PAGE SIX TE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1940 t _ . Dorm To Honor Mrs. Henry Joy On Anniversary Hlien Newerry Residenee Plans Dinner Saturday Fo Its Original Donor The 25th anniversary of the occu- pation of Helen Newberry Residence will be celebrated at a dinner to be given at 6 p.m. Saturday in honor of Mrs. Henry B. Joy who gave the building June, 1915, in honor of her mother, Helen Handy Newbery. "For 25 years Mrs. Joy has main- tained a personal and active inter- est in all activities connected with the house and has given unsparing- ly of her time and sympathy to pro- mote the interests of the students and to further their welfare," Miss Ruth H. Danielson, house director of the dormitory, said yesterday. Guests invited to the dinner include President and Mrs. Ruthven, Vice- President and Mrs. Shirley W. Smith, Dean Alice Lloyd, Mrs. Frederick G. Jordan, Dean-Emeritus of Women, Mrs. Byrl Bacher and Miss Jeannette Perry, assitant Deans of Women, Prof. Karl Litzenberg of the English de- partment and Mrs. Litzenberg, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Shiel, and members of the Board of Patronesses who in- clude Mrs. J. G. Hays, Mrs. Wilfred Shaw, Mrs. Arthur Bromage, Mrs. Henry Douglas, Mrs. Donald Blake- ley and Miss Claire Sanders of De- troit. Alumnae of the dormitory and mothers of the residents will alsobe guests at the dinner. House officers include: Ellen Redner, '40, president; Patricia Walpole, '41, vice-president; Mildred Curtis, '42, secretary; Meri- bah Ashdowne, '41Ed, treasurer, and Muriel Hess, '40, social chairman. Mimes Group Nominates 16 Drama Club Heads To Be Drawn From List Mimes, honorary men's dramatic society which presented this year's Union Opera "Four Out of Five," nominated 16 men last 'night for offices of the group next year. The following were nominated for the post of president: James Neil- son, '41A, Tom Goodkind, '42, and James Harrison, '41. For the office of vice-president, Dick Strain, '42,' Don Stevenson and Bill Conrad, '42A, were nominated. COarles Boynton, '42, Sid Wein- berg, '42A, Dale Chamberlain, '42, and Art Treut were nominated for corresponding and recording secre- taries jobs. James Duthie, '41E, Al Englander, '41, and Bob Titus, '42, were proposed for treasurer, and Fred Linsell, '41, Owen Mays, '42, and Henry Fielding, '42E, were nom- inated for the position of librarian. A complete list of the candidates will be found in the student offices of the Union today, and voting will take place there also for those mem- bers who cannot attend the meeting and regular election next week. In addition to the nominations, the1 members of the society voted Doug Gould, '41, new president of the Union, to membership in Mimes by1 acclamation. Group I uugucrates Civil Service Drive LANSING, May 8.-(A')-Clarence V. Smazel, office manager for the Michigan Merit System Association, said today the organization's cam- paign to amend the State constitu- tion to protect Civil Service from tampering by politicians is away to a flying start. Michigan has been blanketed with 16,000 petitions which, if signed in full, would bear 350,000 signatures, he declared. The first petition returned came from Mrs. Craig C. Miller of Mar- shall, former president of the Mich- igan Federation of Women's Clubs, Smazel declared. He added that she received the blank petition from t o association's offices Monday morn- ing, and had placed it in the mails Monday afternoon bearing its full quota of 25 signatures. Smazel declared Association offi- cials have obtained promises of as- sistance from many out-state Repub- lican and Democratic leaders, but that officials of the two parties in Lansing have indicated they were not enthusiastic about the program. DAILY OFFICIAL BU LL E T INv (Continued from Page 4) Curtiss-Wright and Bell Aircraft fac- tories, should list their names on the Bulletin Board of the Aeronauti- Job Shift? Tuition Raise Does Not 9tr A pltcitios "As One Beauty To Another . " I En rollmen: -Rate is Above, Previous Years:, Smith Sees No Effect By WILL SARPI Registrar Tia A. m'th's uredic- tioD that lVichigan's tution increase "would not make an ic'a if differ- ence" in cutting down next year's enrollment was substantiated today when itw as learned that freshman! entrance apnlications to date excee' those received at this time last. year. Part of this increase may be at- tiibuted to the natural ;well in en- rcllment which the University has experienced for the last four years, Smith explained. Resident Tuition Abobe Average 'The only decrease which ean be expected," Smith added, "is the withdrawal of a few uprerclass stu- dents who have come here with just enough money to carry them through under the old tuition rates." President Roosevelt said recent- ly th:at he probably would name Robert Hinckley (above) as as- sistant secretary of commerce to succeed Monroe Johnson. Hinck- ley now is chairman of the Civil Aeronauti-esAuthority. Si By JUNE McKEE- Jerome Wiesner, Chief Radio Technician, and assistant to Prof. - Waldo Abbot, has been called to Washington to consider accepting a position as head of a new transcrip- tion division of the Library of Con- gress. Records now ready for distribu- tion include those from the Finnish Relief Concert made by the band- Sibelius' "Finlandia," Victor Cher- vin's "Dunes" movement of the "Lake Michigan Suite," and Morton Gould's "Pavanne" from the "Second American Symphonette." Also the first recordings Louis Untermeyer ever made, as well as the first Broad- casting Service transcription of a speaking voice, may now be called for at Morris Hall. A limited number of orders for these transcriptions will still be accepted. Professor Abbot is busy planning next . year's broadcasting schedule, booking speakers from varied fields and their fifteen-minute topics, so the bulletin of broadcasts for the 1940-41 season may be" compiled be-1 fore the semester's close. Mike Wallace, Morris Hall alum-" nus in radio, is transferring an- nouncing duties from Grand Rapids' WOOD to WXYZ in Detroit ... Steve Filipiak, now settled with Jackson's station WIBM, stopped by the broadcasting studio yesterday.r. . The Full Day of Broadcasting on campus has been postponed until next Tuesday, when an 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. schedule will be followed without interruption. Finally finding some Union wait- ers for softballing Saturday, the Morris Hall "Velocity Ten" emerged as victors from the fray. ASCE To Hear Speech On Tunnel Construction Prof. W. D. Housel will show movies of tunel construction in Detroit and will discuss problems involving their operation at a meeting of the stu- dent chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers tonight at 7:30 in the Union. Members of the society will also complete plans for their projected trip to Toledo, Ohio, next Tuesday where they will inspect the new intake tunnel from Lake Erie and the filter- ation plant being constructed to aug- ment the Toledo water supply. Summer Students Will Assist In Excavatimg Ancient Villages By 1?oWARD FENSTEMAKER rate the exi tcnce of other lakes be- Fr tie first time in University fo'e th 1resent system of Great history, students will have an oppor- Lakes was formed, and give concrete lunity to a ist in the excavatin evidence to th theoryi thathe land ncient Indiam vilages and a te northof Saginaw Ba has been siow- rame tuin receive University vr di: ly rising for 1he pasi. .000 years. for their work, in a new cour;l to Because of an unusual tilt in the )e offered this summer,. Prof. Teslie l strata of the land in that region, the A. White, acting chairman of I e age of human occupation can easily Department of Anthropology, ai- be ascertained. Strangely enough, nonced recently. the more ancient evidences of hi- Field wrk will be centered at'man settlement are found on a 'vManitoulin Island, in Lake Huron. higher level than those of more re- e findings there are expected to cent ages. now muh lit on te cary is Students will register in Ann Ar- ory of Mchiga.Studes k brbeforeain orthwardabout the' (,ourse;will ean thlr(,ugh1 actutal June 23. The cour1se will contl.inue( for eight weeks and will o f rt' six of fiel (.c c1ava io1. hours of credit. hcoursewhich will be given cy the Department of Anthropology -s ;u (on unction with the Museum of Anhropology, will be conducted by Dr. Emerson F. Greenman, assistantsLeid 'curatcr of the Museum of Anthro- pology. Only a limited number ofAl ni tip .tudents can be accounnodatedl. 1 o ti lum Chit'1" Thcse interested should get in touch with Dr. Greeniman. Members of the Museum staff Dean E. Blythe Stason and Prof. have been conducting research onPaul H. Leidy, both of the Law Manitoulin Island since 193'. To School. were guests of honor at a date they have located and exca- dinner of the Chicago Chapter of the vated approximately 15 village sites.I Michigan Law School Alumni which Three of these sites have unusual was held last night in the Windy antiquity, ranging from 1100 to 2600 City. years in age. One was evitlently oc-DCnty. cupied before the introduction of Dean Stason and Prof. Leidy left upedryeforthergitrodctheonagesAnn Arbor early yesterday afternoon pottery in the region. The largest ( in order to attend the dinner, at of these locations measures 700 by ic plans fo furtheine , M t 050 feet. An early historic Indianwi lans forfurthering the Mic cemetery is also included among the igan Law Society in Chicago were dis- discoveries. cussed. Both Law School professors The scene of operations has been gave talks. tMichigan Law Societies have been logical antiquity. Abandoned beaches established in various large urban of Lake Huron and the presence of centers throughout the United States oaelHudstraon theprsnceindi for the purpose of creating closer co- water-laid strata on the island indi- operation between the Law School and its alumni, and of aiding the icr1Cyf', To1 t Law School graduates to obtain posi- tions in law firms. Freshman enrollment in 1939 ex- ceeded that of 1938 by 200 students, and the same increase is expected this year, tuition raise notwithstand- ing. This would bring the 1940-41 freshman total to almost 2,000. In comparison with a dozen other Midwestern state-supported univer- sities, the new resident tuition here is slightly above average, while the non-resident fees are yet below the othertrepresentative schools, Mr. Herbert Wagner of 'the business office said yesterday. Added Services "It must be remembered that the University Committee on Fees raised the tuition to secure more money for added services rendered to the stu- dents, not to make Michigan an 'ex- clusive