PAGE FOUR. THE MICHIGAN DAiL V THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1935 'PAGE POUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. MARCH 17, 1955 CARELESSNESS: Election Procedure The Worst in Years The Recording Angels AT THIS writing no definite judgment of the quality of elected SGC candidates can be made. However, one thing is sure: the technical handling of the two-day elections was the most careless in years. Specifically, some errors that occurred at polling places were as follows: 1) Some seniors received ballots on whicli to vote for senior class officers. Only juniors are allowed to vote for these officers. 2) Some students didn't receive ballots for Board in Control of Student Publications. All students are supposed to be given ballots to vote for the three people in these positions. (I might add that the wording on the ballot in- structions made a "vote for three" members of the Board appear mandatory; a voter does have the right to vote for only one or only two people for this Board however, and instruc- tions should have been worded "vote for no more than three." 3) Polling booths at some spots were not carefully manned during some periods in yes- terday's cold weather; ballots were weighted down on tables, and supervisors hurried to take shelter, probably expecting voters to take care of casting their ballots in their own un- orthodox way. That this is sloppy handling of elections is an understatement; the ramifica- tions of such carelessness could be great, i.e., ballot forging, ballot-box stuffing. 4) At the business administration school booth, voters had to stumble over sidewalk piles of ballots for business administration school officers instead of being handed them in the usual way. The above listed observations can be sum- marized quite accurately with the word "care- lessness," and members of the student body have a right to expect efficiency and accuracy, in balloting procedures. A closing note on the just completed cam- paign: only a few of the candidates saw fit to discuss issues that truly do exist at this Uni- versity when going from house to house mus- tering up votes. Many of the campaigners stressed over and over that there were no is- sues and that SGC's problem now is mainly one of organization. If these same people represent the student body on SGC, major campus issues and prob- lems may take a back seat to petty details. It is too early to predict an unsuccessful trial period for SGC. But the recent campaign has indicated that many of those who were elected to SGC will have to devote a great deal of consideration to campus problems and issues if SGC is to become an effective student govern- ment. -Dorothy Myers Pat Roelofs I 'V «o p{ §J. o. 's LETTERS TO THE EDITOR IFC Takes Backward Step To Censor 'Bad' News TWO WEEKS AGO Interfraternity Council took steps toward removing news restric- tions. IFC agreed to let The Daily print news on judiciary action taken at Executive Council meetings and recommended the reporter first contact the fraternity president of the house involved. Tuesday IFC took steps backward to its former censorship position. Incensed over printing of news of a $25 fine levied against Sigma Chi Epsilon at the first "opened" Executive Council meeting, fraternity presidents voted Tuesday to recommend again putting Executive Council meetings off-the- record. District representatives will carry the fraternity president's recommendation to next week's executive council meeting. The recommendation prohibits direct re- porting of jNdiciary action taken in executive council sessions. The reporters are to inter- view the IFC President after each meeting to get selected information for print. The new rul- ing leaves it up to IFC's discretion to choose in- formation for Daily columns. There will be little unfavorable information available. THERE IS no reason for IFC to change its previous commendable position on judiciary action. If The Daily checks facts with the fra- ternities involved there can be no chance of in- accuracies. In reporting the Sig Ep fine the Daily reporter checked with the fraternity be- fore printing information on the fine. The campus has a right to know and The Daily a responsibility to report both the f a- vorable and unfavorable "news" about an or- ganization. Organizations as strong as the fra- ternity system should have no fear of occa- sional bad publicity. A system led by an IFC voted tops in the country two years ago, and tops in its class last year certainly can suffer having occasional unfavorable news printed, --Dave Baad CERAMICS SHOW Potter's Guild Celebrates Fifth Anniversary Year A SHOW of ceramics, practically all of which is pottery is now being shown at the Rack- ham Galleries through March 26th. The