SIX TIE NUCHWA fi-I LY TUESDAY, . _ . _ . _ _. - - - -- - _ . _ -- --- ------ r . Third Sister from Korea Is ScholarshipStudent Here By KEN LOWE When Dr. Nan Kyung Koh en- rolled last fall she became the third in a trio of prominent sisters from Korea to enter the Univer- sity. One of her sisters, Evelyn Whang-Kyung Koh, earned an M.A. degree in 1933 and a Ph.D. in 1937 at the University. She is now chief of the Women's Bureau in Seoul, Korea. The other sister, Gladys, studied in the University School of Music and is now director of the tional Red Cross in Korea. Youngest of Three Dr. Nan Koh, youngest of Na- the three sisters, is a Barbour Schol- arship student. She is enrolled in the School of Public Health and is working toward a master's de- gree in public health. Prior to coming to the United States, Dr. Koh had earned an M.D. degree at the Tokyo Wom- en's Medical College and subse- quently practiced gynecology in the American Military Govern- ment's Bureau of Preventive Med- icine in Seoul. Preventive Aspects Dr. Koh will complete her studies at the University in Feb- ruary. She is specializing in the preventive aspects of maternal and child health. Her plans call for an eventual return to Seoul and work in the field of preventive medicine. Dr. Koh is not likely to forget her University days when she re- turns to Seoul because, she says, "there are about 20 former Mich- igan students there." Pharmacists Of State Hold Campus Calendar Anthropology Club - Speaker. Prof. Norman D. Humphrey, Wayne University, "Status Struc- turing in Teclotan, Jalisco, Mex- ico," 8 p.m., Museums Building. AVC-Executive Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Union. Organ Recital-Walter Baker, New York City, guest organist 4:15 p.m. Hill Auditorium. Student Exchange Conference-- Second day's sessions at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Rackham Lecture Hall. Organ and Choral Program - Student organists, Richard Dun- ham Trumpet, University Choir, Raymond Kendall conductor, and string grehestra, Emil Raabcon- ductor, 8:30 p.m., Hill Audito- rium. Pharmaceutical Conference - Sessions 2:15 and 7:45 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Michigan-"State of the Un- ion," 1, 3:30, 6 and 8:50 p.m. State-"A Double Life," 1, 3:35, 6:10 and 8:45 p.m. EVENTS TOMORROW BaseballMichigan vs. Michi- gan State College, 3:30 p.m. Ferry Field. Concert -- University Concert Band, Prof. William D. Revelli, di- rector 8:30 p.m., HillAuditorium. Sigma Xi-Lecture, Dean Ralph A. Sawyer, "The Social Responsi- bilities of Modern Science," 8:15 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Union Opera PetitionStill Being Taken Production Director, Other Help Needed Petitions for the top adminis- trative and production positions on the 1948 Union Opera will con- tinue to be received from 3 to 5 p.m. today through Friday in the Student Offices of the Union. According to Dave Leyshon, chairman, the Executive Council needs a permanent production ohairman, promotion chairman, and finance chairman.' Commit- tee heads are also needed for cos- tumes and make-up, properties, settings, publicity, photography, personnel and all other production jobs. We also need men interested in working as corresponding secre- tary, recording secretary, budget work, accounting and requisition control," he said. Emphasizing that all appoint- ments would be made on a perm- onent basis, Leyshon asked that all petitions include school status and availability during summer school as well as previous expe- rience and other pertinent infor- mation. Petitions must be delivered in person so that appointments for individual interviews may be made. The interviews will be held next week by Leyshon and Gene Sikorovsky president of the Un- ion. Leyshon also asked that all song-writers now at work on mu- sie for the 1948 Union Opera have a. rough draft of their songs or lyrics ready for submission May 22. Television... (Continued from Page 1) hind the scenes of the television enterprise is Mel Wissman, pro- gram director of WWJ and WWJ- TV. Bits of stage "business" were brushed up:-an actor's entrance here, a gesture there - James Lynch, who has the title role, even got his hair parted in the middle. He also got his portrait painted in television grays by WWJ-TV's staff artist, Harry Wayne. The portrait is among the props which the station is build- ing especially for the production. "Especially for TV" has meant plenty of experimental work for both the writer, Robert Hawke, '48, and the cast. The comedy had to be written with camera angles in mind, and action had to be pared to fit video requirements. The cast memo- rized every line and gesture-no script-watching allowed in televi- sion. "It's like putting on a one- act play-but with lots of new problems thrown in," one student said. "Mr. Plummerton" is the story of a girdle manufacturer who gets his wish that people tell him the truth-and meets with subsequent mental disaster. The cast in- cludes James Lynch, Ed Baker, Helen Fuller, Richard Charlton, Sid Pollick, Ed Johnston, Bill Bromfield, John Momeyer, Helen Currie, Joyce Katz, John Rich, William Flemming, Ralph Cappu- cilli and James Schiavone. The Shi is In! 0t - IT'S ABOUT TIME: U' Studeiit Fhied When End Drops Off 1915 Model Car By CRAIG WILSON Sunday was just one bad day for Jerry Fauth, '50E - it rained all day, he smashed up his 1915 Chevrolet and the University fined him $10 for driving illegally. It all began when he and his date set out in the "Baby Grand" 1915 dust-raiser for a Sunday jaunt. But turning from Packard on to E. University was too much for the ancient auto. Off came the left rear-wheel: the car did a dip and his date squealed. Then the extra burden on the right rear-wheel became overwhelming and it splintered into a thousand rotten and senile slivers. Fauth, lady-friend and .car :xle droppect two feet. A Shiny Dodge Ironically, they ended the Sun- day drive by running back to Fauth's fraternity house and bor- rowing a shiny new 1948 Dodge. Today Fauth is looking for someone with two wheels for a 1915 Chevie (and a round pool table) and conjecturing how next to provide himself with locomno- tion. But as some people collect stamps, and others stack match- folders, his hobby is saving old cars. 