PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAIN HAIIT rk:WAY, MARCH 12, 1954 PAGE POUR k kI.iOA~, MAB~CH 12, W.i4 In Favor Of Fall Rushing By DIANE D. AuWERTER Daily Associate Editor IT IS UNFORTUNATE that an unpleasant aura of politicking and eleventh hour maneuvering surrounded the Student Af- fairs Committee's recent decision to main- tain fall rushing. For, despite the taint which the system now bears, fall rushing is definitely superior to the "deferred," or be- tween semester rushing used on this cani- pus until two years ago. The focal point of the attack on fall rushing is the discrepancy between the number of women who rush and the final number which the houses are able to pledge. This is not a valid criticism. It is true that, even after one eliminates the rushees who are merely interested in see- ing the inside of all the houses, there are going to be some disappointed rushees. On the other hand, the objective of rush- ing is to place as many women in the sor- orities of their choice as possible. Under deferred rushing, many women were dis- couraged from rushing and thus fewer rushees were disappointed, but there were fewer girls being placed in houses. Under the deferred system, not only were many rushees not being pledged, but many houses were not making their quotas; two of these houses went off campus within a short period of time and another came dan- gerously close. It stands to reason that the fewer houses remaining on campus, the fewer women who will be pledged and the more who will be disappointed. Smaller houses did not have a fighting chance to get, their membership up because would-be rushees were frightened by a full semester of rumors that the houses in question were going under. Another criticism of deferred rushing was the necessity for a full semester of contact rules. Past experience had show- ed that these rules created an artificial barrier between independent and affiliat- ed women which was not easily worn down. Needless to say, the rules were dif- ficult to enforce and frequently defeated their own purpose. With fall rushing, contact rules are over after two weeks. Critics of the SAC decision point to re- cently revealed figures from Health Service which showed that fall rushing increased the number of women requesting counseling and psychological help. The figures did not, however, indicate any comparison with the number of women who dropped out of school or whose health was seriously impaired un- dere the "deferred" system. Rushing at any time of the year is hec- tic. At least, in the fall, people have the benefit of a summer's vacation and nice weather to safeguard their mental and phy- sical health. Rushing between semesters, students finished up the heavy strain of final exams and then plunged immediately into rushing. 'It is very dubious whether the physical and psychological effects of fall rushing can match the effects of the be- tween-semester ordeal. In their handling of the issue, the Stu- dent Affairs Committee chose not to be guided by Assembly Associations stand against fall rushing and rather to adhere to the stand of Panhel. Assembly's senti- ments are generally anti-sorority, and the group seems to have overlooked the fact that many freshmen women genuinely want to pledge a sorority. If freshmen are indeed as bewildered a group as As- sembly indicated, why allow them to en- ter a large university at all? Why not farm them all out to prep schools? The sorority women who voted to support fall rushing rather than the deferred sys- tem are as sincerely interested in the wel- fare of freshmen as their friends in Assem- bly. Most of them, however, have experien- ced rushing in the spring as well as the fall, and they are better aware of the merits' and flaws of both systems. They are also in a better position to judge the systems than the members of SAC, and the committee was wise to uphold their decision. Strange Coincidence TWO REPUBLICAN Senators have moved to unseat Sen. Dennis Chavez (D-N.M.). The move springs from alleged "irregulari- ties" in the 1952 Senatorial elections, a charge levelled at Chavez by his Republican opponent, Patrick Hurley. The three man group investigating the year-old fraud charge is composed of two Republicans and one Democrat. It is a sub-committee of Sen. Jenner's (R-Ind.) Senate Rules Committee -the same committee, incidently, which ihn- vestigated charges of fraud and irregulari- ties in the Maryland Tydings election and the McCarthy Finances scandal. STRANGE COINCIDENCE DEPT. 1) The Republicans are a 47-48 minority in the Senate. 2) New Mexico's Gov. Mechem, who is a Republican, would appoint the man to sit in Chavez' seat until the next regular election, in the event that the Senate votes to un- seat Chavez. 3) Gov. Mechem would presumably ap- point a Republican, boosting the GOP into a majority position in the Senate. 