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October 19, 1951 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1951-10-19

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PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

IRIDAY, OUI OBEIL 19, 1851

R'AG~ £~UJI UDA, OCW$EI 19,1_.

Med School Blanks

THE MEDICAL SCHOOL has not changed
its policy.
Its new application blank is merely the
product of a "routine" printing.
The secretary of the Medical School,
Prof. Wayne L. Whitakgr, has emphasized
these facts about the new application.
Yet Student Legislature mentors who
worked to have "potentially discriminatory"
questions removed from University appli-
cation blanks foresee no more need for ac-
tion in this field.
In fact, they appeared "happy about the
blank change.
"With the Medical School's action our aim
is accomplished," they said. "We hope they
will comply with.the spirit of the action."
According to secretary Whitaker, there
was no "spirit" behind the action.
We can hardly disagree with Prof. Whit-
aker.
True, removed from the form are certain
queries on religion, race, nationality, former
name if changed, family citizenship and a
required photograph.
But there are some substitutions for these
questions, and in one case, a "loaded" ques-
tion has been added.
In place of former name if changed is
the query, "name used in high school rec-

ords, if different." "Nationality" has been
replaced by, "are you a United States citi-
zen?" Added is the question on mother's
occupation, which accompanies, one on
the father's occupation.
And remaining from the days of the old
controversy is the query, "place of birth."
Even if we accede that the blank is an im-
provement over the old form, it cannont be
denied that it leaves much to be desired.
But over and above these mechanical as-
pects is the fact that while the new form is
hailed by these currently working on the
discrimination problem in SL as a step for-
ward, that phase of the action is ignored
completely by the Medical School.
The Dean's Conference recommenda-
tions of last January, which suggested the
removal of "potentially discriminatory"
questions from University application
blanks, are not even credited with influ-
encing the changes in the form.
These, then, must be merely "routine," as
Prof. Whitaker has said.
This leads to an overwhelming question:
What kind of an aim did the SL Campus
Action Committee have, anyway?
Some of the revisions don't even look good
on paper.
-Donna Hendleman

The Bane of Power

EGYPT HAS TAKEN up the gauntlet from
where Iran left off in the assertion of
national independence. The concourse of
events in the Near East to oust Britain're-
sounds like a melodramatic play. In the
last quarter of the 19th century, Britain was
a dominant power to be reckoned with from
9airo to Teheran and from Bagdad to Aden.
During that period, she possessed a re-
nowned navy that ruled the waves. Her vast
but scattered empire was one upon which the
sun never set, and from which she could
draw with ease a reserve of manpower to
forstall any nation which threatened her
interests and security.
But the two World Wars weakened Bri-
tain's position. They wrecked an empire
Jwhich had been built on the fallacy of
"might is right." The wars destroyed the
hopes of this apparently insignificant is-
land which fed upon the natural re-
sources and cheap labor of the so-called
backward areas.
Egypt was no exception. In 1882, she came
under the political and military control of
Britain because of her weak form of govern-
ment. In later years, Egyptian nationalism
broke British influence, and British troops
were withdrawn from that country. In 1922,
Britain awarded Egypt her independence on
the condition that the latter rant her a
right to share in the control of the Suez,
thereby protecting her life line to the Fari
East.
What Egypt really enjoyed was a limited
independence with a puppet sovereign. In
1898, Lord Kitchner over-ran the Sudan
and established British despotism. The
following year, a condominium was set up
in the Sudan, with the title of Anglo-
Egyptian Sudan. In 1936, after nearly ten
years of hopeless negotiation, Britain and
Egypt signed a formal treaty by which
Britain was to protect the Suez, use Cairo
and Alexandria for military purposes un-
til such time that Egypt could alone pro-
vide for their defense.
Meanwhile, Britain could quarter a garri-
son of 10,000 troops and 400 pilots in the
canal zone. The treaty could be revised in
1956 or my mutual consent in 1946. After
World War II, Egypt denanded that the
treaty be reexamined for change, and that
CIINIEMA
Architecture Auditorium
IVAN THE TERRIBLE, with Nikolai
Cherkassov (Alexander Neusky) and vari-
ous other nine syllable characters at the
Architecture Auditorium.
"JVAN the Terrible" has been about the
only thing heard from the great Russian
producer, Eisenstein, since he supposedly in-
curred the displeasure of the big guys in the
Kremlin.
Although Eisenstein demonstrates his
mastery of the use of sound in this film,
he offers only silent film-type overact-
ing, in three reels of almost flawless pho-
tographic perfection. Each scene shows
carefully arranged composition, balance,
emphasis and relation of lights and sha-
dows. Contrived perfection however, soon
becomes boring.
The film has value as an historical docu-
ment of Ivan IV, his coronation, marriage
to Anastasia and attempt to unite Russia,
spiced with an occasional "we shall protect
the rights of the workers and tradesmen."
The saga of war, troop movements and
ginpowder shows Eisenstein at his best pro-
viding all the pomp and massiveness of a
DeMille epic without the element of sex.
Ivan, having conquered the tartars, con-
tracts brain fever, and silken bear grown
mangy, face aged thirty years, he is pro-
nounced dead while against his dying wish-
es, his hulking cronies proceed to crown
Vladimir, an idiot with sensuous lips, Czar
of Russia.
Ivan fools them all by not dying-passes
a crisis, and renews his conquests ending

