TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1947 PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FOUXI TUESDAY, NO11~~ 25, jt~~'~ 4 iw 3ir1ttan & Fifty.Eighth Year I I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: IDemocratic Doctrine DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the Editor Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan undernthe authority of the Board In Control of Student Publications. John Campbell. .. .... ...........Managing Editor Nancy Helmick.................General Manager Clyde Recht ..........................City Editor Jeanne Swendeman.........Advertising Manager Stuart Finlayson ................Editorial Director Edwin Schneider .................Finance Manager Lida Daies .......................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- l$an, as second class mail matter. Subscriptiondduring 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. NIGHT EDITOR: DICK MALOY Class Election T OMORROW is election day for students in the College of Engineering! At that time, those interested will go to the polls to vote for class officers for the coming year. Judging from past perform- ances, not very many students will be in- terested. In December 1945 exactly 1756 students voted in the legislature election; in 1946 it was "less than 2000" which amounted to about 15% of the student body. In March 1947, with the war over and registration in the University climbing, there were barely 3,000 votes cast. This term with a record enrollment in all colleges of the University the vote for members of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications brought out 2,340 interested persons. Too often this attitude is one which is carried over into later life. Percentages on participation of eligible persons in elections in northern states show college students with one of the poorest records. How important has the individual vote been in past campus elections? Looking at the record we find that in the last election a seat on the publications board was won by the margin of one vote. In the same election, a tie in the balloting for the positions on the Soph Prom Com- mittee resulted in the enlargement of the committee to satisfy both candidates. An organized minority, by taking ad- vantage of student apathy can swing an entire campus election involving the repre- sentation of over 18,000 students with a few hundred well-placed votes. Only by carrying over the battle strategy that woh the war can we defeat an organized clique: "A good offense is still the best defense." Class representatives will be chosen in the College of Engineering tomorrow for the coming year. Let's make it real representa- tion this time by a strong showing at the polls! -Walter Dean. Music HE WESTMINSTER CHOIR, under the direction of John Finley Williamson, presented the fifth Choral Union concert last night. Opening with two motets by Palestrina and Bach, the choir sang rather raggedly at first, as individual voices stood out and occasional entrances were fouled. The concert improved increasingly, how- ever, with a well-sung piece by Liszt and a sacred work by Schubert. One of di Lasso's few secular songs was marred only by a couple of minor mistakes and a Brahms motet was sung with good balance and ex- pression. After works by MacDowell, Delius and Nicolau, the choir reached its peak in the Handel selection, "Haste Thee Nymph," a setting of Milton's poem which was done with verve and gayety. Tr noam after interminion was de By SAMUEL GRAFTON WE LIVE in a world haunted by the ghost of an old love. There was that moment during the war when most of mankind stood together. We cannot quite forget the feel- ings then stirred, the flood of books which rushed from our presses, dedicated to a new mystique of global democracy. I wrote a couple myself; I reviewed twenty; I did it over again in a thousand columns. Now some try to recapture the same feeling through the Marshall Plan, the emotion of men and nations rallying, the common cause, the hard and clear ob- jective. Some do it, too, with notable suc- cess, and clear sincerity, for if the motives of a man like Henry L. Stimson, say, are not good, and for the good of all, then one simply does not know how to judge people any more. Yet something is missing, down at bottom, in spite of good motives, for is only a partial program for part of world, expected to produce not peace the this the and MATTER OF FACT: Soviet Speech By JOSEPH ALSOP BERLIN-The most significant single epi- sode in recent months here in