100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 24, 1953 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1953-09-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

tkktUSIAY, SLr' LfY s kt Z4, M93

s

I -!Eft

itop b note
~

By HARRY LUNN
Daily Managing Editor
AFTER MONTHS of detailed work and
discouragement the new joint judiciary
constitution received Regents' approval this
summer. But approval did not come with-
out a very important setback to student gov-
ernment-the Regents altered the inter-
viewing committee to eliminate one Student
Legislature representative.
When the judiciary charter was orig-
inally being revised, greatest controversy
arose over who should sit on the inter-
viewing board which selects the joint
council. In the initial plan the board was
to be made up of four SL -members and
two League officers, but opposition to
granting SL this power was so great that a
compromise plan was adopted giving SL
only three members with two from the
League and the outgoing Judic chairman
who would act as chairman with only a
tie-breaking vote.
In this form the constitution unanimous-
ly passed the huge Student Conduct Com-
mittee and was endorsed to the Regents by
this group. It can only be conjectured why
the third SL memiber was dropped, but the
most conceivable reason was that the Re-
gents did npt care to give the Legislature
any further power, despite the fact that the
appointive function is one of SL's most im-
portant duties.
This function -of the legislature has be-
come more widely recognized in the last
year with SL naming students to several im-
portant administration-faculty groups. The
Regents' insult to student government was
particularly objectionable in light of the
unanimity of approval by the conduct group.
After SL's seven years on campus it should
by now be clear that the organization is not
engaged in a huge power grab, but is only
trying to carry out its functions as the
central representative student governing
body. Unfortunately the Regents did not
choose to recognize this fact.
* * * *
LAST WEEK the Student Affairs Commit-
tee reversed itself on its earlier ruling
not to allow Interfraternity Council rush-
ingmounselors to rush. As much as anything,
the turn-about came because members rec-

ognized that the IFC system was not nearly
as concerned with counseling prospective
rushees on individual houses but with "sell-
ing" them on the fraternity system as a
whole.
While the public relations idea is need-
ed and admirable, the decision to place
almost entire emphasis here rather than
on counseling was unfortunate. As orig-
inally conceived, the system was intended
to help rushees through the difficult and
confusing rushing system. One counselor
from each house was recruited to answer
rushees' questions on factual matters re-
lated to the fraternities generally and
specifically.
*This system was considered worthwhile
and valuable to the rushees and in time it
was hoped fraternities might develop as good
a counseling system as Panhellenic now has
in effect. The latest trend toward public re-
lations, however, negates the counseling pro-
gram.
* * * *
NATIONAL STUDENT Association's sixth
annual congress held at Ohio State earlier
this month offered impressive evidence of
the effectiveness of the national student gov-
ernment program.
With endorsements from President Eisen-
hower, Adlai Stevenson and other national
leaders, the group settled down for 10 days
of serious discussion and reflection on cam-
pus life today in relation to national and
international affairs.
In terms of continuing activity, NSA
has developed a widely respected inter-
national program sustained in the last two
years by $60,000 raised from interested
educational and civic foundations. Nation-
al affairs, student government and educa-
tional committees also are developing
worthwhile research programs which
bring student governments across the na-
tion leadership and information.
Significantly, the local Student Legisla-
ture has taken a central role in the federa-
tion and has supplied from its own ranks
several national officers. NSA's progress to-
day indicates it is a growing and important
group and should receive the continued sup-
port of both SL and the student body as a
whole.

