I FOUR THE MICIGAN XDAILY SUNDAY, JULY 20, 1952 I I Woodwind Quintet -Daily-Don Campbell WOODWIND QUINTET-The Woodwind Quintet, with Nelson Hauenstein, flute, Lare Wardrop, oboe, Albert Luconi, clarinet, Ted Evans, French horn, and Lewis Cooper, bassoon, will present one of the three faculty concerts to be given thisweekend. They will be accompanied by Prof. Benning Dexter, piano. MusicFacultyTo Give Three Concerts School of Music faculty mem- bers will take over the musical entertainment spotlight during the next few days. University organist Robert Noeh- ren, the Woodwind Quintet and the Stanley Quartet, accompan- ied by Clyde Thompson, string bass, will each present a concert. THE FIRST will be an organ recital by Robert Noehren at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. His program will include: Three chor- ales in E major, D minor and A minor by Cesar Franck; Chorale Prelude, "0 Welt, ich muss dich lassen" by Johannes Brahms and Franck To Deliver Near Eastern Talk Peter G. Franck, director of the Rockefeller Project at Haverford College, Haverford, Pa. will speak on economic nationalism, plan- ning and progress at 4:15 Tues- day in the Architecture Auditori- um. The speech is one in a series sponsored by the Near Eastern Studies department. English Teachers To Hold Meeting "College Preporatory English- The Senior Year Course" will be discussed at the English teachers conference to be held from 4 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Rckham Assembly hall. Topics of the discussion will in- clude kinds of oral and written composition; number of papers and their length; grammar re- views and punctuation drills and assigned reading. Prof. Fred G. Walcott, professor of education and English will be chairman of the session. Max Reger's "Fantasia and Fuge in D minor, Opus 135." The Woodwind Quartet, ac- companied by Prof. Benning Dexter, pianist, will give a con- cert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Lecture Hall, in con- junction with the Band Conduc- tors' Workshop, to be held here tomorrow through July 26. The group, with Nelson Hauen- stein, .flute, Lare Wardrop, oboe, Albert Luconi, clarinet, Ted Evans, French horn and Lewis Cooper. bassoon will open the program with Adagio, allegro, Adagio, Men- uetto and Rondo from Beethoven's "Quintet, Opus 71." This will be followed by Two Miniatures: "From Norfolk" and "From De- von" by Vinter; and Allegro, An- dante, Assai lento and Allegro Scherzando from Ibert's "Trois Pieces Breves." * * * THE SECOND PART of the con- cert will include: Entree et ron- Guston To Speak On Modern Art Prof. Philip Guston, adjunct professor of art at New York Uni- versity, will speak on modern painting in a lecture at 2:15 p.m. Tuesday at the Architecture Audi- torium. The speech will be sponsored by the College of Architecture and Design. Guest specialist on the summer program "Interpreting the Visual Arts in School and Society," Prof. Guston is the recipient of num- erous awards in the field of art, including a Guggennheim Fellow- ship in 1947, and the Prix de Rome, American Academy in Rome, 1948-49, and a grant of $1,- 000 from the American Academy' of Arts and Letters and American Institute of Arts and Letters in 1948. deau, tambourin, musette, Seren- dade, Fanfare, Rondeau, Menuets and LeCouCou from Milhaud's "Suite (d'apres Corrette)" and Al- legro vivace, Divertissement and Finale from "Sextuor" by Pou- lenc. At 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, the Stanley Quartet, accompanied by Clyde Thompson, string bass, will present their second con- cerf of the summer session which will also be held in Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Members of the quartet are: Prof. Gilbert Ross and Prof. Emil Raab, vio- linists; Prof. Oliver Edel, cellist, and Robert Courte, violist. They will play: Allegro, Ro- manze (andante), Menuetto (al- legretto) and Rondo (allegro) from Mozart's "Serenade in G major, K. 525;" Allegro con brio, Allegretto ma non troppo, Allegro assai vivace, ma serioso and Lar- ghetto espressive, allegro agitato, allegro from "Quartet in F minor, Op. 25" by Beethoven; and selec- tions from Bela Bartok's "Quar- tet No. 1, Opus 7:" Lento, Alle- gretto and Introduzione (allegro), allegro vivace. All three programs will be open to the public without charge. Houses Moved For New Pool Eight houses are being removed to provide room for the new wo- men's swimming pool, according to Walter Roth, University plant superintendent. Four of the houses are being removed from Geddes; three from N. University and one from For- est. Roth said that the houses should be cleared away by Sept. 1, but it is not known now when construc- tion of the pool will begin because of the steel strike. 'Winterset' To Begin Run Wednesday Lauded as one of the finest poetic dramas of contemporary American life, Maxwell Anderson's "Winterset" will be presented by speech department Wednesday through Saturday at Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Concerned with a theme of jus- tice and integrity built around the turbulent story of a son's loy- alty and devotion to the memory of his wrongfully condemned fath- er, "Winterset" was originally produced in 1935 with Burgess Meredith in the leading role. * * * A FAVORITE of American aud- iences, the drama has won a Pul- itzer Price and the coveted New York Drama Critics Award. According to critic Brooks At- kinson "Winterset lives on a plane of high thinking, deep emotions and eloquent writing. It is packed with terror. It is a courageous poem of justice and integrity." The play will be directed by guest director Ralph C. Hunter who also directedthe speech de- partment production of "Twelfth Night." Many Changes Mark History