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April 18, 1948 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1948-04-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICTIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, A

_ _ -

I

Begin Ii
World Trade
Poll To Cover
City by Phone
Expect to Contact
1 Out of 5 Families
A telephone poll on world trade
will take place from 7-9 p.m. to-
morraow night as part of Inter-
national Week.
The poll, expected to contact
one out of every five families in
the city, will include four ques-
tions compiled by the National
Opinion Research Center at the
University of Chicago, in coopera-
tion with the Michigan League of
Women Voters. Questions are:
1. Do you think it would be a
good thing for the United States
or a bad thing if there were more
trade between people in this coun-
try and people in other countries?
2. How about our own state-do
you think that people in Michigan
would be better off or worse off if
the United States would trade
more with foreign countries, or
wouldn't it make any difference?
3. How about you personally-
would you be better off or worse
off, or wouldn't it make any dif-
ference to you personally?
4. Do you think the United
States should or should not reduce
its tariffs (taxes on imports) on
goods that other countries want to
sell here, provided these other
countries reduce their tariffs on
goods we want to sell to them?
Answers will be tabulated and
returns known by 11 a.m. Tues-
day. Telephoners'will also call at-
tention to the Hickman Price lec-
ture on World Trade at 8 p.m.
Tuesday in the Rackham Audi-
torium.
The poll is conducted by the
League of Women Voters and the
AAUW, assisted by the Ann Arbor
Woman's Club, Beta Tau Lambda
and the Zonta, Club.
International Teas
International Week will offi-
cially get under way as seven
church guilds welcome University
foreign students at tea from 3-
5 p.m. tomorrow.
The Westminster Guild-Pres-
byterian Church will honor Chi-
nese students; Wesley Founda-
tion-Methodist Church all Island
groups; Gamma Delta-Lutheran
Student Club, Turkish students;
and the Baptist Student Group,
Indian students.
The Lutheran Student Associa-
ti6" will ho ior EiUrpean stu-
dents; Orthodox Student Club,
Arab Students; and the Congre-
gational Disciples Guild, Latin
Students.
--------

iternational Week Today

OLD SALT'S TALE:
Internatioul-pagealt Stages
Mock Roumi-Ihte-World Trip

Colorful dances, songs and mu-
ic will fill Pattengill Auditorium
at 8 p.m. tomorrow when the In-
ernational Center stages its an-
aual International Pageant.
The pageant is being held as
part of International Week which'
opens today.
Featuring talented foreign stu-
dents, the program is based on the
tale of a round-the-world trip, as
told by an old sailor to his grand-

International
Wee kgendla
Today
3-5 p.m.-Student Teas hon-
oring foreign students.
6:30-7 p.m.-"World Trade
and World Peace," Citizen's
Forum, Station WPAG.
7-9 p.m.-International Stu-
dents Association Turkish din-
ner.
Tomorrow
7-9 p.m.-Telephone poll on
World Trade.
8 p.m. - International Pa-
geant, Pattengill Auditorium.
Tuesday
8 p.m.-"Ann Arbor's Stake
in World Trade," Rackham
Auditorium.
Wednesday
7:30 p.m.-Model United Na-
tions Assembly, Rackham Au-
ditorium.
Thursday
4:30 - 6 p.m.-International
Center Tea.
Friday
4-5 p.m.-Debate on World
Government, Kellogg Auditori-
um.
9-12 p.m. - International
Ball, Michigan Union.
Saturday
9:15-3:30 p.m.-World Gov-
ernment College Forum, Rack-
ham Auditorium.
9-12 p.m.-World Govern-
ment Dance, Michigan Union.
Sunday j
9-10:30 - Special Service of
Common Worship, Rackham
Auditorium.
1-3:15 - World Government
College Forum, Michigan Un-
ion.
3:30-4:50 p.m. - Campus-
wide World Government Rally,
Rackham Auditorium.
6:30 p.m. - World Govern-
ment College Forum, WPAG.

