VALlf.D ATIr JI Zk12 itc SimAi i*AtIL ' VlAi+kEJJAX, IMAK~i 4, 1955 -i .£A~ L' D'V APV6 OPPORTUNITY IGNORED: Bureau of Appointments Offers Valuable Services "Maybe I Shouldn't Have Pulled the Trigger" DREW PEARSON: French THE OPPORTUNITY is there but it isn't be- ing taken, The University maintains a Biireau of Ap-. pointments where students may find out about job opportunities and be placed in worthwhile positions. Each week more than 25 firms send repre- sentatives to the Bureau to interview students for future jobs and to tell them about avail- able opportunities. Companies show great in- terest in the University because of its high academic standing and the potential of its students. They are disappointed when few stu- dents respond. Firms have claimed they receiv- ed a much better turn-out at some of the small- er colleges and at Michigan State. STUDENT APATHY can result in companies sending fewer representatives and, conse- quently a loss of job opportunities. Firms in- vest money to send representatives to the Uni- versity. Lack of student interest indicates to them that University students aren't what they want. Companies realize students are busy. If a student can't see them during scheduled times, most are willing to make arrangements to help students. All they ask for is a little student initiative and interest. Some students claim they don't know about the Bureau of Appointments. Leaflets intro- ducing the Bureau are distributed at registra- tion, posters are put up on campus and the University General Bulletin mentions it. In addition the Daily Official Bulletin carries a list of firms coming to interview students and a list of visiting companies is mailed tq all housing units each week. Possibly the Bureau could go one step further and send a personal leaflet to each student, but the Bureau is of- fering a service and students should take some responsibility for finding out about it. STUDENTS WHO have visited the Bureau complain about "red tape" involved in regis- tering. They refer to a packet of reference sheets, personal data, and job preference ma- terial which requires several hours to fill out. This envelope is supposed to be filled out at "their earliest convenience." Frequently this "convenience" never comes and the envelops lies unopened. Reinstatement of the one dollar fine after a set time limit might speed stu- dents up, but this practice was dropped because of vigorous student objection. Students can meet company representatives without being registered but they lose out on some of the Bureau's services. The Bureau keeps a permanent and continuing record of all registered students. Its files are availalle to companies at any time, making placement of alumni possible. The Bureau frequently gets calls about students who aren't registered with them and the student loses a valuable job op- portunity. By being on the Bureau's active list, students are sometimes notified of job oppor- tunities which might be of special interest to them, although the major responsibility still rests with the student. The Bureau offers stu- dents a valuable service. Job opportunities are often there, waiting to be taken. -Arlis Garon ^ \ >I ' [ -ut r DESMOND MacCAR THY: Review Essays on 'Theatre' Name Change Attempt Seen As Seasonal Symptom- IN THE SPRING a young man's fancy turns to love and the State Board of Agriculture's to changing Michigan State's name. Every spring we go through pretty much the same nonsense. MSC decides it's time to change into long pants and tries to become MSU-UM (with a fiscal eye turned towards Lansing) tries to prevent the change. Everypne ends up hot under the collar and MSC resigns itself to another year as MSC. Our East Lansing friends have gotten a little further this year than last-even got the House Committee on Education to report a name- change bill by a favorable 5-4 vote. And to top it all (the bitter blow) the Michigan State News held a policy meeting and decided to drop the name "College" when refering to MSC (which; as things now stand, is still MSC). EHIND ALL the public statements dished out by administrators of both schools and their respective governing boards is an im- portant but much glossed over fact-the two schools are intense rivals. No one likes to ad- mit that the MSC-UM rivalry (which is a good deal deeper than Paul Bunyan) is the underlying cause of dissension (we try to dis- cuss the problem objectively and rationally), but we suspect it is. No one's fault you understand, it's just that both schools have to vie for funds, prestige, the limelight, football players and students. Perhaps we're partial but we think the sanest solution yet proposed to end the ab- surd