f.§ PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY T171F'.RnAV- APUTT, 12- 14AS TH,.CIGNA. Ik)Z7LtAYY Al-nlL 14, 1O~ a CRUCIAL TO SGC: New Administrative Wing Will Need Many Members STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council's new ad- ministrative structure appears on the sure face little different from that existing under Student Legislature. Only the addition of a special administrative secretary and tightening of lines of responsibility and function in a few places differentiate the two structures. However despite surface evidence of iden- tity one department under SGC will be taking added responsibility in University student gov- ,ernment. It's failure. to meet the responsibility might prove a great weakness in SGC's early grappling with campus problems. We refer to the administrative wing under direction of the administrative coordinator. ADMINISTRATIVE wing originated three years ago under SL. Members served actively on standing committees and helped with the secretarial work. Approximately half of the membership on SL's standing commit- tees was taken from the administrative wing. Although the number varied from time to time an estimated 40 students worked regularly with the wing, with an average of from 10 to 12 serving on SL's four standing committees. Under SGC need for an increase in both quality and quantity of students becomes imme- diately evident.,Because of SGC's small elect- ed membership a maximum of three SGC mem- bers can serve on any of the student govern- ment's three standing committees. At least eight elected members served on SL commit- tees. SGC Vice-President Donna Netzer estimates each of the three committees needs 20 mem- bers to function effectively, so the wing should furnish at least 17-a number definitely in ex- cess of that needed under SL. The wing was never an influential force une- der SL. It needs to be under SGC. If SGC op- erated like SK wing members will have a vote on committees and will be able to exert strong influence in the formulation of measures to be brought before the Council. Since they will do an abundance of the research elected SGC members will want to know their conclusions and opinions on various campus problems. The Council will have extreme difficulty operat- ing without both a strong administrative wing both qualitatively and quantitatively. T IS UP to the Council to produce the neces- sary strong administrative wing. Although it may be too late $o start this spring, SGC should immediately campaign next fall to build this segment of their organization. Emphasizing the increased responsibility of the wing as well as the opportunity for experience toward pos- sibl future membership on the elected body, the Council should stage a vigorous all-cam- pus drive for wing workers. Failure to build the wing could cause collapse of the whole new ad- ministrative structure. Three elected members per committee is a far cry from the number necessary to do the research for solutions to the University's problems. --Dave Baad Recent Censorship of College Papers: Who Should Decide? CONTRARY to the recognized "freedom off the press," some college publications have recently felt the axe of censorship and accu- sation.. At Cornell University, three editors of the college humor magazine were officially repri- manded by the Faculty Committee on Stu- dent Conduct because one issue contained an article lampooning sororities. In the midwest, five editors of the Illinois Technology News received disciplinary probation, also handed down by a faculty committee. Tech editors were charged with publishing a cartoon and an article that the committee considered "doubtful." Both penalties were incurred because the publications were in "extremely poor taste" -at least *as far as both committees were concerned. As a result, the Technology News was dis- banded until the Board of Publications de- cides otherwise. The Cornell committee gra- ciously permitted their magazine to continue publication-with stipulations.- HOWEVER, criticism isn't exclusively a fac- ulty committee, prerogative. Student legis- lators at the University of North Carolina charged that The Daily Tar Heel is a "second Daily Worker" managed by "lazy" editors. Irate legislators accused the editor of imposing his liberal views on the students and giving "poor coverage" to student activities. To further jus- tify their complaints, the legislature appointed a committee to investigate "the circulation and quality problems" of the paper. CENSORSHIP Is a valuable tool when used constructively except when harshly con- fined to the decisions of a few. Undoubtedly, a college publication has some responsibility to the school, but primarily to the readers- the students. Unless something is clearly in poor taste, the line separating good and bad becomes a matter of opinion. But whose opihion?