A PURPOSE OBSCURED:,
Degeneration of the Unions

The
Cite Editor' s
SCRATCH
PAD
By ERIC VETTER
Daily City Editor
For the past several football seasons
student hawkers of "outlaw" programs have
carried on a running battle with the ath-
letic administration. The feud gained new
impetus this week when it was learned
that the athletic department has copy-
righted all material in the official football
program sold inside the stadium.
Program difficulty first began in 1946
when enterpraneurs discovered they could
earn a sizeable amount of money by sell-
ing dime programs in competition with
the glossy 50 cent athletic department
program. To meet this threat the Board
in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics
first lowered the price of their program to
25 cents. When this failed, the Board be-
gan distribution of paper rosters of both
teams at the home football games.
A third approach, taken last season, was
the arrest of student sellers by Ann Arbor
police for not having vendors' licenses. The
case was dismissed after the court ruled the
city ordinance failed to apply because oth-
er programs are sold on University property
without vending permits.
Copyrighting the program appears to be
the answer the Board has been looking for.
Prof. Herbert o. "Fritz" Crisler, Director of
Athletics, admits frankly that the copyright
is designed to halt student hawkers from
"killing our program sale." The idea is pat-
terned after the method used successfully by
other Big Ten schools and professional teams
to prevent printing of inexpensive rosters.
Several factors must be considered be-
fore resolving the situation, even though
the final one may come in a court case.
On the student side, the copyright looms
as a serious income threat to upwards of
100 men. It also brings into focus the
economic and legal problem of restriction
and prohibition of competition through
patents, copyrights and other exclusive
rights arrangements.
Despite these considerations the Board is
justified in its action for legal precedent ap-
pears to be on its side. In addition the rev-
enue from the souvenir programs is used
by the athletic department to benefit the
University and student body, many members
of the varsity M Club also help defray their
school expenses by selling the fifty cent pro-
grams. The souvenir program, with its fea-
tures and photographs of campus life, has
long been recognized as a fine University re-
lations project. Finally, since the Board
distributes free rosters to students, the orig-
inal reason for the dime program, that of an
inexpensive roster for students, is removed.
If the Athletic Board is able to remove all
progra'm competition with the copyright,
however, it remains under a strong obligation
to continue providing free student programs.
At the Michigan . .
FROM HERE TO ETERNITY, with Mont-
gomery Clift, and Burt Lancaster
A CYNICAL viewer could take this movie
as a treatise on the psychology of peace-
time armies' what do soldiers do when
there's no national enemy to fight? They
fight among tlemselves, naturally. While
this is true as far as it goes, Montgomery
Clift nonetheless plays more than just a
particularly restless infantry private.
He presents the frightening spectacle of

a man who will carry out his own moral
judgements without considering the con-
sequences to himself. An aimless youth
spent in a white-trash Southern town
makes him ready to seize on army disci-
pline and standards for the strength and
direction he lacks. He signs up for a
thirty year hitch and becomes a "hard-
head" who will measure up to the Army
rule book or die trying. When the pressure
is put on him to box for the regimental
team, after he has sworn to quit boxing,
he will not allow himself to whine or try
to get out from under it. The terrible
pathos of all this is that all his stoic lit-
eralness and devotion to duty don't even
make him a useful soldier: he is shot by
a sentry when he tries to rejoin his outfit
during the attack on Pearl Harbor. In con-
trast to Clift, Burt Lancaster plays a ser-
geant who recognizes the Army for the
imperfect machine it is, plays the game,
and stays alive and useful.
At a couple of points, the movie loses cour-
age and makes a nervous effort to sell it-
self short. The major villain, an officer who
is responsible for much of Clift's travail, gets
his comeupance in a particularly unconvinc-
ng manner. Three brass-hats deliver him a
scathing lecture about "an officer's duty to
his men" and demand his resignation. Since
the picture's point certainly cannot be to
establish the benevolent, boy-scout camp at-
mosphere of the Army, one can only regard
this scene as a sop thrown to the Penta-
gon..
The film's surprise package is Frank
Sinatra, as Clift's whimsical and almost

,
y
l .F'
AMYR'M6 +MLd VMgON 'Y 'Jt" M.

"How Do You Feel?"