Britain withdraw from the Suez and the
Sudan. It is against this brief historical
background that one should view the tran-
sient events in that area.
* * *
SINCE IRAN pulled the trigger of Arab na-
tionalism, it is natural for other nations
of the Near East to intensify the pressure of
their demands. In recent years, Egypt had
blown hot and cold. She had not actually de-
cided upon what policy of action to take. The
fresh success of Iran in throwing out the
"rump" personnel of the British Oil Com-
pany at Abadan has put new blood into tFlie
nationalism of the Egyptian people.
The masses are in revolt against foreign
interference on their soil and in their na-
tional affairs. It is the logic of history
that whenever a people become too sensi-
tive to their miseries they will take the
challenge, and go to any extent to seek
redress. The Americans did it in 1776 in
their struggle for political and economic
independence. So, in Egypt and in other
areas of the Near East where thereis un-
rest, it is the people, not their Parliaments,
who have come to the forefront of the
struggle. The Parliaments merely have to
comply to the will of the people which is
supreme law. Such law transcends any
obligations arising from unequal treaties.
Those nations who have taken side with
thei British and put the Egyptian Govern.
ment to task for abrogating the treaty of
1936 should reckon with the factor of na-
tionalism. It is a tide of passion which the
weapons of war, power politics or prestige
cannot ebb; it will merely be flamed to ex-
tremity.
The Western Powers involved should tem-
per their judgement with caution and sober
reflection. War over the question of the Suez
cannot breed goodwill but only more hatred
of the West by the teeming millions of Arabs,
Asians and Africans who are struggling for
their national freedom. A state of war which
is already aglow in the Suez will certainly
justify the fears of the underdog that the
West is interested in preserving the decadant
status quo of colonialism rather than in up-
holding the right of a people for self-deter-
mination. It is incompatible with the tenets
of Western Democracy: national indepen-
dence, freedom and fairplay.
THE UNITED STATES, France, Turkey
along with a belligerent Britain have
made a formal proposal to Egypt to accede
to a joint defense program of the Near East.
This writer is constrained to hold that such
a move was undiplomatic since the nations
involved ought to have known earlier the
strained situation in that region.
The question as to whether Egypt can
defend the Suez is important, but the
choice to reassert her sovereign right is
more significant and meaningful. On the
other hand, Egypt has no right to decide
for the Sudanese under what form of
government they should live.
But it is certainly an abuse of power that
allows Britain to uphold the amoral right of
a treaty which she imposed upon the Egyp-
tian people at a time when she encouraged
Mussolini's Ethiopian conquest by way of the
Suez.
--Ojeamiren Ojehomon

