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October 24, 1954 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1954-10-24

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PAGE FOUR

THE MCMGAN DAMT

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24,1954!,

PAGE FOUR TIlE MICHIGAN DAIlY SUNDAY. OCTOBER 24. 1954

, .. . .__ ,... _ ... .... .. a, .

The Independent Voter Prepares
To Act Like an Egg-Head

SHORTLY BEFORE the 1952 presidential election
someone connected with the history department
made a hopeful forecast for the coming election.
The substance of his remarks was that Adlai Stev-
enson would win the independent vote and become
the 34th president of the United States.
He assumed, and it is a safe assumption, that the
independent vote is the key to winning or losing
for the Democrats and Republicans at each bi-
annual test of their respective platforms. However,
there was a serious flaw in his further reasoning and
is was this flaw that caused his prediction to be
incorrect.
He thought that the independents were the
intellectuals, the people who read and study world
and national problems and ideas proposed to them
at every election. Their background would keep
them from being influenced by prejudices and the
'do as my father didism' that plague many vot-
ers' thinking. He thought that Stevenson with
his logical, liberal and couragous platform would
appeal to these thinking people - they became
known as egg-heads-and a Democrat would be
in the White House another four years.
Professors, men of science and the arts did flock
behind the former Illinois governor but when the
votes were tabulated Dwight D. Eisenhower with
his cliches and continual vacillation on the cam-
paign issues had five million more votes. Four years
previously Harry S. Truman had accomplished a
presidential victory with much the same type cam-
paign.
There was little doubt that Eisenhower must have
won the independent vote and as disappointing to
idealists as it may be, the key fluctuating group
doesn't seen to be those on the history instructor's
intellectual plane but rather those primarily inter-
ested in easing the burden of their own personal
problems. Such things as a quick reduction of
taxes interest them. These are the people who fear
but know little about the cause of wars. who be-
cause they seldom read past the headlines are easy
victims for the shrieking about the Communist
threat and corruption when the newspapers choose
to publicize it. Considering the continually chang-
ing nature of the Mid-Weest vote the farmers also
appear to be an independent element.
When Stevenson attacked the campaign issues
he refused to paint rose-colored solutions for
them because he felt, and the last 18 months
have born him out, none were available. He of-
fered steps for alleviating the disagreeable situa-
tions but his foresight prevented him from prom-

ising Utopian results from his proposed plat-
form. His liberal, well grounded concept of the
national and world situation would have made
him an excellent leader of the United States.
* * * *
HOWEVER, STEVENSON and the Democrats will
never lead United States policy as a minority
group. It has been suggested by some Democratic
sympathisers that Stevenson's attempt to 'talk
sense' to the American people was founded on
impractical ideals. If the Democrats were to regain
control of Congress this fall and perhaps elect a
president in 1956, Stevenson and his running mates
would have sacrifice the admirable principle of re-
maining above the slam-bang, sometimes illogical
glorious phrase-like campaigning that unfortunately
wins elections. Instead a negative campaign should
be substituted for the positive one of 1952.
Stevenson did not take such suggestions. He has
resolutely continued the pattern of his 1952 cam-
paign. It appears that by waiting two extra years
for the Eisenhower type campaign to backfire his
Democrats will regain a majority this fall without
resorting to similar tactics themselves. The inde-
pendent voter was influenced two years ago by many
inviting promises but the independent voter is also
conscious of the many unfulfilled Republican Party
promises.
Laboring men in many parts of the country en-
thralled two years ago by Eisenhower's tax cut-
ting promises and continued prosperity have just
spent a summer standing outside factory gates or
shifting from one insecure construction job to
another. Farmers who heard Dwight D. Eisen-
hower during the fall of 1952, announce that he
favored 100 percent parity will remember that he
helped push through a program for sliding parity
82 to 90 percent. Citizens in the northwest sec-
tion of the United States who heard Pres. Eisen-
hower support public power won't forget Dixon-
Yates or the Republican private power policy on
Northwest river projects.
The independent voter will cast the decisive votes
when the polls open Nov. 2. If present trends con-
tinue (Maine, Alaska) he will return a Democratic
majority. Such an outcome would demonstrate the
fallacy of the 1952 Republican campaign. The in-
dependent voter may not be intellectual, he may
not be particularly logical in his thinking, but he
can remember that he was promised many benefits
two years ago and he will scrutinize rather close-
ly the extent of the benefits he received.
--Dave Baad

