THE MICriGAN DAILY T NU -I: I. . SD:-tT, Al-itil): 4, N e w s f ' ' B.iie ~ o r e Newman Club To Hold Party; iunllev To Lecture at Hillel ed at Amirabad Post in Teheran. Iran, wrote that the news was print- 3d in an April morning edition of the daily News Bulletin, compiled by Radio News Service. It came out of qnn Arbor via wire services and was picked up by the Army News Service in New York City, where it was :adio-teletyped overseas. Stauter wrote of traveling by first, second, and third class on the single- track Iranian State railway, riding in the cab of an American-built Die- sel locomotive, and on the "dog- house" of the Persian version of a :aboose, and ending up by sharing a aoxcar with five Iranians, two Rus- ;ians and three Indian soldiers. The Iranian State railway starts r little above sea level and rises to nore than 7,000 feet in the moun- ;ains. It has been operated by the Ihird Military Railway Service since Jan. 1, 1943. "The bulk of more than 5,000,000 ;ons of war supplies, from -tanks, ;uns, munitions, to boots, beans and kim milk, have been hauled by the United States soldier railroaders over ,his railroad, one of the world'sj ;reat engineering feats,"the letter tated. "On one stretch of the rail- :oad there are 133 tunnels in 130j miles." Among his experiences in the old ,ountry of Persia, Stauter lists his ;ight of the crown jewels which back he currency of Iran and his meeting with the king. i i ', i "Poo Poo Fenner and his Fasci- nating Five" will be among the en- tertainers at the Newman Club "Gay Nineties" party, which will be held, from 8 p. m. to midnight EWT (7 to 11 p. m. CWT) Friday at the club- rooms in St. Mary's Chapel, Williams and Thompson streets. "The clubrooms have been deco- rated in keeping with the theme," Doris Heidgen, member of the Exec- utive Council said, "and will include everything from red checked table clothes to Grandma's and Grandpa's tintype." Other entertainers are the barber- shop quartet of Rogers and Demp- sey-the Barbery Coast Boys and Jane Gourley and Jeanne Arbogast Special late permission has beenI granted Navy personnel, she an- nounced. All Newman Club mem- bers and their guests are invited to attend. -LIBRARY MAP ROOM: i "What Kind of Settlement for Ja- pan?" is the topic of the lecture to be delivered by Dr. Frank L. Hunt- ley, Area Instructor in the Civil Af- fairs Training School following the regular Friday evening services at 7:45 p. m. EWT (6:45 p. m. CWT) tomorrow at the Hillel Foundation. Dr. Huntley, whose parents were medical missionaries, was reared in Shanghai, China, leaving for the United States at 17 to attend Oberlin College. Later he received a Ph.D. from the U. of Chicago. Dr. Huntley has taught English at Washington University, Carlton Col- lege and Oberlin College. In Japan he was affiliated with Doshisha Uni- versity (Kyota) and the Kyota Im- perial University. A social hour at which refresh- ments will be served, will be held at the conclusion of Dr. Huntley's talk, TROOPS ARRIVE AS STRIKE TIES UP DELIVERIES-Troops set up camp in Grant Park, Chicago, for expected federal intervention in strike of 6,500 truck drivers. The War Labor Board last night ad- vised termination of strike in announcing that it will review the industry's wage polic . RAJPUT ART EXHIBIT: Camera Reveals Hindu Artists Knew Technique of Animation By ANITA FRANZ Prof. Preston W. ,Slosson will be the principal speaker of the Annual National Convention of Sigma Rho' Tau, engineering speech fraternity, -peaking on the topic "America: Im- erialist? Isolationist? International- ist?" at 7:30 p.m. EWT ('6:30 p.m. 'WT) Saturday in Rm. 318, the Union. Slosson's talk, which is open to the public, will be followed by a short discussion period, and is a feature of the speakers convention. The national meeting, to be attend- ed by representatives from Sigma Rho Tau chapters at Wayne Uni- versity, the University of Detroit, and Detroit Institute of Technol- ogy, will elect a national president and secretary at a business meet- ing Saturday afternoon. Following a dinner and Slosson's talk, the convention will witness four annual inter-collegiate speaking con- tests. In the first, a Hall of Fame Contest, speakers from the colleges represented will compete in nomi- nating candidates for the Sigma Rho Tau Hall of Fame from the fields of engineering, architecture, science, and technology. Rudolph Habermann will represent the Ann Arbor Alpha chapter, speaking on Nicholas Tesla, electrical genius. William Blakely will represent the University in a Raconteur con- test, in which he will present an en- tertaining, dramatic illustrative anecdote. An impromptu contest in which speakers will have five minutes to prepare a talk will fol- low, with James Stouttspeaking for. the Alpha chapter. Hindu artists mastered the tech- nique of animation years before Walt