__________________THE MICHIGAN DAILY Former Olivet Coeds Tell of Strife's Effect on Students GOVERNOR'S WIFE HERE: Recalls First Meeting with 'Soapy' *.? * By JIM BROWN All was not peace and quiet for students at strife-ridden little Olivet College last semester. Terming the school "one huge political camp" Bobbie Setlow, '50, and Polly Kay, '51, both say they are glad that they transferred to the University this semester. Both added, however, that "we wouldn't Brumm Says U.S. PublicIs Ill-Informed The American public is not re- ceiving the complete news picture through the columns of today's newspapers, Prof. Emeritus John L. Brumm told a journalism lec- ture audience yesterday. Newspaper editors too often print only what they feel the pub- lic should know and thus restrict the freedom of the press by their own actions, Prof. Brumm said. The public is frequently denied the opportunity to consider cer- tain ideas because they are alien to the thinking of many news- paper editors, he continued. This self-imposed restriction of the freedom of the press, accord- ing to Prof. Brumm, is just as serious as government censorship. Paradoxically, the framer's of the Constitution actually limited the freedom of the press in their efforts to secur that end, he point- ed out, because the founding fath- ers expected that newspapers have missed the experience for anything." EMPHASIZING that it was al- most impossible to study at all, both girls said that they got very little out of the semester academ- ically. "We used to sit up until all hours every night arguing the is- sue instead of studying," said Miss Setlow. "Even our classes were dis- rupted since some professors conducted broad discussions on the issue," she added. Pointing out that the students were split as well as the faculty- some siding with the 15 ousted faculty members and others sup- porting the adninistration-the two girls said that the situation was pretty tense at times. "The arguments often became rather bitter and each group almost shunned eachother," declared Miss Kay. BOTH GIRLS felt that the un- certainty of the situation was the most nerve-wracking part of the semester. "We never knew whether the school would close immedi- ately or if our credits would be ac- cepted at other schools," said(Miss Kay.! When asked what they thought the fate of the school would be the two girls again expressed differ- ing opinions. Asserting that Olivet has lost the ideals which it upheld when she entered two years ago, Miss Setlaw said, "I think it will fold or deteriorate in June." Miss Kay, however, felt that the school would survive the current strife. "I have too much faith in By MARY STEIN "I was engaged to a fellow from St. Louis-but my sorority sisters wouldn't let me sit home.'' "So they got me a blind date, and he turned out to be Soapy." MRS. G. MENNEN Williams was telling me how she met her hus- band in 1935, when both were students at the University. The Governor's wife, in this part of the state for a few days, was guest of honor at a facultyf wives' tea at the Ruthven home yesterday. As they greeted her, club members who knew her "back when" helped piece out her story. She was sophomore Nancy Quirk then. Determined to be true to her fiance, she had decided to spend the weekend ofs abig spring dance at home In "Ypsilanti. BUT HER SOROSIS sisters wouldn't hear of it, and St. Louis was far away. So they finally talked Nancy into taking a blind date. le was a law junior named G. Mennen Williams-"Soapy" to his college friends. Evidently he plead his romantic case well on that first date, for two years and one broken engage- ment later, tall, vivacious Nancy Quirk became Mrs. G. Mennen Williams. * * * ONE CLUB MEMBER remei.n- bered the ceremony-"it was aI lovely lawn service," she recalled. Teaehiiig Job Applications Method Cited Getting a 'job as a teacher is the same as getting any other kind of job, Dr. T. Luther Pur- dom, director of the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, said said last night. Speaking on "Securing a Teach- ing Position" in the fifth of a series of weekly public lectures sponsored by the education school, Purdom said the thing to do is be smart, be decent and do some- thing for yourself." ITHE BUREAU of Appointments does not tell people whom to hire or what position to accept, Pur- dom pointed out. Its task is pure- ly one of giving information, he said. And he explained that treating