The Week in Review

Local ...
W r A DETERMINED name and an even more
determined platform, the "Common Sense
Party" announced its first all-campus meeting.
Homecoming frenzy failed to affect the budding
organization as it soberly met to draft a final
plaform, including plans for stronger student gov-
ernment and liberal women's hours. The embryonic
group sets a precedent on campus as the first stud-
pnt political party.
ACTIVITIES & SPACE-Heads of leading campus
organizations got together to discuss the how and
what of the proposed Student Activities Center. Ap-
proved in principle by the Regents last May, the
building is being planned to provide meeting and
work space for crowded student groups. It will be
the job of the 10-man committee to report to the
Regents on how this can be done,
HOMECOMING-Michigan prepared itself for
the annual invasion of alums with nostaligic foot-
ball memories. Displays depicting gophers in
various undignified poses peppered the campus,
along with such festivities as a St. Bernard Char-
lot Race. And the Little Brown Jug was brought
across the field to the Michigan bench.
BIG TEN LOOK-Commenting on the "Big-Ten
way of life," LIFE magazine came out with a pic-
ture-page splash on college fashions. The Univer-
sity was represented with a slice of the Michigras
Carnival and a rosy-looking P-Bell party. Michigan
students, however, were inclined to cast a dubious
look at LIFE's idea of "colorful conformity."
DAVIS PAY-The issue of severance pay for H.
Chandler Davis, dismissed mathematics instructor,
became a dead issue, at least for a while, as far as
the Student Legislature was concerned. The motion
was presented to SL but returned to committee for
further study mainly because SL couldn't figure
out if the issue was under its jurisdiction.
National...
ELECTION CAMPAIGNS were reaching their
height with only two weeks left for either party
to make its impression on the electorate's mind.
Sixty-Fifth Year
Edited and managed by students of the University of
Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Eugene Hartwig...........................Managing Editor
Dorothy Myers............................City Editor
Jon Sobeloff........................... Editorial Director
Pat Roelofs......................Associate City Editor
Becky Conrad...............................Associate Editor
Nan Swinehart..............................Associate Editor
Dave Livingston.......................Sports Editor
Hanley Gurwtn............ Associate Sports Editor
Warren Werzheimer.................Associate Sports Editor
Roz Shlimovitz............................ Women's Editor
Joy Squires... .............Associate Women's Editor
Janet Smith............... ...Associate Women's Editor
Dean Morton.......................Chief Photographer
Business Staff
Lois Pollak.......................,....Business Manager
Phil Brunskill...................Associate Business Manager
Bill Wise....... .........A d'vti sina an ge

Observers tended to see the race as an "uphill
battle" for the Republicans, with Eisenhower popu-
larity the most important part of the GOP strategy.
In the heat of the fray, Ike gave a nation-wide
"non-political" address last week that hinted at his
possible retirement.
DAMAGE TOLL-By the beginning of the week,
a rambunctious Hazel had spun her last hurri-
cane. It had churned up out of the Caribbean and
cut across the North American continent from the
Carolinas to Hudson Bay. Causing 100 million
dollars worth of damage, it was the season's most
vicious tropical storm.
SALK VACCINE-Currently being evaluated in
a nationwide study, the Salk polio vaccine again
hit the headlines. The National Foundation for In-
fantile Paralysis contracted to buy enough vaccine
to treat nine million persons next year. The action
is a "calculated risk" admits the Foundation, since
results of Salk effectiveness will not be ready until
next April. Meanwhile, three American scientists
were awarded the 1954 Nobel Prize in medicine and
physiology for work which made a rapid develop-
ment in preventive measures such as the Salk vac-
cine possible.
* * * *
International,..
THE HISTORIC treaty to end Britain's occupation
of the Suez Canal zone was signed last week, pro-
viding for the 83,000 British troops to leave within
20 months. The treaty ends a 72-year occupation.
SAAR-A perennial problem was giving the Big
Three Western Powers some perennial trouble last
week. The economic future of the Saar, the rich
coal and iron region between France and Germany,
was being debated, with revival of the old conflict
between the two countries. Work was reported to
be progressing in a favorable direction, however.
GERMANY--Foreign ministers of nine anti-Com-
munist allies of the Western world virtually com-
pleted the agreement on formation of the Western
European Union, linking West Germany to NATO.
The Union will include the arms and men of an all
but fully soverign West Germany. Agreement to
bring the Bonn republic into the proposed seven-
nation Union was coupled with a decision to end
the nearly 10-year occupation of Germany.
-Debra IDurchslag
WfITH THE REPUDIATION by the French Na-
tional Assembly of the European Defense Com-
munity, the Atlantic world has given itself over to
an orgy of mutual criticism, complaint, frustra-
tion, and hypocrisy. The chief object of this com-
munity exasperation is France. The exasperation
with the French may be well justified. EDC was a
French idea; we bought it at French insistence over
deep initial misgivings, did our best to nourish it,
had faith in the French plan long after the French
themselves had begun to doubt it. We are baffled
as well as annoyed, because this French Govern-
ment is the first since the war that is doing what
our diplomacy has always urged as France's first
duty-putting its own house in order, to make
France strong, to secure the base that must be
firm under the weight of France's responsibilities.
But to see France as the root of the Atlantic
crisis is to misread the moment entirely. It is not
a post-mortem apportionment of guilt that is re-