Potter's Guild is a group of people, sim- ply, whose main common interest is ceramics. The members are from practically every pro- fession one would expect to find in a University town such as Ann Arbor. There are many stu- dents, businessmen and women, housewives, a professor, an architect and people. In the past few years many such groups have been organized throughout the country as the general interest in ceramics has increased. The Potter's Guild was fortunate from the begin- ning. The people who started the original Pot- ter's Guild had a long range vision as to what a group of people working together with a strong common objective could produce. The original members and teachers were also fine potters whose demands for quality work is still obvious in the present show. THERE was evidence of hard work as far as glaze variety goes. Always one is beset by the cry for more color in ceramics. Bright color is difficult and not even desirable in some in- instances. Color is only one of the many prob- lems to be co-ordinated into making a com- plete piece of pottery so don't be too critical of those "drab" stoneware tones. I personally enjoyed the sgraffito pots of Mimi Doson and Kurt Schneider very much. If one small fowl by Rhoda Lopez had been for sale I would buy it. A beautiful small and quiet brown bowl sitting in on a low table. Try a potter's point of view and look a moment at this one. The Potter's Guild as a cooperative artist group has had a successful five years as far as I am concerned. Here's to the next five. -J. T. Abernathy Hillel Stand. . To the Editor: IN A LETTER recently appearing in The Daily it was stated that "no decent Jew is willing to sup- port Israel anymore," and the Zi- onist movement was referred to as the "international Zionist conspir- acy." We, the Student Government of the Hillel Student Community wish to make it clear that we en- dorse and support the efforts of the Zionist movement in our mu- tual desire to hold in Israel a cul- tural and spiritual center for the Jewish people. To this end we at Hillel have constantly given what- ever aid is within our power to the new state. It is quite obvious that the writ- er of the above mentioned letter knows little about the meaning of Israel and the Zionist movement in Jewish history. The aims of the Zionist movement are an integral part of our program at the Hillel Foundation, as Israel has become an integral part of the life of Jew- ish communities everywhere. A case in point is our annual student United Jewish Appeal which opens every spring with our traditional "Hillelzapoppin." The proceeds from this function and the fund raising campaign are contributed to the UJA. an agency whose primary purpose includes the economic up-building and so- cial and cultural development of Israel. We shall not here discuss the political problems of Israeli-Arab relations, problems which would never have been encountered had. the Arab states not initially violat- ed the United Nations partition plan by attacking Israel. Our position, like that of every other self-respecting Jewish com- munity in the world is clear and we deeply resent attempts to di- vide the Jewish country as well as to confuse the general community on the question of Israel. -Harold E. Josehart, President, Hillel Student Community * * * Name Problems... To The Editor:. HAVE BEEN following with in- terest through exchange copies the "cross-fire" and pros and cons over changing the name of Michi- gan State College to Michigan State University. Reading both the State News and the University of Michigan Daily, I often see New York men- tioned as a state where there "is no confusion over similar names for two state universities," Perhaps to confuse the issue more, let me point out that the two similarly-named universities in New York are officially known as New York University and State University of New York. NYU is a private institution in New York City and was chartered in 1831. State University of New York (1948) is composed of a number of college units in all parts of the state under one board of trustees. There are some 22,000 students at 22 campuses, including 11 teach- ers' colleges and two liberal arts colleges. Many of the SUofNY colleges are part of private insti- tutions, as the State University of New York College of Forestry at Syracuse University and the State University of New York Col- lege of Home Economics at Cornell University. There actually, then, is no single institution that can be called State University of New York. Maybe to further confuse the issue: there is a College of the City of New York (1929) which is a public institution (four col- leges) run by New York City. Also, under the state government, in 1784 the University of the State of New York was