PAGZ WGITT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARM 4, 1951' PAGE EIGHT SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 1951 I I COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Sally Rand, KKK Blasted By Embittered Students. By CAL SAMRA The nation's campuses were teeming with protests last week as embittered students blasted every- thing from the Ku Klux Klan to fan-dancer Sally Rand. * * * AT NORTHWESTERN Univer- sity the Interracial Club bitterly assailed the defacement of their posters by what were referred to as Ku Klux Klan sympathizers.+ The posters, announcing a debate' on "Unsegregated Housing," were burned with cigarettes and mark- ed with symbols ofsthe KKK. One sign was also scrawled with a special symbol represent- ing Gerald L. K. Smith's Chris- tian Nationalist organization.+ Travel Talk Will Be Held At Lane Hall A Round-Up for students who want to get first-hand informa- tion on summer work project and travel tours will be. held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Lane Hall. Sponsored by the. Summer Pro- jects Office at Lane Hall, the Round-Up will feature student speakers who have taken part in various of the tours and work projects now being handled by the Projects office. REPRESENTATIVES from the Experiment in International Liv- ing, the American Youth Hostel,. National Students' Association tours and work camp, the Lisle Fellowship, and the Yale Study Group will be there to tell pros- pective tourists or workers the requirements for and advantages of their respective projects. Also represented will be the American Friends Service Com- mittee, the World Council of Churches and the Independent Travelers. Many of the informal talks will be illustrated with slides, movies and pictures. THE VARIOUS summer proj- ects range from international tours in which the traveler goes primarily as a tourist, a student, or as a worker, to work camp proj- ects and institutional work for psychology and sociology students here in the United States. Information booklets and appli- cation blanks will be available at the meeting. For those who can- not get to the Round-Up, the Summer Projects Office will be open this week from 3:30 to 5 p.m., The publicity director of the Interracial Club said the "act was beneath the dignity and toleration of the student body." In the East at Harvard Univer- sity, fan-dancer Sally Rand set- tled down to a serious speech on class. But apparently the impas- sioned freshmen preferred a little excitement, for Miss Rand's speech was greeted by apathy, pennies, and a few cat-calls and boos. The first pennies fell on the stage when she claimed that "Communism cannot be contained in Europe." Miss Rand rebuked the throwers wittily with: "I know only one animal that throws a scent." s , * WAY DOWN SOUTH, a new rebel organization was formed on the Florida State University cam- pus - WRTPTBSUTRP. The al- phabetic maze is the motto and name for this clique: We Refuse To Patronize Tallahassee Barber Shops Until They Reduce Prices. Spokesmen for the organiza- tion indicated that as soon as the club's treasury was suffi- ciently large, the club would hire its own barber. At Valparaiso University in In- diana, a student editorialist de- manded that the campus student legislature be done away with. The recalcitrant writer lashed out at the so-called "do-nothing" student legislature, and among other things, emphasized that the group wasn't doing a damn thing. "Let's kill it," he proposed. AND AT Pennsylvania State Col- lege, 500 cheering seniors held an informal caucus and demanded that final examinations for sen- iors be done away with. But Students weren't the only ones rebelling. At the University of Minnesota, an alumnus, who referred to himself as an athe- ist, is in the process of bringing suit against the university be- cause of its aid to religious gropips. Frank C. Hughes, the militant atheist, says that after he drives religion out of public education, he will seek to oust all chaplains from the armed forces, legislative bodies, and other tax-supported agencies, and ban the Bible from U.S. mail. * * * ON THE LIGHTER side, the University of Illinois discovered that one of its deceased profes- sors, who had earned on the aver- age $6,000 a year, had built a $1,000,000 fortune as a discreet stock and bond holder in com- panies all over the country. Art Exhibit Will Begin. Tomorrow Colorful paintings of Mexican and Arctic birds- will be the high- light of an art exhibition to be held tomorrow through Mar. 14 in the Rackham Galleries. Featured in the exhibit will be 24 bird paintings by Prof. George M. Sutton, of the zoology dept. These paintings, which have nev- er been displayed publicly before, show the birds in their native habitat. PROF. SUTTON will speak on "The Experiences of a