TH11E A I ~I~i~IAL -- TTTT)-tv rirrmmn JOHN'S OTHER WIFE': Variety Program Presented By WMDS in First Broadcast By TED MLLER Plaintive strains of a soap opr'ra and the wild beat of horses' hoofs filled the corridors of staid Angell Hall this week as station WMDS made its inaugural "broadcast" from the fourth floor studios. These unfamiliar sounds were mixed with cultural notes, how- Faculty Trio Will Present String Concert A trio, consisting of Prof. Gil- bert Ross, violinist, Prof. Oliver Edel, cellist, and Prof. Joseph Brinkman, pianist, will present a program of chamber music in the second faculty concert of the year at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. ever, as the mythical station of the speech department presented a complete variety of radio shows in two three-hour evening pro- grams. Instead of reaching the air waves. the broadcasts were chan- nelled into adjacent rooms where radio stdeni s took notes on their classxiates' efforts. When they weren't listening, the students were participating in the first such broadcast to be staged by the speech department. Students received training in all phases of radio in putting on the broadcast. The script writing, producing, acting and engineer- ing were all done by students in the radio classes. Oragnized to provide practical experience not available in the classroom, the station put nearly 200 students through their home- work paces before the critical eyes of speech instructors. One of them, Garnet Garrison, termed the Prof. Ross, head of the stringed project a instrument department of the mu- ence," and sic school, came here in 1942 from for similar Smith College. He is at present ture. participating in a WWJ Sundayl afternoon chamber music series with Mischa Kottler and GeorgeC Miquelle. Prof.MEdel, formerly staff cel- ' list for a New York radio station, joined the faculty last spring. He has been associated with the Roth String Quartet and the Manhat- Film Cl tan String Quartet. Foreign; Prof. Brinkman has appeared opportunity with the Boston and Chicago film classic Symphony Orchestras in solo ty," starri parts. In 1938 he was soloist with Charles La the Festival Orchestra at the clay in the] Sixth Biennial International Fes- The prog tival of Contemporary Music in students ar Venice, Italy. He is head of the piano department here.J Trio in E major, K. 542, com- J(m Se posed in 1788 by Mozart, will open The U: the concert. Brahms' Trio in C Society wi major, Op. 87, written in the years Sessio'n at 1880-82 will follow. Beethoven's the Leagu. Trio in D major, Op. 70, No. 1, The eve puished in 1809 will 'close the and the g "stimulating experi- said its success called broadcasts in the fu- I am pus ghlights assie . . . students will have the ,y to see an American "Mutiny on the Boun- Ing Clark Garble anid aughton, at 8 p.m. to- International Center. gram is open to foreign ,nd their friends. ssion . . . niversity WIot Record ill sponsor a live jam t 8 p.m. tomorrow at e. nt is open to musicians eneral public. program. The concert is open to the pub- lic. WPAG To Air Student Show Foreign Students To Present Their Views Foreign students representing South America, Europe and the Far East will reveal their views on the University and American students during "Campus Quar- ter," the Union-League radio pro- gram to be presented from 9:45 to 10 a.m. today over Station WPAG. They will be interviewed for their opinions by Jim Schiavone in the course of a round-table discussion. "Campus Quarter" will also fea- ture a news resume of impending campus social and cultural events. An all-student production, this edition of the program was writ- ten by Bob Peeg and directed by Jim Schiavone. Ford Calls On Reuther DETROIT, Dec. 5-(P)-Young Henry Ford's second top-secret, but pre-arranged courtesy call on a top labor leader leaked out to- day and created quite a stir in the automotive capital. The 30-year-old Ford Motor Co. president dropped in for an hour's chat Thursday with Walter Reu- ther, 40-year-old president of the CIO United Auto Workers. The union represents more than 100,- 000 of Ford's employes. What did they talk about? Inflation, foreign aid, the steel situation-but not collective bar- gaining, according to sources on both sides. Reuther described the chat as "very satisfactory" and said Ford "is a very decent sort of a citizen." He also told a reporter he could "see no reason why we shouldn't have satisfactory labor relations." ISA Tickets Still Available A limited number of tickets are still on sale at the International Center for the Arab Supper to be given by the International Stu- dents Association at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, M. K. Raju, president of the group, said yesterday. The supper will feature native dishes as prepared by Arab stu- dents at the University, and is onen to the general public. French Play ... Le Cercle Francaise will hold try-out periods for its 1948 French play from 3 to 5:15 p.m., Monday and Tuesday, in Rm. 408, Romance Languages Building. The French play is an annual presentation of Le Cercle, pro- duced and directed by students and presented entirely in French. "La Malade Imaginaire," by Mo- liere, was the 1947 selection. Co-op Open House ... The Muriel Lester CooperativeI IHouse is sponsoring an open house at 8 p.m. today, 1102 Oak-; land, for all people interested in1 cooperatives. Chanukah Service ... . The B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda- tion and the Intercollegiate Zion- ist Federation of American will hold Chanukah candle lighting services at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the! Foundation. -A program of singing and danc- ing by the Palestinian Song and Dance Group will be featured. The service is open to all students. * * * Economics Club ... Prof. George Catona of the psy- chology department and the Sur- vey