PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. JULY 17, 1954 PAGE TWO TIlE MTCHTGA1'~ DAILY ~ATTTRDA'V JITTV VT WA "ara.svatlan.calr vULi. 1#} i.7i7".#t The Indo-China Failure and The Massive Retaliation Policy "Le's Find Out How Truthful YOU Are" JOHN FOSTER DULLES' latest move in regard to the Indo-China mess causes some faint sur- prise. That he conceded to the French their right to negotiate a peace in Indochina is surprising. But, since he had no other choice, the effect is lessened. Despite the policy of "massive retaliation" and its awesome threat of instant action against ag- gression "at the weapons and places of our choos- ing," the Chinese Communists, for all practical pur- poses, have won Indochina. Sporadic but continuous retreats, and procastination remindful df the Kor- ean experience, have left the Reds in the happy position of being able to dictate terms. Whether intervention by the United States in the name of the UN a couple years ago would have written a different denouement to the Indochina story will never be known. We Monday-morning quarterbacks might think so, because we can shrug off explanations pointing to a world atomic war: Korea; too, was left divided by our fears of large-scale warfare. Now our reluctance to pro- voke the Communists into getting serious has forced even the Republicans to back down. In a way, it is a just desert for promising the Ameri- can public no intervention and victory in Indo- china at the same time, while the situation there was staring them mockingly in the face. A little reflection on what the Kremlin must think of this sort of action, or lack of it, is not at all encouraging. Ah, they say, smiling knowingly to each other, all we have to do is continue to start little wars and we'll keep on winning. In short, the policy of massive retaliation has turned out to be a giant bluff that doesn't work. The United States has been what you would call "playing it cool"-being extra careful, while still talking tough. Not until the United States begins to act as tough as she talks will the tide turn. A bluff is good only until it is recognized. Replacing our words with a little push would possibly be the occasion for an atomic war, if it were not for a pretty safe guess that Russia frowns on one of those as much as we do. But, as things have gone in Indochina, we have no choice except either to take such a chance or painfully watch our own grave be dug. Oh, yes, one other alternative. The Reds could force us into an atomic war, which would go all right with the propaganda, but not so good with the self-preservation. -Jim Dygert iji + BOOKS + "THE SECOND TREE FROM THE CORNER" by J. B. White, Harper and Brothers, New York, 1954. TJIO BE MADE honorary doctor of letters and law in 1775, as was Samuel Johnson by Oxford, was a signal honor, one a man of letters might re- gard as the highest he could attain, a kind of knighthood from those who wished themselves his peers. Few men of English letters have lived up to what one has every right to expect of a doctor with so little difficulty or with so much gusto as Dr. Johnson. These days doctorates are flung wildly about; all one can say is that less emphasis is placed on qualifications than in Dr. Jonhson's time. The one happy choice in the hundreds who were remembered on last June's honors lists at com- mencements throughout the land: E. B. White. El- wyn Brooks White was honored by Harvard Uni- versity and by Colby college, Maine, in both in- stances with the degree of Doctor of Humane Let- ters. The selection of E. B. White has done much to restore my faith in the perception of college authorities. There can be little doubt that White's book, The Second Tree From The Corner, printed this spring, precipitated his awards. I use ."printed" rather than the customarily used "published" be- cause of a quotation from one of White's favorite authors, Henry David Thoreau: "Much is published, but little printed. We are in danger of forgetting the language which all things and events speak Withott metaphor, which alone is copious and stan- dard." White used the quotation in a sly and subtle piece called The Retort Transcendental. His book Is definitely a printing event It is composed of stories, poems, paragraphs, and pieces, most of which first appeared in "The New Yorker." White has been writing for "The New Yorker" since its beginning. He has done much to give the magazine its peculiar charm, compounded from parts of urbane wisdom, subtle high spirits, a hypersensitive eye and ear, and- more than anything else-excellent writing. Com- pounded, yes; and in such a way that it can only be imitated, but never equalled. His "Farewell, My Lovely," a goodbye to the Model- T Ford, is included. There hasn't been a finer, more nostalgically funny familiar essay written in this century. No one is sorry that the "T"Bis gone, and every reader will be glad that E. B. White was around to record its demise for posterity. When