'I m down to the 1913 Buick,' he commented. Besides these two. he has, or had at one time: a 1918 Buick, a 1922 Buick, a 1913 Pat- terson (purchased last year from a farmer who broke his arm cranking it back in 1913, and had not used it since) plus several Model T's. He Collects Them "I suppose I've collected more than 10 jalopies," said Fauth. who has entered many of his vehicles in the Veteran Motor Car Club and has gotten permanent VMC licenses for some of them. But while he digs around for other transportation, the 1915 Chevie, with more than 200,000 miles of happy driving behind it. squats miserably on its rear haunches by the fraternity house wondering if it is headed back to the scrap-heap from whence it came. Fauth rescued the derelict from a wartime Victory-Screp Drive for $45, Accidents Kill One, Injure Nine Others Four weekend traffic accidents in Washtenaw County brought death to Mrs. Alice L. Sterner, 26, of 1750 Fifth St., Dexter and injuries to nine persons. Three Ann Arborites received injuries in the accidents. They are: Jimmy Lillard, 5, and Nancy Lillard, 6, 601 Mary Ct., and Mal- colm Thomas, 29, of 2516 S. Main St. They were treated at St. Jo- seph's Hospital. Honors Course Applica tions Near Deadline Saturday is the last day for students wilth 'B' averages or bet- ter to apply for the Honors pro- gram in Liberal Arts. The program offers a five-hour reading course in politics and ethics with two cognate courses each semester, thereby fulfilling concentration requirements. Students in the program are separated into groups of six to ten students. They meet each week with their tutor, as a group of in- dividually, to discuss great works. The course of readings for the two yearstincludes the Iliad. the Republic. the City of Grod. Henry VI, Hobbes' Leviathan. Hme's Treatise on Human Nature, the Federalist and Dewey:, Human Nature and Conduct. Each work is studied intensively for several weeks, papers are writ- ten and the student is orally test- ed at the close of the semester. Second semester seniors write an Honors essay on some subject based on the program studies. Maslin Gets Post Al Maslin, University junior and AIM vice-president, was elected to the National Executive Council of the National Indepen- dent Students Association at Ames. Iowa, yesterday. 4 CAVE-IN VICTIM DIRECTS RESCUERS-Crushed between two walls of earth in a drainage ditch in Dearborn, Mich., Steve Gra- sela, 29, (arrow) directs rescuers as they try to free him from a cave-in. With only his arms free, he told firemen, policemen, and Ford Motor Company first aid workers buttress the caving walls. He was freed Wayne County Hospital with both legs how to place planks to in an hour and taken to broken. k Women Educators To Meet On Science, Culture Trends Meeting Here 1 The Michigan Branch of the American Pharmaceutical Asso- ciation will hold a conference to- day at the Rackham Building. Registration will begin at noon in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The conference sponsored by the College of Pharmacy will start at 2:15 p.m. in the Amphitheatre. Dr. Gordon K. Moe, associate professor of pharmacology at the University, will talk on "Clinical and Pharmacological Effects of Quaternary Ammonium Com- pounds." Other speakers are Mr. John H. Butts, executive secretary, Michigan State Pharmaceutical Association and Dr. Harold F. Hailman, medical department of the Upjohn Company. Mr. Butts will talk on "Commercial and Le- gal Aspects of the Everyday Phar- macy Operation" while Dr. Hail- man will present a film on the energy release from food. Following a banquet at 6 p.m., there will be an election of of- ficers. Dr. Russell A. Stevenson, Dean of the School of Business Admin- istration, will conclude the con- ference with a talk on "Small Business and the Private Enter- prise Economy." The public is invited to the meetings. Veterans who lose subsistence, compensation or pension checks should notify the approprite re- gional office of the Veterans Ad- ministration, VA officials said to- day. A veteran losing his check should write a letter giving his full name and address, nis claim number and the date and amount of the check. He should also in- clude information regarding the type of benefit for which the check was issued and the circum- stances surrounding its loss. On being notified of the check's loss, VA determines if the check may have been found and re- turned to the U. S. Treasury. If so, the check will be remailed to the veteran. If not, VA will re- quest the Treasury to stop pay- ment and take the necessary steps to reimburse the veteran. Zoological Exhibit Now on Display A special exhibit of zoological illustrations is now on display in the Museum rotunda. They are the work of the late Grace Eager, artist for the Mu- selm of Zoology from 1928 until her death last December, and were achieved