Pin~tted
Peh°
READERS OF yesterday's Daily could eas-
ily believe that the Inter-Fraternity
Council has gotten itself off the hook as far
as ever doing anything concrete about re-
moving fraternity bias clauses. And they
might well be right. When IFC dropped its
anti-bias resolution Wednesday night, it in
effect released itself from any binding agree-
ment to stamp out discriminatory measures
in constitutions of locally represented fra-
ternities.
But IFC's obligation to take effective
action in this problem is still felt through-
out most of the campus. Whether IFC rec-
ognizes this is now the question.
According to Daily reporter Sid Klaus,
who covered the proceedings Wednesday, the
majority of fraternity men at the meeting
acted in good faith. They fully intend-in
the near future-to attempt to solve the
discrimination riddle. That's why they set
up a study committee which will be required
to report its decision on how to get rid of
the bias measures by December.
As for doing away with the old anti-bias
resolution the IFC's reasoning supposedly
went like this: it is questionable that the
Council can really refuse campus existence
to fraternities which do not make an honest
attempt to erase the bias clauses from their
national constitutions; there will be no na-
tional conventions during the period the
study committee is conducting its investi-
gation anyway; therefore, let's just drop the
innocuous resolution right now.
There probably was nothing intentionally
underhanded in this action. But despite the
logic behind the decision, to most people the
now defunct resolution was the only guaran-
tee that IFC really was acting and not just
thinking or investigating. The new commit-
tee to them seems a weak replacement.
And just what the committee offers will
be interesting. On the one hand the Coun-
cil does not feel that it can refuse recog-
nition to houses that do not rid them-
selves of discriminatory clauses. But on
the other it is questionable that an appeal
to the Student Affairs Committee would
fare any better than the Stpdent Legisla-
ture motion that finally fell under past-
president Ruthven's veto. Of course the
Council's study and educational program
could be continued to prove to apathetic
fraternity men that discrimination is bad.
If anything of this type is accepted as a
final solution by IFC, it has failed
What is needed is a strong program of
pressure on the chapters by IFC. The pres-
sure must be immediate. Finding this pro-
gram now rests squarely on IFC's new com-
mittee. If it fails, it is probable that the bias
clauses will live on and on.
-Vernon Emerson
Great Debate
WHILE HIGH SCHOOL debators open
their season with trifling national and
international issues, campus orators have
penetrated to the core of one of the most
burning issues confronting the American
public today.
In the Speech Assembly debate Wednes-
day, representatives of affiliates and in-
dependents clashed violently over the vital
question of where to-live at college and
the great cultural and philosophical con-
flicts involved in making the decision.
Magnificently timed after rushing was ov-
er (in order to give pledges a new insight
into their momentous move), the debate was
heated and controversial. And some telling
points were made.
Famed independent leader Tom Murray
summed up the values of fraternities and
sororities in one terse flare of profundity:

"'IFC sure sings wonderfully." And on the
other side of the ledger, those who had
aligned themselves with the forces of Gre-
cian brotherhood argued that affiliates gain
social polish and friendship from joining.
Aside from these recently discovered fact-
ors, some sparkling and refreshingly original
points were brought out: living in dormitor-
ies is stifling to personality development be-
cause of regulations, poor food and the large
and transient quality of the residents. On
the other hand, one gains an opportunity to
meet a broad cross-section of people and
make many acquaintances.
Fraternities and sororities are handicap-
ped by high rates, social pressure and snob-
bery. And yet they do afford a chance to
know a few people well and have a feeling of
belonging.
Such information will, of course, be
helpful to both freshmen and uninformed
oldsters who have not fully comperhended
the wide and sometimes disastrous cleav-
age which separates white bucks and army
boots.
Having touched on this taboo and rarely
aired problem, debators should next turn to
a discussion of the merits and disadvantages
of religion,
-Barnes Connable
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of ty.' writers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: CAL SAMRA

Tug Week

I

-Daily-Bill Hampton
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

ON THE
Washington Merry-Go-Round
with DREW PEARSON
WASHINGTON-A man who wasn't there-General Eisenhower-
was the main topic of discussion at a meeting of Taft-for-Presi-
dent advisers in Washington recently.
Cincinnati's Ben Tate, head of Standard Brands and a top
Taft backer, made it plain that Taft forces will throw the book at
Eisenhower if he enters the GOP presidential race.
Remarked the usually jovial Tate: "If the General gets in th6
campaign, he'll have to take it like any other candidate. Just because
he's been in uniform doesn't give him any immunity from the searching
cross-examination of voters.
-SMEAR CAMPAIGN STARTS-
SENATOR TAFT probably doesn't know this, but some of his cohorts
already have launched the smear-Eisenhower campaign hinted at
by Ben Tate.
First attempt to scare the General out of the Presidential primar.
ies came from Westbrook Pegler last week when he reported Ike's al-
leged flirtation with an English WAC during the war, and warned that
President Truman would use this to wipe up the General if he got into
the presidential race.
Actually, certain Republicans, not Truman, are more likely to
use this against Eisenhower. In fact, they've already started.
It happens that Truman and Eisenhower not only are friends, but
Truman was deeply grateful to Ike for staying out of the 1948
race when Ike could have had the Democratic nomination for the
asking, but when Truman wanted it more than anything else in
this world.
So if Eisenhower really wants to run this time, it's a fairly good
bet that Truman won't.
Meanwhile, the Westbrook Peglers and other smear-Eisenhower
artists might look up the below-the-belt tactics used against Grover
Cleveland. They elected him.
-JESSUP AND EISENHOWER-
HOSE WHO WATCHED the senate hearings on Ambassador Philip
Jessup detected a smear-Eisenhower undertone in that proceeding
also. For Jessup is a' Columbia University professor who not only serv-
ed on Eisenhower's faculty, but received a letter from Ike defending
him against the McCarthy Pro-Communist attack.
Seated across the table from Jessup during the senate hearings
was a Republican who has vowed to stop Eisenhower and whoa has
staked his entire political future on Taft-Owen Brewster of Maine.
(Copyright, 1951, by' The Bell Syndicate, Inc.)

