PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN -DAILY k-riliDAi, OUIO)Bk 3, 319i3 ! i ENGINEERING CENTENNIAL: 100 Years of Progress And a Look to the Future CURRENT MOVIES Hitclihilker ? . ., DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN a_- L r TODAY THE College of Engineering is initiating its hundredth year of exist- ence with a commemmoratory celebration. Today it will pay tribute to a hundred years of past-of discovery, teaching, invention learning. Today the college has reached a milestone 'of tremendous proportions. At such a time it is customary to look . back over the years and say something about the progress that has been made and achievement that has been attained. It is customary to compare the organized and smooth-running machine of today to the single civil engineering course that was all the technical college there was at Michigan a century ago. It might be cus- tomary to look to the past, but perhaps it is wiser to look to the- future. The College of Engineering has done a lot, and it is doing a lot. It has moved for- ward with industry as a whole and has kept pace with its most advanced representatives. It has produced MIDAC and remedies for shore erosion and the capaciter motor. Atom research and airplane study. The list could be continued indefinitely. But what of that which is yet .to be done? Despite its comparatively long history, the College of Engineering is still having growing pains. It has its honor council, the only one in the University, yet. lacks unity within the student body. At present, in an attempt to unite the student body, a committee has been form- ed to schedule a number of all-college rallies to be conducted by leaders in the field. By acquainting students with the different areas of concentration, it is hop- ed that the students will see the underly- ing relationship among all fields. The problem of including liberal arts in the engineering curriculum is a 'current one which to date has become continually more complex. On the national level as well as at the Universiy the problem has been dis- cussed. Engineers have no time for the humanities. Do they have a need for them.? If so, what major program changes would be necessary. The college is expanding into the North Campus. This in turn will present its prob- lems-Problems of equipment placement, headquarters location and class scheduling. They must be solved. In addition, there is the problem of sci- entific advancement. Nuclear research will continue at an even swifter pace than it has in the past. Michigan will continue to be an integral part of this research-and of all research. Potentially, the University of Michigan College of Engineering can con- tinue in its role of national leadership, a role it has developed for itself in the past century. At this time of looking backward, there ii a need to look forward as well, pausing only to accept a few days' congratulations. -Fran Sheldon After Procrastinaticon, A Stand FTER FIVE weeks of procrastination, Student Legislature finally-and wisely -passed a policy stand on academic free- dom which calls for mild but deserved cen- sureship of some methods of legislative in- vestigating committees. Fortunately, SL, as the supposed voice of all campus students, has put the motion on record before the arrival of Rep. Clardy's sub-committee of the House Un-American activities commit- tee in Detroit, Flint and Lansing, and the beginning of hearings before which some persons connected with the University may be called, As it has been passed. the motion reads: "A democratic society depends upon the free exchange of ideas. It is the func- tion 'of the educational communityrto provide for this exchange of ideas to pre- pare citizens to assume their responsibili- ties in a democratic society. Many meth- ods employed by legislative investigating committees tend to prevent an education- al institution from doing its vital job by producing an atmosphere in which what is novel, original and unconventional may be punished as being pernicious or wick- edly unorthodox. Therefore . . . Student Legislature . . believes it especially desirable at this time to affirm the following fundamental prin- ciples as essential if the educational com- munity is to continually fulfill its function to build questioning and exploring citizens and thus strengthen the forces of freedom. 1) The maintenance of academic freedom is of importance both to the educational comunity and to society as a whole. 2) The members of the educational com- munity, as citizens, have all the constitu- tional rights of any American citizen and no special restrictions not imposed upon other citizens should be imposed upon them. 3) Provided a faculty member, admin- istrator or student speaks or writes as a citizen, clearly indicating he does not speak for the educational institution with which he is connected, he should be free from institutional or public censorship. 