Disney brought it to the American screen. A photographic examination of the "Krishna Dancing With the Milk- maids," featured item in the Insti- tute of Fine Arts sponsored exhibit of 18th century Rajput art, revealed' things to the camera lens not visible to the human eye. Pictures taken Tuesday night by University photo- grapher George Swain and Engineer- ing Research Assistant Barton ,J Howell disclosed an entire prelimi- nary drawing in light red. Commenting upon this discov- ery, Prof. James M. Plumer, Asso- History... (continued from Page 1) known personalities of the early 1900's. Madame Schumann-Heink Prof. Donal Haines of the journal- ism department told of a concert by Madam Schumann-Heink, "who was always a clown anyway." The Frieze Memorial organ, now in Hill Audit- orium, was then in University Hall. Its pipes were separated from the stage by a thin wooden wall, in which were two doors opening onto the stage. After her concert the singer and her accompanist could .not find either door and, to make the best of their confusion, Madam Heink play- ed it up and staged a comedy of her own. Another historical event was de- scribed by Wilfred Shaw. At the Spanish-American War, Dean Vic- tor W. Vaughn of the medical school was delegated to urge students to re- main in school. "In the assembly Dean Vaughn ended by encouraging the men to enlist," Shaw said. Law School Anecdote At another lecture in which the Law School was especially interested. the "Laws" sat on the main floor and{ other students in the gallery. After the meeting, the ditty, "Lits in the high chair! Who put 'em there? Laws! Laws!" was chanted. When Bryan spoke here in 1902 he provoked so much enthusiastic stamping of feet that it was feared the hall was soon to see its last days, and in 1905 "The Inlander" pointed out the shaking of the floor, seats, and gallery during a performance. Laboratory Theatre Extensive public use of the room was cut down with the completion of Hill Auditorium in 1913. The then newly-organized Play Production under Prof. R. D. T. Hollister of the speech department converted the auditorium into a laboratory theatre and presented such plays as "The! Merry Wives of Windsor," Masefield's "Tragedy,' 'and "Pilars of Society." Malcolm MacLean, now president of Hampton Institute and a recent speaker at commencement exercises here, acted in "Se vant in the House" in 1916. Prof. Lokis M. Eich of the speech department and G. E. Dens- more, chairman of the Department of Speech, also appeared in some of the Play Production performances. Play by Betty Smith Again in 1929 Play Production under Prof. Valentine Windt got per- mission from the fire department to use the auditorium, and after clean- ing it, the members presented a ser- ies of free plays, among them one by Betty Smith, now famous. author of "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn." The auditorium was finally con- demned in 1930, and has been used since as a storeroom for Prof. Fair- banks' works and for material be- longing to the Bureau of Appoint- ments. ciate Professor of Fine Arts, said, "The importance of the under- drawing is that it proves the exist- ence in the author's mind of a multiple of living images. "Figures. arms and hands were drawn several times, not unlike the series of drawings made for a Walt Disney cartoon. Unlike Disney, however, the Indian artist expectedI the spectator to animate the pic- ture himself. This effect was accomplished by drawing the picture in two visual perspectives, one horizontal, the oth- er vertical "Studied in either perspective alone the picture appears distorted, and the elements only assume the right relationship to each other when the spectator's eye is moving. "The technique is a trick on the part of the painter to induce the spectator to become a participant in the dance depicted. * "Another even more remarkable discovery is that the meaning of the Krishna dance rests on a secret inner mystery which, like the red lines in the underdraw- ing, is not easily perceived, and may only be understood by an ap- proach on the part of the spectator with two perspectives, one physical, the other metaphysical." The exhibition, which closes Sat- urday, is open to the public from 2 to 5 p.m. EWT (1 to 4 p. m. CWT) week-days, and from 10 to noon EWT (9 to 11 a. m. CWT), Saturday, in Rm. B, Alumni Memorial Hall. Bill Approved for Survey In Great Lakes Region WASHINGTON, May 23.-P)- A bill to authorize the House rivers and harbors committee to survey erosion damage on Great Lakes beaches and along the nation's coast lines was approved today by the House Rules Committee. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) tainnent, games, refreshments, and a Walt Disney film "South of the Border" at 7:30 CWT. Graduate stu- dents and their friends are cordially invited. Architecture and Design School Party: Friday, May 25, from 8 to 12' p.m., Women's Athletic Building. The Graduate Outing Club is spon- soring a bicycle picnic on May 27 at 1:30. Everyone is asked to bring their own lunch and bicycle and meet in the Outing Room at 1:30 p.m. University of Michigan Concert Band: William D. Revelli, Conductor, will present its 32nd Annual Spring Concert at 3:15 (CWT) Sunday af- ternoon, May 27, in Hill Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. A.A.U.P. Annual Meeting: At the Michigan Union Monday, May 28, 6:15 p.m. Election of officers and consideration of resolutions present- ed at the last meeting. Join the Un- ion Cafeteria line at 6:15 and take trays to the lunch room of the Fac- ulty Club. Women members go dir- ectly to the Faculty Club lunch room through the Union Cafeteria, where arrangements will be made for their trays. TYPEWRITERS Geology Camp To Be Attended By 50 Students Wyoming Field Station Begins Survey July 9 Camp Davis, the University field camp for geology and surveying, will be attended this summer by 50 stu- dents, 20 from Michigan and 30 from other schools, according to Prof. R.L. Belknap, acting director of geologic field work there. The camp is located 20 miles south- east of Jackson, Wyo., and 75 miles south of Yellowstone National Park. It is in the famed "Jackson Hole Country". U.S. Highway 187, which connects the Lincoln Highway at Rock Springs, Wyo., with Yellow- stone Park, passes within a mile of the camp. Ideal for Field Study "Almost everything of a geological nature which affords opportunity for field study is found within a 50 mile radius," Prof. Belknap said. The summer climate is almost perfect, he added, with an average total pre- cipitation of only .4 inches during the summer. The elevation is 6,113 feet above sea level. The 50 students, representing a- bout 15 different schools and col- leges, will begin their work July 9. Students from Ann Arbor will leave here July 2 in University-owned sta- tion wagons. They will make a broad survey of the geological features of the area between the Great Lakes and the Teton Mountains. Other Students Join Group The group will drive through Wis- consin, southern Minnesota, the Bad Lands of South Dakota, the Black Hills, the Big Horn Mountains, and Yellowstone Park. Students from other institutions will join the party along the way. Camp Davis was established orig- inally for field work in surveying. The present head of the camp is Prof. Harry Bouchard, of the School of Engineering. Other staff members are Prof. H. L Waness of the Uni- versity of Illinois, Prof. Henry S. Sharp of Barnard College, and Le- land Horberg of the Illinois Geologi- cal Survey. Enrollment Restricted Students may elect thefield course for six, eight, or ten weeks. The re- quirement for admission is a year's work in geology, but due to the war emergency, enrollment is restricted to those intending to concentrate in geology. Courses include an intro- ductory course in field geology for undergraduate students, and advanc- ed courses and special problems for graduate students. Besides taking the special field courses, points of interest, such as the great slide on the Gros Ventre River and the beautiful lake country along the base of the Teton Moun- tains, are visited on week-ends. Trips are made into regions so mountain-' ous that even horses cannot traverse them. Hitler Reported Put to Death in Mercy Killing FLENSBURG, May 23.-(,P)-Rus- sian intelligence reports to Supreme Headquarters said today that Adolf Hitler was put to death in a mercy killing by a physician needs in the main reading room, they1 would be amazed to discover the large collection that is available in the Library's Map Room. This room, located in the south- west corner of the building on thef third floor holds a collection of overf 20,000 maps. Any student wishing to use its facilities many do so bya inquiring in the main reading room1 and the librarians will gladly help him find the map that will best suit his purposes. Duplicates of maps may be drawn from the glass topped tracing table. Large light bulbs be- neath the glass facilities tracing on1 thin, white paper.r Army Map Service' The Map Room receives many of the maps released by United States government agencies and bureaus. Of1 particular, interest and value are the maps being released by the Unit- ed States Army Map Service. Since the outbreak of the war, this service has been gathering maps of areas whose defense is vital to the Allies. With the aid of photographers, and the Intelligence Service, old maps have been corrected and improved and in some cases, new ones have been made. Since these maps are made for use by the military authori- ties, they show minute details of re- lief. While a small percentage of them have been released, the University has already received over 5,000. For security reasons, the