established. It is a unique organization which over- sees all educational activities in the state and in no way is an edu- cational institution as is known in the general sense. And out of all this, little actual confusion arises because of names among the thousands of students in New York State. Just to add a personal opinion -I'm in favor of changing the name to Michigan State Univer- sity. -Ed Hardy Editor-in-Chief Syracuse Daily Orange * * * Peace Efforts... To The Editor: MR. EL-DAREER and Mr. Nak- foor have certainly shown a great deal of skill in abusing and reviling their opponents, a capac- ity they have obviously acquired neither in the University, nor adopted from the American press. Expressions such as "espionage", "Zionist conspiracy", '"political gangsters", "murderers", "rotten souls", and "underground organi- zations", remind one of the simi- lar vocabulary of the Nazi "Stur- mer", and the Moscow "Pravda". Mr. El-Dareer accuses Israel of having won the war against the Arabs by immoral means. He ob- viously refers to the unforgivable fact that, in 1948, 600,000 Israelis, after being forced into a war by 40 million Arabs who threatened them with extermination, dared to fight bravely for their very lives, and succeeded in defeating the 7 Arab states. Mr. Nakfoor claims that these "international conspirators" have violated the truce agreements be- tween Israel and Egypt. Truce, in- deed! Is truce killing soldiers at the borders, burning villages, steal- ing property, and murdering de- fenseless civilians? Does a state of truce mean planting bombs on railroads, shooting at buses on roads and boats on the lakes? The Gaza incident cannot be argued without taking into ac- count the history of six years of continued Arab hostilities. There is only one permanent solution to the Middle East crisis, one way by which we can assure the complete cessation of hostilities. This is a solution consistently proposed by Israel, and just as consistently re- fused by the Arabs, namely, the signing of an overall peace settle- ment. Your trouble, gentlemen, is that you envision a "second rond," by which you hope to succeed in do- ing what you failed to accomplish the last time. Israel may be a small country, but it is a desperate one, because there is no other place where its people will be wel- comed, because it is the only place that they can call home. Would it not be better to direct your efforts toward peace, instead of continually stirring up antag- onism between Arab and Jew? -Abraham.Minkowich Critic's View . To the Editor: PERTINENT to the raging Ber- lin Philharmonic controversy is this excerpt from the New Yorker magazine, a music review by Win- throp Sargeant. "Wmmah P, n miac r ,ilm,- DREW PEARSON: Ike Takes Angus Over Here fords WASHINGTON - "Country Liv- ing" at Gettysburg and else- where dominated the conversation when farmer Ike Eisenhower lunched with farmer-Congressman Lester Johnson of Wisconsin and other freshman Congressmen the other day. - Johnson wondered if Ike's farm near Gettysburg, Pa., was making money, explaining that he himself had tried to operate a farm while living in the city, but the arrange- ment was "not too profitable," and he finally sold out to his tenant. Eisenhower replied that he would be satisfied with a small profit from his Gettysburg acres after leaving the White House, "because I like living in the coun- try and don't plan to work too hard at farming. "My farm is mostly pastureland for grazing beef cattle," he said. "That part of Pennsylvania has been farmed so hard in the past that there has been a lot of ero- sion. As a result, I don't think it would be worth while for me to try to raise any crops on a big scale." "Getting back to my cattle," re- marked the President, "I do not have a big herd, but they are all Black Angus." "You should have settled on White-Faced Herefords," suggest- ed GOP Congressman E. Keith Thomson of Wyoming. "I almost did," disclosed the President. "Hereford breeders of- fered to donate me a herd picked from different states, but I fin- ally turned down the offer. I de- cided on Black Angus because they don't require as much care as dairy cattle. Then, too, practically all my neighbors in Pennsylvania have Black Angus, and it is a lot easier for me to exchange sires with them." Ike's Birthday Present T HE PRESIDENT got a chuckle out of a story told by John- son, an outspoken foe of Senator McCarthy. "I was elected on October 13, 1953," recalled the Democratic Congressman from Wisconsin. "The day was your birthday and my Republican opponent played this up. He put ads in the news- papers urging the voters to send him to Washington as a 'birthday present for Ike.' When the votes were counted, however, you got a Democratic birthday present-. me." Ike