4) A faculty member should be free to express in class, along with the opposing opinions, his own opinions relevant to the material of the course provided it is clear that he is expressing his own opinions and not insisting on their acceptance. 5) Students should be free to hear all points of view on controversial subjects fairly presented in order to aid individual formulation of opinion. 6) Religious, racial and other non-edu- cational considerations shall not enter into the appointment of administraors and faculty members or the acceptance of students. It is understood that where the avowed purpose of an institution is to bring together members for a specific religious purpose, religion may be a fac- tor considered in hiring and acceptance. 7) Administrators, faculty members and students should be protected against dis- missal as well as economic, social and po- litical pressure, because of membership in any religious, political, racial or national origin group. 8) Dismissal from membership in the educational community should be only for incompetence, neglect of obligations to the educational community, moral turpi- tude, violation of the academic freedom of others or conviction under the law of the land and then only after a fair hear- ing in accordance' with the methods uti- lized in the United States Cours." Since the motion and its careful wording have been studied for nearly a year by the Legislature and because now it seemingly represents the majority opinion on campus toward the atmosphere created by commit- tees such as the one headed by Rep. Clardy, it is to be hoped that all University students will take careful, consideration of the signi- ficance of the motion and their fundamen- tal relationship to the entire question of academic freedom. -Dorothy Myers Architecture Auditori un MOBY DICK with Joan Bennett and John Barrymore.- THE DIFFICULTIES of turning the im- mense epic of Moby Dick into an hour and a half film are certainly manifest. Fortunately. this version has been stripped of all unessential episodes and is narrowed down to that concerning the character of Captain Ahab. Unfortunately, this neces- sary simplification destroys exactly those qualities of the novel which give it magnifi- cence-its nobility, its unearthly mysticism, its supreme analysis of the passions of men and of the sea. The elements which enabled Melville to send Ahab and Tashtego down with the ship "which like Satan, would not sink to hell till she had dragged a living part of heaven along with her" are replaced in this instance by, of all things, a happy ending. Inscribed in a rather banal love affair, Moby Dick becomes the story, not of a man driven by furies to avenge himself on a monster of the sea, but the tale of a lover who must, for some extraordinary reason, get a white whale before he gets a wife. In spite of the distortions suffered by the original, however, Moby Dick is worth seeing. John Barrymore, more a name than an actor to many of us, is an attrac- tion in himself and does as well as can be expected with the clipped, expurgated role of Ahab with which he is provided. His lady love, Joan Bennett, appropriately lily white and lovely, is wisely given little to say., Although the film was produced in 1931 and contains a forgivable number o technical imperfections, there are some excellent wh.aling scenes, a good deal of honest to goodness tension, and a display of not unskillful photography. Further- more, if the spectator is interested in see- ing the 18th century as it looked in the 1930's (centuries are so capricious) this is an excellent opportunity. The acting, the dialogue and the faces are all conspicu- ously of another age; Hollywood has ob- viously progressed a great deal since, and it is nice to know how modern we are. However, as history has a certain antique charm, it is often, as in this case, amusing to explore its cellulose past. Accompanying the main feature is a tech- nicolor short on The National Music Camp at Interlochen, Michigan which, especially for the many on campus who hold this spot in tender veneration, is very enjoyable. -Anne Stevenson At the State . . MOGAMBO, with Clark Gable and Ava Gardner. A CAREFUL PERUSAL of the ads that whooped this picture into town reveal that "Mogambo" means "the greatest." Al- though it did seem longer than most movies, there aren't many other aspects to it which deserve superlaives. Since it was directed by John Ford, it is especially disappointing to find none of the usual Ford precision and pace. Substantially it is a remake of King Solomon's Mines, with an unpalatable glob of inter-personal intensity thrown in. It may be a reactionary sentiment, but one is inclined to point out the diffi- culties involved in swallowing a travelogue while trying to digest a triangle. One yearns for the simple old days when musi- cal comedies and African sagas gloried in their musical and African qualities with- out trying to be the significant drama of the year. The triangle in this case is actually a square. Ava Gardner, a safe society girl from out the streets of Brooklyn, finds her- self stood up in the