-this is the controversial point. At the University of North Carolina, stu- dent legislators decided that an investigating committee was the best solution. In the case of Cornell and Illinois Tech, the question of who has the final word was decisively set- tled by a faculty committee. The legislators represent the students; the faculty represents the school. Each- has the concern of a differ- ent group in mind. Who, then, has the exclu- sive right to censure? Neither. First of all, while the publication must realize some responsibility to the school, it is unfair that a faculty committee should issue such harsh decisions because of conflicting ideas. Such a group doesn't adequately repre- sent student opinion. SECONDLY, an investigating committee op- erating under the charge that the paper is "a second Daily Worker" isn't the answer to the problem, either. Unless a publication is radically at odds with student opinion, such a committee will only stifle the paper instead of helping it. If censorship is needed, compromise is a feasible alternative. The student legislature and the faculty committee should decide to- gether whether or not the publication is "abus- ing its privileges." With both sides expressing an opinion and discussing them with the edi- tors of the publication, regulatory measures can then be reached, to the satisfaction of all parties. At present, future issues at Cornell and Illi- nois, Tech will undoubtedly be regulated by conservatism and a threat of permanent dis- banding. Such rigid management, of both the magazine and newspaper, certainly places their, respective staffs in an unenviable position. -Betty Schomer DREW PEARSON: Passing Of FDR Left Void WASHINGTON-A lot of things have happened since that day ten years ago when FDR passed away. It was an April day. full of hope and sunshine. A great war was about to be won Every- one could feel it. Peace was just around the corner. The big things he had fought for were almost within reach . . . And then his body came home-came back on a flag-draped caisson from Geor- gia, came slowly down Pennsyl- vania Avenue up which he had driven four times to take the oath as President . . . The town seemed empty after that. And a little numb. Actually, FDR hadn't been around much that winter. He was in Warm Springs after his elec- tion, in Hyde Park for Christmas. then to Yalta, then back to Hyde Park, then to Warm Springs again -then back to Washington to lie in the east room of the White House-silent and alone . . . But even though he had been away, people always felt that l1e was here, that he had his hands on things, and so the town was emp- ty. Even the guards around the public buildings, the folks who sit on park benches, the elevator op- erators, the taxi drivers, seemed a little lost. For Roosevelt was their President. They felt he was work- ing for them. And they knew they had lost a friend. The little man who took his place, a humble man, was in Sam Rayburn's office late in the after- noon when he got a phone call to come to the White House imme- diately. White-faced and grim, he left. He knew what the call meant .. At the White House later Har- ry Truman took the oath of office as President of the United States. The cabinet stood by shocked and shaken. Miss Perkins, who had known FDR since their early re- form days in Albany, broke down and wept. Henry L. Stimson, a Republican who had served in three cabinets and who once had battled against young FDR in New York State, also wept-unabashed Times Change THE FUNERAL train that car- ried FDR to Hyde Park was crowded with cabinet members and old friends. They stayed awake most of the night. Outside as the train passed were bonfires, people standing, waiting to pay homage to the last visible remains of their dead leader. All night through Philadelphia, Trenton, Newark, New York, people stood along the tracks . . . At Hyde Park the cabinet and the Supreme Court stood on one side of the rose garden, opposite the grave. The new President stood on the other side. With him were Mike Riley of the Secret Service, Mrs. Truman - and Jimmie Byrnes. Jimmie, who had left Washington, supposedly for good, just two weeks before, had hastily flown back toboard thebfuneral train *. Taps were blown. A West Point cadet handed Mrs. Roose- velt the flag which had been drap- ed over her husband's bier. She bore up well . . . The dead Presi- dent was lowered into his grave. That night as the special train rolled back to Washington, Harry Truman spent most of his time with three men-Jimmie Byrnes, Ed Pauley, George Allen. Of these, only Pauley, the California oil man, continues close to him. Byrnes, whom Truman appointed to the highest Cabinet post, has fought him bitterly, tried to carry South Carolina for Eisenhower.. . George Allen, who was given high honor by Truman and a lush job in the RFC, is now Eisenhower's partner in the farm at Gettysburg and in a Howard Johnson restau- rant. Churchill Erred, at Yalta SO TIMES have changed. The man who succeeded Roosevelt is now out of