Of Democrats (Continued from Page 1) of 1929 heralded their return to power with Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1932. Roosevelt with his conception of the "forgotten man" epito- mized the 30's. Legislation more startling and extensive than anything the country had ex- perienced before was enacted to halt the depression. By 1936 prosperity seemed to be return- ing and Roosevelt won a sweep- ing victory. The 1937 business recession com- bined with Roosevelt's court-pack- ing plan and political purges dim- inished his popularity somewhat. but he won again in 1940. The last years of Rooseveltian rule and Truman's period in office are fa- milar to all who gained their first political awareness during that period. Today the Democrats are be- set by Northern-Southern strife as they meet in Chicago to select their 1952 candidates and write the Party platform. Dixiecrats ominously wait for the Northern- ers to attempt a strong civil rights program, and threats of a party split are imminent. Democrats .have .weathered other factionalism in previous elections, however, and probably will stick together this year. Their main problem is to find a candidate of the Eisenhower stature to lead the party to a sixth straight victory. With Ad- lai Stevenson slamming the door in the king-makers' faces, the 'problem is intensified. 1952 may well, observers agree, be the end of the Democratic 20 year reign and the beginning of another long period of GOP ascendency. [I ;# see 3 -Daily-Bruce Knoll CONFESSION-Donald Kleckner, Grad., and Ted Heusel, Grad., are shown during an intense climactic scene from Maxwell Ander- son's "Winterset" which will open at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Londoners Face Unusual Transportation Hazards By the Associated Press Who is right in the tumultuous Lapeer County eviction battle? What does the law say about the 17-year-old fight that has been marked by the distasteful eviction of a 60-year-old widow, fights be- tween the sympathizing farmers and the polide, numerous court cases and reams of sensational publicity? * * * IS THE fault with Mrs. Eliza- beth Stevens and the Zeigenhardt brothers who have refused to pay small assessments levied against their two farms by the receivers after the bankruptcy of the Far- mers' Mutual Fire Insurance Asso- ciation in 1935? Or is it with Mrs. Grace White, who bought the farms at auction in 1948 after court decision rul- ed the assessments valid? by BARNES CONNABLE - Special To The Daily LONDON - Londoners think their traffic snarl is the world's worst, but they're wrong. It can't hold a candle to any middle-sized city in the states. There are a couple of features, however, which would turn a New York truck driver's hair gray. ONE IS THAT horrible inven- tion of wrong way Corrigans-the U-turn. You can do it here in the most terrific traffic situations and the onlooking Bobby won't raise an eyebrow. .The rigid driving regulations we know are as hard to find here as a formal constitution. Just about 'everything goes- short of manslaughter. While car accidents are kept to a minimum, foul play with pedes- trians has been pretty nasty this year. Consequently, a rule just went into effect shedding more light on the "zebras" at night. These last are striped pavement sections where Britishers optimist- ically walk from curg to curb on the assumption that they can't get hurt. LEGALLY, they can't. Cars are obliged to stop when someone's on a zebra. But we saw a lot that didn't. One of the worst traffic spots is the Fleet Street area after press-time. Swarms of blood- red newspaper trucks careen to- ward you without a care in the world-they all have rubber fenders. Otherwise, though, it wouldn't be fair to Detroit taxi drivers who pride themselves on their tough driving assognment if we called this metropolis unusual from the traffic standpoint. i At the request of the Associated Press, Allan F. Smith, University law professor and a specialist in property law, studied the case with these conclusions: 1) There is a persistent refusal on the part of Mrs. Stevens and the brothers, Chris and Paul Zie- genhardt, to pay an obligation de- clared legal innumerable times; 2) Mrs. Grace White has a title to both Mrs. Stevens' 80- acre farm and the 240-acre Zie- genhardt farm that is "com- pletely unassiable," under the law; 3) The "gangsterism" of the sympathizing farmers, in beating Sheriff Clark Gregory and a de- puty during the June 2 eviction attempt and their refusal to accept the law is in violation of the basic tenet of our form of government. Lapeer Fight Fault of Ousted Farmers, Law Professor Says Transportation here is no prob- lem. No matter where you are at whatever time, you just whistle and a half dozen cabs hove into sight. * * * - THE UNDERGROUND, if you have the pluck to sink that far below sea level, is a good ride- if you like subways. For a slow ride, you can hire a carriage. For a noisy one, try one of the two-decker buses or trolley-buses. The trais, as you may have read, are no longer. More than a thousands were blitzed. The others couldn't keep up with the buses. The last one took its tearful swan trip to the car barn on July 6. Right-hand driving, unique on this side of the world, is one of the most terrifying experiences you could ever hope to endure. The only compensation, which you don't realize for the first few endless rides, is that the other cars follow the same pattern. After a while you begin to ad- just to it, as ridiculous as it may seem. Beach Ball The only big campus dance of the summer, the Beach Ball, will be held from 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Friday in the League Ball- room. 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