PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAiLY FRihAY, MARiH 22, 1940 Sink Announces Guest Faculty Of Music School Summer Session Among the otstanding musicians able reputation, President Sink com- of national repute who will appear as mented yesterday. guest instructors at the School of Professor Christiansen is a gradu- Music this summer will be Erik W. ate of St. Olaf's College and has Leidzen, Prof. Olaf C. Christiansen served as guest director at summer- and Nazareno DeRubertis, President sessions of the University of Missouri, Charles A. Sink of the School an- Iowa and Wisconsin. nounced yesterday. Mr. DeRubertis, who will be in( Mr. Leidzen, who will spend two charge of the School of Music Sy'i- weeks here as special guest conduc- phony Orchestra for four weeks dur- tor, was born in Stockholm where ing the Summer Session, received his he studied piano, organ, harmony musical education largely in Italy and and composition at the Royal Acad- France. After touring the world for emy. He came to America in 1915, a number of years he took up per- filling many professional positions manent residence in Kansas City, Mo., in several branches of music; he was where he founded the Kansas City chosen head of the theoretical de- Chamber Music Society and the Little partment of the Ernest -Williams Symphony. School of Music in Brooklyn. As a composer he has contributedj For the last six years he has direct- not only to the literature of his own ed the Swedish Glee Club of Brook- instruments, but in many works for lyn and has served as guest conduct- orchestra, band, and for chamber or with the Northern Orchestral So- music groups. ciety, the Goldman Band and other ---------- school musical organizations. A director of Ensemble Singing Paton., Laing Testify and Choral Conducting at the Ober- lin Conservatory of Music, Professor Prof. W. A. Paton of the School Christiansen has also worked as di- of Business Administration and Prof. rector of the A Capella Choir, the L. L. Laing of the economics depart-{ Elizabethan Singers and the Oratorio ment testified yesterday in Lansing Society. His comprehensive analysis, at a review of the auditing methods clear-cut explanations and practical of the state called for by Attorney- procedure have won for him an envi- General Vernon Brown. Student Council Aids Harvard i m Es t~h in 1C. of gr m to 2'e ar at t u cc in in C r C z. i w m d h r( a ti u: Sn vi g st f3 p a a b C it tE C r C 1i c Pens - Typewriters - Supplies "Writers Trade With Rider's" RIDERS 302 South State St. In ManyWays (This is one of a series of articles on etudent government at American tni- versities and colleges.) By WILLIAM ELMER Harvard College's student govern- ent body, the Student Council, was tablished in 1908, to cooperate with ie faculty in raising the general tellectual standard at Harvard, to ring before the governing bodies f the College expression of under- raduate opinion in an effort to lake College policies better adapted 7the needs of the student body, to operate with the committee on the gulation of atheltics in eradicating ny evils in the conduct of athletics, nd to serve as the responsible au- hority in matters where undergrad- ate action, rather than opinion, oncerns the College as a whole. Agreement Although merely an advisory body n regard to College policies, accord- ng to Dr. A. C. Hanford, dean of the ollege, there is a gentlemen's agree- ent between the dean and the cuncil that no important change n educational policy or in its rules 'ill be made without first consulting he Council and seeking its advice. Dean Hanford points out that the host important service of the Coun- il with respect to the administration, as been in giving advice to the dean egarding changes in the regulations nd on matters of policy affecting he educational and social life of the ndergraduate, and in making sur- eys and reports on important sub- ects. A tutorial system , and a genera] xamination policy, reduction in umber of hour examinations in ad- anced courses, changes in the lan- uage requirements, scholarships and tudent employment, and the modi- ication of the old and somewhat iaternal rules regarding attendance nd probation for upperclassmen, are mong the achievements that can e chalked up to the Student Coun- il, Dean Hanford explained. Council A Leader "No important step has been taken n Harvard College in the last quar- er of a century in which the Coun- il has not played a leading role,' Dean Hanford said. Most of the ecommendations springing from the ouncil have been in the form of oint reports of faculty and studen ommittees, and the service rendered n this way has proved invaluable oa the administration. Very representative of the work [one by the Council, is