of the on for parties student a ma- present -i-wide comes from George and finds vote. istrict feed up an be en as school or dates. will in-icket. taken oblems inter- vote school or. room 376 Assn. by the astelic Zahm plaiman, owers mumbert wman burtam Burcat Burcat mpsonor broker arlow Jonesington anilano edrick williams inston- bera artchell boores loores Law- except second 1879. Page 3 Vespers Service Provides Music For Relaxing By MARILYN DUBACH A relaxing and enjoyable program for easy listening was well presented Sunday afternoon in Hoch auditorium by five University music groups. Participating in the 111th All-Music Vespers were the University band and orchestra, the Men's and Women's Glee clubs, and the A Cappella choir. "I believe In One God," sung by the A Cappella choir under the direction of D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano, was excellently done. The choir sang four songs with much spirit and power. Overture to "Der Freischutz," the opening number, was well played by the Symphony orchestra with Rusin L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra conducting. Gretta Reetz, fine arts freshman, sang a soprano solo which was very well received by the audience. The Women's Glee club, directed by Clayton Krebhl, sang three songs with a good balance between the parts. The snappiest number, "The Bridegroom," was the best received. Director Joseph F. Wilkins, professor of voice, led the Men's Glee club in three forceful and effective songs. The tone quality and deep feeling were outstanding. "Variations on a Theme by Haydn played by the band, triumphantly ended the program. Correction . . . An article on the March issue of Upstream in Tuesday's Kansan stated that the article, "The Japanese Treaty and World Peace," was written by Isaac Namioka, graduate student from Japan. Namika did not write the article Upstream, he merely translated and adapted the article so that it could appear in Upstream. The article was originally written by Dr. Shigato Tsuru and was published in the October issue of Sekai, a critical review. Says Dangerous Urban Shift Caused By Industrialization Industrialization has caused a dangerous drift to the city, Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of the humanities, said in his second lecture Friday evening. Dr. Chakravarty is giving a series of lectures on "The East-West Conflict: An Asian Viewpoint." "A ruthless exploitation of manpower was accomplished by industry which caused a dryup of the village." he said. "Modern methods of doing things with power are not intrinsically wrong, but something must be brought back to the village," he said. The art of correlating beauty with utility has been lost sight of for nearly 20 years, and now it is coming back. Dr. Chakravarty said. The familial aspect of society emphasized by the pre-industrial community has kept Asia intact up to now, he said. He pointed out that industry has not seriously injured the family system in Asia. "The machine has become a rival to the peasant. Industrialism has brought about in small Asian villages, rivalry, discontent and deadly indoctrination of fase ideas," he said. Institute Stresses Screening Tests The importance of teachers using the proper type of screening test materials and techniques was stressed in the eye health institute held Friday at the University. Miss Helen E. Weaver, R.N. consultant of the National Society for Prevention of Blindness, presented an illustrated lecture on "Sight Conservation in the schools." Miss Weaver then gave a demonstration in vision testing, assisted by Miss Marguerite Blase, medical social consultant with the services of the prevention of blindness, Kansas state department of social welfare. Similar institutes have been conducted in Pittsburg, Emporia, Hays, Wichita, Kansas City, and Bend. Bond during the first two weeks of March. The institute was sponsored by the prevention of blindness, Kansas state department of social welfare; public health nursing services, Kansas state board of health, and the division of special education, Kansas state board of education. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS ATTENTION smart girls Get longer life from your sweaters by calling 383 to have them cleaned. University Daily Kansan Monday, March 17, 1952 There is nothing inherently wrong in industrialization, but only in its use, Dr. Crakavarty said. And it is not restricted to Western industrial power, for it is neither Western or Eastern, he added. "Industrialization is finally beginning to see its power, and therefore will not become an end in itself," he concluded. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No.37...THE SWORDFISH They crossed swords with the wrong man when they engaged this swashbuckling senior in combat! At first, he was foiled by the tricky, "one-puff" . . . "one-sniff" cigarette mildness tests. But he parried their thrusts with this gleaming sword of logic: The only way you can judge mildness is by steady smoking. That's the true test of cigarette mildness! It's the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke, on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments! Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat,T for Taste), you'll see why... After all the Mildness Tests . . . Camel leads all other brands by billions