rAl EF(,R TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY - SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1947 4 Fifty-Eighth Year b f Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versit of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Stafff n Campbell...................Managing Editor .......................City Editor htar in 'ayson ...............Editorial Director EnAice Mintz ..................Associate Editor Dick Kraus ..........................Sports Editor Bb Lent..................Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson..................Women's Editor Betty Steward ..........Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Nancy lihnmick ...................General Manager Jeanne Swmiernan......... Advertising Manager Edwin Schneider................Finance Manager Melvin Tick ..................Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 - - --..- - ..._- Member of The Associated Press 'The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to Sthe use for re-publication of all new dispatches + credited to it or otherwise credited in this news- cs Allr ights of re-publication of all other ~ atcr s hcrein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Mich- Igfn, as second class mail matter. Subscriptionduring the regular school year by c e, .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. i SNIGHT EDITOR : HARRIET FRIEDMAN Pofis ard Prices ith prices running amuck and wages lagging far behind, millions of fearful « and angry American citizens are asking- W'Y? MATTER OF FACT: The UnR fo lding Pattern DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the Editor... -4 (Continued from Page 3) By STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-It is dismaying to learn what lay behind the sudden outcrop of violent insults directed against the Amer- ican leaders in a recent issue of the Soviet "Literary Gazette," which brought forth a formal protest from Amcripan Ambassador Walter Bedell Smith. For according to re- ports reaching Washington from Moscow, A A 0 S roday, sixteen months after Congress boed to the National Association of Mamufacturer's oft-repeated and vocifer- ;ou a sertion that prices would fall if all controls were removed, the Department of Labor has announced the cost of living has scared 19.7 percent above last year's record high. Although leaders of the Truman Adminis- tration, Congress and the National Associa-- tion of Manufacturers have blamed runa- + way prices on higher wages', shorter hours, increased costs of production, waste and ex- * cessive exportation, they have assiduously avcicied the key reason-exorbitant profits. Reports for the first half of this year offer irrefutable proof that American in- dustry is gourging itself on the biggest profiteeripg spree in history. Victims. of this gigantic gouge are the men and women who work for a living- the majority of the people in these United States. What evidence is there to support this accusation that current profiteering and phony price fixing is unparalleled in the annals of this nation? To begin with, the Department of Com- merce estimates that corporation profits will reach a fabulous $17.4 billion this year. In 1946, Armour, Swift, Wilson and Cidahy, the Big Four meat packers, re- ported a net profit of $64,200,00, a bare $3l, 0,000 more than .its combined profit in the previous year. And this year, Time (A g. 4) wrote "the big meat packers .. . (are) expected to have even more whop- ping profits." Yet while these four meat packers needed a 1.6 percent price in- crease to offset wage increases, they ac- tually increased prices at the wholesale level by 90.6 percent. American Woolen Mill, Celanese Corpora- tion, Pacific Mills, Industrial Rayon and American Viscose, the five largest firms in the country, while boosting their profits iron $24.5 million in 1945 to a record- breaking $67 million in 1946 (with this year's profits even higher), increased wages 6.7 percent and then raised prices at the whole- aelvl 31.8 percent. )?ste ja profit of $11,360,170 for the first six months of this year, exactly $7,000,000 nore tilan its half year profit last year, su Oil Company, controlled by the Joseph Pew, raised its prices "to discourage new de- mands for fuel oil," although nothing had Scurred to justify even higher prices. es profiteering in oil, however, was no worse than his associates in the field. Socny-Vacuum, controlled by the Rocke- fdlers netted a profit of $40,900,000 in the Net six months of this year, $18,000,000 tuore than last year. Shel'l Oil showed a romt of ,23,325,959 against last year's S0389. Phillips Petroleum reported r ,,99, just double 1946's half-year tc steal, however, was perpetrat- 1,me or strel companies which in- - : tcel priccs $5 to $10 a ton in the o argest profits in history. This Srce gouge was excused by Big and Stle cl a the grounds that wage in- e coal miners had' raised the cost o prodction from 35c to$1.50 a ton. Steel STEVENS THOMSON MASON, MISUN- DERSTOOD PATRIOT. By Kent Sagendorph. New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, Inc. 1947. 