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November 16, 1947 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1947-11-16

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PALL POUR

THE MICHIGAN I AILY

SUN~DAY, NVMBR16, 194

41

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u . . s iI

Fifty-Eighth Year
Edited and managed by students of the Uni-
versity of Michigan under the authority of the
Board in Control of Student Publications.
John Campbell ...................Managing Editor
Nacy Helmick ............... General Manager
Clyde Recht ..........................City Editor
Jeanne Swendeman.......Advertising Manager
Stuart Finlayson ................Editorial Director
Edwin Schneider ...............Finance Manager
Lida Dailes....................Associate Editor
Eunice Mintz ....................Associate Editor
Dick Kraus ..........................Sports Editor
Bob Lent ..................Associate Sports Editor
Joyce Johnson ....................Women's Editor
Betty Steward.........Associate Women's Editor
Joan de Carvajal .... ...........Library Director
Melvin Tick.................Circulation Manager
Telephone 23-24-1
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to
the use for re-publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or otherwise credited in this news-
paper. All rights of re-publication of all other
matters herein also reserved.
Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, as second class mail matter.
Subscription during the regular school year by
carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00.
Member, -Assoc. Collegiate Press, 1947-48
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only.

MATTER OF FACT:
The Reuther Victory

-

NIGHT EDITOR: ARTHUR HIGBEE
"Free Palestine
AN OLD SONG says, "The world is waiting
for the sunrise." Today, two-and-a-half
years after the defeat of Germany, the home-
less Jews of Europe still wait for the sun
to rise on them in a free Palestine.
Happily, the majority report of the Uni-
ted Nations Special Committee on Palestine
has been accepted by the UN Assembly with
the support of both the United States and
the Soviet Union. Britain has agreed to
evacuate Palestine. U.S. and Russia have
agreed that the mandate should terminate
by May of next year and that the independ-
ent Jewish and Arab nations should start
operating by July. The Jewish Agency has
expressed willingness to accept the parti-
tion, and the armed resistance groups were
inactive until recently pending the final out-
come.
But all is not sugar and cream. How
sincere the "Big Three" will be in im-
plementing their decisions is problemat-
ical. The Arab League is bitterly op-
posed to the creation of a Jewish state
and may employ the 30,000 crack troops
of the Transjordan forces to prevent the
"partition. Haj Amin Husseini, the notor-
sous Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, threatens
wholesale assasinations should the ma-
jority report be carried out.
But elementary justice demands that a
sizeable concession be granted to the Jews
in the face of any Arab resistance. Arab
claims to a Palestinian nation are largely
specious inasmuch as the present manda-
tory state of Palestine was created by the
League of Nations to implement the Bal-
four Declaration. This is not to say that
the Arabs have no claim to Palestine, but
rather that theirs is not the sole claim.
Should the Arab League and the Mufti
attempt to employ force to oppose parti-
tion the sincerity of the big powers willt
then'be tested. Surely the combined pow-
ers of the UN need, not be intimidated.
The mouse does not call the tune for the
lion. A strong attitude would then re-
duce the Arab threats to nothing more
than bluff.
In any case,. the Jews do not want to take
the land from others. They merely want an
opportunity to avail themselves of land that
is now unused, to build a free Palestine from
the deserts and swamps, to create a home
and renew their culture. That is the least
they deserve.
-Jacob Hurwitz
rD RATHER BE RIGHT:
Aid Plan and Prices
By SAMUEL GRAFTON
fHE MARSHALL PLAN is almost certain
to keep prices high. It may raise them.
In fact the Marshall Plan is probably the
chief psychological factor underpinning our
present high price structure. If it were an-
nounced tomorrow that the Marshall Plan
was off, it is entirely possible that the long-
expected break in commodity prices would
follow within a matter of days, or weeks.
There are probably commodity traders who
nave never been nearer Europe than Tulsa,
- , .. .- .. a,,.fnr +fl p