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the University
of Michigan for which the Michigan
Daily assumes no editorial responsi-
bility. Publication in it is construc-
tive notice to all members of the
University. Notices shouldtbe sent
in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room
2552 Administration Building before
3 p.m. the day preceding publication
(11 am. on Saturday). 9
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1951
VOL. LXII, NO. '22
Notices
To the Members of the Faculties of the
University:
There will be a special meeting of
the general faculty of the University
at 4:15 p.m., Monday, October 29, in
the Rackham Lecture Hall. Al mem-
bers of the University teaching staff.of
all ranks, including Teaching Asist-
ants and Teaching Fellows, :re cordi-
ally invited. I am particularly eager
to greet the staff and discuss with you
some of the things of fundamental in-
terest to the University. I hope that
all those who can possibly do so will
plan to attend this meeting.
Harlan Hatcher
Choral Union Members whose records
of attendance are clear will please call
for courtesy passes to the Boston Sym-
phony Orchestra concert-Friday, Octo-
ber 19-between 9:30 and 11:30 a.m., and
1 and 4 p.m. After 4 o'clock Friday no
passes will be issued. Members will be
issued a pass for either the Suday or
Monday concert, as they prefer.
Department of State and United Na-
tions Internships:
All students interested in applyin
for Department of State and United
Nations Internships are reminded that
they are expected to take and pass
the United States Civil Service Com-
mission's Junior Management Assistant
examination. Information relative to
the giving of this examinat'ion may be
found on the bulletin board of the
Department of Political Science.
Personnel Request
The Civil Service Commission of Can-
ada announces an examination for For-
eign Service Officers for Canadian stu-
dents. These positions require at least
TEN YEARS RESIDENCE in Canada
and are open to graduates and senior
students, preferably in political sci-
ence, history, geography, economics, or
law. Application forms should be filed
not later than Nov. 3, 1951. Complete
details and application blanks are avail-
able at the Bureau of Appointments,
3528 Administration Building.
Approved social events for the coning
week-end:
October 21-
Graduate Outing Club
Phi Delta Phi
Schools of Education, Music, Naural
Resources and Public Health.
Students, who received marks of I, X,
or "no report" at the close of their last
semester or summer session of attend-
ance, will receive a grade of "E" in the
course of courses unless this work is
made up by Oct. 24. Students, wishing
an extension of time beyond this date
in order to makeup this work, should
file a petition addressed to the appro-
priate official in their school with Room
1513 Administration Building, where it
will be transmitted.
Personnel Request
The Bureau of Appointments has a
call for a young woman to work in one
of the companies in Ann Arbor. Some
courses in physics and chemistry, or
other sciences, would be helpful. Full-
time, permanent. For further infor-
mation call at 3528 Administration
Building.
The following house groups have
registered broadcast entertainments of
the Michigan-Iowa game on Saturday
afternoon from 2:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Chi Phi
Delta Sigma Delta
Delta Tau Delta
Gomberg House
Phi Kappa Psi
Phi Kappa Tau
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Theta Chi
Zeta Beta Tau
Curtiss-Wright Scholarships of $500
each are now available to Aeronautical
and Mechanical Engineering students
who have completed at least the fresh-

