PAGE FOUR THE '111CHlGrAIN DAILY F R IDAT , MAY 7, 1954 PAGE FOUR 1'liE MICliI4iAN I)AILY FRIDAY, MA~ 2, 1954 McCarthy-Army Hearings: A First-Hand Report (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following letter was written by Cal Samra, Editorial Director of The Daily last year.) To The Editor: HAVING RECENTLY attended the Mc- Carthy-Army hearings and witnessed first-hand the absurdity of it all, I have never been so firmly convinced that this country would be far better off if Americans were less prone to institutionalize their fol- lies and parade them before the eyes of the world. Aside from an uncomfortable mo- ment when a myopic old wench mistook me for G. David and asked me for an autograph, I have never been more thoroughly amused by a spectacle since I last witnessed the awarding of degrees at University com- mencement exercises. The obstreperous Senator from Wis- consin is squirming so noticeably it would be a pity, however, to end the hearings at a juncture when the American public is finally getting an idea of what McC-ism really is. At the moment, even the flies are fleeing. On a train back, I happened to sit next to a distinguished-looking gentleian, who, for all my questioning, was curiously reticent and would not venture an opinion on the hearings. He introduced himself as John Marshall Butler, GOP Senator from Mary- land, once an ardent McCarthy supporter and admirer who owed his election to anoth- er doctored photo. Not even Senator B. would put in a good word for Joe. The case of Pvt. Schine has inspired the dedication of the following ballad to his illustrated name. Circulated in D.C.'s Na- tional Press Club, it's author remains un- known: . "Oh, here's to Private David Schine! He never would have shone But for Senator McCarthy And his special counsel Cohn, Lacking talents of his own, Found the very kind he wanted In his special counsel Cohn; And Cohn, whose admiration Of himself was most divine, Found complete corroboration In the love of Private Schine. "And so this jolly trio Start out to beat the Dutch; To rid the world of Democrats And Communists and such, And Schine and Cohn they formed a team, The team of Cohn and Schine, And went to hunt for Communists Beyond the River Rhine; They sought them in the night clubs And in the dark beer halls, They questioned them by the moonlight In the market-place and stalls. "Ah, what a jolly life it was! A life so free and hearty, To frisk around from scene to scene For Senator McCarthy, While John Q. Public paid the bills For caviar and wine .- It was a life of purple thrills For Messrs. Cohn and Schine ! What fun to cuff a diplomat And slap him in the face, Or push a general around And put him in his place. "And when the army bugle called Across the salty main, And Mr. Schine was summoned To his homeland once again To don an Army uniform Though tailor-made, a beauty And then report to GHQ For military duty. The Chief of Staff explained aghast; We've sinned against Divinity; We've drafted into uniform One corner of the Trinity!' "But Private Schine was quite benign; 'Your sin I do condone, But remember, I'm a friend of Joe's And Special Counsel Cohn; So, make it easy for me, pal, And everything is fine, But don't forget that Joe and Cohn Are buddie-pals of mine.' And Private Schine did rise and shine, And, glory, how he shone, As did befit a friend of Joe's And Special Counsel Cohn. "Two captains pressed his uniform, And a colonel, it is said, Stood respectfully beside him While breakfasted in bed. At night a four-star general Would drive up in a jeep And tell him bed-time stories Till he finally went to sleep, So here's to Private David Schine And, Lord, how he has shone, As the friend of Joe McCarthy And his special counsel Cohn!" -Pvt. Cal Samra Mr. Dulles and Mr. Knowland By WALTER LIPPMANN BEFORE THE Western powers can take a stand at Geneva on Indo-China, Mr. Laniel must get a vote of confidence from the French Assembly in Paris, and in Wash- ington the President and Secretary Dulles must in effect get one from Sen. Knowland. It is all very well to take about united ac- tion and about saving this, that, and the other thing. The saving will have to be done, if it is done at all, by governments competent to take decisions. The United States government is not now competent to take decisions. It can play no useful part in Indo-China and in Southeast Asia unless and until the Ad. ministration can count upon the confi- dence and the support of the Senate in negotiating with our allies and with our adversaries. If the only position that the President and the Secretary of State are allowed to take is to demand the uncon- ditional surrender of the Viet Minh by the continuation and expansion of the war, they are doomed to a