THE MICTIIGAFN IA IILY TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1940 mom*= Scholarships, Awards Given At Hillel FeteI lanquet Marks 13th Year For Foundation Here; Ruthven, Feuer Speak Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority was warded permanent possession of the [illel Service Cup at the Founda- ion's "Bar Mitzvah" 13th anniver- ary banquet at the Michigan Union Honor Guards, Color Bearers Selected For Cormencemnent Committee Will Escort Honor Section Of Faculty, Regenits And Recipients Of Honorary Degrees Honor guards and color bearers for this year's Commencement Day ceremonies, selected by the senior class presidents of the various schools, were announced yesterday. This guard will escort the honor section, comprising the several facul- ties, the regents, and recipients of honorary degrees, in the Commencement procession from the campus to Ferry Field. Each unit will carry a pennant decorated with colors representing its school. John Nicholson and Roland Savilla vere named color bearers from the College of Literature. Science and - The cup, won three successive years by Alpha Epsilon Phi, is awarded to the organized house which cooperates best with the Foundation. Honor- able mention went to Phi Sigma Sig- ma sorority and Phi Sigma Delta fraternity. President Alexander G. Ruthven, ,Kenneth, Morgan of the Student Re- ligious Association and Rabbi Leon Feuer of Toledo spoke at the ban- quet. Jerome Mecklenburger, '41E, was installed as president of the Hillel Council, and Irving Zeiger, '41, was inducted as assitant to the director of the Foundation succeeding Ron- ald Freedman, Grad. Martin Dworkis, '40, was present- ed with a $150 scholarship prize giv- en by the Women's auxiliary of the Detroit B'nai B'rith. Hillel Keys were awarded to: Betty Steinhart, '40; David Friedman, '40M; Zelda Davis, '40; Jean Tenofsky, '41; Theodore Leibovitz, '40; R u t h Schwartz, '40; Phyllis Halpern, '40; Samuel Grant, '40; William Simon, '415M; Dworkis; Benjamin Gotlib, '40; Maurice Reizen, '40Spec; Shir- ley Fishman, '40; Zeiger; Sidney Steinhart, '41; Mecklenburger; Jos- eph Bernstein, '40; Anita Newblatt, '41; Mitchell Mandeburg, '40; Nor- man Oxhandler, '41; Kenneth Wax, '40; Raymond Kempner, '41; Ruth Pollock, '40; and Elaine Goldstein, the Arts. Included in the list of honor guards are Dwight Adams, Thomas Adams, Charles Aldridge, J. Thomas Aye, Wilford Brown, Otto Becker, Hal Benham, William Black. James Barnard, Leonard Brandt, William Canfield, Richard Cohen, Augustus Dannemiller, Wilbur Da- vidson, Samuel Durst, Seymour Ell- man, Jack Emery, Milton Fineberg, George Gangwere, John Gelder, By- ron Gerson, Irving Gerson, Howard Greenberg, Lawrence Gubow, Frank Griffin. Jack Hoover, Hilton Hornaday, Thomas Hutton, Robert Kann, Ar- chie Kodros, Malcolm Lang, Herbert Lev, Morton Linder, Newell McCabe, James McNicholas, Edward Mack, Murray Massin, Robert Palmer, Paul Park, Walter Nielsen, Edward O'- Connell, Milton Peterman, Carl Pe- tersen, James Rae, Steward Rob- son, Bruce Randall, Lenton Scul- thorp, Daniel Shaw, Richard Sierk, Casimir Sojka, Peter Soreson, Ted Spangler, Stan Swinton, Thomas Tussing, Richard Waterman, Jack Weiner, Philip Westbrook, Robert Winter. Herman Ulevitch, and Lau- rence Vandenberg. Philip Balyeat, Jack Christensen, Russell Dobson, Clinton Mahlke, ---------- e--- A Robert Morrow, and William Saulson will represent the School of Educa- tion. From the College of Engineering were named Richard Adams, J. An- derson Ashburn, Arthur J. Brandt. Jr., C. Owen Broders, James Brown, Robert Goodyear, Robert Jeffers, Kenneth Myers, John Rane, Walter Rieger, Fred Shands, Hadley Smith, Richard Steding, Douglas Tracy, Vaino Vehko, and James Wills. Arthur Held, Carl Morton, Rufus Roys, and William Small were ap- pointed from the College of Engin- eering. Honor guards from the School of Medicine will be Edward Bauer, Hen- ry Bryant, David Friedman. James DeWeerd, M. Allan Hayes. John Juhl, Donald Lewis, Morton Wiener. Louis Baker, Daniel Cremin, Ben- jamin Franklin, C. Bruce Kelley, Richard Hendrick, W. Wallace Kent, John Mann, Roy Rogers, George Thompson and Leonard Wingert will be representatives from the Law School. Norman Baker and Merton Rosen were named from the College of Pharmacy, while Simon Glerum, Jr., and Hugh Godfrey were