_ s,
t --
y
_ iC .
., -1(=
'w
t , a:;,
: y -.may,..
' 1
,

(Continued from Page 2)

ON THE
WASHINGTON
MERRY-GO-ROUND

WITH DREW PEARSON

PEOPLE HAVE BEEN saying for some
time that labor unions exist for the
benefit of the working man. To be fair, some
of them still do. But others seem to have
dropped their original purpose somewhere
in the maze of politics or buried it under
the stampede for power.
Not long ago, a member of the Teamsters
Union in Detroit related, in part, his expe-
riences as a union' member. He told of com-
paratively low wages, long hours, inability to
get a day off even for a good reason, and the
absence of a paid vacation. Such conditions,
about which this particular union did noth-
ing, cannot be justified when set next to far
better auto-plant conditions. Nor can they
be attributed to the Taft-Hartley Act.
This man, who appeared honest-hon-
estly indignant at least-arrived at the
conclusion that his union local's officials
were receiving an unfair share of his
employer's profits. Now, everyone is en-
titled to his opinion. But when his opinion
smacks of correctness, something should
be done.
Yet this is only an isolated example of
union malpractice. Since many statesmen
prefer their scandals on a larger scale be-
fore cleaning them up, turn your attention
to Circuit Judge Miles N. Culehan's one-
man labor-rackets grand jury which has in-
dicted 12 men, mostly members of the
Teamsters Union in Detroit, for extortion
and racketeering, especially in connection
with shady activities among juke box dis-
tributors.
Tuesday the AFL convention expelled the
International Longshoremen's Association,
an organization noted more for throwing
bodies in rivers than for loading ships. It
The New Risk . .
UNTIL THE DOMESTIC political contra-
dictions are resolved, neither this nor
any President of the United States, neither
Mr. Dulles nor any Secretary of State, can
unlock the almost limitless power of an
American idealist conception. When these
contradictions are resolved, America can
give design and purpose to the whole free
world, backed by the will and the power and
the might of the United States. Once this
is done, we will almost certainly unlock a
similar will and desire and power from Asia
to mid-Europe: renewed hope will arise that
the peace of peoples may be made real; and
the community of free nations will begin to
gather irresistible headway.
This means . . . that men in the White
House and the State Department will have
to risk their political careers in their coun-
try's defense. If this appears to be asking
much, let one thing be remembered: In ev-
ery war we ever fought, we expected young

to
1
E
b
an
je
OC
tb
tb
la
tb
to
is
2
G
L
Il
2
a

took state crime commissions from New
York and New Jersey, grand juries and con-
gressional investigations to effect this no-
ble effort.
When the reign of terror, extortion and#
murder, openly carried on by the ILA,
was even more openly exposed, AFL Pres-
ident George Meany and other top AFL
officials chorused, "There is nothing we
can do." When the ILA's president for
life, Joseph P. Ryan, was indicted for
stealing union funds, the ILA was told to
"shape up," a process which was to include
the firing of gangsters. This had the effect
of telling a gangster to hire new hench-
men.
Since Ryan neglected his assigned task,
the ILA was suspended from the AFL un-
der public opinion pressure and now has
been expelled for failing to meet the terms
of the suspension. The expulsion has tak-
en place almost one year after the situation
was formally exposed, during which time
Ryan showed no intention of meeting stan-
dards.
In case that is not enough, 15 AFL mem-
bers are awaiting trial in St. Louis on labor
racketeering indictments returned by a Fed-1
eral grand jury, and Kansas City, traditional
gangster playground, eyes recent bombings
as union extortion.
If the thought persists that such con -
ditions are in the minority in the unions,
merely wait until the next expose. Howev-
er, if racketeers are in the minority, it
follows that law-abiding citizens are in
the majority and should be able to con-
trol the unions, ridding them of "unde-
sirable characters." Since racketeers
seem rather numerous among the union
it must be either that the majority cannot
control the criminal minority, or that
gangsters are in the majority.
Whichever of the two conclusions is tak-
en, the unions had better do something about3
it themselves instead of passing the buckj
to law enforcement agencies. If they do not,,
they will lose most of the prestige they have
built through improved working conditionsj
and higher wages. They will lose a lot of}
working man votes. And, possibly, under the
Eisenhower administration, they will be
shorn of their political and economic effec-
tiveness, leaving 'the worker where he was
fifty years ago. It is up to the unions to effect
an internal clean-up for their own salvation.
--Jim Dygert
WHAT American diplomacy cannot over-
look, what it must hold Europeans pri-
marily responsible for is to provide the1
initiative and will to make of their own re-
sources a new life. If the chief burden of
America's diplomacy in Europe is to aid -