By STEWART ALSOP
W ASHINGTON-It is difficult to overesti-
neate the real meaning of Walter Reu-
ther's overwhelming victory at the United
Automobile Workers' convention in Atlantic
City this week. For the Communists have
lost their last chance to dominate or deeply
influence an important segment of the
American labor movement. In so doing, they
nave lost their last chance to dominate or
deeply influence the whole American politi-
cal left. For without a solid, unassailable
base in the labor movement, the Communists
are reduced to comparative political im-
potence. And this in turn will have a pro-
found impact on the national political scene.
Only two or three monwhs ago, there ex-
isted a serious possibility that the Commun-
ists might extend their influence to unions
to represent about half the membership of
the entire C.I O. Yet with Curran's recent
victory in the martime workers, and Reu-
ther's success this week, the whole Com-
munist position in the C.I.O. is threatened.
It is threatned, for example, in national
C.I.O. headquarters. The hand of C.LO.
President Philip Murray, who detests'the
Communists, but who has hesitated to
move against them for fear of splitting
his beloved C.O. from top to bottom, is
strengthened. So is the hand of James
Carey, C.L.O, secretary treasurer, and Reu-
ther's chief ally at national headquarters.
And the position of C.LO. counsel Lee
Pressman, the Communists' friend at
court, has thus become exceedingly pre-
carious. Reuther has never troubled to
conceal his sentinents towards Pressman.
One close observer of the C.I.O. has re-
marked that it would surprise him if
Pressman' lasted three months.
The C.I.O.-P.A.C., the C.I.O.'s political in-
strumentality, which has always had a dis-
tinet Communist flavor, will also feel the
impact of Reuther's victory. R. J. Thomas,
the bumbling former president of the U.A.W.,
who has consistently accepted Communist
support, has been treasurer of the P.A.C.
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE RECORD.
By Charles O'Connell. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf. 322 pages.
ECAUSE IT seems inevitable that the
great majority of American music-lov-
ers must extend their enthusiasm to an in-
satiable curiosity concerning the profession-
al performers of music, Charles O'Connell's
latest book is of only slightly less interest
and value than his earlier books. The Vic-
tor Book of the Opera and The Victor Book
of the Symphony are already standard works
in all music lovers' libraries, to which the
addition of The Other Side of the Record
will serve as a nice balance.
Among the personalities treated in this
book are five opera stars, six conductors and
four instrumental soloists, all of unques-
tionably top rank. One might take for the
basis of selection the author's statement
that he has "written about certain people
because they are famous, eccentric, notori-
ous, contemptible, or otherwise interesting,
either as artists o in propriae personae."
Undoubtedly at one with his readers in
his irritation and infuriation at "the end-
less stream of cheap and incredible non-
sense that has been Published about musi-
cal matters and about noted musicians,"
Mr. O'Connell has determined "to add a
third dimension to the somewhat flat and
distorted pictures of certain notable musi-
cal people and rnusical events that have
been presented to the public." He acom-
plishes his purpose with a thoroughness
and frankness that may produce gasps of
astonishment, if not of indignation.
Speaking with the undeniable authority of
long professional and personal associations

with the subjects of his book, as musical
director for Victor Red Seal records, Mr.
O'Connell insists that he writes with malice
towards none, but his frank admission at
the close of this consistently candid book re-
veals what the reader is likely to have sus-
pected all along: that the book has served
as "an effective anodyne for the accumu-
lated irritations of years."
Mr. O'Connell goes back on his word in
some respects. The musical evaluation which
he promises to avoid is flagrantly present
in some form or other in every single chap-
ter. This small fault, happily, by no means
detracts from the book's entertainment val-
ue. But can one deny maliciousness in his
conclusion "that many critics are unfair,
some of them venal, and most of them in-
competent." especially when he adds that
"most critics of music are frustrated musi-
cians with exhibitionist, sadist and other
tendencies even less frequently mentioned in
gentle society?"
In general, the book's style is praise-
worthy for its color, lightness and pace, but
one might wish that the author had not such
an affinity for Biblical quotations and words
like "eleemosynary, rhonchisonus" and "pre-
prandial."
-Natalie Bagrow
General Library Book List . .