Berlin was a lecture delivered by Marshal Sokolov- sky to his German economic and production experts. The Marshal unburdened his sore- ly tried spirit behind closed doors, at the Soviet headquarters at Karlshorst. By now, however, the substance of what he said is accurately and reliably known in the head- quarters of the Western powers. His words are worth weighing carefully. The scene itself must be imagined - the Karlshorst conference chamber, heav- ily guarded by Red Army soldiers; the ser- ried ranks of German economists and en- gineers, most of them able men and all of them terrified; the be-medalled Mer- shal, marching in with his staff, and brusquely calling the meeting to atten- tion. There is no imagination, however, in the following report of what he said. With all the terrible authority of the Kremlin's commander in Germany, Sokolov- sky began with a threat. If considerable increases in industrial production were not shortly achieved in the Soviet zone, it would be necessary to find other work - positions in the uranium mines perhaps - for the responsible German experts. Production de- ficits were serious, considerably surpassing the margin of error permitted in the Karl- shorst planning. Sabotage was also wide- spread. If it continued, it would be neces- sary to consider removing the entire work- ing forces of whole factories to more suit- able employment in the mines. The situa- tion was grave, and had had to be reported directly to the Kremlin. Having thus declared his discontent, Marshal Sokolovsky then went on to re- medies. In an order soon to be issued, in- dustrial workers in the Soviet zone would be given generous inducements to higher production. At the same time, observers and inspecting teams would be established in economic administrations and factory offices, to discover instances of ineffici- ency, slackness, or incorrect political ori- entation. These spies would be directly responsible to Soviet headquarters. All offenses reported to them would be pun- ished with the utmost severity. No ex- cuses for failure would be accepted, since the honor of the Soviet zone demanded that its industry should not fall behind the zones of the West. Finally, the Marshal turned to the moral and mental improvement of the Germans assembled before him. To assist them in their task, he said, they must acquaint themselves with Soviet history and the suc- cesses of the Soviet nation. For this pur- pose, Colonel Tulpanov, chief political offi- cer of Soviet headquarters, would deliver a weekly seminar. Attendance records at these seminars would, of course, be kept. Attempts to increase production by poli- tical seminars by Colonel Tulpanov may seem a trifle comic. None the less, there was and is a grave economic reality behind Marshal Sokolovsky's curious harangue. The Soviet zone has been living on its economic fat from the end of the war to the present -operating factory machines at full speed without repai aorreplacement: using up stocks of raw materials without finding sources of replenishment: and sending to the Soviet Union an unbearably high proportion of its output, both agricultural and industri- al. Now the time of reckoning has come. (Copyright, 1947, New York Herald Tribune) It is impossible to synthesize a general picture from the scattered local reports which are available, but one can at least say that all these reports point to the con- clusion that the general picture is very bad. In the vital heavy industry branch at the Krupp Gruson works, for instance, it was recently discovered that twenty per cent of the raw material was being sold on the black market. At Unterwellenborn, forty per cent of the iron castings were ruined by an incorrect mix, most probably because high sulphur content Russian ores had been used for want of better. At the Rostock ship- paradise, but a workable standoff. Can the emotions wihch once went into drawing a portrait of a united world be effectively taken up, and used in, and expressed by, a program for stabilizing half a world and then waiting, perhaps a long time? Can the ghost of our old love, the love for a united world, be satisfied thus, or will it make disturbing protests in the night as the Marshall Plan ships head over the water for Europe? To this question there are several an- swers, and quite strong ones, even though they take the form of more questions: "What else would you do? With whom are you going to make a planet-wide peace? What assurances would you get, and what about them would you accept and trust?" And it is true that a Commun- ist