4)Sen. Jenner's Committee whitewashed TODAY AND TOMORROW: The Unappeasable Aggressor By WALTER LIPPMAN WITHIN THE inner councils of the Ad- ministration there have long been two conflicting estimates of Sen. McCarthy. The one has been that his target is the Demo- cratic party, and that his purpose is to dis- credit it so deeply with the charge of trea- son that for a generation it will not be able to return to power. The opposing view is that McCarthy's target is the capture of the Republican party, and that his purpose is to dominate or to destroy President Eisen- hower. Ever since the summer of 1952, and par-' ticularly since Gen. Eisenhower went campaigning in Wisconsin with McCarthy and in Indiana with Jenner, the Presi- dent has been using all his skill as a con- ciliator and compromisor to avoid a show- down between the two factions of his par- ty. He has been able to do that as long as Sen. McCarthy was willing to let it appear that his big guns were shooting at the Truman administration, and that he was only sniping at the Eisenhower ad- ministration. The turning point was reached in Sen. McCarthy's television broadcast of .Nov. 24. That was when, having been granted free time on all the networks to reply to some remarks of ex-President Truman on the sub- ject of "McCarthyism," the Senator seized the occasion to attack the Eisenhower ad- ministration, charging it with being soft to Communists at home and abroad. That speech, it seemed to me, was a clear dis- closure that McCarthy was shooting at Eis- enhower's leadership of the Republican par- ty. In plain fact it was a declaration of war. After that it was mere self-deception to cling, as did Chairman Hall for example, to the notion that McCarthy's main object is to defeat the Democrats and to help the Administration obtain a good Republican majority in Congress. Chairman Hall's fond dream was not allowed to last very long. Sen. McCarthy had no sooner gotten himself sponsored by the Republican National Com- mittee as a valued spokesman of the Party of Abraham Lincoln, when-returning from his tour-he promptly bit the hand that fed him and was trying to pet him. He attacked the administration of Gen. Eisenhower at what must be its most sensitive point, name- ly the administration of the Army which the President has commanded in war and of which he is the Commander-in-Chief today. McCarthy charged the Army with coddling Communists. McCarthy did not charge that the Ar- my had made a mistake, or that there was a muddle of red tape and regulations. The charge of "coddling" implies and is meant to imply an intent to help Com- munists infiltrate the Army. There is no use pretending that the Sen- ator merely lost his temper, or that all this was mere rough and tumble politics. This was a blow, meant to be lethal as it is fol- lowed up, against the administration of Gen. Eisenhower. BACK IN November after the television broadcast, it-was only very probable, it was not as yet certain and unmistakable, that McCarthy is out to rule the Republican party by ruining Eisenhower. But now we know. His ablest and most plausible sup- porters are no longer at pains to deny it. The issue, they are saying, is the coddling and nurturing and harboring of traitors in- side the government owing to the fact that Gen. Eisenhower was too closely allied with# the Truman administration to allow its wrong-doing to be fully exposed. If the charge which underlies these in- sinuations were true, the President would not merely be open to criticism for be- ing lax, careless, complacent, and slow to realize the facts-as is his predecessor. If the charge in this insinuation' were true, the President would be guilty of willful and deliberate "coddling and nur- turing and harboring of traitors inside the government." This is as grave an accusation as has ever, I believe, been made against a President of the United States. After such a mortal accusation, to pretend that all the Republicans can get together, can forget McCarthy, enact a constructive and dynamic program, and fight only the Democrats, is an insult to the intelligence. Nor is it anything but a piece of planned obfuscation to talk as if the question is whether President Eisenhower should at- tack McCarthy at the risk of dividing the Party. The President has done everything that a man can do to avoid a fight with McCarthy and a division in the Party. There is no doubt whatever that McCarthy is a deliberate aggressor, that he is fighting Eisenhower's leadership and control of the party, and that he is making no concessions of any kind in the interest of Party unity or of a Republican victory in the autumn elections. He is in fact making it increas- ingly difficult for the independent voters and for the liberal Republicans to support the Party. If there is a fight between the Eisenhower administration and McCarthy, it will be be- cause McCarthy will not permit Eisenhower. to keep within the unity of the Party the broad and varied elements which elected him. The fight is unavoidable because Mc- Carthy refuses to be appeased. Until he is stopped and