THE MICHIGAN DAILY
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1940
Forsythe Formally Receives Anthony Shows
140 Phi Kappa Phi Initiates Farmers' Need
i AL
Newly Elected President
Dean Lloyd Introduces
Candidates For Society
(Continued from Page 1)
Morrissey, Sylvia R. S. Neivert, Rich-
arda Neuberg, John D. Newburgh,
Leonard D. Newman, Robert A. Ny-
man, Shirley R. Phillips, Frank P.
Raiford, Alfred Reifman, Rosa M.
Rohrmaser, Doris A. Scott, Morton
Stahl, Betty M. Steinhart, Elias Stol-
ler, Donald B. Suits, Ann M. Vicary,
John F. Walters, Alberta E. Wood,
Ellis A. Wunsch, and Arthur J. Zam-
bito.
From the College of Engineering:
Richard K. Brown, Robert C. Deland,
Harry C. Fischer, Charles H. Forbes,
Richard B. Gethman, Lewis 0. Heinze,
Robert H. Jeffers, Kenneth L. Levin,
Jack H. Shuler, Nathan S. Siegel,
Hadley J. Smith, John M. Stone, Ben-
jamin H. Vine, Claude V. Wadsworth
and Walter P. Wilkins.
From the School of Education:
Phyllis E. Cannon, Jack E. Christen-
sen, Lillian A. Kazmark, June A.
Madison, Mary E. Robinson, Marion
E. Weiss and Lillian L. Zimmerman.
From the Medical School: Jerome
S. Beigler, Paul C. Le Golvan and
Donald S. Patterson.
From the School of Forestry: Rich-
ard W. Abbott, Gustav R. Gregory
and Orville L. Zeeh.
From the School of Business Ad-
ministration: William B. Corliss and
Julius F. Mellema.
From the College of Architecture
and Design: John H. Farrens and
Christine K. Nagel.
From the School of Music: Hubert
V. Fitch and William W. Schott-
staedt.
Violinist Presser
Will Give Recital
William Presser, '40SM, will pre-
sent a music recital in partial ful-
fillment of the' Bachelor of Music
degree at 8:15 p.m. today in the
School of Music Auditorium.
A violinist from Saginaw, Presser
has been a student of Prof. Wassily
Besekirsky of the faculty for the past
two years. He will be accompanied
by William Schottstaedt, '40SM, pi-
anist.
Scheduled to be heard on his pro-
gram are Bach's "Sonata No. 5 for
Violin Alone" (Largo, Allegro assai),
Beethoven's "Concerto in D major"
(Allegro ma non troppo, Larghetto,
Rondo) and "Nature Studies " (Fra-
grance, Clouds, Maying, Fairyland,
Hour of Nine, "Heav-Ho") by Cecil
Burleigh.
From the School of Dentistry:
Gerald V. Barrow.
From the School of Pharmacy:
Howard E. Parker.
From the School of Library Science
David C. Oppelt and Emily W. Reed.;
Those named as members in Phi1
Kappa Phi from the Graduate School.
were: Kamer Aga-Oglu, R. T. Alex-
ander, James W. Anderson, John R.
Van Andel, Harold E. Baker, Norman
Bauer, Chester Beaman, Robert M.
Biggs, E. William Bilto, Deogracias
Borlongan, Frank X. Braun, Douglas
Brown, Warren H. Brothers, Edwin
G. Burrows, Helen M. Churchill, John
F. Clifford, Alonzo C. Cohen, Jr.,
Lewis D. Crawford, Elizabeth Crozer,
William M. Cruickshank, Morris
Dansky, Kenneth Evashevski, Rob-
ert L. Gibson, Karl E. Goeller, Loyal
Gryting, Stephen P. Hatchett, Mary
E. Heitsch, Josephine Hinds, Ernest,
H. Hollingsworth, David W. Holmes,
Vivian C. Hopkins, Yang Sun Hsu,
Edmund Ingalls, Charles Kistler,
Werner Landecker, Fred LaViolette,
Eugene H. Lawler and G. N. Loof-
bourow.