diplomatic de- feat which can cause only the gravest trouble all over the world. There is a notion in what might be de- scribed as highly irresponsible responsible quarters that while it would be better to have allies than not to have them, it would be feasible for the United States alone to take over the war in Indo-China and to win it. This is a most dangerous fantasy for men of power and influence to entertain. Let them, just for a starter on the way back to the realities, ask themselves what the other powers would do if we decided to wage war alone. The other powers would, let us remember, have refused to participate in that war. Having done that, would they then all be benevolent neutrals as the French were pulling out of Indo-China and as we were moving across the Pacific to put ourselves into Indo-China? Cannot our aging juve- niles realize that many of the countries, especially in Asia, will be opposed not only to their own involvment but to the war itself? For they are bound to believetthat if we are involved, the war will probably be spread and then they will be involved too. Sen. Knowland should, therefore, rid him- self of any illusion that we have a choice between fighting with our allies or fighting alone. The only way we can fight in that part of the world is with the full collabora- tion of our allies not only in military action but in diplomatic and political action no less. *, * * * We can hold an island like Okinawa by ourselves. We can keep Formosa out of the control of Peking. But on the main- land of Asia, we do not have the power to defend large territory with a massive pop- ulation unless we are inside a coalition which includes at least some of the coun- tries of Asia. Gen. Eisenhower knows that as well as any living man. For when he was Chief of Staff he participated in for- mulating the doctrine which underlies it. American military power, which is on the sea and in the air, can hold islands, can deny the use by an enemy of strategic points near the coast of the great continent. But it cannot occupy, it cannot pacify, it cannot control the mainland, even in the coastal areas much less in the hinterland Any American who commits American power in violation of this principle is taking an uncalculated and an incalculable risk. * * * * The question which needs now to be answered in Washington is this: Will Sen. Knowland permit and will he support a policy of united action? A policy of united action must mean united action every- where-at Geneva and in Indo-China, now and later, at the conference table and in the field. It must be united action not only with dependents and clients like Pres- ident Rhee and Chiang Kai-shek but the great power of the Commonwealth and of' the French Union, who ar6 our allies all over the globe. If to this question the answer is yes. then there is no reason at all why a compromise to end the war in Viet Nam should mean the loss of the whole of Southeast Asia. For if Mr. Knowland will allow the United States to cooperate with Great Britain and with Canada. and with the other powers of the Commonwealth, then we shall be negotiat- ing with the Communists from a position of strength. But if Mr. Knowland's answer is no, and that our position must be irreconcilable though we must play the hand alone, then our failure is certain, and a great disaster will almost surely follow from that failure. * * * * So if Mr. Dulles is to go back to Geneva and is to play a part suited to the interests and worthy of the dignity of this country, he must be given-what he has never yet had-a mandate from the Senate to nego- tiate, (Copyright, 1954, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) New Books at Library Cost, March - Invitation from Minerva; Philadelphia, Lippincott, 1954. Doyle, Adrian Conan & Carr, John Dick- son - Exploits of Sherlock Holmes; New York, Random House, 1954. T-%-- - ('n- - ( 1 !\.F f 4. . T1n- . F ON TE WAS HINGTON MERRY-GO-HOUND WITH DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON-Unless the Russians pull some unforeseen boner at Geneva, that conference seems slated to be the worst diplomatic defeat for the United States in 20 years. What Geneva has done is show up the fact that the U.S.A. no longer holds the world's initiative, the balance of power, the trump cards, in the cold war. In Geneva, other diplomats did not come knocking at Dulles' door to find out what the United States wanted. They knocked at Molotov's instead. For the first time, at Geneva, the United States went back to the days of Hoover and Roosevelt when we could not call the tunes at international conferences. Time after time in those inspired important diplomatic gatherings, only to have them end in failure. This was not because either a Democratic or a Republican