action has begun in France and Italy, and that we may yet see French and Italian Communists trying, however vain- ly, to keep American help out of their own ports, and from their own people, perhaps losing everything in doing so, even their own relative positions, yet dedicated, with wild intensity, to making the effort. For there is hate on that side, too, quite probaly a more systematized and deadly hate than on our own; the residue, among the people of the side alleys of Europe, of a hundred years of waiting for the society in which they lived to show more than a pass- ing and emergency concern for their wel- fare. The explanations that they are Com- munists does not explain, for it only leads to another question: Why are they Com- munists? So it is true that one reason the world is split into halves is that there is, on the other side perhaps more than on our own, a lack of faith in the wholeness of the planet. What, then, remains? Only, finally, to lock horns, to butt and push, and give blood in conflict? Is that all, and is it enough? Will it lay the ghost of the dead moment of love, which still haunts us? Or must we not, somehow, even in this unlikely setting, continue our search for pacification? Is not, after all, the doctrine of "the in- evitability of conflict" a Communist doc- trine, of which "the inevitability of com- promise" is the democratic opposite? There is something of this larger approach in such support of the Marshall Plan as Mr. Stim- son's. He forecloses, even now, against no one; he is "anti" no one, not even the Rus- sians; still somehow, he keeps hope alive as he summons us to stand for Europe and humanity. To amplify this murmur, to en- large this approach, to avoid all littleness, doggedly and desperately, as evil in itself, is the only way to keep healthy within us the sound emotions of a few years ago, just as it is the way to refute the arguments of the opposition, and to orphan its hate'. (Copyright, 1947, New York Post Corporation) CURRENT MOVIES At the ichicgan.. . "WILD HARVEST," with Alan Ladd and Dorothy Lamour. IT'S A WILD HARVEST all right, when Alan Ladd and a bunch of his broad- shouldered buddies get together a fleet of combines and set out to harvest the wheat belt. They seem to think that mechanized harvesting is a profitable venture untouched by human minds, but that of course would be much too simple. Unfortunately the script writers got carried away with that word "wild" and the story that results strongly resembles a grain other than wheat. Alan Ladd strains every muscle into his usual pose of the nonchalant tough guy, and it should be a long time between parts for Miss Lamour after this portrayal of the farm girl who read too many movie magazines. Her simmering sallies even nau- seate Mr. Ladd. There are some good laughs at the incongruity of it all, and Ladd's mas- terful leap along a convoy of speeding trucks brings down the house. But it's a pity that they had to mess up the pretty wheat fields with so much nonsense. At theState ... "SONG OF THE THIN MAN," with Myrna Loy and William Powell. THE THIN MAN is putting on weight, but other than that we have the same blithe Nick and Nora Charles, cracking mur- der cases and wise remarks with equal aplomb. This time the murder of a band leader aboard a night club ship keeps the clever couple from bed and Nick, Jr., for a few hectic days, but needless to say, justice and curtain ring down together. The story gets off to a slow start but picks up considerably and the dialogue is better than average. Asta is still the most tal- ented pooch since Rin-Tin-Tin and 'as soon as he learns to talk will probably carry on the series. -Gloria hunter. 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). TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 1947 VOL. LVIII, No. 55 Notices Regents' Meeting: 2 p.m., Dec. 19. Communications for considera- tion at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than December 11. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary University Senate Monday, Dec. 8, 4:15 ham Lecture Hall. All Junior and Sophomore Men living in the Willow Run Dormi- tories may apply for Residence Halls accommodations for the Sec- ond Semester in Rm. 2, University Hall on November 24, 25, and 26. Varsity Debating: All debaters should check bulletin board. No meeting Wednesday. Women students who wish to leave for the Thanksgiving holiday on Wed., Nov. 26, are instructed to request permission directly from their housemothers. Closing hours over the Thanks- giving holiday are as follows: Wed., Nov. 26, 12:30 a.m. Thurs., Nov. 27, 11:30 p.m. Meeting of al ]students who want teaching positions at the end of the first semester: Rm. 2003, Angell Hall, Tues., Nov. 25, 4 p.m. All graduate students and those just getting their degrees are urged to attend. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. University Community Center: Willow Run Village. Village Artists: Bring in cera- mics, textiles, paintings, drawings ready for formal exhibition in De- cember. Tues., Nov. 25, 8 p.m., Wives' Club Board Meeting. Wed., Nov. 26, 8 p.m., Natural Dance Group; Creative Writers' Group; Prof. Preston W. Slosson at Village Church Fellowship Dis- cussion Group. Fri., Nov. 28, 8 p.m., Bridge. West Lodge: Tues., Nov. 25, 7:30 p.m., Fen- cing Group; 8 p.m., Volleyball Lea- gue. Wed., Nov. 26, 7:30 p.m., Dupli- cate Bridge. Sun., Nov. 30, 4:30-6 p.m., Coffee Hour; 6:45 p.m., Michigan-Ohio State football game pictures. Lectures Miss Ruth Chatterton, disting- uished star of stage and screen, will give a lecture-recital tonight at8:30 in Hill Auditorium, cover- ing high-lights of her theatrical career and incorporating scenes from many of her favorite plays. Miss Chatterton is being presented by the Oratorical Association as the fourth number on the current Lecture Course. Tickets may be purchased today at the auditorium box office which is open from 10-1 and 2-8:30 p.m. University Lecture: Alfred Fran- kenstein, Art and Music Critic of the San Francisco Chronicle will speak on "Art into Music-Modeste Moussorgsky and Victor Hart- SOME PEOPLE seem to think the action of a few newspapers in deleting the Al Capp strip "L'il Abner," smells of thought control and censorship. We had a letter to that effect the other day. The writer claims these incidents "add fuel to the Soviet contention that we do not have a free press" . . We cannot differentiate between columnists and cartoonists in this issue. It involves a basic principle. Both prepare material that is sold to newspapers. Editors are under no obligation to print it justhbe- cause they buy it. The authors have no more right to insist on publication than do ordinary con- tributors to the letters column. Under our system of free press the final authority and responsi- bility for what is published rests on thenewspaper editor. If we ever get away from that practice we will no longer have free and independent newspapers. Irrevoc- able dictation by anyone, whether it be a columnist, cartoonist or government official, as to what should or should not appear in a newspaper is an unhealthy thing in America. Editor and Publisher. Meeting: p.m., Rack- Academic Notices' English 31, section 12. Hour test Wednesday at 11 a.m., Rm. 2054, Natural Science Bldg. Differential Geometry Seminar: Tues., Nov. 25, 2 p.m., Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Prof. G. Y. Rainich will speak on Tensors and Theory of Surfaces. Seminar in Engineering Me- chanics: The Engineering Me- chanics Department is sponsoring a series of discussions on applied mechanics. Discussion: 4, p.m., Wed., Nov. 26, Rm. 406, W. Engi- neering Bldg. Mr. P. F. Chenea will discuss a particular problem in Elastic Plates. Physical and Inorganic Chemis- try Seminar: Tues., Nov. 25, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 303, Chemistry Bldg. Mr. J. E. Boggs will speak on "Or- der and Mechanism of Chemical Reactions." Exhibitions Design and the Modern Poster. Ground floor corridor, College of Architecture and Design. Through November 26. Museum of Art: PAINTINGS LOOTED FROM HOLLAND, through November 28. Alumni Me-I morial Hall: Daily, except Mon- day, 10-12 and 2-5; Sunday, 2-5; Wednesday evenings, 7-9; Thanks- giving Day, 2-5. Gallery talk; No- vember 25, 3 p.m. Prof. H. E. Wethey will speak. The public is cordially invited. Michigan Historical Collections: "Items Relating to the Dutch Set- tlements in Michigan," 160 Rack- ham Bldg. Daily, 8-5: Sunday 2-5,1 through November 28. Events Today Radio Program: 4-4:15 p.m., WPAG (1050 Kc.). Hobby Series: "Sculpturing." Car- leton Angell. Botanical Journal Club: 7:30 p.m., Rm. 1139, Natural Science 'Bldg. Reports: A. M. Harvill, Jr., "Trends in the development of geographic bot- any." Hugh Loveland, "Responses of certain liverworts to variation in nutrient supply." H. T. Schacklette, "Introduction to a monograph of the genus Bryum." Chairman: W. C. Steere. A.S.M.E. Members: Group picture for 'Ensian will be taken at 6:45 p.m., Michigan Union Ballroom. English Journal Club: Meeting, 8 p.m., East Lounge, Rackham