PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1.9101 PAGE SIX WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1937 ONOMMOM Sigma Rho Tau Gives Faculty Award Tonight Trophy To Be Presented During Annual Banquet Of Speakers'_Society The Tung Oil Crown, emblematic of oratorical excellence of a member, of the faculty of the College of En- gineering, will be awarded tonight at the annual Tung Oil Banquet of Sigma Rho Tau at 6:15 p.m. in the TUnion. Prof. John S. Worley of the engi- neering college will be toastmaster for the occasion, and Laurence G. Len- hardt, commissioner of public works for the city of Detroit, will address the group on "Human Relations in Engineering." The "Cooley Cane," which is awarded to the student who has ren- dered greatest service to the society during his four years on campus, will be presented by Prof. Roger L. Mor- rison, in the absence of Robert A. Lowe, '36E, last year's winner, who is unable to be iresent. Prof. Ran- som S. Hawley will present the crown to some member of the faculty yet to be announced. The crown, award- ed to the "Gentleman with the Oiliest Tongue," has been presented in the past to Dean Alfred H. Lovell, Prof. A. D. Moore and Prof. Louis A. Hop- kins, among others. Numerous honor awards, including "The Stump," which is presented to the members of Sigma Rho Tau who participate in intercollegiate contests, will be made at the banquet. Various stunts are being planned for the occasion, including a broad- cast, Professor Brackett's coachiome- ter, a stop-and-go signal which willl be° used to regulate the length of speeches which will be made, and nu-t merous other devices calculated to unnerve any faint-hearted speaker. Calls Boron Atoms Interesting Study Boron hydrides, though limited inf practical use, prove very interestingt "playthings" for chemists because ofk their highly active natures, -Dr. H. T. Shlesinger of the University of Chi- cago, noted authority, said yesterday.1 Referring to the hydride consisting1 of two boron atoms and six hydrogen atoms, Dr. Shlesinger pointed out the contrasts between boron and carbon.e Previously, boron was thought to have belonged to the carbon family, he ex- plained. Fractional distillation and conden- sation produce very small quantities of the compound, he continued. Its molecular structure still elusive, the compund's purity is determined through a study of its freezing points. Lewis Pushes CIO Textile Drive Yir s ol mes Commmitteeon University Archives, Alumni Of Library that the matter of their transfer to And tEarl Geolo ist the University archives be considered,T and the Minnesota Society finished by The eighth annual reunion of presenting the papers to the Univer- alumni of the department of Library By JOSEPH GIES I professorship of geology, zoology and sity. Science will be held today with C. R. The acquisition of the papers of botany which he held until 1873 when Have Other Volumes Sanderson, librarian of the Toronto Alexander Winchell, professor of he resigned in order to become Chan- The archives committee had pre- public library, as principal speaker. geology and other subjects in the omviously obtained from Prof. Alexander Sanderson will speak at 10 a.m. at University from 1841 to 1891, has cellor of Syracuse University. In N. Winchell of the University of Wis- the University library. Luncheon, been announced by the Committee on 1879 he returned to the University as consin two autobiographical ac- which is to be held at the Barton University Archives. I professor of geology and paleontology counts in manuscript of his uncle, Hills Country club, and will be fol- The collection consists of more than and remained until his death in 1891. Alexander Winchell, and seven vol- lowed by a free afternoon to be de- 200 volumes in manuscript and about The acquisition of the Winchell umes of bound separates of the lat- voted to informal discussions and 35 letter files of correspondence for: papers is unusual not only for its own ter's writings. These volumes were conferences with faculty members. the period. In addition to a great value to the committee's work, but for arranged and bound by Newton H. Approximately 50 alumni attended deal of biographical information, the method by which it was made. Winchell, brother of Alexander Win- last year's reunion. there is data on the development of a The papers had come into the pos- chell and a member of the class of-'m natural science department at theI session of Mrs. I. R. Campbell, a 1866. University, the administration of the member of the Winchell family, 'who, 'The collection will be of particular RAIN or SHINE - EAT University Museum, the activities of in 1931, presented them to the Minne- value to contributers to the forth- PURITY ICE CREAM the University Musical Society and sota Historical Society, where the coming University Encyclopedia, Ac- the Choral Union, Professor Win- papers of Newton H. Winchell, a bro- cording to a statement by the com- at chell's work as State Geologist, and ther of Alexander, had previously mittee, and will prove a storehouse WIKEL DRUG COMPANY as President of the Michigan State; been