.PAGE FOUR ..it-1e tt tltJL -l M -. " 3 ;as: k tJ,, I . pwit i it, 1. 54 ;y THE FOREIGN STUDENT: Long Walk in a Desert (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles on the' foreign student by a graduate student in journalism from Amsterdam.) By EDDY LACHMAN T WAS ONE of those beautiful warm fall days on the campus. The trees were re- splendent and the multiple colors of the shirts and sweaters worn by the thousands who, laughing and talking, walked leisurely around the halls, spelt nothing but sheer happiness. On the diagonal, two of the thousand foreign students at the University met. One was from India and one was from Europe. They asked each other how they felt. And they agreed on on thing immediately: they felt like they were walking through a desert. How come? The town of Ann Arbor on this cool autumn morning revealed noth- Sng that made you think of a desert. Nor did the friendly, open faces of the students bear any resemblance to the dry faces of Beduins and Arabs. No camels around ei- ther except the ones you smoke. Something wrong with those students? Yes and no. They come from completely different sur- roundings; they left their friends; most of them have never been thrust together with such a huge quantity of people. It is true that they are not left with the feeling that nobody cares about them. The Institute of International Education has arranged their }stay here; they have been received and regis- 'tered by the International Center of the Uni- versity; get-togethers, trips, mixers, etc., have been arranged for them. But somehow -,these have not done the trick. The two stu- dents have .not made any friends yet. They feel like they are walking in the desert. The peculiar malady they are suffering from is cultural shock, the well-known butt little spoken of illness that befalls every person in a foreign country. Most American students in Europe suffer from it too. The anthropologist Cora Dubois of Chicago Uni- versity says about cultural shock: "It is something' like extending your customary and conventional smile to indicate good will and receiving as an answer a deadpan state; or like extending your hano and seeing it ig- nored in favor .of the sawasti gesture of the Thai." When you lose your habitual sur- roundings and the subconscious cues with which you keep in contact with your daily life, when you-are, without knowing it, con- stantly irritated by the groping for words in a foreign language, when you are surround- ed by people with a different set of values than your own, you get cultural shock. You then try to find people who suffer from the same disease. That's why you find in the halls of cer- tain hotels in Paris Americans sitting around together. They don't know each other very well, but now they suddenly be- come intimate friends. They gripe about the French in broad generalizations. While they might usually be "live-and-let-live" patriots, they become chauvinists now. To an Englishman abroad his five o'clock tea is more important than it will ever be at home. An American in Asia will think that nothing is quite as important as having American beer (well-iced). The little things of home become terribly important and the little things one does not like about the host country become even more important. When you begin hearing broad and unusually der- rogatory comments like the Burmese are lazy, the Indians are ignorant, the French are grasping, the Americans are materialist- ic, or naive or shallow-then you can be fairly sure that the speaker is suffering from cultural shock. And walking along in his host country he feels like the two on the diag felt. * * * * rP{ ERE is another thing. Most of the for- eign students who are here on Fulbright or other grants are older than the American students. They find themselves put back into what they see as a high school atmosphere. In Europe for instance, a professor is still a professor, a "learned one" who lives in the distant land of knowledge. He is not a discussion leader or an advisor on how to study. The European student is left free to come and listen or not to come and listen. He has perhaps one exam a year, consisting of a personal interview with his professor. Comprehensive exams, ten-minute quizzes, blue books to his mind belong to high school. The system of supervision outside the uni- versity buildings -no drinking, living in university approved houses, hours for the coeds, driving permits-appears to the for- eigner as an interference with the individu- al liberty of the student. Slowly the foreigner begins to feel that no individual feelings or utterances are possible in this desert of rules, regulations and conforming personalities. After his in- itial enthusiasm of meeting America and Americans, he soon becomes tired and dis- illusioned with meeting hundreds of new faces which, friendly as they might be, seem bent rather on meeting him than knowing him. One foreign student told me: "I am used to talking deep into the night about highly intellectual affairs. I laugh at intellectualism too. But not quite so steadfastly and loud