office, the man. whom Roosevelt made command- ing general in Europe is in of- fice; and when the Yalta records were released, few people whom he had befriended, few' he pro- moted, to high office, rose to de- fend his good name . . . In con- trast, Winston Churchill, who was equally, perhaps more to blame for the mistakes at Yalta, retired last week in a blaze of glory. He lived to defend himself Some years ago, before he carne back as Prime Minister, Churchill confided to a friend that he wished he had passed on as Roosevelt did at the height of vic- tory, at the glorious climax of the war . . . However, he lived to en- joy other glories, lived to defend himself, and I for one am glad he did .. No one attacked Church- ill for the mistakes he made at Yalta. They attacked the dead man who could not defend himself. FDR did not promote me to high office, did me no favors. He fired my father, a Republican appointed governor of the Virgin Islands by Hoover, and once in the heat Tug Of War And Peace LETTERS TO THE EDITOR . #* e.rt$ .e r er. apwcr~c.+ + v~ac~w P's.r .- TODAY AND TOMORROW. Yalta Release Misuses 'Open Diplomiacy' By WALTER LIPPMANN The Yalta Papers I THOUGH IT IS rather late to write about the publication of the Yalta papers, I conclude that I have been sunning myself in a pleasant California valley where time moves slowly. And there, reading in the papers that Mr. Dulles thinks Yalta will be discussed for ages, I felt unhurried and that what I had to say could wait. Across the ages there will, no doubt, be things to discuss which have not yet entered our minds. But before the ages overtake us, there are things to discuss now, and one of them is a question which matters much in practical negotiation and in the conduct of foreign policy. In publishing this miscellaneous collection of papers has Mr. Dulles ap- plied correctly and wisely the sound principle of open diplomacy? Or has he misapplied the principle and done injury to the practice of diplomacy? I venture to think the principle of open diplomacy has been misapplied, that this has done considerable damage to our inter- national credit, and has set a precedent which, if it becomes fixed, will plague him and all his successors. FOR THIS particular publication'does something which is, I believe, radically new. It treats the informal conversation of public men, and an abbreviated and unverified version of it at that, as if it were part of the official diplomatic record. This is as if the official records _t . ...,.-- , ":-:, ;.n. f f bG c'' A ' ' ' Fr - > _ h'r . j - "6 F( y 1 ! T f 'lrr' fM/ ~1« ' Y 'M ~ \: 'C CURRENT MOVIES i i s r i n At the State .. MOVINS may not be better than ever, but they certainly are bigger than ever, as evidenced by MGM's "21-gun-salute musical," Hit the Deck. Hit the Deck is longer (112 minutes) and wider (CinemaScope) than any musical of re- cent appearance. It has gaudier color (East- man, Print by Technicolor), more musical se- lections (13 and a finale), more stars (seven musical, seven suporting, and the Jubalaires), an illustrious story (written by Sonya Levien and William Ludwig, based on the musical play by Herbert Fields as presented on the stage by Vincent Youmans from Shore Leave by Hubert Osborne), songs by Vincent Youmans (nine old, one recently discovered), and new and old lyrics (by Leo Robins, Clifford Grey, and Ir- ving Caesar). MOREOVER, the musical numbers contain "something for everyone": a tender num- ber, "I Know That You Know"; a spritely num- ber, "Loo Loo"; a marching number, "Join the Navy"; a blues number, "Why, Oh Why"; a patter number, "A Kiss or Two"; an Italian street song number, "Ciribiribin"; a romantic ballad ' number, "More Than You Know"; a gay-miserable, manic - depressive n u m b e r, "Sometimes I'm Happy"; a rousing, stand-up- and - sout, give - it - all - you've - got - because- we're-so-happy number, "Hallelujah"; and a sexy production number with chorus boys in torn T-shirts, "Lady From the Bayou." SANDWICHED in between musical offerings, At the Michigan... THE GLASS SLIPPER, with Leslie Caron & Michael Wilding. THIS IS, as might be expected, a ballet-ori- ented Cinderella; with Leslie Caron as the dirty little urchin and Mike Wilding as the Prince. It is a rather imaginative interpretation of cinderella, with two suitably beautiful sisters; one cold as a cobra, the other poisonous as a toadstool. Elsa Lancaster was the cruel step- mother. Best of all was Mary Rudolph's aunt, as the fairy godmother; who went about talking of pickle-relish, window-sills, and apple dump- lings; with flowers in her hair. Madame Geneva, our ballet expert, pronounc- ed the dancing, which formed a rather large portion of the production, well executed but for the most part unimaginative. Leslie Caron was an argumentive Cinderalla, sensitive but thoroughly disagreeable, who ap- peared to deserve much of the ill treatment she received. Going about as she did, covered with cinders