APRIL 17, 1928. TICKET SALE ToOPEN FOR FOUNDERS INNE TO OE OBSERVED SOON! INVITATIONS HAVE BEEN SENT TO NUMEROUS PROMINENT ALUMNI AND OTHERS MANY INVITEDTO ATTEND Founder's Day To Be Celebrated In Honor of William W. Cook, Donor Of Law Club Tickets for those in the Law School who wish to attend the Founder's'day dinner of the Lawyer's club to be held Friday, April 20, will be placed on sale in the Law school beginning tomor- row, according to George P. Garver, '28L, chairman of the Founder's day committee. In addition, many invi- tations were sent out recently to all formen members of the club. Promi- nent attorneys within reasonable dis- tance of Ann Arbor, and to Regents of the University, as well as the fac- ulty of the Law school. Numerous ac- ceptances have been received thus far, Garver stated. Silas Strawn, noted Chicago lawyer and president of the American bar as- sociation, Chief Justice Lewis H. Fead, 'OOL, and Judge Arthun H. Tuttle, '95L of Detroit, will be among the disting- uished guests assembled for the occa- sion and will participate in the pro- grain. In the afternoon of Founder's day, the finals on the case clubs competi- tion for the Henry M. Campbell, '08, prizes of $150 cash will be argued be- fore a court consisting. of Strawn, Judge Fead, and Judge Tuttle on the bench, and lawyers and all other guests as part. of the group in the court-room. The scene for the trial will b? the lounge of the Lawyer's club and will be appropriately deco- rated to resemble. a courtroom. Those who will argue in the trial this year< are George 13. Chistnsen, ' 9L, and William A. Miller, '29L, of the Holmesi club against Robert M. Kerr, '29L, and James I. Johnson, '29L, of the Story club. .Dean Henry M. Bates will be the toastmaster at a banquet that night which will be the main function of thet entire pnogram. All the guests will then assemble at the Lawyer's club toG commemorate the sixth anniversary of the building of the club through the gift of William W. Cook, '81. Strawn will deliver the main address of the evening, while Judges Tuttle and Fead as well as a number of others of those present will be called on to speak. As a special feature of the banquet,t ornamental watch fobs will be pre- sented to graduating Law students who have been in residence at the1 Lawyeri's club for at least two years. This is a new idea developed by the present administration of the club with the idea that some special in- signia shall be awarded all futuref lawyers who have been members oft the club. STEERE TO SPEAK ON GAS BUSINESS "Orienting the gas business" will i 1 the subject cf an address by FrankN W. Stecre, of Nw York, before an engineering smoker, which is open toI all students, to be held at the Uniont Thursday evening. Mr. Steere iss president of the Michigan Gas asso- ciation and vice president and generalt manager of the Smet-Solvay Engin-I cering corporation.- Mr. Steere wilI discuss trend in the basic industries ef th countr and their effect upon the gas indu;try, which is supplying an increasing num- berr of industries with fuel. A graduate of the University, wheret he held the fellowship of the Michi- gan Gas association, of which lie is liow president, M1r.- Steere has develop-t ed and Ierfectc-d many processe.;. ini the pro(IcUtiOi (4 city gas. Prof. Alfred 11. White, of the de- partmient e cliemical engineering, has invited Mr. Steere to inspect the pro- gress of the two research programs Whici are sponsored at the University Ily the Michigan Gas association and the American Gas association. ALUMNI ADVISORS MEET AT DINNER The execiti ve council of the Na- tional Advisory committee of the Al- uimni association headed by D. M. Ferry, Jr., of Detroit, met last night at the Michigan Union for a dinner (liscussion of the various phases of the Alumni Ten-Year program and the Alumni University program. GENERAL MALONE TO GIVE LECTURE "America's Participation in the World War" will be the subject of General Paul B. Malone when he lec- tures at 7 o'clock on Wednesday night April 25 in Natural Science auditori- um. General Malone is well fitted to speak on this topic, according to Ma- jor Reinald Melberg, head of the Uni- ve,,sity R. O. T. C., both by his record in the World war and his reputation as a speaker. A graduate of West Point, Genera: Malone commanded in France the twenty third infantry of the second division and later the second brigade of the second division. For his bravery in action and efficiency in service he wa awarded the Distinguished Ser- yice Cross and the Distinguished Sell- vice Medal. REPORT STEALING OF SPRING COAT.S Four new spring topcoats were stolen yesterda.y morning between 11 and 12 o'clock from the West Medical build- ing, according to reports telephoned in to the office of Irving W. Truettner, maintenanceiinspector of the Build- ings. anld Grounds (I-e)artni cut. Fear was expre.-sed by W. A..Daven- port, assistant superintendent of the department, that this theft may mark the' be.ginning of an epidemic of such robberies, similar to that which ;oc- curred four years ago when secret thieves, after hundreds of coats had been stolen. "I would urge students to be very careful of their coats during the next few days," said Mr. Davenport. "There is no way in which the Buildings and Grounds department can recover missing coats, and not even any ef- fective way in which it can stop the thefts. If students carry their coat's into class with them inst'ead of leaving them in the corridors, any epidemic of thefts will be nipped in the bud." STURGIS TO TALK IN DETROIT SOON Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, Director ofI Simpson Memorial Institute, will speak Thursday before a joint nMeCt- ing of the Michigan Hospital Assoc-1 iation,4 of which Dr. Harley