jungle by a marahajah. She takes refuge with a white hunter, Clark Gable, and right away there's something electric between them. For complication, however, an English lady with scientist husband in tow appears on the scene. Gable a takes his electricity and starts sparking with her. Seems she matches the ideal of femin- inity and decorum he's been packing off on 1 safari with him all these years. Thus far, one can genuinely sympathize with his position; Miss Gardner really appears the greater of two evils in the contrast with the Englishwoman. She a plays her stock role with a vengeance: the woman who has lost someone dear, long ago, but covers up her battered heart with a gush of patter and wisecracks. The second-rate dialogue with which she is furnished make the role impossible; the brashness which she flaunts like a banner seems only vulgar, much as the producers would like to present it as a symptom of American forthrightness. Nor does she have much luck establishing her feminin- ity; her baby talk with infant wild animals fails to impress. With the exception of the 1 native Africans, the other characters are equally unconvincing. 1 Africa enters only incidentally--"look atx that bull elephant; he reminds me of Clark t Gable." The resemblance is undeniably t striking, but the elephant might as well be l mounted on the wall of the lobby of the Waldorf-Astoria. The camera often catches grand and moving shots in Africa, but they're R simply outsiue the human story involved,. 1 SI iA 4t # t.._ 't _ tA I%- woo ON THE WASHINGTON MEIHRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON 1 r WASHINGTON-Mike Di Salle, the ex-price administrator, was talking to Adlai Stevenson, the ex-candidate for President. "If you're seen so much with Margaret Truman," chided Di Salle, "people are going to start talking." "I hope they do," replied Adlai. TEXAS-GO-ROUND JOHN FOSTER DULLES outfoxed a federal judge when he flew to London instead of going with Ike to the Mexican border. U.S. District Judge Ben Rice had issued an order for Dulles to appear in federal court Oct. 19-the date Eisenhower dedicated the Falcon Dam -and "show cause why he should not be held in contempt of court for failure to obey the order of this court of June 5, 1953." . . . . The ordere of June 5 required to admit Kok Jon Gong, an American Chi- nese ancestry, barred by the U.S. Consul in Hong Kong from coming to testify at his own U.S. citizenship hearing . . . . Dulles had expect- ed to go to Falcon Dam and aU.S.marshalexpected to serve him. But Dulles flew to London to see Churchill instead . . . . The Kok Jon Gong case is important because it sets a precedent for Americans of Chinese ancestry; which was why Judge Rice took the unusual step of citing the Secretary of State for possible conempt . . . . The 24- room mansion in which Governor Shivers entertained the Eisenhowers was built by the former regional public works administrator under Roosevelt. John H. Shary, father-in-law of Governor Shivers, built 3: ,q t t ' { , r ;,ems--. . ... -- , , I wiwiw (Continued from Page 2) gineering Research; Director of Willow Run Research; Presidents and Repre- sentatives of other Educational Insti- tutions; Alumni Secretary; Assistant to President; Registrar. (This group will assemble in Rooms 111 and 113, northeast corner of Hill Auditorium at rear, where they will robe.) Group II-Regents; Recipients of Honorary Degrees; Vice Presidents; Di- rector of Public Relations; Assistant Dean of Faculties; Hooding Assistants: Secretary; Minister; Dean of College of Engineering; Speaker of the Day; Pres- ident. (This group will assemble in Rooms 112 and 114 Hill Auditorium, northwest corner at rear, where they will robe.) FACULTY The Faculty of the College of Engi- neering will meet in Rooms 214 and 215, the northeast and northwest rooms, sec- ond floor Hill Auditorium, where they may robe. Registered Alumni and Guests with badge* will be admitted to the reserve section of the Auditorium until 2:15 2:15 P.M. SCHEDULE OF MARCHING The line of march will be from the rear entrances of Hill Auditorium east along the walk to the east side of the building, thence south along the walk to the plaza in front of Hill Auditor- ium, thence through the middle front doors of Hill Auditorium. To Occupants of All University Build- ings Located South of the Heating Plant: On Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 24 and 25, changes are to be made in the University electrical distribution system to the campus. During this time two electrical feeders must carry the load normally carried by three feeders, so it is imperative that the electrical load be kept to a minimum. If your loads are kept to a minimum no building will be without service. If not, loads will have to be discon- nected and some buildings will then be without service. Your cooperation is requested. To Instructors of Engineering Fresh- men: Five-week grades for al Engi- neering Freshmen are due in the Sec- retary's Office, 263 W. Engineering Building on