PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST S,1953 Who's Whose Best Friend A HOT DAY, A HOSE, A DOG, AND A CHARITABLE YOUNGSTER ALL COMBINED TO PROVIDE THIS CHARACTERISTIC SUMMER PHOTO LOOK and LISTEN With DONALD HARRIS \ mi' Gertrude Stein's first printed book of stories, "Three Lives," has been chosen by William G. Rogers, literary editor of the Associated Press, for discussion on CBS Ra- dio's - "Invitation to Learning," 11:35 a.m. tomorrow. Prof. Lewis Leary of Columbia Three Student C Concerts Set Three students will give con- certs tomorrow and Monday. Edward Skidmore, Grad., will present a Double Bass recital at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Skidmore will be Assisted by Wil- bur Perry, pianist, Nathalie Dale,. violinist, David Ireland, violist, and David Baumgartner, violincellist. The program includes works of Marcello, Hindemith, and the Quintet in A major, Op. 114, "Trout" of Schubert. MARY ANN SMELTZER will present a piano recital at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Miss Smeltzer will play works of Scarlatti, Copland, Bach, and Beethoven. Admission is open to the public without charge. * * s J, RUPERT NEARY, Grad., will present a clarinet recital at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Rackham Assem- bly Hall. Neary will be assisted by Carol Van.Asselt, pianist and James Hel- ler, violinist. The program includes works of Mozart, Bozza, A. Longue, Jeanjean, Strawinsky, and Mason. Admission is open to the public without charge. University will join Rogers in the discussion. Rogers is the author of "When This You See" a memoir of Gertrude Stein. * * * GREGOR Piatigorsky will be cello soloist and Joseph de Pas- quale viola soloist in Richard Strauss' "Don Quixote" with the Boston Symphony Orchestra con- ducted by Charles Munch, in a broadcast from the Berkshire Fes- tival at Tanglewood, Mass., on CBS. Radio's "World Music Festivals," at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow. Sir Cedric Hardwicke and Di- ana Lynn co-star in "Best Sell- er" on "G.E. Theater" at 8:00 p.m. tomorrow on CBS Televis- ion. "Best Seller" is the story of an English novelist who is brought to this country by his publisher for a personal appearance tour to ex- plain his philosophy, which is even- tually changed when he meets aj beautiful blond. . TRUE D. MORSE, Under-Secre- tary of Agriculture, will be "Man of the Week" on the CBS Tele- vision public appairs program, 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. Three orchestral programs from the eighth annual Brevard Music Festival, held at the Transylvania Music Camp at Brevard, N. C. will be heard on CBS Radio at 4:30 p.m. Saturdays, Aug. 15, 22, and 29. On Aug. 15 the American violin- ist Joseph Fuchs will be soloist in the first movement of the Brahms Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D major. James Christian Pfohl will conduct the festival orches- tra in Beethoven's Egmont Over- ture and a selection from Handel's Water Music. Study Palsy At Summer Workshop Speech therapists are being trained in the care and treatment of cerebral palsied children at the Speech Clinic in what is consid- ered a pioneer venture in the field. The program is intended pri- marily for speech therapists who presently devote their time to cerebral palsied children or who expect to specialize in CP work. THE ANN ARBOR program has lead to the expected establishment of such clinics in three or four key Michigan cities in the fall and winter. These clinics will be for the benefit of'parents and profes-I sional therapists, as well as medi- cal men and public health workers in general. The local project has been a cooperative -undertaking of the University and the United Cere- bral Palsy Association of Michi- gan, Inc. The latter has pro- vided funds for five speech ther- apists in the training 'program, while ten additional students presently enrolled in speech courses are also participating. Special scholarships provided by UCPA pay the tuition fees and living costs for those attending the course. Additional funds are made available by UCPA for lec- turers brought to Ann Arbor for the program. The program is under the direc- tion of Prof. D. E. Morley of the speech department. * * * THE CURRICULA of the train- ing course has included Anatomy and Function of the Vocal Appa- ratus, with 4 credit hours; Speech and Language Therapy for Dys- phasics, 2 credit hours; and a Seminar in Speech Therapy for the Cerebral Palsied, 2 credit hours. The anatomy course has been given at the Medical School five days a week, with emphasis on acquainting the students with the detailed anatomy of t'he or- gans used in producing speech. Lecturers, recitations and sup- ervised disection of the human cadaver have