Vd-'r- t'7C-';IIT THE MICI-11-4-P-AN BOOKWORM SEASON: Sudets Jam Libar As Exams Draw Near "Standing Room Only" was the rule again this week as semester's end found the General Library and all campus study halls strain- ing at the seams. With the arrival of the four- teenth week of classes (excluding the two weeks of Christmas vaca- tion), a peak in the use of library and study hall facilities was reached. Circulation Survey A survey of the weekly circula- Ro al Affair Is Called Off Temporarily LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Jan. 10-/P)-An aid to former King Mihai of Romania said today Mi- hai's expected marriage to Prin- cess Anne of Bourbon-Parma is off, at least for the immediate fu- ture. The 24-year-old princess inter- rupted her journey from Copen- hagen to meet the former mon- arch and announced she was go- ing instead to Luxembourg. The dramatic denouement to the king's abdication and post- ponement of the romantic rendez- vous was explained by Maj. Jac- ques Vergotti, Mihai's spokesman, who said a love "entanglement" right now could be used by Ro- manian Communists to destroy his hopes of eventually returning to his throne. Reason for Abdication Most persons in the entourage of the Prince of Hohenzollern, as 26-year-old Mihai is now known, have stressed that he abdicated for "political reasons" and not to "marry the girl he loves." Romanian Communists have appeared to be trying to give the impression Mihai was an unstable, playboy, following in the foot- steps of his father, former King Carol II, who once renounced his rights to the throne for romantic reasons. Unlucky in Love The unhappy state of Mihai and Anne's love affair was dis- closed when the Danish princess, looking pale and tired, got off the train at Liege, Belgium, in mid- journey from dopenhagen to Lau- sanne. With her mother, Princess Mar- grethe, she transferred to an au- tomobile and said she was going instead to Luxembourg, where she has relatives, "for an undeter- mined period and have a little rest." She said she did not expect Mi- hai to join her there, and added wanly: "I have no definite plan yet. I might go to Paris but this is not certain. You see we have been having such a lot of troubles and changings that no settlement could have been made up to now." Faculty Wives To Meet The Facuaty Wives' Club will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the University Community Center in Willow Village. Miss Marian Wilson, Project Services Adviser with FHA, will give a talk about her work over- seas with UNRRA and displaced persons. She will also show pic- tures taken in Palestine and Egypt. tion at Angell Hall Study hall and the General Library's first' floor and basement study halls, delivery and charging desks re- vealed an almost over-night 40 per cent increase over the normal circulation figure. According to chief circulation librarian Fred L. Dimock, circu- lation of books has jumped from about 1,400 to 2,000 books a day. Patient Students Commenting on the three- and four-deep line-ups of students waiting for books at the delivery desk during this "rush" period, Dimock enthusiastically praised their "patience" and "coopera- tion." A maximum staff , of four is: working behind the delivery desk nowaday's, while the number ofi workers at the three carrier sta-] tions in the "stacks" has been doubled for the peak daily period, from 2 to 5 p.m.- Unreserved Seats With final exams and the weather as the two principal causes of congestion, the mid-; morning and mid-afternoon pe-i riods this week found desk and chair space at a premium. TheI lucky 1,000 students who got there first filled the library's seat- ing accommodations to capacity.1 The overflow was to be found1 filling 20 divisional libraries and study halls, the average capacity of each of these being 100 stu dents. Speech Dept. To Give Play The campus will be treated to a bit of Shakespeare this week when the Speech Department's Play, Production presents the pastoral comedy "As You Like It" at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This week's program will wind up a busy semester which has in- cluded two bills of one-act plays and Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer- prize winning drama, "Our Town." The play is inder the direction of Prof. William Halstead of the speech department. Dorothy Gut- enkust will portray Rosalind and Norma Katz will take the part of Celia, her cousin. The leading comedy role ofP Touchstone, the clown, will be taken by James Drummond. Other leading roles will be played by Jack Iskin and Edmund Johnston who will portray Duke Senior and Duke Frederick respectively. Tickets will go on sale Monday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office. A special rate for stu- dents will be in effect for the Wednesday and