HTHlE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 10, 1947 1 .SUNDA...« AUGUST 1Ovi i1947z r: Fifty-Seventh Year MATTER OF FACT: Pppets Are Human sca- Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity- of Michigan under the authority of the ,Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Managing Editors ... John Campbell, Clyde Recht Associate Editor .................... Eunice Mintz Sports Editor ..................... Archie Parsons Business Staff leneral Manager ................ Edwin Schneider Advertising Manager...........William Rohrbach Circulation Manager..............Melvin Tick Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches redited to it or otherwise credited in this news- ,aper. All rights of republication of all other .natters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michi-. gan, as second class mailnmatter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: NAOMI STERN Paradox JN THE WORDS of Samuel Grafton, I'# going to "peddle a little paradox" today. A few days back, The Daily reported an address given at the University by Benjamin Gerig, deputy representative on the UN Trusteeship Council. It was an address that treated of the new spirit of colonialism that is abroad in the world today. No more, Gerig said, are administering states ,concerned with exploitation of the non-self-governing territories in their care. "Instead, their par- amount aim is the well-being of the inhab- itants of these territories." To prove his point, Gerig enumerated the stipulations in the United Nations Charter, in which the administering states pledge themselves to the promotion of the political, social, economic and educational with a view toward bringing about self- government in the territories. Another issue of The Daily during this past week reported the launching of a cam- paign on the part of a University student to inscribe the story of oppression in Mad- agascar onto the conscience of the world. Miss Bargyl Rateaver, a native of Mada- gascar, finds it difficult to reconcile the French government's pious assertion that the island is now free with a recent uprising for freedom, in which her father, a mission- ary, along with other natives, was interned in the squalor of an ancient prison at Fort Dauphin. "There has, in the 52 years. of French occupation of the island, been little letup in the imperialistic exploitation of Mad- agascar's people," she said. It was a com- ment based on a life-long and first-hand awareness of the situation. It is apparent that there are at least some persons who do not share Mr. Gerig's views as regards the application of the new spirit of colonialism of which he speaks. Some of these persons are the inhabitants of the colonies-the inhabi- tants whose interests are now "para- mount," whose self-government is being looked to as the aim in view of the admin- istering states, according to Gerig. One doesn't have to refer to The Daily's accomts for stories of colonial exploitations covered up with pious platitudes. Take Pal- estine, for one, and Indonesia for another. Their stories are all in the papers. They all tell the same tale-one of a native popula- tion fed up with oppression and no longer able to rely on promises of freedom. It is a story that doesn't seem to jibe with the assertions of Mr. Gerig. It is apparent that the principles of trus- teeship as enumerated in the UN Charter and enunciated by Gerig remain, for the present, only principles with little in the way of reality to back them up. -Ben Zwerling. CZECHOSLOVAKS find little to laugh at these days. But last week they smiled grimly at a story currently making the rounds of Prague's beer cellars and coffee- houses. A. prominent politician, one of the few leftovers from the old guard of President Masaryk, was being questioned by a worried friend: "Sometimes it looks as if a war between Russia and the U.S. were just around the corner, doesn't it?" It cer- tainly does, sometimes." "And with whom, do you think, Czechoslovakia should ally herself, if and when?" "With Russia, of By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP A VITALLY SIGNIFICANT new problem is beginning to be earnestly debated among the makers of American foreign pol- icy. It can be expressed in a simple question: What will be the result of repeated conflicts NSO and Peace COUNTLESS organizations in the coun- try are currently at work to promote world peace, but our progress in that direc- tion is imperceptible, if, in fact, actual. In the light of this discouraging outlook, it is entirely possible that the embryonic Na- tional Student Organization is the one group which can actually be effective in carrying us toward that end which is the goal of nearly all of civilized society-world peace. Such an extravagant claim for an infant organization, which has thus far been largely ignored by both the public and the press, is not as idealistic as the hasty critic might suppose. The strongest advocates of world