Mon., Oct. 26. The Selective Service College Qualifi- cation Test will be given here on Thurs., Nov. 19. Application deadline Nov. 2. it is recommended that all men who have not previously taken the test make application for it at Ann Arbor Selective Service Board No. 85, 210 West Washington. The Selective Service Board will then notify applicants of time and place.7 The result of this test is used by your local draft board for determining college deferment. The test will be given again on April2 22, 1954. of the moon and a double star, if the sky is clear, or for inspection of the telescopes and planetarium, if the sky is cloudy. Children are welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Episcopal Student Foundation, Can- terbury Club meeting today, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House. Topic: "Is Thee a God?" Pro-Professor William Frankena, Con-Mr. Harold T. Walsh, Chairman and Teaching Fellow, re- spectively, Department of Philosophy. All students welcome. I. M. Party will be sponsored by the Newman Club tonight from 8-12. Those interested are to meet at the Father Richard Center at 7:45 and from there will go to the Intramural Build- ing. Individual or team sports, includ- ing swimming, volleyball, basketball, trampoline, and shuffleboard will be of- fered. There will be dancing and re- freshments at the Center afterwards. Psychology Club. There will be an important meeting today at 3:15 in 2429 Mason Hall. All members and anyone interested please attend. Congregational-Disciples Guild. Sup- per hike, 5 p.m. Meet at the Guild House. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, will meet at the IM Bldg. to- night at 7:30 for an evening of sports. At 10 the group will go to the Center, 1511 Washtenaw, for a weiner roast. Pershing Rifles. All Pershing Rifle- men are to report in uniform to the east side of Hill Auditorium at 1330 hrs. You will be excused from your cadet formations, Roger Williams Guild. IM Sports Night. Meet at the Guild House at 7:30 to leave for the Intramural Building. Bring tennis shoes and swim suits. Re- freshments afterwards at the Guild House. La Sociedad Hispanica. Catherine Ann Porter will speak on Mexico tonight, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheaper. The public is cordially invited to attend. Friday Afternoon Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, 4:15-6:00 p.m. Special guests in- clude faculty and students from the College of Pharmacy and the School of Public Health, and Mr. Wilmer Kit- chen, Executive Secretary of World University Service (WUS) in the Unit- ed States. Hiilel Foundation activities for the week-end: Fri., Oct. 23-7:45 p.m.-Evening ser- vices followed by a speaker. Sat., Oct. 24-9 a.m.-Community ser- vices. 2 p.m. Listening Party for Mich. Minnesota football game. Sun., Oct. 25-10:30 a.m.-Hilei Stu- dent Council meeting. 5:00 p.m.-Hllsel Chorus meets, 6:00 p.m.--Supper Club. 8-10:30-Married couples tea. The Congregational-Disciples Guild. Graduate-Professional group meeting tonight, 8 p.m. Guild House. Please call if you are coming. Petitions of Candidacy for Student Legislature elections are due at the Student Legislature building at noon Saturday, October 24. Coming Event S.R.A. Saturday Lunch Discussion. "Their Future Is Our Future," Wilmer J. Kitchen,Executive Secretary, World University Service, formerly W.S.S.F. Call reservations to Lane Hall, 31511, Ext. 2851. All students and faculty wel- come. Latin-American Party sponsored by the Newman Club will be held Sat., Oct. 24, from 8-12 in the Father Rich- ard Center. Both North and South Americans are cordially invited. South American dancing lessons will be given for those interested. Entertainment and refreshments will be provided. Faculty Sports Night. IM Building, Sat., Oct. 24, at 7:30 p.m. All equip- ment will be available to all famulty families. For further information call Mrs. W. R. Dixon, 258975. Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office opens Monday at 10 a.m. for the Department of Speech productions of The Heiress and Elizabeth The Queen. Tickets are $1.20- 900-60c. Student tickets are reserved seats andtcan be obtainedafor 50cefor The Heiress for October 28 and 29 and for Elizabeth The Queen for Nov. 12. Foreign Language Group. Meeting Oct. 26, 8 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Prof. Benjamin W. Wheeler (History) will discuss the In- terdisciplinary Seminar on Second- year Language Teaching Materials and Objectives. All teachers of language and graduate students of the various lan- guage departments are cordially in- vited, the mansion to house Iowa-Nebraska prospects who came on special Predoctoral and Postdoctoral Fellow- trains to buy land. Shary was a big real-estate promoter; also spent ships in the Biological, gngineering, millions for PWA. Some of it didn't do the Shary properties any harm. Mathematical, Medical, and Physical Sciences, including physical anthropol- SIGNAL CORPS LEAKS ogy, psychology (excluding clinical psy- TOE MC