as the American students. I am used to having two or three intimate friends, with whom I share my deepest thoughts. I am not used to having a hundred acduaintances with whom I only exchange a desert full of platitudes.' This state of cultural' shock, of complete loneliness in the crowd, of hate against a mass society bent on making it members conform to a certain pattern, se'ts in two to six months after the student has reached the university. A study by Norman Kiell on In- dian students in the U.S. showed even a marked decrease in favorable opinion about this country after four to forty months here. Is the student exchange program a failure then? Some of these signs seem to indicate that it is not as successful as it could be. Most of the "grant-students" leave the coun- try after one year. It is very probable that they will talk at home about the frustra- tions and irritations encountered here. Many of them will think back to their time in America as a long walk in a desert, in search of an equally lonely traveller with whom they can share their fear of what p- pears to them the greatest emptiness ey-tr created. (Next, THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER) An Editorial [T IS NATURAL, following an event like the recent demise of the Arts Theater Club, that there should be much poking behind the unbalanced balance sheets to ferret out the real reason why. For those closest to the theater, the explanation has seemed to lie somewhere between inade- quate management and the difficulty of getting sufficient community support be- hind an experimental theater group. For- tunately, most of the post-mortems have indulged in little finger-pointing; neither the theater nor the town is solely to blame, and there is not much long-run comfort in blaming one or the other anyway. To those who voice the honest protest of whether such a theater can ever survive here there is only one answer: it did sur- vive, even if on a meatball diet, for three years. With a few less professional actors and reactivated community interest it could possibly make a go of it sometime in the future. But for the present, 180 canvas chairs have been folded or awarded to creditors, the discussion nights and coffee inter- missions and Children's Theater produc- tions are things-very nice things-of the past. And on the other side, young actors already typed on Broadway as juvenile delinquents can no longer come here to play Knights of Burning Pestles, obscure but interesting scripts will lose one more chance of being gi~ven a first or second or third run. What the Arts Theater closing leaves in terms of current Ann Arbor drama is a group of organizations admittedly dedi- cated to the pursuit of producing the tried and true. We do not ask that they deviate from this pursuit, only that they attempt to put more emphasis on the true than the tried. The Speech Department, the Student.Players, the Drama Festival can- not count on absorbing the Arts Theater membership unless they adopt some of the group's liveliness and professional stand- ards as well. -The Senior Editors (Continued from Page 2) "Louder !" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN MUSIC At Tulane and Georgia - Censorship THAT GORGON of the press, censorship, has reared its ugly head in two South- ern colleges leaving a bad taste in the. mouths of those who trumpet intellectual freedom. At Tulane University, the student coun- cil severly reprimanded the student paper,' Hullabalo, for printing "opinionated ma- terial" without the consent of the paper's faculty advisors. Th~e State Sets A Record WHEN THE STATE of Michigan recently announced that its total of traffic f a- talities in 1953 was higher than that of any previous year in history, most people dedi- cated a moment to muse that the fact was interesting and proceeded to dismiss it os bearing no other significance. This reaction, or lack of reaction, to the announcement is a rather conspicuous in- dication of one of the two factors behind the high total. It reflects the lack of inter- est and carelessness concerning the safe operation of an automobile which studies have revealed is the chief cause of acci- dents. The other cause is probably that there are more cars than ever. But the lack of interest in safety on the roads is one that can be 2orrected, not by ostentatious campaigns, but by individual determination. The carelessness in driving Perhaps the more serious of the two in- stances occurred at the University of Georgia where an anti-discrimination editorial in- curred the wrath of Roy Harris, politically powerful University regent. A second editor- ial criticizing Regent Harris for censuring the Red and' Black, Georgia's undergraduate paper, resulted in the resignation of the two top editors. After a second pair of editors quit in disgust, the paper was left to a for- mer assistant sports editor and a reporter. All copy is now rigorously inspected by facul- ty advisors before the paper goes to press. Censorship of ideas is bad in any in- stance but it is particularly odious at an institution presumably