in the face of severe physical handicaps and almost continuous ill health. The drawings were made from actual specimens and were used to illustrate published papers re- quiring detailed delineations of animals or their parts. The work is noted for its accuracy of detail and proportion as well as great artistic merit. Lectures and discussions of the current trends in medicine, cur- rent affairs, and the arts will be featured at the 16th annual Adult Education Institute opening here tomorrow. Eight hundred Michigan women will attend the three-day Insti- tute, which is co-sponsored by the University Extension Service and the Michigan State Federation of Women's Clubs. Dr. Theodore M. Newcomb, pro- fessor of sociology and psychology, will deliver the first lecture to- morrow at Rackham Lecture Hall, on "Social Attitudes in American Culture." Robert P. Briggs, vice-president of the University, and Mrs. A. W. Bruce, president of the Michigan Federation of Women's Clubs, will welcome delegates. Headline Speaker Headline speaker of the confer- ence will be Dean Rusk, director of the Office of United Nations Affairs in Washington. His sub- ject will be "Shall We Revise the United Nations Charter?" Other speakers will include: Prof. Carl V. Weller of the pathol- ogy department, Dr. Juana de La- ban, associate supervisor in phy- sical education, Ford L. Lemler, supervisor of the University's Au- dio-Visual Education Center, Prof. Harold M. Dorr, of the political science department, Dr. Frederick A. Coller, professor of surgery, and Prof. Louise E. Cuyler, of the School of Music. Medieval Music A public recital of medieval and Organists ive Concerts Here Two specially arranged organ concerts at 4:15 and 8:30 p.m. to- day in Hill Auditorium will high- light the meeting of the three Michigan chapters of the Ameri- can Guild of Organists. The evening program will fea- ture five organists accompanied by the University Choir, directed by Raymond Kendall, a special string orchestra, conducted by Emil Raab, and a trumpet solo by Richard Dunham. The student organists partici- pating are: William MacGowan J. Bertram Strickland; Kathryn Karch Loew and Lorraine Zeeuw Jones. Marilyn Mason, a member of the organ faculty of the School of Music, will also play. Prof. Walter Baker, guest or- ganist from Westminster Choir College, Princeton, N. J., will pre- sent the afternoon concert. Both concerts are open to the public. Win Phi Beta Keys Seventy - five University of Michigan students were initiated into Phi Beta Kappa, national scholarship society, in ceremonies Monday night. The group of initiates includes eight members of the junior class, 56 seniors, and 11 graduate stu- dents. An initiation banquet was held at 6:30 in the Michigan Union, with the principal address being given by Dr. Helen C. White, pro- fessor of English at the University of Wisconsin. PRINTING (Since 1899) Inspect our clean, main floor davlight plant, with all new renaissance music will be present- ed at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Lea- gue Ballroom. Choral and or- chestral groups directed by Wayne Dunlap, Joseph White and Myron Russell, of the School of Music, will participate. Mrs. Mary C. Bromage, assistant dean of women, and Dr. Samuel W. Hartwell, asisistant director, Michigan Department of Mental Health, and Dr. Frank N. Wilson, professor of internal medicine, will speak Friday. Friday afternoon students in play production classes supervised by Prof. Valentine B. Windt, of the speech department, will stage two one-act plays in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Announce Law Review Staff, The editorial board for the '48- '49 Michigan Law Review was appointed yesterday by Law School faculty members. The review, a monthly publi- cation sent to 2,000 practicing lawyers, will be headedby William J. Schrenk, Sandusky,-O.,,editor- in-chief; William B. Harvey, Wil- low Run; Ralph J. Isackson, Bay City; W. Sterling Maxwell, Hins- dale, Ill., and Richard V. Wellman, Columbus, 0., assistant editors. Educators Confer In ioundtable Leaders of small town and county schools of southeastern Michigan will converge on Ann Arbor tomorrow for their semi- annual Administrative Round- table. Co-sponsors of the meeting are the University School of Educa- tion and the Michigan State Nor- mal College. University faculty men participating in the program, a series of panel discussions, are Dean J. B. Edmonson, Harlan C. Koch and Clifford Woody. Comer Elected To Be First Bus. Ad. Officer In a class election yesterday, Jerry B. Comer, '48BAd., was chosen to be the first senior class president in the history of the Business Administration School. Comer is a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, Bus. Ad. professional fraternity, and a native of Wich- ita, Kans. Allen.. (Continued from Page 1) terest in exchange must continue. "The initiative has been in their hands and it should remain there; the government does not wish to assume it," he said. Earlier, Dr. Helen C. White of the University of Wisconsin told the conferees that international understanding on the human level requires careful planning. Dr. White, a member of the U.S. national commission for UNESCO and of the board of Board of For- eign Scholarships, pointed to the importance of American aid to countries with little industrializa- tion who want to receive our in- dustrial know-how. She also stated that nations that have gone through the war would appreciate the chance to ex- perience the creative aspects of our freedom of spirit. i r Save II and I F,rn -