White collides head-on with the problems of contemporary life, he has a way of exaggerating that is pathetically amusing. His piece on sports, "The Decline of Sport," jabs at regimented, com- mercialized athletics played in giant stadia; "The Morning of the Day They Did It," tells of the end of the world by atomic blast, and his "About My- self" illustrates the sorry pass to which big-brother government, statistics, and red-tape, have brought the individual. One laughs, and in the middle of a chuckle catch- es himself up short, slightly discomfited, with the question, "My Goodness, what am I laughing at?" White isn't a satirist, but a humorist v:hose wit helps him, and his readers, get through the hazard- ous business of living in a state which could be almost perfect but isn't. Wit is the means this lat- ter-day Puck points out "What Fools these mortals be!" without ever despairing of the essential good- ness of the fools: "Spent . . . the morning studying the crisis in the newspapers and watching apple-fall and Muscles and Behavior THE INACTIVE physical life into which Ameri- can children are drifting has been causing much concern to educators, health authorities and defense planners. It also has a relation to delir- quency, now warns the American Association of Health, Physical Education and Recreation. Chil- dren of today particularly need a healthy physical outlet for the tensions of modern living, which may otherwise be expressed in antisocial behavior. The flabby muscled, passive child is likely to be a graver problem in juvenile maladjustment than the strong, active one. It seems to be largely up to the schools to pro- vide the two to four hours of physical activity a Cavn +hat n hili rpmccnhnrn rrus-a -... leaf-fall in our city backyard, where nature is cleverly boxed and has therefore an appearance of special value, as of a jewel so precious that it must always be suitably contained. The day was clear, with a gentle wind, and the small leaves descended singly and serenly, except now and then when a breeze entered and caused a mo- mentary rain of leaves-what one weather pro- phet on the radio calls "inner mitten" showers. A school of fish paraded slowly counterclockwise in the fountain, and on the wall above us hung seed pods of the polygonum vine. Our complaint about the crisis is not that it is so appalling, but that it is so trivial. The consequences of the atomic cataclysm that are being relentlessly pub- lished seem mild alongside the burning loveliness of a: fall morning, or the flash of a south-bound bird, or the wry smell of chrysanthemums in the air. We examined everything said yesterday in the council chambers of the mighty and could find no single idea that was not trifling, not a noble word of any calibre, not one unhurried observation or natural thought. The newspaper headline prophesying darkness is less moving than the pool of daylight that overflows it from the window, illuminating it. The light of day- so hard at times to see, so convincing when seen." Humor is a strange commodity, more difficult to discuss than tragedy. White's "Some Remarks on Humor" will do as much as anything in Eng- lish to tell one what humor is and does, and in the span of a few pages. Then read his preface to Don Marquis, a first-rate critical examination, for am- plification. The poems that are included are wonderful. They amuse one so much that he may fail to notice that they have real merit as verse. The best, "Son of the Queen Bee," on the unlikely theme of artificial insemination in the animal world, a long poem by light verse standards, never falters, but moves for- ward with lilt and speed. The book does not contain all that White has written, but what he wants saved. Perhaps the thing Mr. White does best is paragraphing. A para- grapher writes notes, comments, reflections-any- thing on any subject-because those who pay him think what he has to say will be interesting, brief, and on the hook in the composing room by an in- flexible deadline. This may sound simple, but it isn't. Think of being urbane, wise, observant, and spirited-in prose of the first rank--day in and out for years, deadline after deadline. E. B. White is a rare man, indeed. On reading, he has this to say: "Reading is the work of the alert mind, is demanding, and under ideal conditions produces finally a sort of ecstasy. As in the sexual ex- perience, there are never more than two persons present in the act of reading-the writer, who is the impregnator, and the reader who is the res- pondent. This gives the experience of reading a sublimity and power unequalled by any other form of communication. It would be just as well, we think, if educators clung to this great phe- nomenon and did not get sidetracked, for al- though books and reading may at times have played too large a part in the educational process, that is not what is happening today. Indeed, there is very little true reading, and not nearly as much writing as one