government generally admit that legislation alone will not bring world peace; that na- tionalism will be reduced, not by a vote of the Security Council or even by interna- tionalism in the minds and hearts of the people. Through developing friendship be- tween American and foreign students, the NSO can accomplish this over a long period. The threat of annihilation by the atom bomb before that transition to an inter- national thinking is achieved now faces us. However, the world's leaders are so far away from finding a short cut for preventing that destruction that we can only educate and hope. Because of its unique position as the organization of all American students, the NSO, more than any other body, can effec- tively develop the internationalism upon which our prospects for world peace depend. America's college youth of today will be America's leaders of tomorrow. Because of America's position as the world's strongest power, what our students are learning and experiencing now will sway the destiny of the world in the near future. Michigan delegates joined with represen- tatives from 300 other schools last December to form an organization through which students could work to solve their common problems. "Fostering cultural activities, pro- moting two-way student exchange, and fa- cilitating student travel, both within this country and without," were the general terms in which the new organization spoke about its part in promoting world peace. As so many phrases on paper they have little meaning. Transformed, however, into terms of chartering ships to enable Amer- ican students to travel abroad at reason- able rates, increasing the number of stu- dents studying abroad, and including stu- dent participation in the American UN- ESCO delegation, the NSO's potentialities take on color. The University will have 12 representa- tives at the NSO's constitutional convention to be held at the University of Wisconsin the end of this month. On their shoulders rests the responsibility for establishing the organization that can make these objectives' a reality. This summer the State Department used two Maritime Commission ships to carry students to Europe for study. Next summer at least a dozen should be carrying students abroad, those who prefer just to tour as well as those who desire to study formally. That is but one step. Smith College and the University of Delaware have inau- gurated a plan which enables students to spend their junior years abroad in coun- tries such as France, Italy, or Switzerland. The Fulbright Bill offers government scholarships for our students studying abroad. These will probably be restricted mainly to graduate students. (The pro- gram needs expanding to include a volume of potential student leaders, not simply specialists in a specific field.) Representation on UNESCO would give students an opportunity to present their ideas to that body as well as to learn about its program and activities first hand. The NSO's contribution to world peace will not be spectacular. But by making it possible for the students of today to visit, to know, and to understand other students throughout the world, the NSO can lay a sound foundation for cooperation among the nations tomorrow. It can accomplish a major task in broadening the horizons of the American leaders who will be promot- ing that cooperation. Of all the prospects for world peace in sight today, the international aspect of the NSO's program can easily be voted the "most likely to succeed." -Tom Walsh. MEETING on the anniversary of Hiro- shima's destruction and, as the Chinese delegate pointed out, in the "grim shadow" of that portentous event, the United Nations Atonic Energy Commission has underscored the failure of statesmanship to meet the threat of atomic warfare. Representatives of five nations-the United States, Canada, Belgium, China and Australia-discussed the Russian plan for atomic control in terms which made it plain that while Russia main- tains her position, the commission has reached a dead end in its search for a solu- tion of the atomic nroblem. Mr. Osborn. the of national interest between the Soviet Un- ion and its satellite states? This may sound pretty academic. Yet the problem has been brought to the fore by completely concrete and frequently highly dramatic reports from behind the iron cur- tain. The reports concern the events leading up to Soviet puppets' unanimous refusal to participate in the Marshall plan for European reconstruction. The public hu- miliation of Czechoslovakia, which is now called at Prague "the Munich in reverse," is known to the whole world. But now that the returns are in from all over eastern Europe, they disclose that the pattern was approximately the same everywhere. In Budapest, for example, the Commu- nist-dominated Hungarian government was as anxious to become eligible for the benefits of the Marshall plan as was the Communist-led government at Prague. It was never publicly announced, yet the Hungarian