devoted to the fur- thering of intellectual concepts. The Tulane student council showed an in- tolerable ignorance of the proper function of a newspaper when it admonished the Hulla- baloo for printing "opinionated material." To force students who are being trained to think for themselves to go running to the faculty before forming opinions is ridiculous; worse than that, it is dangerous. The attitude of Georgia regent, Roy Harris, may be properly summized from some remarks quoted in Time magazine: "Every time I see some of these sissy- squirts writing editorials, I think we need more he-men playing football and less sissies working for newspapers!" It is unfortunate that Regent Harris, in squelching the Red and Black's attempts to strike out against segregation, could rot recognize the importance of a free exchange of ideas in a democracy. But more import- ant, neither the Tulane student council nor Harris realized that it is not only a news- At Hill Auditorium . . TORONTO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Sir Ernest MacMillan, Conductor, with Betty-Jean Hagen, violinist HILL AUDITORIUM played host last night to a very creditable concert by Sir Ernest MacMillan and the Toronto Symphony Or- chestra. Playing their first Ann Arbor con- cert, the orchestra, considered Canada's fin- est, was technically quite proficient. As a unit their tone emphasized an even round- ness, more subdued than the whirlwind bril- liance of an orchestra like the Boston or the plushness usually associated with a French orchestra. The string section particularly shone out as an example of even playing and strict blend. In the Overture to Euryanthe by Weber, it was their precision and versa- tility in rapid allegro passages or quiet lyric- ism that carried the performance. The Two Sketches for String Orchestra on French- Canadian Airs, composed by Sir Ernest, showed them with a lovely softness in the gentle contrapuntal weavings of the first song, Notre Seigneur en pauvre, and a rous- ing vibrancy in the rhythmic second, A Saint Malo. The pieces themselves were skillfully arranged by Sir Ernest, but length in the first caused by too much repetition, and too much reliance on extra effects in the second did diminish their effectiveness somewhat.' A real surprise on the program was Miss Betty-Jean Hagen's performance of Lalo's "Symphonie espagnole." The advance pub- licity for the concert hardly gave her any notice, but she literally stole the concert from Sir Ernest in an interpretation of Lalo's lovely melodies that had vitality, musicianship, and enthusiasm. To say that her playing of this concerto reminded one of a gypsy fiddler does not cheapen her artistry the least as this is exactly the ap- proach these folksy melodies demand, and Miss Hagen's huge tone and accomplish- ed technique easily brought out the work's delicious schmaltz. The main orchestral part of the program included Benjamin Britten's orchestration of Five Movements from Rossmi, Soirees Musicales, Chausson's Symphony in B-flat major, Op. 20, and as an encore William Walton's orchestration of J. S. Bach's "Sheep May Safely Graze." Both the Britten and Walton arrangements were given clear-cut interpretations, and both are intelligent and effective musical settings. The Chausson piece was a tour-de-forcd for Sir Ernest. It is not easy to make hang together as it is one of those endless-flow nineteenth century works. But Sir Ernest understood its underlying dynamic plan, made sense of its never ending gestures, and brought out its best. The woodwinds had their main opportunity here as their flutterings to and fro are an essential part partner. Wallace K. Harrison &o Max Abramovitz architects, New York City. Color slides and movies. Thurs., Feb. 11, 4 p.m., Architecture Auditorium. Thoseinterestedare invited. College of Arhtecture and Design. Academic Notices The Department of Biological Chemi- stry will hold the first seminar of the second semester in 319 West Medical Building at 10:15 a.m., Sat., Feb. 13. Dr. Joseph J. Pfiffner of the Research De- partment, Parke, Davis and Company, will speak on "Pigments of the vita- min B-12 Group." Course 402, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar in the Application of Mathmatics to the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., Feb. 11, at 4 p.m. in 3409 Mason Hall. Mr. William N. Dember of the Psychology Department will speak on "Decision Time as a Distance Func- tion." Romance Linguistics 15. Students enrolled will please meet Thurs., Feb. 11, at 4 p.m., in 208 Romance Lan- guages Building. Class hours will be settled. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics. Organizational meeting for those in- terested will be on Fri., Feb. 12, in 3020 Angell Hall, at 12 noon. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Feb. 11, at 4 in 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Dr. R. K. Ritt. Topic: Theory of Distributions. Aero. Eng. 251. "Theory of Nonlinear System Response," will meet on Wed- nesdays at 11 a.m. and on Thursdays at 1 p.m. in 1075 East Engineering Building. Seminar in Potential Theory. Organ- izational meeting Fri., Feb. 12, at 12 noon, 270 West Engineering Building. Section 12, History 50, Friday 8, will meet in Room 5, Economics Building. Logic Seminar will meet on Thurs., Feb. 11, 4 p.m., 414 Mason Hall, to dis- cuss the agenda for the second semes- ter. Doctoral Examination for Rodger Da- vid Mitchell, Zoology; thesis: "Anatomy, Life History, and Evolution of the Mites Parasitising Fresh Water Mussels," Fri., Feb. 12, 2089 Natural Science Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman. H. van der Schalie. The University Extension Service an- nounces openings in the following classes: (Registration for these classes may be made in 164 School of Busi- ness Administration, on Monroe St., 6:30-9:30 p.m., or in 4501 Administra- tion Building, 8:00-5:00 through the day.) Family Health. Acquaints the student with some of the individual family and community factors essential to health- ful living. Emphasis will be placed on helping the student to understand the importance of heredity, nutrition, and housing; and on the provision and util- ization of services for maternal and child health and for the prevention and care of illness. The family will be treated as the basic unit in society, and the mental and emotional as well as the physical aspects of health will be considered. (Public Health Practice 176. two hours of undergraduate credit.) $18. Instructor, Donald C. Smith, Resident Lecturer in Public Health Practice and Instructor in Pediatrics. Thurs., Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m., 171 Busi- ness Administration Bldg. Modern European and American Painting. Modern painting becomes more meaningful and significant if one has some knowledge of its historical development-both from a cultural and an artistic point of view. This course will deal with European and American painting from the early nineteenth cen- tury to the present day. Particular em- phasis will be placed on such key fig- ures as Manet, Homer, VanGogh, Ce- zanne, Picasso, Marin, and Matisse. Lec- tures will be illustrated with lantern slides, and pertinent films will be shown from time to time. Sixteen weeks. 18. Instructor, Nathan T. Whitman, In- structor in Fine Arts. Thurs., Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m., 4 Tappan Hall. Painting. Advanced Course. Gives in- dividual attention to the technical problems of painting in either oil or water color. Designed primarily for stu- dents who have taken previous Exten- sion courses in painting or who have had comparable training. Permission of the instructor is required before regis- tration. Sixteen weeks. $18. Instructor, Richard Wilt. Assistant Professor of'Drawing and Painting. Thurs., Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m., 415 Archi- tecture Bldg. The Film in America. Lectures, films, and discussion focused on the question of whether the cinema, born of Amei- can creative genius, can take its place with other already established art forms, such as the novel, poetry, sculpture, or painting. A survey of the notable ar- tistic achievements of the film and the significant cultural relationships be- tween the films and society. Beginning with the silent motion pictures, lec- tures will trace the development of artistic techniques through various stages to the beginning of the present era of sound films. A few of the more unique and interesting films to be shown are: Queen Elizabeth, with the great Sarah Bernhardt, The New York Hat, directed by D. W. Griffith, with Mary Pickford and Lionel Barrymore, All Quiet on the Western Front, with Lew Ayres and Louis Wolheim, and Anna Christie, with Greta Garbo, Char- les Bickford, and Marie Dressler. Eight weeks, $5. Coordinator, Marvin Feiheim, Assist- ant Professor of English. Thurs., Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m., Auditorium C, Angell HalL TheRecorder and Its Music. Inter- mediate Course. Active participation in music by means of a study of the re- corder 'and its music. The fascinating and beautiful instrument of Everyman, the recorder, has remained virtually un- changed in design for 800 years. Its dul- cet little voice has spoken for the some- time musician and the artist in cot- tages and castles, and today the man who would while away a few hours in the making of music finds at his hand the ideal instrument for this purpose. Class limited to thirty. Early registra- tion is advised. Eight weeks.$ 8. Instructor, William H. Stubbins, As- sociate Professor of Band Instruments. at $12, $9, and $8 each. Beginning March 10 all unsold season tickets, if any re- main, will go on sale for single concerts at $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, and $1.50 each- at the offices of the University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower. Events Today Phi Sigma Lecture. "Pathology In the Future Forest Practice in Alaska" (il- lustrated bysmotion pictures), by Dow V. Baxter, Department of Forestry, School of Natural Resources, this even- ing, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Public is cordially invited. Hillel: 2 p.m.