Haynes, director of the University Hospital is .president and the South-Eastern Michigan Dietetic Association of which Miss S. Margaret Gillam, dir- ector of dietetics and housekeeping at the University Hospital is p resicient. The meeting will be held on April 19 and 20 at the Book-Cadillac Hotel in Detroit. THE MICHIGAN DAILY___ Two Pilots Prepare Giant Fokker Plane For Long Extended STUDENT EDITORS Tapping To Flight From Fresno to Mexico And South Amercian Countries MAKE COMPLAINT Alumni Gaf James C. Angel, former pursuit instructor for the British, Italian, North Chinese, and Bolivian armies, and his co-pilot, Presho Stephenson, vice-president of the Beacon Airways company, are preparing their special Fokker plane at Fresno for a 25,000 mile air tour including Mexico and ;countries in South America. "The rounding of the Horn" is included as part of the project. UNIVERSITY RADIO EDUCATIONAL AID (Continued from page one) the current 1927-28 series is now in progress. It is the aim and purpose of the Michigan Night radiocasts to offer to ithe radio audience, timely talks on current event topics, athletics, scien- tific advances, medical problems and, the like. With the entire University Faculty available for these addresses, any numbers of engrossing speakers have been heard on the various pro- grams, according to the numerous radio letters received by the local station and WWJ. Broadcasting during this year and the last has been accomplished by means of a direct wire connection fror the campus studio on the fourth floor of University hall and the De- troit station. The programs have been handled by Mr. Abbot from the I local end, and have generally been broadcast every other Friday night throughout the school year between 7 and 8 o'clock. Ip connection with the radio broad- casting, a special University of Michi- gan radio bulletin containing all the talks broadcast during the year, has cc-rn to be a permanent publication at the end of each year. More demands for it have been received this year i than ever before, according to Mr. Abbot, who also compiles the bulle-, jtin. GLEE CLUB GIVES RECESSCONCERTS Encountering severe storms in the neighborhood of Cadillac, the Glee club com'pleted a two-concert cour (luring the Easter vacation. Friday night, April 6, they gave a concert before a group of alumni and towns- people at Owosso, where they were well received. They set out the next day for Cadillac, but bad roads, broken spriigs on their bus, and in- clement weather prevented them irom keeping the Saturday night engage- ment and they remained at Reed City. The following morning they pro- ceeded to Cadillac where they sang in the churches of the city for Easter services, and gave a program at the. Cadillac high school on Monday af- ternoon. The regular concert ivas given Monday night in the Presby- terian church. About forty .men made the trip, in- cluding Robert 4. Campbell, faculty manager of the club. These two con- certs conclude the regularly sched- uled Glee club program for the year. The club will remain organized how- ever, and will practice for special f- fairs during the spring. PRINCETON UNIVERSITY-An in- tramural boxing tournament was can- celled on account of "general apathy." First-Class Shoe Repairing Expert Worigmanship CLARK'S SHOE REPAIRER 321 South State LIBRARY DISPLAYS NUMEROUS OLD MEDICAL BOOKS DATING FAR BACK Rare medical books dating back to the fifteenth- century are on display in the Main library. The volumes are frpm the Rare Book room of the library and are part of the Haass and Pilcher Vesalius Incunabula of medi- cal books. There are not more than 20,000 incunabulae (books printed be- fore 1500 by movable type) on record today, and of these less than 10 per cent are medical boks. The exhibit contains books which deal with the various conceptions of the medical iscience. In the pre- Vesalian era an erreneous id"a con- cerning anatomy was advanced in a book published by Mundinus which was printed in 1521. In 1543 Vesaliui , the found(,r of the science c' anl-t,cmy, publishled a book, "Fabrica," which has had a profound influence on mod- ern medicine. In c-mneomoration of th: 300th an- niversary of t 1 " publi ,hing o f IHarvey's expla nation c1' the circula- tion of the bkiod, several of the -lithor's works are on di play. "l)e 1 -tn Ccrdis," hi; wont on the sub- is second only to I'briCi in im- pcr. ace to mdicine. Se. -ral of the books are so rare that there re cnly on: or two other records J copies in the United States. One cf -se volumcA is "Lumen An- ime," pub.1:h'd in an -encycloledia by Sorg in -.7. Another is I'liny's "llist,cria N uralia," a co1ection of subjects as history, arts, the natural 1 U E" Rama small car . o° a week up... see twice as much. Motor Map t IPARTQIUJTOWRIP46nc.1 AUTO .iRVI CE ABnpROA s5I FIFTMAVe. NEWYCRK CITY sciences, and medicine. One of the oldest medical books is "Pharetra," ,printed - about 1472 by Mentelin, a Stras'sburg printer who was also a scribe and an illuminator. The borders and beginning initials were all ilettered by the author. Abhumeron Avenzahar, a famous physician of the 15th century, wrote one of the most valuable Arabic med- ical books, which was one of the few to contradict "Galenism." The exhibit was arranged for the benefit of the American Anatoruy as- sociation, amid the Bi3ological confer- ence which was*held in Ann Arbor during the vacation, and will con- tinue during the present week. F I ai i i YS] C 11 educa'tion the bowlful, 4 k Exercise is most help. ful to bodies made strong by proper eat. ing. Nature has placed a valuable store of pro. teins, carbohydrates, vitamins and bran in Perfectly Pasteurized Ann Arbor Dairy Milk is perfectly pasteurized, making it a s pure as can ,e P* M , I I- I. n :1a,1, Is c i i