Bldg. Mr. Lester Wolfson, Mr. E. M. Halliday, and Mr. Peter Stanlis will lead a discussion of four lyr- ics by Shelley. Institute of Aeronautical Sci- ences: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 1042 E. Engineering Bldg. Program: Plans for the banquet next month to be discussed; Dr. Ross will talk on Supersonics. New members wel- come. U. of M. Rifle Club: Meet Wed., 7:15 p.m., ROTC Rifle Range. Last chance to try out for a place on the team. All experienced rifle- men are invited. A.S.h. and V.E.: Meeting 7:30 p.m., Rm. 308 Michigan Union. Speaker, Prof. Katz, of Engineer- ing Research. Subject: "Heat Transfer Thru Fin Tubes." (illus- trated). All interested are invit- ed. Quarterdeck: Meeting, 7:15 p.m., Rm. 336 W. Engineering Bldg. "The Vibration of a Ship as a Floating Elastic Beam" will be presented by Mr. G. K. Hess, of the Engineering Mechanics De- partment. Deutscher Verein: Meet at 7 p.m., Rm. 305, Michigan Union, to hlave picture taken for the 'Ensian. Bring membership cards. Those who have not obtained their cards can do so at the door. Alpha Phi Alpha: Meeting, 7-8 p.m., Michigan Union. Polonia Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., International Center. Prof. C. Fajans will be the guest lecturer. Discussion about scholar- ship fund. Refreshments. I.Z.F.A.: Dramatic presenta- tion; the story of Hannah Sen- nesh, Palestinian girl parachutist. Discussion of "What is the Jewish nann" at 4:15 Tues., Nov. Rackham Lecture Hall. The lic is invited. -Major, per Paul Morgan 27 others. * * * 25, pub- 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 writersonly. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. Canine Comment To the Editor: I AM DEFINITELY not a Delma- tion; in fact, I'm not even a Dalmation. I am a Harlequin Great Dane. and Veteraln Maturity To the Editor: IN REPLY to Harold T. Walsh. I would not have it thought that all veterans are of Mr. Walsh's opinion. The fact that some of us do not like rah, rah, and do not Indulge in the usual shenanigans 'is our individual privilege. Perhaps we have other things which absorb our energies or perhaps we feel that such pleasant simple-mind- edness is a waste of time, that is neither here nor there. However, I think it is not correct to say that a man, because of his role in the Aleutians, Europe, the Pacific and/or in combat, is to be con- sidered mature by virtue of these experiences. Maturity is a nebulous phrase describing a state which is reached by observation and evaluation. Observation without evaluation gives no true representation of the actual state of affairs. The worthy Babbitt who believes that, with some minor improvements, this is the best of all possible worlds, is no more mature than his sophomoric counterpart who idealistically wants the immediate reform of the world. Neither has evaluated the situation, neither has tried to see it in a "true" per- spective-exactly what is the true perspective has been debated for thousands of years; just what it is remains an open question. If all of our veterans were "mature," our voice would be more loudly heard where it would be useful rather than making much of trivia. Mr. Walsh's statement on bus- iness schools and worlds is an example of the veteran's tremen- dous desire for security-a good job, a wife, a house, an untroubled world. Everybody wants these, I presume, but with the veteran, it has become a fetish, the ultimate end of his striving . .. An under- standable position in view of events, but one which is liable to m make him forget the broad issues which affect him. An institution with ideals sim- ilar to those Mr. Walsh proposes, could hardly produce people who would know how to live a full life, vote, or much less be voted for. Security would not be obtained by these people for the obvious reason that they would have no understanding of the elements of their security. Whether or not a college education as it exists to- day provides the necessary infor- mation, is again a moot question. In any case, it is a somewhat bet- ter solution than a knowledge of mere business methods. A man's life is his to mold, if he can, but don't insist that the rest of the world conform to your pattern, and with this pious ob- servation I close. -William A. Conrad. Cheering Veteran To the Editor: IREFETTERin Sat. Daily on I am a veteran. I cheer at foot- ball games. Is this wrong? -H. M. Taggart. Emphasis on Teaching To the Editor: A RECENT LETTER commented on the pool grade of teaching that is becoming prominent in the University. It was pointed out that