IGH THE M I CG AN D A ILY COMEDY IN FRENCH: Le Cerele Fran Aiinual Produ "Les Femmes Savantes," French comedy by Moliere. will be presented May 1 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre under the auspices of Le Cer - cle Francais, Prof. Charles E. Koella, director of the production announced yesterday. Consisting of five acts and in verse, "Les Femmes Savantes" was intro- duced in March 1672 in Paris. It deals Lowdermilk Will Discuess Jordan Valley "Plans for a Jordan Valley Author- ity" will be the subject of a Universty lecture by Dr. Walter Clay Lowder- milk assistant chief of the U. S. Soil Conservation Service, to be given at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building, under the Jauspices of the College of Engineering and the School of Forestry and Con- servation. In addition to five agricultural ex- plorations into north central and northwest China, Dr. Lowdermilk has traveled extensively in the Near East and the Americas. He has worked out a power and irrigation plan for Pal- estine which he calls the Jordan Val- ley Authority and which would pro- vide a fifth as much power as the Boulder Dam and bring irrigation to Returned From China He has recently returned from a year as agricultural adviser to the Chinese government, which has re- quested that he return as soon as pos- sible with the farm machinery to set up ten demonstration areas in vai- ous parts of Free China and to ex- tend the soil conservation districts to other parts of the country. "As laymen interested in popula- tion shifts of minority peoples, we have followed the work of Dr. Low- dermilk for 15 years," stated Dr. Ed- ward W. Blakeman, Religious coun- selor. "He has much to teach us, and a most entertaining and convincing way of presenting his findings." Dr. Lowdermilk will also speak to an Assembly of the School of Fores- try and Conservation at 11 a.m. Wed- nesday in the kakham Amphithea- tre, on the subject "Land Use Studies in the Near and Far Easty." Both lectures are open to the pub- li. Russian Circle Plans ieet i The Russky Kruzhok, Russian Cir- cle, will hold the first meeting of the semester at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the International Center. A panel discussion on Russian lt- erature and medicine will be led by students and a skit prepared by one of the language classes will be pre- sented to highlight the evening's pro- grai. Tea will be served from the samovar, and tickets for the Russian movie will be distributed to all mem- bers of the club. All interested students are invited to attend his organization meeting. Spain rTo Reply MADRID, March 16 _-0-I - The Spanish Foreign Office announced to- day a reply has been framed to the United States "white book" which accused the regime of Generalissimo Franco of hraving had ties with Hit- 1er and Mussolini, The government said a copy of the reply would be delivered officially through diplomatic channels here and would be made public some time next week. cais T G)(ive ctioti on May I cihia ora i ll 'd a ovxithI a (certain riiilOOl hi~l ; ioad: (,i- ?utiIV pedantry that developed to- aid the end of the 1711i centIury and >loomed fav into the 18th century. Moldiere. alarmed by that new ten- dency which might submerge reason and common onse, produced "Les emmes Savantes." The learned women are represented in this play by: Philaminte, the moth- ar, a pedantic, ambitious and domi- necring Juno, Bclise, her sister-in- law, a ridiculously affected old maid, who is convinced that all men are in love with her, but forbids them to de- -lare their pa4.sion, and Armande, the elder daughter, sarcastic, dry, haughty who tries to follow in the steps of her mother and who, though attracted to- wards the high spheres of spiritual vulture, cannot reconcile herself to the fact that her younger sister, Hen- riette, should marry her former suitor, whom she had rejected, the handsome and proud Clitandre. A series of events, disclosing one of Henriette's suitors as a fortune- hunter, ends the play in a suitable marriage for Henriette. Negro Leader Will Lecture The Rev. Claude Williams, Negro minister who suffered attempted lynching by southern whites and lived to continue his work of promoting racial equality, will speak on racial problems at 7:30 p.m. Thursday night in the Union under the auspices of IRA. Mr. William's experience of being hanged and having the rope removed just before death was only