THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNI Dental Society inducts Eleven At Dinner Here Dr. Rufus Leigh Awarded Honorary Membership; G;ives Principal Speech Omicron .Kappa Upsilon, national honorary dental fraternity, initiated 11 men at Its annual initiation ban- quet held at 8:30 p.m. last night in the League. Dr. F. D. Ostrander, president of the fraternity, presided over the banquet, at which Dr. Rufus Wood Leigh of the United States Army, honorary initiate, gave the phincipal address. Six alumni, one faculty member, and three students, in addition to Dr. Leigh, were honored with mem- bership. The alumni initiates were: Dr. Earle S. Braithwaite, Dr. M. L. Drake, Dr. H. A. Anderson, Dr. Von K. Frowine, and Dr. Don Ballinger. Dr. Lowrie Porter, who was eligible for membership last year but was not initiated, was also formally honored last night. Dr. 0. C. Applegate was the only faculty member initiated, while the three students were Edward Marceau, Donald Engel and Herman Hubinger;, Students must be in the upper 12 per cent of their class scholastically in order to be eligible for Omicron Kappa Upsilon, while alumni mem- bers are chosen for outstanding tn- dergraduate work combined with not- able achievements in the field of dentistry after graduation. Only one honorary membership is given each year. Library Display Honors Colony Founding Of New Sweden Marked By Exhibit Rare books and maps from the Clements Library collection are on display this week .in the Library in commemoration of the Tercentenary of the Swedish settlements of the Delaware River. The exhibit, arranged with the help of the Jenny Lind Club, of Detroit, is made up mainly of maps showing the rise of Swedish settlements on the Delaware, starting with the building of Fort Christina in 1638. ;Also included in the exhibit, which will be up only a week, according to Dorothy Chipman, assistant. direc- tor of the Library; are maps and books dating from as early as 1595 telling of the discovery of America by the Northmen about the yeaf 1000 and' showing the Scandinavian coun- tries at the time of the establish- ments of the settlements of the Dela- ware., The settlements, according to a ,pamphlet published in conjunction with the exhibit, were prjected dur-, ing the reign of King Gustavus Adol- phus, and were established during the reign of Queen Christina. University Receives Old Account Books A colletion ofaccount books of a general store in Marshall, Mich., covering a period from 1836 to 1926 reecntly was presented to the Univer- sity Historical Collections by Mrs. Edgar Brewer and Mrs. C. E. Gauss of Marshall. The account books are those of the store maintained by Chauncey M. Brewer and his son Edgar and are, according to Henry M. Brown of the Collections, the most complete set of books covering so long a period known to exist in Michigan. According to Mr. Brown, entries made in the ledgers enable historians to trace social developments in the town, through showing what the people of the time needed and bought. Historians can trace, through book entries, the trend of the farmer away from self-suficiency toward an exis- tence more closely integrated with the rest of society. Pol icementClash W ith XUAW Picke ts S.R.A. Offers 20 Volunteers T-14 *\ 0 t1ramme ii Here students In Social Service Manage Sports, Plays; Aid At Health Ag'encies University students interested in social service work have found meth-, ods of applying their interest through the efforts of the Social Service De- partment of the Student Religious As- sociation which has placed 20 stu- dents in volunteer jobs this year. In response to a :demand of Ann Arbor agencies, students have been supplied to do office work, or act as group leaders, dramatic supervisors or athletic directors. These jobs are not limited to those taking sociology courses, but are open to all interested students. The Social Service Department has also extended its aid to /students in the hospital or Health Service. They are visited regularly by volunteer workers who run errands, deliver mes- sages, and help them in other ways. In an effort to acquaint students with problems of community life and the steps taken toward their solution, this department has sponsored two Reconciliation trips this year. Police headquarters, courts, jails and com- munity houses in Detroit and Ann Ar- bor were visited where explanatory talks were made to the group. Sophomore 'Picnice To Be elid May 21 Which has more muscle, a blond or brunette? Enterprising sophomores will get scientific statistics on the matter when the two divisions of the female sex mix it up in a tug-of-war at the sophomore picnic to be held .Satur- day; May 21, Don Press, '40, chair-. man, revealed yesterday. . Other featured which will mark the event are .a tug-of-war between en- gineers and literary college students with the two class presidents taking part; baseball,. horseshoes, potatoe races and half-a-dozen traditional picnic events, Press declared. The picnic, which is to be a "ne date" affair, will begin at 2 p.m, and end at 5 p.m. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Cont.11111e 'frm Page 4) Boerner. Dues payable at banquet May 25, 1938. Inter-Guild Worship Service will be held at the League Chapel Wed- nesday morning at 7:30 o'clock. Archery Individual skill tests archery will be given today at 4:30 p.m. at tle Women's Athletic Bldg.1 Radio Club will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 246 West Engineer- ing Building. Dr. John Kraus will talk about antennas and there will be a contest and prize drawing. Every one invited to the last meeting of the year. Athena: Mock debate tonight with Alpha Nu on Resolved: That Michigan men lack finesse. 7:30, Portia Room, 4th floor Angell Hall. Congress: There will be a very im- portant joint meeting of the Execu- tive Council and the District Council tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 306 of the Union. All presidents or secre- taries who cannot attend will please inform Robert Kleiner, 4151., Mimes: There will be an important meeting tonight at 8 p.m. at thet Union. The room number will be announced on the bulletin board. All members are asked to atte1d this very important meeting. Coming Events Medical School: On Friday after- noon, May 13 at 1:30 Dr. H. Windsor Wade, Medical Director of the Ameri- can Leprosy Foundation (Formerly the Leonard Wood Memorial) will speak on Leprosy, as a World Problem. West Amphitheatre, West Medical Building. Those interested are cor- dially invited. Zoology Seminar: Mr. Lowell A. Woodbury will report on "Quantita- tive: Studies of Parasite Populations" on Thursday, May 12 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 2116 N.S. Freshman and Varsity Glee Club: Tickets for the banquet on May 17 may be obtained from Tom Draperat the Union, Bus desk every day from 12-1 and 5-6. English Journal Club: Mr. Robert Warshaw will speak on "Some Ap- proaches to Shakespeare" at the meeting Friday, May 13, at 4:15 pm., in the Englsh Seminar Room in An- gelilHa. The faculty, members and guests are cordially invited to attend and to iarticipate in the discussion following the paper. Nominations for faculty and stu- dent offices will be submitted by the ExecutiveaCommittee at the business meeting at 4 p.m.: all members are urged to be prresent. Women's Debate Tournament: Semi-final debates will be held in the Michigan League at 4:15 Thursday. The public is invited. Gamma Phi Beta, aff., vs. Delta Gamma (Team 2) neg. Kappa Delta, aff., vs. Delta Gam- ma (Team 1) neg. Tau Beta Pi: All members are urged to attend the election meeting at Barton Hills Country Club on Tues- day, May 17. All those planning to attend should sign the list on the main bulletin board in West Engineering Bldg. Indicate on this list whether you plan to play golf in the afternoon. . Men's Physical Education Club: There will be a very important meet- ing on Thursday, May 12 in Room 321 of the Union at 9 p.m. At this time election of the club officers for the next year will take place. This will be the last of our meetings, and it is urged that every- one attend. There will be refresh- ments at the conclusion of this meet- ing. The University of Michigan Flying Club will hold a meeting on Thursday, May 12, at 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan Union. Plans for a practice flying meet on Saturday, May 14 will be discussed and the election of officers for next year will be considered. The Polonia Literary Circle will hold its annual informal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, May 14, at Lane Hall. Ray Carrey's orchestra will play. All students of Polish extraction and their friends are cordially invited. Ad- mission will be 35 cents per person and refreshments will be served. Finance Committee of Frosh Proj- ect will meet at 5:20 Thursday at the League instead of at 5:00. Room will be