Reuther is now expected to replace him.
There is no doubt that he will firmly quash
the P.A.C.'s sprinkling of Communists.
Again, Communist control of the biggest
Communist trade union base, the United
Electrical Workers, is seriously undermin-
ed. Carey, former U.E.W. president and
leader of a movement to oust its Com-
munist officers, will receive support from
Reuther. Moreover, Philip Murray's steel-
workers are expected soon to follow the
U.A.W. lead in signing under protest the
non-Communist affidavits required by the
Taft-Hartley law. This will leave the elec-
trical workers as the only major C.I.O.
union without recourse to the National
Labor. Relations Board, since a number of
its officers could not sign the affidavits
without risking perjury charges.
Thus the electrical workers will be sub-
ject to raids both from the A.F. of L.'s ma-
chinists and from the steel and auto work-
ers. It seems unlikely that the vast major-
ity of non-Communists in the electrical
workers' rank and file will long agree to
pay such a price for the luxury of maintain-
ing Communist officers. And if the Com-
munists lose the electrical workers, they lose
their last great labor base.
Thus the whole internal balance of pow-
er in the C.I.O. has been overturned, and
will be overturned still further. The im-
pact of this overturn on the national po-
litical scene is made obvious if one recalls
the speech made by Henry Wallace before
the electrical workers' convention in Bos-
ton last September. Carey's attempt to
displace the Communist leadership of his
old union had been swamped by the pow-
erful Communist machine. Wallace pro-
ceeded to devote much of his speech to
the horrors of "red-baiting," and con-
gratulating the union on not allowing it-
self to be disrupted by such "false issues"
as Carey had raised. Wallace thus placed
himself squarely and unequivocally in the
C.I.O.'s minority pro-Communist camp.
The overwhelming rank-and-file support
for Walter Reuther has now threatened the
very existence of that camp, and has clear-
ly repudiated Henry Wallace's strategy of
a "united Front" with the Communists. Thus
Reuther's victory is the greatest setback
which the third party movement, spark-
plugged by the Communists, has yet received.
Reuther's enemies in the U.A.W., now sunk
without trace, having consistently flirted
with the progressive citizens of America, the
party-line, third-party organization which
has provided Wallace with his main plat-
form.
Reuther, like Carey, is a firm supporter
of the anti-Wallace, anti-third party, anti-
Communist liberal organization, the Aer-
ican for democratic action. It is too early
to say that the third party is dead. But
certainly the Democratic leaders who fear-
ed that Henry Wallace, by heading a third
party, would elect a right-wing Republi-
can in 1948, can take heart.
Yet the impact of Reuther's victory may
extend beyond the political fortune's of Hen-
ry Wallace. For although Reuther has been
described as the leader of the U.A.W.'s
"right wing," his views would be exceeding-
ly abhorrent to the Union League Club.
Reuther's victory, and the increasing re-
pudiation of the Communists by the C.I.O.,
are laying the groundwork for what the
country will badly need when the present
swing to the right is inevitably reversed in
time; a militant, intelligent, non-Commun-
ist American left.
(Copyright, 1947, New York Herald Tribune)
Wh ~ c % ~ s i a x w o

WHEN COUNT BASIE switched from the
Columbia label where he had been a fix-
ture for some years, to R.C.A. Victor, not
much comment was noted in the trade press.
It was newsworthy, yes, but not too startling.
The interest centered around whether the
band would make better or worse records
than they had made at Columbia. While
the idiosyncrasies of Victor's recording di-
rector, Eli Oberstein, were well-known, no
I one was quite prepared for the series of
incredibly bad records which resulted from
the tie-up. Apparently, this is all in the
past. Just released is "Frustration," distin-
guished by a complex Jimmy Mundy ar-
rangement and a neat performance by the
band. George Merry's velvet-smooth tram-
ing is a distinct highlight on this side. The
reverse spots Jimmy Rushing doing a shout
vocal on a twelve bar blues theme.
In spite of dire predictions by many critics
bebop continues to flourish. That it is a sig-
nificant factor in modern music is an un-
deniable faet. A good example is a late Apol-
lo issue listed as "Mad Land" featuring a
small group headed by Sir Charles Thomp-
son.It is mainly a vehicle for a long and in-
tricate baritone sax solo by Leo Parker,
whose conception and technique will as-
tound even the casual listener. The coupling
is mostly tricky ensemble work with Joe
Newman's able trumpet supplementing the
versatile Mr. Parker.

