PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1952 FIFTY-FIRST CONCERT: Stanley Quartet To Open Fall Season * * 4 Autority Finds Aesthetic Conflict in Whitman Poetry i.. *FIIEfl By CYNTHIA BOYES The University's resident Stan- ley Quartet, currently getting its fourth season underway, will con- tinue to follow its established poli- cy of interspersing new chamber 'music works by contemporary composers in its programs of time- honored string quartet woris. The Quartet will play its fifty- first concert at 8:30 p.m. Wednes- day in Rackham Lecture Hall, opening the t'hreepro rau iseries td be given on campus this. year. * * * ESTABLISHED by the Universi- ty in 1949, the quartet honors the name of Albert Al Stanley, an out- stgnalipg name in AnnArbor's ear- lyniusical life and professor of music at tie University from 1889 to 1922. Designed to be. of service to 4music and musicians in Michi- gan, the Quartet each season introduces a new American work especially comrissioned by the University. Darius Milhaud," foieino'st con- temporary French corenp ser whose recently commissioned string quin - tet was perforfied here July 8 by the Stanley Quartet "With Clyde Thompson, strin -bags, ptalsed the groiup's perforrane a"'" onder- ful" in a recent letter. The musicians made a special recording of the numib r, a string quintet for: two violins, viola, cello and bass, and sent it to the composer who had been unable to attend its premier. The Quartet, which includes *of. Gilbert Ross, first violinist; Prof. Emil Raab, second violinist: Robert Courte, violist .and Prof. Oliver Edel, cellist; has a busy sea- son away from the campus each year. Traveling through the state's upper peninsula and as far away as Massachusetts and Washing- td .,: D.C., the Quartet has sehed- uled fifteen out-of-town concerts, many of them at colleges. The concert. tour will be culmi- nated Jan. 16 with a performance in the Library of Congress Cham- bet Music Series. MEETING of spaghetti lavers. If you like real Italian Spaghetti or Ravioli drop in anytime at 122 W. Washington BEER * WINE . SANDWICHES Prof. Gay Wilson Allen of New York University's English depart- ment yesterday explained that a basic aesthetic conflict existed in Walt Whitman's poetry because the author interchangeably used "I" to refer to himself as a specific person and to all mankind. Speaking before a full house in Kellogg Auditorium, the Whitman authority maintained, "The uni- versal I' is better than the sen- sual, sentimental I' and one must view Whitman's poetry from these Plumer to Speak On Japanese Art "Japanese Sculpture" will be the subject of an illustrated lecture to be given by Prof. James M. Plumer of the fine arts depart- ment, at 4:15 p.m. today at Rack- ham Amphitheatre. The talk is in conjunction with the Japanese Art Festival which began Oct. 12 and will close Nov. 2. The theme of the entire festival is a gesture of good will to Japan with reference to the recent sign- ing of the Japanese Peace Treaty. standpoints in order to criticize it validly." * * * THE PROFESSOR believed that, although much is written about Whitman, there is very lit- tle really good criticism of the poet's works. He felt the aesthetic conflict was responsible, and that the author himself made criticism{ difficult, since he believed that "Whoever touches this book, touches a man." According to Prof. Allen, Whitman was the forerunner of the spatial-time concept which has reached maturity in the writings of T. S. Eliot. "In 'Leaves of Grass,'" Allen said, "there is flowing imagery like of a photo-montage." "When Whitman had the per- sonal 'I' under control, he wrote such great poems as 'Crossing the Brooklyn Ferry,'" he claimed. "The study of flowing time and spatial poems from the conflict viewpoint reveals success or fail- ure," the NYU professor said. Prof. Gay stressed that the three major symbols in Whitman's po- etry were birth, death and resur- rection and explained that they were handled both in the univer- sal and the personal sense. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Glasses in blue felt case. Call 3568 Alice Lloyd. )23L LOST-Black kitten from 825 E. Univer- sity. Call 3-1429. LOST near dining room, West Quad- Grey topcoat. Thomas Gilmore. Will exchange for your coat. 418 Chicago, W.Q. )25L LOST-Glasses in blue case on or near Tappan St. Ph. 6922. )26L LOST - White gold, Longine watch. Please call 3-1561, 6569 Palmer House. Reward. ) 28L LOST-Red wallet near East Med. Build- ing. Need the identification desper- ately. Nancy Karnischky, 4008 Alice Lloyd. )27L FOR SALE 2 END TABLES, contemporary wrought iron and walnut designers' models: reasonable mahogany bowls and oil painting. 9455. Mr. Hoffman. )2 UNIVERSITY of Michigan pottery ash tray. Regular 1.25 Special. 75c. Bur Patts. 1209 South University. 139' ARMY-NAVY type oxfords $6.88. Black and brown. Sizes 6 to 12. A to F widths. Sams Store, 122 E. Washing- ton St. )51 KODAK MEDALIST I 2%x3% with 50 m.m. Ektar lens, leather case, Men- delsohn flash gun, filters, portra and poloroid lenses, Enlarger, Federal Mo- del 250, 21'4x3i4 with 87 m.m. F. 4.5 lens. Excellent condition. All for $160. Call 2-4636. )47 This is the final week to make Senior Picture ap- pointments. You may sign up from 1:30 to 5:30 un- until Friday at the Student Publications Building. FOR SALE NEW Navy calf pumps "Rhythm Style". Size 71' AAA. Reasonable 3-0088. )57 ATTRACTIVE large bird cage with glass sices-$25. Pair of young cocketiels-_ $30. Striking shelf clock. 562 S. 7th. Ph. 5330. )58 STUDENTS-Up to t soff on diamonds, watches, rings, electric shaver, silver- ware, appliances and all other jewelry items. Any nationally advertised pro- ducts at these savings. Ph. Ed Neback, Lit. '53, 3-1713. )59 CHEVROLET CAR. Good condition $100. 322 John St. )56 EVERGREENS Spreading Juniper (3 kinds) $2.25-$7.50 Upright Juniper (3 kinds) $1 95-$5.00 Pyramidai Arborvitae. $2,00-$5.00 Common Arborvitae (5-7 ft.) $2.50 Mugho (Dwarf) Pine . ... $2.0b-$4.50 Scotch Pine (4-7 ft.) Youdig ... $1.95 Samples at 1422 Wash. Hts. Call Michael Lee, 8574. )3 ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMS FOR FOOTBALL WEEKENDS- Reserve rooms now at rhe Campus Tourist Homes. 518 E. William (near State). Phone 3-8454. )2R FOOTBALL weekend guest rooms avail- able. Student Room Bureau. Phone Don Tewes, 3-8454 8 a.m.-11 p.m. )3R LARGE double room available for male students. 1346 Geddes Ave. )21R FOR RENT - 2-room semi-furnished apartment. Apply Star Cleaners, 1513 S. University, or call Ypsi Ypsi 1716. ) 22R ON CAMPUS-3-room suite for two men. Two study rooms plus bedroom. 1103 E. Washington. Phone 3-2612. )23R ROOM AND BOARD SINGLE ROOM & BOARD for research or professional man. Also double for two (can part pay with duties in house). Live with congenial cultured group on campus. 520 Thompson. )4X TRANSPORTATION FOR WEEKEND RIDES to Elkhart Ind., call 5382 Thurs., 9 p.m. )6T HELP WANTED HOW ABOUT a well paying job with The Michigan Daily delivering papers. Early hours. Phone 23-24-1. STUDENT with radio servicing exper- ience. Call 7942. 27R MALE STUDENTS WANTED for 4 hour shifts in diecasting plant either after- noons or evenings. Call or come to Universal Die Casting and Mfg. Corp. 232 Munroe St., Saline, Mich. Tele- phone 280. )29H EXPERIENCED Shoe Salesman - Part time or full time. Willoughby Shoes, Ypsilanti 324. )30H YOUNG LADY to work at soda fountain 3 cr 4 nights a week from 6:00 to 10 p.m. Swift's Drug Store, 340 S. State, Phone 2-0534. )31H BUSINESS SERVICES WASHING - Finished work, and hand ironing. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone 2-9020. )5B TAILORING, alterations, restyling. spe- cializing in children's apparel. Accur- ate fittings. Phone 9708. )9B TYPEWRITERS! Portable and Standard for rent, sale and service. Morrill's 314 S. State St., Phone 7177. )8B WANTED TO RENT WANTED - Double for men, close to campus as possible. Call 220 Wenley House W.Q. Between 7-10 p.m. )2W MISCELLANEOUS MAGS at special student-faculty rates. Ph. 6007 to order or inquire. Student Periodical Agency. )14M 0 Alpha Delta Phi Will Play Host At" House.Presidents' Banquet * * T h e' annual 1Iterfraternity Council Ibuse PreSients' banquet will be held at 6 pm. toay at the Alpha Delta Phi house. Harold Jacobsen, Sigma Pi's na- tional executive secretary for