bickering comes from the University Board of Regents. Let them have their "University" title, the Regents said, but to prevent con- fusion preface it with something other than "Michigan State." Not wanting to lose the prestige attached to "Michigan State," (Rose Bowl in '54) the State Board of Agriculture objects. Let MSC become a University if they want but if they're sincere (and we doubt it) in claiming they want the change simply because academically they deserve it, let them give up "Michigan State." One reason they're reluctant to do this, we suspect, is that Michigan State University sounds a lot like University of Michigan an; there's a lot of justifiable prestige attached to UM for them to capitalize on. Meanwhile West Germany's Bundesrat ap- proved the Paris Pacts and debate was still go- ing on as to the advisability of releasing the Yalta secrets. --Lee Marks I iw I I Y _ MUSIC REVIEW At Hill Auditorium-... WALTER GIESEKING, pianist TO THOSE of us who have listened to and admired the playing of Gieseking through his recordings, it was an inspiring opportunity for us to hear the man in person. We have given him many plaudits, and used many su- perlatives about him. And we were not dis- sapointed last night. He performed as excep- tionally well as we have come to expect. Age has not interfered with his brilliant virtuosity, nor has it dulled his sensitivity. The program was well chosen. It consisted of a Beethoven Sonata, a group of short Brahms pieces, and two Schubert Impromptus for the first half of the program. The Beetho- ven had violent contrasts, the Brahms had sheer lyricism, sometimes strident and the Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the Un)versity 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 ................. ... Sporots Editor Hanley Gurwin.............Associate Sports Editor Warren Wertheimer. ....... Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz........................Women's Editor Janet Smith. .............Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzei. ..................... Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak..,. ...........Business Manager Phil Brunskill,............Associate Business Manager Bill Wise......................Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski...............Finance Manager Telephone NO 23241 Schubert demonstrated utter and melodious simplicity. The second half was devoted to the Impressionism of Castelnuova-Tadesco and Debussy, of which Mr. Gieseking may be re- garded as the extreme exponent. Our only dis- appointment was that program included none of the music of Bach. AND JUST why do we consider Mr. Giese- king's playing so great? First and fore- most, he is not just a pianist, but a musician, To him, the music is all important and noth- ing else matters. Technic and tone are mere means to this end, but they are necessary means. Gieseking's is a relaxed and effortless style of playing. The music flows out and seems to ride on its own momentum, always moving and never stagnant. He has complete mastery of the keyboard. His dynamics con- sist of an infinite number of purposely con- trolled gradations from pianissimo to fortis- simo. The playing is precise and articulate- we never miss a note. His delicacy and use of piano color is second to none, and his cli- maxes are so planned as to produce the ulti- mate in effect, thus realizing the full inten- tions of the composer. His encores were: a Scarlatti Sonata, the Debussy Arabesque number one, and one of the Grieg Lyric Pieces. -Tom Kreger New Books at the Library Armstrong, Charlotte-The Dream Walker; New York, Coward-McCann, 1955. Arny, Mary Travis-Seasoned With Salt; Philadelphia, The Westminster Press, 1955. Berton, Laura Beatrice-I Married the Klon- dike; Boston & Toronto, Rinehart and Co., 1955. Carmer, Carl-The Susquehanna; New York & Toronto, Lojie Brown and Co., 1955 Davis, Elmer-Two Minutes Till Midnight; Indianapoles & New York, The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc., 1955. Salisbury, Harrison E.