, : PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY - , State Confab On Education Starts Today o v e r 200, representatives of Michigan coleges and universities will attend the fifth Annual Con- ference on Higher Education in Michigan scheduled to convene here today and tomorrow. Centering around "The Intellec- tual Phase of the World Conflict," the University sponsored confer- ence will include discussion ses- sions and addresses open to the public. * * * THE CONFERENCE will get un- derway at a closed dinner meeting tonight in the Union. University Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss will preside, and Prof. Algo D. Henderson, of t h e education school, is scheduled to give a short talk. Sen. Blair Moody will high- light the evening session with an address on "Struggle for Men's Minds" at 8:30 p.m. in Kellogg Auditorium. The Wednesday morning meet- ing will consist of a lecture by John S. Millis, President of West- ern Reserve University, followed by a discussion session with Presi- dent of Wayne University David D. Henry, Dean John W. Hollen- bach of Hope College, and John R. Richards, Special Assistant to the Secretary, Department of the Army. Both the lecture and discussion session will be held at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphithe- ater. fpp /vJ~Y..".... ....::\. /]. Here's your chance to get rid of those neckties you never wear. TRADE 'EM! - for some you'll like. Name your favorite style or pattern. We'll try to get it for you-perhaps with a PalmBeach, New York or Honolulu label, too! - Mail us five ties and - a dollar. We'll send ', , you five different ones, freshly cleaned and pressed. Postage paid. r The Tie Exchange, Box 1901 1 I New Haven, Conn. 1 1 Here'* a dollar and five ties. I Send me five others - freshly I cleaned and pressed in exchange. ame I I Address I .Tow - - r-s State G~~~~~~~~~. ........... -,..------ LEGISLATION DUE: Ohio Elections Probe Constructive -- Lederle TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1951 'U' Symphony Orchestra To Perform Tonight at Hill By ZANDER HOLLANDER The man who will help pick up the pieces in the Ohio 1951 elec- tion inquiry last night told what the voting public can expect from the just-begun hearings. Yesterday's opening blast, a Taft denial of any "special in- terest" support, was only the be- ginning of a parade of some 25 witnesses before the Senate Elec- tions subcommittee, according to Prof. John W. Lederle, special con- * * * 41 SEN. ROBERT A. TAFT Walters Slated To TalkHere Basil L. Walters, executive edi- tor of Knight Newspapers and di- rector of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, will discuss "The Forgotten Right" in the sec- ond of the University Lectures in Journalism series at 3:00 p.m. to- morrow in the Rackham Amphi- theater. The lecture, which is open to the public, will be followed at 4:00 p.m. by an informal coffee hour in the Department of Journalism news room. Walters will also speak at jour- nalism fraternity Sigma Delta Chi's initiation banquet. sultant to the Gillette sub-com- mittee. Prof. Lederle is director of the University's Institute of Public Administration. *, * * PARTISAN politicians who ex- pect Democratic Senator Guy Gil- lette's sub-committee to perform a hatchet-job on "Mr. Republican" Taft are going to be disappointed, Prof. Lederle indicated. "There is an almost total ab- sence of partisanship on this com- mittee," he said. What they are after is not an. expose of corrupt practices in Ohio or elsewhere but a basis for determining what kind of legislature is needed to correct American election abuses, ac- cording to Special Consultant Lederle. When they get to this phase of operations Prof. Lederle will head for the nation's capital to assist in drafting the committee's rec- ommendations. * * * THE CRUX of the problem, as illustrated in the Tydings-Butler campaign in Maryland and the Taft-Ferguson contest in Ohio, lies in candidates not being held responsible for the activities of their backers, Prof. Lederle be- lieves. "We are never going to put a real limit on expenditures as long as a state committee can spend money for a candidate without his being accountable for it," he said. There ws only $1800 spent di- rectly by Taft in his 1951 cam- paign for re-election to the Sen- ate, Prof. Lederle noted. Yet some estimates show that $1,200,000 may have been closer to the real total. WHAT LEDERLE would like to see is a curtailment of what he calls "beating of dead horses" and more attention to the future. One possibility, he hinted, is a Congressional appropriation for the readying of machinery to make a thorough analysis of elec- tion abuses in the coming presi- dential campaign. Five Get Lane Hall Positions Five new members have been appointed to the Lane Hall Board of Governors for this year. Faculty representative and new chairman of the board is Prof. Frank L. Huntley of the English department. He replaces Prof. William Frankena, past chair- man. Lewis Reimann, a local alum- nus, replaces James Kennedy, an Ann Arbor lawyer, on the board. Three student members elected are Ann Cotton '52, president of the Student Religious Association, Bob Hartman, '53, SRA vice-presi- dent and Betty Adams, '54, presi- dent of Inter-Guild. Other members of the board are Prof. Ronald Freedman of the so- ciology department, Prof. Edward Ham, of the romance languages department, Harold Logan, princi- pal of the Ann Arbor west-side junior high school, Prof. Howard McClusky of the School of Edu- cation, Prof. Carlton Wells of the English department and Dean of Students Erich A. Walter. Wayne Dunlap will conduct the 87 members of the University Symphony Orchestra in their an- nual fall concert at 8:30 p.m. to- day in Hill Auditorium. Featuring Theodore Johnson, violinist, the program will include Rossini's "Overture to 'Semira- mide''', Beethoven's "Symphony No. 4 in B-flat major, Op. 60," "Symphonie Espagnole, Op. 21" by Lalo and Copland's "El Salon Mexico." ROSSINI'S "Semiramide," the thirty-fourth in a series of operas written for the Italian theatre be- tween the years of 1810 and 1823, revolves around the semi-real, semi-mythical figure of the Assy- rian Queen who was a favorite in operas from the middle of the seventeenth century to the end of the eighteenth, Intense joy, exuberance and warmth characterize Beetho- ven's symphony, while piquant 4," C?