NOVEMBER 28, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN NOVEMBER 28, 194G PAGE SEVEN Dr. Lauterpacht Will Give Talk Here Monday Post-War Reconstruction To Be Lecture Topic Of LegalProfessor Dr. H. Lauterpacht, Wheell Profes- sor of International Law at Cam- bridge University, will lecture on "Problems of Post-War International Reconstruction", 4:15 p.m. Monday, Dec. 2, in the Rackham Lecture Hall under the auspices of the Law School and the political science department. Holder of the highest international law professorship in Britain and fam- ous as a lecturer on the Continent, Dr. Lauterpacht since September has been lecturing in the United States under the auspices of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He has given courses of lectures before the Academy of International Law at The Hague, before the Insti- tute of Higher International Studies at Geneva, and has been lecturer in public international law at the Lon- don School of Economics and Politi- cal Science. Professor Lauterpacht's principal works include "Private Law Sources and Analogies in Public International Law," "The Function of Law in the International Community", and "The Development of International Law by the Permanent Court of Interna- tional Justice." Faculty Works Are Published Among the books published recent- ly by members of the University fac- ulty is "A Criticism of the Crusade, A Study of Public Opinion and Cru- sade Propaganda," written by Prof. Palmer A. Throop of the history de- partment. Professor Throop's book deals with the political and religious forces to which the medieval ages were sub- jected with regard to the crusades. Methods of propaganda utilized both by those and for those against the crusade are explained. "Pioneers in American Anthropol- ogy," a collection of the biographies Big Ten Highlights ... Richard Bonelli To Be Featured In Fifth Choral Union Concert. By GEORGE SALLADE With a welcomed but all too brief respite on Thanksgiving aiding it the Big Ten tried to revive itself from the strenuous routines of homecoming, dedications and conventions this week. Chicago, illinois, Minnesota, Ohio State, and Wisconsin were having honlecoming celebrations. Diad's Day was the highlight It Illinois, Minresota and Wisconsin. The Illini alumni saw the dedication of a new $554,454 Natural Resources Building. Coincident with this was the Sixth Annual Midwest Wildlife Conference also held at Champaign. Minnesota alumi wandered around to their old haunts through one of the worst blizzards on record, but were consoled by the fact that the university had been awarded its largest budget in history by the State. The traditional Gay Nineties Re- view entertained old Chicago gradu- ates. Ohio State students elected a homecoming queen for their visitors. The voting for the queen took place along with a general campus elec- tion for which 6,000 students turned out. Campus opinion said that the in- terest in the queen rather than a re- vival of interest in student govern- ment caused a large turnout. Homecoming Note: Most famous "Dad" at Wisconsin's Dad's Day was former President Clarence E. Dykstra who left his Washington post for the occasion. Conventions were in order at Pur- due, Indiana and Iowa. Purdue was the center for a women's vocational conference called Feminine Futures. Indiana was host to the Sixth An- nual State Drama Conference, while women from 17 colleges and univer- sities invaded the Iowa campus for the Regional Panhellenic Confer- ence. of men concerned with the develop- ment of anthropology in Americaj written by Mr. Leslie A. White, acting chairman of the anthropology depart- ment, has been published in two vol- umes. Richard Bonelli, Metropotan Op- era baritone, will be f eatured in the fifth Choral Union Concert at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Sponsored by the University Musi- cal Society, the New York artist will sing a program of classical and oper- atic numbers. Tickets for the per- formance may be had throughout the week at the Musical Society offices in Burton Tower, or after 7 p.m. Tues- day at the Hill Auditorium box office. Attended Syracuse Bonelli started his musical career while attending Syracuse University, and while majoring in the department of applied science. Encouraged by the dean of the fine arts department to study singing, he studied on and off for the next few years between retaining jobs as a hotel manager, an accident investigator, and a porter. Finally, however ,a friend managed to get him to Paris where he started studying voice in earnest. Bonelli's singing career started in Italy when he was introduced to the Monte Carlo Opera's impressario Raoul Gunsberg, who engaged him for four performances. His success was immediate. From Italy he trav- eled to Germany, Paris and Cuba where he made a deep impression on the music critics. The Chicago Opera Company retained him as leading baritone from 1925 to 1931, and in 1932 he was engaged by the Metro- politan Opera Company as their lead- ing baritone. Name Was Bunn Bonelli's family name was Bunn, but because of the vogue for foreign singers at the time he made his debut, he changed his stagername to the Latin-sounding Bonelli. The Bunn family has been musically minded in America for several generations. Famous in the Metropolitan for the leading roles he created in "Othello" and "Rigoletto," Bonelli has always expressed his preference for great singing roles rather than those that require more acting than singing. For Auto Production Hits High DETROIT, Nov. 27-(P)-Automo- tive News, in a survey of automobile ilant activity, today estimated total ,roduction for the current wpo, at 123,6P6 vehicles, the highest output I-vel reahbed .ned June. 1' 7. Anthology Of State Poetry To Be Printed An anthology of 97 representative Michigan poems, written by 24 of the state's outstanding poets, is scheduled to be printed by the University in the near future. Everything about Michigan which can be expressed in poetry is includ- ed in the publication ranging from explanations of what the state was like during the days of the Indian and explorer to what Michigan is like today. According to its editor, Prof. Carl E. Burklund of the engineering Eng- lish department, the collection is the first o be sponsored by any school in the state and possibly the first regional anthology to be published by any college or university Several of the poems are the work of students and members of the facul- ty including Professor Burklund, Prof. Bennett Weaver of the English department, Elizabeth Allen, Grad., of Ann Arbor, Charles Miller, '41, of Jackson, and John M. Brinnin, '41, of Ann Arbor. Author, poet and lecturer, Louis Untermeyer has this to say about the book in its foreword: "It is, I think, proper, if somewhat unusual, that a large educational institution should :got only support scientific researches and archeological explorations, but also encourage the creative energies cf the state." A ceramics exhibit, featuring art- icles prepared by Grover D. Cole and Ernst Munt of the College of Archi- tecture and Design, is being held un- til Dec. 7 on the first floor of the Architecture Building. Open to the public until 10 p.m., Ceramics Exhibit Now Being Shown cral private collections in Ann Arbor, from the research seminar in Islamic Art, from the Fart Eastern art de- partment and from the College. The exhibition demonstrates the various functions of clay showing it in several raw forms, colors and tex- every evening, the exhibit contains tures and showing how it is used in examples of the use of clay from sev-j industry and art. s, 4 i 70 ° GIVE AN AMERICAN-MADE I RICHARD BONELLI this reason, he has enjoyed yearly concert tours where he can experience "soulful delight" in exercising his "utmost vocal talent." Not only has the artist been ac- claimed on the concert and opera stages, but also in radio, where he has appeared as guest-artist on many national broadcasts. Possessed of a powerful, "manly" Voice, Bonelli has sung all of the wordl's greatest operas with th the greatest of present-day opera singers. IFPP- 17 JEWELS * For generation after gen- eration. 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