447 pages. AFTER THREE introductory background chapters made somewhat dull by com- parison with the remaining action-packed chapters of this book, the reader's initial curiosity is displaced by growing interest and suspense. A sudden tremendous gain in momentum precipitates him into a series of events and intrigues typical of all records of pioneer and politeial history. Sagendorph's book is a sort of literary resurrection. With obviously intense inter- est and admiration, he has painstakingly delved into all sorts of historical records and documents in order to rescue from undeserved disgrace an' oblivion a man who, more than any other man, was re- sponsible for bringirn the Territory of Michigan into statehoo( ind for its na- tionally recognized siawtar of education and its internationally recognized Uni- versity. Without doubt, Stevens Thomson Mason was an unusua'l figure. Consider the fact that he became a Territorial Secretary, as the result of a practical joke to be sure, at the age of nineteen year;. Five years later, in a characteristically audacious move, he found himself first governor of the state of Michigan fifteen months before that state had even been officially accepted into the Union. Descended from an impressive line of out- standing statesmen, Mason never lost that heritage of democratic honor and faith. At- tempting to follow the Jeffersonian ideal of democratic statesmanship, he lost his cause at the hands of politicians headed by a vil- lain to whom Sagendorph, with perhaps excusable bias, endows all the qualities of a truly melodramatic villain, William Wood- bridge. The almost universal popularity which Sagendorph claims for Mason must be attributed, at least in art, to his romantic appearance, his Byronic dark hair, his gold-headed cane and his perfectly tail- ored New York clothes. Although an over-awed enthusiasm for his subject may be noted in Sarendorph's treat- ment of his hero, he cannot, on the other hand, be accused of neglecting facts in favor of the story. This is not a "fictional- ized biography," as the lengthy biblio- graphy and complete index prove. Neither is it dryly colorless, but rather swift-moving and exciting. What else could it be, with such a story and such a hero? One wonders why there are not people such as this hero around today. Of course, the days of pioneers and Indians are over, but certainly not the need for youths 'of fire, imagination and determination. Perhaps what this country needs is another Stevens Thomson Mason. Maybe even two or three. -Natalie Bagrow. General Library IBook L ist Chamberlain, Henriqueta-Where the Sabia Sings, New York, Macmillan, 1947. Coffin, Tristram - Missouri Compromise, Boston, Little, 1947. Javellana, Stevan -- Without Seeing the Dawn. Boston, Little, 1947. Paul, Elliot-Linden on the Saugus Branch. New York. Random House, 1947. Taylor, Edmond-Richer by Asia, Boston, Houghton, 1947. Van Loon, Hendrik-Report to Saint Peter, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1947. year profit of $28,499,000. Jones & Laughlin $11,703,000, and Wheeling $5,790,000. In all cases the increases thus far this year were either double or more than all pre- vious earnings. To bring prices down, President Truman and Senator Taft have collaborated in ad- vocating voluntary rationing and urging the American people to waste less food. These tongue-in-cheek suggestions have never worked in the past and do not stand a ghost of a chance of affectuating a sharp drop in current prices now, they merely serve to obscure and protect the greedy and irresponsible industrial buca- neers who are fundamentally responsible for America's rm ay inflation, In the final analysis, only the immediate reinstitution of price controls by a special session of Congress can strike an effective blow against unscrupulous big business forces that are now muleting the lifeblood from the American people. -Joe Frien. there is solid evidence that the abuse was inspired by no less a person than Soviet Premier Josef Stalin. "The Literary Gazette" is the organ of the Union of Soviet Writers, a body which has for some months been undergoing an extensive purge. The Soviet literary men, already sufficiently cowed by the purge, were recently informed that Stalin himself was displeased by the quality of the magazine. They were given to under- stand that this ominous displeasure would only be softened if the magazine in the future had a far more "political and anti- Western content." The Soviet writers, not unsurprisingly, hastened to comply. In the next issue of the magazine, the President of the United States was said to "vie for the laurels of the little corporal of Munich." Secretary of State George C. Marshall was