J'~iGE M~r 1 V- VMl i ;:; R iT,=N: I'll vat Xvnrr r I'lix .a. la a-: !rx x "..r la x V k4. A P xJ :!,..1 L: .I. .. .4JY c ; n i'I a 1!344 t City Art Show Honors 3 U Staff Members Slusser,,Chapin, Dana Are Winners; Poplar Prize To Be Awarded Three members of the University faculty, Prof. Jean Paul Slusser, Mrs. Myron B. Chapin and Eugene Dana, received awards in the exhibition for artists of Ann Arbor and vicinity which opened at the Rackham Gal- leries Friday. First honors in the class of oil painting went to Prof. Slusser, of the College of Architecture and Design, for his "Landscape," a composition of wintry brown fields and hills. Mrs. Chapin, teacher of fine arts in Uni- versity High School, divided honors in the field of water color with Mar- garet Bradfield for her gouache, "Courageous Geranium." Detroiters Judge Dana, a newcomer to the staff of the architectural school, received the award in the graphic arts group for his abstract college, "Drawing, 1939." The awards were made by a jury invited from Detroit, Miss Helen May and Sarkis Sarkisian, both Mich- igan painters. A popular prize is also being voted by visitors to the galleries during the week. Featuring more than 100 examples of exhibition painting, sculpture and crafts, the event is the 21st annual exhibition for local artists to be spon- sored by the Ann Arbor Art Associa- tion. Artists, both professional and amateur, are allowed to enter three works. Servicemen Enter Works Among other artists represented are Professors Roger Bailey, Myron B. Chapin, Donald Gooch, Emil Wed- dige, Alexander M. Valerio, Marion Haile and Aarre Lahti of the faculty of the College of Architecture and Design and Carleton W. Angell of the University Museum. Several entries this year also come from members of the armed forces stationed on campus. The exhibition will be open to the public daily except Sundays from 2 to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 10 p.m. through May Festival Week and con- tinuing until May 12. Symposium on China Is Today Miss Chao To Talk On Ancient Philosophy "Chinese Philosophy" will be the topic for discussion at the third in the series of symposiums on China, which will be held at 7:30 p.m. today at the International Center. The discussion will be opened by Miss Celia Chao, a graduate student of philosophy from Shanghai, China. She will discuss the three main schools of Chinese philosophy, the school of Confucius and his two disci- ples, Mencius and Suntze, that of Moti and the school of Laotze. Moti is the latest of these though they all prospered at about the same time, the sixth century, B.C. Miss Chao will discuss the older Chinese political philosophy as well as the individual ethics set forth by these philosophers. She indicated further that she will identify this philosophy with modern Chinese thought. Guest chairmen for the discussion will be Prof. Roy Lautenschlager, who taught formerly at Hankow Univer- sity, and Herman Yueh, president of the Chinese Student Society. The meeting is open to the public. Peridontology Academy Meets The fourth postgraduate program for the American Academy of Peri- dontology, which opened here yester- row in the Kellogg Building, features a series of lectures and demonstra- tions by authorities on diseases of the gumsfrom all over the country. The program, sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation Institute of graduate and postgraduate dentistry, will include today an address on "Pharmacology of the Sulfonamides and Their Toxic Effects" by Dr. Mau- rice Seevers, chairman of the Univer- sity pharmacology department, and a lecture on "Clinical Application of Sulpha Drugs and Penicillin" by Dr. H. M. Pollard, professor of internal medicine at the University. Dr. Balint Orban of Loyola Uni- versity will speak on "Gingival In- flamation" and Dr. Phillip Jay of the University will give a report of re- search on dental caries. Dr. A. C. Curtis, University professor of derm- atology, will give a clinical demon- stration of dermatological manifes-3 tation. Honorary Speech Group i _ _ 1,014 YEARS OF DEMO( Ieland Se exallpit 1 whic i"t. r(' of the world should note of how people can live together without political revolution or violence of any type," Candidate' Buster Cole of the 0th OC Class of the Judge Advocate General's School said yestei day. Candidate Cole recently returned from Iceland, where he was sta- tioned for 13 months. IUe'said that there are 150,000 people living on the island. li 1930 they celebrated the 1,000th anniversary of their republican form of government. "In the past 100 years there have been only three murders in Iceland. There was one twenty years ago, one ten years prior to that and one in 1854. This is probably due to the fact that there is no competition in that country as there is in other parts of the world," he continued. According to Candidate Cole, the people know that there are plenty of fish in the tsea, so they never have to worry about where their next meal is coming from. They also know that whereas they will never starve to death, neither will they ever become extremely weal- thy. Therefore, one of their main occupations is getting along with rtheir neighbors. "The Icelandic people are very po- lite and always serve coffee and cake whenever anyone drops in on- them. For breakfast they usually have bread and cheese, coffee and cake. CRACY: ts Good Peace Exwnple At 10 a.m. they again have coffee and cake. They eat fish and potatoes for their noon meal. At 4 p.m. they again eat coffee and cake. Dinner is served at 8 or 9 p.m. and consists of fish and potatoes or mutton," Can- didate Cole added. All the homes in the city of Reyk- javik, the capital of Iceland, are heated by circulating hot water which is piped from volcanic springs 13 miles away, he said. Candidate Cole stated that the entire population lives along the coastline never more than 10 or 20 miles interior as the entire inland is barren and uninhabitable. Approxi- mately 