the University, in appointing its faculty, has placed a premium on research ability and reputation. The degree to which a professor succeeds as a teacher seems to carry but little weight. What is the University's principal function? Is it promi- nence as a research center or is it an institution for higher education? Essentially, research should be an educational tool rather than an end in itself. Still, this University attaches more importance to the profes- sor's laboratory than to the stu- dents' classroom. As a result, our lectures are all too frequently delivered by bril- liant research scientists who, of- ten just as brilliantly, fail as teachers. In huge lecture sections, the professor is oftentimes out of contact with the students and their difficulties. Brilliant re- search scientists as teachers when they do not know how to teach, crowded classes, and a course that covers material so rapidly that it cannot be instilled for future use, make going to college an almost regrettable experience. Students need not be told of these things. On the other hand, do the University higher-ups fully ap- preciate the students' frustra- tion, the inevitable result of such practice? The shortcomings outlined are so fundamental that they must be attended to. A new emphasis on teaching must be evolved and the mass production trends must be emphatically rejected if this Uni- versity is to retain its reputation as an EDUCATIONAL institution. -Max H. Well. Patrick H. Doyle. Bluebook Prices To the Editor: WITH THE SEMESTER half over, maybe this is the best time to complain about the prices of such items as bluebooks. Hav- ing a bluebook not being bad enough,, we are forced to pay a dime for a few pages of paper. In all seriousness, the prices of such items in the local bookstores are unwarranted. Inasmuch as there exists no practical competi- tion of the bookstores, isn't it about time for the University to make use of its position to assure a more equitable relationship be- tween student buyer and book- store monopoly? -Otto W. McMors Ph.D. Union Card' To the Editor: A WEEK AGO last Sunday I wit- nessed the stupendously Michigan welcome awarded our football players on their victorious return from Wisconsin. A hundred and fifty students, a handful of band-men, one cheer, three songs, three posters. Ten minutes-the train was five late. Inflated in- struments re-cooped themselves neatly in their musical cases, cars rolled away, students walked up South State's sidewalks, doubling the weather's grim note, hushing Sunday's sepulchral morning, as if afraid of rousing it to the real- ization of their daring profana- tion. The cab driver made his take. We have a wonderful set-up. A big stadium, plenty of money tak- en in, plenty of money handed out, bourgeois salaries, and ath- letic opportunities : national pres- tige-Time, Life, Look, Colliers. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICH- IGAN. (It's capitalized just like GOD.) The Michigan Daily reports faithfully, in the best faith of THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. "But the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN needs a-what is it you call it-a student body, on which to operate," the brilliant observer insinuates meekly. Our champion is appalled: "Are you blind, man? Twenty thousand strong-as impressive as a Kaiser- Frazer statistic. See them swarm across the diagonal network, rub- bing antennae, circuiting the wis- dom of the ages. Just for your benefit, for the benefit of our de- nocracy. You, man, are the lead- er of tomorrow. Man, are you blind?" Our observer's hand motions the 4 1 .1 .4 q. National Fund." 8 p.m., Foundation. All invited. Hillel Christian Science Organization: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. All are invited. Faculty Woman's Club: Play Reading Section meet at 1:45 p.m., Mary B. Henderson Room, Michi- gan League. Student Federalists Study Group: Meeting, 8 p.m., Michigan League. Topic: An Inquiry into the Problem of the Electoral Units . Coming Events Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Meet- ing, Wed., Rm. 31056, Natural Sci- ence Bldg. Mr. Robert Hutchinson will speak on "The Geology of the Browns Lake Area, Beaverhead Mountains, Montana." Bowling: The bowling alleys at the Women's Athletic Building will close on Wed., Nov. 26, at 5:30 p.m. and will re-open on Fri., Nov. 28 at 7:30 p.m. Square Dance sponsored by the Graduate Outing Club, Women's Athletic Bldg., Wed., Nov. 26, 8 p.m. All graduates and under- graduates welcome. t1 .1 BARNABY.. U - -. 7