its climax with the final concerts on Sunday, May 5. William Kapell, noted young pianist, will be the solo- ist while Hilsberg will conduct. Sal- vatore Baccaloni, famous Metropoli- tan basso buffo, will highlight the evening's performance. Prokofieff's "Alexander Nevsky" featuring con- tralto Rosalind Nadell and the Choral Union, will conclude the Fes- tival. y Victory Bonds! Coomaraswamy Will Lecture AtRackham "Riddle of Sphinx in Greece" To Be Topic Dr. Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, Fellow for Research in Indian, Per-1 sian and Mohammadan Art at thel Boston Museum of Fine Arts, will speak in the University Lecture Ser- ies on "The Riddle of the Sphinx" with special emphasis on the Sphinx in Greece at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Amphitheatre under the auspices of the Institute of Fine Arts. Advisory Editor of Ars Islamica, Dr. Coomaraswamy is a leading au- thority in the field of Oriental Art and outstanding scholar in compara- tive symbolism, metaphysics, folklore, philosophy and religion. Dr. Coomaraswamy will be guest of honor at an informal reception to be given by Prof. James M. Plumer and Mrs. Plumer and the Far Eastern Art students in the Far Eastern Art Room, Alumni Memorial Hall from 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesday. The Student Religious Association has invited Dr. Coomaraswamy to lectue at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. His topic will be "The Religious Basis of India Society." A reception, sponsored by SRA and the Indian Student Society will be held in Lane Hall following the lecture. Liberal Group Chooses Roxas MANILA, Jan. 19-(P)-Manuel Roxas was nominated for the presi- dency of the Philippines today by the liberal wing of the Nacionalista Party and immediately accepted in a speech critical of President Osmena, his ex- pected opponent in the April 4 elec- tion. Roxas and Osmena, long friends and political allies, finally split of- ficially last month. University Radio Programs The University of Michigan Broadcasting Service will broadcast the following programs for the week of Jan. 21 to Jan. 27. MONDAY: Station WKAR 2:30 p.m. U of M STUDENTS QUIZ THEIR PROFESSORS OF EDUCATION "What Next" Program by University High School students. Arranged by Mr. Sydney Straight, Teacher of English 2:45 p.m. COMMUNITY IN ACTION "Milan-A Community in Action" Irma Herman, Youth Worker, interviewed by Mrs. Matilda Rubin of the Staff of the Adult Education Program. Station WPAG 3:15 p.m. CAMPUS NEWS Prepared by Cleland Wylie of the University News Service. TUESDAY: Station WPAG 3:15 p.m. THE ORIGINAL DRAMA "Every Year the Same Thing" by Luck Chase Stephenson WEDNESDAY: Station WKAR 2:00 p.m. to 2:30:p.m.. EPOCHS IN MUSIC Music in Germany in the Early Classic Era. Directed by Hanns Pick. 2:30 p.m. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION "The Veteran's Misunderstanding of G.I. Insurance" Ward Peterson, guest speaker. Station WPAG 3:15 p.m. THE MEDICAL SERIES "The Common Causes of Diarrhea" Dr. H. Marvin Pollard. THURSDAY: Station WPAG 3:15 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY CARILLON Played by Mr. Sydney Giles. Station WJR 11:15 p.m. THE MEDICAL SERIES "Some Comolications of Pregnancy" Dr. Reynold L. Haas, Instructor in Obstetrics and Gynecology. FRIDAY: Station WKAR 2:30 p.m. THE ORIGINAL DRAMA Student-written, student-enacted radio plays. Directed by Professor David Owen. 2:45 p.m. WORKER'S EDUCATION SERIES Debate of the Full Employment Bill before Congress. Martin Shapero (negative); John Condylis (af- firmative). Both of the Law School. Station WPAG 3:15 p.m. DOROTHY ORNEST, Soprano. SATURDAY: Station WJR 2:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. STUMP THE PROFESSOR Basic Panel: Randolph Adams, Director of the Clements Library of American History; Arthur Hack- ett, Professor of Voice in the school of music: George Kiss, Professor of Geography; Amos Morris, Profes- sor of English, and Frank Robbins, Assistant to the President. Strikee... (Continued from Page 1) Schwellenbach last night invited the presidents of General Electric and Westinghouse Electric Companies to meet him Tuesday in the capital to discuss a dispute which last Tuesday sent 175,000 United Electrical Work- ers (CIO) off their jobs with three companies, including GE and West- inghouse. General Motors electrical appliance plants, which also were in- volved in the UE dispute, were not included in the Schwellenbach invi- tation. The UE walkout involved a $2 a day wage increase demand. The nation's belt tightening walk- out of 263,000 CIO anl AFL meat in- dustry workers was deadlocl:ed in its fifty day, with no developments ex- pected until a government fact-find- ing board opens public hearings in Chicago Tuesday. Packinghouse workers were seek- ing wage increases of 1712 cents hourly, as compared with the highest company offer of 10 cents. Two other walkouts scheduled for Monday included 30,000 members of the CIO-Farm equipment workers who sought a 30 per cent wage in- crease at 11 plants of the Interna- tional Harvester Company, and 5,000 employes of three Utah metals com- panies at which members of the mine, mill and smelter workers (CIO) sought to bring wages into line with similar work scales in Idaho. Zoologists Will Hear Lecture By Dr. Ger-ard Dr. Ralph W. Gerard, professor of physiology at the University of Chi- cago, will address the Zoology depart- ment on electrical phenomena in tho nervous system at 4:15 p.m. tomor,- row and will speak on "A Biologist's View of Society" at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Dr. Gerard, who holds both tho Doctor of Medicine and Doctor of Philosophy degrees, bears the coveted star after his name in American Men of Science, indicating that he i3 re- garded by his colleaguei as being among the top thousand men of sci- ence in all fields whose contributions are of primary importance. Dr. Ger- ard has studied in Europe under the auspices of a National Research Council fellowship. Dr. Gerard's lectures are being jointly sponsored by the Department of Zoology and Phi Sigma, honorary natural science fraternity, and are open to the public. A reception will be given for members of the Zoology department and the Phi Sigma so- ciety and their guests following the evening lecture. Buy Victo ry.Bonds! N \\\ *>kM\Nv \M "N ____'y > 4 .l ', '4% ,f/ / / ICLASSIFIED ADVERTISING VflLENTINE S / Don't chance forgetting favorite friends or relatives -/ n the last-minute rush. Select your Valentines now! A FRANCISCO-BOYCE PHOTO CO. 723 North University - -- CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one of two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional five words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional five words.) Contract Rates on Request LOST AND FOUND LOST: Cameo ring, between Michigan Theatre and Sugar Bowl. Family keepsake. Finder please phone' 2-6190. LOST: Green Sheaffer Lifetime pen, Jan. 14 between Angell Hall and Forest. Desperately needed. Betty Naneakow, call 6577. FOUND: Outside U. Drug. Yellow leather change purse. Owner call M. Rich. 2-5268. Identify contents. LOST: 6" slide rule. Name on back. Address on leather cover. Call 4295. LOST:Black in League found, call leather envelope purse Friday afternoon. If Jean Dennis, 