described as "The Shylock of Wall Street." General Dwight Eisenhower was said to "speak with the voice of Hitler." And so on. AMBASSADOR SMITH'S protest was of course fruitless, and the incident is now no doubt closed. Yet Stalin's reported part in it is interesting as a symptom, and as part of a larger pattern. For it is quite evident, not only from this incident but from the whole course of Soviet policy in recent months, that Stalin has made a fateful decision. At one time Stalin, unlike most of those around him, undoubtedly considered the possibility of limited co-operation with the West, at least for tactical purposes. That time is past. The Soviet Union is now waging tireless political warfare against the West and above all against the United States. Reflecting this decision, the wiorld Com- munist parties may no longer co-operate, however tentatively, with the democratic parties. Instead, they must prepare for the revolutionary moment. The little group of Russian experts in Moscow and Washington first sensed this final, decisive shift in both the Soviet and Communist lines as early as last April. In that month a series of articles began to appear in Moscow's "Pravda." The series consisted largely of a reprinting of Nicolai Lenin's "April Theses" accom- panied by a significant interpretation by "Pravda's" editors. The theses were written by Lenin in April, 1917. The short-lived Ker- ensky regime was then in power, and for the first time the Russian Communist party was a legal political party. A number of the lesser party leadrs were therefore pro- posing that there was no longer need for the traditional tactics of conspiracy and violence. Rather, they argued, the party must concentrate on winning the broad support of the masses, and thus by legal means gain control of the Parliament and the government. In his April Theses, Lenin blasted these weaklins. The bourgeoisie and their Social Demo- cratic tools, he said could never be over- thrown except by violence. The Social Democratic government must be under- mined to prepare the way for the rev- olutionary moment and the seizure of full power by the Communists. Moreover, these tactics did not concern Russia alone. "There is one and only one kind of in- ternationalism in deed; working wholeheart- edly for the development of the revolution- ary movement and the revolutionary struggle and supporting such and only such a struggle and such a line in every country without exception." So wrote Lenin in 1917, as reprinted by "Pravda" in 1947. "Pravda" noted carefully that Lenin's 1917 words were fully "applicable to the world situation" of 1947. It remarked also on the "anarchy and deepening crisis of Western capitalism." And it pointed out that by following Lenin's tactics in 1917 the party became sufficiently powerful in a few short months to organize the rev- olution and the full seizure of power by November. The policy of the Soviet Union and the policy of the World Communist parties are two sides of the same coin. Thus the Russian experts believe that the "Pravda" series fore- shadowed the increasingly aggressive policy of the Kremlin, of which the abuse in the "Literary Gazette" and the recent furious Vishinsky speech in the United Nations are symptoms. It also foreshadowed the fate of such anti-Communist/"Social Democrats" in eastern Europe at Maniu, Nagy and Petkov. Finally, it foreshadowed the new Communist line in the non-Soviet world, and especially in Italy and France. In Italy, Communist leader Palmiro Togliatti, who once, like the objects of Lenin's wrath in 1917, preached "legality," has now told his followers to be prepared to fight. In France last month, the central committee of the Communist party decided that its ideology must be reoriented along revolutionary lines, and that French Communists "should resolve to welcome the epithet Stalinist." Thus the pattern unfolds. The great Com- munist bid for power in western Europe wiil come this winter. As to whether or not it succeeds, more depends on the United States than on Josef Stalin and his fellow strat- egists in the Kremlin. - (Copyright 1947, New York Herald Tribune) ferred to the first vacancies avail- able for the spring semester. 