DREW PEARSON'
Washington
Merry-Go-
Round
WASHINGTON - Officials of th
Disabled American Veterans
had a brief moment of anxiety
about President Eisenhower's fi-
nances during a recent White House
visit to launch the DA's annual
"forget-me-not" drive for hospital-
ized vets.
As Mrs. Virginia Turner Chair-
man of the drive, handed Ike the
first forget-me-not, the Presi-
dent opened his billfold to make
a donation. It appeared to be
empty.
"It's easy to see that you have
just returned from your vacation,"
quipped Waldron E. Leonard, Dis-
trict of Columbia Director of Vet-
erans Affairs.
"Wait a minute," said Ike. Then
he opened another section of his
wallet, revealing a tidy sum of
crisp, new folding money. The Pres-
ident fished out a five-dollar bill
and dropped it in the DAV canister.
* * *
JENNER TO REPLACE JOE
INDIANA'S Senator "Breezy Bill"
Jenner will probably deny it, but
he is scheming privately to move
into Senator McCarthy's shoes as
the nation's no. 1 Red hunter.
Jenner expects the Senate to
slap McCarthy down with an
overwhelming censure vote, thus
curbing his headline appeal. This,
Jenner feels, should leavethe
top spot open for him and he is
quietly preparing to move up.
Meanwhile, Jenner's chief coun-
sel, Col. Alva Carpenter, is tight-
ening his authority over the Inter-
nal Security Subcommittee staff.
Carpenter has laid down the law to
the staff that he, and he alone,
should have contact with senators
and the press.
In a confidential directive to staff:
members Carpenter ordered:
"Liaison initiated by a member
of the staff with the chairman and
members of the subcommittee will
be undertaken only after authori-
zation by me. Liaison initiated by
(committee members) with any
member of the staff will be prompt-
ly reported to me to prevent dupli-
cation of effort . . . Material to be
distributed to the press will be ap-
proved by me before stenciling."
Carpenter apparently wants to
make sure no other staff member
will be cozying up to the senators
and the press.
* * *
NO MORE HURRICANES
W EATHER BUREAU experts
say they expect no more hur-
ricanes this year. Meanwhile, in
case you are wondering how hurri-
canes happen to be given female
names, it isn't because, as one wit
has suggested, they are so "unpre-
dictable." Hurricanes are becom-
ing more predictable every year,
due to the constant vigilance of the
Air Force, Navy and U.S.Weath-
er Bureau.
As a consequence, the loss of
human life has greatly declined,
though property damage in 1954
has been the greatest in the last
20 years. Carol, Edna and Hazel
alone caused direct or indirect
property damage of close to a
billion dollars, according to un-
official Weather Bureau esti-
mates.
Hurricanes have been given fem-
inine names because they come
from the sea and the sea is sup-
posed to be feminine-though a
move is on by some of the ladies'
organizations to change this be-
cause hurricanes are too rough.
However, individual names are
carefully selected in advance each

year by government weather au-
thorities and the names of Carol,
Edna, Hazel, etc. were selected as
early as last February.
The names selected must be pho-
netically clear and easily under-
standable in radio reporting; also,
must not duplicate typhoons, which
also have a feminine termindlogy.
Hurricane names chosen last
February for this year were:
Alice, Barbara, Carol, Dolly,
Edna, Florence, Gilda, Hazel,
Irene, Jill, Katherine, Lucy, Ma-
bel, Norma, Orpha, Patsy,
Queen, Rachel, Susie, Tina, Una,
Vicky and Wallis (the name of
the Duchess of Windsor).
Weather authorities ignored the
last three letters of the alphabet,
X, Y, and Z, figuring that the
storms in the 1954 hurricane sea-
son would not number more than
23. So far, we have had eight,
counting Hazel, and no more are
contemplated, except of a freak-
ish variety, since the hurricane
season usually doesn't run beyond
October.
Highest previous 'record of hur-
ricanes was 21 in 1933. There were
16 in 1887 and 17 in 1936.
Note-The word "hurricane" is
of Carib-Indian origin and means
"big wind."
* * *
FIRETRAP SCHOOLS
WHILE McCarthyites have been
c o o k i n g up a synthetic
"march" on Washington, educa-
tors from all over the country have
been staging a real march, aimed