posted. All members please be present. PURDOM ATTENDS MEETING Dr. Luther T. Purdom, director of the Bureau of Appointments and Vo- cational Information, and ,T. Hawley Tapping, secretary of the Alumni As- sociaton, will attend a meeting of the University of Michigan Club of Mount Pleasant Friday. He will be here Swinging clubs sent two policemen and a picket to a Detroit hospitil as police forced a path through a United Auto Workers picket line into the Michigan Steel Castings Company Plant. A truckload of workers had been taken into the plant previously. Rivalries, Fire, Com petition Tell History Of Student Publications By NORMAN A. SCHORR Fraternity-independent rivalries, a fire and private journalistic ventures have all played interesting roles in, the history and development of stu- dent publications at the University, which today include the Michigan- ensian, Daily, Gargoyle, Technic, De- signer and the newest member in the fold-the literary magazine, Perspec- tives. The Palladium, a senior yearbook published by the nine oldest frater- nities is the oldest publication on rec- ord, dating from 1858. With photo- graphs and class history it continued until 1896 as a leading campus organ. The independents published a sen- ,ior yearbook, the Castalian, for five years, beginning in 1866. Unable to keep up with Palladium, they were forced to suspend publication until 1890. Castalian revived that year to com- pete with the Palladium, now met with much greater success, surpassing Palladium in campus popularity. In 1896, a fire in the engraving house made publication of Castalian impos- sible and a merger with Palladium ex- pedient for both factions. ,Inthat year, the compromise sen- ior yearbook, Michiganensian, made its first appearance and fraternity men and independents smoked the peace pipe. The weekly University Chronicle led the way in student news publications in 1867. In 1869 it was united with the University magazine to form the Chronicle, a weekly newsmagazine which was controlled and run by fra- ternities until 1890. The Argonaut, another fraternity- controlled weekly w s published from 1882-1890, when an independents' publication forced the competing fra- ternity ventures into combination. The result, the Chronicle-Argonaut, lasted for one year now that the newly-formed Michigan Daily was in the field. The Inlander is the first literary magazine on record, its initial issue dated 1890. After an irregular career for one decade it was succeeded by :he Painted Window in 1901 and Whimsies which appeared whenever there was sufficient interest manifest- ed. Contemporary took up the literary herald in 1935 and held it for two years. After sustained student ap- peal, the Board in Control of Student Publicatio'ns decided to experiment and see if students wanted and could maintain a literary magazine. The Orientation Details Now Being Planned (Continuect Iron Page 1) Appleyard, '39; Ronald R. Askren, '39; Stanley G. Christian, '39; Pres- cott S. Earle, '41; Robert Fisher, '40; Ralph Freeman, '39; E. L. Gilbert, '39; Donald R. Hill, '41; Gerhard A. Liedholz, '40; John D. Lobb, '39; Fred D. Metcalf, '41; Neil Podewils, '41; ,George Swartz, '40; Hugh S. Wagner, '40; Stan M. Wells, '41: L. W. Worth- ing, '39; Clifford King, '39; Don Van Loon, '39. result was Perspectives which ap- peared in April, 1938. Wrinkle, whose publication -dates' are given as 1894-1902, was a typical humor magazine of the day-a tame Police Gazette with Miller gags and cartoons with double-entendres. 1902 saw the beginning of Gargoyle, con- ducted in the style of the Judge hu- mor magazine. Gargoyle, in 1933 became the first college magazine to change its comic style to the sophisticated tone of the New Yorker, with, fashion' sections a la Vogue. Iomorrow~ f- t See Thu rsa' Ti DailyU STATE STREET on the CAMPUS_ Prof. Karpiuski's Damaged By Home Flames Firemen fought a roof blaze at'the home of Prof. Louis C. Karpinski of the mathematics department yester- day for an hour before it was finally extinguished. Damage was described as "corsiderable." Caused by flying sparks from the chimney, the fire at the 1315 Cam- bridge Rd. residence began about 11:L0 a.m. CORRECTION Contrary to the impression given by an article in last Wednesday's DaiLy hunting or fishing is prohibited at all times on Saginaw Forest ac- cording to Frank Murray, University Forest Manager. ...... . ........ . SUDDE SERVI E il r_,~w 'adnipgFttteso SERVIC 1 7 * AL