one of the many escapes from death he has had while trying to aid the Southern Ne- gro. He is now director of the Peo- ple's Institute of Applied Religions in Detroit, which he founded three years ago along with similar institutes throughout the counuy. The purpose of the program is to educate funda- m entalist preachers from sharecrop- per areas along democratic and social lines. During the 1930's Mr. Williams was president of Commonwealth College, a school in Arkansas organized for the benefit of the working classes. He! also founded the CIO Sharecropper's' Union. GM (kir OutlpiuL To Wegiii DE'ROIT, March 16 -- () -- New passenger automobile output will move upward within the next fort- night as the long idle General Motors assembly lines get back into produc- tion, but the industry still is many weeks from its peace-time normal av- erage of around 120,000 units weekly. DAILY OFFICAI2I BULLETIN (Cun11irwed from Page '4 110 N. State Stre'. Third Grade through I-i L -houl at Lane Hall ba:cmn~t. 10:00 a.m. Adult Study Group. Lane Hall Upper Room. Mr. Parikh speaking on: "Political Situation in India." 11:00 a.m. Service of Worship. Sermon ty Rev. Edward 11. Redman on "Dictatorship with Atomic Power." 6:30 p.m. Unitarian Students in- vited to parsonage at 110 N. State for buffet supper and discussion with Prof. William Frankena of the Phil- osophy D partment. Reservations for supper may be made by calling 3035. First Church of Christ, Scientist: 1G9 S. Division St. Wednesday evening service at 8 p.m. Sunday morning service at 10:30 a.m. Subject: "Substance." Sunday School at 11:45 a.m. A special reading room is main- tained by this church at 706 Wolver- ine Bldg., Washington at Fourth, where the Bible, also the Christian Science textbook,"Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," and other writings by Mary Baker Eddy may be read, borrowed or purchased. Open daily except Sundays and holi- days from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. University Lutheran Chapel, 1151 Washtenaw has its Sunday service at 11:00 a.m. This Sunday the Rev. Alfred Scheips will preach on the subject, "The Changing World and the Church." Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, will have its regular supper meeting Sunday at 5:15 at the Stu- dent Center, 1511 Washtenaw. Unity: Sunday services at League Chapel at 11:00 o'clock. Marie Mun- ro, Minister, will speak on "Extract- ing New Life Out of Lent." Noonday Prayer Services at the Reading Rooms, 310 S. State St., Room 31, daily (except Thursday) from 12 to 12:30 at which anyone is invited to stop in for as long as pos- sible. Grace Bible Church, State and Huron Streets: 10:00 a.m. Bible School, University Class. 11:00 a.m.: "Mornings in the Psalms." 7:30 p.m.: "The Prophecy of Daniel."' Beer - Wine - Mixers - Keg Beer 10 to 10 Daily 8 AM. to 11 P.M. Sat. 303 N.5th Ave. Ph. 8200 ASS CI A TED PRESS PICTURE NEWS PATERNAL tH A I RC UT - Singer Perry Como, who once was a barber in Cannonsburg, Pa., keeps his hand in by giving a haircut to his six-year-old-son, Ronald Perry Como. C E L E R Y E A T E R - Recently out of the armed forces, Dodger outfielder Joe Gallagher chews on a stalk of celery before a workout at the club's Sanford, Fla., training camp. C A P E T O W N V I S I T 0 R -- HMS King George V; only British battleship to bombard 'Japan, crnters hiarbor at Cape Town, South Africa. In the background is Table Mountain..' C H A R M E R -Fnlm.-act, ress Janis Carter smiles for .the photographer as she poses 'for \a portrait in a new gow As Advertisedi 3 V ys 3 LAMOUI S2 K I )e a f1 :~~\ t O \ P O L I T E VETERANS - Wearing Jap kimonos, Sgt. Milton (Hardin (left) of Augusta, Ga., and Sgt. Talbert Fowler of Glainesville, Fla., bow with oriental courtesy after arriving from Japan aboard the USS Exchange at New York.;1 M U S I C A L R E U N IO N-- Fritz Kreisler, (left) vet- eran violin virtuoso, chats with his old friend Hans Kindler in Washington as the latter celebrated the fifteenth anniversary of his founding the National symphony orchestra. TIME MAGAZINE Special Student Rate 2.67 for 8 months !fito r f .< ail( * DebElaine by Miss Elaine, the perfect slip for slim young figures. Shimmerinc, tea rose rayon satin... and just on: of many Miss Elaine lingerie-exquisites, precisional* sized and styled to fit you to individualized perfection. *Reg, 1'. 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