-American In Russia; "Theatre" by Desmond Mac- Carhyt O x f o r d University Press, 1955. "THEATRE" is a collection of pieces, published posthumous- ly in February 1955, on plays, per- formances, actors and actresses, and on the theatre in general, by Desmond MacCarthy, the English man-of-letters whose death a few years ago left criticism in a classi- cal sense an almost unpractised art. Many American readers may not know the constant pleasure he provides; there is no counterpart in the United States, so compari- son is difficult, On one hand - in the enormous range of his sympathies and in- terests-he reminds you of Ed- mund Wilson, except about Mac- Carthy's work you never have re- servations; you never think, as is possible with Wilson, that you are being given I Final Word when, really, it isn't a critic's business to write the last word, only his say. And MacCarthy, again unlike Wil- son, has no dull axes to whet. On another hand-that of clear- sighted, no-nonsense, please, sen- sibility, he reminds you of George Jean Nathan, except MacCarthy has none of the superficial pro- fundity and subsurface shallow- ness that mars Nathan's writing when he feels compelled to defend his reputation as bon vivant with venomed thrust ready to dispatch some witless miscreant where art is concerned, leaving a scintillat. ing quote, but nothing much con- structive. Where MacCarthy draws near a composite Wilson-Nathan is in this, he, too, is an enormous schol- ar who dispenses scholarship eas- fly. He writes like a brilliant talk- er would speak: There is in the fitting of his thoughts into sen- tences a sense of one period still producing an echo while yet a new one is launched. MacCarthy's es- says are never congrested with parentheticals; he has none of the footnotes put down as such, as do many academicians-turned- critics; in their speaking parts scholarly apparatus appear as an- noying, consumptive coughs. MacCARTHY never formulated his approach to drama or lit- ' erature into an Aesthetic which would include or exclude depend- ing on whether or not the parti- cular work was at variance. A few sentences, scattered through his writing, give you his viewpoint, as in this one when he neatly dispos- es of F. R. Leavis in writing about W. H. Davies in "Memories": "It seem to me a dubious bar- gain to lose a Keats to gain a Pound, to surrender a Coleridge to find a Flint, to exchange a Milton even for an Eliot. Bust must it be with us always either this poet or that? Does not the same read- er often respond both to Pope and Blake? Surely we are all gifted with a happy natural inconsis- tency of tastes? Indeed, we are- if only we let ourselves alone We can admire poets equally who nave hardly one excellence in common, until we apply to both the same Aesthetic. But the moment we start, think we know what is the essence of poetry we are driven to reject much we could otherwise admire." In writing about Swinburne in "Humanities" he said, "The crit- ic's functions are by no means limited to comparison, analysis, and judgment: he may simply make 'us feel what he has felt." A crisp, clear appraisal of Noel Coward in "Theatre" contains this sentence: "I enjoyed it; I wept -for I am not one of those who nhc innt Z _vof,.. r n t,. " he had experienced at the per- formance or in the reading, know- ing full well that if this impression were to have any real value it required him to draw upon both his intellect and his sensations, in calm afterward, in detachment. MacCarthy's big question is al- ways to same, regardless of the work at hand or the time from which the work comes, "What does this work mean in terms of life, my life and your life?" The test of the work of art for Mac- Carthy was always its relation to the experience that all men have, living, and he says in a dialogue with two parts of himself ".-- me second counsellor soothes me. He talks like this: 'You are a lit- erary man; you should write for literary people, not for those who are confined to the moment-in a great measure through the infer- iority of their faculties. Litera- ture is an important part of life; taste is high morality." Lord David Cecil has written of MacCarthy: "He examined litera- ture always in relation to impor- tant and permanent aspects of man's experience, and estimated it by rational and timeless stand- ards deeply grounded in the Euro- pean tradition of culture and not biased by the preudice of any school or period." The word for MacCarthy's approach is "hu- mane." OW, THERE is nothing new in what MacCarthy did be- cause of his viewpoint,' and yet what he did is just the lack in the great body of criticism in this cen- tury, and it is his great recom- mendation. In "Theatre" McCar- thy considers Shakespeare, Ibsen, Chekhov, Strindberg, Pirandellow, Barrie, Maugham. Perhaps Mac- Carthy's estimates of Maugham will do something to restore him to a place he ought rightfully hold in theatre history, MacCarthy writes with such probity that any- one who cares about the stage ought find considerable instruc- tion in him. It is good also to read his ap- praisals of Mrs. Patrick Camp- bell, Eleanora Duse and Sara Bernhardt, for these are legendary figures in the theatre and you like to know what bases legends have. Of Bernhardt he says: "Sarah Bernhardt was always the actress as well as the part; at