ON WORLD AFFAIRS:
Sovereign
Equality
By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER
AMERICAN objection to electing
the Ukraine to the Security
Council is on a level with Soviet
Russian objection to being con-
tinually outvoted - absurd.
At Dumbarton Oaks and San
Francisco, the U.N. Charter
makers proceeded to set up a
qualification for membership
and then systematically violat-
ed it. They also arranged for
systematic voting in the U.N.
Assembly on a one-state one-
vote principle.
In order to note the violation of
the membership qualification we
need only examine for effective
sovereignty the fifty-seven states
presently members of the organ-
ization.
The best index, in my judg-
ment, consists in classifying
these countries into five cate-
gories.
In class one - enjoying no in-
dependence - we must put the
two segments of Soviet Russia, the
Ukraine and White Russia. They
are merely pretexts for giving the
Soviet Union three votes.
At the other end, among the
states enjoying real independence,
are the big five - the U.S.S.R.,
the United Kingdom, the United
States, France and China. We
may, in addition, concede consid-
erable independence to Afghanis-
tan, Argentina, Chile and just pos-
sibly to Egypt and Ethiopia, the
three Scandinavian countries and
the Low Countries - Belgium, the
Netherlands and Luxembourg,
lumped together as Benelux.
Between these two extreme
groups are three other categor-
ies. Group two consists of states
living in obligatory dependence
on a Great Power. Here we find
Russia's European satellites, Po-
land, Czechoslovakia and Yugo-
slavia and America's satellite,
Panama. None of these has any
independenece in its foreign re-
lations.
Above these, group three would
include states that have accepted
some degree of voluntary depend-
ence. This is a large category.
Probably it would include the ma-
jority of Latin American repub-
lies, Greece and all the Moslem
states except Afghanistan and
Egypt.
In group two - states that
have accepted voluntary associa-
tion with a great power - we
should put the British Dominions
- Canada, Australia, New Zea-
land, South Africa and India -
Turkey, Brazil, Cuba, Mexico and
perhaps Thailand. These coun-
tries can at any time break off
their present arrangements and
enter into others.
Some students would disagree
with the details of this classif-
cation. But all persons familiar
with world affairs, in so far as
they are honest, would admit
that there is no real basis in the
membership list for that "sov-
ereign equality" of member
states that the Charter pre-
scribes. Some might go as far as
E. H. Carr ("The Soviet Impact
on the Western World," Macmil-
lan, 1947): "the prospect which
apparently confronts us is that
of two, three or more constella-
tions of power, each of them
having one Great Power as its

nucleus." "Sovereign equality"
among unsovereign unequals is
either a pious aspiration, a
practical make-believe or a piece
of deliberate hypocrisy.
Since the Ukraine and Czecho-
slovakia are equally susceptible to
orders from Moscow, it makes no
real difference which is elected to
the Security Council.
At the same time, since ab-
sence of real sovereignty applies
to some extent to most of the
member states, Mr. Vishinsky's
diatribes against being outvoted
by "oppressive majorities," might
seem justified. This is not the
case. Only if the democratic
bloc were a majority of As-
sembly votes depending mechan-
ically upon mere numbers would
Mr. Vishinsky be right. Actual-
ly, the Soviet bloc is not only
a minority of states. It repre-
sents a minority of actual people
and - even more important -
a minority of real power.
If Mr. Vishinsky were as frank
as he is ill-mannered, he would
admit that if the Soviet bloc pos-
sessed greater real power than
its adversaries, it would long since
have defied them - majority or
not. That is has not done so is
a recognition of its present weak-
ness.
It is also a sign that the anti-
Soviet majority could by consti-
tuting themselves into a real
I rntinan heeame a Gibraltar