cabinet is now known to have actually appointed a delegation to attend the Paris conference on the Marshall plan. The chief delegate was to have been the Minister of Communications, M. Gero, himself a Communist, and even the lesser members of his staff had been selected. Then General Sviridov, Soviet commander in Hungary, requested an interview with Hungary's new puppet premier, Dinnyes. In talking to Dinnyes, Sviridov minced no words. .According to reliable reports, he pointed out that the Soviets would strip Hungary bare through their control of Ger- man and Italian assets; that there were still unnumbered Hungarian prisoners of war in Russia; and finally that a Soviet refusal to ratify the Hungarian peace treaty would have disagreeable consequences-such as the permanent retention of the Soviet garrison in Hungary. Dinnyes listened to this rather forceful sort of 'reason. The Hungarian refusal to go to Paris was promptly announced. Hungarian leaders are now frankly congratulating themselves, in conversations with foreigners, on their good fortune in avoiding the public humiliation of the Czechs. In Finland no "less than in Hungary, members of the Cabinet frankly wished to send a deputation to Paris. Foreign Min- ister Enkell is even known to have branded rumors that Finns would refuse the Paris invitation as mere Communist tactics of confusion. But Enkell, together with the rest of the Finnish people, learned that Finland had indeed refused as rumored- from the Moscow radio. In Poland, members of the government were obviously distressed but made no plaint. Some Polish Socialists, however, dared to demand the sending of a Polish deputation to Paris. No deputation went, and recently reports have come from Warsaw that addi- tional arrests of Socialists are now occur- ring, on the ground that they lacl."the will to cooperate" with the Communists. The process of crushing out all possible opposition is also proceeding apace in Ro- mania. The arrests of Dr. Juliu Maniu and other leaders of the Peasant party occurred some time ago. Now the party's remaining deputies have been expelled from the parlia- ment, and just to round the thing off, a new party leadership has been officially ap- pointed. The leaders are a certain Popovici, a cooperative but complete deaf nonentity, and Professor Zanne, who has the valuable qualification of being a protege of Andrei Vishinsky.w The important fact about these pre- nomena is that they are bound to repeat themselves. It is not only that the Soviet Union wishes its satellites to have no contact with the West. There is a vital additional factor. The Russians also want their satellites to provide them with raw materials and manufactured goods. And the satellites in turn must depend on the Soviet Union for other goods and raw materials which they are now prevented from securing from western Europe or the United States. New conflicts must thus arise. And the bullying tactics used to secure obedience to the Kremlin's edict against the Marshall plan, will have to be used again whenever there is another con- flict. In the cases of Finland and Czecho- slovakia, this presents a special problem. These nations are not yet completely pup- petized. If their governments are,constantly forced to subordinate the national interest to Soviet interest, the peoples will turn against the governments. Then the Soviets will have to choose between relaxing their present control, or resorting to puppetiza- tion, by force. But even within the confines of the countries already puppetized, the same process will also work. Men like Dinnyes and Gero in Hungary, for example, by presenting Moscow for a better deal for their people, will eventually incur the Kremlin's suspicions. More and more abject puppets will be demanded and installed. The present system of delegat- ing control of the satellites to governments like that in Hungary may thus gradually begin to break down. Yet the system can only be replaced by extension of direct Soviet responsibility. The question being asked in Washington is whether the Soviet system can support these added strains upon its administrative and other resources. (Copyright 1947, New York Herald Tribune) k0cOl'hie ARNOLD J. TOYNBEE, in "A Study of History" says: The creative minority, out of which the creative individuals had emerged in the growth stage, has ceased to be creative, and has stink into being merely 'dominant' out of the secession of the proletariat, which is the essential feature of disintegration, has itself been achieved under the leadership of creative personalities for whose activity there is now no scope ex- cept in the organization of oppo- sition to the incubus of the un- creative 'powers that be.' " Regardless of Toynbee's un- due mysticism in those final chapters, the struggle today is between those who, by dollars, would get oil or trade, and those who by sympathy would get the loyalties of people. Years ago the great war strate- gists of Britain got