AT THE MICHIGAN . ..
SABRINA
A FILM with somewhat limited
appeal, Sabrina is the Cinder-
ella story neatly wrapped up with
yards of sophisticated charm.
Women will probably say it is
Interpreting
The News
By J. M. ROBERTS
Associated Press News Analyst
IF FRANCE now permits the
question of the Saar to block
all the new arrangements which
have been made for incorporating
Germany into a Western Europe-
an defense system, she is going to
be accused, rightly or wrongly, of
never intending to go through with
German rearmament.
France and Germany had just
about agreed on the Saar when
France killed the European defense
Community program. The territory
would have remained integrated in
the French economy with its in-
ternational relations controlled by
the supranational EDC council.
The death of EDC and proposal
for extension of the Brussels trea-
ty to bring Germany into a pri-
marily military arrangement with-
out any supranational political
controls put Bonn into a bargain-
ing position on military matters
which strengthened her ability to
seek further concession on the
Saar.
There is no question that the
German atttitude has toughened.
For one thing, she is now demand-
ing free trade with the territory,
whereas before she had appeared
satisfied with lesser concessions.
She is now demanding the right
for herself and the presently ban-
ned pro-German Saar parties to
agitate for return of the Saar to
Germany at an eventual peace
conference. Before she had agreed
to a final settlement on the basis
of "Europeanization."
In these respects, Germany plays
her part in the deadlock. But it is
France, not Germany, which reit-
erates that there will be no return
of German sovereignty, no Germ-
any in the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, until she is satisfied
about the Saar.
Frenchmen are saying frankly
that they take this stand because
they can never expect to get what
they want except in a trade of this
sort. They figure that sovereignty
and rearmament are more impor-
tant to Germany than the Saar.
France's need for the comple-
mentary Saar economy to give her
greater parity with Germany is
well recognized by all the nations.

"That's NA Eamle"

[L

"cute"; men may find it "corny."
At any rate, the reactions are like-
ly to be extremely varied.
Sabrina (Audrey Hepburn) lives
with her chauffer father (John
Williams) over the garage of the
plush Larabee home, from whence
she gazes adoringly upon David
Larabee (William Holden). David,
a regular ladies' man, just ignores
her. But father sends Sabrina to a
Paris cooking school, and the kid
picks up a few pointers on men,
along with souffle recipes.
When Sabrina walks in on a
Larabee party wearing an Edith
Head original, she takes the sit-
uation well in hand. David
promptly falls in love with her.
Even tycoon brother Linus Lar-
abee (Humphrey Bogart), sent
by Papa Larabee to break up
the romance, falls under Sabri-
na's enchanting spell. Needless
to say, Sabrina eventually gets
a husband, loads of money, and
a honeymoon in Europe.
Audrey Hepburn makes an ap-
pealing Sabrina. She is still play-
ing the princess role from Roman
Holiday; and whether she is a ca-
pable actress, or just a fresh per-
sonality, is difficult to decide. She
has the bony body of a ten-year-
old boy and a piquant face, with
large eyes, dark eyebrows, and a
pounting little smile. Miss Hep-
burn is nymph-like, wistful, de-
lightful-in short, worthy of the
many adjectives lavished upon her
by an adoring public. But how
long her personality will remain
fresh will decide how long she re-
mains a star.
The film's biggest surprise is Bo-
gart. With calm assurance, he
steals every scene; no young up-
start performers can push him
aside. Holden handles the playboy
role with ease; and the support-
ing cast is adequate in standard
type-roles.
Like no other picture in re-
cent film history, Sabrina con-
centrates entirely on being
charming. It attempts to spread
nearly two hours of slick, glos-
sy charm over its audiences'
minds. This is, of course, a ra-
ther difficult thing to do; and
Sabrina does well only part of
the time. When it should have
the viewerroaring withlaugh-
ter, it provides a few chuckles;
when it should leave an impres-
sion of sustained hilarity, it
gives only a 112 minute smile-
and it is often rather difficult to
keep smiling that long, unless
there is a good belly-laugh to
break up the monotony.
It is probably chiefly because of
Producer-Director Billy Wilder's
talents that Sabrina never gets
overly bearing with its sentiment,
sweetness, and romance.
-Ernest Theodossin