its most re- ent report on education. This sur- 'y examines the premises of a lib ral education in general, studie ritically the plans of concentration eneral examination and tutorial in- truction. Specific suggestions and riticisms are directed at the preva- ence of over-concentration and th narrowness of the knowledge which he average senior carries away with him. III Music Festival Tickets Selling Well Sink Saysj Reservations Are Coming From Entire Midwest; Places Still Available Ticket sales for the forty-sixth an- nual spring music festival to be held here May 8-11 are running far in advance of recent years' sales at this time, Dr. Charles A. Sink said yester- day, in predicting near-record crowds, I for the four-day affair. Reservations have been coming in daily from the entire Middle West, he said, but added that orders for tickets to .all six concerts and to individual concerts are still being taken at the School of Music office. Twelve vocal and instrumental so- loists, three organizations and five conductors will appear during the four-day festival. The soloists: Lily I Pons, soprano; Dorothy Maynor, so- prano; Rosa Tentoni, soprano; Enid Szantho, contralto; Giovanni Mar- tinelli, tenor: Lawrence Tibbett, bari- tpne; Robert Weede, baritone; Nor- man Cordon, bass; Richard Hale. narrator; Joseph Szigeti, violinist; Emanuel Feuermann, violoncellist. and Arthur Schnabel, pianist. The Philadelphia Orchestra, the University Choral Union and the Young Peoples Chorus will also ap- pear, conducted by Eugene Ormandy, Thor Johnson, Saul Caston, Harl McDonald and Juva Higbee. Social Workers Elect Officers Club Of Detroit Institute Aids Faculty, Students (Special To The Daily) Students of the University's In- stitute of Public and Social Admin- istration (Curriculum in Social Work) in Detroit, elected officers Wednesday for the Student Social Work Club. Joseph P. Andriola was elected president; Edward Dalton, first vice- president; Mary Holmes, second vice- president; Elizabeth Harrington, sec- retary; and Ruth Scofield, treasurer. The aims of the organization are: t (1) To promote closer relationship of the faculty and students; (2) provide student services including in- formation about job placement, pro- mote the publication of some of the better students' term papers and theses, and investigation of housing facilities for students; (3) interpret- s ation of the functions and fields of social work and public administra- tion; (4) promote social activities t such as picnics, dances, and teas; - (5) bring in outside speakers to dis- e cuss problems of social work and a]- z lied fields; and (6) establish closer ties between the Institute students and the campus in Ann Arbor. h f S;hnificant to resent and future avhers o speecl is the newly re- 5d cu "e The Psychology of! ech and the Audience, whichj I )e offered to" hxe first time in] he summer session, P of. G. E.] ensmore of the so eech department announced yesterday. The course is being offered by the I ;beech department through the coop- ?ration of the psychology department and will be presented by Prof. Walter; B. Pillsbury, chairman of the Depart- ment of Psychology. The course willc hsist of a study of the principles of the psychology of masses as seen in speaker-au- dience relations. A udience ye s. r1 a 'l I I? ~lcis(ed Cou rse SPECIAL Underwood famous Universal Model. New 1939 Models. Price complete with case, $42.50. Budget terms $1.00 a week. While they last BALL & THRASHER 229 S. State St. Phone 3955 -- -- - TE00 Referenceand Fiction Reprints Biography Trayel 9C to99C r) Parsonsi Presents Paper Dr. Robert J. Parsons. of the De- -Mt1111 of P.^thology in the Med- i al School, returned this week from 4 w Orleans. where he presented a paper before the American So- ciety for Experimenta- Pathology. The title of Dr. Parsons' paper was: Tiansformation of the Mycelial Form of Histpolasma Capsulatum, Darling, to the Yeast-like Form of Mice." r"(r "te ui"n" Cl"b Sponsors Hike Sunday Plans for Sunday's meeting of the Graduate Outing Club include a hike to the water softening plant and ice skating for the last time at the Coli- seum, according to Abe Rosenzweig, Grad., president of the club. The group is to meet back of Rackham Building at 2:30 and return to it later for supper. the will OMMMMEOMMEMW A Delicious Drink during Any Season! Phone 8270 FOLLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE 322 S. State at N. University Bob Graham, Mgr. I III i 4F tc at The %c g s C I r t ;v Befotre 6EAT~ER at The and his Orchestra Saturay March 23 I CQnFnRRRT STVI.P > I OUT TODAY The March Issue of 11111 I i4 * Tic-T ac-Toe, 'T'hree luscious lipsticks by Lucien Lelong in a leather kit. 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