a prospective employer with re- spect is important no matter how well qualified you are. The most important thing is to show initia- tive, Purdom said. Bat o Speak Ojn ChIld Study ?rjonal/QzcGIFTS - 1--- _____________ _I, GIVE THE ADDED TOUCH THA T MEANS SO MUCH We Pirinl/ i;,iud/s or !i;c) ion MATCHES COASTERS STIRRING RODS PEN CILS f i I ! il PLAYING CARDS NAPKINS STATIONERY RRMSPY- CRNFIELD I nc o r r a/ cd -'ng ers . . . PIRINTERS . .S;tationers 119 East Libcrty Plhonc 7900 RE-VISITS COLLEGE SCENE 1937 graduate of the University Faculty Wives' tea held at th Williams was guest of honor att FrenchlN ovi. Daly-Tyson S-Mrs. G. Mennen Williams, a y, greets Ann Arbor friends at a e Ruthven home yesterday. Mrs. the event., e To Be Shown dealing with current social prob- lems. t Hans Eisler has done the mu- sical score of the film, and the cast includes Jean-Pierre Au- trays the lives of poverty stricken I boys' gangs in Paris. "Learning from Children" will be discussed by Prof. William Blatu of the University of Toron- to at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham lecture hall. Prof. Blatz will address the education school's 14thi annual convocation to honor students planning teaching careers. His talk will also form part of the annual Washtenaw County Teach- ers, Institute. Prof. Blatz is director of the Institute of Child Study at the University of Toronto and con- sultant to the juvenile court clinic of Toronto . _- _ Read and Use Daily Classifiedd s You Ve seen New York's "Dead End Kids", Rome's "Shoeshine" Boys now see PARISIAN toughies who are really TOUGH! "SONG OF THE ST EmnET" '0 would always attempt to print all the present the news if given the liberty to do think that it SO. said. administration ,will collapse," to she FRIDAY, MARCH 18 D)ANCING at the KOMO KATERI NG KLUB 2 Great Bands NORMAN BROWN & His Orchestra and HUGH JACKSON & His "Uptown 6" NSA To Close Travel Bureau Hesitant students must decide their summer travel plans today -if they want to make use of NSA's Travel Bureau, 1010 Ad- ministration Building. Today is the last day of Bureau operations, ending three weeks of service to students hoping to travel abroad on NSA and other travel plans. The bureau will be open from 4 to 4:45 p.m., Sue Sirus, '50, chairman of Bureau sub-committee, announced. Information and applications for National Student Association tours and work-camps in Europe and other areas of the world will be ready for the last-minute trav- "Song of the Street," a French film with English titles, will be shown at 8 p.m. today, and 7 and 9, p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at the Architecture Auditorium. The picture is the first in a series of three films sponsored by Students for Democratic Action 'U' Fraternities Accept 298 Pledges $1,00 per Person (tax inc.) Formerly Smith's Catering 834 Greene Street '"1 eler. UN The DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH presents "4TOVABICH" SPARKLING COMEDY by Jacques Deval ENGLISH ADAPTATION by Robert E. Sherwood THURS. TH RU SAT. - 8 P.M. =.ny (Continued from Page 1) Morse, George Roberts, James Watkins. KAPPA NU: Kenneth Adler, Ralph Coskey, Julian Daly, Jack Lipson, Morris Peltz, William Rothman, Mark Sandground. KAPPA SIMGA: John Keffrey, John Merow, Anthony Palermo, John Piazza, Christoph Schneider, Alfred Silverberg, Clarke Steven- son, Robert Van Arsdol, James Lindsay. LAMBDA CIII ALPHA: John Box, James Fish, Richard Foster, Donald Greiner, Thomas Healy, Swight Heim, George Inman, Harry Miller, Harry Mosher, Al- phonsus Murphy, Richard Reed, Bruce Sodee, Richard Yarmain, Harold Zigmanth. Pl'hI GAMMA DELTA: Richard Day, Richard Frame, John Kathe, Parker Pennington, Richard Thomas. Pill KAPPA PSI: Richard Bak- er, John Beger, John Buckley, William Eggenberger, Ned Mac Williams, Thomas Mills, Jr., Dave Settle. PIll KAPPA SIGMA: Bruce Coulter, Donald Dr Vries, John Farncy, James Kaser, .J'mes Maur- er, Frank Miller, Jr., Hugh Parker, Peter Randolph, William Rohring, Gordon Stewart, Charles Stowe, Robert Wagner. PIlI KAPPA TAU: Donald Brown, Richard Ciheney, Davis Crippcn, Conrad lEtt, Charles Good, 'I homas Grala m, Janics Kciper, Richard Knape, John Le- valley, Robert Lewis, Jr., Frank Pauly, Robert Ridgway, Russell Wcpfcr. Pjil LAMBDA Pill: Norman j Axelrod, Richard Krinsley, Hugh IcGreenberg. Pill SIGMA DELTA: Donald Berns. Ernest Brookfield, Herbert Cohen, Maurice Forbes, Kenneth