PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FDAY, JANUARY 18, 1952 ________________________________________ Pianist Levant To Play In First Recital at Hill MORE SAY-SO: a. Oscar Levant, a colorful person- ality in American music, will ap- pear in the extra concert series presentation at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Nationally famous for his ap- pearanes on radio and television as well as for his roles in several motion pictures, Levant promises an unusual program of piano mu- sic, spiced with commentaries. * * a SINCE LEVANT never announc- es his program beforehand, con- cert-goers may expect anything CAMPUS: News Briefs Meader Talk George Meader (Rep.-Mich.) will be the featured speaker at the Southeast Michigan Conference on Christian and Foreign Policy of religious leaders tomorrow at the Parish House of St. Andrew's Epis- copal Church, 306 N. Division St. Sponsored by the International Relations Commission of the Michigan Council of Churches, the group will also be addressed by Prof. Kenneth E. Boulding of the economics department. The con- ference will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. * S Museum Movies The University Museums will present three movies at 7:30 p.m, today in Kellogg Auditorium. They are: "Beavers," "Spotty- Story of a Fawn" and "Sanctuary of the Seals." The free movie schedule will continue during final examina- tions. On Jan. 25 "The Wea- ther," "The Work of the Atmos- phere" and "Atmosphere and Its Circulation" will be shown. The Feb. 1 card of movies in- cludes: "People of Western Chi- na," "Children of China" and "Ti- bet-Land of Isolation." "Our Animal Neighbors," "Ro- dents" and "Gray Squirrel" will be presented on Feb. 2. * * * Conference "Christian Frontiers in World Tensions" will be the theme of the thirteenth annual Michigan Pas- tors' Conference scheduled for Jan. 21, 22 and 23 in the Rackham Bldg. The conference will be sponsored by the University Extension Serv- ice and the Michigan Council of Churches. A series of four lec- tures on "Christian Dynamics in a Changing World" by Russell N. Stafford, president of the Hart- ford Seminary Foundation will highlight the conference. Snowbound T rain Relief Just M Time' SAN FRANCISCO - (A - The dramatic rescue Wednesday of 226 persons f r o m the snowbound streamliner City of San Francisco in the High Sierra came just in time, some passengers declared yesterday. "We thought we were going to die," they said. Bearded and dirty, the refugees explained they felt one more night aboard the freezing, foul-smelling and helpless luxury train in its mountain trap would have caused deaths or serious casualties. The epic of the "modern don- ner party" ended in weary vic- tory with arrival of the survi- vors at Oakland yesterday. They were full of praise for the valient rescuers who freed them from their bleak prison after bit- ter struggles up the mountain. The luxury train itself is still paralyzed on a snow-covered ledge in the Sierra Peaks, some 150 air miles northeast of San Francisco. Southern Pacific officials said they did not know how long it would take to free the 15-car train. Halstead Named To Head Art Group Prof. William P. Halstead, of the speech department, has been elected 15resident of the American Educational Theater Association. A member of the University fac- ulty since 1934, Prof. Halstead re- ceived his Doctor of Philosophy in 1935. He completed his under- graduate work in 1927 at the Uni- versity of Indiana. -_ _ _ _ * .' from Bach to Shostakovich, from Gershwin to Beethoven. Levant will employ his customary tech- nique of announcing his, numbers from the stage, choosing selections to suit the mood of the audience and himself. Levant was born in Pittsburgh, a cfty which he seldom fails to mention in his "asides" to his audiences, and showed an inter- est in music at an early age. At 15 he abandoned formal school- ing and went to New York where lie devoted all his time to study- ing music. When it became necessary to earn some money he turned to the lucrative field of popular music and got his first job playing the piano in a Japanese tea garden in a New York suburb. THE VERSATILE pianist moved on to better jobs and finally achieved public recognition when he wrote a popular song called "Lady Play Your Mandolin." j In the late twenties, Levant played the piano in a speak- easy scene in the Broadway hit "Burlesque," and when Holly- wood converted this play into a "talkie," Levant was engaged for the same role. He has played in numerous films since then, his latest release being "An American in Paris." There are a limited number of tickets available for tonight's con- cert at $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 at the University Musical Society, Burton Tower. Remaining tickets will be sold at Hill Auditorium box office after 7 p.m. today. Social Scientists To Confer Today Representatives of the Univer- sity will meet with delegates from the Universities of Minnesota, Illi- nois, Wisconsin and Ohio State at a social science research con- ference today on campus. The conference will discuss the organizational set-up for social science research at these universi- ties. It has been arranged by the Institute of Social Research, under the direction of Rensis Likert. OSCAR LEVANT. Arts Theater 'Little Eyolf' BeginsToday As their last play of the current season, the Arts Theatre