administration was in power, or because we didn't try hard. It was because Nazi-Fascist leadership was too strong and because we were too divided at home. So we coasted . . . downhill . . . into war. Today strong Communist leadership has replaced Nazi-Fascist leadership-at a time when the United States has become woefully divided at home. A nation divided against itself cannot lead, and our European allies know it. That's why we have lost world initiative. Herbert Hoover lost leadership abroad because of the isolationist split in his own Republican party. Roosevelt couldn't gain leadership -until after Pearl Harbor-because of increasing isolation, especially from some of the same crowd that has come back with such vigor to support McCarthy. Today the Kremlin obviously reads the newspapers. So do our Allies. They know that, regardless of what Mr. Dulles may say at Geneva or Paris or London, he can't carry out what he says without certain Republican Senators; without the American people-now con- fused by McCarthy; and without the morale-shot American Army. In other words, John Foster Dulles went to Geneva with almost no trump cards in his hand. And when he got there he proceeded to throw away the one card that Molotov thought was a trump. WILL DULLES RESIGN? ALL THIS WAS WHY Dulles left Geneva amid reports that he would resign . While the reports were denied. it is no secret that the harassed jettepJ 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. No Unicorns at Harvard ture, recognizes that in order to insure the basic democratic foun- To The Editor ordt ions guaranteed inthe Bill of Rights, an atmosphere of com- IR. SWIFT'S letter of April 30th plete individual freedom must pre- came as a great surprise to vail at the hearings being held in me, for I had not expected to find Lansing, May 10, to which student such an attitude in a fellow stu- i and faculty members of our uni- dent. As a law student myself, I versity have been subpoenaed. found the "Unicorn in the Gar- To counteract the inquisitional den" a highly humorous distrac- tactics which permeated all such tion from the ordinary law school congressional investigations and is life, and think that the instigator unabashedly being perpetuated in of this ingenious act, whoever he the Detroit hearings now being may be, should be highly com-j held, we, as members of this uni- mended. I don't believe I had ever versity community, invite every- heard of Mr. Swift until I read one, as Mr. Clardy has so cordially his letter, but he obviously appears done, to be present at theserhear- to be the type of "books for books ings in order to observe the "dem- sake" student who, in his quest for ecratic" procedure. legal dignity, would perhaps have We strongly urge students and been better off to have chosen the all those concerned with preserv- Harvard Law School, where such ing their democratic rights, not "juvenile" disruptions of the aca- only now but in the future, to at- demic are unheard of. However; tend these hearings. Since trans- since the die has been cast, and portation to Lansing will be dif- Mr. Swift is stuck with Michigan ficult we recommend that univer- (and vice-versa), all I can do is sity chartered buses be made avail- suggest that he might find life able, and that all people with cars around here a lot more enjoyable volunteer to take riders along. if he would occasionally take some time off from his conscientious -Diana Styler pursuit of the law, and have a little fun. -Robert B. Fiske, Jr., '55L Clardy's Open Mind , . . P.S. As for the Crease Ball, I To The Editor: think I can safely speak for allT E who attended in saying that it was JIM DYGERT'S report on an in- a roaring success-in spite of the terview with Kit Clardy was absence of Mr. Swift. exceptionally "education" because * * it helped us see how pat and posi- I .1. '' F. r lrrrarrtin Plnrrev _ j tive "open-minded" thinking can A11, 1p4614 .LU1u1L+),44I LU P14* * . and beleaguered Secretary of State has felt terribly depressed. be. Such a relief from the muddle- Once, when heckled before the Senate Foreign Relations Coin- To The Editor: headed thinking of narrow-minded mittee by the leader of his own party, Knowland of California, Dulles E COME FROM New York. liel yn WE Since Clardy is so open-minded, seemed almost on the verge of tears. It's a mighty big city, and, he must have given careful con- "I can't seem to please you gentlemen," he said. "It looks as you can meet all kinds of people sideration to liberal objections to if there's just no way we can conduct foreign affairs to your there. Know what though? We've some of the practices of his cor- liking." discovered that you can meet theI mittee. He has apparently found And, as he departed for Geneva, Dulles told