been included. The dysphasia course has been given at the Speech Clinic four days a week. It has emphasized the present objectives and meth- ods of treatment in dysphasia and has given an opportunity for ob- servation and participation in therapy work with parents in the Speech Clinic's Dysphasia Divi- sion. The seminar in speech therapy also has been conducted at the Speech Clinic, with occasional field trips, including a number to Rack- ham School in Ypsilanti, where the therapists have had an op- portunity to work directly with cerebral palsied children. The summer program will con- clude on August 15. The proposed statewide program for the fall and winter will include a panel of fore- most professional staff executives at the University. By ROBERT HEWETT (Editor's Note: The young Repub- lie of Indonesia has been without a government since June 3 when Com- munists joined with the Nationalist party in Parliament to bring about the downfall of Premier Wilopo's cab- inet. AP Correspondent Robert Hewett tells in the following story the diffi- culties Indonesia is running into three and a half years after winning independence from Holland.) JAKARTA - (P) - The train chugged slowly through the moun- tains of West Java, past terraced rice fields and tea plantations amid the most beautiful scenery in the world. Abruptly, the stillness was ripped by the ugly rattle of machinegun fire. Little, brown-uniformed men charged from ambush as the train lurched to a stop before a crude barricade. A few Indonesian ai'my soldiers in the train tried vainly to fight off the attack. Passengers who re- sisted were shot. When the raiders withdrew after looting the train, the toll was 9 killed, 37 wounded. FANATICAL Darul Islam troops, fighting to establish a strictly theocratic Moslem state in newly- independent Indonesia. had struck again. For four years Darul Islam's disciplined army of about 5,000 armed men-supported by thous- ands of followers-had virtually ruled West Java. Led by a fiery 46-year-old Moslem, Katosuwir- jo, Darul Islam has fought 40,000 Indonesian army troops by hit- and-run raids and run its own "government" in an area roughly 150 miles long and 40 miles wide, not far from the capital of Jak- arta. Last year Darul Islam was responsible for an estimated 2,000 deaths and loss of more than $12,000,000 in burned vil- lages, looted estates and attacks on rail and road transport. A few days after the attack de- I scribed, 15,000 demonstrators in Jakarta demanded more drastic action against Darul Islam. They demonstrated also the growing power of the numerically- small Communist party. In the last year the Communists have exploit- ed economic and political unrest and, working through Red China's embassy, have outdone all other parties in propaganda. ELSEWHERE in the capital, rival party leaders in the badly- split Parliament were trying to patch together their fifth govern- ment since independence was won from the Dutch three and a half years ago. The Darul Islam attacks, Com- munist agitation, the jockeying for power in a Parliament which has never faced an election- these are the growing pains of the largest, and potentially the richest, nation in South East Asia. The Japanese invasion smashed forever the facade of "western white superiority" built up in 300 years of Dutch rule over Indo- nesia's'"0,000,000 brown skinned people. In 1945, a rag-tag but de- termined nationalistic army pro- claimed independence for the 18.- 000 islands scattered across the tropical South Seas. Four years of on-again, off- again revolutionary war followed until the Dutch, under pressure from the United Nations, trans- ferred sovereignty to the Indon- esian Republic on Dec. 27, 1949. TODAY INDONESIA'S dreams of prosperity and happiness under independence are being frustrated by fanatical Moslem guerrilla war- fare and clever maneuvering by Moscow-trained Communists. Caught in the middle are su- per-nationalistic politicians who duck responsibility and flirt with both extreme right and left in a dangerous game for political ad- vantage. It's a gloomy situation disturb- ing to foreign friends (both Asian and Western) and is drawing in- creasing criticism from any re- sponsible Indonesians. Don't get the idea that the new nation is in chaos. It isn't. TOURISTS ARE still drawn to the isle of Bali to watch the sa- rong-clad dancers. Happy-go- lucky Indonesians still tap their rubber trees, sail their little fish- ing boats, plow their rice fields. Earnest young students are go- ing in increasing numbers to schools and colleges, trying to catch up on the desperate need for doctorsengineers, farm spec- ialists and technicians in dozens of fields. In Jakarta the night-time cur- few was lifted recently for the first time in 11 years. Security