Club will present Ibsen's "Little Eyolf," opening at 8:30 p.m. today and running through Feb. 2. The experimental production is designed to emphasize the emo- tional, lyric qualities of Ibsen's 19th century drama by using ex- aggerated,dance-like gestures and movements. Starred in the production are Dana Elcar as an "ivory tower" poet and Robin Good as his ma- terialistic wife. Paulle Karell and Don Douglas have importanlt sup- porting roles. Director Strowan Robertson ex- plained that the club would event- ually like to do a "dance-drama." Their production of "Little Eyolf" is the first step in this direction. Comedy Continues The curtain will rise for the third performance of "The Fan" at 8 p.m. today in Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Tickets for the Italian comedy, which will run through Saturday, are 60 cents, 90 cents and $1.20. SL Legislators Eye California's Set-Up (Editor's note! This is the second of two interpretive articles dealing with the possibilities of reorganization of student government on campus.) Byr CRAWFORD YOUNG Students can be virtually autonomous within a University. This is demonstrated by the amazing powers granted the student government at the University of California. Operating with an annual budget of $768,000, the student government controls the entire athletic department, and has a finger in virtually every pie relating to the student in any way. s a . * MANY LEGISLATORS here gaze with longing eyes on the struc- tural organization of 'the California campus. All student functions are neatly pyramided-and at the apex is the student government, the executive committee of the Associated Students. Compactness is the motto on the council-a voting group of 13 members holds the center of power on the campus. Ten of these are elected by the students, including a president and vice-president. The Alumni Council appoints one representative, and the California president appoints a faculty representative and a personal representative. This gives the students a convincing 10-3 majority on the com- mittee. IN ADDITION, heads of the major campus organizations sit as non-voting members on the council. Also present, in a non-voting. capacity, is the athletic director. The small size of the body is defended on the grounds that more competent representatives are elected, and that a small group functions more efficiently. On the first point, it is argued that if the students have only 10 to elect, they will make a more careful choice than if 40 are chosen. It will also force candidates to make an extensive campaign to win-- whereas here, many candidates are said to win election with rela- tively little effort. DELEGATION of authority is another keynote of the California organization. The executive committee approves projects and policies, but the execution of these is left to subordinate groups-and every- thing is subordinate. For example, a project like Tug Week, now handled by SL, would be handed over to an organization like the Union. The most amazing power is control over the athletic department. Such things as hiring and firing of coaches are now up to the students -for better or for worse. But with control of the athletic department comes control of the athletic gate receipts-a tidy little source of income. True, much of it has to be poured back into the athletic establishment, but the mere control of it is significant. Consideration of the California set-up is one thing, but trying to copy their organization here. is quite another. Though a good many legislators would undoubtedly like to copy the structure, there appears little chance anything as far-reaching could be effected here in the foreseeable future. Any reorganization plans, California or otherwise, face con- siderable opposition within SL as well as without. Bob Baker, vice-president, has declared himself strongly against any radical changes at this point-and a substantial number of legislators probably agree with him. However, the SL reorganization committee now studying campus organization is looking carefully at the California plan, hoping that some of its features could be adopted here. Two University students are in- volved in a law suit over salvage claims for two barges which broke loose on Lake Erie this summer and were secured by them. During a heavy storm on the lake last July tht lines from a tug hauling the barges either snapped or were cut to prevent the tug from sinking. They drifted to a point naer a summer camp where the students were employed as coun- selors. BOB APPLE, '54, Jerry Kess, '55P, and three men from other colleges sighted the ships off shore. They swam out to them and tied their lines to trees along the beach. Later the salvage company that owned the barges had them picked up. The students contend that the barges would have been a menace to shipping had they not been se- cured to land. The company, on the other hand claims that they released the ships and kept an eye on them constantly. Federal Judge Frank C. Picard will hear the law suit in Detroit within the next few weeks. The suit is for salvage rights. If the Judge rules that the stu- dents have such rights, he can award them damages which could amount to a maximum of $100,000 one-half the value of the two barges. TOTE THAT BARGE: Two Students Involved In Lake Salvage Case CONSENT OF PARENT OR GUARDIAN I hereby give my consent forI I I I I Name to donate blood to the University of Michigan Blood Drive. I I9 I I jSigned ___________________ j (Parent or guardian) Address I I N Witness -_ 1 I DateI _.....