her best she was both equally, Conse- quently, she was at her best in plays where passions were ex- press in a dramatic convention which does not attempt to com- pete with nature or to create the greatest illusion, but to interpret life on another . . . In her acting at its best she achieved what mo- dern poets long to do-to express their own personalities with spon- taneous freedom without losing the dignity and definiteness of a conscious work of art." Virginia Woolf was at center of' the Bloomsbury group now so fam- ous; E. M. Forster is pehaps the greatest of the survivors who once included Roger Fry, Vanessa and Clive Bell, Lytton Strachey, and others. Desmond MacCarthy was a member, too, and it is to his credit that he is thought of apart from the others - He was, in fact, the despair of those geniuses at times, because there was so much in English li- terature and drama he could re- spond to and admire by not forc- ing his concept of excellence to conform to standards other than those grouped under the word "humane," which in context means "life-enriching," classical. Had they not a great friendship, and were not Virginia Woolf's Feeling 'Fallout' WASHINGTON-Yalta fallout -The fallout from the Yalta explosion is like the Hydrogen. Its devastating diplomatic effect continues long after the original blast . . . Today the French Sen- ate votes on ratification of the German arms agreement, which Dulles for two years has made the cornerstone of his European policy. He took four trips to Europe to urge, threaten, cajole French par- ticipation . . . Yet just six days prior to French senate debate on ratification he released a docu- ment quoting Winston Churchill as saying: "no solution has been found for controlling the French while they are controlling the Germans. If the French wish to be tiresome they could produce trouble in their zone which would cause trouble in the other zones. If -we decide to be strict they could be lenient. If we decide to be lenient they could be strict." . . . French diplomats working for ratification of the German arms agreement were dumbfounded, the French press furious ., . before the State Department released the Yalta ex- pi1 o s i o n stenographers hastily crossed out certain passages with pencils. However, French news- men could see right through the penciled censorship, including the Churchill quote: "I do feel that if the French are given this little sop it will keep- them quietly, for I feel strongly that they should not be at this table. This is an exclusive group (smiling) and the entrance subscription is at least five million soldiers." . . . Natur- ally this was headlined in Paris. Yalta'd British-What flabber- gasted the British was that the Secretary of State himself should leak the documents. They knew, as the entire press and diplomatic corps now knows, that it was none other than John Foster Dulles who authorized that two huge volumes be planted with the New York Times, a technique calculated to satisfy right-wing Republicans yet let Dulles tell the British he was against publication . . . "If that happened in England," remarked one British diplomat, "Eden would face questions in Commons next morning and might have to re- sign." . . . One Yalta line that es- pecially irked the British was the Churchill quote: "It would be a ~pity to stuff the Polish goose so full of German food that it would have indigestion." Yalta Wisecracks - With the weight of the war on their should- ers the old gentlemen at Yalta were full of wisecracks, which is one reason Senator Knowland de- nanded publication. However, Churchill and Roosevelt always wisecracked, war or no war -. - Here are some Yalta-cracks: . .. Churchill: "We are pursuing the Atlantic Charter. I sent a copy of this interpretation to Wendell Willkie." Roosevelt: "Is that wht killed him?" . . Roosevelt "re- called there had been an organiza- tion called the Ku Klux Klan that had hated the Catholics and Jews, and when he had been on a visit to a small town in the south he had been the guest of the presi- dent of the local Chamber of Com- nerce. He had sat next to an Ital- ian on one side and a Jew on the other and had asked the presi- dent of the Chamber of Commerce whether they were members of the Ku. Klux Klan, to. which the president replied that they were, but that they were considered all right since everyone in the com- munity knew them. The President remarked that it was a good illus- tration of how difficult it was to have any prejudice-racial, reli- gious or otherwise-if you really knew people." . . . Roosevelt told this in supporting a Churchill toast for peaceful cooperation with Russia "that the common danger of war had