depostited. Prof. L. G. Vander of information for future historians We Deliver Phone 3494 Teachers' Association and Editor of Velde, executive secretary of the of the University. _ the Michigan Journal of Education. - - Camp Here In 1853 j-- Professor Winchell came to the University in 1853 as the first profes- sor of physics and civil engineering, according to members of the Commit- BOOK jusc tee, but was soon transferred to the i John L. Lewis, bushy-browed generalissimo of the Committee for Industrial Organization, has invaded the heart of New England's great textile industry to rally workers to his cause.. He is shown addressing a crowd at Lawrence, Mass., estimated by police at being between 10,000 and 15,000. Edison Institute Presents Post To Pawlow ski Appointment of Prof. Felix Paw- lowski of the aeronautical engineering department, to the Early Bird His- torical and Museum Committee of the Edison Institute Museum at Dearborn was announced yesterday. The purpose of the committee is to judge the authenticity and historical importance of aeronautical relics which are- considered for the museum. At the same time it was announced that the engineering department has agreed to turn over to the museum the Baumann plane which was built by the now defunct Dayton Airplane Company for the 1926 Gordon Ben- nett race in France. It was the first plane with 'successful retractable landing chassis and variable wing camber. Baumann, the designer, grad- uated from the University in 1921 in engineering. The completion of Greenfield Vil- Mexican Labor Set To FightOil Trust MEXICO CITY, May 25.-Q)- Mexican labor is ready for battle with the nation's $400,000,000, foreign-do- minated oil industry-scheduled to begin at midnight Thursday. A general strike of 18,000 employe, of 17 producing, distributing and transporting companies has been set for that hour. It may slow the whole commercial structure of the country. Railways, many factories and other industrial concerns depend on oil for fuel. lage's reconstruction 'of the Wright brothers bicycle shop and family; home will be made in time for sum- mer visitors, it was said. The finest in PIPES and ACCESSORIES may be purchased from. CITY CIGAR STORE 106 East Huron ! il Beveridge - Abraham Lincoln, 4 vols. - formerly $12.50..,. . Journal of Gamaliel Bradford. Edited by Van Wyck Brooks. Landau - Paderewski ..... ........ ...... . . ........ . ... 1.00 Neblette and others - Elementary Photography . . . . . .$.... . . .72 3.98 1.00 Nevins - Letters of Grover Cleveland ......... . 1.19 Woodbridge - The Son of Apollo ........................ . .89 Duret - Renoir - 8 color plates - 60 halftones ............ 1.89 Duret - Manet - 8 color plates - 48 halftones 1.89 Ganguin's Intimate Journal, 55 illustrations. . ........ .. . . .... 4.00 WAHR'S BOOKSTORES I 316 SOUTH STATE STREET MAIN STREET opp. COURT HOUSE '''IlI - -- - - lit RIDER'S 302 S. State St. Pen& Typewriter Service Put Your Money On i . 17 A The Thoroughbred H. B. GODFREY '410 North 4th Avenue Moving in the City or State OUT OF STATE VIA ALLIED VAN LINES We'll be pleased to give information and estimates. to =NO I r -'gali Ifit LANTERN NIGHT PALMER FIELD 1111 THURSDAY, MAY 27TH DANCING A THOROUGHBRED will carry more weight fur- ther and faster than an ordinary horse. All blooded race horses trace their descent from three Arabian Studs, Byerly Turk, Darly Arabian, and Godolphin Barb. Crossed with English mares these stallions produced horses vastly superior to 7:30 until 10:00 on Tennis Courts of Palmer Field FROM THESE THREE STALLIONS originated the superb racing strains of Eclipse, Herod and Matchem, known wherever men discuss fine horses. Strange to say, the Thoroughbreds thus developed proved far fleeter than the horses by whom they were sired, and today it is common knowledge that a medium Thoroughbred will In Case of Rain, Dancing will be in Barbour Gym. any before known. The strain proved 'so fine that it was kept carefully in tack and resulted in the fleet Thoroughbred. OF THESE THREE HORSES, perhaps, the history outrun the best of the Arabians. But from the Bill Sawyer and His Orchestra' Five Cents per Dance Also of Godolphin Barb is the most romantic. Dis- covered in 1728 hitched to a hackney cab on the streets of Paris, he was purchased by an English- man, Mr. Coke, and given by him as a present to a friend, Mr. Williams, who in turn presented three noble stallions they received an unmatched heritage for courage, endurance, intelligence, and speed that would respond to breeding. OVER A PERIOD OF YEARS The Michigan Daily has proved its right to the title of Thoroughbred. Its Editorial policy is intelligent and courageous, its Display and Classified Advertising Service efficiently administered. Backed by readers ex- ceeding ten thousand in number, it stands alone as an Advertising. medium for those who would the stallion to the Earl of Godolphin. In the LINE OF MARCH.. PICNIC LUNCHES . ...........at 5:30 ..........at 6 :15 ..........at 6:45 Earl's stables the horse was to make famous the name of Godolphin. PAGEANT (Rip Van Winkle). reach collegiate Ann Arbor. II .1 i . I I IIII 11 1