advisers that the same kinds ofapeople in Ann Arbor reasonable answers to these objec- Republican party's Senate leader, Mr. Knowland, seemed to be the too. But we're not writing to tell tions, because the committee has biggest obstacle to Dulles' policies. The senate leader should lead in you about our home town. We not changed its methods. To help supporting Republican policies, not try to block it, he complained. wanted to tell you about some- Clardy in his great task of public thing real funny that happened to education, perhaps Jim Dygert DUL.LES BONER us the other night. could ask him some questions that ECAUSE OF these worries, plus the fact that he was extremely We had dates with a couple of would help the public see the Con- tired and had not enjoyed four weeks of golf, Dulles pulled a sur- fellows, and our housemother did- gressrnan's carefully worked-out prising boner at Geneva. He held a background press meeting in his n't want to allow them into the conclusions. To date, apparently, Geneva hotel room the night before the conference opened at which house. Seems that she objected the just and open-minded reason- he flatly reversed Vice-President Nixon and his own statements about to them cause they had red hair ing of men like Clardy has been U.S. intervention in Indo-China. Categorically he stated that we had and freckles on their noses. We completely hidden from the public no intention of doing anything in Indo-China Three weeks before.: couldn't understand this but she by the insidious liberal press. 'Meaningful Commencement' Means Meaningless Ballot Nixon had told newspaper editors Dulles said we would do no such thi Though Dulles was not quot around the world. But more important, Molotovl author of the nonintervention stat Immediately, Molotov called together, told them to adopt a h surrender in Indo-China. Previo had picked up what seemed to ber planned a conciliatory policy. I States really meant business and he wasn't afraid. So Communist p (Copyright 1954, byt IN VOTING on the calendar referendum in the all-campus elections the student body was given an important opportunity to ex- press its preference regarding the scheduling of final exams. Or was it? Conspicuously missing from the refer- endum ballot was the schedule which was in operation at the University until last year. This plan, which left a longer dead period than the present one, also called for an "unofficial graduation" of seniors. Possibly a better plan may be worked out, but that "better plan" didn't seem to be on the referendum. There seems to be some large problem connected with each of the proposals. The quarter-semester plan is considered impos- sible by the administration, since it would require a complete revamping of credits and course plans. The Reading Period and Brown plans, respectively, would let school out the third and fourth weeks in June, thus putting students at a disadvantage in the competition for summer jobs. The Crary plan would prevent students from taking jobs requiring them to work over the Labor Day weekend, while the Dwyer plan would call for the exam period to begin immediate- ly after Christmas vacation. The plan presently in operation would be most satisfactory of those on the referen- dum, were it not for the single day "dead period" before exams. The only argument against returning to the former plan with its extended study period before the begin- ning of finals seems to be that President Hatcher insists on an "official" graduation of seniors. In a polling of the parents of seniors, and in an all-campus referendum last fall, it was shown that both parents of seniors and the students themselves fa- vored by two to one a longer exam period over the alternative of an "official" grad- uation. Since getting a real diploma at commence- ment rather than two weeks later is not really "more meaningful" to the students who are forced into a speeded-up exam period, it seems a little coercive on the part of the administration that this proposal could not be placed on the ballot. -Mary Kane [ DAILY OFFICI we might even send troops. But said that since red hair and freck- Here are some of the many pos- ing at all.; les are sort of in the minority the sible questions that could be an- ed directly, this made headlines otherrkids' parents might object swered by Clardy to help clearup too, and you know how it is. We the muddled heads of liberals: still couldn't understand though, Should the Fifth Amendment be knew within 30 minutes who the cause you see, sometimes the other kept in the Constitution? Why? ement was. kids dated fellows who were real When court decisions and men like Communist satellite diplomats skinny and had big ears. We're Francis Biddle say it is not proper ard-fast policy of unconditional