appointed from the School of Dentistry. Honor guards from the School of Business Administration will be Arthur P. Bartholomew, Jr., Roger Hinderer, William Rhodes, and Jack S4iter. From the School of Forestry and Conservation were appointed Rich- ard Abbott, Gustav Gregory, Robert Patton, Robert Pope, William Ruth- erford and Orville Zeeh. Earl Loessell and Gail Rector were named from the School of Mu- sic. Driver Is Arraigned The driver of the car in which Rob- ert L. Trowbridge, '40, was killed last week in Nichols Arboretum, Dale F. Puglise of Detroit, was placed on a five year probation yesterday by Cir- cuit Judge George W. Sample. Pug- lise was ordered to pay a fine of $50 and $50 costs. He had previously been arraigned on a charge of negli- gent homicide. Michigan Wins Annual Speech SocietyTrophy Deceives Award For 11 i Straight Year As Best Sigma Rho Tau Chapter For the eleventh consecutive time in the 11year history of Sigma Rho Tau, honorary engineering speech' society, the University chapter, Al- pha, was awarded the Stump Speak- ers' Society trophy as the leading echnical college speech group in the country. The award was given on the basis of the number of debates won, the number of prizes received at the annual Convention and for the best exchange speakers at a Banquet Saturday in Detroit. The local chap- ter won 11 out of 12 debates this year. Michigan individual winners at the Banquet were Harry C. Fischer, '40E, of Plymouth, who was awarded first prize in the impromptu speak- ing contest, Gordon Girod, '42E, of Grand Rapids, who won the Hall of Fame contest, and Newton C. Hagar' '40E, of Westfield, N. J., who placed third in the raconteur competition. Prof. Robert D. Brackett of the engineering English department, fac- ulty adviser of the local chapter, was appointed Chairman of the Commit- tees on Extension, Program and Na- tional Relations for the coming year. Girod was made a CommitteO member. Medical Prtogram.- On Blood Begins A four day program for doctors on disease of the blood and blood- forming organs began yesterday at the Simpson Memorial Institute. The course, which is one of fifteen short postgraduate courses in medi- cine, which are being offered during 1940, is under the direction of Dr. Raphael Isaacs, associate professor of internal medicine, and assistant director of Simpson Memorial Insti- tute, Dr. Milton Goldhamer, assistant professor of internal medicine and Dr. Frank H. Bethell, assistant pro- fessor of internal medicine. These postgraduate courses are designed as "continuing education of the doctor in which certain phases rather than the whole medical prac- tice are brought up to date," it was explained. Dr. Yatchew Will Talk Western Ukrania which was for- merly a part of Poland and is now under Russian control, will be dis- cussed byDr. John Yatchew at 7:301 p.m. today, Room 319, Union. Cooley Cane Will Be Presented ToMember Of Sigma Rho Tau Professor Brackett To Award Traditional Fence Relic At Annial 'Stump Speakers Society' Banquet By A. P. BLAUSTEIN One of Michigan's oldest traditions, the presentation of the Cooley Cane to the most outstanding member of Sigma Rho Tau, engineering sneech honor society, will be continued at the "Stump Speakers Society" annual Tng Oil Banquet next Tuesday at the League. The Cooley Cane, one of the two left in existence today, was once part of a fence placed around the campus to protect the campus from wandering cows. The other cane is owned by a man from Marshall who claimed its possession a number of years ago - -- - - but has not as yet been found. Prof. for the cane. Tung Oil is the oil Robert D. Brackett of the engin- extracted from a rare tree, origin- eering English department, national director of Sigma Rho Tau, how- ally grown only in China, which is ever, is still continuing his search of value to engineers in wood finish- for the missing cane and claims that ing work. Sigma Rho Tau receives he "will never swerve from my its tung oil wood from a plantation course and that some day successi. will be mine." in Florida. 