Publication in The Daily Official
Bulletin is constructive notice to all
members of the University. Notices
for the Bulletin should be sent in
typewritten form to the office of the
Assistant to the President, Room 1021
Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day
preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat-
urdays).
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1947
VOL. LVII, No. 48
Notices
Parking: Evening of November
19: On the evening of November
19, there will be a lecture in the
Clements Library, and it is re-
quested that the parking space at
the rear of West Engineering Bldg.
be reserved for those attending the
lecture, especially those who are
from out of town. An attendant
will be in charge and if those who
would ordinarily use this parking
space on that evening will please
park elsewhere, it will be appreci-
ated.
Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary
Assembly, School of Forestry and
Conservation: 10 a.m., Tues., Nov.
18. W. K. Kellogg Auditorium.
Dr. Ralph H. Allee, Director of
the Inter-American Institute of
Agricultural Sciences at Turrial-
ba. Costa Rica, will speak on the
activities of the Institute.
All School of Forestry and Con-
servation students not having non-
forestry conflicts are expected to
attend. All others interested are
cordially invited to attend.
Freshman - Sophomore Forestry
Conference: 7:30 p.m., Tues., Nov.
18, Rm. 2039, Natural Science Bldg.
Prof. W. W. Chase will talk on
work with the U.S. Fish and Wild-
life Service, and Dr. Emmet T.
Hooper of the Museum of Zoology
will speak on opportunities for
work in related fields of zoology.
Men's Glee Club:
The following men have been
selected as members of the Men's
Glee Club. Meeting, Sun., 3 p.m.
First Tenors-Bay, Bennett,
Bernardy, Kochenderfer, Mc-
Laughlin, Pringle, Puff, Stephen-
son, Wright.
Second Tenors-Beam, Challis,
DeMerritt, Dunkle, Fischer, Har-
rington, McGowan, Phebus, Rue-
tenik, Van Husen, Westphal.
Baritones-Boesen, David, Grei-
der, Hammel, Hanson, Holmes,
Jensen, Jones, Morris, Mark,
Pfluke, Ryckman, Sandweiss,
Strickland, Talbot.
Basses - Brockhaus, Cleveland,
Entenmann, Garchow, Gault, Hall,
Hart, Jensen, Lindquist, Lowen-
berg, Perry, Peterson, Ross.
Women students interested in
applying for residence in Hender-
son House beginning with the fall
semester of 1948 may call at the
Office of the Dean of Women. This
small house for fifteen girls is rur
on a cooperative basis, enabling
the residents to earn part of thei
living expenses. Meals are servec
The alumnae give consideratior
in choice of residents to the stu-
dent's interest in and desire fo
the principles of cooperative liv-
ing.
University Community Center
(Willow Run Village.
Mon., Nov. 17, 8 p.m., Sewin
Club.
Tues., Nov. 18, 8 p.m., Open le-
ture-"How Does a Writer Write?'
Prof. Allan Seager. Followed by
Wives' Club meeting and Creativ
Writers' meeting.
Wed., Nov. 19, 8 p.m., Natura
Dance Group; 8 p.m., General Nur-
sery Meeting.
Thurs., Nov. 20, 8 p.m., The Nev
Art Group.
Sat., Nov. 22, 8 p.m., At Home

Records and popcorn.
* * *.

DAILY
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN

EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily
prints every letter to the editor re-
ceived (which is signed, 300 words
or less in length, and in good taste)
we remind our readers that the views
expressed in letters are those of the
writers only. Letters of more than
300 words are shortened, printed or
omitted at the discretion of the edi-
torial director.
World Student Day
To the Editor:
MONDAY is International Stu-
dent Day, in commemoration of
the massacre by the Nazis of 157
Czechoslovakian students in the
resistance in 1939. The Student
Legislature has set aside Monday
for observance of this day. It is
important today, not only in mem-
ory of those whose lives were tak-
en, but also for the part an Inter-
national Student movement can
play in the fight for peace, that
students at the University of Mich-
igan do nct forget International
Student Day.
-George Sarver
* 4 4'
Bus Service .. -
To the Editor:
T'S TOO BAD there have to be
so many complaints about a
service which the University is
not forced to give us. Being a new-
comer to the University, I'm not
enough acquainted with the bus
starting ,to be sure that maximum
efficiency is attained; however, the
fact is apparent that it is a great
service even with the limitations
apparently necessary. It is obvi-
ous that if you don't want to stand
for nine cents on the University,
buses, you can stand for thirty-
five cents on the commercial bus-
es.
--. M. Stiles
*/ * *
Gargoyle Standards
To the Editor:
AS MAY be expected I am mak-
ing a few mild replies to the
letters written by Garg staff mem-
bers in defense of their sheet.
Andee Seeger of the Garg says
that the Garg "must be funny or
else it would not have so many
avid readers." This is the most
coherent piece of logic I have
heard all week. It's like sayingl
that "Forever Amber" was a great
book because it had so many "avid
readers."
I quote again . . . "though peo-