and ashes, it is no surprise that the good townspeople locked up their white sheets when she came past; encompassed as she was by an aura of filth. But she got cleaned up lat- er. The Prince and his retinue were unspeakably royal. Everyone danced well at the ball. Even the fat old Duke. The glass slipper incident was de-empha- sized, as though the film writers thought use of the name as the title was sufficient. Like- of the Chicago conventions of 1952 were made to include excerpts of telephone conversations among the political managers, and bits and pieces on what politicians said to one another in the lobbies. It is like publishing excerpts of the talks which Mr. Dulles had with Sen. Taft and with Gen. Eisen- hower before the Dulles plank on foreign affairs was adopted for the Republican platform., The publication of the official agreements entered into at Yalta, and of the American memoranda bearing on American policy and action, is one thing, The dialogue, the chit-chat, the table talk be- fore and after the liquor, are a quite different affair. Yet these jottings which form part of no verified record-and not the agree- ments and the official documents themselves-have done the dam- age, have sewn the suspicion and the ill will, and have shaken con- fidence inside the Atlantic alli- ance. If open diplomacy required the publication of such stuff, then Mr. Knowland ought to introduce a new law. In the future every dip- lomat should be required to travel around with a tape recorder at- tached to him. This law should ap- ply also to Senators when they talk to the representatives of for- 'eign powers. Nothing should be unpublished except the dreams that statesmen cannot remember when they wake up the next morn- ing. MR. DULLES has been quoted as saying at a press conference in Ottawa that the Yalta papers were put out in the normal course of procedure in accord 'with the State Department's policy of pub- lishing periodically papers of his- toric interest. I wonder whether in his busy life Mr. Dulles has had the time to check the accuracy of that statement. I have not, of course, examined all the many volumes on foreign relations published by the State Department. But I have often worked in these volumes, and my impression is that it.is a new de- parture to publish unverified and ex parte notes like these on the conversations of diplomats. If any other Secretary of State has ever made such a publication, it would be interesting to know who he was and when he did it. THERE IS no simple and auto- matic solution for the prob- lem of open diplomacy. The prob- lem is how to keep diplomacy op- en enough so that the Legislature can know enough to hold the exe- cutive responsible and accountable _-and s hesametime ot t collection of the Yalta papers -- three main types of documentary material which are left over from international negotiations. The first consists of the agreements which bind the governments, or the executive branch of the gov- ernments to do certain things. There can be no question that they must be published, and ex- cept possibly in the crisis of a war, international agreements should not even be considered as valid until they have been pub- lished, and until there has been a public accounting. This collection of Yalta papers discloses no agree- ments or commitments which have not already been published. THE SECOND type of document might be described as concern- ed with the terms of the bargains on which the agreements rest. The democracies need to know what was given for what, and why:-for example, the concessions to the Soviet Union in the Far East in return for the pledge to go to war against Japan, and with them the contemporary military and politc cal estimates on which the nego- tiators acted. But there is a third type of ma- terial which, unless there has been an agreement to make a steno- graphic record, is not a legitimate part of the official record. It con- sists of reports of what men said, believing they were speaking off the record. This material is norm- ally reserved for personal diaries and memoirs, which do not have official authority behind them. What, for example, Churchill was heard to say onehday about the Poles was not on the record and it should not have been put into the record. It does not belong in a contemporary official publication, and to put it there is not to make diplomacy more open. It was in this case to misrepresent the atti- tude of Churchill towards Poland. Its publication is a warning to his successor to be more furtive an,.. secretive, and to say nothing which their public relations ad- visers do not think will look well in print a few years later. But where would we be if every uttered word of public men were public? Back in the caves brunting at one another. IT IS ONLY fair to say that the trouble could have been avert- ed if the three great men at Yalta had provided a precise and system- atic record of their own, if after' their personal talks they had ex- changed memoranda of what was said. But they were in a hurry, and they were casual in the man- (Continued from Page 2) entire company)-B.S. In Elect., Ind., Mech., Chem. E., Engrg. ,Mech. and Chemistry for Research, Development, Production, Plant Engrg. Fri., April 15 Brush Electronics Co., Clevite Corp., Cleveland, Ohio-B.S. in Elect., Mech., and Ind. E. for Design and Production. Koehring Co., Milwaukee, Wis.