Research Center will speak to the Economics Club on "Empiri- cal Studies of the Consumption Function," at 7:45 p.m. Monday, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Yule Progcram To Be Given Members of Alpha chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national pro- fessional music fraternity for women, will present their tradi- tional Christmas Candlelight Serv- ice at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist Church. The Christmas concert, one of the highlights, of the fraternity's activities, will consist of vocal, in- strumental and choral music. Soloists for the evening will be June Van Meter, organist; Arlene Sollenberger, contralto; Bette Bleekman. violinist; and Marylee Hill, soprano. The remainder of the program will be sung by the Sigma Alpha Iota chorus, conducted by Arlene Sollenberger and accompanied by Mrs. T. Heger on the organ. The program is open to the public. University To .Lose Vets' Coordinator Walter B. Fariss, veterans' co- ordinator at the University, has announced his resignation to ac- cept a position as director of field personnel for the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., of Newark, NrT. Cite Reasons For Property L'es of Stites Tax Instiite Speaker ExplainsAdvantages States originally adopt com- munity property laws for'the re- sultant increase in tax exemp- tions, according to Prof. William E. Burby, of the University of Southern California Law School. who is principal lecturer in the Community Tax Intitute being held this week in Hutchins Hall. Nevertheless, people should rea- lize that there are other import- ant advantages to the law, Prof. Burby said. "Women particular- ly should be interested in the greater protection afforded the wife under the law," he comment- ed. Financial Security "The law gives her financial security respecting the income af- ter marriage," he said, in explain- ing the law's entirely different concept under which the com- munal property acquired after mar:iage is owned jointly by the husband and wife. Despite the increase in tax ex- emptions, the federal government has recognized the community property laws in the 13 states where they exist. Antedates Income Tax In a few of the states where the law is in effect, it is older than the federal income tax law. California had the community property law before the state was incorporated into the Union in 1848. Under the Treaty of Guad- alupe-Hidalgo, in that year, it was provided that the private property of the people in the ced- ed territory would be protected, so the United States had to ac- cept the community tax concept, according to Prof. Burby. The French and Spanish intro- duced the communal property theory into American law, and when the French and Spanish left, the law didn't, Prof. Burby added. Clark Names "Un-American' Organizations Following is a list of the twenty "totalitarian, Fascist, Communist or subversive" organizations added to the 1943 list of 47 groups yes- terday by Attorhey General Tom Clark: Communist Party of the United States (formerly the Communist Political Association). Citizens' Committee of the Up- per West Side, New York City. Committee to Aid the Fight- ing South. Dennis Defense Committee. Labor Research Association, Inc. Southern Negro Youth Con- gress. United May Day Committee. United Negro and Allied Vet- erans of America. Ku Klux Klan. Proletarian Party of America. Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Com- mittee. National Council of American- Soviet Friendship. American Youth for Democracy. Civil Rights Congress. Civil Rights Congress for Texas. Veterans Against Discrimination of Civil Rights Congress of New York. Columbians. Hollywood Writers' Mobilization for Defense. National Committee to Win the Peace. Veterans of the Abraham Lin- coln Brigade. The new list also includes eleven schools described as "adjuncts of the Communist-Party": Abraham Lincoln School, Chi- cago, Ill. George Washington Carver School, New York City. Jefferson School of Social Sci- ence, New York City. Ohio School of Social Sciences. Philadelphia School of Social Science and Art. Samuel Adams School, Boston, Mass. School of Jewish Studies, New York City. Seattle Labor School, Seattle, Wash. Tom Paine School of Social Sci- ence, Philadelphia, Pa. Tom Paine School of Westches- ter, N.Y. Walt Whitman School of Social Science, Newark, N.J. Languages Get Mixed in Film Last night's "Shoe Shine" audi- ence at T-ill Auditorium was G I R L SC O U I lIEAU - Mrs. C.Vaughan Ferguson (left) of Schenectady. N. Y., re-elected national president of the Girl Scouts of America at Long Beach, Calif., is congratulated by Betty Reigart, 16, of Alhambra. F R I E N D L Y F A W N - Kandy, two-months-old fawn in a game exhibit at a Tallahassee, Fla., county fair, makes friends with young Joe Evans, a visitor, who doesn't seem to mind the gesture of affection. M O D E R N- Giving his reindeer a rest, Santa Claus pulls into Los Angeles on the stream. liner, City of Los Angeles, and is greeted at the station by Con- suelo Cezon. I ' :I A I R F O R C E C-H I E F S-.Gen. Carl Spaatz, command- ing general of the Air Force, and W. Stuart Symington, s'ecretary of the Air Force, converse at an Army Ordnance Association dinner in the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. S T A T U E F 0 R S T. P E T E R' S -- As a crowd watches, a giant marble statue of Mother Cabrini, the first American saint, is started in its crate into St. Peter's in Rome. 4- 4' OBSERVING THE LAW - Gloria Whelan, Long Island horsewoman, and a former West Point steed conform to law requiring saddle horses to be lit, fore and aft, when abroad after dark in Nassau County, New York. 4 S T O R Y T I M E I N T O T T O W N - Sister Anne reads to children of working mothers in Tiny Tot Town, Marillac House, Catholic charities social center in Chicago. i kI I'l mmom look. A