:.# .4,. PAGE SIX TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, ULY 19, 1949 Oleo, Ration Bills Awaitincg Lawmakers WASHINGTON, July 17-(P)- Meat rationing and oleomargarine tax repeal were added today to, the legislative bill-of-fare thatl Congress will look over when it re-t turns a week from Monday. A new anti-Communism bill also was an added starter. Proposals for all three came from the law-1 makers themselves, not from the White House. The trend appeared likely to spread. President Truman can1 and did call Congress back; he can tell Congress what he wants; but he can't make Congress stick to the program. Some guarded talk was heard of± possible investigations-inquiries conducted by the Republican ma- jority which would probe the workings of some of the executive agencies controlled by Democrats. But the Republicans weren't tell- ing-yet---just what they had in mind. The Republicans, as well as Mr. Truman, face some prospective headaches in the dog-days ses- sion. But they also have an ab- solute majority in both Houses. Rep. Javits (Rep., N.Y.) brought up > the meat rationing proposal. What he wants is a law which would let the President set up ra- tioning and let Congress end it1 when it chose., U.S. Journalist Will Discuss Spain's Unrestt A first-hand account of under-l ground activities in Spain will be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday in Kellogg Auditorium by David1 Nussbaum, American correspond-1 ent recently returned from Europe. Nussbaum said Spanish guerilla forces have doubled in the past two years and are priming for thec overthrow of Franco. The Spanish Republic fell nine1 years ago following the capture of Barcelona. "The underground is now or- ganized under a unified com- mand," Nussbaum said. "Engage- ments between government troops and guerillas occur regularly." Nussbaum reported the enemies of Franco planning for his over-1 throw include Communists and] Socialists on the Left, Monarchists on the Right, the trade unions and the Basque Catholics. Nussbaum will speak under the auspices of the American Veterans Committee. Campus Events Preview Drama "Macbeth" and Taming of the Shrew," productions by the Shakes- peare Festival Players, Ohio Wesleyan University, sponsored by the University Department of Speech. 8 p.m. Friday, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Movies "Fannie," French Film starring Raimu. 8:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Hill Auditorium. "Emperor Waltz," with Bing Crosby and Joan Fontaine. Sunday through Friday at the Michigan Theatre. "Cary and the Bishop's Wife," with Cary Grant, Loretta Young and David Niven Starts Saturday at the Michigan Theatre. "Bride Goes Wild" with Van Johnson and June Allyson. Sunday through Wednesday at the State Theatre. "Sainted Sisters" with Veronica Lake and John Garfield. Starts Thursday at the State Theatre. "Voice of the Turtle," with Ronald Reagan and Eleanor Parker, and "Out of the Past" with Robert Mitchum. Sunday through Tues- day at the Wuerth Theatre. "Trade Winds." with Frederic March and "So Well Remembered" with Martha Scott and John Mill. Wednesday and Thursday at the Wuerth Theatre. Music Music Forum on "Coiiemporary Music." Sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, national professional music fraternity, Webster Ait- ken, pianist, Rose Lee Finney, composer, Erik Leidzen, conductor and arranger and Curt Sachs, musicologist, will be participants. Lectures and Forums International Law Forum: Part II, "International Law and Public Rights." "Legal Problems of German Occupation," by Charles Fahy; 2:30 p.m. Thursday. "The Present International Status of Germany," by Prof. Max Rheinstein, University of Chicago, 4 p.m. Thursday "In- ternational Crimes and Their Prosecution," by George Burke, Judge, Military Tribunal No. 5, International Military Trials, Germany, 8 p.m. Thursday. "Codification of International Law," Prof. James Brierly, 2:30 p.m. Friday. "International Law and Human Rights," by Prof. Hersch Lauterpacht, Cambridge University, England, 4 p.m. Friday. "Peace Treaties of World War II," by Prof. William Bishop, Jr., 8 p.m. Friday. All lectures will be held in Rm. 120 Hutchins Hall. School of Education Lecture Series: "The Place of Vocational Ed- ucational Education in Public Education," by Prof. Thomas Diamond, 4:05 p.m. Monday. "The School as a Laboratory for the Training of Citizens," byProf. William C. Reavis, University of Chicago, 4:05 p.m. Tuesday. "The Function of a Campus Teacher Training School," by Prof. John M. Trytten, 4:05 p.m. Wednesday. "Let's Come to Grips with the Guidance Problem in High School Mathematics," by Prof. Raleigh Schorling, 4:05 p.m. Thursday. "Education in Oregon," by Dean Clair Langton, Oregon State, 4:05 p.m. Friday. All lectures will be held in the University High School Auditorium. Charles A. Fisher Memorial Institute on Aging: "The Growing Problem of Aging, Ernest W. Burgess, University of Chicago, 10 a.m. "Personal Challenge of Aging: Biological Changes and Maintenance of Health," by Dr. Edward J. Stieglitz, Washington, D.C., 1:30 p.m. Monday. "Demonstration of Leisure Time Activities" by William G. Robinson, Extension Service, 8 p.m. Monday. "Mental Health in Old Age: What It Is and Tow To Have It," Dr. Moses M. Frohlich, Veter- ans Readjustment Center, 9:30 a.m. "Relian and Religious Obeser- vance in Old Age, Prof. Leroy Waterman; "Mental Health in Old Age; What It Is and How To Have It," Dr. Moses M. Frohlich, Veterans Re- adjustment Center and "Religion and Religious Observances in Old Age," Professor Emeritus Leroy Waterman, 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. "Aging Creatively," Dr. George Lawton, and "Living Arrangements for Older People, Mrs. Patricia Rabinovitz, Wayne County Bureau of Social Aid, 1:30 p.m. Dances Student Veterans' Wives Club semi-formal. Al Rice's Orchestra. 9-12 midnight Saturday, University Building, Willow Run Village. Square Dance. sponsored by American Youth Hostels. 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Ann Arbor High School. 0+ I F!' ; I lO I 1 T O T S D R E S S E D' A L I K E - Children in Holland are dressed alike-except for caps--until they are 8 years old. Boys' caps are of 6 pieces of cloth; girls' of 3 pieces. Child on left of these four at Marken, Holland, is girl. The others are boys. SEVEN-STORY C A R D E N- Workmen manicure a lawn and garden on seventh floor of La Maison Francaise, one of the fifteen buildings of New York's Rockefeller Center. The spires of St. Patrick's Cathedral are in background. '4 M 0 T M E R G U A R D S B A B Y - A sealion, Catalina, stands over her baby, Guppy I, to prevent two others from getting closer to it on rock at Chicago's Brookfield Zoo. 0 A N C I N G 0 U T-A lad performs in a tavern in the ey of Rhodes on Island of Rhodes, in the Aegean Sea. i 4 v C 0 W - M I L K I N G C O N T E S T - State Senator Charles Olsen (right) of Massachusetts observes technique of State Rep. W. Arthur Simpson of Vermont during cow milking contest on Boston Common between legislators of the two states. The Massachusetts men won. B A M B I H A S A P A L-Bambi, month-old fawn at the Bronx Zoo, New York, plants a kiss on cheek of his toy panda. The little white-tailed deer is being hand-raised by Mrs. Helen Martini, who keeps the Zoo's nursery.,/ Sleek-Fitting LASTEX SWIMSUITS Figure-hugging one-piece swim suit, seen at the beach this . : .. . . _.