'Cooley Canes' Also at the banquet will be an im- Schools Form Relations Bloc Lewis To Head Michigan Merger Committee Meeting Saturday in Detroit, 11 representatives of six Michigan col- leges and universities organized the Michigan College Public Relations Committee. Headed by Charles Lewis, public relations director of Wayne Univer- sity, the Committee includes mem- bers from this University, Lawrence College, the University of Detroit, Adrian College and Michigan State College. Donald Anderson, assistant to the director of the University News Bureau, and Mrs. Ruth Trezise, his assistant, represent the University on the Committee. Throughmcoordination of their ef- forts, Anderson said yesterday, the members of the group feel that they will make their work a great deal more efficient. Their aim, he con- tinued, is to aidaeducation in the state as a whole and not merely the standings of the particular institu- tions represented. Eventually, he said, the Committee may act as a general clearing house for infornmation, and it is likely to grow to include several more col- leges. For the Finest PRINTING DEVELOPING and Bring Your Film to GACH CAMERA SHOP 14 NICKELS ARCADE The canes were dubbed "Cooley Canes" by a group of students who tore down the fence and triumph- antly carried its pickets into one of Dean Emeritus Mortimer E. Cooley's classes. For many years Dean Cooley used some of these pickets as canes. Charles O. Probst, '39E, winner of the cane at the 1939 banquet, will return to present it to this year's winner and Dean Cooley will give a short address at the presentation. Dickinson Speaks Principle speaker at the banquet will be Gov. Luren Dickinson who will talk on "Character in Democracy." A gavel, made of wood from the Tung Oil tree, turned with chrom- ium and silver, will be presented to the runner-up in the competition DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) nesday, May 22, at 8:00 p.m. in 408 R.L. Deutscher Verein: The picnic and election of officers will be held Fri- day, May 24. Meet in front of the Rackham Building at 5 o'clock. The Garden Section of theFaculty Women's Club will meet on Wednes- day, May 22. The following gardens will be open during the afternoon: Mrs. E. B. Mains, 1911 Lorraine Place; Mrs. John Brumm, 1916 Cam- bridge Road: Mrs. O. R. Greschke, 1258 Ferdon Road; Mrs. Bradley Pat- ten, 2126 Highland Road ; Mrs. Ra- leigh Schorling, 403 Lenawee Drive; Mrs. G. E. Killins, 401 Lenawee Drive; Tea will be served at the home of Mrs. J. H. Kemper, 2605 Bedford Road at 4:30 p.m. promptu speaking contest with the member of the faculty giving the best speech receiving the Tung Oil Crown made of flowers and leaves from the tree. Special Sale' Student ticket sales will open to- day at the League and at Wahr's and Ulrich's bookstores. Organiza- tions in the College of Engineering who wish to be seated together may make group reservations now. General chairman of the banquet is Newton Hagar, '40E. Harry Reed, '41BAd, is program chairman, Thom- as Cook, Spec., will serve as ticket chairman and Harry Smith, '41E, will take charge of publicity. Pens ._ Tewrtes _ Supples "Writers Trade With Rider's" RIDER'S F 302 South State St. The Saginaw Steering Gear Divi- F resh Fruit Drinks sion of General Motors will present a 1,600 foot film on "Machine De- hit the spot in this sign and Motion Economy" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 348 of the wea ther . . . West Engineering Building. Members of the American Society ORANGEADE * *. of Mechanical Engineers will hold a E NA E ... meeting to elect officers for the com- LE ON D ing year at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. LIME ADE .. . -* * * New officers of Eta Kappa Nu. 10 c electrical engineering honor society, are John Strand, '41E, president; made froin - Robert S. Buritz, '41E, vice-president; Eugene H. Beach, '41E, correspond- Fresh, Choice ing secretary; Harold E. Britton, '41E, recording secretary; Gordon A. Fruit Stumpf, '41E, treasurer, and Charles R. Tieman, '41E, bridge correspond- ori a lavg frosty glass ent. Prof. F. E. Bartell and J. K. Davis of the chemistry department will de- liver a paper on the "Correlation of Adsorption at the Water-Air and MILLER Water-Organic Liquid Interface" and DRUG STORE Prof. Kasimir Fajans will present a paper on "Light Adsorption of Dye- Opp. Hill Aud. - 727 N. Univ. I stuff-Ions Adsorbed on Colloidal Sil- ver Iodide" at the Seventeenth Na- Air Conditioned tional Colloid Symposium June 6 to -- 8 in the Rackham Building. 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