80,000 people live in the city of Reykjavik and the rest of the people are scattered around in small fishing villages. . "All the men in Iceland have Tuxedos. They wear them every time three of them get together. All the men and the younger women follow New York and London styles in their dress," he said. "The women have a national dress which the older onIs Isti clL hO. It consists of a fine black silk dress trimmed in gold or silver, either a small black or white lace cap and long braids with gold or silver rings around them," he explained. Candidate Cole said that the peo- ple are of Norwegian origin and that Lutheranism is the state religion, with about 99 per cent of the people belonging to the Lutheran Church. "All the education in Iceland is free. Tuition is not charged even for the university. They have a school equivalent to our grade school and one equivalent to our high school and junior college com- bined. In order to graduate from this second school one must be able to read, speak and write in five different languages," he added. The Icelandic language is that which was spoken by the Norwegians at the time Iceland was settled. Con- sequently, the people can read the old Norwegian books, but not the modern ones, Candidate Cole con- cluded. -I QUINTUPLETS GET AN AIRING-The Diligenti quintuplets sun them- selves in a playpen outside their Buenos Aires, Argentina, home. Little Franco is held by Senorita Regina Monsalvo of theBuenos Aires maga- zine Aqui Esta, whose photographer made this picture. The others are (left to right) Carlos Alberta, Maria Christina, Maria Fernanda and Maria Esther. UPSIDE DOWN: Architectural Exhibit Shows Reversed Building Principles -1 Cooperative Economy Foreseen As Help in Advertising Depression v "Frank Lloyd Wright's revolution- any building is like a set of public buildings turned upside down, start- ing from the ground down instead of the ground up, with the gardens and playgrounds on top and the offices below," commented Prof. W. O. Whit- temore, of the School of Architecture, yesterday about Wright's Civic Cen- ter plan now on exhibit in the foyer of the Architecture Building. ' "It is like a series of five shelves built out over the lake, and it makes people reconsider the whole purpose of building and its relation to the peculiarities of the site," he contin- ued. "It is a very unusual and revo- lutionary arrangement for a Civic Center." Two Terraces Built There are two huge concrete ter- races, the upper on a level with the street; the lower and larger terrace three stories below. Between the two terraces occupying three stories are the Civic, Auditorium and the City and County court rooms and offices. On the upper terrace are the park- ing squares for cars, elevator lifts, glass domes and fountains; and on the second level is the main entrance, the city and county offices and the second balcony of the center audi- torium and the garden area. In order to support the tremendous weight of the five stories and the two terraces, triangular piers of about 35--feet on each side could be sunk down to the hardpan strata unde the lake. The terraces are lighted by huge triangular glass towers on top of the DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Medical Building. Subject: Reticulo- Endothelial System. All interested are invited. Coming Events Chemistry Colloquium, will meet on Wednesday, April 26, at 4:15 p.m. in Rm. 303, Chemistry Building. Profes- sor L. O. Case will speak on "Some Considerations Concerning Phase Equilibria in Gas-Hydrate Systems." All interested are invited. The Stump Speakers' Society of Sigma Rho Tau will present an Ox- ford Union Forum "Should Engineers Unionize?" this Wednesday evening at 7:30. The meeting, taking place in the Michigan Union, will be keynoted by Prof. Ferdinand N. Menefee. Sev- eral student members will also take part. The public is urged to attend and to take part in the discussion. The Association Music Hour will present Mozart's "Requiem Mass" at Lane Hall, Wednesday evening, April 26, at 7:30 p.m. Everyone interested is cordially invited. Inter-Guild will have its weekly luncheon Wednesday noon in the Fireside Room of Lane Hall. Rev. C. H. Loucks will speak on Religion's Remedy. All that are interested are made at Lane Hall (University ex- change). Michigan Wolverine Students' Co- operative Restaurant, Inc.: The an- nual membership meeting will be held on Monday, May 1, 1944, at 7:30 p.m., at the Michigan League Building. concrete piers. The glass domes over the auditorium and court rooms are topped by huge fountains which throw water 100 feet into the air, cooling the rooms below and giving a vibrating light effect. Professor Whittemore explained that in placing the building on the lake shore bluff and by the existing railroad tracks, Wright had to con- sider several things; the court and office buildings, the city offices, the civic auditorium, the Union railroad station, the lake front drive and the large amount of parking space re- quired., Center Built on Lake There was no space to put all these except beyond the edge of the bluff, which meant one of two things. Either Wright had to fill out over the lake by dumping dirt into the lake and building on piles or he could built out over the lake on piers. He chose the latter, using huge piers of reinforced concrete. "This Civic Center building shows a trend in the remarkable possibilities of the use of reinforced concrete to construct any shape of building on almost any site," Professor Whitte- more commented. "It is also revolu- tionary in the reversed principle and in the form of building out over the lake." The exhibit will be in the foyer of the Architecture School until May 1. Photostat copies have been made of the seven drawings to be used for future references by the students. Dr. Lemon Gives 'Talk on Orient Hindu-Western Ideals Compared in Discussion Dr. William P. Lemon, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, said that the Orient has anticipated a great deal of our thinking in a speech Sun-1 day at the International Center. Speaking on "Hindu Thought," Dr. Lemon said "we have lost a great deal because we have been obsessed with the visible. Our senses have deceived us. But India has taught consistently that the primary part of life is the spiritual." In discussing the "negative nature of reality," he said, "You can never describe the infinite except \in nega- tive terms." He stated that life is not to be explained by any intellec- tual formula and that all our induc- tive philosophy depends on insight and intuition. Both the paradoxicall nature of truth and the use of insight, he said, have been anticipated by India. He added that the impersonal as- pect is fundamental in both Hindu thought and in Buddhism, "and in emphasizing this India has done us a great favor." Dr. Lemon was introduced by Miss Mercy Cornelius of Madras, India. 'Ensian Covers Available Covers for the Michiganensian have arrived and may be obtained at the 'Ensian office in the Student Publi- cations Building this week. There are extra covers available for those who were unable to get them last semester. FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW4 NEW YORK Three-Year Day Course Children'Art Exhibit Opened By Mrs. Salgado o An exhibit that goes into every phase of Philippine life, language and history and which was arranged by Mrs. Eduardo Salgado, a graduate student of museum science at the University, opened yesterday in the Children's Museum, Detroit. Aimed at the children's level, the exhibit explains Philippine life and culture through models, maps, pic- tures, cut-outs and other illustrative objects. President Alexander . G. Ruthven and Dr. Warren E. Bow, president of Wayne University and superintendent of Detroit schools, spoke at the opening last night. Mrs. Salgado, a native of Manila, has spent many months preparing and collecting the materials for 25 large cases which comprise the ex- hibit. This has been part of the work required for an advanced course in her field. Hockey Cl0 To Hold First Meeting The WAA sponsored Hockey Club will hold its first meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in the small lounge of the WAB for all women interested in the sport. A practice session will follow the short organi'zational meeting, accord- ing to Helen Masson, '45, manager of the club. She said that womenj are urged to come dressed appropri- ately, in shorts, slacks or jeans and that tennis shoes are not required. Avukah Study Group To Hold Discussion Tonight The Avukah Study Group will hold its weekly discussion on topics of current Jewish interest at 8 p.m. to- day in the Hillel Foundation lounge. Eliza Dworkin will lead a discus- sion on the question, "Must One Mi- grate to Palestine To Be a Zionist?" That cooperative economy can help avert depression was pointed out by a professor of economics at a con- ference of the Mid-west Federation of Campus Cooperatives, held recently at Antioch College, Ohio. Five stu- dent members of the Inter-Coopera- tive Council returned Sunday from the conference. During a panel made up of pro- fessors from Antioch College, a sug- gestion was made that government war plants be turned over to the Co- operatives after the war. It was Pro- fessor Corey, Department of Econ- omics at Antioch, who pointed out that cooperative economy can avert depression, as was shown, he safd, when Cooperatives expanded during the depression, unaffected by the ec- onomic collapse of the rest of the world. It was later stated that heav- ier industries should be nationalized rather than placed in the hands of private ownership. Cooperative Action Necessary Because one of the principles of the Cooperatives is political neutrality, one of the delegates brought up the question of the extent of this prin- ciple. A panel member stated that cooperative action, union action and political action are necessary for the development of a stable economy. He went on to say that full em- ployment is vital to all and Coopera- tives should take action on this ques- tion. In summary, he said that Co- operatives should take political 'ac- tion as long as they do not run the risk of a split within themselves. As to the question of the use of students in the Consumer Coopera- tives it was stated in one lecture that students should not expect to start out as leaders, but must work up through the menial jobs offered in the field. While still in school, the speak- er went on to say, students should try to get classes in economics and his- tory departments on cooperatives so that other students could learn more of the movement. Representatives Visit Campus After the panel many students went through the dormitories, the student book store and college buildings. Be- tween meetings they talked with An- tioch students and professors in or- der to become acquainted with the organization of the college. They reported that the entire college is run on a cooperative plan in which stu- dents alternate between.studying and working outside of school. Toward the end of the conference Oberlin College was chosen to be the executive committee for the MFCC during nect year, and delegates were informed of a national convention for campus Co-ops set for Oct. 6 in Chicago. The constitution for the MFCC was also formed and is to be returned to individual campuses. t *T TOP NOTCHERS From the Hat Box . . . thinking caps for bright young ladies. Tiny felt skull caps in rainbow colors. Pin on your pet thinga- mabob, or wear it "as is" for class, date, or church. FOR THE MAN ON YOUR MIND "Calkins-Fletcher offers HIS -anew line of masculine toilet articles. Shaving lotion, soap and mug, or cream... in three- in-one sets or packaged sepa- rately. Reasonably priced, too! ONj ME A _ . -".,,_ ; (K for lips Behifid your Ears?" 1 Do you have it behind your ears? The expression is ofd but the idea is new. 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