ple at Michigan do not buy their
own Gargoyles" . . - a most com-
mendable stand, from my view-
point. Incidentall-, who does buy
it? Large out of state circulation,
I presume? . .
A little farther along in Miss
Seeger'stletter we run across
"~worn-out grags, thleecoy and point-
less stories, the haphazard art
work, the inanities" . . . except for
the art work I thought that a des-
cription of the Garg ,was being
given, but I find that these are
merely unkind references to other
humor magazines.
In all fairness to the few, un-
fortunately, the too few contribu-
tors to Garg, there were some
amusing items. However a critical
judgment must necessarily cent-
er on the main ...
True, there is a trace of literary
merit - a faint trace, which was
so unfortunately obscured by the
mass of drivel, that only the strong
had the stomach to seek it out.
A most cogent rebuttal to my
letter condemning the Garg I of-
fcr here:
"The Gargoyle is highly revered
in all Detroit high schools ' . . .
Andee Seeger.
I am happy for them . . . but
since when have the Detroit high
school kiddies been cutting the
critical ice around these parts?
Next on the agenda is the very
amusing letter by Dick Coleman.
Seriously, it was highly amusing.
However, it is a little presumptu-
ous for Coleman to assume that
he was the "ill-begotten venture"
to which I referred. It was the
Garg, Coleman, not you.
As for criticizing Coleman .
All I did was to quote a descrip-
tion by one of his "close personal
friends," who are naturally more
suited to the critic's seat than I
--Richard Arnesen
** *'
What Is Humor?
To the Editor:
W HO IS THIS CHARACTER,
Richard Arnesen, who dislikes
the type of humor that has been
put into the first issue of this
year's Gargoyle? He says that the
humor is inane, exaggeration, and
absurd. Pray tell, just what is
humor if it isn't that? According
to most dictionaries this is a very
good definition of, humor. Our
boy, Arnesen had better find out
what humor is before he starts
criticizing it.
-William L. Reeve

A

I1

Letters to the Editor... I

'1

#1

I

Antarctic explorations from which1
he returned last March. Tickets
on sale at 10 a.m., Mon., Auditor-
lum box office.
Doctor Haven Emerson, Profes-
sor of Public Health of Columbia E
University, will lecture on the sub-E
ject, "The Control of the Com-
municable Diseases," at the regu-
lar student assembly at 4 p.m.,
Nov. 17, School of Public Health
Auditorium.
Academic Notices
Doctoral Examination for Char-
les Schaffner Goodman, Business
Administration; thesis: "The De-
velopment of California as a Man-
ufacturing and Marketing Center
for Fashion Apparel," at 4 p.m.,
Tues., Nov. 18, West Council Room,
Rackham Bldg. Chairman, E. H.
Gault.
The Graduate Aptitude Exami-
nation is required of all graduate
students who have not had the
Graduate Record Examination or
the Graduate Aptitude Examina-
tion before.
This semester the examination
will be held at 6:30 p.m., Nov. 19,
Rackham Lecture Hall.
The fee for the examination is
$2. Each student must buy an ex-
amination ticket at the Cashier's
office and present a receipt in they
office of the Graduate School at
least three days prior to the ex-
amination. The student will be
given a receipt to keep which will
be his admission to the examina-
tion.
Veterans will have a yellow Sup-
ply Requisition signed in the
Graduate School office before go-I
ing to the Cashier's office. This
will permit the purchase of an ex-
amination ticket to be covered by'
Public Law 346 or 16.
Classical Representations Semi-
nar: Tues., Nov. 18, 4:15 p.m., Rm.
3010, Angell Hall. Miss Burroughs
will speak on Young Symmetrizers.,
Modular Representations Semi-
nar: Rm. 3012 Angell Hall, 4 p.m.,
Mon., Nov. 17. Transportation will
be provided to East Lansing for
the meeting.
Orientation Seminar: Mon., 7
p.m., Rm. 3001, Angell Hall. Miss
Jean Smolak will discuss Partial-
ly Ordered Systems.