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

WASHINGTON -- Secretary of Defense Charlie Wilson was fidgety
all last week because the Joint Chiefs of Staff passed their Sept.i
15 deadline without submitting figures on the military budget forT
next year. The military chiefs were supposed to submit their budgetN
estimates 10 days ago, but let the Sept. 15 deadline slip by withoutN
sending Wilson a single piece of paper or even a single figure.
There is, however, an excellent reason for the delay. It can be
summarized in exactly six words, plus a correlary explanation.
The six words are: Russia's possession of the hydrogen bomb. C
The correlary explanation boils down to this: the Joint Chiefs ofs
Staff can't make any estimates on military needs until they get ant
over-all decision from the White House on the following all-importantS
problems:B
1. Will the U.S.A. erect adequate civil and military defense pro-
tection against the H-bomb?
2. If so, does this defense money come out of the military budget?s
3. Does the President intend to stick to his budget-balancinga
program? Or will he sacrifice the budget for the sake of strongerF
defense?
-IKE'S AWESOME DECISION-n
THESE ARE CIVILIAN questions which the military chiefs can't an-o
swer. They aren't in their province. They are the problem of their
own civilian boss, Secretary of Defense Wilson and the President him-a
self. They also constitute the most difficult problem facing Gen. Ei-
senhower-a problem on which he has postponed decision but whichv
cannot be postponed much longer.
He must either: A. Let the budget stay out of balance again, B.
Increase taxes, C. or sacrifice the safety of the nation.F
The first two alternatives will be dealt with in future columns.
Regarding the third-the safety of the nation-here is some lit-v
tie-known background showing beyond any shadow of doubt that#
the United States is in very great danger today.t
It was in the spring of 1952 that the inner-government debate overE
protection from the atom bomb really became intensive. At that timet
a group of scientists, working under the supervision of top easternc
universities, prepared a confidential report known as "Project East#
River" warning that the United States was totally, woefully unpreparedc
to meet an A-bomb attack.t
This report roused great consternation, argument and disagreementt
-especially among the military. And there followed a second reportt
under the auspices of Massachusetts Institute of Technology calledt
the "Lincoln Summer Study" which in the end came out with almost
the same conclusion, namely that the United States was extremely vul-
nerable.e
The military, however, were hard to convince. And at first the
National Security Council pooh-poohed the findings. It was not untilI
President Truman put a burr under the Council that its members begani
to realize that the U.S.A. was blithely and complacently going about
its business with little realization that it could be put out of commis-
sion almost overnight.<
-FOOT SOLDIERS VS. ELECTRONICS-
A T THIS POINT, Secretary of Defense Lovett, despite all the other
reports on Tie .hject, ordered a third report, this one in charge of,
M. J. Kelly, head of the Bell Telephone laboratories. Later, on Jan. 19,
one day before the Eisenhower administration came in, another com-
mittee was appointed under Gen. Idwai Edwards.
Both committees came back with equally alarming reports,
warning that the United States was in definite danger. All this, of
course, was well before there was any intimation that Russia had
the hydrogen bomb.
Despite all these reports, General Eisenhower decided that an-
other report was needed and appointed one of his most trusted
officers in the European invasion, Gen. Harold Bull, to study the
problem of enemy invasion.
The Bull report is now complete and is equally alarming. General
Bull has recommended less money than the Kelly committee, but even
so, about ten billions would have to be added to the national budget
over a five-year period-possibly more. Or the alternative is to scrap
some of the existing methods of national defense, such as two or three
infantry divisions: or another alternative, increase taxes.
This is why the Joint Chiefs of Staff have been in a predicament
regarding their budget figures for next year. They can't make any
estimates until they know what the over-all policy is going to be;
also they aren't at all sure that electronics can be substituted for
foot soldiers.
Thus goes the biggest and most important debate now going on in-
side the administration. Upon its outcome will depend whether the
budget is balanced and/or we have higher taxes. Even more im-
portant. upon its outcome will depend the future safety of the nation.
-UNCLE OMAR BRADLEY-
GEN. OMAR BRADLEY, ex-chairman of the joint chiefs of staff who
now works for the Bulova watch company and doesn't have to wor-
ry about budget cuts, was attending a cocktail party some time ago
given by his publishers in New York.
"Uncle Omar," as he is affectionately called around the Pentagon,
comes from Moberly, Mo., and, speaking with a slow Missouri drawl,

