FioN Sit THE RICHMIAN D) A ILY WEDNESDAY, )MARCU 20, 194g Scientific Groups To Discuss ToGoveriment Aid to Researcli Governmental support for scienti- fic research will be discussed at a joint meeting of University scientific organizations at 8 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Auditorium. Need for a national fund to en- courage research was stressed by Prof. Robley C. Williams of the phy- sics department in an interview yesterday, pointing out that there is a "great dearth of skilled scientists in Industry today" due to the draft- ing of graduate scientists during the war. With President Alexander G. Ruth- ven as presiding officer, Prof. Wil- liams will open the program with a survey of the present legislative situ- ation in this field. Merits of different proposals will be discussed by Prof. Lawrence O. Brockway, chemistry; Prof. Thomas Francis, public health; nnd Prof. Robert B. Hall, geography. A general discussion will follow. 1,300 Questionnaires About 1,300 questionnaires dealing with a national science foundation have been sent out and will be col- lected at the end of the meeting. The University administration, according to President Ruthven, will arrange for IRA To Hear Rv. Wiliams on Race Issue The Rev. Claude Williams, founder and director of the People's Institute df Applied Religions in Detroit, will speak on "Fighting Discrimination" fp owilng a business meeting of Inter- *tcial Association at 7:30 p.m. to- rnrrw in the Union. Rev. Williams founded the Institute three years ago for the purpose of edudating fundamentalist preachers aloig democratic and social lines, working mainly with ministers from t h oharecropper areas of the South. The Instvtute has expanded a nation- al program with headquarters in ma- ny ioaijr cities. Durin the 1Q30's Rev. Williams was presdeitt .of Conmonwealth College, a chool in Arkansas organized for the benefit of the working clases. He is also the founder of the CIO Share- cropper's Union. RV. Williams' many years of work to bringi about racial unity in th youth are described in his biography, "Faith to Free the People" written by Cedric Belfrage. Those unable to attend the lecture because it conflicts with that being presented by the Oratorical Series are urged to 'attend the business #ieeting which will precede the talk. At that time the principles and pur- poses of IRA will be stated, the re- ainder of the officers will be elect- ed a&pd working committees will be chosen. Alec templeton To Play Here Alec Templeton, well-known blind pianist, will present his third Ann Arbor concert at 8:30 p.m. Friday, March 29 in Hill Auditorium, under the auspices of the University Musi- cal Society. Specializing in performing the works of the great masters both seri- ously and satirically, Templeton sup- plewents his program with vocal mi - micry, of famous figures and fads. Born in Wales in 1910, he showed unusual musical talent while still a child, writing his first composition at the age of four. At 13 he won the British Broadcasting Corporation prise for composition and later won a piano contest sponsored by the London Daily Express which sent limo on a tour through England, France and Holland. 'ENSIAN MEETING All members of the Ensian business staff are urged to attend a meeting at 4 pm. Thursday in the Student Publi-- cations Building. It is especially important that all those on the sales staff attend. results from the qiuestionnaires to he sent to sponsors of proposed bills, and to U. S. Senators and Represen- tatives from Michigan. Commenting on the slow-down of fundamental research during the war, Prof. Williams pointed out that "in about five years, industry will be wanting new scientific ideas which we have not yet developed." Funds from Services Most large-scale funds available for research at present are from the Army and Navy, he said, and "we feel that a civilian commission, al- lowing freedom of research and pub- lication would be better." Sponsoring this meeting are Sigma Xi, the Association of University of Michigan Scientists, the Research Club, the Women's Research Club, the American Association of Uni- versity Professors, and faculty mem- bers in the social sciences. DAILY OFFICIAL] BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) members of this committee be pres- ent. Flying Club: There will be an im- portant business meeting tonight at 7:30 in Room 1042 East Engineering Bldg. All students and members of the faculty are invited. Coming Events The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065, N. S. Bldg, at 12:15 p.m. on Friday, March 22. Program: Various phases of the geology of Camp Davis, Wyo. area, by Ruth Bachrach, Alice Gray and Henry Gray. All interested are cordially invited. Forestry Club: There will be a brief busines meeting Thursday evening, March 21, at 7:30 in Room 2039, Nat- ural Science Building. 