tive in the aphid Macrosiphum
sanborni .(Gillette)."
Conlcerts
A Concert of Dutch Music of the
15th, 16th, and 17.th Centuries will
be presented by the Collegium Mu-
sicum of the School of Music this
afternoon at 4:00 in Alumni Mem-
orial Hall as a part of the cele-
bration of a century of Dutch set-
tlement in Michigan. Selections
from Dutch Psalmody in the 16th
and 17th centuries will be present-
ed by a brass ensemble and the
Madrigal Singers, and the pro-
gram will also include Netherlands
Secular Music of the 15th and 16th
centuries for voices, small en-
sembles, and large chamber en-
semble. Free tickets are available
at 808 Burton Memorial Tower.
Organ Recital: Marshall Bid-
well, Lecturer in Organ from the
Carnegie Institute of Technology,
Pittsburgh, Pa., 4:15 p.m., Wed.,
Nov. 19, Hill Auditorium. Program:
Compositions by Handel, Loeillet,
Bach, Widor, Jacob, Karg-Elert,
Bossi, and Vierna. Open to the
general public without charge.
University of Michigan Sym-
phony Orchestra, Wayne Dunlap,
Conductor will play a concert in
Hille Auditorium at 8:30 p.m.,
Wed., Noy. 19. Program: Mendels-
sohn's Symphony No. 4 in A ma-
jor ("Italian"), Copland's Suite
from the Ballet ' "Appalachian
Spring," and Symphony in D
minor by Franck.
The public is cordially invited.
Exhibitions
Atomic Energy: Association of
U. of M. Scientists calls to the at-
tention of its members, and any
others who may be interested, the
exhibit on atomic energy, its sci-
entific and political implications,
now on display at the Ann Arbr
High School.
Museum of Art: Paintings looted
from Holland, through November
28. Alumni Memorial Hall: Daily,
except Monday, 10-12 and 2-5;
Sunday, 2-5; Wednesday evening,
7-9. Gallery talks: Nov. 16 at 3
p.m.; Nov. 20, and Nov. 25, at
4:15 p.m. The public is invited.
Design and the Modern Poster.
Ground floor corridor, College of
Architecture and Design. Through
November 26.
"NaturHi storv Studies at the

4

i

West Lodge:
Mcn., Nov.
ling, Willow
ley.

17, 6:45 p.m., Bow-
Village Bowling Al-

Tues., Nov. 18, 7:30 p.m., Fencing
Group; 8 p.m., Volleyball League.
Wed., Nov. 19, 7:30 p.m., Dupli-
cate Bridge tournament..
Fri., Nov. 21, 8:30 p.m., West
Lodge Hayride.
Sun., Nov. 23, 4-6 p.m., Open
House Tea at Dormitory 2; 6:45
p.m., Michigan - Indiana football
pictures.
Lectures
University Lecture: Mon-
sieur R. Jasinski, Professor of
French Literature, University of
Paris, will lecture on the subject,
"Les generations litterraires" (in
French), at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Nov.
20, Kellogg Auditorium; auspices
of 'the Department of Romance
Languages.
University Lecture: Carroll L.
Shartel, Professor of Psychology,
and Chairman of the Personnel
Research Board, Ohio State Uni-
versity, will lecture on the sub-
ject, "Some Problems in Studying
Tadership." at 4:15 p.m., Thurs.,

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