daughter. The part of the old salt
is played by Lloyd Van Volken-
burgh, of Play Production; and
his grandchild for the evening is
Suzanne Dutail of Slosson Junior
High School.
1awaiian Islands
The voyage begins at the Ha-
waiian Islands, where a May-Day
celebration is in progress, com-
plete with songs and hulas. From
there, the story-ship follows the
trade winds to China, and the'
audience hears and sees part of
a Chinese opera.
The next port of call is in India,
where the celebrated Candle
Dance is performed. The dancer
will be Mrs. Kamla Chowdhry, of
India, long known in Detroit and
Ann Arbor for her studies and in-
terpretation of Indian dance mo-
tif.
After this, the "ship" proceeds
to Arabia, and the "passengers"I
see an Arab wedding. For this
scene, an Arabian crchestra has
been imported from Detroit. After
Arabia comes Italy, and another
opera scene starring Mrs. William
Weeks, formerly Anna Vellone of
the San Carlo Opera Company of
Naples. Before her marriage, Mrs.
Weeks spent two years singing in
the San Carlo, with such stars as
'Tagliavini and his wife.
Roiumania,
The scene in Italy will be fol-
lowed by one in Roumania, for
which a folk-dance group has
come here from Detroit. The last
scene takes the old sailor to a
Latin-American carnival in Vera
'ruz.
The book for the pageant was
lvritten by Homer Underwood, as-
3istant director of the Interna-
donal Center. The pageant was
Directed by Mrs. Underwood.
A few tickets, at $0.25 each, re-'
nain for sale at the International!
'enter, and there may be some
ivailable at the door. Several
tickets can also still be had, at
$1.50, for the ISA Turkish ban-
luet at 7 p.m. tonight in the
Women's Athletic Building.
Aid UWF Forum

UWF Parley
Will Climax
Week Activities
Delegates from 25
Schools Will Attend
Climaxing a week of interna-
tional activity, United World Fed-
eralists from approximately 25
surrounding schools and colleges
will convene at the University
from April 23 to 25 for a three-
day discussion of World Govern-
ment.
The weekend will open with a
debate on World Government by
teams from the University of Chi-
cago and Michigan State College
at 4 p.m. Friday.
Thorsen Address
The first session of the Forum
will convene at 9:15 a.m., Satur-
day in Rackham Auditorium to
hear an address by Wallace Thor-
sen of the United Nations World
magazine on "United Nations-
Past,bPresent,Future." Thorsen
will be followed by Dr. Edward
Teller, University of Chicago nu-
clear physicist, who will speak on
"Atomic Energy and World Gov-
ernment."
The second session, meeting at
2 p.m.. will be addressed by Dr.
Frederick L. Schuman on "World
Government - Dream or. Duty."
Panel discussions will follow each
of the sessions.
On the lighter side of the agen-
da are a World Government Ban-
quet at 6:30 p.m. and a World
Government Dance at 9 p.m. Dr.
Robert Holmes Beck, professor
of education of the University
of Minnesota, will speak on "Com-
mon Sense" at the banquet.
At 9 p.m. Sunday, Rev. Leslie
T. Pennington of the Univer-
sity of Chicago First Unitarian
Church, will conduct a service of
common worship.
Alternatives
A discussion on Alternatives to
World Government will be con-
ducted by John Schmidt, Ietroit
and Washington patent attorney,
at 1 p.m. Sunday.
A student round-table discus-
sion on the "Anatomy of World
Government" will follow at 2 p.m.
with Philpps Ruopp, associate ed-
itor of Common Cause, as guest
speaker.
The weekend will culminate
with a Campus-wide World Gov-
ernment Rally at 3:30 p.m. led by
Dr. Paul Arthur Schilpp, profes-
sor of philosophy at Northwestern
University.

ASSOCIATED
POCTURE

,.

PRESS
N EWS

I

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J E T F I G H T E R S - Meteor IV's sweep low over line of
other jet fighter planes at Horsham St. Fath, near Norwich, Eng.
A land, shortly after base was equipped with the speedy craft.

F I R E M E N O N H IG H --.Four London firemen stand
atop 100-foot turntable ladders during a demonstration.

w I

Pints of blood at $17.50 a donor
will be contributed en masse by
he United World Federalists to
'inance their World Government
College Forum next weekend.

c

. U E E N --Gertrude DeCombe,
Viennese mannequin, will repre-
sent Austria in a Paris beauty
"onteSt.

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yOUI L
N C COUNT
U SI GAN!

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hike I'i
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vej Iparts beauty by /
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C H A M P I 0 N S H I P F O R M - Josephine Barnum, 18, of Boston shows at Colorado Springs,
the form which won her the novice ladies' title in National Figure Skating Championshlips.

A
qq '

..

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What this red-red can do for
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r

C A N D I D A T E--enry A.
wVallace, new thir-d party presi-
dential candidate, said in New
York that everything that has
happened recently to him was
good news. lie included the fact
that his party was going to get
on the ballot in ,Cali'formia.

Li

boast the unique
Schiaparelli
Herbal Infusion.
And all smell divinely
of Shocking!

o N T H E N O S E - Hunter Mexico lands on his nose during the Buckingham Ladies' Hunt at
the Royal Show at Sydney, Australia. Both the horse and rider, Beryl Perry, escaped injury.

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