man year of study in the Engineering
College, or its equivalent. To be eligi-
ble, students must be American citi-
zens, partially self-supporting, with an
academic standing above average. Ap-
plications should be filed with Prof. H.
W. Miller, Chairman of the Committee
on Scholarships, 414 W. Engineering
Building by October 26.
Curtiss-Wright Aeronautical Fellow-
ship of $1000 available.hRecipient is ex-
pected to complete the requirements
for the M.S.E. degree in Aeronautical
Engineering. Appointments to these
fellowships will be made by the Execu-
tive Board of the Graduate School on
recommendation of the Department of
Aeronautical Engieering and with the
approval of the Curtiss-Wright Corpor-
ation Applications should be addressed
to Prof. E. W. Conlon, Chairman of the
Department of Aeronautical Engineer-
ing, 1501 E. Engineering Building by
October 26.
Personnel Requests:
The Dravo Corporation of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania is looking for recent
graduates of Civil, Mechanical, Electri-
cal, and Industrial Engineers, Naval Ar-
chitects, and experienced Mechanical
and Electrical Engineersnand Analytical
Chemists.
The American Radiator and Standard
Sanitary Corporation of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, is in need of home econo-
mists, physicists, and all kinds of en-
gineers.
For further information concerning
the above requests, contact the Bureau
of Appointments, 3528 Administration
Building.
Lectures
Dr. Isador Lubin, U.S. Representative
in the Economic and Social Council of
the United Nations, will deliver a Uni-
versity Lecture on "The Economic Basis
of World Peace," Mon., Oct. 22, 4:15
p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre,
auspices of the. Department of Econo-
mics.
Academic Notices
Non-Algebraic Topology Seminar.
Prof. Moise will speak on "A new
proof of the Claytor Imbedding The-
orem," Fri., Oct. 19, 3 p.m.,,3011 A. Hall.
Doctoral examination for Terrell C.
Myers, Chemistry; thesis:" Syntheses of
Vinylogs of Known Plant Growth Regu-
lators and Syntheses and Reactions of
Some Substituted Cyclohexenones and
Cyclohexane-l, 3-Diones," Sat., Oct.
20, 3003 Chemistry Bldg., 10 a.m. Chair-
man, A. S. Dreiding.
Psychology Colloquium. Fri., Oct. 19,
Rackham Assembly Hall (third floor),
4:15 p.m. Mr. Donald Pelz, Study Di-
rector, Survey Research Center, will
speak on "Power and Leadership in the
First - line Supervisor." Refreshments
at 3:45.
The University Extension Service an-
nounces a new class in its evening
program for adults:
Michigan's Great Book Course. An
evening section of this course, similar
to that offered in the freshman year
on the campus, will be conducted in
the Extension Service program by John
E. Bingley. Selected classics will be
discussed. Noncredit course, eight ses-
sions on alternate Wednesdays. $8.00.
Registration, which is limited to 20,
may be made in advance in 4524 Ad-
ministration Building, or at the class
room just prior to the opening session
if there are places left. 69 Business
Administration Building, Wed., Oct. 24,
7:30 p.m.
Concert
The Boston Symphony Orchestra,
Charles Munch, conductor, will give the
following program in the Choral Union
Series, Sunday evening, October 21, at
8:30: Beethoven Overture to "Egmont";
Honegger Symphony No. 5; and the
Tchaikovsky No. 6, "Pathetique."
The Orchestra will be heard in a
second concert in the ExtrarConcert
Series Monday, October 22, at 8:30, in
a different program: Suite from "Dar-
danus" (Ramneau); Symphony No. 4 in
D minor (Schumann); Strauss' "Death
and Transfiguration" and the Ravel
Spanish Rhapsody.
Tickets will continue on sale until
Saturday noon at the offices of the
University Musical Society in Burton
Tower; and on the night of the re-

