EDNSAY, MAY 1, 1929 -, 3 rt~tMICHICAN DA1tY 1 E t ... -! 11 Sculptor Accepts Position On Faculty! .AIRBANKS DEC.BE N~EWLAY APPOINTED PROFESSOR IN FINE ARTS SPEAKS Si OF IS IDEALS WILL CONDUCT ATE3LIER Ability of Art Medium to Depict"r{F a People's Aims Reflects . $}5 / Its Significance "Sculpture is the significant ex- ipressl'on of the aims and ideals of apeople or an epoch of their life,"f ,>.'r : reetywestern sculptor, rcntyappoint- { Y:piIL ; ed Associate Professor in the Div- I~. Monday afternoon. "In every epoch: k ..F >:". and to every race there is some ;- -:. "' mode of expression' in one of then arts that is significant of their~ civilization; if there is no such ex-Iprsio ,w y t e th ra e sin significant.": Mr. Fairbanks, who has been r spending the last year in Eugene, Oregon, and who has been working since fast September modeling the clay figure of the memorial which!sen i th ac o p n ng r -': : >< production, has just arrived in Ann Arbor to make .arrangements in '''}-" ' connection with the sculptures < studio which he 'is to conduct next year. Mr. Fairbanks is to conduct, ....... more, or less what it known in France :} ,}>}:::: r;: };.":<:}':.:.Y as an atelier, and it is to be a part of . the University Department of Finef Arts. "Chiefly, my aim," said Mr . ,. ... Fairbanks, "is to create an interest' Memorial to the 91st division b y Avard Tennyson Fairbanks in sculpture as a Fine Art and as -_______ _~____________ a training for later professional ! ment that this will be 'a distinct de- that it will prove more instructive work." This means that only] parture from the class room method Mr. Fairbanks will continue to workl those who have any talent in the of mass production of scuptors on his subjects, and the students subject or who would take the course primarily because they are interested heart and soul in the art will be allowed to elect sculp- T~ l turd. It is the hope of the depart-jJf IE!B'UTBITV NE WEDY I will learn by observing his methods and by his advice. The accompanying reproduction II shows a memorial to the division on which Mr. Fairbanks has been working and which is now being cast in bronze. It stands 20 feet high to the tip of the upraised hand, and the central and sur- mounting figure portrays the ideal "That Right Shall Prevail." The lower group represents the soldiers at their posts, the injured soldier being attended by a Red Cross nurse and a welfare worker. The monument is to erected at Fort Lewis, Washington. AT NOON - 1 Something that hits the spot - Tasty Sandwiches Delicious Salads Eat Well at HARRISON'S LUNCH' 391 S. State St. FLYING INSTRUCTION RIGHTMERE AT ANN ARBOR T IE lo Schol if lingofesyu hV finest typeC of flyig intut ioniyokell 1 secure .anyVwhere--with theinadded con'. en- ience of training right here at the Attna Arbor Mun icipal Airport. Lei~onardl S. Flo, presiden tcof he Flo fling Services Inc., is the chief instructor of ther lo School of Flyig. I fe is assisted 1by a comipeten t staff of l icensed pilots of w~ide dvy in g experience. New Spartan and1 Arrow SSport planes arc thec standard training shins. Personnel, equipmienit and facilities tcaslire up to the highest standard. BUS SERVICE A private lbus oper ated byl 11. lea lyingi Services 111ti., leaves thle 'l ihigaaii I ni'n at 10 miiites after every hour daiiilv fromt in a, rn, till dusk. Comie ont and instpect the tlying field--take a paissenger flighit and see tihe Campus from the air. FLO FLYING SERVICES, INC. CONDUCTING THE FLO SCHOOL OF FLYING Ann Arbor Municipal Airport Main Office: '6o6Ypnsi-Ann Bldg. I It's due to the active selling of Good Goods, that our stock is kept fresh and clan They are coming and going continually G-jafell's I..M .arket 223 North Main Phone 4208 r V wmlmm MKMMMMMMM Stop ! Lock AsI d! eve wom OWN I I What's Co r-,ung Now S 11 I d aI l n i ii VIV R wu At Bargain Prices A 1ItEAL SALE-NO FOOLIN' Burr, Patterson and Auld Co. 49th Anniversary Sale 603 Church Street ITS NOT TOO EARLY to order Personal Cards and S-tationary for Graduation NEW SAMPLES JUST RECEIVED I See Thursday' a~.b l en OPM Ma .ins r OW 1 R Becautiful hut dunh ... fatnil- (Inc .tcr~ids are amild, ccrtainiy-bi't 'aren't )r dearis they all"? The point is that Chesterfields are rituid . salso "int'restin"',".They satisfy-and right there er pick is why they gather in the gang. They gave the express rider a good start Henry Wells, (Ievelopinlg the mnail am~ ex- press business of Wells F~argo, knewv the hieces- sityof careful preparation andalert maan agcnent. Communication was more than the pictuarestlue racing of pony express ridlers;lbehindl the scenes therewas always the sysfemnatic planini ntigrire is, the watchful inspection of outpos ts and 1w-en. Communication today is immeasurably fa 't 'r than it was then, thanks to electricity. And to a vastly greater degree has the work of prepa- ration b~ehind the scenes become important. Tn the Bell System, management must con- stawily look ahead to p*rovide the sinews of s~'r- vicec against growing public demand-ni atcria1 and ncr ust be mobilized to extend and. keep open the lines of communication. We a4re reliably informedlthat theaov iar phrase is applied mainly to certain poo. in whom all the pituitary runs to pulch. A gargoyle is "t int'restin"'", at least. Bette 'em freckled and friendly than lovely but la And getting our minds hack on bu sin( innocuous, unmitigated mildness rathe in a cigarette, too,. acking. ess . T palls~ Ta ste-the taste and richness of quality tobac- cos=that's what matters. And the blend can't e copied; you k now you are smoking. a §Iesterfield, nothing else, at every puff. BELL SYSTEM u pvm% w I - - -~ - - - or% =-. = =..I& = = in