Bird Paint- er" at the opening of the exhibit at 8:15 p.m., tomorrow at the Rackham Bldg. He will discuss his experiences working on Arctic birds in 1929-30 and on the birds of Mexico from 1941 to 1950. Various paintings, drawings, photographs and model biological studies will be displayed at the exhibit, which is sponsored by the Washtenaw County Audubon So- ciety and the Phi Sigma society. Phi Sigma is a national organi- zation promoting the interests of research in the biological sciences. Prof. Karl F. Lagler, of the School of Natural Resources, and Prof. Henry van der Schalie, of the zoo- logy dept., are national officers in the organization. Out-of-Town Showings Set For 'Mikado' Scheduled To Open Here on May 17 The Gilbert and Sullivan So- ciety's production of "Mikado" will have out-of-town showings in Hillsdale and .Detroit before it opens in Ann Arbor May 17. The operetta is being sponsored in Hillsdale by the Rotary Club and proceeds from the perform- anee will be donated to a local charity. s * a APPEARING IN THE cast of what is reputedly Gilbert and Sul- livan's most popular work will be Dude Stepfienson, Grad., as Nan- ki-Poo, the Mikado's son disguised as a "wandering minstrel"; Mary Jo Jones, '528M, as Yum-Yum, the girl Nanki-Poo loves; Vivien Mi- lan, '51SM, and Barbara Johnson, '53, as Yum-Yum's sisters, Pitti- Sing and Peep-Bo; Jim Fudge, Grad., as Koko, the "Lord High Executioner" and guardian of the three sisters; Frances Morse, '51, as Katisha, an. elderly woman of the Mikado's court who seeks to win the affections of the fleeing Nanki-Poo; Dave Tolan, Grad., as the Mikado, and Dave Murray, '52, and Don Stout, Grad., as high officials of the state. ORATORICAL SERIES: Author-Editor Brown To Lecture Wednesday MARINES ADVANCE - Double-pronged arrow shows where Marines stabbed north of Hoengsong at the Chinese 66th Corps. Arrow on extreme right indicates American lunge to within 28 miles of the 38th Parallel. In the West, United Nations forces fought 3,000 yards closer to Yongdu. Case Clubs To Debate Law John Mason Brown, author, lec- turer and associate editor of the Saturday Review of Literature, will give the sixth lecture of the University Oratorical Association's season at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday in Hill Auditorium,. He will speak on "Seeing Things." This is the title of the weekly column which he con- tributes to the Saturday Review. Brown is one of Ann Arbor's fa- vorite lecture personalities.. THIS WILL BE his fourth ap- pearance in Ann Arbor in as BusAd Elections Start Tomorrow Business administration stu- dents will flock to the polls to- morrow and Tuesday to elect seven members to their student government, the Business Admin- istration Council. Thirteen candidates will be in the running in the semi-annual vote contest., Balloting will take place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both days in the lobby of the business admin- istration school. Identification cards will be required of all voters. many years. He is the only speak er to have done this in the 30- year history of the Oratorical Asw sociation's lecture series. The lecturer Is a 50 year old native of Louisville, entucky, who has had a long and varied career,,most of it connected in some way with the theatre. He started out, however, as a re- porter on the Louisville Courier- Journal. But Brown was not a reporterJ for long. He' soon quit to enroll at Harvard, where in 1923 he graduated cum laude. While there he studied under George, Pierce Baker,"famousifor his founding of Workshop 47, one of the first; university-sponsored theatres. * * 1 IMWEDIATELY after gradua- tion Brown tackled Ne# York, Until the war he did dramatie criticism for assorted publications in New York. After three years of service in the navy, Brown return- ed to take his present position with the Saturday Review. Tickets for the lecture will go on sale at 10 am. Tuesday in the 1ill Auditorium box office. They will be priced at $1.50, $1.20 and' 60 cents. .5i Eight Law School Case Club teams will debate the constitu- tionality of the McCarran law at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hutchins Hall. The debates will be organized in the form of court trials. Each team of student lawyers will be given the same set of hypotheti- cal facts upon which to base its case. The cases will involve the president of an imaginary Com- munist front group accused of dis- tributing subversive literature. F TI eC Campus 701 A- your U c COLLEGE SHOP your favorite all-nylon slip Encore in nylon crepe Such a pretty slip - it's hard to believe it will weather so much wearing and washing when it looks so pretty and dainty. Edged with matching embroidered nylon sheer - even that needs no ironing. . 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