SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE I+'IVE SATURDAY. DECEMBER 10, 195~i THE MICHIGAN DAIL1~ ?A01 ~2YU First Playbill Features Drama, Opera Excer pts The speech department' will pre- sent a laboratory playbill at 8 p.m. November 3 and 4 in the Lydia Mendelshon Theatre. A combination of opera and. drama excerpts will constitute the program. Dramatic presentations include Chekov's farce, "The Proposal" under the direction of Allan Knee, '56, and Rostand's comedy, "The Romances" directed by Michael Gregoric, Grad.' Two scenes from Verdi's opera, "Aida" which will be presented by the opera workshop under the direction of Prof.. Josef Blatt of the School . of Music and Prof. Valentine Windt of the Depart- ment of Speech make up the musical contribution. Students in the advanced theatre courses will handle the production of costumes and scenery. The presentation will be the -firstplaybill of the semester. All seats are reserved. Tickets will go on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box office October 31. The laboratory play production division of the speech department is designed to give students study- ing dramatics the opportunity to act and to direct and produce actual plays. Group to Discuss Religious Needs A meeting to evaluate the reli- gious needs of students will be held on the third floor of the Union today. Representatives of campis- or- ganizations and Lane Hall student and advisory staff will attend. Today's meeting is the third of such consultations in the past six months. Their purpose has been to promote co-ordination and co- operation among religious groups on campus as well as to discuss the type of program most valuable to students. The consultation will begin at 9:30 a.m., include dinner at the Union and continue into the eye- ning. 'U' Develops Army Tank' 'SeeingEye' A method of "seeing" the action of an army tank being simulated in an electronic computer has been developed at the University. Scientists and engineers at the Engineering Research Institute's Willow Run Laboratories have de- vised the method, which makes it possible to watch the "tank" climb over a mock obstacle. As the tank "climbs over" a one-foot obstacle at a speed of 20 feet per second, the wheels rise and fall and the hull pitches realistically. The action can then be recorded on film for later use. Although not as precise as other methods of,, studying tanks, the new system permits an integrated picture of the entire motion which the other methods fail to provide.. The system was developed by Henry T. Nay, Jr., formerly of the Institute. By CHARLES MERUER NEW YTRK P)-One day back in Grover Cleveland's second ad- ministration when a man saw Vice-President Adlai E. Stevenson walking down a Washington street he remarked to a friend, "There goes the vice president of the United States with nothing on his mind except the health of the President." Today, with that vice president's grandson a national political fig- ure himself, the nation is much more concerned with the health of presidents and the role of the vice presidency than ever in our history. Irony in Politics In fact, the low esteem in which vice-presidents have been held, despite the fact that 28 per cent of them have become president, is one of the most ironic facts in American political life. This is the raw material from which Edward R. Murrow and his associate Fred W. Friendly have forged a television program for the first See It Now show coming 'See It Now' To Commence With Vice-Presidential Study on CBS-TV next Wednesday. Film Interviews Murrow has maGe inmed inter- views with three living ex-vice presidents-Henry A. Wallace, Harry S. Truman and Sen. Albers W. Barkley. The program will include news- reels of a fourth living ex-vice president, John N. Garner it will recreate past campaigns and study some curious facts that have long eluded many historians. To Give Recital Third program in the current series of Sunday afternoon organ recitals by Robert Noehren, Uni- versity Organist, will be presented at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow. Devoted to Bach's organ music, the recital for tomorrow will open with "Prelude and Fugue in E minor," and continue with the Chorale Prelude "All Glory Be to God on High," "Canzona in D mi- nor," three chorale preludes from "The Eighteen Great Chorales," and the "Prelude and Fugue in B minor." -. . . . . .... - - .. . . . ... . . . AP Newstaiures THE ABOVE MAP illustrates how Iran, which lined up officially with the western-bacne# Middle East defense alliance, closes the gap in the defense chain south of the Soviet Union. Shaded coun- tries of Turkey, Iran, and Pakistan complete the anti-communist belt from the Mediterranean to the. Himalayas. (P) wirephoto.) Iran Fills Middle East Defense Gap By DAVID L. BOWEN Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer After years of careful building, the Western world can point this week to an intricate series of in- terlocking defense alliancesrwhich insulate the free nations from the Communist bloc in a continuous chain from the North Atlantic to the Himalaya Mountains