The list continues with: Lesla R.
McKinley (Mrs. E.B.), Harry W.
Paine, Donald S. Peck, John A..Per-
kins, Harold R. Pryor, Bennett M.
Rich, Betty Robertson, Frank G. Ry-
der, Frank L. Scott, Dorothy J. Ste-
phenson, Rolland C. Stewart, Sidney
Straight, Earl W. Thomas, Guy C.
Throner, John E. Tillford, Daniel F.Q.
du Toit, Leopoldo V. Toralballa, B.
Vinograde, Adolph Voigt, Robert R.
White, Joeseph A. Yager, Chia-ren
Yang, Rosalind M. Zaph and Alex-
ander Zerbon.
Attwood Receives
AIEE Recognition
Receiving recognition for ten years
of service with the student chapter
of the American Institute of Elec-
trical Engineers, Prof. Stephen S.
Attwood of the electrical engineering
department retired from his position
of faculty councilor of the chapter
at the A.I.E.E. annual banquet held
last night.
Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour-
nalism department gave the address
of the evening, urging a closer coor-
dination between science and eco-
nomics.
Professor Attwood, who will be
succeeded by Prof. James S. Gault
of the same department, was pre-
sented with a book, "Dyadic Circuit
Analysis," by Charles R. Tieman,
'41E, chairman of the chapter.
Robert S. Buritz, '41E, was toast-
master for the banquet, which closed
with a mock radio program conduct-
ed by members of the society.
ot Cooperatives
(Continued from Page 1)
of the geography department will
analyze Brazil in the South Amer-
ica series. He will be followed at
11 a.m. by a review of the "Great
Mooks of 1939," "The Revolution of
Nihilism," by Herman Rauschnigg,
by Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the po-
litical science department.
Second speaker in the afternoon
session will be Prof. James K. Pol-
lock of the political science depart-
ment with an analysis of Adolf Hit-
ler in the Contemporary World Fig-
ures series at 2 p.m.
Other speakers at yesterday's ses-
sions of the five-day Institute were
Col. Basil D. Edwards, chairman of
the Department of Military Science
and Tactics, on "The National De-
fense Policy of the United States";
Prof. Arthur S. Aiton of the history
department on "Mexico"; Prof. Rob-
ert S. Ford of the economics de-
partment reviewing "America in
Midpassage," and George Neufield,
Grad., on Josef Stalin.
library Plans
To Make LDist
Of Rare Books
In celebration of the 500th anni-
versary of the invention of printing
from movable type the Library plans
to compile a list of all incunabula
owned by residents of Ann Arbor.
The name "incunabula" is given to
those comparatively few volumes
which were printed in the early or
cradle stage of printing, from 1450
to 1501 or 1502. There are approxi-
mately 38,000 of thesebooks in ex-
istence, of which 277 are owned by
the University.
Anyone in Ann Arbor, faculty
member, student or townsperson, who
owns one or more of these rare books
is asked to send a list of his titles
to Dr. Bishop's office in the Main
Library.
In conjuction with this project
there is an exhibit of some of the
University's incunabula now on dis-
play in the front corridor of the Li-
brary.
Probably the most interesting feat-
ure of the exhibit is a fascimile of one
of the volumes of the famous Guten-
berg Bible, the first complete volume
ever printed, done in 1485. Of the
few copies in existence the Universi-
ty has not been able to obtain so
much as a single page.
Other volumes on display illustrate
the tendency toward the use of scroll-
work and design in early printing.