their oil and trade around the Mediterranean but came out finally with the dis- trust alike of Mohammedans throughout Egypt, Arabia and Syria; of the Christians in Greece and the Balkans; and of the Jews scattered thinly but vocally around the world. Shall we get the oil from the Persian Gulf, a thousand miles to ships at Joppa or Haifa, but failing to understand human need, spill the loyalty of millions into the lap of Russia? A low standard economy with a message of protest-just because it can understand minimums-may be- come the saviour while a high standard economy, replete "with double entry systems which relate to maximums, fails to understand bewildered citizens. Toynbee's insistence that the, only place a creative mind can function is in revolt was attested five years ago by the Catholic French philosopher, Jacques Maritan. In a brilliant book, "Christianity and Democracy," he pointed out that in recent decades Christianity seems im- potent, unable to take advan- tage of its opportunities, weak in the critical periods and indif- ferent to the major social ob- jectives of its Founder. He reminded us that while it was the Christian drive which brought the American revolution, it was the revolting agnostics who introduced liberty and fraternity into France and the protesting atheists who developed a people's economy for the Russians. His lamentationis over the inability of the followers of Jesus persistently to merge the two commandments: 1. Thou shalt love God and 2. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy- self, in social practice. General George Marshall at Harvard, plumbing the spirit of defeated Europe with a few sen- tences on self help, set off the best industry since UNRRA. If the United Nations organization can salvage concerted action for Euro- peans from us as effectively as they salvaged an armistice for In- donesia from the Dutch, we may; soon see constructive peace intro- duced. There is an untabulatable something beneath every move men make or fail to make today, which, over much, must deter- mine consequences. In such an era, when complexity obscures the path, it is safest for every citizen to deliberately align him- self with goodness. "The suffering God is no vast cosmic force, That by some blind, unthink- ing, loveless power Keeps stars and atoms swing- ' ing in their course, And reckons nought of men in this grim hour. Nor is the suffering God a fair ideal Engendered in the questioning hearts of men, A figment of the mind to help me steel My soul to rude realities I ken. God suffers with a love that cleanses dross; A God like that, I see upon a cross-" Georgia Harkness; "Holy Flame." -Edward W. Blakeman. Ideologically as well as geo- graphically, England is set be- tween the United States and the Soviet Union. There are dangers in this position, but there are also great advantages, and although they know that they must do a good deal of rather drab "holding- on," the English people are not without a strong sense of optim- ism about their own future. Foreign Affairs Magazine Pubication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructivernotice to all members of the University. Notices fir the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 Angel] hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day pre- ceding publication (11:00 a.m Sat- urdays). SUNDAY, AUGUST 10, 1947 VOL. LVIII, No. 34S Notices Examination for U n i v e r s i t y Credit. All students who desire credit for work done in the sum- mer session will be required to take examinations at the close of the session. The examination schedule for the schools and col- leges on the eight-week basis is as follows: (Thursday, August 14 and Friday, August 15.) Hour of Recitation Time of Exam 8 Thursday, 8-10 9 Friday, 8-10 10 Thursday, 2-4 11 Friday, 2-4 1 Thursday, 4-6 2 Thursday 10-12 3 Friday, 10-12 All other hours Friday, 4-6 Any deviation from the above schedule may be made only by ml itual agreement between stu- dent and instructor, and with the approval of the Examination Schedule Committee. All veterans enrolled for the eight weeks Summer Session and who are receiving government ed- ucational benefits under the Vet- erans Administration, are remind- ed that Report of Absence Cards are due Monday, August 11, 1947. These cards may be mailed to the Veterans Service Bureau or placed in any deposit box. If any veteran has failed to receive a Report of Absence Card he should obtain one immediately at the Veterans Service Bureau, Room 1514, Rackham Building. The filing of a Report of Ab- sence Card is a University regula- tion applying to all veterans cer- tified for government educational benefits. Attention August Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Pub- lic Health: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instructor to report the make-up grade not later than 111 a.m., August 23. Grades received after that time may defer the stu- dent's graduation until a laterl date. Note: This is a correctionI of the date listed in The DailyI August 6, and 7.c Colleges of Literature, Science,I and the Arts, and Architecturec and Design, Schools of Education, Fo r e s try,dMusic and Public Health: Students who have beenI in residence only during the Sum- mer Session and who wish a tran- script of this summer workl should file a request in Room 4, U.H. several days before leaving1 Ann Airbor. Failure to file this request before the end of the ses- sion will result in a needless de-1 Ilay of several days. Other stu- dents will receive a print of their entire record two weeks after the end of the Summer Session. Edward G. Groesbeck Assistant Registrar Admission - School of Business Administration. Deadline for ap- plicants for Fall Semester admis- sion - August 15. Application blanks available in Room 108 Tap-t pan Hall. Deadline for Veterans' Booki and supply Requisitions. August; 22, 1947 has been set at the dead- line for the approval of Veterans' Book and Supply Requisitions for the Summer Session-1947. Re- quisitions will be accepted by the book stores through August 23, 1947.- To all students having Library books:t 1. Students having in their pos- session books borrowed from the General Library or its branches are notified that such books are due Monday, August 11. 2. Students having special needi for certain books between August 11 and August 15 may retain such; books for that period by renew- ing them at the Charging Desk.1 3. The names of all students who have not cleared their records at the Library by Wednesday,1 August 13 will be sent to the Cash-F ier's Office and their credits and grades will be witheld until such time as said records are cleared in compliance with the regula-3 tions of the Regents. Recommendations for Depart-l mental Honors: Teaching depart- ments wishing to recommend ten- tative August graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Edu- cation for departmental honors should recommend such students in a letter, sent to the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall, by 11 a.m., August 23. Note: This is a correction of the date listed in The Daily August 6, and 7. Doctoral Examination for Harry Alex Romanowitz, Electrical En- gineering; thesis: "Measurements. Analysis, and Statistical Nature of Deionization Time in a Mer- cury Vapor Thyratron," Monday, August 11 at 1:30 p.m. in the West Council Room, Rackham. Chair- man, W. G. Dow. Ralph A. Sawyer Doctoral Examination for Cheng Tsui, Botany; thesis: "The In- fluence of Zinc in Plant Growth," Monday, August 11, at 2 p.m. in Room 1139, Natural Science Build- ing. Chairman, F. G. Gustafson. Ralph A. Sawyer Doctoral Examination for Ther- al Thomas Herrick, Education; thesis: "The Development of Cri- teria for the Evaluation of Citi- zenship Training in the Senior High School," Monday, August 11, at 3 p.m. in the East Coun- cil Room, Rackham, Chairman, H. C. Koch. Ralph A. Sawyer Doctoral Examination for Man- uel Ochoa Hizon, Mathematics; thesis: "Actuarial Studies of the Philippines' Government Service Insurance System," Tuesday, Aug- ust 12, at 3:30 p.m. in the East Council Room, Rackham. Chair- man, C. J. Nesbitt. Ralph A. Sawyer Doctoral Examination for Rob- ert Fulton Haugh, English Lang- uage and Literature; thesis: "Sen- timentalism in the American Pro- letarian Novel," Tuesday, August 12, at 7 p.m. in the West Council Room, Rackham. Chairman, J. L. Davis. Ralph A. Sawyer La p'tite causette will meet on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Michigan League. Civil Service: City of Detroit Civil Service Commission an- nounces examination for Med- ical Attendant (male), Head Hos- pital Nurse, and Supervisor of Hospital Nurses. New York Civil Service Depart-1 ment announces examinations for positions in the Health Depart- ment: Assistant Director, Division of Cancer Research; Assistant Dis- trict Health Officer; and Senior Public Health Physician, Tuber- culosis Control. Call at the Bureau for further information. General Placement-Charles E.' Merrill Co., Inc., announces an opening for School Representa- tive to cover part of Michigan and northern Indiana. The Grand Rapids Urban League announces an opening for a group work secretary (male) for an inter-racial agency. Call at thec Bureau for further information. Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information.1 University of Michigan1 General Library Schedule of Hours after Summer Session 1947:-, The General Library will closet at 6 p.m. daily from Friday, Aug- ust 15 to Saturday, September 20. The Graduate Reading Rooms and the First Floor Study Hall will be closed during this period. The1 Basement Study Hall will be open1 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily except Saturday when it will be closed at noon. The Rare Book Room 1 will be open from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 10 am. to 12 noon on Saturday. All departments of the Library will be closed on September 1, Labor -Day. Divisional Libraries, with the exception of those listed below, will close Friday afternoon, Aug- ust 15, and will reopen Monday, September 15 on a short schedule1 (10 a.m. to 12 noon, 2 p.m. to 4l p.m.). Regular schedules approx- imating those in force during the second semester of the academic year will be resumed in all branch- es of the Library on Monday, Sep- tember 22.1 Bureau of Government. Open August 18-September 20-Monday through Friday 8:30-12; 1-4:30; Saturday 8:30-12:30. Detroit Branch: Closed August 18-August 27;. Open August 28- September 20; Monday through Friday 10-1; 2-6; Saturday 10-12. East Engineering: Open August 18-September 20; Monday through Friday 10-12; 2-5; Saturday 10-1 12. Engineering: Open August 18- September 20; Monday through Friday 10-12; 2-5; Saturday 10- 12. Hospital Open August 15-Aug- ust 23; Monday through Friday 8-12; 1-5; Saturday 8-12; Closed August 25-September 13; Open September 15-September 20; Mon- day through Friday 8-12; 1-5; Saturday 8-12. Physics: Open August 18-Sep- tember 20; Monday through Sat- urday 10-12. Transportation: Open August 18-September 20; Monday through Friday 8-12; 1:30-4:30; Saturday 8-12. Vocational Guidance: Opens August 18-September 20; Monday through Friday 1:30-5:30; Satur- day 9-12. Lectures Professor Joshua Whatmough of Harvard University will lecture on "Man and His Language" at the eighth luncheon conference of the Linguistic Institute at 1:00 Tuesday August twelfth in room 308 Michigan Union. The lec- ture will be preceded by a lunch- eon at 12:10 in the Anderson Room. Both luncheon and lec- ture will be open to members of the Linguistic Institute and the Linguistic Society. Professor Whatmough is Professor of Com- parative Philology at Harvard University, and is well known for his many contributions to Celtic and Indo-European philology and to general linguistics. Professor Joshua Whatniough will deliver the second of two lec- tures to the Linguistic Institute at 7:30 Wednesday, August 13 in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. His subject will be "De- scriptive Linguistics, Historical Linguistics, and Area Linguistics, with Special Reference to the Dia- lects of Ancient Gaul." The lec- ture will be open to the Public. Professor Whatmough's lecture will concern itself with the impli- cations of some of the newer methods in the investigation of language. The concluding lecture of the series offered by the Linguistic Institute will be offered by Pro- fessor Hans Kurath of the Uni- versity of Michigan. The address will be given Thurs., Aug. 14 at 7:30 in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building and will be open to the public. The subject will be "Linguistic Geography and Its Relations to Other Fields of Research." Professor Kurath, now the director of the Middle English Dictionary, and of the Linguistic Institute, is well qualified to talk on LinguisticdGeography, since he is also the editor of the Linguis- tic Atlas of the United States which has published over three hundred maps of the dialect areas of New England and is planning publication for the Middle and South Atlantic States. Concerts Carillon Recital: Sunday after- noon, August 10, 3:00 p.m., Per- cival Price, University Carilloneu, will play a program including a group of Old English Airs, con- positions by D. Scarlatti, Prelude and Fugue for Carillon by J. A. Maasen, and a group of hymns. Student Recital: The Chamber Music Class, under the direction of Oliver Edel, will present a pro- gram Monday afternoon, August 11, 4:15 p.m., ih the Rackham As- sembly Hall. The concert will in- clude works from Pergloesi to e- tremely modern compositions. The public is cordially invited . Faculty Concert Series: Mr. Lee Pattison, Pianist, will present the final Monday evening concet, August 11, 8:30 p.m., in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The all-Bee- thoven program will include Son- ata, Op. 10, No. 1, Sonata, Op. 10, No. 3, Rondo in G, Op. 51, No. 2, Polanaise, Op. 89, and Sonata, Op. 101. The concert is open to the general public. Student Recital: Kenneth Snapp, Cornetist, will present a program Tuesday afternoon, Aug- ust 12, 4:15 p.m., in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Mr.s Snapp wil be assisted by Carolyn Weaver, Pi- anist, and The Brass Choir. The recital will include compositions by Senee, Thofe, Bohme, Gaubert, Bach and Brandt. Mr. Snapp, a student of Haskell Sexton, will present this program in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the Master of Music Degree in Music Education, and is open to the general public. Student Recital: Robert Noeh- ren, Organist, will present a pro- gram Tuesday evening, August 12, 8:30 p.m., in Hill Auditorium. The program, presented in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, will include Part Three of The Greater Catechism from the Clay- ierubung by Johann Sebastian DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN r . i.1 i BARNABY...