__ "- .-- -------- --I PROSPECTIVE BLOOD DONORS-In preparation for the big all campus blood drive which will be held March 10 through 21, the above blank has been provided. All students under 21 years old who want to donate blood must fill it out and have it signed by their parents before they will be able to procure registration "rds. Broadway Cheers Hero Sea Skipper NEW YORK--JP)-A modest lit- tle ship's captain came homeifrom the merciless sea yesterday to the warm, thundering cheers of more than a quarter million New York- ers. He was 37-year-old Capt. Hen- rik Kurt Carlsen who lost his ship, the Flying Enterprise, but won in return the hearts of millions for his gallant duel against the sea. * * * THE GIANT civic welcome op- ened one week almost to the min- ute from the time Carlsen's broken freighter vanished below raging seas off England. Boats in the harbor blasted the skies with whistles and si- rens as Carlsen was borne from Brooklyn to Manhattan aboard a coast guard cutter. Carlsen stepped ashore at the battery and began a triumphal procession up lower Broadway to City Hall-the street of heroes. *' * a HE WANTED to walk it but the crowd was too great. So he rode. Police estimated that at least 300,000 persons lined the sky- scraper canyon or massed before city hall. "It seems unreal," Carlsen mused In awe. "It's undeserved." His wife, Agnes, rode with his two small daughters In a car be- hind Carlsen. Her throat was choked, her eyes dim with pride and joy. ) .! Read and Use Daily Classiuieds :r x a 4 III W41, 11 FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETING Lane Hall 11:00 A.M.: Sundays. Visitors welconie. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Woshtenow Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. Subject-Life. 11:00 A.M.: Primary Sunday School during the morning service. 5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service. 8:00 P.M. Wednesday: Testimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 to 5, Friday evenings from 7 to 9, and Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. CAMPUS CHAPEL , (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) Washtenaw at Forest Rev. Leotard Verduin, Director Phone 3-4332 10:00 A.M.: Morning Worship, Rev. Leonard Verduin. 7:30 P.M.: Evening Service, Rev. Veruin. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH' 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor William H. Bos, Minister to Students Irene Applin Boice, Director of Music 9:30 A.M.: Church School. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon by Rev. Bos, "The Way of Faith." 6:15 P.M.: Student Guild. MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ), Hill and Tappan Streets Rev. Joseph M. Smith, Minister Director Student Work, H. L. Pickerill, Mai- lynn Paterson Howard Farrar, Choir Director Frances Farrar, Organist 10:00 A.M.: Church School, Junior High-Adults. 10:45 A.M.: Church School, Nursery to 6th grade. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon: "The Power of Patience." Student Guild: 6:00 supper and 6:45 program. Mrs. Preston Slosson will speak on "The Chris- tian Home in a World in Crisis." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH and The Episcopal Student Foundation North Division of Catherine The Reverend Henry Lewis, S.T.D., Rector The Reverend Ellsworth E. !Coon -, Curate The Reverend Bruce H. Cooke, Chaplain Miss Ada May Ames, Counsellor for Women 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communior. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion (followed by Stu- dent Breakfast, Canterbury Hous). 10:00 A.M.: Church School (Nursery-9th grade) 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer. Sermon by the Reverend Bruce H. Cook, Chaplain. 12:15 P.M.: After-Service Fellowship. 5:30 P.M.: Canterbury Open House: Supper and recorded concert of sacred music. 6:30 P.M.: High School Club. 6:45 P.M.: Seminar on Christian Living. 8:00 P.M.: Choral Evening Prayer. Wednesday-7:00 A.M.: Holy Communion (fol- lowed by Student Breakfast). f Friday-7:00 A.M.: Holy Communion by-Student Breakfast). 12:10 P.M.: Holy Communion. (followed FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wongdahl, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 9:30 A.M.: Breakfast Seminar. Pine Room. 10:45 A.M.: Worship, "His Gospel and Your Business," Dr. Large preaching. 5:30 P.M.: Supper and Fellowship. 6:45 P.M.: Worship and Program. Rev. Eugene Ransom will speak on "The Significance of Methodism." Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, open daily! FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenow W. P. Lemon, D.D., Pastor Emeritus John Bathgate, Minister to Students Maynard Klein, Director of Music 9:30 A.M.: Seminar in Religion. Studies in the Gospel of Mark. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Dr. W. P. Lemon, preaching. 6:30 P.M.! Westminster Guild Meeting-motion picture ":South of the Clouds." UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenow Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 10:30: Service, with Holy Communion. Sermon, "How About Christ's Miracles?" Sunday at 5:30: Supper-Program of Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. '.x. 1 1 1111 -I _ r