-B.S. In Civil, Ind., and Mech. E. for Training Program for Design, Mnufacturing Sales. For appointments' contact the Engrg. Placement Office, Ext. 2182, 248 W.E. Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Tues., April 12 Travelers Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn.-men and women, Sr. for regular, Jrs. and Sophs. for summer, for Produc- tion, Underwriting, Actuarial, Claims nd Admin. The Summer Program wil be in the Actuarial Dept. Both majors are particularly desired. Thurs., April 14 Prudential Insurance Co., various 10- eations-mnen in LS&A and BusAd for Management Training for offices in var- ious locations throughout the U.S. Mich. Civil Service-men and women in any field for any department in any part of the state. Among the fields needed are Accounting, Chemistry, Psych., vocational School Teachers, Econ. Research, Nursing, Medicine, Sta- tistics, Home Ec., BusAd., Pol. Sci., Spec. Educ., Soc. Work, Phys. Educ., Law and Engrg. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, Room 3528 Admin. Bldg. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Navy Area Office, San Diego, Crlif - employment opportunities for Audi- tors, GS-9, requiring experience in ac- counting and auditing. Sheboygan Local Council of Girl Scouts, Inc., Sheboygan, Wis., Is seek- ing an Executive Dir., 23 yrs. old, hav- ing had some experience in teaching and social organization, and a Field Dir., 21 yrs., college grad but needs no previous professional experience. General Mills, Inc., Minneapolis, Minn., has openings in the Gen'l. Mills Mechanical Div. for Tech., Scientific and Professional personnel, including Mech. E., Electronics, Engrg. Physics, and Chemistry. Bendix Computer, Div. of Bendix Avi- ation Corp., Los Angeles, Calif., has v- cancies for Design Engrs., Mathemati- clans, Field Service Engrs., Sales Engrs. Opportunities exist for E.E., M.E., and Math. City of Hamilton, Ohio, has an open- ing for Engrg. Aide IV. Qualifications: registered Civil Engr. or Graduate Civil Engr., 25-55 yrs. of age. Deadline for ap- plications is April 22, 1955. New York State Civil Service an- nounces exam for Jr. Sanitary Engr., open to all qualified citizens of the U.S. B.S.E. with experience and/or speciali- zation in Sanitary or Public Health Engrg. Mich. State Civil Service announces exams for vision Consultant III, Con- servation Worker C, Conservation I- lustrator III, Child Guidance Psychia- trist V, Child Guidance Psych. VI, Child Guidance Psych. VI A, Pediatri- cian VI A, Physician IV A, Physician VPhysician VI, Psychiatric Resident III, Psych. Nv A, Psych. V A, Psych, Clinic Dir. VI, Pub. Health Epidemiolo- gist VI, Pub. Health Epidem. VI A, Pub. HealthuMaternal & Ch. Health Phys. VA, Pub. Health Maternal & Ch. Health Phys. VI A, Pub. Health Phys. VI, San- atorium Phys.V, Sanatorium Phys. V A, Sanatorium Phys. VI, Sanatorium Phys. VI A, Dentist IV, and Dentist V. The Electric Controller & Mfg. Co, Cleveland, Ohio, needs Field Engrs, for SalesWork-recent BSEE grads., and Development Engrs. - Research and Devel. Engrs. with 3 or more yrs. of ex- perience, must have degree in E.E. Hdq. Warner Robins Air Materiel Area, Robins Air Force Base, Ga., has a vacancy for a Systems Development An- alyst-GS-12, 13-to study all phases of the USAF logistical system. Requires minimum of six years of experience with knowledge of acquisition, compila- tion, analysis and evaluation of volume data in areas of supply, maintenance, etc. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. INTERVIEWING IN DETROIT Pan American World Airways repre- sentative will interview applicants for Steward and Stewardess positions on flights to Europe, Asia and Africa. In- terview will be held in Detroit, Tues., April 12. Qualifications: stewardesses age 21-27, stewards 21-35; must be con- versationally fluent in French, German, Italian, Portugese or a Scandinavian Inguage and English. For information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, 3528 Ad. Bldg. Lectures Dr. Robert R. Shrock, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will give the second of three lectures sponsored by the Department of Geology Tues., Apr. 12 at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Auditorium on "Where are Unusual Fossils to be Found?" Phi Sigma Society. "Natural and Man-Made Itndscapes in the Ivory Coast." Pierre Dansereau, associate pro- fessor of botany. Illustrated. Rackham Amphitheatre at' 8:00 p.m., Tues., April 12. Open to the Public. Refreshments after meeting for members and guests; business meeting 7:30 p.m. to install of- ficers. American Chemical Society Lecture. Wed., April 13 at 8:00 p.m. in Room 1300 Chemistry. Dr. William Rieman of Rut- gers University will discuss "Ion Ex- change, A New Tool for the Analytical Chemist." Undergraduate Zoology Club. "Photo- graphic Foray in Florida Wild Life," Narrated motion film by Dow V. Bax- ter, professor of natural resources. Wed., April 13, 3:00 p.m. 1139 N.S. Open to public, Academic Notices Seniors: College of L.S.