3. New women students not now on campus admitted to the Uni- versity for the spring semester will be given the opportunity to apply for housing through the Of-1 fice of the Dean of Women as fol- lows: a. A limited number of women admitted as first semester fresh- men for the spring may apply for dormitory accommodations on and after November 15, 1947. b. All other women newly ad- mitted, including those with ad- vanced standing and graduate students, may apply for supple- mentary housing on or after No-' vember 15, 1947.. (Announcement of application procedure for housing for fall 1948 will appear at a later date) Regulations Governing Social events: Following is a review of the regulations pertaining to social events planned by student organi- zations where both men and wom- en are to be present: (a) Approval is required for all social events, graduate or under- graduate, sponsored by student organizations where both men and' women are to be present. (b) Applications for approval are to be submitted on forms provided by the Office of Stu- dent Affairs. Form A, the request for approval, must include the names of two sets of chaperons, preferably two married couples, endorsed in accordance with the following requirements: (1) Chaperons of social affairs given by a group which has a resident house director will be ap- proved, provided the house presi- dent and house director both sign Form A, thus indicating their personal sponsorship of the chap- erons selected. (The resident house director may be selected as one of the chaperones if the group so desires, in which case only one married couple will be necessary.) (2) Chaperones of social events given by a group without a resi- dent house director must be ap- proved by the Dean of Students. The president of the group will indicate his endorsement of the chaperons selected by signing Formh A before it is presented to the Dean of Students for ap- proval. Two married couples of sufficiently mature years, such as faculty members, parents of stu- dents, or alumni, are preferred as chaperons for these groups. (c) Requests for approval must be filed in the Office of Student Affairs no later than 12 o'clock noon on the lyonday before the event is to take place. Since ap- plications must include the signed acceptance of the chaperons (Form B) before approval will be granted forms should be secured well in advance of the party. Late applications will not be accepted. (d) Exchange and guest din- ners are approved, cshaperoned or unchaperoned, provided that no- tice of such affairs is given the Office of Student Affairs at least one day in advance of the sched- uled date, and provided such oc- casions are confined to the hours 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. on week days, and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. (e) In the case of a fraternity or a sorority, written approval of the financial adviser of the group is required for any party involv- ing an estimated expenditure of more than $25. (f) A list of approved social events will be published in the Daily Official Bulletin on Wed- nesday of each week. (g) Dances may be held only on Friday and Saturday nights during the term or on the night preceding a University holiday. No dances may be held on a night preceding a University vacation. (h) Dances shall close not later than 12 o'clock midnight. Special dances are authorized to continue beyond this hour as indicated: the J-Hop and Senior Ball shall close at two a.m.; Assembly, Pan- hellenic, Slide-Rule, International Ball, Military Ball, Sophomore Prom, and the Interfraternity Council dances shall close at one a.m. In all cases the party must end at the hour designated for closing; mere cessation of dancingI is not sufficient. Office of Student Affairs Room in University Hall, Group Hospitalization and Sur- gical Service: During the period from October 5 through October 15, the Univer- sity Business Office, (Room 9, University Hall) will accept new applications as well as requests for changes in contracts now in ef- fect. These new applications and changes become effective Decem- ber 5, with the first payroll deduc- tion on November 30. After Octo- ber 15, no new applications or changes can be accepted until April 1948. The School of Education Test- ing Program: Thurs., Oct. 16, Rackham Bldg., 4:30-6:15 p.m. and 7:45-10 p.m. This testing program is intended for all teach- er's certificate candidates. Applications for Grants in Sup-J port of Research Projects:9 It is requested that faculty members desiring grants from the Research Funds in support of re- search projects begin early in 1948C to file their proposals in the Of- f fice of the Graduate School by Wednesday, October 15, 1947. Re- quests for continuation of present projects or for projects to be initi- ated during the next fiscal year should be made at a date earlye next year to be announced later. Application forms will be mailed 1 or can be obtained at the Secre-t tary's Office, Rm. 1006 Rackham Building, Telephone 372. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Schools of Edu- cation, Forestry, Music and Public Health. Students who received marks1 of I, X or "no report" at the closee of their last semester or summerk session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course orF courses unless this work is made up by October 22. Students wish- ing an extension of time beyondt this date in order to make up thisI work should file a petition ad-t dressed to the appropriate offi- cial in their school with Room 4 U.H. where it will be transmitted.; Job Registration will be held on Mon., Oct. 13, 4 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. This applies to Feb- c ruary, June and August graduates, also to graduate students or staff members who wish to register and who will be available for positionsI within the next year. The Bureau has two placement divisions:' Teacher Placement and General Placement. The General Division includes service to people seeking' positions in business, industry, and professions other than education. It is important to register NOW because employers are already; asking for February and June graduates. There is no fee for registration. After the regular en- rollment, however, a late registra-- tion fee of $1.00 is charged by the University. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Infor- mation, 201 Mason Hall. Teacher's Certificate Candidates for February, June, and August, 1948: Registration with the Bur- eau of Appointments and Occu- pational Information is one of the requirements for the teacher's cer- tificate. Please read the preced- ing item in the DOB for details regarding registration. University Community Center: Willow Run Village. Sunday, Oct. 5, 10:45 a.m.-Vil- lage Church Fellowship; Interde- nominational Service; Pre-School Christian Education Nursery. Monday, Oct. 6, 8:00 p.m.-Sew- ing Club. Tuesday, Oct. 7, 8:30 p.m... Wives of Student Veterans' Club sponsoring Goodytar's Fall Style Show. 9:30-11:00 p.m.. .Bridgb Party. Thursday, Oct. 9, 8:00 p.m.- The New Art Group. Beginners and advanced students invited. Lectures University Lecture. Mr. Colin Clark, Director of the Bureau of Industry, government statistician, and financial adviser, State of Queensland, Australia, will lecture on the subject, "Wealthy and Poor Nations," at 4:15 p.m., Tues., Oct. 14; auspices of the Department of Economics and the School of Busi- ness Administration. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices History Language Examination for the M.A. degree: Fri., Oct. 10, 4 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Each student is responsible for his own dictionary. Please register at the E history office before taking the examination. History Final Examination make- up: Sat., Oct. 11, 9 a.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Students must come with written permission of instruc- tor. Engineering Mechanics Seminar:I The Engineering Mechanics De- partment is sponsoring a series of discussions on applied mechanics. The next seminar will be at 4 p.m., Tues., Oct. 7, Rm. 406, W. E. Bldg. Mr. J. L. Edman will discuss the 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 views1 expressed in letters are those ofthe writers only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. . Time To Act To the Editor: ONE CANNOT SAY whether, in printing Stewart Alsop's article of October 1, the reference to "a future gibbon, industriously com- piling his 'decline and fall of the United States'," The Daily pur- posely used the lower case by way of bitter irony, or whether it came out that way through a happy ac- cident of typography. In either case, nothing could point up .the substance of our times more dramatically than the somber reflection that if the na- tions cannot, or will not, do their utmost to prevent another world war, the histories of the future may in fact have to be left to the apes. The fundamentals of American policy toward the possible spread of communism have for some time been well defined and agreed upon by Democrats and Republicans alike. We fully realize that com- munism must be contained within its present limits and that we are the only nation in a position to take positive measures looking to ths end. We know that the key to the situation lies in preserving the political independence of west- ern Europe and that the only cerr tain means of doing this is to theory escapement mechanisms of clocks with special attention to the minimizing of time errors. } Group Representation Seminar: Mon., Oct. 6, 7:30 p.m., 3011 AH. Prof. R. M. Thrall Will speak on Modular Characters of Groups. Orientation Seminar: Next meet- ing Mon., Oct. 6, 7 p.m., Rm. 3001, Angell Hall. Use of Library, ques- tion and answer period. Freshman Health Lectures for Women: It is a University requirement that all entering freshmen take a series of Health Lectures and pass an examination on the con- tent of these lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing are also required to take the course unless they have had a similar course elgewhere, which has been accredited here. Upperclassmen who were here as freshmen and who did not ful- fill the requirements are requested to do so this term. The lectures will be given in the Natural Science Auditoium at 4 p.m. and repeated at 7:30 p.m. as per the following schedule: Lecture 1-Mon., Oct. 6 Lecture 2-Tues.,Oct. 7 Lecture 3-Wed., Oct. 8 Lecture 4-Thurs., Oct. 9 Lecture 5-Mon., Oct. 13 Lecture 6-Tues., Oct. 14 Lecture 7 (Final Exam.)