removed the impedi- ments to understanding and the fires of war had wiped out old ani- mosities." Dumb Democrats-The Demo- cratic National Committee was either too dumb or too busy play- ing bridge or unable to read. For the Yalta papers contained good political ammunition . . . GOP mouthpieces, including David Law- rence's U.S. News, also Newsweek, had leaked the story that Joe Lash, onetime friend of Mrs Roosevelt and former member of a Com- munist-front youth group, was to be a U.S. delegate to the United Nations. It now develops that Ed Stettinius, then Secretary of State, didn't know how to spell "Laus- ' che," the name of the Governor of Ohio. Yalta - hissing - One document in the Yalta record which neither McCarthy nor Nixon is likely to quote is a memo the State De- partment attributed to Hiss show- ing. he opposed giving two extra votes to Russia in the United Na- tions . . .When Stalin wanted the TT-, m nT~ia R vc n a f - -f on "The Study of Channel Capacity.," p.m. Henry Quastler (Illinois) will speak Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., March 24, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Dr. I. Marx will speak on "Half-Plane Diffr#Lction: Wiener-Hopf Method." A Social Seminar will be held Thurs., March 24, at 7:45 p.m. in the East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Building. Panel discussion by Institute graduates on "Education for Public Administra- tion: A Critique." Refreshments. Seminar in Organic Chemistry. Thurs., March 24 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1300 Chemistry. Stanley L. Reid will speak on "Oxidations with Phenyl Iodosoace- tates." Seminar in Analytical-Inorganic-Phys- ical Chemistry. Thurs., March 24 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3005 Chemistry. Raymond E. Bahor will speak on "Analytical Ap- plieptions of Ion Exchange Resins." Concerts Faculty Concert. Florian Mueller, oboe, Clyde Carpenter, French horn, and Charles Fisher, piano, in Auditorium A, Angell Hall, Wed., March 23, at 8:30 p.m. Concerto for Oboe and Piano by Cimarosa; Mozart's Horn Concerto No. 2; and the first performance of Sona- ta for French Horn and Piano composed by Edith Borroff, graduate student at the University; first performance of Sonata for Oboe and Piano by Robert Casadesus; Suite of Two Pieces by Hugland, and En Foret by Bozza. Open to the public. Student Recital. Suzanne Grenard, pi- anist, will be heard at 8:30 p.m. Thurs., March 24, in Rackham Assembly Hall, playing compositions by Galuppi, 'Brahnis, Schubert, and Honegger. Miss Grenard studies with Joseph Brinkman, and her reciti will be open to the public. It is to be presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree, Events Today La Cercle Francais will meet Wednes- day at 8:00 p.m. in the League. Three skits: "Les Chevaliers de Scrabble," "Aimez-vous le fromage?", and "Dorme Reforme" will be given. Bingo in French with prizes, a French film, records, and refreshments will follow. Venez tous! Lutheran Stu dent Association-Wed- nesday, 7:30 p.m. This week the media- tion will be on the Fifth Word from the Cross. Corner of Hill St. and Forest .Ave. Episcopal S t u d e n t Foundation. Breakfast at Canterbury House follow- foing the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion, Wednesday, March 23. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent and Faculty-conducted Evensong on Wednesday, March 23, at 5:15 p.m., in the Chapel of St. Michael and All An- gels. The following Badminton games will be played on Wednesday, March 23 in Barbour Gym: At 7:00-Marg Smith and Frank, Cohn and Hammill, Kirchner and Gebhard. At 7:30-Hantel and Do- err, Bryant, Galvin and Walters, Hei- den, O'Tool, Gubbins and Moffatt, Smith. At 8:00-Reilly, Shicks and Johnstone, Weinert, Larwin, Pahl and Quine, Burroughs, Uebel, Leroy, and THE MASTER, ESCUDERO: Noted Dancer Makes Final Appearance AT THE SHUBERT IN DETROIT .*. ESCUDERO and his Company. VINCENTE ESCUDERO, the grand master of all flamenco dancers, is now making a final appearance tour of the country. At present, he is dancing to Detroit audiences for the remainder of the week. Like most "final appearance" tours, Escudero's program has a kind of romantic nostalgia and sadness, for there is something innately pathetic about an old dancer putting an end to a career of fame and applause. Escudero is an old man (his program age is listed as 62) and age has taken some of his lithesomeness. But what he lacks in youth- ful vitality, he more than compensates with technique, a technique which is probably unsurpassed in the entire world, and which takes its roots in the culmination of nearly a half century of dancing. More- over, it