his power is checked, he will go on until he is the master of the Party. The aftermath of the Stevens affair proved that McCarthy's terms for this Administra- tion are to let itself be ruled by him or ruin- ed by him. Were he willing to compromise for less than that, he would at the very latest have allowed the Administration in the person of Secretary Stevens some small saving of face. That point has how been reached and passed. The period of surrenders, retreats and withdrawals is coming to its close. (Copyright, 1954, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) "Fair Is Fair"; 4 y CA >Jo DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON Inter-American Conference -- Prob lems Involved W ASHINGTON-The other day I flew down to Mexico City to inter- view Bill O'Dwyer, sometimes called the most mysterious man of American politics. The former mayor of New York City had not granted an interview since he retired as U.S. ambassador to Mexico and chose, at least temporarily, to live there, rather than return to the United States. I had known of Bill O'Dwyer when the State Department des- cribed him as the most popular and effective ambassador since Josephus Daniels. I had known him personally when he was in charge of Roosevelt's committee to help Jewish refugees escape the prison camps and soap factories of Adolf Hitler, I had also known him when, as a brigadier general in the Army, he had helped rebuild Italy. And one very' cold December day I had driven up Broadway with him when the historic canyons of lower Manhattan welcomed the friendship train with the traditional shower of ticker tape. And, like a lot of other people, I wondered why he did not come back to New York. The answer can't be given in a single sentence or a single para- graph-except to say that he is coming back, and did come back to meet me in Miami when some technicalities in our TV interview developed and it had to be refilmed. O'DWYER'S MARRIAGE I SUPPOSE THAT part of the answer to the mystery of Bill O'Dwyer is found in the old French adage, cherchez la femme. In brief, he got married to Sloan Simpson, a girl half his age, and there seldom has been a marriage that more cruelly and sensationally went on the rocks. At first it was just the opposite. Sloan was the toast of Mexico; later her flirtations were the talk of Mexico. At the very height of this gossip when he needed a wife most, Am- bassador O'Dwyer flew back to New York-of his own volition-to testify before the Kefauver Committee. There he was grilled by Ru- dolph Halley, the man who it later developed aspired to become mayor of New York, and was using the Kefauver Committee as a spring- board. O'Dwyer was suffering from pneumonia at the time and his temperature was 101, though his doctor didn't know this until later. Specifically O'Dwyer was grilled about James J. Moran, his deputy fire commissioner who later went to jail for perjury and extortion. Moran had been close to O'Dwyer, though not a bit closer than J. Rus- sell Sprague and N.Y. Secretary of State Curran and some of the other men who boosted Tom Dewey up the political ladder and who have now been exposed as having their hands in the race-track till. N.Y. CITY GRAFT WHEN I ASKED O'Dwyer about some of these things, he said he still could not understand Moran, that he had always trusted him. "As far as Dewey is concerned," he added, "you have to judge him on his accomplishments, not the men around him. The head of any state or city can't always know everything that's going on around him, and you can't hold Dewey responsible for what some of his friends did." Discussing graft in New York City politics, O'Dwyer said: "The biggest graft is in contracts-building contracts. That's the case not only in New York City but any city. The contractors will swarm around your office, if you give them a chance, ready to do anything for you. "But I continued Bob Moses in the job of handling building contracts, and not a five-cent piece went wrong out of more than a billion dollars." In that connection, it's important to note that O'Dwyer built more schools, more hospitals and more public housing than any other mayor in New York's history-even more than Fiorello La Guardia. He made a crusade of his building program. He also pointed out that he had appointed the present mayor of New York, Bob Wagner, to his first New York City job, and that Dr. Luther Gulick, now administrator of New York City and acclaimed by Republicans and Democrats alike, had first been appointed by O'Dwyer. Another man he appointed, Charles Preus- se, is now assistant administrator. I asked O'Dwyer about the problem of race-track gambling and a proposal of his which had caused headaches and criticism. "People will gamble," he said. "They gamble in New York or any other place. And I thought that since they're bound to gamble, why not make it legal and take it away from the underworld. By that I meant, put it in under state control. When I proposed this, I got a storm