the past 25 years, will be the main speaker. Jacobsen, who is active in na- tional Interfraternity Council cir- cles, ,wil fly out from Elizabeth, N.J., for the function. Currently business manager of his frater- nity's magazine The Emerald, Jacobsen was formerly an officer in the fraternity editors' asso- ciation. Dean of Students Erich A. Wal- ter and.Associate Dean Walter B. Rea will be present at the dinner which is being held this year ii the fall-instead of spring to .en- able house presidents to 'get to- gether earlier. Toastmaster will be Donn Mil- ler, '54L, a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Assistant to the Dean of 'Students, Bill Zerman, will also speak at the affair. India Students The India Students Association will meet at 8 p.m. today at the Madelon Pound House, 1024 Hill. This is the final week to make Senior Picture appointments. You may sign up from 1:30 to 5:30 until Fri. at the Student Publi- cations Building. } DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN HAROLD JACOBSEN ...to speak at dinner Junior Council Of IFC To Meet The first junior Interfraternity Council meeting of the semester will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Union. IFC vice-president Sandy Ro- bertson, '53 BAd., urged all pledge class presidents to bring *class schedules of their pledge mem- bers to the meeting. Carillon Concert Sidney Giles, assistant Universi- ty Carillonneur, will present a re- cital at 7:15 p.m. today including works by Victor Herbert, Rimsky- Korsakow, von Gluck and Brahms. 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 should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Adiministration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (before 11 a.m. on Saturday.) Thursday,October 23, 1952 VOL. LXIII, No. 27 Notices To Instructors of Engineering Fresh- men. Five-week grades for all Engineer- ing Freshmen are due in the Secre- tary's Office, 263 West Engineering Building, on Mon., Oct. 27. Lectures Japanese Festival. Lecture, Professor James Marshall Plumer, "Japanese Sculpture," Thurs., Oct. 23, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Frank Adolph Ecker, Political Science; the- sis: "Transition in Asia: Uzbekistan un- der the Soviets," Fri., Oct. 24, East Council Room, Rackham Building, at 2 p.m. Chairman, J. H. Meisel. Course 401, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar on the Application of Mathematics to the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., Oct. 23, 3409 Mason Hall, at 4:00 p.m. Mr. Stefan Vail of the Mathemat- ics Department will speak on "Experi- ments on Gambling and Psychological Probability." History 11, Lecture Group 11, Writ- ten test Fri.. Oct. 24, 10 a.m. Sections 9, 10, 11, and 12a (Leslie, McLarty, Don- aldson) in 1025 Angell Hall. Section 12, 13,, 14, 15 and 16 (Cassels, Slosson) in 348 West Engineering. Applied Mathematics Seminar. Thurs., Oct. 23, 4 p.m., 247 West Engineering Bulding. Speaker: Dr. J. L. Ulman. Topic: "The Eigenvalues of a Toeplitz Form." Psychology Colloquium, Fri., Oct. 24, 4:15 p.m., in Auditorium D, Haven Hall Annex. Professor Oscar Oeser of the Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, Australia, will discuss "Applications of Psychology in the De- velopment of a New Department of Psychology." E rentis Tod aiv La P'tite Causette will meet today from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the North Cafe- teria of the Michigan Union. The Weekly Graduate Record Concert will be held in the East Lounge of Rack- ham at 7:45 p.m.; program: Bach. So- nata in E Major (Landowska, Menuhin); Schubert, String Quintet in C Major (Budapest); and Brahms, Concerto No. 2 in Bb Major for Piano and Orchestra (Horowitz, Toscanini). All Grad stu- dents are cordially invited. Parliamentary Procedure. (Last one-. hour course.) Sponsored by the League and the Union; featuring Mr. Fred G. Stevenson, in the Union at 8:30 p.m. No admission. All welcome. The Students for Stevenson Club will meet at 8 p.m. today in the recreation room of the Hillel Foundation Bldg., at 204 S. State Street. "The Humorous Side ofBCanvassing" and "Operation Ballot Box" will be