ute of Ophthalmology, University of
,ondon, Fri., Sept. 25, 10 a.m., School
f Public Health Auditorium.
Academic Notices
Preliminary Ph.D. Examinations in
conomics. Theory examinations will
e given on Thurs. and Fri., Oct. 22
nd 23. The examinations in other sub-
cts will be given beginning Mon.,
ct. 26. Each student planning to take
,ese examinations should leave with
he Secretary of the Department not
ater than Mon., Sept. 28, his name,
he three fields in which he desires
o be examined, and his field of spec-
alization.
Astronomical Colloquium, Fri., Sept.
5, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Dr. Leo
aoldberg will speak on "The Origin of
mine Broadening in Solar Flares."
Organizational Meeting for Mathemat-
s Seminars will be held on Fri., Sept.
5, at 4 o'clock, 3011 Angell Hall.
Sociology-Psychology 62. New room as-
ignments for Sociology-Psychology 62
re as follows:
Lecture-25 Angell Hall
Recitation Section 1-2435 Mason Hall
Section 2-2443 Mason Hall
Section 3-2444 Mason Hall
Section 4-2448 Mason Hall
Section 5(now meeting T-Th 2) 2450
Mason Hall
Section 6-25 Angell Hall
sports and Dance Instruction for
Women. women students who have
completed their physical education re-
quirement may register as electives in
physical education classes through Fri.,
Sept. 25, in Barbour Gymnasium. There
are openings in Golf, Tennis, Swim-
ming, and Modern Dance.
Course 401, the Interdisciplinary Sem-
nar on the Application of Mathematics
to the Social Sciences, will meet on
Thurs., Sept. 24, at 4 p.m., in 3409
Mason Hall. Professor Robert M. Thrall,
Messrs. Robert Davis, Bertram Raven,
and william Hays will speak on "The
1953 Summer Institute in Mathe-
matics."
Doctoral Examination for Willard
Clayton Jordan, Physics; thesis: "A
Study of the Gamma Transitions As-
sociated with Various Short-Lived Neu-
tron-Induced Radioactivities," Thurs.,
Sept. 24 East Qouncil Room, Rackham
Building, at 2 pm. Chairman, J. M.
Cork.
Doctoral Examination for Andrew
Sherman Dibner, Psychology: thesis:
The Relationship between Ambiguity
and Anxiety in a Clinical Interview,"
Fri., Sept. 25, 6625 Haven Hall, at 8:30
a.m. Chairman, E. S. Bordin.
The University Extension Service an-
nounces that enrollment may still be
made in the following classes which
open this evening:
Astronomy for the Layman. For those
who wish a general knowledge of the
constellations and a survey of the ele-
mentary facts of astronomy. Lectures
will be supplemented by lantern slides,
demonstrations with the planetarium,
telescopic observations, and identifica-
tion of constellations from the sky
Eight weeks. $8.00. Instructor: Hazel M
Losh.
Introduction to the Fine Arts. The
work of art has both its personal mean-
ing and the power to tell us of the at-
titudes of an entire age. The arts o1
Ancient Greece and Rome, Medieva
France, Renaissance Italy, and Europe
and America in general from the seven-
teenth century to the present will be
discussed both for their artistic and
for their cultural significance. The
course is also intended to serve as a
cornerstone for any further study o
the fine arts. Lectures will be illus-
trated with lantern slides, and per-
tinent films will be shown from tim
to time. Sixteen weeks. $18.00. Instruc
tor: Marvin J. Eisenberg.
Parent-Child Relationships. Gives th
student an understanding of the ef
fects of childhood experience on late
adult adjustment, acquaints him with
the role of parent or child associate
examines some of the errors commonl
made through a misunderstanding o
the nature of childhood, and assists ii
achieving an understanding of the de
velopment of the self through a stud:
of children. May be taken for credi
or without credit. (Psychology 78, tw
hours of undergraduate credit.) Ma:
also be taken as Education 078. $18.00
Instructor: Dorothy P. Marquis.
Workshop in Creative Writing.JA
course in the short story, the persona
essay and poetry, for beginners an
intermediate students, emphasizing th
reading and criticism of students' writ
ing. Sixteen weeks. $18.00. Instructor
John F, Mueh.