N(STRN
*,t
CURREN'rMEVI

At the Dramatic Arts Center...
ARMS AND THE MAN, by George Bernard Shaw, presented by
the Dramatic Arts Association
WITH THE BEST WISHES of Governor Williams, Mayor Brown,
President Hatcher, and hosts of lesser folk who live, in the Ann
Arbor area, the Dramatic Arts Center opened its doors a little timor-
ously on Thursday, welcomed its guests a little grandly, and pre-
sented its first play, Shaw's "Arms and the Man" a little awkwardly.
Nothing daunted, they look like a solid group with solid backing and
will probably go far. The Center company has obvious talent, the
Center board offers sound support, and both share high ambitious
ideals about the theater. Still, on opening night, then show was logy,
perhaps because the performers were still "too much in the sun" of pa-
ternal benevolence. Everybody was a little too nervously on his best
behavior. The best theaters, I think, are rebellions. The Abbey Thea-
ter was; the Group Theater was; so was the Art Theater. Although
the Dramatic Arts Center presented a "rebellious" play, they did
not act as if they knew that. They had so many people to be good
"for"; and nobody, no movement, no vested interest to be good
"against." As a result, their styles, their sets, their whole method of
presentation was no more than vaguely, eclectically pleasant. Even at
this early date, it seems as if the Center's genuinely selfless urge to
embrace everybody could wind up in their embracing nobody,
The choice of "Arms and the Man" to open the season might
have seemed like a good idea, except that it is kind of an old idea,
seeming that it is revived all the time. It is also a play about an "old
idea." The "old idea" is, of course, that military men are really choc-
olate soldiers down deep, and it is mostly fickle women who make
them heroes in order to gratify female whimsies. This "idea," as
such, has little power to surprise us any longer, and I sort of doubt
that any great quantities of people were "'shocked" by it when it
was orginally presented. (Shaw, I suspect, won his popularity from
the quasi-sophisticated who gained a sense of superiority by just
knowing that their neighbors were terribly shocked by Shaw's plays.)
But in order for the play to have any zip any more, it ought to be
invested with some mock rebellion, some pretense that this is a "pow-
erful" idea. Of course, it will not be a straight-faced pretense; good
melodrama is never completely straight-faced and good comedy is at
its best when some inner Olympian "eye" is provided by the writer
to contemplate what is going on on the stage, thus to refine the
dimension of the comedy and help it to be intellectually acceptable.
Probably "Arms and the Man" is one of Shaw's duller exer-
cises, even if you pretend its ideas are still energetic. If you do
not; If you try and summon up energy strictly from its characters,
as Director Joe Gistrak did, I think you really go off. InAct One,
for example, he has Irma Hurley as Raina, skipping about, sollIlo-
quizing to photographs, and in general, managing herself like a
hyperthyroid adolescent. Two acts later wer are told that her hero
worship is only a pose and that she is really a mature and stable
twenty-three. Her Swiss "hero," Captain Bluntschli finds this
hard to believe, but accepts it, although I never could.
Raina's mother and father offer.further problems. James Coco
plays the latter role like an affable Akim Tamiroff, slapping his wife
on the rear, shouting for more coffee, and simulating the constant
puzzlement common to middle-aged folk in comic opera. His wife,
played by Barbara Lawrence, wears a peasant costume, but acts in
it more like a gypsy on the midway than a nuevo-riche Bulgarian.
Sergius Saranoff is Raina's cavalry-charging betrothed and William
Andrews plays the part with a Hamletian melancholy that is occa-
sionally interesting. Elaine Swire and Wilfred Kaplan play Louka and
Nicola, the servants, respectively, like Carmen, and EBrendel.
All this is not said for satiric purposes. Clearly, there is talent in
the company, but of the cast, on opening night, only Ralph Drischel1
as Bluntschli really gave the show the proper touch, the curre't outer
contemplation, the right kind of mockery. And it is hard to explain
just how you do this right: there is involved something like the char-
acter knowing he is acting as well as the actor. It is a business of
getting into the character and somehow getting out of it again too.
Otherwise, the wit gets lost in a welter of posturing.
On a technical level, the Dramatic Arts Ceter arena is like
the Arts Theater in Cinemascope. The plays are "centrally staged,"
of course, but in a much. wider area than the Arts Theater had:
occasionally opening night audiences had to turn their head fro
one end of the arena to the other to follow the conversation. Sets
one were bright, almost Technicolor, both tasteful and not tasteful;
but presumably the Bulgarian Petcoffs have every right to be
shrewd in the garden and dull in the library. The only bothersome
mechanical feature of opening night was a bad "light spill" from
the technician's control booth which prevented anything ap-
proaching total darkness on the stage. This seriously damaged
all curtain effects.
But so much for "Arms and the Man" which is after all only an
opening production.
A new theater has been born in Ann Arbor. A new professional
theater with large ideals has been born in Ann Arbor .
Let us hope that they succeed.
-Bill Wiegand
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