use of these1 valuable maps is restricted to those using them for official purposes, but1 Lansing Alumni To Hear Prof. Dorr. "Dumbarton Oaks and After" is< the subject of a speech by Prof. Har- old M. Dorr of the political science1 department before the University of Michigan Club at Lansing today. Robert 0. Morgan, assistant gen- eral secretary of Alumni Association, will accompany Prof. Dorr to Lansing and speak on alumni activities. Coeds Ituerested In USO To Meet Today Coeds interested in becoming Jun- ior Hostesses or in doingUSO work have been asked to attend an Orien- tation meeting at 7:30 p. m. (EWT) today at Harris Hall.p Any former hpstess who wishes to be reinstated is also requested to at-1 tend the meeting. Women who at-f tended a similar session Monday need not be present.C Julius Streicher Captured In Bavarian Hills by Yank BERCHTESGADEN, May 23.-P) -Julius Streicher, the Nazis' violent No. 1 Jew-baiter, was captured today by a Jewish officer from New York. MOSELEY TYPEWRITER AND SUPPLY CO. 114 SOUTH FOURTH AVE. Complete Typewriter Service Phone 5888 Maps of Coastline Other maps distributed by the United States Coast and Geodetic Service in the Department of Com- merce give detailed information on the continental coastline of the Unit- ed States. In addition, copies of numerous maps released by state bu- reaus and agencies are available in the Map Room. When planning canoe trips on the Huron River or bike hikes in the vicinity, the stu- dent may benefit by consulting the relief maps of the Ann Arbor area. Aside from receiving maps from these various distributive sources, many professors and alumni have added to the collection. Notable among these is Professor Emeritus William Hobbs of the geology de- partment whose exploring trips to Greenland, Canada and the South Pacific islands have brought many interesting and valuable additions to the Map Room. Pianist To Give Recital Today Ruth Wolkowsky Will Play Brazilian Suite Several dances from the Brazilian suite by Milhaud will highlight the piano recital to be presented by Ruth Wolkowsky, student in the School of Music, at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p.m. CWT) today in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Opening her program with the Bach-Busoni arrangement of "Chac- onne," Miss Wolkowsky will also play the Schubert "Sonata in A minor, Op. 164" and the Brahms "Sonata in C major, Op. 1." She is a-pupil of Prof. Joseph Brinkman and studied with Hannah Asher at the University of Miami before entering the Uni- versity in 1943. Contralto Will Present Recital Marian Cole Siegfried, contralto, will feature selections by Schumann, Torelli, Carpenter and Pergolesi on her recital at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Accompanied by Ruby Kuhlman, Mrs. Siegfried will sing a group of five American compositions, in ad- dition to selections from "Jeanne d'Arc," "Frauenliebe und Leben" and "Tu lo sai." Collection Available By ALICE JORGE.NSEN By AICE ORGESENafter the war they will constitute im- Although the majority of studentsIarhan te wllfonsin. find ample map material for their !portant^ sources of information. tions, tickets, war activities awards, The final contest will consist ofI scholai'ship; awards and patrons. project speeches-the exposition and Petitions may be obtained in the defense of an engineering project. Undergraduate Office of the League. Marvin Shafer will represent the' Interviewing will be from 3 p.m. to local chapter, discussing "Controll- 5 p.m. EWT (2 p.m. to 4 p.m. CWT) ing the Missouri," describing the pro- Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. posed Missouri Valley Authority. AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG I' 1 ,! I 3:10-Baseball (Det. at Phila:) 5:00-News. 5:05-Campus Ballroom. 5:45-Sports Review. 6:00-News. 6:15-Harry Horlick. 6:30-Telephone Quiz. 6:45-Piano Interlude. 6:55-Flashes from Life. 7:00-News. 7:15-Fireside Harmonies. 7:25-Band of the Week. 7:30--A. A. Civic Program. 7:45-Evening Serenade. 8:00-News. 8:05-Dance Time. 8:15-Put & rakeIt. 8 :30--Extravaganza. TRULY 11 BEAUTI FUL PORT RA I TS I i1. The War's Not Won Yet! UNIVERSITY PROGRAMS TODAY Over Station WPAG: p. m. "Radio Personalities I have Known"-Prof. David Owen. p. m. THE MEDICAL SERIES-Dr. Wayne Whitaker, assistant pro-! fessor in anatomy. "How the Hormones Help the Various Parts of the Body to Work Together." Mimeographed copies of this may be obtained free by writing Waldo Abbot, director of; broadcasting, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Station WJR:! p. m. THE MEDICAL SERIES-Dr. Reynold Haas, instructor in Obstetrics and Gynecology in the Medical School, will discuss "The Significance of Vaginal Bleeding During Pregnancy." 11 PARK LANE STUDIOS 11 7 MUNICIPAL COURT 1 \,,,r V I Y i i.. N-/ 1 V \-/ V I. I l 1111 III V-V° III I I