rAGE SIX -T#TE MICHIGAN rA11,Y CENTURY OF CAMERAS: U' Exhibit Displays History, Modern Uses of Photography A Century of Photography, one of a series of exhibits circulated by New York's Museum of Mod- ern Art, is now on exhibition in the Architecture building. In a series of panels the history of photography is discussed and illustrated with significant photo- graphs. Art Versus Science The various modern uses tc which photography has been ap- plied is also a part of the ex- hibit as well as discussion as to whether photography is "art." Finnish Strike Draws Action Of Government HELSINKI, Nov. 26-(3)-Fin nish government members said to- day they had decided upon "cer - tain actions" to settle a strike by 40,000 civil servants which threat- ened the domestic economy with paralysis and severed almost every communication between Finland and the other world. The only trains moving today' were carrying reparations to Rus- sia and essential foodstuffs. The strike presented new dif- ficulties to the country, alread beset with the twin problems of inflation and the meeting of rep- arations payments under terms o the peace treaty. Premier Mauno Pekkala, whose leftwing Socialist Union Parts merged with the Communists t form the Democratic Union, warned the strikers that they risked loss of their jobs by .their action. He said the strike consti- tuted direct action against the parliament and government. Parliament had offered the civil servants a general increase of 800 marks a month (approximately $6) but the committee represent- inp the Government workers turned it down. Informants said the government expected to maintain its tough stand toward the strikers and thousands of officials might be discharged. Political sources said such ac- tion would have the effect of granting the desire of the Left Wing to purge "politically less de- sirable elements" within the pres- ent administration who could not be discharged otherwise save for breach of duty. Some said the Communists might use the strike to attack the Civil servants, the mainstay of Finland's middle class. Pekkala heads a coalition cab- inet which has six ministers from the leftist Democratic Union, five Social Democrats, five Agrarians and one member of the Swedish party. The Agrarians are a cen-' trist party. Ruling Sought For Barmaids LANSING1, Nov. 26--()-The Michigan table-top licensees' Con- gress declared today the United States Supreme Court would be asked to pass on a 1945 Michigan law forbidding women to tend bar. James Dotsch, director, said an appeal would be taken from a three-judge federal court decision in Detroit that the state had the right to adopt such a law for the protection of women. It previous- ly had been upheld by the State Supreme Court and enforcement of the act has been withheld pending the end of litigation. Plans for the appeal will be made at a mass, meeting of li- censees in Detroit Friday night, Dotsch said. See the Annual Football Classic ROSE BOWL AIR SPECIAL * Round trip, 21. passenger DC3 * Stewardess service * All meals aloft * 6 nights Hotel Del Mar * Special bus to game 0 Sightseeing * Big New Year's Eve Party * Free Air Trip to Las Vegas Leave Detroit, JDc. 26 Return Jan. 2, 10 p.., E.S.T. Only 2,'550 incl. tax Early Reservations Necessary Beginning with the various nethods of mechanical reproduc tion used before the invention of )hotography the exhibition con- inues with reproductions of pho- )graphs made with the daguer-- otype and calotype, the most )rmitive forms of photographic eproduction. Recording Reality Treating photography as a neans of recording reality the xhibition notes the great dif- rence in the manner it was em- Toyed in the 19th and 20th cen- uries, especially in portraiture. While 19th century photograph- rs emphasized realism and sharp detail in their work, 20th century portraits take on psychological .onnotations. The photographer Af this period attempt to reveal hought and feeling by the use of -arious lighting tricks. scientific Application The scientific application of yhotography is also treated, show- ng the uses of the X-ray, the nfra-red filter which penetrates lust and fog and the electron nicroscope which is able to rec- ord minute particles which can- iot be seen by the human eye. erial photography is also men- ioned as the "new perspective." The exhibit seems to indicate hat photography is an "art." It ists such factors as sensitivity to nood and texture as requirements of an exceptional photograph and ses two works, "Cadenza" and "Sand Dunes" to illustrate this point. These works show how photog- raphers are able to achieve a jariety of expression and feeling through this apparently realistic medium. Four Survive In Shipwreck Rest Believed Dead In Alaskan Tragedy KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Nov. 26-- A-Four shocked, chilled surviv- ors and the bodies of three other rew members were found today )n the beached bow section of the shattered Army transport Clarks- dale Victory, and the second mate ;aid he thought the other 44 crew- men went to the bottom in the stern half of the broken ship. The Coast Guard said 2nd Mate Henry H. Wolfe of Oakland, Calif., informed his rescuers that no survivors were able to get away in lifeboats after the ship rammed onto rocky little Hippa Island Monday night and broke apart in the rough sea. The survivors were reported suf- ering from shock as well as from he long salt water exposure of their feet. Other survivors reported by the Coast Guard rescue party were 3rd Mates William M. Rasmussen, Modesto, Calif., and Clair E. Dris- Coll, Los Angeles, and Seaman Carlos Sanabria, Honduras. The Coast Guard said two of the bodies were identified as those of Ken J. Bower, an assistant en- gineer from Wolfforth, Texas, and Peter J. Roman, Midland, Pa. The identity of the third body was not reported. The 10,850-ton transport, south- bound with cargo, hit the rocky island, off the Northern British Columbia coast 140 miles south- west of here, so hard that the bow section was high on the beach, with its nose in the woods, when the sea subsided today. Discovery of the survivors came after moderating seas allowed a Coast Guard search party to get aboard the battered bow for the first time. Capt. Niels Haugen, Coast Guard commandant, said he was advised the men were found in the bow section. Another report to the Ketchikan Chronicle said they were beside it. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Conhiued fromi Page 4) 4-4:15 p.m., WPAG (1050 Kc.), Lis Forburger, Mu Phi Epsilon. Graduating Outing Club, meet for ice-skating or hiking, 2:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 30, northwest en- trance, Rackham Bldg. Sign up at Rackharn check desk before noon Saturday. All graduate stu- dents welcome. Institute of Aeronautical Sci- ences annual banquet will be postponed to a time immediately following Christmas vacation. Saturday Swimming - Women Students: There will be no swim- mina fAr wnmen at th TTninn Ponl Don Cossacks Will Present Concert Here Tuesday Marks Ninth Local Perforiaiee The Original Don Cossack Chorus and dancers, under th direction of their Tom Thumb di- rector Serge Jaroff will present the third in the Extra Concert Series at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at Hill Auditorium. In their ninth performance be- fore an Ann Arbor audience, the chorus's program include a group f Russian liturgies, selections :rom Russian Operas, traditional Russian drinking songs and a group of Ukrainian folk songs. Original Chorus The original chorus was formed 27 years ago in a field near con- tantinople where a troop of Rus- sian soldiers spent a lonely eve- 'ing singing their country's folk I gongs. Jaroff, diminutive leader of the ix-foot Cossack giants, selected the best of the group and within a few weeks was the director of a choir of 30 men. Cathedral Choir They became the choir of the Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sofia and in the Bulgarian capital were sent on their first tour by one of the congregation, a concert man- ager. Since then, the Don Cossacks have traveled almost a million- and-a-half miles in Europe, Africa, Australia and North and South America. They have toured the United States annually since 1939, visiting an average of 125 cities each season. Citizenship en Masse in 1943, the Cossacks became American citizens en masse, after assiduously studying the Consti- tution in Russian and English in daily classes for six weeks. A limited number of tickets for the concert Tuesday may be ob- tained at the Choral Union offices in the Burton Tower. Meetings Draw FacultyMen Attend Conventions In New York, Ohio Several members of the Univer- sity's faculty and administrative staff will be attending meetings in various parts of the country this week and next. Prof. Kenneth T. Rose, of the English department, will attend the annual meeting of the Na- tional Theatre Conference to be held tomorrow through Monday in New York City, as an advisor to a committee on new playwrights. Prof. Warner G. Rice, Director of the University General Library. will participate in a meeting on Saturday of the Association of Research Libraries in New York City. Registrar Ira M. Smith and his assistant, Edward G. Groesbeck will attend a meeting of head- masters of Easterr preparatory schools to be held Friday and Sat- urday in Oberlin, Ohio, to discuss problems of college administra- tion. Dr. T. Luther Purdom, director of the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. and Mrs. Juanita B. Mantle, sec- retary of the Bureau, will be in Chicago, today through Saturday, to participate in programs of the National Institutional Teacher Placement Association. Dr. Frederick N. Hamerstrom Jr., curator of the Edwin S. George Reserve of the University Museum of Zoology, is in Colum- bus, Ohio, attending meetings of the Wilson Ornithological Club Dr. Hamerstrom is editor of the Wilson Bulletin and also chair- man of the Club's wildlife and conservation committee. Library Men To Meet Here An institute for public library trustees, sponsored by the State Library of Michigan, the Burear of Government, the General Lib- rary and the University ExtIn- sion Service will be held here Dec 4, 5, and 6. Local government and taxatior as related to public libraries wil be discussed at the conference which is part of the State Lib- rary's program for library trus- tees. The program is supported b3 a grant from the Kellogg Foun- dation. Play for Children r C''; "* IIF I)Iel SKEET SHOOTERS-- E. Roland Harriman, (left) chairman of the board of the Union Pacific railroad, and actor Ralph Bellamy take time out for conversation on the skeet shoot- ing .grounds at Sun Valley, Idaho. 'W E C A N W A I T '- A Denver monument maker, whose plant lies along a busy street, erected this striking safety poster to remind motorists of the hazards of traffic. PIA N IST AND PET- With possibly a note or two from Kappa, his pet collie, Webster Aitken, pianist, goes over scores a his New Mexico ranch, Aitken will be a guest professor at Carnegie Institute this fall. H O R S E G U A R D L I N E U P- Horse Guards line up in ceremonial uniforms at barracks in Knightsbridge, London, to rehearse for Princess Elizabeth's wedding procession. F i I IP I N 4 V I S I I K - Philippine cadet-midship- men from the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point. N. Y., on a two-day visit to Auburn, N. Y., sponsored by the Philippine American Chamber of Commerce, are escorted through a fiber storehouse by M. M. Murdock, superintendent of the Columbian Rope Company's No. ,I mill. H E E L S 0 V E R H E A D - Tom (Shorty) McWilliams, star Mississippi State back, really took a header as he was tackled by Andy Douglas (19) of Auburn during a came in Birmingham. ..... .... .... .... .... :mss .'<