school' or to keep the enroll- ment down," Wagner declared. Michigan State College has upped its resident tuition to $40 per quar- ter, or $120 per year, placing it on par with the University. Offer Musical Record Series' Ten Discs l\Vay Be Bought Complete At One Time' As a special recognition of May Festival week, the Ann Arbor CcIn- mittee for Music Appreciation an- nounced yesterday that the series of 10 "World's Greatest Music" sym- phonic recordings may be purchased at one time by out-of-town guests and students, although a different recording will be featured each week. These records are on sale at the Committee's headquarters at 601 William Street; corner of Maynard. At present, the Committee is fea- turing Tschaikowsky's Fourth Sym- phony. The recordings which have been made available in Detroit may also be obtained in Ann Arbor, and according to the Committee, "it will at all times be possible to duplicate Detroit offerings here." The two final recordings-Tschai- kowsky's Nutcracker Suite and Bee- thoven's Eighth Symphony-will be released in regular order. Composers in this low-cost series, designed to bring music into every home, include Schubert, Brahms, Mozart, Debussy, Haydn and Franck. Patricia Dannelly (left), "Miss America" of 1939, who left Mich- igan mnen gasping after her visit here last fall under the sponsorship of The Daily, congratulates Joan Paine, 18, blue-eyed high school senior from Three Riers, who was selected queen of southwestern Michigan's 18th annual blossom festival at Benton Harbor. The BigTen .. ._Highlights By GEORGE W. SALLADE The Big Ten turned its candid camera this week on May Queens, political conventions, Mother's Day programs and above all things stu- dent opinion polls. At Northwestern the big news of the week was the surprising showing of Norman Thomas who Glared the monarchy of the origi- nal six queens vacant and select- ed six new candidates. It's all a deep, dark mystery of dynastic politics. Naturally the findings of some new Program By Denyn student opinion poll had to be re- leased during the week. At the Uni- versity of Wisconsin where, curious- campaigned under a strong peace ly enough, they have a junior girl platform at the Mock Political as the Queen of the Senior Ball, a Convention. It took the combined survey to end all surveys on college delegates for Vandenberg, Dewey women was conducted. According to and Roosevelt to beat him. reports the average Wisconsin coed in one year drinks 210 quarts of coca Illinoi, Indiana and Minnesota cola, eats 20 pounds of candy, chews are having special programs for 20 feet of gum, applies 6 inches of Mother's Day over the weekend. The lipstick and turns down 125 dates. Illini expect more than 3,000 mothers Although this column is principal- while Minnesota's visitors will be en- ly devoted to the Big Ten, little, pro- tertained by a special program given gressive Oberlin College deserves men- by the agricul student is tion. Its Republican mock Political program will be presented with in- Convention will be broadcast over a terruptions every two hours because, nation-wide Mutual Broadcasting of the new police ordinance restrict- ntIon- upe wthlB roucas ingthelenth f tudnt arkngin System hook-up with Bob Trout as ing the length of student parking commentator. Perhaps tlie other Big Minneapolis. The mothers of the Ten Schools having conventions will loyal sons of Indiana will help that take notice and make theirs as worth- University celebrate its 120th birth- while as Oberlin's must be to get day, 1820-1940. such recognition. The four bells of the week go to Ohio State for having the most Duke University has substituted trouble in selecting a May Queen. lacrosse for boxing as an approved It seems the Student Senate de- intercollegiate sport. Arrangements for the carillon by Jef Denyn, Director of the Carillon School of Mechelen, Belgium, will be played at 7 p.m. today by Prof. Per- cival Price, University carillonneur. The program will open with two Walloon airs, "Richard Coe'r de Lion" by A.E.M. Gretry and "Li ligeo- is egagi" by J. N. Hamal. Following these Professor Price will play a group of compositions for the pianoforte, "Allegro" by Karl Czerny, "Melodie" by Robert Schumann, "Spirituoso" by Muzia Clementi, "Sonatina 2" by D. Steibelt, and "Etude-allegro" by Stephen Heller. Closing the concert will be "Valse Jubilaire" by Edward Denyn and Bach's "Meneut" and "Prelude. .i H1 ndreds Attend MeI~enie R its Hundreds of Michigan' students, faculty and alumni gathered yester- day to pay final tribute to Dr. Rod- crick D. McKenzie, chairman of the sociology department, who died Monday. Prof. Herbert Blumer of the Uni- versity of Chicago was among the prominent sociologists who attended the funeral. Several former students of Dr. McKenzie now holding facul- ty positions in other universities also attended. Rev. D. E. Melvor of Fort Wil- ;iams, Ont., officiated at the funeral services held in the Muehlig Chapel Burial was in Arborcrest Cemetery. l Pens -- Typewriters - Supplies "Writers Trade With Rider's" RIsDsER'S' 02South State St. r c yl , .n ,. ]Eey n - ---.------.- __ ter.te I:= \ veyon OPERA-TI ON ~~'~""',--UNIONZATIO OCALIATIONS ....C.. NONERATION MIMES..:. * .nnudt open ...d 1.,/r....D.....rDWT *'h4d Swee/t T44e! 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