would suppose from the towering piles of pulpwood in the dooryard of our paper mills. Readers and writers are scarce, as are pub- lishers and reporters. The reports we get now- adays are those of men who have not gone to the scene of the accident, which is always far- ther inside one's own head than it is conven- ient to penetrate without galoshes . .." The magic quality of White's paragraphs is that they leave nothing more to be said. One realizes, after a reading or two, that the last word is there before him, beautifully expressed. "The Second Tree From The Corner" is made of such excellence throughout. E. B. White is about as unlike Dr. Johnson as anyone can be. He's shy, a man one would ask his dinner partner to identify at a literary gathering, if one can imagine White being present. Still, E. B. White wins, easily, my vote for the title of Doctor, He writes so well that he alone makes other maga- zines and writers with pretensions to intelligence look muddy, confused, and verbose. He draws near Johnson in this respect: He is a man who has liv- WASHINGTON-Important back-t stage huddles have been taking; place among both Democratic and Republican senators regarding Joe McCarthy. Upon these huddles will depend the outcome of the big testi vote on McCarthy which SenatorE Flanders of Vermont is bringing; to a head next week. The huddling among Republican senators has been to urge Flan- ders not to force them to a vote. Some senators, such as Saltonstall of Massachusetts, have said: "If you call for a vote it will defeat me. For I'll have to votet for your resolution." What Saltonstall referred to was3 the strong McCarthy sentiment among the Boston Irish and the' fact that he faces a tough re-1 election fight. This was why he ducked having the Army - Mc- Carthy probe referred to his Armed Services Committee as the White House originally suggested. However, Ralph Flanders is as inflexible as the granite of his own mountainous Vermont, a state which voted Republican even dur- ing the Roosevelt landslide of 1936.' Like many other New England Re-7 publicans, Flanders believes that the party should be purged of un- Republican influences, and he con-t siders McCarthy one of them. , By no means a radical, Flanders began life as a machine-tool de- signer, now owns his own factory, is a millionaire. He was president of the Bryant Chucking Grinder; Co. until elected to the Senate, is' director of various insurance com-; panies, was president of the Fed-1 eral Reserve Bank of Boston, has a distinguished record as an en- gineer. And having watched McCarthy from the sidelines for four years, he is convinced the Republican; Party cannot shirk the responsi-1 bility of voting for or against Mc- Carthy's retention as chairman. Flanders thinks he has 12 Re- publican senators who will vote; with him. Other senators say he is; too optimistic. But whether right or wrong, Flanders is determined to call for a showdown vote. Lyndon Says No Backstage huddling among Dem- ocratic senators is over how they should line up on the Flanders' vote. If most of them line up with' Flanders, McCarthy will lose his chairmanship. For they control one-half the Senate. However, the likable and elu- sive leader of the Senate Demo- crats, Lyndon Johnson of Texas, has decreed otherwise. Exactly two years ago, Johnsont was in about the same position on' about the same issue. A Senate subcommittee had just adopted unanimously the most devastating1 report on McCarthy's finances ever made on a fellow senator. And the big question was: "What action should, Democratic sena- tors take?" Johnson ruled: "No action at all." Other senators, such as Ful-' bright of Arkansas and Hennings of Missouri, believed the Senate should face the issue of McCarthy- ism then and there. So did Neely of West Virginia, Republicans were then busy chal- lenging other senators, but not Mc- Carthy. They challenged Demo-' cratic Senator Chavez of New Mexico and their own Republican colleague, Langer of North Da-' kota, by refusing to let them take' their seats permanently as they walked down the center aisle. They faced the humiliation of being seated subject to later vote andj investigation.1 But as the senator from Wis- consin walked up to the rostrum they might put a candidate in the race against him if he bucked Mc- Carthy. So, as the Louisville Courier-Journal pointed out, the policies of the Democratic Party in the Senate were shaped by the election ambitions of one man rather than the good of the nation. These were the circumstances under which McCarthyism was ducked two years ago, and it was this evasion that helped win for the senator from Texas the nick- name of "lyin'-down" Johnson. Today Johnson faces no impor- tant election opposition. The son of a wealthy but nonpolitical oil- man, Dudley Dougherty, is run- ning against him, but will get no- where. It will be a walkaway for Lyndon. However the handsome Texan has passed the word to Democratic colleagues that the