-Hillel News and pub- licity committee meeting for those in- terested in organizing and working on a Hillel newspaper. Those who cannot attend this meeting please contact Hal Josehart, 334 Cooley, East Quad. 4 p.m.-Reception for new students. Gilbert and Sullivan Society. Tryouts for "Thespis" and "The Sorcerer" in the League tonight from 7-9; Friday 7-9; Saturday 2 p.m.-6 p.m.; Sunday 2 p.m.-10 p.m. Everyone urged to come. Foresters' Club. Important meeting will be held this evening at 7:30 p.m., in 2054 Natural Science Building. Speaker will be Hyland R. Jones, Train- ing Director, Asplundh Tree Expert Co. Paul Bunyan Dance publicity will be organized. Jug Band rehearsal after meet4ng. Refreshments. La p'tite causette will meet this aft- ernoon from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.' in the wing of the Michigan Union Cafeteria. This is an informal group for those who wish to practice andrimprove their French conversation Everyone is wel- come t Christian Science Organization. Tes- timony meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m., Fireside Room, Lane Hall. All are wel- come. International Center Weekly Tea will be held this afternoon from 4:30 to 6, third floor, Rackham Building. Please note the change at place from the In- ternational Center to the Rackham Building. Ukranian Students' Club. Meeting will be held today at 7 p.m. in the Made- lon Pound House (1024 Hill St.) Guests are welcome. S.R.A. Social Action Committee meets at Lane Hall, 4 p.m. Baha'i Student Group will sponsor an Introduction to the Baha'i world Faith, followed by informal discussion, to- night at 8 p.m., Michigan League. All interested students welcome! Union Student Offices Tryout Smoker, a meeting for all men interested in joining the staff of the Student Offices. Meeting today at 7:15 in Room 3-A of the Union. The Congregational-Disciples Guild. Mid-week Meditation today from 5:00- 5:30 p.m., Douglas Chapel. Freshman Discussion Group, 7 to 8 p.m., Guild House. ERLI(R (ONFi~NES I c y _ aka .. Xette/'4 TO THE EDITOR . The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. T danger to the country. This is suf- Three Statements . * ficient reason for every citizen and To the Editor: organization to make plain that the people will refuse to surrender IN THE PAST six weeks, Eisen- inalienable democratic rights. hower, Dulles and McCarthy -Mike Sharpe, Chairman have delivered themselves of cer- Labor Youth League tam ideas which should make us all sit up and take notice. 1. The President proposed toCo r . create a new category of political To the Editor: crime which he entitled "actions akin to treason." Whoever. could ON BEHALF of both past and be fitted into this slot would be present members of the Uni- stripped of citizenship. Finding it versity Symphony Orchestra, I impossible to label legitimate po- would like to correct the reporter litical activity as treason, it would who stated, in a front page article be possible with the new category on the Toronto Symphony Con- to label such activity as "akin to cert, February 10, that Chausson's treason," and to bring down ban- B Flat Symphony was being per- ishment upon the head of anyone formed in Ann Arbor for the first who dared to challenge the pow- time since 1948, and Britten's ers that be. "Soirees Musicales" for the first 2. On Jan. 12, Dulles declared time, period. that it was the government's poli- On May 24, 1953, the University cy to use weapons of mass destruc- Orchestra, under the dircetion of tion "to retaliate instantly by Wayne Dunlap, performed the means and places of our choosing" Chausson work in Hill Auditorium, against "aggression." This state- as well as the final movement of ment plainly means that the Ad- the Soirees, Portions of the latter ministration is prepared to cir- had also been played on children's cumvent the right of Congress to concerts on previous occasions, declare war, to define "aggression" I in it ow.emad ntewrs If Daily reporters do not wvish to H its own terms, and, ti the words attend concerts given by their own of Dr. Harold Urey, to raise the School of Music, it is their own af- threat "to launch an atomic World fair; but when writing an article 3arI." a of this sort, they should, to gain a 3. Joseph McCarthy, in seeking complete picture of campus musi- $214,000 from the Senate (which cal activity, look further than the voted 85-1 in favor) asserted "We files of the University Musical So- will send its (Communist Party's) ciety. leaders to jail, not because of tech- -Richard Thurston nical conviction of espionage in the courts, but for contempt of this E committee." Finding it impossible sE sENEMY, as the President to convict his political opponents said, is materialism, and the of espionage in the courts, Mc- greatest advocate of materialism Carthy seeks to by-pass the "tech- in our days is Soviet Russia, the nicality" of trial by jury, and to country where the very notion of accuse, try and convict anyone he "unto God" has been savagely out- chooses via Star Chamber