TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY' £I1YQTW' Asp Attlo4' ** im TW TlEMIHIaA 111 L 1 . :SUN1wAY, ArzsIu,22, 1962 Regents Must Take Time From Jobs To Serve 'U' Bartok Specialist Label Incorrect Sandor Says By STEVEN HALLER I Harry Burns Hutchins DIAL NO 8-6416 i , l Continuous Today from 1 o'clock I (Continued from Page 1) 'SI By MICHAEL HARRAH Since each of the eight members of the Regents serve the University and the people of Michigan with- out compensation, each must take time out from his or her particu- lar profession in the interests of higher education. Six of the eight Regents are graduates of the University and they all hold a variety of honors and degrees. The senior member of the Board and chairman of the group in its executive sessions, Eugene B. Power of Ann Arbor was elected in 1955 on the Democratic ticket. He received a masters degree in business administration from the University in 1930, after which he was associated with Edwards Brothers, Inc., of Ann Arbor until 1938, when he founded University Microfilms. Carl Brablec of Roseville was elected in 1957 as a Democrat. He received his masters degree from the University and has been super- intendent of schools in Roseville since 1947. He is also a graduate of Eastern Michigan University at Ypsilanti, and has attended Charles Univer- sity in Prague, the University of Chicago, Michigan State Univer- sity and Northwestern University. Masters in Sociology Irene E. Murphy of Birmingham received her masters degree in sociology from the University in 1928. The widow of Harold J. Mur- phy, she was elected to the Board as a Democrat inT 1957. Regent Murphy has directed the case work program for the City of Detroit's Public Welfare Depart- ment and~ was also active in the. Philippines where she organized postwar relief centers. Donale M. D. Thurber of Grosse Pointe, a Democrat, was appointed in 1958 to fill the vacancy created when Paul Adams was named Attorney General for the State of Michigan. He is a graduate of Harvard University and currently serves as secretary-treasurer of Public Re- lations Counselors, Inc., and as ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Coll Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars president of the Detroit Financial Printing Co. The first Republican to win a Regental election in some year, Frederick C. Matthaei of Ann Ar- bor, graduated from the University in 1914. He founded American Metal Products Co. and served as its president until 1954 and chair- man of the board until 1958, when he retired. He was elected to the Board in 1959, and he currently serves as director of American Metal Pro- ducts, Detroit Bank and Trust Co., McLouth Steel Corp., and the Greater Detroit Board of Com- merce. William K. McInally of Jackson was elected to the Regents as a Democrat in 1959. A graduate in 1933 of the Detroit College of Law, he has served also as a teacher and educator. He currently practices law in Jackson and serves as chairman of the board of the National Bank of Jackson. Regent McInally is also a director of the bank, Jacob- son Stores, Inc., S. H. Camp and Co., Inc., and Ltd., Teer-Wickwire & Co., Handley Brown Co., and the Macklin Co., all of Jackson. The only other Republican on the Regents, Paul G. Goebel of Grand Rapids, was elected in 1961. A graduate of the University in 1923, he is vice - president and treasurer of Sports Distributing Co., in Grand Rapids and a dele- gate to the constitutional conven- tion. Former Mayor He has been mayor of Grand Rapids and a member of the Kent County Board of Supervisors. Also elected in 1961, Midland Democrat Allan B. Sorenson, the youngest member of the Board, is a chemical engineer for Dow Chemical Co. He is a graduate of the engi- neering college and has served as a member of the Board in Control. of Michigan College of Mining and Technology at Houghton from 1959-61. To Hear Talk By Schriever Air Force General Bernard Schriever will address the first Engineering Honors Convocation ever held at the University at 10:15 a.m. tomorrow in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Schriever, who is Commander of the Air Force Systems Com- mand and the officer responsible for the Air Force's development of long-range missiles, will speak on "Today's Engineering Challenge." Everyone "in the know," musi- cally speaking, is quick to label Hungarian-born pianist Gyorgy Sandor as a "Bartok specialist," it seems--everyone, that is, except Sandor himself. "In this age of 'specialization,' everyone 'has to be a specialist in something'," said Sandor, who is now in residence at the University: "I myself am anything but a spe- cialist." Yet Sandor and Bela Bartok seem inseparable to many. This is understandable, as it was Sandor who premiered Bar- tok's Third Piano Concerto with' Eugene Ormandy and the Phila- delphia Orchestra in January, 1946. The same organization ac- companied Sandor when he