THE MICHIGAN DWILY FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1945 THE MICHIGAN DATTIV !'R!I~AY, AUGUST 24~ 1945 Wright, Sheean, Perkins, Stowe To Speak Here Others To Be Heard In Oratorical Series Ten distinguished personalities, among them Congresswoman Helen Gahagan. Douglas, Owen Lattimore, Vincent Sheean, Richard Wright, Frances Perkins and Leland Stowe, will discuss a wide variety of topics encompassing national and interna- tional problems as University Ora- torical Assodiation speakers for the 1945-'46 lecture course. Opening the lecture course at Hill Auditorium, November 6, Mrs. Doug- las, member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and wife of actor Melvin Douglas, will speak on "The Price of World Peace." She will be followed on Novem- her 28 by Mr. Lattimore, political advisor to Generalissimo Chiang KaI-Shek, Director of Pacific Op- erations for OWI and of the School of International Relations at Johns Hopkins University. He will speak on "Solution to Asia," the title of his most recent book on Far Eastern problems. "Personal Opinion" will be the ROBESON, HEIFETZ, TOUREL: Choral Union Will Feature Famous Artists in 1945 Series GUTHRIE McCLINTIC VINCENT SHEEAN HELEN GAHAGAN DOUGLAS RICHARD WRIGHT Among the attractions for the 1945- '46 music series are Paul Robeson, Alexander Uninsky, Jennie Tourel, Jascha Heifetz, Arthur Schna bel, four well known philharmonic or- chestras and the Don Cossack Chor- us. Besides the ten concerts of the Choral Union series, the annual May Festival with outstanding soloists, the Christmas performance of Han- del's "Messiah" and chamber music concerts will also be presented. Opening the Choral Union season November 3, in Hill Auditorium will be Paul Robeson, baritone. Others scheduled for the same month are the Cleveland Orchestra with Erich Leinsdorf as conductor, Nov. 11; Al- exander Uninsky, pianist, Nov. 19, and Jennie Tourel, Metropolitan so- prano, Nov. 27. The Don Cossack Chorus, a great organ of human voices, under the direction of Serge Jaroff, will ap- pear December 3, and the Boston Symphony orchestra under the lead- ership of Serge Koussevitsky, Dec. 10. The distinguished violinist, Jas- cha Heifetz, will appear Jan. 18, and the Chicago Symphony, under the direction of Desire Defauw, Jan. 31. Fraternities Arthur Schnabel, pianist, Feb. 13 The Detroit Symphony Orchestra, under the leadership of Karl Krueger will conclude the series in March. Tickets are now on sale at the Bur- ton Memorial Tower. s 0 * topic of Mr. Sheean, author of "Personal Listcry," "Not Peace But a Sword," and war correspon- dent just returned after five months with the U. S. Third Army, when he lectures December 5. The fourth lecture will be given December 11 by Mr. Wright, author of "Native Son" and "Black Boy." He will speak on "The American Negro Discovers Himself." "The Destiny of American Labor" is the topic on which Miss Perkins, Secretary of Labor from 1933 to 1945, when she speaks here January 16, 1946. Active in the Indian Nationalist movement, Madame Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, sister of Jawaharal Nehru, Indian Nationalist feader, will speak February 5 on "The Coming Indian Democracy." "The Theatre, Reminiscences and Predictions," will be the sub- jact of Guthrie McClintic, husband of Katherine Cornell and director of more plays, among them several critic prize winners, than any oth- er man in the theatre, when he speaks here February 15. He will be followed March 5, when Edmund Stevens, war cor- respondent with the Russian Army for the Christian Science Monitor, taking his topic from the title of his recent book, will speak on "Russia Is No Riddle." "Britain Looks to the Future" will be the topic of the Honorable Robert Boothby, Member of Parliament in the British House of Commons for 25 years and Undersecretary for Food during the present war. He will speak here March 12. "What We May Expect in the Fu- ture" will be news comentator Stowe's topic when he concludes the lecture series March 21. le is the Pulitzer prize winner author of "They Shall Not Sleep." Mail orders for season tickets will be taken at the Oratorical Associa- tion Office, 3211 Angell Hall. (Continued from Page 6) of at least two weeks. Pledges, who are not under contract with another resident establishment, may live in the chapter house. The minimum period of pledgeship is one month, and a freshman may be initiated at the end of this time if his latest grade reports do not show any grade below a C. A transfer student, in his first term at the Uni- versity, who has been admitted with a clear record may also be initiated at this time. A tentative list of fraternities whose houses open in the fall includes Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Alpha Ep- silon, Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon. Theta Chi, Zeta Beta Tau and Zeta Psi. Ulrich's Connections with 600 Schools and Bookstores Throughout the United States Have Stocked Our Store with ijnd TANS vf +xr X 9 qmfflffil. gglvmlhk r,7M IMF M c, , I , W EXTB4OKS For Every Course on the Michigan Campus ELVA= IA a 11' give- ou greait aue NOTICE ENGINEERS and ARCHITECTS ULRICH'S cdrry the largest stock in Michigan of Engineers'-and Architects' Books and' Supplies at Special Student Prices--- Newand Used rawing WT } ! 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