grinned but was noncommit- tal when two of his Democratic guests, freshmen Congressmen James Quigley of Pennsylvania and Herbert Zelenko of New York, both insisted that he was their "constituent." "It stands to reason that I am your Congressman, Mr. President," contended Quigley. "Your farm is in my district." "Wait a minute," spoke up Ze- lenko, onetime champion wrestler at Columbia. "Columbia Univer- sity is in my district, and that's the precinct where you voted the last time. Until you change your. voting address, you are still my constituent." Eisenhower laughed louder than anybody when Zelenko added as an afterthought: "You know, this is one of the few times I have been invited to lunch by a constituent when he didn't ask me for a favor." Less McCarthyism ACLOSED-DOOR session of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy revealed that the latest Eisenhower appointee to the Ato- mic Energy Commission appeared to have the same kind of back- ground as Dr. Robert Oppenheim- er. However, Admiral Strauss doesn't plan to persecute him as he did Oppenheimer. Neither do the Republicans. Strauss is not anxious to antagonize the scien- tists any more. The new appointee is Dr. John von Neumann, renowned Prince- ton scientist; and it developed in closed-door hearings that he had come to the defense of Israel Hal- perin when the latter was tried as a member of the Soviet espionage ring in Canada. Unlike Oppenheimer, however, von Neumann was not found "guilty" by association. The Princeton scientist admitted to the Congressional committee that during the Canada spy trials in 1946 he joined others in send- ing a telegram to the Prime Min- ister of Canada urging a "fair trial" for - Halperin, a Canadian university professor. The telegram also expressed confidence in the "innocence" of Halperin, later ac- quitted when he stood "mute" and the court could not produce evi- dence that he gave any informa- tion to the spy ring. Dr. von Neumann further ad- mitted to the committee: "He (Halperin) told me in 1940 thn - hr 2 Ca1A-v-. raC- (Continued from Page 2) 5699 Belmont Avenue, Cincinnati 24 Ohio. Hiram House Camp, Moreland ills, Ohio (15 miles from Cleveland) needs Unit leaders, Cabin Counselors, Riding counselors. Salary range from $150-400; season, June 15 to Aug. 29, Also have full-time openings for trained & un- trained Group Workers beginning Sept. 1955. For these positions they are in- terested in college grada as well as graduates of the Graduate School of Social Work. Salary ranges from $3000 to $3800. Contact Mr. Henry B. Ollen- dorff, Ex. Dir., The Neighborhood Set- tlement Association of Cleveland, 410 Cuyahoga Svings Bldg., 2123 East 9th St., Cleveland, Ohio. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: U.S. Naval Laboratories, Calif.-n- nounces career opportunities in Engi- neering, Physics, Electronic Science, Mathematics-GS-9 to 15. Professional Fields needed Aero., Civil, Elect., Elec- tronic, Gen'I, Ind., Materials, Mech. Ordnance, Structural, Chem. E., Phys- ics. Electronic Science, Match. N.Y. State Civil Service, announces exms for Principal Planning Tech., open to any qualified citizen of U.S.; Assistant Librarian (Law), open to can- didates resident in 4th Judicial Dis- trict; Toll Collector, N.Y.S. Bridge' Au- thority, open to candidates resident in the 3rd or 9th Dist.; Associate Plan- ning Tech., Medical Record Librarian, Thruway Toll Collector, Unemployment Insurance Claims Clerk, Steam Fire- man, Telephone Operator, all six open to any residents of N.Y. Applications accepted up to April 15, 1955. Mich. State Civil Service announces exams for Legal Stenogrspher 1-must have had three years of recent experi- ence in law office, Fisheries Biologist 1, Forester 1, Game Biologist 1, and Geolo- gist 1. Applications accepted up to March 30, 1955. Aeronautical Chart & Information Center, Air Photographic & Charting Service (Mats), U.S. Air Force, St. Lou- is, Missouri, has urgent need for stu- dents majoring in Geology or Math and have courses in Forestry or Photogram- rnetry, who will acquire degrees in June. Positions are classified as Carto- graphic Aid and Cartographer posi- tions. For frtherpinformation contact the Bureau of Appointments. 