of India. The latest link was forged when Iran announced her decision to join with Turkey, Iraq and Pakis- tan as a member of the Baghdad Pact. The move closed a glaring hole in the, West's defenses and completed, as the accompanying map shows, a "northern tier" of Moslem states sealing off Russia from the strategic Middle East and Africa. The action served to counter- balance the headway Russia made among Arab nations by concluding a deal in which Communist mili- tary equipment will be supplied Egypt. The Baghdad pact is not pri- marily a military alliance, although it provides for joint military plan- Debaters For 'Clinic' Meet Today More than 450 debaters from 44 high schools throughout the state are attending a debate clinic in the Rackham Lecture Hall to- day. Sponsored by the speech depart- ment, the all-day program will be highlighted by a morning discus- sion of the topic "Resolved: That the Federal government should guarantee higher education to qualified high school students by means of annual grants to colleges and universities." Questions will be answered by a panel of subject matter experts following the discussion. Members of the panel will be Prof. Claude Eggertsen of the School of Edu- cation, James M. Davis of the In- ternational Center and Arthur E. Lean of Extension Service. ning. It is rather a recognition of the common interests of the members in a united front, much after the fashion of the Yugoslav- Turkish-Greek agreement which connects Yugoslavia to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The Baghdad group is connect- ed with NATO on the west through Turkey, a NATO member, and to the Southeast Asia Treaty Organi- zation on the east through Paki- stan, a SEATO member. Britain also participates in the Baghdad agreement, and there is a possibility that the United States also will join, just to seal the bargain between this alliance and other segments of the world- wide defense line. The formation of the Middle East group has long been an aim River Plan May Relieuve Arab Tension WASHINGTON (R) - American officials . are talking hopefully again about winning Arab approval of a river development plan con- ceived as a means of reversing Arab-Israeli tensions. "Prospects are very good," spe- cial envoy Eric Johnston said re- cently as he reported to Secretary of State John Fosters Dulles on the status of the Jordan River development plan. This attitude contrasts strongly with the gloomy picture painted in Washington last week. The as- sessment then was that the 120- million-dollar irrigation-dam pro- posal was on the verge of collapse after the Arab states, led by Leb- anon and Syria, voted at Cairo to delay it for further study. "The Arab states asked for more time and that seemed like a rea- sonable request," Johnston said. "After all, both Lebanan and Syr- ia have governments which are less than two weeks old." Johnston said he expects to hear from the Arab states "very short- ly" and has "been assured" by them that last week's postpone- ment was "not a death sentence in disguise." of Western diplomacy. Up until this year it had been blocked by Arab League intransigence. How- ever, Arab unity was smashed last February when Iraq signed a mutual defense pact with the Turks, despite bitter opposition from Egypt, and later broadened it by joining forces with both Turkey and Pakistan. Iraq's move was the first time an Arab League member entered an agreement with another coun- try for defense against Commun- ist aggression. With Iran now following Iraq's lead, it is possible that Egypt's hold on the Arab League is slipping. The big question in the weeks immediately ahead will be whe- ther the West can draw other Arab nations into the Baghdad Pact faster than Russia can get her grip on them with arms agree- ments like the one with Egypt. But a major result of success- ful completion of the "northern tier" is transformation of an area of vacuum into one of positive planning and notice to the entire region, particularly Egypt, that one of Russia's nearest neighbors ful- ly recognizes the dangers of the .Kremlin's latest interference in Middle Eastern affairs. Universit YD's Attend Convention Four representatives of the Uni- versity Young Democrats Club will attend the third annual Williams Day dinner today in Detroit. Sen. Matthew M. Neely (D-W. Va.) will be the principal speaker at the dinner, highlight of a three- day YD convention. Representing the campus club will be Joyce Greenbaum, '56, pres- ident, Ralph Goldberg, '56, Keke Pyrros, '58, and Dick Lambert, Grad. On the campus, the YD's are sponsoring a panel discussion on the Israel-Arab dispute Thursday night. Prof. John Dawson of the law school will moderate a panel discussion between two Arab ard two Israeli students. CA us SA E 0O Y " NEW r 1955=1956 -~ a a ~a a a a a a a a a a a - p .- - T! "TT -- "nh .. Complete Student Listings Campus Listing '4 Sorority Numbers Fraternity Numbers Dormitory Numbers 4, 't le 14qnid .. . -- , Iimk. 4, TO A , S~j *#,* .' ,) ML RETURN YOUR SENIOR PICTURE PROOFS STUDENT M1N I Y 1 - a */1 a 4 a V J / 7 -J S$ y Avoid saying"HOO-HA?" I