&A., and Schools of Education; Music, and Pub- lic Health. Tentative lists of seniors for June graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in the first floor lobby, Administration Building. Any changes therefrom should be requested of the Recorder at Office of Registra- tion and Records window ,number 1, 113 Admistaion Riiili'. College of LSA Students who plan to attend summer sessions elsewhere and wish this credit approved for transfer, should call for sumnmer session approval blanks at the Admission Office, 1524 Administration Bldg., before May 13. No approval blarnks will be issued after this date. Actuarial Review Class will meet T'ues., April 12 at 4:10 p.m. in Room 3010 Angell Hall. Lit. School Steering Comm. will meet in Dean Robertson's office at 4:00 p.m. today. English 150 (Playwriting) will meet at 6:55 p.m. Tues., April 12. Doctoral Examination for John W. Coy, Mathematics; thesis: "A Differen- tial Calculus in a Matrix Algebra," Wed., April 13, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 3:00 pm. Chairman, P. S. Dwyer. Sociology Colloquium. Wed., April 13, 4:00 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rackham Building; Dr. Fred L. Strod- beck, University of Chicago, "'An Em- pirical Study of Juror Behavior." Geometry Seminar will meet Wed., April 13, at 7:00 p.m. in 3001 A.H. Prof. J. R. Buchi will speak on "Invariant Theory in Groups." Political Science Round Table meet- ing Thurs., April 14 at 7:45 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. Prof. Eric Voe- gelin, Department of Government, Lou- isiana State University, will speak on, "The Quest for Principles In Politcal Science." Open to public. Concerts Student Recital. Florinda Suguitan, pianist, 8:30 p.m., Wed., April 13, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Recital in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. A pupil of Joseph Brinkman, Miss Suguitan will play compositions by Purcell, Mozart, Debussy, and Bach. Open to the public. Men's Glee Club annual Spring Con- cert date has been changed from Sat., May 21 to Fri., May 20. Exhibitions Exhibitions, Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Bruguiere Photographs, A Student Collects through May 1. Hours: 9:00-5:00 p.m. weekdays, 2:00- 5:00 p.m. Sundays. The public is in. vited. Events Today Mathematics Club. Tues., April 12, at 8:00 p.m. in the West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Prof. C. J. Coe will speak on "The Varied Motions in The- oreticai Mechanics." Frosh Weekend. Maize Team Poster Committee meeting tonight, 8:00 p.m. In the PublicityFRoom of the League. Maize Team Floorshow Rehearsals Tues., April 12, Group 5, 7:00 p.m.; Groups 3 and 4 8:00 p.m. Wed., ;April 13, Group 2, 7':00 p.m. and Group 6, 8:00 p.m. Maize Team Skits and Stunts Committee meeting, Tues., April 12, 7:30 p.m. in the League. Square Dancing tonight. Instruction for every dnce. Grey Austin, caller. Lane Hall. 7:30-10:00' p.m. Congregational-Disciples Guild. 4:30- 5:45 p.m., Tea at the Guild House. Coming Events Le Cercle Francais will sponsor a spe. cial full-length feature film in French, "Carnival in Flanders," Wed., April 13 at 7:30 p.m. In the League. Free for members, Bring your membership card! Membership cards will be on sale for 75c which will include free admis- sion to the French play, "L'Avare," on May 4. Near Eastern Research Club, Wed., April 13, in the E. Lecture Room, Rack- ham Building, 8:00-9:30 p.m. 4Jahangir Amuzegar, lecturer in economics, will speak on, "Point Four in Iran." Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Brekfast at Canterbury House,' Wed., April 13, after the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion. "Employment Possibilities and Inter. ests in international Organizations," Wed., April 13, 3:30-5:00 p.m. in 2413 Mason Hall. Miss Jane ,Weidund, for. mer UN assistant program officer, Office for Europe, Africa and the Middle East, Technical Assistnce Administration. Open to public. Undergraduate Mathematics Club. Willow Run trip: Sat., April 16. If you the offices of the mathematics depart- ment, 3012 Angell Hall or 274 West Engi- neering Building by Wed., April 13. If you will have access to a car, please sign up to drive. 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 David Livingston ........Sports- Editor > Hanley Gurwin ...Assoc. Sports 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 Member .4 I 4 -}' t I f 6