3528 Ad. Bldg. Ext. 371. OPPORTUNITIES FOR ADVANCED STUDY: School of Retailing, Univ. of Pitts. Pittsburgh, Penn., offers a secialized training course In retailing to gradu- ates with liberal arts, bus.ad. or home econ. backgrounds. Scholarships are available. Lectures University Lecture. Dr. Ibrahim No- shy, Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Ibra- him University, Cairo, Egypt. "Egyp- tian and Hellenistic Influences in Ptolemaic Egypt," under auspices of Departments of Classical Studies, His- tory and Kelsey Museum. Rackham Am- phitheatre, Thurs., March 17, 4:15 p.m. Prof. R. A. Stirton, Chairman of the Department and Director of the Museum of Paleontology, University of Califor- nia will speak at 4:10 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium in the last of his three lectures on the geological history of Australia. "Fossil Record of Australia." Open to public, Academic Notices 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science will meet Thurs., March 17, Room 3401 Mason Hall, 4:00-5:30 p.m. A. Rapoport will speak on "Exploitative and Cooperative Strategies in a Non-zero Sum Game." Seminar in Organic Chemistry. Thurs., March 17 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1300 Chemistry. Miss Seyhan N. Ege will speak on "Some Aspects of the Compar- ative Organic Chemistry of Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Arsenic." Semiar in Analytical - Inorganic - Physical Chemistry. Thuns., March 17 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3005 Chemistry. John L. Griffin will speak on "Codeposition of Metals." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., March 17, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Dr. I. Marx will speak on "Half-plane Diffraction: Sommerfeld's Solution." Little Seminar. Thurs., March 17, 8:00 p.m. Rackham, West Lecture Room. Merton J. Peck (Harvard) will spek on "Excess Demand in the Aluminum In- dustry," Faculty and graduate students invited, others welcome. Actuarial Seminar will meet Thurs., March 17, at 4:00 .m. in 3212 Angell Hall. Neal Speake will continue the dis- Sixty-Fifth Year Editei. 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.............CityEditor Jon Sobeloff .........Editorial Director Pat Roelofs ......Associate City Editor Becky Conrad .........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart ........Associate Editor David Livingston........ Sports Editor Hanley Gurwin .. .. Assoc. Spc'tr. Editor Warren Wertheimer ..............Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz ........Women's Editor Janet Smith Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel .....Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak ........Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise .........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski .Finance Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN cussion of "Interpolation In 'erms of Operators." Honors Program in Psychology. Stu- dents interested in entering the program next year should apply to Mr. Heyns, Room 6632 Haven Hall, before March 19. Office Hours: Tues. and Thurs. 9:00- 11:00 a.m., other times by appointment. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics. Thurs., March 17, 3:30-5:30 in Room 3010 Angell Hall. William Wrobleski will finish discussion of Chapter 8 and Mr. Jack Meagher will begin Chapter 10 of Cochran's "Sampling Techniques." Anatomy Seminar. Travel pictures of the Hawaiian Islands, Dr. Bradley M. Patten, at 4:00 p.m. "Hormones and Nu- trition," Dr. James H. Lethem, Dept. of Zoology, Rutgers University, at 4:30 p.m., Room 2501 East Medical Building, March 18. Biological Chemistry Seminar. "Some Aspects of the Biotin Problem," under the direction of Dr. Melvin Levine; Room 319 West Medical Building, Sat, March 19, at 10:00 a.m. Logic seminar will meet Fri., March 18 at 4:00 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall. Dr. Lyndon will conclude his discussion of "Tarski's Theory of Algebraic Classes." Concerts Student Recital Marilyn Millspaugh, student of piano with Joseph Brink- man, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree at 8:30 p.m. Thurs., March 17, in Rackham Assembly Hall, Compositions by C.P.E. Bach, Bee- thoven, Franck, and Copland. Open to the public. Events Today Modern Dance Club. Lesson with Miss H'Doubler Thurs., Mar. 17 from 3:20- 4:20 p.m. Be dressed and ready to move by 3:15 p.m. All invited to meet Miss H'Double informally after the lesson; brief discussion. Regular meeting will be held as usual Thurs., Mar. 17 at 7:30 p.m. with warm-ups at 7:00 p.m. Both sessions take plce in Barbour Gym. Christian Science Organization Testi- monial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea. Thurs., Mar. 3, 4:30-6:00 p.m., Rackham Building. Sailing Club. Meeting Thurs., Mar 10 at 7:45 p.m. in 311 W. Eng. Blue Team Publicity Meeting. All those not starred for poster work. Thurs., Mar. 17, 7:00 p.m. Women's League. Hillel: Reservations for Fri. evening supper must be made and paid for at Hillel Thurs. evening any time from 7:00-10:00 p.m. Academic Freedom Committee meet- ing Thurs., March 17, at 4:00 p.m., in Room 3R of the Union to plan Academ- ic Freedom Week, third week in April. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent and Faculty-conducted Evensong Thurs., March 17, at 5:15 p.m., in the Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. Holy Communion at 7:30 p.m. Thurs., March 17, followed *it 8:15 p.m. by four seminars dealing with various aspects of "Everyday Christianity," in the Par- ish House, La Petite Causette will meet Thurs, Mar. 1.7 from 3:30-5:00 p.m. in the left room of the Union cafeteria. Scrabble en francais. Congregational - Disciples Guild. Thurs., Mar. 17, 7:00 a.m., Breakfast Meditation-Discussion group at Guild House Chapel. 5:00-5:30 p.m., Lenten Meditation service in Douglas Chapel. 7:00-8:00 p.m., Bible Class ataGuild House. Russian coffee hour will meet Thurs., March 17 in Michigan Union Cafeteria from 3:30-5:00 p.m. Russian dance group will meet Thurs. March 17 in recreation room of Madelon Pound house, corner of East University and Hill Streets, at 7:00 p.m. Frosh Weekend-Maize team Floor- show try-outs, Thurs., March 17 in the League, 4:00-5:30 and 7:00-9:00 pm. Fri,. March 18, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Meeting of all interested in working toward eliminating -discrimination in housing in Ann Arbor Thurs., 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Frosh Week-end. Blue team tickets committee. Thurs., 4:30 p.m. League. Blue team floor show committee. Thurs., 7:00 p.m. Legue. Gilbert & Sullivan. Principals and chorus rehearsal tonight in the League at 7:00 p.m. Mid-Week Lenten Vespers in the Sanctuary of the Presbyterian Church at 5:10-5:35 p.m., Thurs., March 17, sponsored by Westminster Student Fel- Slowship.Meditation from Mark-"Fol- lowing the Multitude." Arts Chorale will meet Thurs. at 7:00 p.m. in Aud. D Angell Hall. Open to public, Baha'i Student Group sponsors an open discussion Thurs. 8:30 p.m. at the Michigan League. rComing Events Episcopal Student Foundation. Can- terbury Coffee Clatch, 4:00 to 5:15 p.m., Fri., March 18, at Canterbury House. Student and Faculty-conducted Even- r song Fri., March 18, at 5:15 p.m.. in the Chapel off St. Michael and All Angels. Canterbury Campus Series. The Rev. Robert H. Whitaker, Chaplain, discuss- ing "Christianity and Sickness," sec- ond speaker in the Lenten Series on "Christianity and Evil" at 7:30 p.m., Fri., March 18, at Canterbury House. Coffee (and tea) Hour in the Lane H all Library Fri., Mir. 18, from 4:30- 6:00 p.m. Miss Samira Samuel from the YWCA, Cairo, Egypt will be our guest. Campus Chapel group is the guild host. Hillel. Fri. evening services 7:15 p.m. Conducted by Phi Sigma Delta frater- nity. A I CURRENT MOVIES A t the Michigan . MR. HULOT'S HOLIDAY is only one step from a Charlie Chaplin movie, and much closer in laughs. Its star, Jacques Tati, is the closest actor to Chaplin. Tati is loose and lanky with the funniest gait ever. From the time he first drives to a seaside resort in a car that could shame Jack Benny's 1908 Maxwell, until he somehow de- parts in same, we have about the funniest film of the year. As in Tati's first hilarious movie, Jour de Fete (The Big Day), there is very little dia- logue, thusly closely resembling a silent movie. The sparse bits of talk are dubbed in English, and while not the best job, it is not as bad as most dubbings of foreign films., SPRINTING IN his ever-present sneakers, Mr. Hulot wanders into one situation after another. He manages to row a collapsible boatA and naturally collapses it mid-water, wins ten- nis against all comers with a most uproarious serve and sets off a magnificent display of fireworks for a grand finale. Running between these hilarious events are minor characters also at the resort for a brief At Architecture And. . .. STRANGERS ON A TRAIN-Alfred Hitch- cock, Robert Walker, Farley Granger. THIS IS ONE OF Hitchcock's great movies. It marks his return from the extreme psycho- logical studies in which the inter-play of two striking characters crowds out the plot and crimps the camera work (Gaslight, Spell- bound,) Here the inter-action of characters is so skillful that it rarely intrudes to distract the audience from the plot, which must be the basic vehicle for any good mystery. The plot concerns a depraved n'er-do-well Robert Walker who forces a young tennis play- er into a "you do my murder-I'll do yours" situation. Walker's attempts to pin his crime on his unreceptive friend '(Farley Granger) form the chilling climax. As this is a plot-sus- pense picture, your reviewer is reluctant to re- veal any more of the story. Suffice it to say that the final action on a run-away merry-go- round in a crowded amusement park is one of the most thrilling scenes ever filmed. WALKER GIVES a top-notch performance in a difficult part. He strangles, helps blind men across streets, and chit-chats with society matrons, all credibly and almost tenderly. His 4