Ceramics. Advanced Course. The ma
terials and forms of pottery. Basi
ceramic design applied to the potter'
wheel and uses of glazes. Designed fc
students who have had some previou
work in ceramics. Class limited to twen
ty. Noncredit course, sixteen week;
$18.00. Laboratory fee, $5.00. Instructoi
J. T. Abernathy.
IndustrialtElectronics. Theory an
practice of electronics for measuremen
and control. Subjects include vacuu
tubes as circuit elements, amplifier
oscillators, and oscilloscope circuit
Application to motor speed control an
welding control. Laboratory periods wi
be held in connection with the cours
Films, slides, and demonstrations wi
supplement the lectures. Sixteen week
$18.00. Instructor: Stephen V. Hart.
The Recorder and Its Music I, Begin
ning Course. Active participation i
music by means of a study of the rf
corder and its music. The fascinatin
and beautiful instrument of Every
man, the recorder, has remained vii
tually, unchanged in design for 8(
years. Its dulcet little voice has spol
en for the sometime musician and th
artist in cottages and castles, and t(
day the man who would while away
few hours in the making of music fin(
at his hand the ideal instrument f
this purpose. No previous music,
training or background is required f
this course, which will consist of tl
playing of the recorder and the bas
musical instruction necessary theret
Eight weeks. $8.00. Instructor: Williai
H. Stubbins.