of criticism. But since then I notice that today some of the newspapers have come round to that point of view." Mason Hall. Mr. George Baker will speak on the Detroit school system, All welcome! For appointments, contact the Bur- eau of Appointments, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS- Monday, March 15: Harris-Seybold Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, will have a representative at the Bureau of Appointments on March 15 to inter- view June men graduates in Bus. Ad. for the company's Junior Executive Development Program in Sales, Finance, Manufacturing, and Personnel. International Petroleum Co., Ltd., of Colombia, South America, will have in- terviewers on the campus on March 15 to talk with Colombian nationals about both summer and permanent employ- ment in Colombia. Men with degrees or work in Accounting, Bus. Ad., Chem- istry, Economics, Geology, and Chemi- cal, Civil, Electrical, Industrial and Mechanical Engineering are eligible to schedule appointments. Tuesday, March 16: Herposheimers Department Store, Grand Rapids, Mich., will visit the cam- pus on March 16 to interview June men and women graduates in Bus. Ad., LS&A, and Commercial Education for the store's Executive Training Program leading to store management. Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co., De- troit, Mich., will have a representa- tive at the Bureau on March 16 to in- terview June men graduates, Bus. Ad. or LS&A, for the company's insurance sales program. Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Co., Chicago, Il., will visit the Bureau on March 16 to talk with June men grad- uates in Bus. Ad., LS&A, orrLaw about the company's training program for positions in Underwriting, Claim Ad- justing, Accounting, Statistics, Safety Engineering, and Auditing. The com- pany's representative will also see June women graduates in Bus. Ad. or LS&A for secretarial, statistical, or accounting positions in Chicago. wednesday, March 17: American Airlines of New York City will have a representative on the cam- pus on March 17 to interview June men graduates (veterans) in Bus. Ad. (Ac- counting), Economics, or Statistics for their supervisory training program in the Treasury Department. Pan American World Airways System, New York City, will visit the Bureau on March 17 to interview single June men gradates in all fields for its Sales Management Training Program. Boy Scouts of America, Chicago, Ill., will be on the campus on March 17 to interview June men graduates in all fields for professional careers in scout- ing.. National Casualty Co., Detroit, Mich., will have a representative at the Bur- eau on March 17 to talk with June men graduates, Bus. Ad. or Law, who are veterans about the company's Exe- cutive Training Program in Home Of- fice Insurance Administration. Wed. and Thurs., March 17 and 18: Camp Fire Girls, Inc., New York City, will have an interviewer at the Bureau on March 17 and 18 to talk with wo- men students interested in either sum- mer or permanent work with the organ- ization. Positions as Field Directors are available throughout the U. S. to wo- men graduates; summer camp jobs are available to both graduate and uner- graduate women. Students wishing to schedule ap- pointments with any of the companies listed above may contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Lecture and Discussion, jointly spon- sored by the Decentralized Training Program for post-graduate medical stu- dents and the Department of Biological Chemistry. Armand J. Quick, national authority on the chemistry of blood clotting and hemorrhagic diseases, will be a guest speaker at the University Mon., Mar. 15. A lecture and discus- sion on "The Memorrhagic Diseases, Diagnosis, and Treatment" will be held in 319 West Medical Building at 9:30 a.m. This is intended primarily for the post-graduate medical students in the Decentralized Training Program but is open to all who are interested. A second lecture, "The Coagulation Mechanisms," will be given at 2:15 p.m. on Monday in 1300 Chemistry Build- ing. This topic should interest bo- chemists, medical students, and medi- cal staff members. Academic Notices Seminar in Logic and Foundations, Fri., Mar. 12, at 4 p.m. in 411 Mason Hall. Dr. Robert McNaughton will dis- cuss a paper by Kleene on "Recursive- ness and Axiomatizability." Department of Biological Chemistry Seminar. Dr. Saul Roseman, of the Rackham Arthritis Research Unit, will be the guest speaker at the seminar of the Department of Biological Chem- istry in 319 West Medical Building at 10:15 a.m., Sat,, Mar. 13. His topic will be "Action of extracts of E. coli on n- acetyl glucosamine." Potential Theory Seminar will meet Fri., Mar. 12, in 3010 Angell Hall. Mr. Robert Wasserman will talk on "Some Explicit Potential Functions and theirI Implications."' Student Recital. Alevandra Moncrieff, pianist, will be heard in a program presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree, at 8:30 Monday evening, Mar. 15, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The recital will include works by Brahms, Ravel, Barber, and Beethoven, and will be open to the general public. Miss Moncrieff is a pupil of Ava Comin Case. Events Today S.R.A. Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, 4:30 6:00. New watercolor paintings by Miss Margaret Dorman will be added to the present exhibit. S.R.A. Council will be host. Everyone welcome. Psychology Club. There will be a general meeting this afternoon at 3:15 in 2429 Mason Hall. Semester pro- jects will be begun. All members and prospective members are urged to at- tend 1 The Hawaii Club will have an IM get-together on Friday night from 7 to 10 o'clock. Members will be able to take part in many sports. Guests are welcome. Hillel. Sabbath dinner, 6 p.m. Even- ing services, 745. Michigan Christian Fellowship. In- formal discussion meeting on the topic of "Missions," 7:30 tonight in Lane Hall. Episcopal StudentFoundation. Can- terbury Club, 7:30 p.m., tonight, at Canterbury House. "Martin Luthe: Right or Wrong?" The Reverend Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor at the Lutheran Stu- dent Center, will discuss issues raised by the current film, "Martin Luther." Episcopal Student Foundation. Tea from 4 to 5:15 today at Canterbury House followed by Student-Faculty led Evensong, Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. The Congregational-Disciples Guild. ifd-Week Meditation in Douglas Chapel, following devotionals from "Manhood of the Master," 5:05-5:30 p.m. Fresh- man Discussion Group at Guild House, 7 to 8 p.m. Topic: "The Significance of Lent." Wesleyan Guild. There you see. Back- wards done dancing square for ready be and, backwards clothes your wear. 8:00 at tonight Party Backwards! 3rd Laboratory Bill of Plays will be presented by the Department of Speech at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Included on the program are Aristophanes' satiric comedy, THE FROGS; Roupert Brooke's thriller, LITHUANIA; and Frank Wedekind's ironic comedy, THE TENOR. All seats are reserved at 25c each. Tickets are available at the Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. Coming Events Episcopal Student Foundation. Break- fast and vocational Quiet Hour for all men contemplating the Priesthood, fol- lowing 8:30 a.m. Ember Day service of Holy Communion, Chapel of St. Mich- ael and All Angels, Sat., Mar. 13. Square Dance, students and faculty welcome, Lane Hall. No admission. charge. Saturday, 8-12 p.m. The Congregational-Disciples Guild. Guild party at Pilgrim Hall of the Con- gregational Church, Sat., Mar. 13, 8 pm. Informal Folk sing at Muriel Lester Co-op, 900 Oakland, on Sunday, Mar. 14, at a p.m. Everyone invited Inter-cooperative Council. All stu- dents considering living or boarding in a co-op house during the fall or the summer session are invited to come to dinner any night next week, at anyone of the six co-op houses. Please call NO 8-6872. The Inter-Arts Union will hold its weekly meeting 2 p.m. Saturday at the League. All interested persons are invited. t1 1 r ONE OF THE more conspicuous phenome- non in contemporary international po- litics is the trend toward unified action. This trend has been most pronounced in the post-war period during which we have seen the formation of numerous economic and military alliances. The prospect of a m p1 i f y i n g existing arrangements throughout the Western Hemisphere has been the topic of discussion at the Tenth Inter-American Conference at Caracas. More specifically, the United States has introduced a resoution to the conference calling for action against the threat of in- ternational communism. This resolution contains two sections. The first states that if the worldwide Communist movement should come to dominate the political insti- tutions cf any American nation, it will be construed as a threat to the sovereignty of all and that collective action should be called upon; the second part calls for an ex- change of information among the several states for the purpose of fulfilling past measures to stifle Communism. To us in the United States this resolution appears, undoubtedly, extremely mild and its two recommendations seem necessary minimum steps to meet Communist subver- sion. Furthermore much speculation has been aroused concerning the adequacy of this resolution, many feeling that it needs much practical implementation. Obviously, as the resolution now stands it is nothing more than an inapplicable platitude. To be sure, its denunciation of international Com- munism is laudable, but these words mean nothing unless behind them is the prospect of materially hard-hitting measures. This proposal has, as can be expected, aroused much dissension at the confer- ence thus making unanimous acceptance an unattainable goal. Attacks against it. have driven right at the heart of hemis- pherical affairs. The doctrine of non- intervention holds preeminence as the basis for sound relations between the