discussed. All stu- dents, faculty members, and guests are invited to attend. Hillel Coffee Hour will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. at 1429 Hill. International Relations Club. Foreign Policy Debate at 7:45 p.m., Angell Hall Resolved: That the foreign policy of the Democratic Administration has been inadequate. Affirmative: Ned Simon- Negative Victor Gladstone. Everyone welcome. Society for Peaceful Alternatives. Meeting at the Michigan League. Fol- lowing a business meeting, Mr. R. Fred- rick Christman, State Chairman of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, will speak on "A Program for Peace." U. of M. Sailing Club will hold a meet- ing in 311 West Engineering. Shore School. There will be intercollegiate sail- ing on Sun., Oct. 26. Dues deadline Oct. 23. Anthropology Club. Meeting at 4:30, in 1402 Mason Hall. Program: Graduate student reports on field work. Political Science Coffee Hour. Thiirs., Oct. 23, from 4 to 5:30 at the Union. All students invited. International Center Weekly Tea for foreign students and American friends, 4-6 p.m. The Modern Dance Club will meet to- night at 7:30 in Barbour Gymnasium. Will the members and all others inter- ested in the club please attend. Ukrainian Students Club. Meeting in the International Center, 7 p.m. Stu- dents of Ukrainian descent are invited to join the Club. Guests are welcome. Alpha Phi Omega. A meeting of the pledges will be held at 8:30 p.m., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. All pledges are requested to attend. Gilbert and Sullivan Society. Mixed chorus rehearsal tonight at 7:15 in Union, instead of League. Kappa Phi. Pledging, supper, and pro- gram at the Methodist Church at 5. All members and pledges are requested to be present. Union Opera. There will be a meet- ing of all people interested in work- ing on production for the Union Opera this afternoon at 4:30 in Room 3-A of the Union. Coming Events Department of Astronomy. Visitors' Night, Fri., Oct. 24, 7:30 p.m. Mr. James E. Milligan will speak on "Between the Planets." After the illustrated lec- ture in 2003 Angell Hall, the Students' Observatory on the fifth floor will be open for telescopic obseravation of the Moon and Jupiter, if the sky is clear, or for inspection of the telescopes and (Continued on Page 4) 1' SUNDAY ... AT 8:30 ONLY C he SL uid 3 NIGHTS -- FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY FRIDAY - SATURDAY CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES Complete shows at 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Feature at 6:00, 8:00, 10:30 I I A story of dark terror and strange lovet A REPUBLIC PICTURE with JUDITH ANDERSON " MICHAEL CHEKHOV IVAN KIROV VIOLA ESSEN LIONEL STANDER Produced, Written.and Directed by B E N H E C H T I I Opportunities in qoptometry Optometry is a profession offering spe- cial advantages to ambitious young men and women. Its scope, is constantly ex- panding. Eighty per cent of the Nation's millions depend upon the Doctor of Optometry and his professional skill in conserving vision. There is a shortage of optometrists in many States. 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Ave., Today and Friday Who cut the throat of Price Controis"~ on "Labor Views the News" Sponsored by the international Union UAW-CIO Fountain Pens School Supplies Typewriters Tape & Wire Recorders Desks Files Chairs Added - Charlie Chaplin in "ONE A.M." 1 f ''Give Mr. Hecht credit for departing from the pattern of commercialism he so vehemently detests."-N. Y. Times ARCHITECTURE AUD. 50c I I BuleE u en MORRILL'S Phone 314 S. State 7177 ,. F -I .1 11 - -,.in = in , - I : - -min (lull V ~ A Irf:U!AI A/'DfI: r"AViC Tn U'~.I I- Read and Use Daily Cl assi f ieds Since UINLY1 AF-VY IVUJL. LU I VU V It starts SUNDAY I 1908 Open Sat. till 5 P.M. Except on Home Football Games "Al I ! \II NOW! TO DAY ! i -- iii NOW PLAYING through November 2 CROSS PURPOSE by Albert Camus THE ARTS THEATER i (I it I; t4 " d-il. u i c AIlEs -iuS yAwl * " h06c" if Il C. Campo ' iCSMK AI NT O " A*UPPT ?)CIRES PU M!ATMU Continuous from 1 P.M, - Also - 44c until 5 P.M. 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