not particularly fond of skinny to infer guilt from use of the Fifth usly, U.S. and Indian observers fellows with big ears. But we fig- Amendment, what is wrong with reliable reports that Molotov had I ured it, was their right to date their logic? Is it necessarily true le had been afraid the Ignited whomever they felt like, and wf that witnesses before his commit- might enter Indo-China. Now sure didn't mind having them in tee who use the Fifth Amendment olicy went into reverse overnight, the house. So we kind of expected are members of a gigantic conspir- the Bell Syndicate) our dating preferences to be re- acy against the United . States? spected too. Our housemother pat- Should constitutional protections ted us on our heads then, and be granted only to those who truly explained that since we were from believe in freedom of speech and NY we had different ideas of how assemblage? If so, where does A people should behave, and we a that leave certain avid anti-com- couldn't expect things to be the munists? same in Ann Arbor. We thought A friend has bet me, twenty to this over seriously, but then, like one, that men like Clardy have not sent a program of compositions by Bach, we said - people in Ann Arbor really considered, ,and certainly Saint Saens, Pierne, Gagnebin, and Mo- seem awful much like the people won't attempt to answer, such zart, at 8:30 Friday evening, May 7, in in NY, or any other place for that questions. Please have your re- Auditorium A, Angell Hall. A Music Ed- matter. We even asked our moth- porter ask the questions soon, be- ueation major, Mr. Onofrey will present ers about it. They said that they cause I've got my money on the the public recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor didn't mind if skinny boys with big open-minded congressmen. of Music degree, ears were around the house, and; -Howard Wolfe, '54 they couldn't understand why the Exhibits other mothers might complain Y' tstzmofAr, Aumi emoia }about our red haired freckled 11a11. Student Exhibition, College of dates. And gee whiz, the house we Architecture and Design. May 6-26. Mu- live in here is real big anyway, seum hours: 9-5 on weekdays, 2-5 on and there's plenty of room in the I Sundays. The public is invited, living -room for everyone's date to wait comfortably. So we really Events Today don't understand. Could you ex- plain it please? Fourth Laboratory Bill of Plays will -Ester Mark be presented by the Department of Martha Green (Continued from Page 2) CURR;eNl'f i'AQV/I% A rchitecture A uditorium OF MICE AND MEN with Burgess Mere- dith and Lon Chaney JOHN STEINBECK'S distinction as a nov- elist is due, in part at least, to his abil- ity to write about the lives and hopes of simple people without being on the one hand, supercilious, or on the other, simple- minded about it. Especially he isn't simple- minded-his style is too hard, his vision per- haps too bitter for him ever to become ser- iously sentimental over his characters. And it is in this trait, the avoidance of senti- mentality, that the movie version Of Mice and Men almost trips up. There is a cer- tain heightening of the importance of the more pitiful scenes that takes place in the change fron novel to movie. Even so, the movie stops short of the tear-jerker line. The actors are very good, and it is mainly their restraint, I think, that keeps the pic- ture from bogging down in mawkishness. Best of all are the grotesques. The values ranch. He is unkempt and filthy, and he lives in constant fear of being fired and sent to the county poorhouse. The tear- ful petulance with which he strikes back at the people who mock him, and his devotion to a *heepdog as old and filthy as himself are very well done. Equally good is the old Negro with the twisted back, who is even more of a pariah on the ranch. He lives alone and reads, and the scur- rility born of his loneliness is an effec- tive balance for the hopefulness of the other outcasts. The most important of the grotesques, Len Small, the semi-imbecile, is not up to the mark of the other two. Lon Chaney does a consistent job, which probably was difficult enough, but the character sometimes seems like a burlesque idiot. Burgess Meredith, the prophet and pro- tector of this little group of unfortunates, is excellent. He strikes a delicate balance in his attitude toward the hope he holds out to them; he is partly cynical and partly cre- dulons .Tontrasted with the little arnnnin of Income from Cooperative Enterpris- es," Fri., May 7, 105 Economics Bldg., at 3 p.m. Chairman, R. A. Musgrave. Doctoral Examination for Henry Char- les Schwartz, Romance Languages and Literature; thesis: "Gabriel Miro (1879- 1930): A Thematic Analysis of the Secu- lar Works," Sat., May 8, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 10 a.m. Chair- man, N. W. Eddy. Doctoral Examination for Charles Na- than Lebeaux, Sociology; thesis: "Ru- ral and Urban Background as Factors in the Behavior of Factory Workers," Sat., May 8, 613 Haven Hall, at 10 am. Chairman, Ronald Freedman. Doctoral Examination for Ann Elisa- beth Schendler. Comparative Literature; thesis: "An Aristotelian Theory of Co- medy," Sat., May 8, West Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 9 am, Chairman, N. E. Nelson. Concerts Michigan School Vocal Association Concert, 3:30 Saturday afternoon, May 8, in Hill Auditorium. Featured will be Class A High School Festival Choirs from surrounding communities and the University Bach Choir. Maynard Klein, Conductor of University Choirs, will lead the festival choirs in two groups of English songs, and the Bach Choir in Brahms' Neue Liebeslieder, Op. 65, and Bach's Mass in B Minor. The con- cert will be open to the general public without charge. The audience will sit in the first balcony, since the first floor has been reserved for thefourteen high school choirs participating. Student Recital. Judith Becker, Pian- ist, wil Tbe heard at 4:15 Sunday after- noon, May 9, in Auditorium A, Angell Hall, playing a program in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. It will in- clude compositions by Mozart, Brahms, and Schubert, and will be open to the public. Mrs. Becker is a pupil of John Kollen. Recital Postponed. Tie voice recital by Russell Christopher. baritone, previ- ously announced for Mon., May 10, has been postpon-ed until Tues., June 1. Student Recital .Tnan St. nDnis Dodd, e J 7 i1 Ir r i',t I I 7 " '' F 'r$ { ' I .:, Speech tonight at 8 ocock in the Wo- Imen's Athletic Building. Thtere is no - -~ 4 admission charge, and the seats are not Lansing Hearings . . .I reserved. Included on the bill are Wen !Q D rv Shun T'ang's Chinese play, THE DRA- To The Editor: GON; scenes from Eva Le Gallienne's Hh dramatization of Lewis Carroll's ALICE THIS IN WONDERLAND; and Anatole Fran- posal by David Levy who as a cIs THE MAN WHO MARRIED A DUMB member of the Culture and Educa- Sixty-Fourth Year tion Committee, Student Legisla- Edited and managed by students of Episcopal Student Foundation. Can- the University of Michigan under the terbury Club, 7:30, Canterbury House. able saving. Box office hours are 10 authority of the Board in Control of I a.m.-5 p.m. Student Publications. Episcopal Student Foundation. + Tea -_ _ _ _ _ _ from 4 to 5:30 at Canterbury House. Forum on College and University Teaching. Editorial Staf Department of Astronomy. Visitors' Final session, Fri., May 7, 3-4:30 p.m., Harry Lunn...........Managing Editor I Night, 8 p.m. Dr. Dean B. McLaughlin Auditorium C, Angell Hall. Eric Vetter............ ,.... City Editor will speak on "The Earth-Geological Topic: How Can a Professor Evaluate Virginia Voss.......Editorial Director After the illustrated talk in Auditorium the Effectiveness of His Teachings? Mike Wolff........Associate City Editor "B", Angell Hall, the Students' Obser- Symposium: Alice B. Silver. Assoc. Editorial Director vatory on the fifth floor will be open "The Basis for Evaluation"-Edward; Diane D. AuWerter...Associate Editor for telescopic observation of the Moon L. Walker, Associatie Professor of Helene Simon........ .Associate Editor and Saturn if the sky is clear or for Psychology. Ivan Kaye................Sports Editor inspection of the telescopes and plane- "The LSA College Student Rating Paul Greenberg... ..Assoc. Sports Editor tiumIftesyiIcod.Cide Procedures"-Burton D. Thuma, As- ( Marilyn Campbell...Women's Editor 1 are welcome, but must be accompanied sociate Dean of the College of Lit- Kathy Zeisler.. .Assoc. Women's Editor by adults. erature Science and the Arts. Chuck Kelsey ......Chief Photographer $Lessons from Teaching by Televi- Wesleyan ~ ~ ~ ~ io-ar Guild. Roller skating party, son-alFLgerChimnf 8 p.m. Meet in the lounge the Department of Fisheries. Business Staff "Observations from the Administra- IThomas Treeger..Business Manager Congregational-Disciples Guild. Sup- tive Point of View"-J. Philip Wer- William Kaufman Advertising Manager per hike, leaving from Guild House, 5:25 nette, Professor of Business Admin- Harlean Hankin....Assoc. Business Mgr. p.m, Clean-up Day at Guild House, 9 istration. William Seiden......Finance Manager Sa.m.,Sat., May 10, lunch provided. Professor Algo D. Henderson will serve Anita Sigesmund. Circulation Manager I schairman. __________________ (Please sign up if you plan to eat with aculty o the University and gradu- ate students are invited. Telephone NO 23-24-1 S.R.A. Coffee Hour will be held at inter-Arts Union will present a Pro- Lane Hall. 4:15 to 5:30 n.m. Everyone ntr--rsU-i,_-- l- resent . r- A S