is a technique which is ageless and which displays its depth and complexity when compared with the vibrant but immature dancing of the company's other male performers. FROM THE time Escudero makes his first appearance, dancing a Zapateado without music, filling the theater with primitive fla- menco rhythms made by the feet and hands, to his final Romeras, he holds his audience electrified with the poise, ability, and assurance of a truly great artist. There is always the arched back, the stilled hips, the violent Gypsy temperament brought under the control and precision of flamenco; Escudero can produce the most intense kind of excitement, the feet tapping out the ancient rhythms, he hands making music in sound and motion. Only five times does the Master dance; but each alone is wor- thy of attendance: the hand and arm movements in the Romance Al Molino; the strikingly complex Siguiria Gitana done on a dimly light- ed stage; the humorous Sevilla performed with castanets that seem to speak. THE COMPANY never allows popularization for American audiences influence their work; and all dancing is pure and authentic. Car- mita Garcia, who also works with Escudero in the Sevilla, injects hu- mor and playfulness into her dancing without ever losing control of technique. Maria Marquez displays a thorough mastery of classical Spanish dancing. In addition, there is a solo guitarist, Mario Escudero (no relation), who won a rousing reception on opening night, and Flamenco singer Pepe La Matrona. The company is small and each performer is given ample opportunity to display his or her talents. A small but appreciative opening night audience seemed to indi- cate that there are few Detroiters interested in Escudero, which is un- fortunate; for the entire program is a dance experience to be long re- membered, well worth the inconvenience of traveling to Detroit. -Ernest Theodossin DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I (Continued from Page 2) Frosh Weekend -- Maize Team Pub licity Committee Stunts and Skits meeting Wed., March 23 7:30 p.m. in the League. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw: Midweek Lenten vespers today at 7:30 and at 9:15: Sermon by the pastor, "Pontius Pilate -- Blameworthy Bungler." WCBN WQ. General staff meeting to- day, Wed., March 23, in the West Quad council room at 6:30 p.m. Attendance required, Pershing Rifles. Be at TCB in uni- form Wed., March 23 at 1930 hrs. foir regular company drill. First Baptist Church. Wed., March 23. 4:30-5:45 p.m. Tea at Guild House. Meeting of Ullr Ski Club will be held in Room 3K, Union, at 8:00 p.m. Wed., March 23. Movies. "The Skin of Our Teeth," Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning come- dy, will be presented by the Depart- ment of Speech at 8:00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets tire on sale at the box office 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Student Zionist meeting March 23. Plans for Israel Independence Day cel- ebration will be discussed. Young Democrats. Prospects' for the Democratic Party in 1956 will be dis- cussed by Lieutenant Governor Phil Hart, Professor Moos of Johns Hopkins, national committee woman Margaret Price, and Horace Cooper of the Survey Research Center, at the Michigan Un- ion, Room 3G tonight at 7:30 p.m. Wesleyan Guild. Wed., March 23. Mid- week Tea in lounge, 4:00-5:15 p.m. Mid- week Worship in the chapel at 5:15 p.m. Regular Meeting of the Co-Recreation- al Badminton Club will be held March 23, in Barbour Gymnasium. 7:00 p.m. Coming Events Christian Science Organization Testl- monial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea. Thurs., 4:30- 6:00 p.m., Rackham Building. Sailing Club. Meeting Thurs. at 7:45 p.m. Iz 311 W. Eng. Hillel Grad Group. Brunch. Bagles and Lox. Sunday March 27, 10:30 a.m. at Hillel. $.50 charge. Reservations must be made at Hillel before Thursday eve- ning, March 24. A Workcamp is planned for Ypsilan- tt this week-end. Information can be obtained from Lane Hall, Ext. 2851. Congressional-Disciples Guild. Thurs., May 24, 7:00 a.m., Breakfast group at the Guild House Chapel. 5:00-5:30 p.m., Len- ten Meditation in Douglas Chapel. 7:15- 8:15 p.m., Bible Class at the Guild House. La Petite Causette meets Thurs., May 24, 3:30-5:00 p.m.-in the left room of the Union cafeteria. Scrabble en francals. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent and Faculty-conducted Evensong Thurs., March 24, at 5:15 p.m., in the Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. Holy Communion at 7:30 p.m. Thurs,, March 24, followed at 8:15 p.m. by four seminars dealing with various aspects of "Everyday Christianity," in the Par- ish House. ,.