CARTHY will almost drop dead when he reads this, but in chology), physical geography, and in- S , terdisciplinary fields, are offered for. my opinion he is absolutely right in probing the leak of Signal the next school year by the NATIONAL Corps radar secrets at Fort Monmouth, N.J. Furthermore he is abso- SCIENCE FOUNDATION. Selection of lutely right in saying that the leaks go back about 10 years. Actually persons for? fellowships will be made from among citizens of the United they go back even further. States solely on the basis of ability. Joe has forgotten it, but three years ago I testified before a A Fellow may pursue his fellowship Senate committee that 12 drawers of irreplaceable records giving at any accredited instituntion of high- the dates and details of radar development mysteriously disap- any simarinistitUtion abroad approv- peared from Fort Monmouth in 1946. The Army immediately is- ed by the National Science Foundation. sued a denial. Stipends will range from $1,400 to $3,- Entirely aside from the 12 drawers, there was also evidence of 400 per year, dependig on the trai- ing and faiy olgaintohee- leaks to Russia, however, and I personally reported this to the Army lows. Awards also include the payment and warned that one technician born in Russia working in the Signal of tuition fees and a dependency al- Corps bore watching. lowance. Postdoctoral applications are due by December 15 and graduate ap- Six years ago-Dec. 19, 1947-this column also published facts piications are due by January 4. Ap- regarding the use of radar secrets by the Radio Corporation of Ameri- plication forms may be requested from ca. RCA had no connection whatsoever with leaks to Soviet Russia, Department Chairmen or from the Fel- lowship Office, National Research Coun- and I'm sure the last thing RCA officials would do would be to con- cil, 2101 Constitution Avenue N.W., done use of radar patents by the Communists. However, the pre- Washington25, D.C. Further information Pearl Harbor leak to RCA showed, first of all, sloppy security by the about these fellowships may be ob- Signal Corps. Second, RCA proceeded to file application for radar tai.ed at the Office of the Graduate patents in foreign countries, including prewar Japan, where they be-t came available to 'foreign powers. At that time radar was the most Academic Notices priceless secret the Army had. What happened was that RCA hired one of the Signal Corps' The Department of Biological Chem- top experts on radar, William D. Hershberger; then in 1937 pro- istry will hold a seminar in 319 West 1Medical at 4 p.m., yin Fri., Oct. 23. The ceeded to use some of the discoveries made by Hershberger for the topic for discussion will be "Some Army and apply for radar patents in Japan and Australia. Patents Theories of Protein Synthesis," con- were also filed in the U.S. Patent Office-all this at a time when ducted by Mr. John Fopeano. Hitler was invading Austria and later Czechoslovakia, and when Psychology Colloquium meets Fri., it was apparent to every competent newsman that war was in-i Oct. 23, at 4:15 in Auditorium C of An- escapable. gell Hall. Prof. W. J. McKeachie will speak on "Anxiety in the Classroom." The Signal Corps was so flabbergasted at RCA's action in using the Army-Hershberger secrets to file for radar patents, especially in Astronomical Colloquium, Fri., Oct. 23 Japan, then a potential enemy of the U.S.A., that some Signal Corps 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Sydney Chapman, Visiting Professor of Solar officers wanted to take action against RCA. It was believed, however, and Terrestrial Physics, will speak on that such action would only serve to spotlight the importance of the "Photochemistry of Oxygen and Nitro- sensational new discovery whereby an electronic eye could detect in- gen in the Earth's Atmosphere." visible shapes in the distance. So the Signal Corps delayed action. Mathematics Colloquium, Fri., Oct. 23, After the war was over, however, Maj..Gen. Harry Ingles, then at 4:10 p.m., 3011 Angell Hall. Profes- chief of the Signal Corps, wrote RCA protesting that it had violated sor Donald Darling will speak on "Meas- ythe Al'my's radar patent, but also security, by applying for e Theory in Function Spaces-Some not onlythArysrdrptnbtasseuiybyapygfo Analytical Problems." radar patents in foreign countries. To use the official words of the army: Actuarial Seminar, Fri., Oct. 23, 3 p.m., "Gen. Ingles . . . , wrote RCA authorities expressing a belief 3s2u sngel Hall.fDr.Nesbt llopen in government rights to the impulse generator patents; pointing The Mathematical Risk of Lump-Sum + MUSIC + At Hill Auditorium . BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Charles Munch, Conductor. N WRITING about a concert by the Bos- ton Symphony Orchestra, some things go without saying: the wonderful ensemble, the precision of attack and release, the musical integrity of even the most insignificant in- ner part-all these were present last night. The remarkable sound of the string section was