sev- eral nations. Many other Latin-American states besides Guatemala contend that the United States has unduly intervened in their affairs. This indeed is a powerful antagonism to reckon with and poses a definite problem for the United States in the establishment of harmonious Inter- American relations. Other objections have also been leveled at the resolution, the chife one being that as it now stands, its measures are insufficient. In order to alleviate their social and eco- nomic problems, many of the Latin-Ameri- can states are seeking the aid of the United States. They claim that such aid will help arrest the growth of Communism and they have a valid contention, for Communism easily breeds among disillusioned, discon- tented masses in that its ideology promises to lift them from their economic and socia4 plight. But here again we have a most deli- cate situation because the extension of such aid by the United States would tend to in- crease even more her dominarfbe of the hemisphere-dominance which has already aroused the contempt of many of our Latin- American neighbors. Still another formidable threat to the re- solution is that some of our neighbors to the south don't consider Communism an actual threat. There is ample evidence, how- ever, that Communist parties in Latin-Am- erica are not indigenous groups merely con- cerned with legitimate social and economic reform but rather that they are branches of an international Communist conspiracy di- rected by Moscow. In substantiation, a re- cent issue of the Cominform newspaper de- voted a whole page to the development of the Party in Brazil and even called for an armed revolution in that country. Among the ideas being discussed at the conference is the setting up of an over- all council in Washington to draw up plans for the entire area. But will such an over-all plan be effective in the light that the differences among the several nations are in some cases profound and moreover, that most of the nations are in various stages of development? Obviously not. What may be needed is an agreement of the United States with each of the in- dividual states. We cannot imitate the NATO set-up for here the nations involv- ed are industrially and economically ad- vanced, and also exhibit practically iden- tical social structures. Despite momentous obstacles, the trend is definitely toward unity. We must re- alize that a community of interest exists in . Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harry Lunn...........Managing Editor Erie Vetter............ ..City Editor Virginia Voss........ Editorial Director Mike Wolff......Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver. .Assoc. Editorial Director Diane D. Au'Wqrter..Associate Editor tIl- Qi^ -A - Me-s @A--- Helene Simon..........Associate Editor l COncerts Ivan Kaye................Sports Editor IPaul Greenberg.... Assoc. Sports Editor MEXICAN ACCLAIM Organ Recital by Robert Noehren, Marilyn Campbell.. Wome's Editor N Ed' r in rsUniversity Organist, 4:15, Sunday aft- Kathy Zeisler....Assoc. Women's Editor INMEXICO CITY they crowd around Bill ODwyerlin estaur ants ernoon, March 14. During this series Chuck Kelsey...Chief Photographer or in the American Club as if he were still ambassador. He's so Mr. Noehren is featuring the "Eigh-__huc__Ke___y_......____________raph__ popular that it's embarrassing to the new ambassador, Francis White. teen Great Chorales" of Bach, and his second program will continue with BCsinePss Sta Sitting with O'Dwyer in the office where he practices law seven of the famous works. Other Bach with a Mexican partner, you can understand why he enjoys Mex- compositions to be played are: Toc- Thomas Treeger......Business Manager cata. Adagio and Fugue in C major. William Kaufman Advertising Manager ico and why he does not go back to New York until he gets good Canzona in D minor, and Prelude and Harlean Hankin....Assoc. Business Mgr. and ready. Fugue in D minor. The general public William Seiden......Finance Manager There's not only the heartache connected with the wife who walk- will be admitted without charge. Don Chisholm.....Circulation Manager ed out when the going was tough, but there are other sentimental reasons. Program of American Music spon- Telephone NO 23-24-1 Most Irishmen are sentimental, and Bill O'Dwyer perhaps is more School of b sic, wi o a be presentedt so than most. Born in Ireland. migrating to Brooklyn where he be- 8:30, Sunday evening, March 14, in Aud- Member came a cop, a district attorney, a judge, and one of the most popular itorium A. Angell Hall. The program ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS mayors in recent history, O'Dwyer was heartbroken when the cityIby Frances Elaine Hauss, pianist, fol- for which he had built so many schools, hospitals and housing turn- lowed by Three songs from Jewish Life, ed against him. In a few short days the papers which had been by Elaine Friedman, senior composition Member of The Associated Press I} .V 4