vote on McCarthy is a Republican battle, and the Democrats will not line up one way or the other. A majority will probably vote against Flanders and inferentially for McCarthy on the technicality that seniority rule for committee chairmanships must not be dis- turbed. Mamie's Nightmare Mamie Eisenhower had such a terrifying dream the other after- noon that she confided to friends she wished she had never gone to sleep. She took a short cat-nap while Ike was out playing golf and dreamed she had become blind. The dream was so horrible that she was white and nervous when the President returned to the White House. Later she learned that two guests had tiptoed through the room while she was asleep. "I wish to goodness they had awakened me," she told her friends. * * * WASHINGTON. - The question of whether the Justice Department should bring a monopoly suit against the United Fruit Company during the Guatemalan revolt went all the way up to the Cabinet be- forea decision was reached. Inside fact is that the suit was begun a long time abo by Assistant Attorney General Graham Morison, and when Attorney General Brown- ell took over, United Fruit lawyers remarked: "This is some of that nonsense of the Democrats and should be tossed out immediately." However, Eisenhower' s new trustbuster, Judge Stanley N. Barnes, decided differently. It took him about 30 minutes to decide that there was a definite case against United Fruit for its banana monopoly in Central America. When he took up the case, with the new attorney general, however, Brownell was cautious. "Talk to the United Fruit law- yers about it before you file suit," he advised. "Hear their side of the story first." Brownell was advised by subor- dinates that it was not Justice De- partment policy to confer with of- fending parties when the govern- ment had an airtight case. Never- theless, in deference to Brownell's instructions intermittent confer- ences took placeabetweenUnited Fruit attorneys and the antitrust division for about a year. This was what delayed action until about the time of the Guate- malan revolt. It was then that the case was finally sent to President Eisenhower himself. He in turn took it up in a Cabinet meeting. Secretary of State Dulles was all for the suit. He felt it would show the United States was not working for United Fruit alone, but cham- pioned smaller companies in Latin Amerira Xetten4 TO THEEDITOR The Daily welcomes communica- tions from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the wri- ter and in good taste. Letters ex- ceeding 300 words in length, defama- tory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. The Irony of It A ll. .. To the Editors: THE UNIVERSITY of Michigan has shown sufficient interest in the position of women in contem- porary society to devote a summer lecture series to this subject. In view of this, it is ironic to note that in practice the University con- tinues to maintain a discrimina- tory policy toward its own women students. There are a large number of senior women over twenty-one who prefer to live in apartments but who are restricted by a stringent university housing policy. No un- dergraduate men,above the fresh- man level, h o w e v e r, are con- strained by such regulations. The reason given for the retention of senior women in the dormitory sys- tem is the acute shortage of apart- ment available in Ann Arbor. This is understandable, but the distrib- ution of apartments could be made more equitable by tightening hous- ing policy in regard to at least sophomore men and liberalizing the regulations for senior women. We feel this situation merits ser- ious examination by the student body and the Board of Governors. -Betty Arnswald '54.. -Barbara Sklar '55 -Carol Hertz '55 Dramatic Arts Center . To the Editor: THE BOARD of Directors of the newly organized Dramatic Arts Center is pleased at the support it got in Jerry Helman's editorial last Friday. We are fully aware of the problems ahead of us and are doing everything possible to make the venture a success. In the election and selection of a Board of Directors, great pais havebeen taken to insure that we have a balance of non-University people as well as faculty; we be- lieve that the project can succeed only as a truly civic organization. From the start the Board has in- tended to appoint a student mem- ber, thus representing another large and important segment of our audience. Great care will be given to the selection of plays. While the new and experimental will be empha- sized in part, we also are of the opinion that the year's program should have balance and should allow for some "classic" plays. There is some feeling that a slate of plays completely devoted to ex- perimental drama is too rich for the blood of many theatre-goers. Nor does this mean that we intend to duplicate the efforts of the ex- cellent and worthy organizations already engaged in putting on plays in Ann Arbor; our plays will supplement theirs. Financial