proceet- lawed. Our own materialism has ings. - not much to do with comfort or What do these propositions gadgets. It comes rather from the mean, but that in its approach to tendency to restrict our allegiance political opposition, international to the secular side of life-a tend- relations, and the civil rights of ency which, peculiarly enough, is { citizens, the Administration is accompanied by the effort to nar- prepared flagrantly to violate the row the sphere of government in Constitution, that it no longer even order to restore the "freedom of pretends to adhere to the provi- the individual"-or rather that of __- -- - 1. h ifnoa r ~r aail ,. _ . ,' tom-. S: - - ~ :""" "~ r1 i9 T , IA.YWM; s- "ST 4 s r Y i 6 The Young Democrats will meet this evening at 7:30 p m. in Room 3-S of the Union. Mr. Gus Schoe, President of the Michigan C.I.O., wil. speak on "Labor Looks at Eisenhower." All students interested in hearing Mr. Scholle or wanting information about our organization will be very Welcome, The Kaffee Stunde of the Deutscher Verein meets this afternoon at 3:15 in the taproom of the Union. New stu- dents as well as old are welcomed to this informal group to practice their conversational German. Orthodox Students Society. Meeting this evening in the Upper Room of Lane Hall at 7:30. Bring along a friend. Kappa Phl. There will be a business meeting tonight at 7:15 at the Metho- dist Church. Young Republicans. The University of Michigan Young Republican Club will hold its first meeting of the Second Semester this evening at 7:45 in the Michigan Union. Professor James K. Pollock, chairman of the Political Science Dept., will speak on "why I Still Like Ike," a review of the Administra- tion's first year in office. Prospective new members are welcome and re- freshments will be served. Modern Dance Club. Organizational meeting for the second semester will be held tonight at 7:30 in the dance studio of Barbour Gymnasium. All in- terested men and women are invited to attend; experience is not necessary. U. of M. Sailing Club. Meeting to- night, 7:30 p.m., 311 West Engineering Building. Final plans will be made for M.C.S.A. Convention. Coming Events Anthropology Club. There will be a SPECIAL MEETING of the Anthro- pology Club on Fri., Feb. 12, at 7:45 p.m. in the West Conference Room at the Rackham Building. The Guest Speaker will be DR. MEYER FORTES who will speak on "Recent Develop- ments in African Ethnography." EV- ERYONE IS INVITED. The Regular meeting of the Anthro- pology Club will be held on Feb. 16, at 7:45 p.m. in the EAST Conference Room of the Rackham Building. DR. E. R. SERVICE will speak on "Facts and Theories in Ethnology." Refreshments will be served. Psychology Club. Old members-There will be a meeting to discuss plans for this semester on Fri., Feb. 12, at 3:15 in 2429 Mason Hall. This meeting is important, please attend. Newman Club. New Student Dance will be held Fri., Feb. 12, from 9-12 at the Father Richard Center. Music for dancing will be provided by a well- known campus orchestra. Refreshments and entertainment will be provided by the Newmanites. All new students are urged to come and get acquainted with the Newman Club and its members. Lutheran Student Center. There'll be a party at the Lutheran Student Cen- ter on Fri., Feb. 12, at 8 p.m. New students are especially welcome. Roger Williams Guild. Weekly party, Friday evening at 8 o'clock, in the Guild House. An added attraction will be the showing of slides portraying some interesting Japanese customs. Episcopal Student Foundation. Can- terbury Club, 7:30 p.m. Fri., Feb. 12 at Canterbury House. Professor Roma A. King, Jr. will lead a discussion of recordings of Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral." Episcopal Student Foundation. Tea from 4 to 5:30 at Canterbury House, Fri., Feb. 12. All students invited. Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, Friday, 4:15- 6:00 p.m. Selected readings from the life of Abraham Lincoln featured. Ev- eryone invited. S.R.A. Workeamp in the Ann Arbor area will be held all day Sat., Feb. 13. Those interested in future Saturday or week-end workcamps may contact Jean Horton at Lane Hail. The Congregational-Disciples Guild. The Graduate-Professional Group will meet Saturday evening at 8 p.m. at the Guild House. , 1 g L, 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 Eric Vetter. .............City Editor Virginia Voss...... . Editorial Director Mike Wolff....... Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver.. Assoc. Editorial Director Diane D. AuWerter.....Associate Editor Helene Simon..........Associate Editor Ivan Kaye............... Sports Editor Paul Greenberg....Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell......Women's Editor Kathy Zeiser....Assoc. Women's Editor Chuck Kelsey... Chief Photographer Business Staff Thomas Traeger......Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin. . ..Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seiden........Finance Manager Don Chisholm.....Circulation Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1 Member !