CHORAL UNION SERIES (10 concerts):
Roberta Peters, Soprano......October 7
Warner Bass, Accompanist; and Sam-
uel Pratt, Flutist.
Boston Symphony Orchestra.October 22
Charles Munch, Conductor.
Virtuosi di Roma.......... November 2
Renato Fasano, Conductor.
DePaur's Infantry Chorus.. November 24
Leonard dePaur, Conductor.
Chicago Symphony Orchestra..Dec. 13
Fritz Reiner, Conductor.
Toronto Symphony Orchestra....Feb. 10
Sir Ernest MacMillan, Conductor.
Paul Badura-Skoda, Pianist..... Feb. 17
George London, Bass.. ....February 28
Elena Nikolaidi, Contralto....March 12
Myra Hess, Pianist..........March 17
Season Tickets: $16.00-$12.00--$10.00
Single Concerts: $3.00-$2.50-42-$1.50
EXTRA CONCERT SERIES (5 concerts)
Erica Morini, violnst.....October 12
Leon Pommers, Accompanist.
Cleveland Orchestra........November 3
George Szell, Conductor.
Guard Republican Band of Paris....
...... ....................November 30
Francois-Julien Brun, Conductor.
Marian Anderson, Contralto .January 10
Boston Pops Tour Orchestra..- March 4
Arthur Fiedler, Conductor.
Season Tickets: $8.00-$6.00-$5.00
Single Concerts: $3.00-$2.50-$2-$.50
By purchasing season tickets a sub-
stantial savings is made.
Tickets now on sale at the offices of
the University Musical Society in Bur-
ton Memorial Tower.
Events Today
Alpha Phi Omega. First meeting to-
night at 7:30, Room 3-R, Union. Elec-
tions for vice-president and recording
secretary. Everyone must attend.
Young Republicans. Organizational
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the
Union. Enrollment of new members.
Speaker: Hon. George wahr Sallade,
Ann Arbor City Council President.
All Graduate Students in Sociology
are cordially invited to attend an "or-
ientation" meeting with the Sociology
faculty at 8 p.m. in the west Confer-
ence Room of the Rackham Building.
Assembly Activity Chairmen. Meeting
of all chairmen today at 4 p.m. in the
League. Attendance important.
Congressional Disciples Guild. Mid-
week meditation, Douglas Chapel, Con-
gregational Church, 5 to 5:30 p.m.
U. of M. Sailing Club, Inc. will hold
an open meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m.,
Room 3-K-1, Michigan Union. Colored
slides will be shown. Everyone invited.
Shore School for new members will be
held Sun., Sept. 27, 10 a.m., Base Llxle
Lake.
Delta Sigma Pi, Professional Business
Administration Fraternity, invites all
Business Administration and Pre-Bus-
iness Administration students to the
Rushing Smoker to be held at the
Chapter house, 927 Forest, tonight at
7:30 p.m.
U. of M. Rifle Club will hold its first
meeting of the year at 7:30 p.m., in
Room 3-B, Michigan Union. Anyone in-
terested in target shooting is invited.
Previous experience is not necessary for
membership. Past' accomplishments
and the year's plans will be discussed.
International Center Weekly Tea will
be held this afternoon from 4:30 to
6 at the International Center.
Kappa Phi will have a meeting to.
night at 7:15 at the Methodist Church.
All active members are requested to
attend.
Christian Science Organization. Tes-
timony meeting, 7:30 p.m., Fireside
f Room, Lane Hall. All are welcome.
Gilbert and Sullivan Society Tryouts
e Correction. Tonight tryouts will be held
- in the Union, 7 to 10 p.m. not in the
League as previously announced. Try-
e outs on Friday and Sunday will be
- held in the League as scheduled.
ir
, Coming Events
y Hillel. There will be a meeting of the
f Social Committee Friday afternoon at
n 4:15 at the Hillel Building. All those in-
- terested please attend. Plans for the
y coming semester will be made.
t _
Roger Williams Guild, First Baptist
'y Church. Meet Friday evening at 6:30
' at the Guild House to go to 'the Pep
Rally. A "Hidden Talents" recreation
A party follows the Rally at 8 o'clock.
11 Refreshments-fun for all.
d
e Newman Club Dunkers' Hour after the
- football game at 4:30 on Sat., Sept. 26,
at the Father Richard Center, All are

welcome.
c
s
swp
r:
Sixty-Fourth Year
d Edited and managed by students of
It the University of Michigan under the
m authority of the Board in Control of
's Student Publications.
s.
d
11 Editorial Staff
e. Harry Lunn..........Managing Editor
ll Eric Vetter................City Editor
s. Virginia Voss.........Editorial Director
Mike Wolff...... Associate City Editor
- Alice B. Silver..Assoc. Editorial Director
n Diane Decker........Associate Editor
- Helene Simon......... Associate. Editor
.g Ivan Kaye ............... Sports Editor
y_ Paul Greenberg.....Assoc. Sports Editor
r MarilyneCampbell.... Women's Editor
0 Kathy Zeisler... Assoc. Women's Editor
Don Campbell......Head Photographer
Ie
- Business Staff
a Thomas Treeger......Business Manager
Is William Kaufman Advertising Manager
or Harlean Hankin..Assoc. Business Mgr.
SWilliam Seiden ......Finance Manager
)r) JmsSrp....>'Circulation Manager
ic
o. Telephone 23-24-1
Member
-~sccied ACollideik ress

kI

f

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan