EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JUNE 15, COMPOSERS CONTEST: Students Offered $1,000 Prize All eligib being tory City, best Pri nl a 17r For Best Musical Composition students at the University are and preparation of instrumental le for a prize of $1,000 which is parts (if orchestral work). The win- offered by the B'nai B'rith Vic- ning composer also will be given a Lodge No. .1481, of New York contract by Music Publishers Holding to te pesoncompsingtheCorporation, which will entitle him to the person composing the to the usual royalties on all copies 15-minute musical composition. of the music that are sold and on all ze winning composition will be performances for which fees are col- d At the Geo~rLe Gershwin MP- lected. paye a ttae %_mu g x '.A lwY1 - morial Concert to be given March 16, 1946, at Carnegie Hall in New York, and will be performed by the Roches- ter Philharmonic Orchestra with a soloist, under the direction of Leon- ard Bernstein. Publication of the winning work is included with the prize, and will con- sist of an issue of the printed score TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Bought, Rented, Repaired. STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Any composer under 35 years of age and an American citizen is eligi- ble to enter the contest providing he qualifies under one of the following groups: Those invited by the judges to participate, one who represents one of the recognized music schools, or is attending a university or college at which there exists a B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation. Any original published composi- tion, vocal, instrumental or orches- tral, which does not exceed 15 min- utes in length, may be submitted, but a composer may submit only one manuscript. MOSELEY TYPEWRITER AND SUPPLY CO. 114 SOUTH FOURTH AVE. Complete Typewriter Service Phone 5888 Jewish Appeal Pledges Due Stoekwel I Students give Memorial Fund Students who have not yet ful- filled their pledges to the United Jewish Appeal campaign, which to date has yielded $3025.00, have been requested by the Hillel Foundation to do so as soon as possible. During the course of the campaign, which ended May 26, a group of stu- dents living in Stockwell Hall gave, in addition to their individual con- tributions, a memorial donation in honor of Lt. Warren Laufe, a former student of the University who was recently reported killed in Italy. Lt. Laufe was a member of the Student Religious Association and the Hillel Student Council. Prof. Kellum To Do Research in Alaska Prof. Lewis B. Kellum of the De- oartment of Geology will spend the jummer in Alaska, working for the United States Geological Survey in ts program of research for strategic minerals. Prof. Kellum plans to leave by ,)lane June 16 and remain in Ala- ska until October. U' Grad Cited by General Electric For Designing Vital War Devices John Henby Wurster, '39, the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Wurster of 332 South Division, has been cited by the General Electric Co. recently for his work designing new types of electric capacitors, vital components of all radar and electronic war equipment, in their Pittsfield, Mass., plant. "Every piece of electronic equip- ment from radio transmitters to mi- nute aircraft instruments, all devices upon which the lives of our men and the success of their missions depend, employs some type of capacitor," Wurster has pointed out. His job is to design, develop, and test the de- vices to meet Army and Navy war standard* requirements. Wurster graduated from the Uni- versity in 1939 and enrolled in the test course for student engineers at the General Electric Pittsfield plant the following year. BLUEBOOKS GLORIA ANN SALTER, a student in Prof. Avard T. Fairbank's sculp- ture classes, works on an original composition which is on display until June 23 in the sixteenth annual exhibition of University sculpture classes in the League, Annual Sculpture Exhibit Displayed at LeagueGalleries ALL SIZES Swift's Drug Store 1... - - i l 340 South Stae St. FAR F T OC's THE UNION OFFERS YOU a chance to. get acquainted ith the activities and with the kids on campus. Join our staff this summer . . there i The sixteenth annual exhibition of sculpture now on display in the League galleries has been designed to capture the 'spirit of the times', according to Prof. Avard T. Fair- banks, instructor of the University ,culptor classes. The exhibit is an example of the work of Prof. Fairbanks and of the best work of the students in the var- ious sculpture classes this semester. "Each piece is an original composi- are openings on many Interesting commit tees. rc ljtx 9 " A er tion which the student has develop- ed himself," said Prof. Fairbanks. Exhibit Only Small Part Prof. Fairbanks emphasized the fact that the work in the exhibit is only a small part of the work done by the students during the semester. The students first study anatomy, composition and design; then they work from models, said Prof. Fair- banks. The students do not study old masters or antiques, he said, but they study the work of former stu- dents and build up their own confi- dence to create original works. Ma ke Small Studies The students first make small stu- (lies which are developed into larger armatures (supporting frameworks) covered with water clay. Finally the model is cast in a waste or glue mold and is retouched. "The complete process takes much time, and every model represents hours of work," Prof. Fairbanks declared. Prof. Fairbanks emphasized the fact that he feels sculpture must be "an expression of our own times and our civilization which we are build- ing-" BUY MORE BONDS 1I live* in the. sun! 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