* THE MICHIGAN DAILY __..__________________..__ Eva Jessye Negro Gordon Loud Does utstandin Choir To Give Two W - .____ra m-Feld. ArchaeologY Recital Pro gramns y___ f Guild To Hold Authority On Prints -cSr e To Talk At League Special Service ,, Two programs, both arranged by he directors, will be given by Eva ;; choir of Negro artists which :ill be heard in recitls a 4 p.m. and 3:15 p.m., April 23, in Lydia Mendel- ohn Theater. The appearances are :ucncred in Ann Arbor by the Dun- bar League and the Congregational it dent Club. The program for the afternoon con- rert has been arranged in a series of cpisod es fron the life of Christ, the exceruts to be expressed in spirituals. Te night -rformance will consist of ra~ lar a r airrr n 'This is the second in a series of articles about the occupations of prominent alumni: By ELSIE PIERCE Credit for last year's most impor- tant discovery in the field of arch- acology has been given to a Univer- sity of Michigan graduate, Gordon Loud, '22, who is now director of the University of Chicago Oriental Insti- tute Iraq Expedition. Loud, who was excavating at the palace of Sargon II, at Khorsabad, discovered a small clay tablet with CuneCiforma inscriptions bearing the names and dates of 95 Assyrian kings who ruled in unbroken succession . Miss Isabel Weadock of Detroit will This Sunday speak cn prints at the last lecture meeting of the season held by the The Wesleyan Guild has made Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti branch of plans for a special Easter service tothe American Association of Univer- be held at 6 a.m. next Sunday in the sity women at 3 p.m Saturday in auditorium of the Methodist C'hurch. the Grand Rapids R:om, the League. The meeting will take place of the Miss Weadcck, who has been cur- Guild's iegular Sunday evening serv- ator of prints at the Detroit Institute ice. of Arts since 1922, received her train- The program is to be built around ing in the art department of the New the events of Holy Week, various per- York Public Library and the Boston ,ons representing the happenings of Museum of Fine Arts, cash day. Those participating in the Mrs. Adele Brewer Mitchell will en- p ogram will include Dorothy Arr- v ong, '36. who will give the intr c.. ertain Wiss Weadock over the week- duction; Ruth Sonnanstine, *, w end, at her home on Martin Place, will present the events of Palm San- and will honor her guest at a small day; and Phyllis Huston, '37; Iett dinner party on Saturday night. Other Reading, '37; Bertha Kolb, '38, Mary guests invited to the dinner are Prof. Lunny, '35, Wilma Rattenbury, '37, and Mrs. Morrison, Dr. and Mrs. Meh- Margaret Forsythe, '38, and Harriet met Aga-Oglu and Prof. Bruce Don- Breay, '37, who will present the aldson. events of Monday, Tuesday, Wednes- day, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and .embers of Kappa Phi at Stalker Hall Easter Sunday respectively. Special at 7 a.m. following he sunrise service Easter music has been planned for and at 9:39 a.m. between the first the occasion by Helen Byrn, '38SM. and second church services. Tickets The service will be followed by an are priced at 25 cents and may be Easter breakfast to which the public purchased at either Stalker Hall or is invited. It will be served by the at the office of the Methodist church. is or secular andt rehg sous songs. _ rmte2t x ighf men, seven wonen, and Miss reioth century iress Jessye, all of whom are college grad- Before this f Mece Da?=I, attra ve debutante. uates, compose the choir. All of a few isolated 1z° n ;?chn F. the P cen of the them have a wide background on the archaeologists, cottEn ca3nival oi be held in Memphis, stage, and some have been starred or cf Sargon, his T~n. Th, cornival will take place have had leading roles in New York moved the re: Tcnn. h stage successes. Nineveh. early i v May, Critics have especially noted the Spends skill with which the choir dramatizes After gradua Stantey Flecher S its renditions. Their familiarity with sity in 1922, L the songs and the natural ability with vard Architect Facic ,onCert 10 which they interpret them make it there in 1923. cossible to substitute roles, if neces- in Egypt as are e wen Sunday sary, with no loss of effect. auma, about 40 z Stanley Fletcher, instructor in the s next year he j school of nusic, and winner of two stitute at Chic contests sponsored by the Nationalb Federation of Music Clubs last week, ,dyears he was s will give a Faculty Concert program dIsfeorm ardt e at 4:15 p.m. Sunday, April 21, in Hill 1 desert site ne Auditorium. Ta ondstratatonin Mr. Fletcher will play the same 2000 B.C program in his concert Sunday that .Durng this he gave before the State Federation "There is a great divergence be- r this of Musc Clubs in Grand Rapids on t tween what we feel and what we know. et f ^ l 10 h Sunerian cult. April 10 when he won the first prize Our minds have been educated but our ofte cult. and also the program he gave at the of the gods x emotions have remained as tney were are important di;-ict Conte:=t in Indianapolis on April 13 when he again received first