spective concerts after 7 o'clock in the
Hill Auditorium box office.
Exhibits
October Exhibitions. Museum of Art,
Alumni Memorial Hall: Faculty Exhibi-
tion. College of Architecture and De-
sign through October 26; Seattle Draw-
ings through October 21; The Age of
Enlightenment (L IF E Photographs)
through October 26. Weekdays, 9-5;
Sundays, 2-5. The public is invited.
Events Today
Episcopal Student Group: Canter-
bury House Tea, 4 p.m.
Roger Williams Guild: Sports Party:
those going swimming meet at 8 p.m. at
the Guild House. Second group, leav-
ing for IM Building at 8:45. Open House
and games.
S.R.A. Coffee Hour. Lane Hall, 4:30-
6 p.m. All students welcome.
Hillel Foundation: Friday evening
service, 7:45 p.m., Lane Hall, to be fol-
lowed by Fireside Discussion led by
Prof. William Haber of the Economics
Department. Refreshments.
Congregational-Disciples Guild: Wie-
ner Roast Party. Leave Guild House
at 8 p.m. Back by 12. Wear old clothes.
IZFA. Executive Board meeting, 3:15
p.m., Room 3L, Union.
Motion Pictures, auspices of the Uni-
versity Museums. "Mountain Build-
ing," "Wearing Away of the Land," and
"The Andes." 7:30 p.m., Kellogg Audi-
torium.
Newman Club. Open House, 8-12
p.m., in the basement of Saint Mary's
Chapel. All Catholic students and their
friends invited.
Department of Astronomy. Visitors'
Night, 7:30 p.m. Mr. Karl G. Hemze
will lecture on "The Clouds of
Magellan." After the lecture in 3017
Angell Hall, the Students' Observa-
tory on the fifth floor will be open
for telescopic observation of Jupiter
and a nebula, if the sky is clear, or
for inspection of the telescopes and
planetarium, if the sky is cloudy. Chil-
dren must be accompanied by adults.
JGP. Meeting of the central commit-
tee, 4 p.m., League.
International Radio Roundtable
Auspices of International Center and
WUOM. Discussions are held every
Friday at 8 p.m., on WUOM, transcribed
on WHRV on Monday at 9:30 p.m., and
are broadcast on the Voice of America
to foreign countries. Subject for dis-
cussion:
Oil Dispute inCIran-Oct. 19.
Marriage and Courtship Customs--
Oct. 26, Guest Moderator Mrs. Francis
Schilling.
Students interested in participating
in the programs may contact Hiru
Shah, Moderator of the Roundtable, ph.
8598,
S.L. International Committee: Atten-
tion all interested in furthering rela-
tions between foreign students and
their American counterparts. Meeting
to plan a program of activities, 3:15
p.m., S.L. Bldg., 122 Forest.
Weseleyan Guild: Treasure Hunt, 8
p.m. Meet at the Guild at 8 pan.,
wearing jeans. Bring flashlights. So-
cial dancing will follow at 10 p.m.
Hillel Publicity Committee. Meeting,
4 pam., Lane Hall. Anyone interested
is invited.
Record Concert. League Library, 4-
5:30 p.m.
Coming Events
Communion Breakfast, sponsored by
the Newman Club, Sun., Oct. 21, St.

Mary's Chapel. Speaker: Father Can-
field, Sacred Heart Seminary, De*roit.
"Catholic Literature." Tickets obtain-
able at the Chapel Office or t the
door.
Graduate Outing Club. Meet at the
rear of the Rackham Building, 2 p.m.,
Sun., Oct. 21. Canoeing and hiking.
Inter-Guild Workshop. Sat., Oct. 20,
Lane Hall, 3-5 p.m. Mr. Jack Pether-
bridge will speak on: "The Impact of
Guilds on Campus Through Their In-
dividual Members." Discussion groups
wilm be held and Smorgasbord served at,
5 p.m. (Small fee).
Barnaby Club. Supper and business.
meeting in Lane Hall, p.m., Mon., Oct.
22. No reservations will be necessary.
Air Force R.O.T.C. Bannl members:
Special rehearsal, Sat.,; Oct. 20, 9 a.m.,
229 North Ball. Will need music lyres
as we will be outside part of the time.
Wesleyan Guild: Interguild Workshop,,
3 to 5 p.m., Sat., Lane Hall, Topic:
"The Impact of Guilds on Campus
through Their Individual Members."
Smorgasbord at 5 p.m. Members of all
Guilds are welcome.
A LECTURE is the process by
which' the notes!of the profes-
sor become the notes of the stu-
dent, without passing through the
minds of either.
-Prof. Rathbun,
Law, Stanford Univ.

I

Sixty-Second Year
Edited and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board of Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Chuck Elliott .........Managing Editor
Bob Keith.............. .City Editor
Leonard Greenbaum. Editorial Director
Vern Emerson.........Feature Editor
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CURRENT MOVIES

Wu

At The State . .
A MILLIONAIRE FOR CLTRISTY,"
with Fred MacMurray and Eleanor Parker.
WHAT HAPPENS when a professional joy-
spreader inherits two million dollars?
He gives it away, of course. And what hap-
pens when a secretary who is supposed to
tell him of his inheritance doesn't do it?
He falls in love with her, of course.
Tie these basic actions together with an
over-generous amount of slapstick, and the
result is a movie which occasionally come
near hilarity but never quite makes it. Fred
MacMurray, with his usual brand of stumb-

BARNABY

Why is your Fairy Godfather taking
an umbrella? Is it raining up there?
~~fm

Under its concavity, the vast power
of my magic wishing wand creates a

Let me
explain

"

I

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