9823. FOR SALE FOR SALE: Nine matched Kroydon! irons. Call 2-4401. Ask for Geo. Koskinas. OKLAHOMA NATIVE PECANS*:Rich, full flavored nuts, 5 pounds $2.98, post paid. Send mail order to Law- tonka Pecan Co., P.O. Box 959, Law- ton, Okla. WANTED WANTED: Architectural student draftsman for partime work. Tele- phone before 8:15 a.m., 3936. WANTED TO BUY WANTED TO BUY, HOUSE: Prefer- ably small house near campus for occupancy Sept. 1st. Write price, lo- cation, don't call: WWC, 1313 Ford Bldg., Detroit 26. SERVICING and REPAIRING HAVE YOUR typewriters, adding ma- chines, calculators repaired. Work guaranteed. Office Equipment Ser- vice, 1111 S. 4th Avenue. Phone 2-1213. h- AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG U- i ... SUNDAY, JAN. 20, 1946 11:00-News 1:40-Leo Erdody 8:00-News 11:05-Unitarian church 2:00-News 8:05-Organ Music 2:05-Symphonic Selections 8:15-Jack Connor Trio 12:00-News 3:00-News 8:30--Freddie- Martin 12:05-Do You Remember 3:05-California Harmonies 9:00-Thomas Peluso 12:15--Carol Gilbert 3:30 U of M Women's Glee 9:30-Ave Maria Hour 12:30-Concert Hall of the Club 10:00--News Air 4:00-Milt Herth 10:15-Michigan Highway 12:45-Bible Hour 4:15-Johnny Herbered and Department 1:00-News Orchestra 10:30--Henry Busse 1:15-Boy Scouts of 4:30-Boston Blackle 10:45-veteran's Counseling America 5:00-News Service 1:30-Moments of Devotion 5:15-Carlos Molina V111 Sweeping '/2 Off Sale r Y NWAINNNNNCMV 1 COATS Formerly 34.95 to 69.95 Now 1/2 Off SUITS Formerly 22.95 to 45.00 Now V2 Off BLOUSES Formerly 3.95 to 9.95 Now 1/2 Off SKIRTS Formerly 6.95 to 14.95 Now /2 Off DRESSES Formerly 5.00 to 49.95 Now 2 Off SWEATERS Formerly 5.95 to 10.95 Now 1z Off SUNDAY DINNER ITALF GRAPEFRUIT FRUIT COCKTAIL tained by writing Public Relations, Air Forces Room 3-330 Pentagon Bldg. Washington, D. C. Dr. Wessinger Urges pom ion Asserting that a majority of victims of infantile paralysis re- cover, Dr. John A. Wessinger, county health officer, issued a plea that everyone contribute heavily to the March of Dimes. "'As a iember of the foundation, I know their work is successful," Dr. Wessinger"said, adding that "we need p!,enty of money." The Washtenaw County Polio Founda- tion, which works as part of the National Foundation, alone spends about $1,0 a year, lr. Wessin- ger diselodi. All- eesr treatmients are given everyone stricken with the disease., Dr. Wessinger said, even if the patient is unable to pay for the treatments. That is why the Foundation needs money, he said. They also need money for research, and that money must come out of- CHICKEN SUPREME SOUP VARIETY OF CELERY, OLIVES, AND PICKLES BROILED LAKE HURON TROUT with tartar sauce $1.50 GRILLED TENDERLOIN STEAK with french fried onions.....................2.25 GRILLED PORTERHOUSE STEAK with french fried onions ....."............ 2.00 GRILLED SIRLOIN STEAK with french fried onions 1.85 BROILED LAMB CHOPS...................... ...1.50 BAKED VIRGINIA HAM with candied yams........1.50 ROAST YOUNG CHICKEN with sage dressing and giblet gravy .. ........ ............ 1.50 SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN.. .............. 1.50 -ead Lettuce Salad with Thousand Island' Dressing Fresh Frozen Vegetables: Corn, Green Peas, Lima Beans French fried potatoes, mashed, candied yams ROBES Formerly 8.95 to 55.00 Now Of Special Beauty Bonus: ll $2.00 DuBarry Derma 'Sec Cream $1.00 $2.50 Kathleen Mary Quinlan Strawberry Mask $1.00 $2.00 Dorothy Gray Blustery Weather Lotion . $1.00 Homemade Apple Pie Ice Cream Lemon Meringue Pie Cake TO BE SERVED IN THE DINING ROOM OR TO BE DELIVERED 1 , 3 . ' C HA4f 11 I /ill %,-- , " I i -- ?,V V J U i , r I IT."I 1111 \ / A M T H