per- formed Bartok's Second Piano Concerto at the 1958 May Festival. Premiered Piano Version Furthermore, it was Sandor who premiered the piano version of Bartok's "Dance Suite" (originally an orchestral work) in Carnegie Hall (1945). Predictably then, Sandor has also committed to records Bartok's entire piano rep- ertory. Sandor disclaimed the term "Bartok specialist," however, say- ing that he merely plays what is most frequently asked of him; and because of his impressive back- ground in the repertory of that composer, he is perhaps all too' frequentlycalled upon to perform Bartok's compositions. However, his repertoire also includes con-' certi by Beethoven, Liszt, Mozart,j Rachmaninoff and others. Sandor has not abandoned his concert and recording career in] accepting his current post as di- rector of the doctoral program in music here. Of his pedagogical position, he said, "One acquires1 invaluable experience from con- certizing, and it is gratifying to be able to pass it on and to con- tribute to others' knowledge." Contemporary Music3 Regarding the broad field oft contemporary music, it is na- tural that Sandor should hold1 much affection for his countrymen Bartok and Zoltan Kodaly. "There are only a handful of great com- posers from our century," he re- plied. To the two noted Hun- garians above, he added Igor ment. Or rather, it should be said that President Hutchins wrote the letters and the War Department issued edicts. It seems the government wanted to institute a military program that would have removed the control of the University from local hands, and President Hutchins wasn't about to stand for it. And stand for it he did not. The Army backed down. But soon even the Great War was over, and it left President Hutchins visibly aged. Upon retirement of President Angell, President Hutchins made an agreement with the Regents: He would serve only five years. Now, in 1919, he had served already five years more. In March, he handed in his letter of resignation. The Regents, as they had with the Great War, tried to ignore it. President Hutchins agreed to stay until a successor could be found, and he made sure that the Regents kept looking too. * * * IT TOOK TWO YEARS, but at last Harry Burns Hutchins, who had ascended to the presi- dency with only a bachelor's degree, stepped down with four doctorates of law-from the University of Wisconsin, the University of California, Wes- leyan University at Water- town, and the University of Notre Dame. The University had been so busy with the Great War that it had neglected its own presi- dent. Somewhat belatedly, it added its own doctorate to his list of honors. So in 1921, Harry Burns Hutchins, who had stipulated at the outset he would only serve five years, was able to retire, because after a long search, the Regents had found a satis- factory replacement. They stumbled on him quite by accident, for they had not considered him at first. With some trepidation they called him, he came, and he stayed. And because of that, the Uni- versity of Minnesota was sud- denly without a president--he had left for Ann Arbor. Marion LeRoy Burton was a worker; he toiled for the Uni- versity day and night for four short but fruitful years. He lit- erally worked himself to death, for he collapsed after introduc- ing a guest lecturer in Hill Aud. in October of 1924. He was confined to his bed throughout the winter, and there he died early in 1925. The Regents were hard-pressed to find a successor. "Highly gratifying . and memorablei"-N.Y. Times MARIA SCHELL/STUART WHITMAN "THE MARK" Cm-&Scope ..d ROO STEIGER .. Doc McN.?y A Conti-nntal OiStributing. inc. .Rl... EXTRA ! Academy Award Winner "ERSATZ" I s.-.- * DIAL NO 5-6290 rumnTm-ki From the men who gave you "Oklahoma," "South Pacific," "The King and I ' GYORGY SANDOR .Bartok pupil Stravinsky among others. "There is good music and bad music, so that the era in which the in usic was written is not important," he said. Of electronic music, he said that it is an acceptable medium, but he did not go so far as to agree with the term "music" as applic- able to this controversial art. It is not true, as is commonly thought, that Sandor was a "pro- tege of Bartok." He explained the difference between being a pro- tege and a pupil, saying that he was only a pupil of Bartok be- cause he never lookedrto Bartok for sponsorship. Great Composer Sandor spoke further of Bartok himself as a great pianist annd composer, saying, "Bartok is the most significant and the only consistently great composer of this century." He was an outstanding folklorist and musicologist, and he spoke not only 14 languages but their various dialects as well. He is, however, most vividly remembered as a composer. His "Concerto for Or- chestra" and "Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta" are two of his most popular works. Sandor will perform Richard Strauss' "Burleske" with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra May 6 as part of the May Festival series of concerts. PROGRAM NOTES TOM EWELL [ftSRw and CALS( RAK tl [ f ALICE FAYE SE FERRER BCUAR O YAREEN PO CINEMAScoPE COLOR by DE LUXE I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .y........ .... .......:r : "r;}}iR::1i''i.......... . . rSi:ti.....,. .......... ... r INTERNATIONAL SMORGASBORD Benefit for World University Service Delicacies prepared by 15 Nationality Clubs SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1962; 5:30 P.M. and 7 P.M. Newman Club, 331 THOMPSON $1.75 per ticket - limited to 400 persons Available at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER. The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. SUNDAY, APRIL 22 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home Wed., April 25 from 4 to 6 p.m. The MA French and German reading examinations for Linguistics are sched- uled for May 12. Students who are go- ing to take the exam should contact Prof. Ernst Pulgram (ext. 402) to make appointments. sity, military personnel, and honors awards selectees will assemble in the Graduate School offices, east side of the lobby to robe. Specially invited guests will assemble in the West Lounge on the 2nd floor. Mechanical Engineering Graduate- Faculty Seminar to be held April 23rd 3:00-5:00 p.m. at the Cooley Memorial Lab., N. Campus. The speakers will be Prof. Charles Lipson of this Department, and -James C. Harty of Lear, Incorporat- ed. The subject of the seminar will be "Reliability." Social Work-Social Science Colloqui- um: Prof. Werner Boehm, University of Minnesota, will speak on "Conceptual Problems in the Development of Prac- tice Theory of Social Casework with a Focus on Interpersonal Relationships," on Mon., April 23 at 4:15 p.m. in the 2nd floor aud., Frieze Bldg. Doctoral Examination for Ignatius Schumacher, Pharmaceutical Chemistry; thesis: "Polyaryl Ethanols as Hypo- cholesterolemic Agents," Mon., April 23, 2525 Pharm-Chem Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, J. H. Burckhalter. ORGANIZATION NOTICES RI MICH IGRAS TICKETS ON SALE NOW Phi Beta Kappa Annual Meeting on Mon., April 23, at 3 p.m., in 439 Mason Hall. Election of officers and new mem- bers. Petitions for membership on the Lit- erary College Steering Committee may be obtained in 1220 Angell Hall. These must be returned by 5 p.m. on Fri., April 27. The Inter-Quadrangle Judiciary Coun- cil will hear an appeal from West Quad- rangle at 6:30 and the case of Strauss House vs. East Quadrangle Council at 8:00 in 3524, SAB, on Mon., April 23. The hearings will be public.? I Gamma Delta, Luth. Stud. Club,1 er Breakfast, 8:45 a.m., Supper, 6 Easter vespers and slides, 6:45 April 22, 1511 Washtenaw. East- p.m., p.m., DIAG, ENGINE ARCH, UNION STEPS Events Monday Faculty Recital: Jerome Jelinek, cell- ist, and Rhea Kish, pianist, will present a recital on Mon., April 23, 8:30 p.m., in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Compositions they will perform are by Bach, Barber, Beet- hoven and Bartok. Open to the public without charge. A DIAL NO .2-6264 qty It Il lliltq}t1( Ilit>illl>' III I ' , {ll min IIuu, nlllfii 1,11 11lant>> II N Starting TODAY Engineering Honors Convocation: Mon., April 23, 10 a.m. Rackham Bldg. Guest speaker, General Bernard Shriev- er. Members of the Engineering fac- ulty, executive officers of the Univer- 2nd Annual FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL University of Michigan April 20, 21, 22 Tickets at Disc Shop and door German Club, Folk Dance Festival with Detroit German Folk Dancing Group under Erika Brenner, April 24, 8 p.m., Union Balirm. Group perform- ance with audience participation. "Herz- lich willkommen!" * * * Grad Outing Club, Hike, April 22, 2 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron St. En- trance. * * * Human Relations Board, Launching Project Welcome-Dr. Donald Pelz, April 23, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3B. Everyone welcome. * s * Lutheran Stud. Assoc., Easter Story in Art & Music, April 22, 7 p.m., Hill & Forest. La Sociedad Hispanica, Tertulia, April 23, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. Refreshments, Spanish conversation practice. U. of M. Folk Dancers, No Meeting, April 24, Congr. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, "Arts & Responsibility of the Artist"-Ballet, April 22, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. WAA Ping Pong Tournament, Entree deadline extended to April 25, Noon, Barbour Gym, Rm. 15. .4 READERSP! Clip Coupon - Win M ICHIGRAS Door Prizes 11 I I -- Stereo console, complete men's and women's outfit, season tickets to University Professional Theatre FILL OUT COUPON AND SEND TO: MICHIGRAS '62 I Just Received .. . Shipment of F"r"'I / u A, /"\ ra t i '-"T"r" ==a iu m minin wom mnONwmw wor * min ininiininini U I MICHIGAN UNION COUPON MUST BE ATTACHED TIr A fICT rA D f A %A Mn MU~WWUMN WU~ ~U UEWE - Ii I I I