Gorson, Irving Goldberg, Charles Karp, Seymour Muskovitz, Jules PHI UPSILON: Tony Bandyk, ert Hoexter, Ivan Kaufman, Stewart Elliott, Henry Roesch, Thomas Much, Jay Pike. . Robert Ross. TAU DELTA I'hI: Ira Albion, SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON: Da- Sheldon Labret, Joel Meltzer, Da- vid Bell, Francis Gabel, Justin vid Oestreich. Geyer, Paul Gikas, Jack Hachi- TRIANGLE: Donald Firth, Her- gan, Hjalmar Johnson, William bert Gold, James Hood, Gerald Keith, Lyle LaPine, Eugene Les- Jarosik, Louis Rotolo. sieu, Harold Pink, Charles Pin-, son, Robert Sheridan, Kenneth THETA CHI: George Cameron, Shireling, Stanley Steinkamp, Richard Dreese.,John Mowitt, Ralph Stribe, Charles Thomas, Stanley Tangalakis. Robert Underhill, Thomas Upton, THETA DELTA CHI: Richard David Williams, Donald Zanfagna. Kamrath, Melvin Kordenbrock, SIGMA ALPHA MU: William Dewayne Phillips, Zeph Phillips. Altman, Richard Ehrenberg, Har- THETA XI: Dale Bock, Andrew vey Gordenker, Henry Gtreens- Boris, James Chalmers, Clifford pahn, Victor Hurwitz, Bernard Farrington, Gerald Fox, Donald Kahn, Burton Kampner, Charles Hall, Jack Hamer, Jack Hulburd, Kauffman, Edwin Kornblue, Bar- Richard Johnso, Elmer Lang, Da- ton Mann, Martin Packard, Lewis vid Leddick, Robert Mitchell, Rob- Pollock, Milton Rosenbaum, Je-1 etr Niehaus, David O'Brien, Don- rome Schafer, Leon Schekter, ald Olivier, Gordon Sakstrup, Rob- Melvin Schwartz, Jerome Segal, ert Shanahan, William Taylor, Harvey Taterka, Bruce Thal. Robert Vincent, Edwin Willis. Perlberg, Hebert Ruben, Norman Siegel. PHI SIGMA KAPPA: Thomas Kristofferson, James Knox, Alec Currie, Richard Beers, Arthur Lane. * * *' 3 Ross Phal'graff. Walter Roth, Robert Schmidt, Glen Spade, Rob- ert Warrilow, Robert Wilson, Louis Wirbel, Jack Zerull. TRIGON: Lee Boboltz, James, Christiansen, Francis Dalton, Rob- "ThE FRENCH CALL A SPADE A SPADE . . . These Parisian toughies could teach our Dead End Kids a thing about acting, and a thing about being tough." "ROMANTIC REALISM .. hegihtened by . . . beau- tiful photography and Hanns Eiler's symphonic score .. . -Trancelike ...bizarre . . . UNUSUAL CINEMA IMAGINATION." DANS LES RUES * ENGLISH TITLES A Iilm of unsaI beauty am social meanlt/g CAMPUS PREMIERE TON ITE, 8 P.M. Two shows Friday & Saturday 7 and 9 P.M., March 18 and 19 N CRITICS SAY; ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM First in a SOCIAL ISSUES CINEMA SERIES sponsored by the Students for Democratic Action, U. of M. Chapter - .., p ..s Sat. Matinee 2:30 P.M. March 24, 25, 26 Tickets 1.20, 90c, 60c (tax inc.) .. SPECIAL RATE for STUDENTS Thursday Evening and Saturday Matinee - 48c Box Office Opens March 21, Mail Orders Now! LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATER, SIGMA CIII: Joseph Beet, Wil- liam Doyle, Wilbert Flascher, Paul Grubbs, Charles Hattaway, Rob- ert Heathcott, Edward Keough, Paul Rodenbeck, Fredrick Thomp- son, Leo VanderKuy, Richard Williams. SIGMA NU: Dante Archangeli, Paul Bagrow, John Barrows, John Bedford, James Bologna, Donald Downie, Robert Ford, William Je- weill, Carroll Leedy, Alexander Popp, Lee Robinson, James Scog- gin, William Thompson. SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Rich- arcd Boonstra, William Burkett, Claude Crawford, Liberato D'Ad-j dona, Robert Franc, Jack Gillett, Gene Gilmore, Lawrence Gray, Harry Hillman, Donald Jacques, Arthur Knorst, Leonard Martin, Richard Martin, Lowell Modlin, William Morris, Nelson Merrill, I Harold Niemeyer, Frank Palazzolo, ZETA BETA TAU: Sumner Fliedman, Donald Harris, Stuart Florwich, Frederick Keidan, Leon Reiskin, Norman Pivkees, Stanley Weinberger. ZETA PSI: Joseph Dean, Clarke Goethal. ]1 O ypf n II dI Offi con I Portable tModels of al rn ak Sold, Renited STATIONE Y & SU PPLIES G. 1. IuIi rAcepted 0. 9. I M RILL 314 South Stari t. qarfOgye 4 I t CITY EDITION ncreaIng cloudiness tofafy Intermittent rain tomorrow. TeinperatuveRaag.Today-Maz.,4G; Teemperatures Yetrdaw- a es7AnU V.S. W*Mbar r a Prepare Yourself for the Rainy Season Ahead WITH THIS FINE RAINCOAT April showers or September showers are all the same to you in this fine rayon gabar- dine coat. Its processing keeps you snugly SECOND ANNUAL i _ __ - - a The NION OPERA PRESENT S I's 29th Musical Comedy ~Foggy Bottom 7 ' I BLOODYPUL wo dry through the hardest downpour, It Itarch 23, 24, 25 8: t{J I Barring an Act of God and two acts vnstalI nthokritics (Act of 1797 anda /* 1 - - c I Act