11i Sigma, honorary biological fra- ternity, will hold tL closed meeting Thursday, March 21, at 7:30 p.m. in West Conference Room, Rackham. The following persons are particularly requested to attend: William Hovan- itz, Van Harris, Cheng Tsui, Alby Sharknas, Morton Livingston, Doro- thy M. Sherman, and Helene Freed. The Ann Arbor Chapter of the American Veterans Union, 7:30 p.m. p.m., Thursday, March 21. Topics for discussion incuude arguments on both sides of the Atonic Energy Con- trol Commission issue. All veterans are cordially invited Tea at te luternaational Cenier Tc weekly informal teas at the In- t°riat onal Center on Thursdays, from 4 :00 to 5:30 p.m. are open to all foreign students and their Amer can friends. Tea Dance: AU foreign and Ameri- can students are invited to the weekly Friday afternoon tea dance from 4-6 p.m. at the International Center, sponsored by the All Nations' Club. _______ Uliveirsity A lini Mleeti in Pliii+'pjits Since thc first sign of normalcy in Philippine transportation and living conditions, University of Michigan alumni in the Islands have been holding regular month- ly luncheon meetings in the hope of gradually . regaining .contact Wit former membhers displaced during the occupation. In a letter to T. HawlcyT apiVng, General Secretary of the Alumni Association, a University of Phil- il~l iines botany prof ssor describes the progress of these gathering, At the first meeting held Dec. 4, 1945, there were ten people pre- sent. Twenty persons attended the second alair held Jan. 13, and the number jumped to twenty-five at tre last meeting on Feb. 3. i] Americani FolkI Sin er To Give John Jacob Niles, American folk ,"inger, wilpresent a program of An- glo-American madrigals, ballads and folk songs at 8:30 p.m. Friday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Niles' songs represent a collection of century old music from England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland that was handed down by oral transmis- sion and brought to the United States by immigrants from those countries. Today the music still lives in the Ap- palachian Mountains and in remote corners of Kentucky, Virginia, and other Southern states. Niles is a na- tive of Kentucky. The songs Nis will sing are divided into three groups: folk songs, bal- lads, and carols. The folk songs deal with familiar everyday subjects. The ballads are American versions of English and Scottish ballads about famous people of the 15th and 16th centuries. Tlhe carols are old songs dealing with domestic events in the life of the Christ child. Niles has traveled all over the Unit- ed States and through foreign coun- tries, singing these same ballads and playing his dulcimers, ancient string instruments that resemble over-sized guitars and sound like zithers. He has appeared before full dress audiences in Paris, London, and The Hague, be- fore scholars at Harvard and Ox- ford, before socialites in Bar Har- bor, and before ordinary audiences which lie claims are his favorites. TI E MAGAZ I NE Student Rate 2.67 for 8 months Exclusively at 322 Sutha StOe ASSSOCUATEII IRESS PICTUIRE NEW'S H I G H - P R ICED ROOKIE'- Bob Brown,.rookie shortstop from San Francisco, takes a cut at a ball at the Yankees' camp in St. Petersburg, Fla. Brown said he signed with theYanks for a "very satisfactory bonus." VETERANS STUDY MACHINE -Jack Uhler (left) and Edwin Schwartz, both veterans of World War 11, study the mechanism of a cut-away compressor in the plant of the York Corporation at York, Pa. They are taking an engineering course arranged in co-operation with Pennsylvania State College, lead-I ing to a regular college degree. GEORGE D. SHERMERHORN (above) of Reading, Mich., is an aspirant to the Democratic nomi- nation for Governor of Michigan. A T O M GH O S T P L A N E S -Lined up at Jonesville, Pa., are some of the 56 Naval planes' to be used as pilotless, radio-controlled craft in the Pacific atomic bomb tests.' . ti ,_ ,j , y f #¢ 5 I p : d , > h i T , t L C y; 4 PIGEON GETS MEDAL-Maj. Gen. J. W. Van Oorschot of the Netherlands embassy in London hangs the Dickin Medal for gallantry on Tommy, the pigeon from Lancashire who brought important information out of Holland in. 1942.] RO Y A L B R OT.H ER$S°- Shown with Prince carl of Sweden (seated, center) on his 85th birthday are his brothers, )KingZGustav, (seated, right) now 87, Prince Oscar Bernadotte2 (extreme left) 86, and Prince Eugen, 81. , : ..... :: Y ..: -:: .::. :: t°.t , i" ?;; ._:.. _.. c" :" ^.:"}_"'^:fii: .tii4} '. ;...::: : " :":: i> {.i}i:3 : i::........ ..fi ...:v:.::.".": n: :.".":."."::: is i. :::..... ................ ' p ..._ 1.... 5............,, .................. _.. _...n .r .. .... . , , Imo .. ...._.: