PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1941 PAGE TWO WEflNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1941 U I I Faculty Men Will Address Voters' Club State Will On Women's League Hold Discussion Foreign Policies Discussion of Latin American re- lations, defense finance and the Far East by experts in the field will be the highlights at the state meeting of the foreign policy section of the Michigan League of Women Voters which will be held today and tomor- row,. at the League. The first open meeting will be held immediately following the dinner which will be served at 6 15 p.m. Faculty members who will speak on the general subject of Latin-Ameri- can relations at this time will be Prof. Joseph Hayden of the politi- cal science department, Prof. Preston James of the geography department, and Prof. Dudley M. Phelps of the, school of business administration. The Latin American countries will be represented by Luiz Antonio Ce- vero da Costa of Brazil, J. Walter Dit- tel of Costa Rica and Lieut. Eliseo Vila of the Argentine Navy. Another open meeting will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow when Prof. Ro- bert Ford, head of the Bureau of Government, will address the dele- gates on defense finance. The Far East will be taken at the third open meeting which will be held at the luncheon immediately follow- ing. This discussion will be led by Prof. Robert Hall of the geography department and other faculty mem- bers will participate. The Ann Arbor league, of which Mrs. F. E. Ross is president, will be the hostess organization. Mrs. Charles F. Remer, who is the chairman of the foreign policy section of the Ann Ar- bor group, will preside at the lun- cheon meeting tomorrow. Ann Arbor Here Is Today's In Summary News New developments in the investiga- tion of the fatal stabbing of Price Osborne, 24-year-old Chelsea farm- hand, have raised a doubt in Prose- hutorGeorge Meader's mind whether to hold Beecher Price, the brother, for second or first degree murder. Two discrepancies have appeared in the testimony of Beecher who said he killed Beecher in self de- fense. Ann Arbor's 13th annual police and fireman's benefit ball will be held next Tuesday night in the Ma- sonic Temple it was announced yes- terday. Tickets for the dance will go on sale tomorrow. Proceeds of the dance will go into the department's joint fund for the payment of benefits to members' families in case of death. Capt. Ward Estes, army recruiting officer for flying cadets, was in Ann Arbor yesterday to interview young men interested in flight training with the army corps. He will remain in Ann Arbor today and will be available at the post office. Applicants must be between 20 and 27 years of age and must have had two years of college education. They must also be in good health. Training as non-flying cadets with the air corps also is available. Applicants for this program must be graduate engineers or have a sen- ior standing in an engineering col- lege. The pay for both programs is $75 monthly, plus expenses, during the nine months of training. When an aviator receives a commission and goes on active duty with the . air corps they receive $205.50 to $245.50 as second lieutenants. 'Oriental Weaving' I4 Subject Of Talk To Be Given Friday "Oriental Weaving" will be the sub- ject of a talk by Mrs. Percy B. Wil- liams, national authority and teacher on the subject, to be given at 2 p.m. Friday in the League. Mrs. Williams will show Persian rugs of yaried types, textiles, and brocades to illustrate her lecture. She- has conducted classes on the subject for 15 years in Toledo and other cities. She has also interpreted collections for Detroit, Toledo and Oberlin mu- seums. Mrs. B. A. deVere Bailey, chairman of the-Arts and Crafts division of the Woman's Club of Ann Arbor, is spon- soring the talk. Student Group Aids Paralysis Fund Drive Every year many fatalities are re- corded due to infantile paralysis, and many more cases are treated in which the victim, though recovering, suf- fers permanent afflictions. With this in mind thousands of doc- tors and research experts are search- ing for the cause and cure of the di- sease. Hospitals everywhere are being supplied with iron lungs and splints which can bring some hope to the sufferers of the dread disease. Only if the American public con- tributes generously to the funds of the National Foundation for Infan- tile Paralysis, which is now conduct- ing its yearly drive, can these ac- tivities be carried on, leaders of the drive assert. As a part of the national campaign a drive is being conducted on the campus by a student group headed by Hervie Haufler, '41, and Bill Combs, '41. The campus group is co- operating with the Ann Arbor com- mittee, which has a $2,000 goal. Mrs. A., M. Waldron and Mrs. Fielding Yost are co-chairmen of the Ann Ar- bor committee. Contributions to the campus fund may be sent to Hervie Haufler, Stu- dent Publications Building. Of the funds collected. one-half will remain in the community, and the remainder will go to the National Foundation. The National Foundation uses the funds not only to combat the disease through the purchase of such equip- ment as iron lungs, but also to spon- sor laboratory work aimed at determ- ining the cause and the cure of in- fantile paralysis.' Experts declare that it is virtually impossible to make any discoveries regarding the disease unless the pub- lic provides the necessary funds. Edwin Mains To Speak Here Professor Will Address Phi SigmaMeeting Describing , photomicro technique as an aid to biological research, Dr. Edwin D. Mains, professor of botany, and director of the University Her- barium, will address the initiation meeting of Phi Sigma, national bio- logical research society, at 8 p.m. to- day in the Rackham Building Entitled "Photography in Biology," his talk will be presented to the pres- ent organization and its 30 initiates. Mr. Robert W. Kleemeier, of the psy- chology department, president of Phi Sigma, will preside over the meeting and the induction services to follow. The observance of the society's 25th anniversary will be a feature of the meeting. Pres. Alexander G. Ruth- ven is a past national honorary pres- ident of the group. Prof. Rhead Will Present Faculty Concert Sunday Prof. Mabel Ross Rhead of the School of Music piano department will offer a Faculty Concert at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. Scheduled to be heard on the pro- gram are "Prelude and Fugue, Op. 35" by Mendelssohn, "Chaconne in G major" by Handel, "Sonata, Op. 2. No. 3" by Beethoven and Chopin's "Nocturne, Op. 27, No. 2", "Etude, Op. 25, No. 11", Mazurka, Op. 50, No. 3" and "Fantasie, F minor, Op. 49". Etchings On Exhibition In Architecture School Thirty etchings of landscape de- tails by Prof.-Emeritus Frank A. Waugh of the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology are on display in the first floor exhibition cases in the College of Architecture and Design. The display, which will continue until Feb. 1, consists mainly of trees, and demonstrates the ability of this medium to depict trunks and branches and the difficulty of representing fol- iage. Prof. Diamond's Book Enters Eighth Printing Prof. Thomas Diamond's book, "A Primer of Blue Print Reading," this week went into its eighth printing since publication, it has been re- vealed by the Bruce Publishing Com- pany of Milwaukee. The book provides drill in readingI blue prints and aims to develop skill in the use of mechanical-drawing tools. Professor Diamond, whose field is vocational education, also included teaching suggestions. Little Symphony Begins Southern Tour Today Pictured above is the University Little Symphony Orchestra which will begin its two-week tour of the Midwest and South today. In the center is Prof. Thor Johnson of the School of Music, conductor. Michigan's famed Little Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Prof. Thor Johnson of the School of Music, will leave Ann Arbor today for a two-week concert tour in which it will offer a total of 17 recitals in 14 different mid-western and south- ern cities. Organized in 1934, the Little Sym- phony has nrade several similar tours of this type and has to its credit approximately 350 concert appear- ances in 25 states. The concerts have been presented primarily in the lead- ing institutions of higher education and prominent musical centers. The group, composed of 16 assis- tants in instrumental instruction at the University, was formed for the double purpose of gaining experience in professional concertizing and ac- quaint the musical public in various sections of the country with the cali- bre of youthful American artists. The director and organizer, Pro- fessor Johnson, is also conductor of the 90-piece University Symphony Orchestra and the University Choral Physicists Develt To Speed Up) By DAN BEHRMAN Speeding up analysis of metallic alloys to a new high, the spectroscope is gaining wider use in foundries and steel mills throughout the na- tion. In the past, spectroscopic anal- ysis of alloy steel has not been ac- curate enough for industrial work, but the apparatus developed by Dr. Har- vard B. Vincent and Dr. Ralph A. Sawyer of the University physics de- partment has yielded exceptionally high reproducibility of results. Spectroscopic analysis depends on the fact that heated metal radiates light. The apparatus splits the light into various wave lengths, and no Congress J-Hop Booth Reservations Available Reservations are still available for places in the Independent Booth at the J-Hop, William H. Rockwell, '41, president of Congress, Independent Men's Association, announced yes- terday. The Independent Booth will be the Union. During the annual May Fes- tival he conducts the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra in two concerts. In 1916-37, he studied in Europe as a recipient of the Frank Hunting-' ton Beebe Fellowship and last sum- mer he was a scholarship student un- der Serge Koussevitsky in' the Berk- shires. Aside from his work here, Pro- lessor Johnson has achieved national recognition as conductor of the Grand Rapids Symphony and as mus- ical director of the annual Mozart Festival in Ashville, N. C., which he founded in 1937. During its tour the Little Sym- phony will play at Bowling Green High School in Bowling Green, Ohio; the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music in Cincinnati; Berea College in Berea, Ky.; Ashville School lfor Boys, Ash- ville, N.C.; Shorter College, Rome, Ga.; Americus, Ga.; Georgia State College for Women, Milledgeville, Ga.; and the University of Georgia, Ath- ens, Ga. in the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C.; Salem High School and Salem College in Winston-Salem, N.C.; Davidson College, Davidson, N.C.; Queens College, Charlotte, N.C.; Bluefield, W. Va.. and Charleston, W. Va. Students in the Orchestra who will make the trip include: Edward Or- mond, '42SM, Thomas Wheatley, '42SM, Italo frajola, Grad., Sam Kurlandsky, Grad., Frank Fischer, Grad., Vladimir Lukashuk, '42SM, Margery Mellott, '43SM, Clyde Thompson, '42SM, William Golz, '41E, Alfred Burt, '42SM, Gail Rector, Spec., Kenneth Van Der Heuvel, '42SM, Joseph White, Grad., Dudley Howe, '44SM, Jean Jeffrey, '43, and William Stubbins comprise the group. Fine Arts Men Attend Meeting Rifle Team Loses Contest To Indiana Wolverine Target Squad Drops Big Ten Match; Score Is 1,892-1,847 The University Rifle Team fell in step with the basketball team yester- day when it was announced that the marksmen had lost their second Big Ten contest to the University of In- diana, 182 to 147. Helping no little bit in the Indiana victory was an Indiana high score of 383 out of a possible 400, which is one of the best scores turned in this year. Verne C. Kennedy, Jr., '42E, captain of the Michigan team, announced. Far from being a complete loss, hcwever, last week's score was more than sufficient to give the Michi- gan squad wins over Coe College, Gettysburg College and Texas Tech, the last by default. In their first Big Ten match shot two weeks ago, the team lost to the University of Illinois. Officially cor- rected targets gave the Illini a mar- gin of only three points, however. Shooting high scores for the Michi- gan squad were Richard O. Jones, '43E, Harry E. Altman, '43E, Gordon A. Stumpf, '41E, David H. Weisburg, '44E, and Albert D. Engstrom, '44. Book Published By Blanshard Alunnus Writes Treatise On Nature Of Thought Brand Blanshard, a member of the Class of '14 and an assistant profes- sor in philosophy here from 121-5. has recentlyly published a philoso- phical treatise on idealism, entitled "Nature of Thought." In 1913 Blanshard won an Oxford scholarship, where he earned a de- gree in Bachelor of Science. After he had received a master's degree from Columbia and his doctoral degree from Harvard, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1929 to study and write a book in England and Germany. Since that time, Blan- shard has taught philosophy at Swarthmore College, outside Phila- delphia. Blanshard's new book is being ac- claimed by literary critics as one of the most outstandirng books of philos- ophy in a decade. Blanshard has been particularly interested in exploring the processes of thought in perception and in determining the goals of thought. Other concerts have been scheduled Three members of the fine arts de- partment will participate in the na- /i'N-'3-LI U4tional convention of the College Art o Apparatu Association to be held today through eASaturday in Chicago. M eta lic.Anal sis!Prof. Harold E. Wethey, chairman of the fine arts department, will act two elements produce the same set as chairman of the special session of spectrum lines. Quantitative an- on "Methods of Research in Artistry," alysis of metal is possible, because the and Richard Ettinghausen, associate strength of the spectrum is one ele- ment of an alloy varies with its con- professor in the history of Islamic centration in the mixture. Quanti- art, will precent the opening ad- tative analysis requires, unvarying dress on the subject of "Painting in vaporization and excitation of the Fatimid Egypt." alloy, and complete calibration of all , Mr. James Plumer, lecturer in Far processes entering into the analysis Eastern Art, will also take part in of the light emitted by the excited the convention sessions, speaking on vapors. "Design and Technique in Early Chi- The apparatus, developed through nese Bronze Mirrors." the Dept. of Engineering Research, resembles a short wave transmitter without an antennae. It has been in- Arch Students Wi Award stalled in a number of plants, includ- The report of the Jury at the Uni- ing the Ford Motor Company's foun- versity of California announced the daries at River Rouge. The River winners of the Landscape Exchange Rouge installation handles eight Competition yesterday to be Fran hundred samples per day, and analy- Willsey and Robert Lillibridge, both sis results can be posted in a third of the University department of of the time needed by chemical wet landscape and architecture. The prob- Imethods. lem called for a design for a western Besides high speed, the spectro- state park with construction detail scope offers low operating costs, per- figures. Other places of merit were mitting a plant to increase the num- given to students of Cincinnati and ber of tests it can take. Dr. Vincent Pennsylvania State College. largest at the J-Hop and will cover and Dr. Sawyer nave also speeded an entire end of the Intramural up the processing of the photographic Building. Reservations may be made plates used in this work. any afternoon between the hours of The improved spectroscope tech- 3 and 5 p.m. at Congress office, nique, first used by foundries, has Room 306 in the Union. Reserva- been introduced into large steel mills tions cost 75 cents per couple. to aid the industry in its defense Those wishing reservations are speedup. Source equipment and in- urged to apply as soon as possible, struments for further installations as the booth reservations are filling are now being constructed in the Uni- up fast, Rockwell explained. versity. 1r. MICHIGAN Loving, fighting dare-devils of the air ...zooming to the mightiest thrills ...the most stirring romance ... since "Hell Divers"' i BLUE BOOKS All Sizes and Rulings buy Them Now! 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