support has been such that we feel justified in going ahead with plans. But in order to assure the opening of the Center this fall we must have the com- plete backing of as many people as possible, both in the form of pledges for a reserve fund (which will not be called in unless our goal of $4000 is reached) and mem- bership subscriptions ($10 for the year). -Richard C. Boys -Vice President, Dramatic Arts Center _ c,(ie irl ig n 1 ily' Ynterpethi9 thie lle By WILLIAM L. RYAN head of the 20th French govern- AP Foreign News Analyst ment since the war's end. Possibly Washingrton's gudden flurry of he will get his ceasefire, but he 4 activity over prospective granting of sovereignty to West Germany seems to indicate that the capital has little faith in the staying pow- ers of the present French govern- ment, Administration leaders apparent- ly have taken to heart a hard- learned lesson which has emerged from the Geneva conference; that Moscow's European and Asian strategy are enmeshed in a single, global cold war strategy. Time aft- er time Moscow has made it clear the Kremlin considers the lessen- ing of tensions in Europe and Asia a single world problem. Word now comes from Washing- ton that the administration may have to recall the Senate into spe- cial session after its scheduled July 31 adjournment, so that change in the Bonn treaty with Chancellor Adenauer's West Ger- man government may be ratified. That is, there is a good chance that France will not ratify the Eu- ropean Defense Community treaty, and time is growing short. A frightening global p i c t u r e is emergink. In the old days of European im- perialism, the Kaiser guaranteed the western security of his cousin, the Czar, while the Russians ad- ventured about in the Far East. Today the guarantee for Moscow is a chain of bitter satellites, in- cluding East Germany, with mili- tary strength facing disunity. The West's voice would be firmer in Asia today if a determined collec- tive defense in Europe was a real- ity. But France remains fearful of an armed Germany and Communist propaganda makes the most of it. France has a choicevto make. She can attempt to live with an armed Germany within a frame- work which will discourage a re- currence of German military am- bitions, or she can stand aside and watch Germany being armed in an arrangement wholly beyond French influence. If Premier Pierre Mendes - France fails to get an "honorable" cease-fire in Indochina by Tues- day, he is pledged to resign as is far from out of the woods then, because Communist peace terms in Indochina are likely to be harsh. But one way of the other, Indo- china must be out of the way be- fore the French assembly will turn its attention to EDC ratification-- and the National Assembly is headed for adjournment Aug. 15,. The Kremlin has a large stakge in staving off EDC. Ratification by France is the key to its effective operation. Washington seems fullĀ§ aware of all the possibilities. The plan to give West Germany sov- ereignty and bring German troops into an EDC army without France is born of desperation over France's dragging feet. Western nations are becoming impatient, knowing that the more the delay the more Soviet influence and pow- er are enhanced in Europe. Today's Youth IN THE years that have passed since 1914 the entire complexion of American living has altered and nowhere is the change better ex- emplified than in the attitude of the young people of the nation. In times gone by vacation was vacation-a long holiday to be passed at mountain or seaside re- sort by the fortunate, in street play or suburban spots by those who had not the means to seek plasure afar. Today, regardless of social or financial position and re- gardless of sex, high-school stu- dents and collegians alike, with the exception of the small group of idle rich, everywhere seek jobs for the vacation months, as ap- prentices in publishing houses and editorial offices, as clerks and mod- els and salespeople in stores, as waiters and waitresses in hotels, on farms or in lumber camps, in filling stations and summer camps, anywhere and everywhere that inexperienced help is acceptable. Life wears too stern an aspect to- day for even the young to be con- tent to play it away; the future is too insecure, the poesent too hazardous. -Saturday Review } DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m, the day preceding publication. SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1954 VOL. LXIV, No. 20S Notices The University of Michigan Blood Bank Club has arranged to have a Red Cross mobile unit at the Student Health Service on August 4, 1954, to take care of staff members who wish to contri- bute a pint of blood and thus become members of the Blood Bank Club with the privilege of drawing upon the bank for themselves and their immediate families in the event blood is needed, The unit will be at the Health Service from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon and from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Staff members who are interested should contact the Personnel Office, Room 3026, Ext. 2619. Seniors: College of LS&A; and Schools of Education, Music, and Public Health: Tentative lists of seniors for August graduation have been posted on the Registrar's bulletin board in the first floor corridor, Administration Building. Please notify the Recorder at Registrar's window number 1, 1513 Administration Building if any changes in your name or degree are necessary. EDWARD G. GROESBECK Assista it Registrar The following student sponsored so- cial activities have been approved for the following week-end: July 17, 1954 Michigan Christian Fellowship Phi Delta Phi open to the public. It is performed in partialfulfillment of the requiremeIto for the Master of Music degree. i~s* Lowry is a pupil of Chase Baromeo. July 19-Monday, 8:30 p.m. Hill Au- ditorium. AnnaRussell, International Mncert Comedienne, Concert. (Ticket sale at Box Office, Hill Auditorium, opens July 15. Mal.i orders accepted be- ginning July 10.) The Stanley Quartet, Gilbert Ros and Emil Raab, violins, Robert Courte, viola, and Oliver Edel, cello, will be heard in the second concert in the sum- mer series at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 20, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. It wp1 include Beethoven's Quartet in B-flat major, Op. 18, No. 6, villa-Lobos' Quar- tet No. 14, and Beethoven's Quartet in A minor, Op. 132, and will be open to the public. Exhibitions Clements Library. Women and Woman in Early America. I Superintendent Clayton of North Branch, Michigan, has teaching vacan- I d ies in the following fields: art, vocal music, men's physical education, kin- E y '~xdergarten, and early elementary. The starting salary is $3400 for inexperience. For further information, please call the Bureau of Appointments, 3523 Admin- Sixty-Fourth Year istration Building, telephone NO 3-1511, Edited and managed by students of ext. 489. the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Lectures Student Publications. General Library. Women as Authors. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Egyp- tian Antiquities-a loan exhibit from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New' York City. Michigan Historical Collections. The University in 1904. Museum of Art. Three Women PsAat- ers. Events Today Intercultural Outing touSaline Valley Farms Youth Hostel Saturday, July 17. Leave Lane Hall at 9:30 a.m.; return by 8 p.m. Call NO 3-1511, ext. 2851 for de- tails and reservation. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Satur. day, July 17, You are invited to join us for a pic- nic and outing at Silver Lake. We will be leaving Lane Hall at 2 o'clock, p.m. Food and transportation provided. Please contact B. J. Cole at 3-1561 Ext. 3553 if you would like to go. Coming Events Sunday, July 18 Services in Ann Arbor Churches Lutheran Student Association Meet- ing Sunday 7:00 p.m. at the Student Chapel, corner Hill and Forest Ave. The Rev. Carl Schneuker, Graduate Student and Missionary on Furlough from New Guinea, will be the speaker. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Sun- day, July 18, 4:00 p.m. at Lane Hall. We will have as a missionary speaker, Mrs. Helen Gould, former mis- sionary to China.Mrs. Gould and her husband now have a Chinese church in Detroit. Following the meeting there will be a social period where we hope to become more acquainted and get to know each of you. We invite you and urge you to come. Russian Circle. The Russkii Chashka Chayu, the Russian Coffee Hour, will .- Editorial Staff Dianne AuWerter.....Managing Becky Conrad...........Night Rona Friedman ........... Night Wally Eberhard..........Night Russ AuWerter............Night Sue Garfield.........Women's Hanley Gurwin.........Sports Jack Horwitz...Assoc. Sports E. J. Smith,....... Assoc. Sports Saturday, Juily 17 ..Summer Speech Conference, auspices of the Department of Speech. Program session. 9:00 a.m., Rackham Amphithe- ater. Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Luncheon. "Rhetoric and Politics." Karl R. Wallace, Chairman, Department of Speech, University of Illinois. 12:151 p.m., Michigan Union, Academic N otices Mathematics Colloquium. Dr. W. T, van tartv s'in grleture "t"ni - I s11CvanC~ MS , 6tn e~ce ru . i ~"~JI vrsiy OXUtrcfl. I~tnelans, i meet on Monday, July 19 at 3 p.m. in Dick Aistrom........Business Manager speak on Cohomology concepts in con- the coffee shop of the Union, All those Lois Pollak........Circulation Manager tinuous groups. Tuesday, July 20, 4:10 who are interested in speaking Russian Bob Kovaks........Advertising Manager p.m., Room 3010 Angell Hall. in an informal setting are cordially in- vited to attend. Beginners in Russian Telephone NO 23-24-1 Concerts Ilanguage courses are especially asked to __join the group in order to improve their Student Recital: Boyd Halstead, pi- active command of the language. k