U. of M. Press
Publishes First
Musical Work
"Notes on the Literature for the
Piano", a 235 page volume by Albert
Lockwood, appeared today as the first
publication by the University of Mich-
igan press on the subject of music.1
Albert Lockwood, until shortly be-
fore his death, was instructor in
piano in the University School of
Music, and one of the most eminent
authorities on piano literature in the
United States. This book was written
to "guide taste and stimulate the
spirit of adventure, the inclination to
browse in strange pastures, and to
guide the aesthetic curiosity indis-
pensable to artistic growth", the au-
thor says in the introduction.
To carry out this purpose Mr.
Lockwood has listed in separate sec-
tions the piano works of 61 of the
most prominent American composers,
giving titles and publishers.
In addition there are named, in
national groups, lists of 244 other
composers, and their works. Albert
Lockwood was a fellow pupil at one
tim,, in his career with Gabrilowitsch
and Schnabel, under Leschetizky.
Litzenberg Talks To Club
Prof. Karl Litzenberg, director of
Residence Halls, and Robert 0. Mor-
gan, assistant secretary of the Alum-
ni Association attended a meeting
yesterday of the University of Mich-
igan Club of Coldwater. Professor
Litzenberg addressed the group on
"The New Residence Halls, and Their
Influence on University Life."
Art Exhibit To Close Saturday
An exhibit of Far Eastern Art, in Alumni Memorial Hall are designed
the new quarters in the basement of for lectures, seminar meetings, use
Alumni Memorial Hall, will be open of study tables by advanced students,
daily from 2 to 5 p.m. until Satur- archaelogical research, and my of-
day. A special reception for under- fice. The exhibit is a display of the
graduates will be held from 3:30 to functions which the new quarters are
5:30 p.m. Thursday. designed to perform."
In 1933 the late Benjamin March, Irtluding bronze pieces, stone and
then Curator of Oriental Art at the clay sculptures, Chinese and Japan-
Detroit Institute of Arts, gave the ese paintings, Buddhist sculpture, and
ceramic pieces, the objects have been
first lectures in Far Eastern Art, a loaned for use in teaching by several
tubdivision of the Institute of Fine friends of the University. Among
Arts. From that time on the courses th~ese are Miss Miriam Forbes and
have been given in the Museum of Miss Maude Russell of Shanghai, Mr.
Anthropology until this semester, and Mrs. R. K. Stockwell of San
when they were moved to Alumni Francisco, Mrs. Mary Cahse Strat-
Hall, ton and John A Foster of Detroit,
James Plumer, lecturer on Far Eas- Dikran Kelekian and C. T. Loo of
tern Art, explained, "The new spa- New York, O. J. Todd, '08, and Prof.
cious and attractive quarters at Emeritus Walter R. Parker.
[
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Betsy Ross Shop
WE DELivER Nickels Arcade Dial 5931
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hANDY SERVICE DIECTORY
STRAYED, LOST, FOUND- 1
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LOST: Ladies' gold Elgin wrist
watch on Washtenaw, Monday,
Please call 4367. 388
LOST: Small, yellow-gold, square
wrist watch, on a black ribbon
wrist band. Lost Friday. Reward.
Write Box 9, Michigan Daily. 389
MISCELLANEOUS- 20
MEMBERS of University faculty
willing to accommodate high
school girl delegates to the Press
Convention Thursday and Friday
nights, May 2nd and 3rd, please
notify the Journalism Office, 213.
Haven Hall, Tel. 4121, ex. 485. 386
WANTED-TO BUY-4
ANY OLD CLOTHING-PAY $5.00
TO $500. SUITS, OVERCOATS,
FURS, MINKS, PERSIAN LAMBS,
DIAMONDS, TYPEWRITERS, &
CASH FOR OLD GOLD. PHONE
SAM-6304. SUNDAY APPOINT-
MENTS PREFERRED. 359
HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for
your discarded wearing apparel.
Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street.
146
LAUNDRY- - 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low prices. 16
TRANSPORTATION -21 4
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL -
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Killins Gravel Company. Phone
7112. 13
WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list-
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Daily for summer visiting
sors. Dial 23-24-1 for
rates.
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