-Wed., Oct. 15. Please note that attendance is required and roll will be taken. Enrollment will be held at the first lecture. Concerts Choral Union Concert. Karin Branzell, contralto, assisted by Donald Comrie, pianist, will give the following prpgram in the opening Choral Union concert Wednesday night, October 8, at 8:30: Program: Dido's Lament: "When I am laid in Earth" from "Dido and Aeneas," Purcell; Sand- mannchen, Brahms; Meine Liebe ist grun, Brahms; Das Verlas- sene Magdlein, Wolf; Gesang Weyla's, Wolf; Med en primula veris, Med en vandlilie, En Svane, Og jeg vil ha mig en hjertenskjaer-Grieg; Der Lindenbaum, Fischerweise Nachtviolen, Der Erlkonig-Schu- bert; The Cloths of Heaven, Th Cherry Tree, Air de Lia, from "L'Enfant Prodigue"-Debussy. A limited number of tickets for this concert and for several of the concerts in the series are avail- able at the offices of the Univer- sity Musical Society, Burton Me- morial Tower. Exhibitions Architecture Building. Prints Contemporary American Artist from the collection of W. W J. Gores. Through October 10 Main floor. The Museum of Art. MODERN help restore the economic stability of these countries. We even have, in the Marshall Plan, a clear and practical blueprint for doing the job. The coming winter is sure to be critical for Europe, perhaps even decisive so far as the further ad- vance of communism is concerned. The discussion and debate given to this matter has been more than ample. It is now time to act. -Cornel Frana * * * Willow Schools To the Editor: THE teacher from Rdss School who questions the accuracy of the Daily Willow Run stories has gone astray. It is she, not the Daily reporter, who is in error. If Miss DeLaurier will take a walk in the area of the Simmonds School some day, she can verify the fol- lowing facts. Simmonds School lies not in all-Negro area, but in an all-white area. The school is bounded on the right by Rich- mond Court, which lies just across the street and is all-white with the exception of one Negro family. On the left the school is bounded by the business and administra- tive. Behind the school there is open land. The nearest all-Negro area is approximately half a mile away. It is obvious that if the simple principle of drawing boundary' lines on the basis of distance had been followed, Simmonds would be a mixed school. I need not com- ment on the rest of Miss De Laurier's letter. -Paul A. Bates HANDMADE JEWELRY, circu- lated by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, through October 19; Alumni Memorial Hall; Daily, except Monday, 10-12 and 2-5; Sunday, 2-5; Wednesday evening, 7-9. The public is cordially in- vited. "Natural History Studies at the Edwin S. George Reserve, Univer- sity of . Michigan." October through December, Museums Building Rotunda. Events Today University Women Veterans As- sociation: Bowling, 3 p.m., Michi- gan Recreation, 525 E. Liberty. Organizational meeting of all persons interested in social psy- chological problems: 7:30 p.m., Rm. 302, Michigan Union. Dr. Al- vin Zander, School of Education, will describe the Laboratory on Group Development of Bethel, Maine. Wesleyan Guild: Student Sem- inar, 9:45 am., Pine Room. Dis- cussion on "Revelation and the Bible." Guild Meeting, 5:30 p.m., in the Lounge. "The Christian Student on Campus," student panel led by Prof. J. L. Brumm. Supper and fellowship afterwards. Young Adult Fellowship, 7:45 p.m., Rm. 214. Dr. Kenna will be the speaker. All graduate students invited. Unity: Sunday services, 11 a.m., Unity Chapel, 310 S. State St. Subject: "Basic Peace." Student discussion group, 7:30 p.m. Coming Events Science Research Club: October meeting, 7:30 pm., Tues., Oct. 7, Rackham Amphitheatre. Program: Evolution of the Western Cordillera, A. J. Eardley, Department of Geology; Dicu- marol, Ivan F. Duff, Department of Internal Medicine. Meeting . open to members only. Women's Research Club: 8 p.m., Mon., Oct. 6, West Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg. Margaret S. Og- den will speak on the subject, "Picture Collecting during the 17th Century in England." Additional classical record con- certs are now being given at the e League, 2nd floor, from 5:15 to n 6:15 p.m. every week on Monday through Thursday. The concerts r from 7 to 8 p.m. on these days will e be continued. The time of the - Sunday concerts has been in- creased an hour, beginning at 4 p.m. instead of 5 p.m. Any re- quests for program selections are welcome. University Women Veterans As- sociation: Mon., Oct. 6, 7:30 p.m., s Grand Rapids Room, Michigan . League. Alpha Kappa Psi, Phi Chapter, professional fraternity in com- merce, economics and business ad- ministration: Smoker, 7:30 p.m., Tues., Oct. 7, Chapter House, 1325 Washtenaw. All men interested in becoming members of the fra- ternity are invited. 4 I I } 4 4 i I BARNABY - - - Al!. -.J7rTn? .. rA cepru The d~rceadf~ul nafionjl sickness I' I All may vet be all right, Barnabv. ., I I