I I PAGE SIB 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1951 U I U REMINISCING: 'U' Students Star In Campus Film University students will be on the screen as well as in the audi- ence when the SL-Cinema Guild presents "We'll Remember Michi- gan" before their regular film this weekend. Produced by the Audio-Visual Dogs Put Bite On an' Cast "Mike" and "Rielly," the canine semi-finalists for a part in the speech department's, play, "The Fan," were both unable to pass the final test of any actor-dress rehearsal. It appeared to be a case of cri- tic's judgment, not actor's temper- ament, as both bulldog "Mike" and "Rielly", the Great Dane, at- tempted to bite members of the cast. Director Prof. Hugh Norton, of the speech department, fin- ally settled on a peaceful Ger- man shepherd to "play the part" of a country gentleman's dog in the 18th century farce. The German shepherd will make his stage debut tomorrow when "The Fan" opens in Lydia Men- delssohn theater at 8 p.m. There will be special student rates of 50 cents tomorrow and Thursday. Tickets for the play, which will run through Saturday, may be obtained at the Lydia Mendelssohn theater box office. Regular prices are 60 cents, 90 cents and $1.20. Finholt To Deliver Chemistry Talk Prof. A. E. Finholt, from the chemistry department, St. Olaf College, will speak on "The Com- plex Hydrides," at 8 p.m. tomor- row in Rm. 1300 Chemistry build- ing. Sponsored by th e American Chemical Society, the talk is open to all interested persons. Education Center, the technicolor epic paints an panoramic picture of campus life designed primarily for distribution to high school and alumni associations. PORTRAYING THE story of a graduation ceremony in the Stadi- um, starting with the mailing of graduation invitations, the movie provides a reminiscent spot cover- age of various campus activities through a series of flashbacks. Included are scenes from for- mal and informal dances, hockey, basketball, baseball and football games, Homecoming displays, reg- istration, -students publications and Student Legislature. Clusters of students will be shown in the usual gathering places -the Roundup Room of the League, International Cen- ter and General Library. Classroom scenes and exchange dinners include such faculty men as Dean George Granger Brown of the engineering school; Prof. I. L. Sharf man of the economics department; Prof. William Payton of the accounting department; and Prof. George Uhlenbeck of the physics department. * * * MUSIC FOR the background of the 33 minute production is fur- nished by the concert band, wo- men's glee club, Men's Glee Club, School of Music students and Prof. Percival Price, University carillion- eur. The students who participated in the film's production are Jim Bob Stephenson, Grad., who did the narration; and Bill Chapman, '53 E, and Fred Kerr, '52 E, who did the sound recording. The direction was in the hands of Bert Lavastida, Audio-Visual Production Supervisor. "We'll Remember Michigan" may be borrowed by responsibile groups throughout the state. It is available from the Audio-Visual Education Center, 4028 Adminis- tration Bldg. Borrowers need pay only the return postage. OLD WORLD RESTORED-The Agora (market place) of ancient Athens is being restored by Amer- ican Archeological Institute. Tombs 3,500 years old were uncovered. BEGINS LECTURE SERIES: Jones Traces 'Pursuit of Happiness' a'.I By TOM ARP The question "What is happi- ness?" is one that is often evaded and seldom defined, according to Prof. Howard Mumford Jones of Harvard University. Delivering the first of five Wil- liam C. Cook lectures yesterday, Prof. Jopes traced the history of the phrase "pursuit of happiness" as it is found in the Declaration of Independence. HE POINTED OUT that the phrase was not used in early gov- ernment documents in England, but first appeared in the colonies in the Virginia Declaration of BOOKSTORE PLANS: Second Tuesday of Exams Set for SL Book Collections '0 U S "1 i } 44 ti}t. lid- Re Prepared for the J-Hop TUXEDOS We can show you a magnificent collection of Tuxedos, Priced $5250 Come in now, while our stock is complete. The Student Legislature's new. book store will roar into high gear when book collections are made in 55 student residences on the sec- ond Tuesday of final exam week. House representatives should, have their books ready and have the provided slips all filled out Lyons T o Talk On Journalismr Guest speaker for the third in a series of University Lectures in Journalism will be author Louis M. Lyons, now curator of the Nieman Foundation at Harvard. The lecture, entitled "Newspa- per Enterprise," will be given at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Am- phitheater. An informal coffee hour will follow in the newsroom of the journalism department, 512 S. State St. As curator, Lyons acts as co- ordinator of the work of newspa- permen awarded Nieman Fellow- ships at Harvard. He began his newspaper experience as reporter for the Boston Globe in 1909, aft- er graduation from Massachusetts Agricultural College. The lecture is open to the