I

11
1

DRAMA

4

WUS Thanks.. *
To The Editor:
THE WORLD UNIVERSITY serv-
ice committee would like to
thank all those who gave of their
time and energy in helping on our
recent bucket drive. The coopera-
tion we received from all sides
was excellent. The committee also

acknowledges the support given
the program by the many student
and faculty members who contrib-
uted. Speaking on behalf of the uni-
versities which will benefit from
this drive, we hope you will con-
tinue to give WUS your support.
-WUS Committee
Edna Carlson, Chairman
Doris Harpole, Advisor

4

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the University
of Michigan for which the Michigan
Daily assumes no editorial responsi-
bility. Publication in it is construc-
tive notice to all members of the
University. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553
Administration Building before 2 p.m.
the day preceding publication (be-
fore 10 a.m. on Saturday).
SUNDAE', OCTOBER 24, 1954
Vol. LXV, No. 29
Notces
Attention All Students: There is an
Anti-Discrimination Board set up to
work actively for the removal of dis-
crimination in the general area of
serving and hiring of students in the
Ann Arbor business community. The
Board is interested in learning of any
cases of possibly discriminatory prac-

Angel Hal. Dr. Maurice Aualander will
speak on "Cohomology and Commuta-
tor Subgroups of Free Groups."
All students planning to enter the
Law School for the first time in Feb.,
1955, MUST, unless they have already
done so, take the Law School Admis-
sion Test at the Nov. 13 administration.
Applications for this test must be in
the hands of the Educational Testing
Service (20 Nassau Street, Princeton,
New Jersey) not later than Nov. 3. Ap-
plication blanks and further informa-
tion may be obtained in Room 311,
Hutchins Hail.
There will be a meeting of the Edu-
cational School Council Mon., Oct. 25th,
at 4:15 p.m. in the Educational School
Lounge. Please be prompt.
Concerts

num, Conductor, will present the fol-
lowing program: Beethoven's Symphony
No. 4 in B-flat major, Debussy's "Aft-
ernoon of a Faun," Rudolph Escher's
"Musique pour l'esprit en deuil," and
Stravinsky's "Suite from The Firebird."
A limited number of tickets are
available, at the offices of the Univer-
sity Musical Society, in Burton Memo-
rial Tower. Tickets will also be on sale
at the Hill Auditorium box office after
7:00 on the evening of the perform-
ance.
Events Today
Movies. Free movies, "Arizona" and
"California." Oct. 19-25. 4th floor Ex-
hibit Hall, Museums Building. Films are
shown daily at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m., in-
cluding Sat. and Sun., with an extra
showing on Wed, at 12:30.
The Unitarian Student Group will

Oct 24. Student Panel Discussion ony
the topic, "Experiencing the Reality
of Christ" at 4 p.m., Lane Hall. Re-
freshments will be served. Everyone is
cordially invited.
Wesleyan Guild, Sun., Oct. 24-9:30
a.m. Discussion-Basic Christian Be-
liefs, 10:30 a.m. Discussion - Great
Ideas of the Bible, 5:30 p.m. Fellow-
ship Supper, 6:45 p.m. Worship and
Program. Movie: "Beyond Our Own."
Episcopal Student Foundation. Sun.,
Oct. 24. Canterbury House breakfasts
following both the 8:00 and 9:00 a.m.
services. "Faith of the Church" lec-
ture series, 4:30 p.m., at Canterbury
House. Student Supper Club, 6:30 p.m.,
at Canterbury House. Coffee hour at
the Student Center following 8:00 p.m,.
Evensong.
Hillel: All those interested in joining
the Hillel Chorus come to the first

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