Thursday per- formances. Poker rewards a skillful player more than any other card game, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Patience, rather than a "poker face," is a prime quality of the successful player, enabling him to drop out time after time until a good hand comes along. Even more important is the good player's insistence on receiving proper "odds" for every bet he makes. U Lectures ivti Resume ir e iClo se t ol tin juhnalt James S. Pope, Inanaging edito- of the Louisville Courier-Journal, will resume the University jour- nalism lecture series when he speaks on "The Newspaper in World Affairs" at 8 p.m. Wednes- day in Kellogg Auditorium. A member of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fratern- ity. Pope was the first newspa- perman to receive a travel fel- lowship from the Rosenwald Foundation. Travel Articles . In 1937, he spent six months in England, Scotland and France. writing daily travel articles and compiling data on the relation- ship between the British Gov- ernment and the press. During the war Pope served for a time in Byron Price's Office of Censorship handling press prob- lems. He also toured Canada and wrote a series of articles on Can- ada's war effort. Correspondent in India In 1945, at the invitation of the Indian Army, Pope flew to India. Here he wrote about the coming showdown in Indian-British pol- itics. Pope began his newspaper ca- reer as a reporter for the Atlanta journal and was made successive- ly assistant city editor, city edi- tor and assistant managing edi- tor. Joins Courier-Journal In 1940 he joined the Courier- Journal as a special writer. Three months later he was appointed managing editor. The current lecture series will end with the appearance of Paul Shinkman, news commentator and former foreign correspondent, and Hamilton Cochran of the Saturday Evening Post. Both of them will speak Friday to jour- alism students studying editorial policy and management. Housing To Be PanelTopic Michigan housing problems will be the principal subject for dis- cussion at a Conference on Labor- Management Legislation to be held Jan. 23-24 at the Rackham Building. Sponsored by the Michigan Federation of Labor in conjunc- tion with the Workers Education- al Service of the University, the conference will open with a panel discussion on "Housing Problems in Michigan." Henry A. Reniger, president of the Michigan chapter of Associat- ed General Contractors, Finley Al- len, secretary of the Detroit Build- ing Trade Council, and Donald A. Monson, city planner, will partici- pate in the discussion, which will be open to the public. The Taft-Hartley Act will be the subject of a talk by Peter Hen- le, of the Washington staff of the American Federation of Labor, to be given at the second session of the Conference. Though Polynesian women tend to grow stout as they grow older, the Polynesians consider this a desirable sign of beauty, accord- ing to the Encyclopedia Britan- nica. I. I() \I i / 1 %I C I R C U S - A little girl is a picture of suppressed excite- ment as she watches a circĀ±s at Olympia, London.' SNOW DECORATES CAP ITO L-Alightblanket of snow mantles trees and shrubs around the national capitol. T W I N S T A K E B I T E S --Raymond (left) and Geoffrey Herbert, 9-year-old twins, bite into apples which were part of a shipment of 600 bushels sent to the Bassett Green School, South- ampton, England, by IFranklin County, Pa., growers: The apples were distributed during ceremonies honoring the memory of Sgt. Paul Schimer, Chambersburg, Pa., who was killed in France, ,I J A P A N E SE GET BOOK - Mrs. Elizabeth Gray Vining, tutor to Prince Akahito, stands with Japanese pupils at Tokyo after presenting them books on behalf of the school chil- dren of North Carolina, her native state. C L I M B U P TO S L I D E D O W N -Girls carry their sled up a toboggan slide atPa Park, Chicago. Left to right: Barbara Frieman, visitor from Mexico City who thought it great h( day fun, Shirley Levin, Flora Locke and Norma Cohen. V I hA . 4 c badb}:.4J.ir.!i4.t;.: :. t!.1:.' !"V.y1VL.t :: :ti2 .itiv t."9IIIR :":... .:":, :"v!: ::{{"i:" ti :" :": '"i.......:!:l' :'. ' .4 f'2":... 9V * \ ^N. LV ~.V r""VV. .. :.L...... :". :r . tY.: "hVt::vv ".t^+l'.:. "":": ...... .... .... ............ y . . :..;{.:............ I I kI f I\ y IT ALL...A UNDERNEATH Enjoy the comfort of controlled freedom A T P L A Y !IN 5 N O W - Polar bears frolic in the Fnow at Brooklyn's Prospect Park zoo. Their attitude contrasted with complaints of other New Yorkers about storm hardships. B U I L D I N C A S A N D M A N - Marilyn Randall (right), Glendale College student, and $illie Ann Reynolds (center), U.C.L.A. co-ed, make a sandman on the beach at Santa Monica, Calif. Sonya Kruger sits at left. 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