public. School Official To Speak Today when the collection truck rolls by, according to Leah Marks, '52, SLI spokesman. Students not living in, house groups will be able to put+ their texts into the business cir- cuit by placing them in a booth in Angell Hall. * *' * THE BOOKS will go on sale from the Wednesday of orienta- tion week to the first Friday of the second semester, at the Union. Students who put their books up for sale willhname their own price. SL members. will take charge of the selling. Books can also be turned in at the book store after the sale gets under way. The SL house at 122 S. Forest was crowded today as anxious stu- dents grabbed reduced price books from the liquidated stock of the now defunct IFC Book Exchange. The remainder of the stock will be on sale from 3 to 5:30 p.m. to- day and tomorrow. Prices range from one cent to about one dollar. Rights which preceded the sever- ance of the ties with the British Empire. According to Prof. Jones, George Mason, a Virginia colon- ist influential in philosophical and political thought in America in the early decades of its exis- tence, first coined the phrase. It was adopted by Thomas Jef- ferson in July, 1776, in his draft of the Declaration of Indepen- dence. Since then it has found its way into more than two-thirds of the state constitutions, Prof. Jones said. * * * IN AN ATTEMPT to arrive at a definition of "happiness," he quot- ed a diversity of views on the sub- ject, and then stated that "the only sensible thing to do is to ap- plaud that statement of Archbish- op Wately when he said that hap- piness is no laughing matter." If we confine our views to the notion of private happiness held by a majority of the committee which drew up the Declaration of Independence, we shall have to infer that in making the pur- suit of happiness an inalienable right, they were guaranteeing the American citizen the ghastly privilege of pursuing a phantom and embracing a delusion," Prof. Jones asserted. The Harvard English professor will deliver his second lecture in the series at 4:15 p.m. today at Rackham Lecture Hall. The topic to be presented is entitled "As By an Invisible Hand," a discourse on the various definitions of the "pur- suit of happiness" made by courts throughout the country. I- Class Ranks Open To All By Marines A Marine Platoon Leader's Class, which in the past has been bound by a strict quota system, will now be opened to an almost unlimited number of men if sufficient in- terest is shown in the progran, according to Captain Lester E. Veigel, of the University's Naval ROTC. The course, sponsored by the Marine Corps, has no specific class requirements, such as drills, and is not affiliated with the ROTC. It is open to all Uni- versity men except seniors. UNDER THE Marine Corp's Of- ficer Procurement Program, the course requires that a man under- go two six-week training periods during two separate summers. Paris Island, N.C., is the scene of the first summer camp, at which the trainee is given the rank of a corporal. He becomes a sergeant at the next training' camp, held at Quantico, Va. During his stay at college, the enrollee is deferred from the Se- lective Service, and upon gradu- ation from any program he chooses, he is commissioned in the Marine Corps. If called to active duty, the new officer goes through a special four month training program, serves for a total of eight -years-two ac- tive and three in the reserves. * * * "TO GET INTO the course, a man has only a few requirements to meet, most of which are rou- tine," Capt. Veigel pointed out. "He has to be between 18 and 25 years old at graduation, in good standing with the University, a non-veteran, unattached to any other service organization a n d must pass a rigid physical exami- nation. It's the examination that trips most men up, especially the eye test," he said. "And a man can drop out of the course at any time before re- ceiving his commission," Capt. Veigel noted. For further information about the training program, interested men may contact Capt. Veigel at North Hall. fi SCampus In :I.w sty. K'n SCORE! By Buying your 1952 ENSIAN NOW! On sale Wednesday in Angell Hall Lobby or any day at the Student Publications Bldg. A I' [' , _ Medical Test Dates Announced The Medical College Admission Test, administered by the Asso- ciation of American Medical Colleges, will be given to candidates for admission to medical school in the fall of 1953 on May 10 and on Nov. 3, it was announced yesterday. The test islocally given by the University Bureau of Psychological Services. The Association recommends that candidates for admission to classes starting in the fall of 1953 take the May test. The MCAT consists of tests of general scholastic ability, a test on understanding of modern society and an achievement test in science. The Ann Arbor Art Association Presents AN ART PROGRAM - inctltdin A SPEAKER -- Professor Frank N. Ludden " RUBEN" International prize-winning motion picture TUESDAY - JANUARY 15TH AT 8 P.M. ARCHITECTURAL AUDITORIUM Everyone Welcome Y A4 A, 'a I -- - r I .+1 I t. !! r I IIU 0I SI -