in many parts of the island na- tion is back to normal. But economically, Indonesia is limping along. Insecurity is only partly responsible for such condi- tions as a 99 per cent drop in sugar production, 44 per cent in tea. The more responsible political leaders are exhorting the people to work harder and drop the idea that "freedom from the Dutch means freedom from toil." POLITICALLY, the chornic in- stability of government was re- flected by the resignation on June 3 of the coalition cabinet headed by Dr. Wilopo, a leader of the Na- tionalist party. The cabinet's downfall was engineered by Wilopo's own Na- tionalist party with the enthus- iastic support of the 16 Com- munist members of Parliament. No single party controls the 210- man Parliament and the Com- munist bloc holds the balance of power. Indonesia's Parliament, split up among 18 or 19 parties, resembles in many ways the French National Assembly - with the difference that parliamentary elections have never been held in Indonesia. Thus the parties themselves are often split and there is little party soli- darity or responsibility. (Continued from Page 2) Concerts Student Recital: Edward Skidmore, student of double bass with Clyde Thompson, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music at 8:30 Sunday evening, August 9, in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. He will be assisted by Wil- bur Perry, piano, Nathalie Dale, violin, David Ireland, viola, and David Baum- gartner, cello, in a program of works by' Marcello, Hindemith and Schubert. The general public is invited. Student Recital: J. Rupert Neary, clarinetist, with Carol Van Asselt, pi- anist, and James Heller, violinist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master ofgMusic at 8:30, Monday eve- ning, August 10, 'in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. It will include the works of Mozart, Bozza, A. Longue, Jeanjean, Strawinsky and Daniel Gregory Mason. His recital will be open to the public without charge. 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T o0 s:: " ; A PO R sOX1M A TELA M C tJ.M Iseatian f.7rea 3AVA ' '"al's"' :,' '' ' - .....: .._ M:JeW ... - ::.:.:..... .......................... Tom: I y ,,.* Carillon Student Recital, Tuesday, August 11, at 12 noon, by Lois Batche- lor, Betsy Gidley, Fred Fahrner and Richard Harper. The recital will include Bach's, Prelude 1, from 8 short pre- ludes and fugues, Children's Suite, played by Lois Batchelor; Mozart's, Minuet from Don Giovanni, Couperin's, Andante, Folk Airs, played by Betsy Gidley; Handel's, Sonata for a musical clock, Fesch's, Tempo di gavotta e, double di tempo, played by Richard Harper; Price's Rhapsody for Two Car- illonneurs, No. 4, First performance, played by Lois Batchelor and Betsy Gidley, Gow's Caller herrin', and Price's. Victory Rhapsody for Large Carillon, played by Fred Fahrner. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial H~all. Popular Art in America (JTune 30 -August 7): General Library. First Floor Corridor. Incunabula: Books Printed in the Fif- teenth Century. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Gill- man Collection of Antiques of Palestine. Museums Building, rotunda exhibit. Steps in the preparation of ethnolo- gical dioramas., Michigan Historical Collections. Mi- chigan, year-round vacation land. Clements Library. The good, the bad. the popular. Law Library. Elizabeth II and her em- pire. Architecture Building. Michigan Chil- dren's Art Exhibition, University High School. Childrens' Books from Fifty Countries. Events Today Tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre, PROMPTLY AT 8:00 p.m., the Department of Speech and School of Music wil present Jacques Offenbach's fantastic opera, The Tales of Hoff- mann. Music direction is by Josef Blatt with the stage direction by Valentine Windt and the choreography by Betty Pease. LATE COMERS WILL NOT BE SEATED UNTIL AFTER THE PRO- LOGUE. SI, Cinema Guild Summer Program: Humphrey Bogart, Sidney Greenstreet in Dashiell Hammett's "The Maltese Fal- con"-Cartoon: Disney's "Donald and Pluto." Showings, 7 and 9 p.m. Archi- tecture Auditorium, Coming Events Lutheran Student Association (Na- tional Lutheran Council) Hill and For,. est Ave. Sunday: 9:30 a.m. Bible lass; 10:30 a.m. Worship Service; 7:00 p.m. Informal Meeting. Sunday, August 9. SL Cinema Guild Summer Program: Humphrey Bogart, Sidney Greenstreet in Dashiell Ham- mett's "The Maltese Falcon"--Cartoon: Disney's "Donald and Pluto." 8:00 p.m. |Architecture Auditorium. , -- .-' Q .., UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL- AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 10:30: Service, with sermon by the pastor, "As Losing Life, Yet Finding It." (last in summer series on "Paradoxes in Christianity) Sunday at 6:00: Lutheran Student Club (Gamma Delta). Supper and Program. Showing of two recently produced religious movies. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Henry Kuizenga, Minister Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister William S. Baker, University Pastor 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship, Mr. Mitchell preaching, "Religion without Applause." 5:30 P.M.: The Summer Student Fellowship will have a picnic supper. George Mendenhall, Asst. Prof. of Near Eastern Studies, will speak on Biblical Archeology. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 E. Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister and Student Counselor 10:00 A.M.: Student Bible Class studies "The Book of Daniel." 11:00 A.M.: Church Worship. Sermon Topic, "Good and Faithful Servants." LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) Hill and Forest Avenue Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor Sunday-9:30 A.M.: Bible Class. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Service 7:00 P.M.: Informal Meeting. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone 2-1121 Wm. C. Bennett, Pastor 10:00 A.M.: Church School. 11:00 A.M.: "God And The Nation." 7:30 P.M.: "Who Is My Neighbor?" 8:00 Wednesday: Prayer Meeting. A Friendly Church where the Word is preached. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Sts. Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M. Sunday at 8:00 A.M., 10:00 A.M., 11:30 AM. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings 7;30 P.M. Newman Club Rooms in Father Richard Center. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor Irene Applin Boice, Director of Music 10:45 A.M.: Worship Service. Sermon by Rev. Walter S. Press, "The Use of'Our Capabilities." 11:30 A.M.: Broadcast of the Sermon over WHRV. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland v. Wangdohl, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 10:45 A.M.: Morning worship, "The Expanding Horizon" Rev. Wangdohl, preaching. 2:30 P.M.: Student group meet in Wesley Lounge for picnic outing at nearby lake. Swimming, volley-ball, picnic supper. Vesper worship ser- vice, leader Norman Frisch. All students wel- come. Welcome to Wesley Foundation rooms, open daily. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH No. Division at Catherine 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Commentary. 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer and Sermon. 11:00 A.M.: Church School (Summer Term, thru 6th grade) 8:00 P.M.: Evensong, St. Michael's Chapel. During the Week Wednesday, 7:00 A.M.: Holy Communion; Friday, 12:10 P.M.: Holy Communion. FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETING Lane Hall 11:00 A.M. Sundays. Visitors welcome. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. August 9.-Spirit 5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service. 8:00 P.M. Wednesday: Testimonial Service. A free readina room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 to 5, Friday evenings from 7 to 9, and Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. 'p x.- _\ You'll Say t I "Next Week is the Last of Their Yearly Clearance and the Values are Marvelous." il * * * * * * * * * * *_Il WOOL SUITS-All can be worn for Fall and Winter. Sizes 9 to 15, 10 to 40, 121/2 to 241/2. ot25.00 and 39.95 Originally 49.95 to 79.95. SPRING COATS - Shorties and Long, pastels and darks. . . at 25.00 to 39.95. at 5.00 Group of Dresses (mostly cotton) Better Slacks and Playtogs . . . Better Blouses of nylon, orlon, silk or rayon ... Costume Jewelry (genuine zircon set rings) . . . Nylon gowns and slips-. . Orlon, wool and better Cotton Skirts... Jackets. WONDERFUL BUYS in Dresses . . . Many dark crepes and failles included. Sizes 9 to 15, 10 to 44, 121/2 to 241/2. Originally 10.95 to 39.95,. Now from 5.00 to 19.98. at 2.95 GROUP OF BLOUSES (Nylons, rayons, better cottons) .. . Handbags (patent plastics, straws, bamboos) . . . Taffeta Petticoats, Cotton Skirts, Shorts, Pedal Pushers, Slacks, Halters, Weskits, Nylon Bras, Hats, Costume Jewelry. at 1.00 Cotton Bros Nylon Hose. Hots, Gloves. For Worry-f ree Trips, Use TRAVELERS CHECKS * * *I Travelers Checks offer both convenience and safety for your vacation trips. You can cash them almost anywhere - Hotels, Restaurants, and Stores - and because only YOU can cash them, you can enjoy away-from-home secur- ity, too. * * * 11 11 THE CHURCH OF CHRIST Y.M.C.A. Auditorium Sundays: 10:15, 11:00 A.M., 7:30 P.M. Thursdays: 7:30 P M , Bible Study. G. Wheeler Utley, Minister Hear: "The Herald of Truth." WXYZ-ABC Network If 11 at 1.49 I FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Street Leonard A. Parr, Minister 4$1 II III I i I 11 11 I I