when we were children," stated Prof. studying Sume place. John L. Brumm, professor of jour- Describes His concert includes works of Bach, nalism and chairman of the depart- The hair, an Beethoven, Chopin, Chadwick, and ment of journalism, in an informal ored with bitur Debussy. During the latter part of talk at a luncheon for graduate stu- inlaid with she century down to the B.C. ind the names of only kings were known to' because at the death' son, Sennacherib, re- Cords to his place at Time in Egypt ting from the Unive - oud attended the Har- ural School, finishing He then spent a year chitect for the Univer- an Expedition to Fay- miles- from Cairo. The pined the Oriental In- ago, with which he has d ever since. For two stationed at the expe- rters at Tell Asmar, a ar Baghdad, working winingyhouses and pal- moghly from. 2500 to' expedition he discov-1 known statues of the They were the figures worshipped then, and archaeologically in rian sculpture.r { GORDON LOUD fect condition, although constructed :Statues Found 3d the beards are ccl- men, and the eyes are 11 and black limestone f ' dents at 12 o'clock yesterday, in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League. Professor Brumm spoke on the sub- ject of "Keeping Up With One's In- telligence." He said that the trouble with the present system of education is that it is concerned only with the knowledge of the mind or intellect, while the equally important factor of the emotion is entirely overlooked. "Since no machinery is available by which to educate the emotions," as- serted Professor Brumm, "the duty drops on the individual. Therefore each student should endeavor to im- prove and train his emotions as well as his intellect." Because of this emotionai weak- ness, continued Professor Brumm, persons do things impulsively which they would not do with trained emo- tions, and also fail to do things which their intelligence prompts them to do because their emotional feelings pre- vent them. Where T10 Mation Pictures: Whitney, "Great Expectations" with. Phillip Holmes, and "Happiness Ahead" with Dick Powell; Wuerth, "Caravan" with Lor- retta Young and "Babbitt" with Guy Kibbee; Majestic, "Lightning Strikes Twice" with Thelma Todd and "Car- nival" with Lee Tracy; Michigan, "Princess O'Hara" with Jean Park- er and "Transient Lady" with Gene Raymond. Exhibitions: Collection of water color paintings made in Europe and in this country, open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, Architectural Building. Exhibi- tion of photographs, Alumni Memo- rial Hall. Dancing: Hut Cellar. or lapis lazuli. They also show the! styles of hair-dress used 5000 years! ago. At Khorsabad Loud's expedition is engaged in excavating where the French left off at the city of Sargon, II. In commenting on his expedi- tion, Loud said, "What lies within the walls ot this ancient city has never been known. It is the investigation of that area which will, I hope, keep me occupied for some seasons to come in -an effort to learn more about the every day life of the Assyrians, whose military exploits in building up that great empire have long been known." Paa-e had 186 Rooms The palace of Khorsabad, built at the northwest of the city, contains 186 rooms arranged about open courts. Inside the palace were six temples, dedicated to the Assyrian gods. The city itself is notod for its im- posing gates at the citadel. These gates were huge human-headed winged bulls, which are still in per- PRiMPT 2600 years ago. Find List Of Assyria-i Kings The tablet containing the lists of the Assyrian kings was found under a pile of rubbish in a small room in' the temple of Nabu, the god of WIs- dcm, which was built on a flatform 25 feet above the street. Living conditions at the Khorsa- bad excavations are not as primitive as one might imagine. In a recent letter Loud said, "You may think of us as living in tents and eating the strange concoctions which make up the diet of the Oriental. As a matter of fact there are very few of the com- forts of western civilization which we are without. Our house is of mud brick with a thatched roof, primarily a native house done over to suit our requirements, but I must admit the addition of bath rooms and a living room as well as the tent-like cloth ceilings so placed as to prevent the descent of wild life, said to consist of mice, snakes, and scorpions, in the thatch."- Petitions For Positions On Committees Dune Petitions for positions on League committees must be sub- mitted today. Women interested } in positions on the orientation, house-reception, merit system, theater and arts, social, and pub- licity committees may hand in their petitions at the Undergrad- uate office. L __ _+~ -~ - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ H.tLE THEY LAST A five-piece modernistic, natched KITCHEN SET, consisting of a cake carrier and four flour, sugar, tea, and coffee containers. SCHLENKER HARDWARE COMPANY 213-215 West Liberty St. Phone 8575 O a i 11 'ii' 111 A 1% / U U -T - * %30 A ABOVUTIAE wild it&Ck ............ . oK us.. 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