THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1950 F r __ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _"__ _ __ _ __ _ First IAU Meet To Be Held Today Students working in the arts or interested in them were urged to attend the first summer meet- ing of the Inter-Arts-Union at 7:30 pm. today in the League by Lou Orlin, Grad., Managing Editor of IAU's magazine, Gener- ation. Plans for the Summer Arts Fes- tival, to be held in conjunction with the program in Contemporary Arts and Society, will be the main topic of discussion. * * * THE SUMMER festival will be the third in the year and one half history of the Union which was formed in 1948 to provide those in- terested in arts with a knowledge of what others were doing in the separate branches of art. A second purpose was to pro- vide an outlet for those inter- ested in music, dance, drama, writing, etc., and to give such people an opportunity to com- bine their efforts. The accomplishments of the new group have been numerous. In addition to the two festivals at which student compositions were given their first airing, the Union sponsored an all-student production of "Murder in the Ca- thedral" and has put out two is- sues of a new art magazine, "Gen- eration." Third Annual NSA Congress To Meet Here Students from more than 300 U.S. campuses will gather in Au- gust at the University for the Third Annual Congress of the U.. National Student Association. With Student Legislature, its NSA .committee, and the Univer- sity administration as hosts, more than 1,000 students will spend eight days thrashing out import- ant issues in the educational com- munity - student rights, Federal aid to higher education, academic freedom, and the relationships of students to college faculties and administrations. THE CONGRESS will begin Aug. 21 and end Aug. 31. Main "plenary" sessions of the entire group will be held in Rackham Lecture Hall. Aside from playing host, SL will have .its full fourteen-man delegation present, to discuss and vote on issues, and benefit from the exchange of thought and practical programs, which are expected to highlight the Congress. Keynote speaker will be Ralph E. Himstead, general secretary, American Association of Univer- sity Professrs. Dean Erich A. Walter will give the welcoming ad- dress on behalf of the University. Schiavone To Go To Radio Confab James Schiavone, production director of the University's radio station WUOM, will attend the second Allerton House Seminar on Educational Broadcasting July 2- 18 at the University of Illinois. Schiavone is one of 23 college radio producers selected through- out the nation to participate in the Seminar, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation. PARTICIPATING in the meet- ings will be prominent broadcast- ers from network organizations in- cluding Edward R. Murrow, CBS news analyst; Robert Louis Sha- yon, radio writer-producer; Ro- bert Saudek, ABC vice-president; and Judith Waller, education and public affairs director for NBC. Schiavone was producer of the "Treasures off the Shelf" series which was broadcast by WUOM last year and won first prize for the University in the Institution for Education by Radio contest. French Club Will Meet Today Le Circle Francais will elect of- ficers at 8 p.m. today in the Lea- gue. The program for the meeting will also include French songs and games. The club is open to all in- terested students and faculty members. Astronomers Will Hear Abetti Lecture Today A series of lectures by eminent scientists, sponsored by the as- tronomy department, will contin- ue at 2 p.m. today in the observa- tory with discussion by Giorgio Abetti of thethistorly of astrono- mical thought. Abetti is director of the Arcetri Observatory in Florence, Italy. In the course of his lectures at 2 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays un- til July 8, he will deal with ancient and medieval astronomy, the Re- formation of astronomy, and ce- lestial mechanics and astrophy- sics in the nineteenth century. ABETTI will be followed tomor- row by Bertil Lindblad, director of the Stockholm Observatory, who will discuss the dynamics of stellar systems with application to the galaxy and to the extra- galactic nebulae. Lindblad, recipient of an honorary Doctor of Sciene de- gree from the University at Commencement, is president of the International Astronomical Union. His lectures, at 2 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays through July 22, will also include a dis- cussion of the spectrophotometric criteria of stellar luminosity and their appplication to the study of stellar distribution. OTHER LECTURERS who will appear here later this summer are G. C. McVittio, professor of mathematics at Queen Mary Col- lege, London, and S. Chandrasek- har, astronomer at Yerkes Obser- vatory. Prof. McVittie will discuss va- rious topics related to the expan- sion of an interstellar gas-cloud while Chandrasekhar, who is also a speaker in the Physics Sympo- sium, will treat the statistical theory of turbulence. Grant 4,134 Degrees at Graduatio n A record-breaking 4,134 degrees were granted by the University at its 106th commencement on June 17, Secretary Herbert G, Watkins announced recently. The June figure also contributed to another record-breaking total of 7,048 degrees granted by the University during the year, as there were 1,329 degrees granted at the end of the 1949 Summer Session and 1,585 at the end of the fall semester in February. * * * THE PREVIOUS HIGH for a June commencement has been 3,437, established in 1949, and the other record broken was the total of 6,158 degrees granted during the 1948-49 school year. The Law School's Summer In- stitute on the Law and Labor Ma- nagement continues sessions tomorrow considering "The Gov- ernment and Labor-Management Critical Disputes" in Rm. 100, Hutchins Hall. Speakers tomorrow include Pe- ter Seitz, General Counsel, Fed- eral Mediation and Conciliation Service; John W. Gibson, Assis- tant Secretary of Labor; John C. Gall, Washington, D. C. attorney; and Prof. N. P. Feinsinger of the University of Wisconsin Law School. OTHER SPEAKERS slated for tomorrow are Prof. Boaz Siegel of the Wayne University Law School; Prof. C. M. Updegraff of the Uni- versity of Iowa College of Law; and Norman J. D. Makin, Aus- tralian Ambassador to the United States. Completing the list of speak- ers are Prof. Otto Kahn-Freund of the London School of Eco- nomics and Political Science; Ernst Lemberger, Austrian le - gation to the United States; Prof. Stoyan Bayic of the Uni- versity of Chicago School of Law; P. M. Draper, Chairman, Ontario Labour Relations Board; and Prof. James J. Robbins of The American University. Sietz, Sec. Gibson, Gall and Prof. Feinsinger will form a panel on "Settlement of Basic Indus- try Disputes" at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Prof. Kahn-Freund, Lemberger, Prof. Bayic, Draper and Prof. Robbins will speak on "Critical NUMEROUS NOTABLES TO SPEAK: Law Institute on Labor Continues Today Dispute Settlement in Compara- tive Law" at 4 p.m. Final address of the day will be delivered by Ambassador Mskin at 8 p.m. on "The Australian Sys- tem of Compulsory Arbitration." Pollock To Serve As McClo Aide Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the University's political science department, left Monday for Germany where he will serve as adviser to John J. McCloy, U.S. High Commissioner for Germany. Prof. Pollock, who hopes to re- turn to the University in the fall, expects to divide his time between U.S. headquarters in Bonn,, Ber- lin, and Frankfort. 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