there, all the way down to the string basses, which are sometimes so much aud- ible -mush in less capable orchestras, the curious but effective trumpet vibrato (I am told that this is the French style of trumpet playing) was there-it was a good, average, Boston Symphony concert. Mr. Munch knows exactly what he .wants from the orchestra, and he goes about getting it without unnecessary or extravagant motions. The interpretations were almost always appropriate to the character of the music, the performances were well paced, and the climaxes came off magnificently. HE GREATEST obstacle to being heroic is the doubt whether one may not be go- ina ton ,.rnvp'nnp' caf' n frnnl - .p.n ,.,or .n- The first work played was the second symphony of Brahms. Every detail was there, and the details did not obscure the design of the work. The slow movement was played with almost too much intensity, but the interpretation was consistent and made musical sense. The audience liked it. In fact, some of the members could not restrain their applause until the last chord had ceased. After the intermission, Arthur Honeg- ger's Symphony No. 2 for String Orchestra (with trumpets) was performed. I had never heard the work before, and was very much impressed. It is solidly written music, without tricks or mannerisms. No attempt is made to explore every last effect possible with the strings, but the texture is rich and very beautiful. The urgency of the slow introduction to the first movement, with its insistent repeated note figure, is carried through the remainder of the movement, through the sombre and intense slow move- ment, to the exciting finale, with the trum- pet chorale at the end. A very moving work, one which I should like to hear again. Then the orchestra played Ravel's or- chestration of four movements from his piano suite, "Le Tombeau de Couperin." An extremely successful transcription, the composition is a delight from beginning to end. In tfl~~A'ialmoivment- Rit o',n ' Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of out that there was some question of violation of security in that the impulse generator applications had been distributed to for- eign affiliates of RCA, and that it appeared information contain- ed in the impulse generator applications was similar to secret information to which Mr. Hershberger might have had access while working in Signal Corps laboratories." F 'i 11vr1y v v ugau urst Death Benefits in a Trusted Pension authority of the Board in Control of Plan. Student Publications. Doctoral Examination for Ruth Rie- nier, Sociology; thesis: "Social Mobil- ity and Mobility Aspiration in Rela- tion to Fertility Planning and Fertil- ity," Fri., Oct. 23, East Council Room, But suddenly General Ingles, author of this protest, went to work Rackham Building, at 3 p.m. Chairman, for RCA after that the protest lapsed. It had already been sent to the Ronald Freednman. Justice Department, however, where it was mulled over by Justice Doctoral Examination for Helen Holt Department attorneys for some years. In the end nothing happened. Sharpensteen, Botany; thesis: "Stud- The Army has issued all sorts of alibis to condone and excuse its ies on the Wound Respiration of Po- andh Armyill ismsutoe srsi alibis.t Howdev, te rt tato, Solanum Tuberosum L," Sat., Oct. laxity and still seems to be issuing alibis. However, the important 4, 1139 Natural Science Building, at point is that the Signal Corps did not crack down on an American 9 a.m. Chairman, A. S. Sussman. corporation for sending the most priceless militarv secret we had Editorial Staff Harry Lunri..........Managing Editor Eric Vetter.............:..City Editor Virginia Voss..........Editorial Director Mike Wolff.........Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver..Assoc. Editorial Director Diane Decker..,..'. . Associate Editor Helene Simon...........Associate Editor Ivan Kaye.................Sports Editor Paul Greenberg.... Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell......Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler....Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell.......Head Photographer I cl-ff .jV o 1 o.G "'Wbusiness ta to Japan before the war, and hasn't prevented the leak or secrets to oncerts Thomas Treeger......Business Manager Russia since the war. Organ Recital. The final program in William Kaufman Advertising Manager the fall series of organ recitals by Rob-- 1arlean Hankin.... Assoc. Business Mgr. HIEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES ertNoehren, University Organist, will1William-Seiden......Finance Manager 7APANESE PRIME MINISTER YOSHIDA'S personal representative, be given at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, Oct. James Sharp..roulatlon Manager sent here to negotiate a military assistance pact, has been kicked 25, in Hill Auditorium. It will consist entirely of compositions by Max Reger Telephone 23-24-1 from one minor bureaucrat to another. So far he hasn't talked to any- (1873-1916): Fantasia and Fugue in D r r