> INSIDE LOOKING OUT-Despite varied sports and occupational activities, inside, this group oe Red war prisoners sits beside a tent in Koje-do prison- of-war camp looking at the outside world. Exchange of these prisoners and many more is one of the topics being discussed by Communists and UN truce negotiators at Panmunjom. j. 4x 6 inch cotton = x 12 lochcoon * only 25c * my 3$c SPEC9ALt torq* 12018 inch floguso"$Y 604 Seed your ordwrs now with manly eiclosed to. NASH ENTERPRISES, Dept. N10 sa 10S1. G. P. O.. Now Yodt I.N. Y. i 'Lateconers' Cause Pain To 'Richard II' Producers CHRISTMAS CARDS Chnstmas Wrappings Stationery Gift Boxes, Fountain Pens TYPEWRITERS, Sales Service, Rentals SMORRILL'S 314 S. State St., Ph. 7177 Travelers which have failed to arrive in Ann Arbor on schedule have caused problems for the pro- ducers of "Richard II." A traveler is a type of draw cur- tain which allows a stage to be sectioned off for quick scene changes. Needed for this week's speech department presentation of the Shakespearian history, the travelers are still enroute to the city, and are not expected until next week. BUT SET designer, Jack Bender, Hillel Draws Closer to Goal For Building A $50,000 increase in funds for the new B'nai Brith Hillel build- ing was reported at a progress report meeting held in Detroit last week, according to Rabbi Herschel Lymon, Hillel director. The $500,000 two-story building, to be located at 1429 Hill, is now three-quarters finished and will be ready for occupancy early in the second semester, he said. Rabbi Lymon reported on Uni- versity Hillel activities at the De- troit meeting. Dr. A. L. Sachar, president of Brandeis University and chairman of the National Hil- lel Commission was the principal speaker. The cornerstone for the building was laid last June. Hillel activities are now being conducted in Lane Hall. 'Oklahoma' Trip Tickets on Sale Students who want to see the hit musical Oklahoma in Detroit Fri- day may purchase tickets for the Union's theatre trip between 3 and 5 p.m. today through Thursday in the Union lobby, according to Rue- di Gingras, '54, for $3.90, round trip. The theatre-goers' bus will leave the Union at 6:45 p.m., Friday. of the speech department, and his staff have rigged up some old ones to do for the production, which will run tomorrow through Satur- day at Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. "They might just squeak a little," Bender said, "but they have solved our problem." A slightly more personal prob- lem has confronted two of the male leads, William Hadley, '52, and Richard Burgwin, Grad. They both are costumed in medieval armor, and have had some trouble mas- tering their movements in the rig- id apparel. They claim all kinks will be iron- ed out, however, by the time the first curtain rises at 8 p.m. to- morrow. Tickets for the perform- ances will be available at the Men- delssohn box office. Regularly priced at $1.20, 90) cents and 60 cents, all tickets will be specially priced at 50 cents for tomorrow and Thursday's per- formances. Football Problem To Be Debated Once again the pros and cons of college football will be the issue for discussion at a Speech De- partment sponsored debate which will be held at 4:00 p.m. tomorrow, at Rackham Lecture Hall. Varsity football players - end, Merritt Greene, '53, and tackle, Ralph Stribe, '52 - will defend football, as speech major Phil Van Houten, '52, and pre-law student Glen Grossman, '52 will review all recent criticism and arguments against football. The meeting will be open to the public. Artist To Talk on Indian Art At Lbane Show An exhibit of modern Indian art by Angela Trindade will open at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Lane Hall with a reception at which the artist will lecture on Christian art in India and comment informally on the paintings. The display will continue in Lane Hall through Dec. 6. It will be open to the public from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily. M i s s Trindade's "Birth of Christ" watercolors, as illustrated in Indian symbolism, continues the tradition of transferring the story of Christ to the artist's own country. The traditional Indian colors and figures are used to por- tray the Christmas story through Eastern eyes to the Indian people. The daughter of Antonio Xavier Trindade, the 'Rembrandt of the East,' Miss Trindade graduated from the Bombay Art School. Her paintings have been awarded sev- eral prizes in art exhibitions in her own country and have been dis- played in Rome, Paris, Lucerne, Brussels, and the United States. Travel Comfort PLUS SAFETY AND SAVINGS WHEN YOU GoU ByTrain ON YOUR HOLIDAY TRIP rhythms and harmonized melo- dies are notable in Lalo's. The spirit of the Mexican peo- ple inspired Aaron Copland, con- temporary American composer, to write his "El Salon Mexico." The concert is open to the pub- lic. Big Warm Blankets, I $ r'1 0 and up ULRICH'S BOOK STORE THE SOUTH WILL RISE AGAIN! Jon tht thousands of Dam- yankees from coast-to-coast who are proud to fly these colorful CONFEDERATE BATTLE FLAGS on cars, motorcycles, a n d every- EFFECTIVE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26 We will be open Mondays and closed Saturdays Cottage Inn Restaurant S.. 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