NOT SO FABULOUS: Soviet Tomb Discovery 'OldStuff' to Beardsley By ROSALIND VIRSHIP Empire managed to take a The recent Russian discovery of share of the treasures w a tomb in outer Mongolia yielding traveled by their doors." evidence of a "fabulous" civiliza- tion dating back 2000 years was I (hen at (he hig called "old stuff" by Dr. Richard er a faacwantycivilization, Carn trd .Badlyo h nhoo ogy teas fay away as the Ro K. Beardsley of the anthropology Empire, whose trading r department. crossed this area, Dr. Bear "At least half a dozen similar explained. r tombs have been found in the same area in the past century, al- "ThEY WERE a horsey though comparatively little is he remarked. "They raised h known about this civilization," rode horses, drank horsemilk Dr. Beardsley said. when they died they buried1 *:, *r * horses with them." "AS FOR THE civilization be- According to Dr. Beards ing fabulous," Dr. Beardsley con- chieftains of this culture h tinued, "the people were hillbillies been found buried in log cab compared to their Chinese con- their horses dressed in elabo temporaries. The treasures found trappings, with them. in the tomb probably came from The Russian find included China." mummified bodies of a man TlE MTlCUIG A DAI LY - "'sDAY FEBRUAR 24, 1949 West Quad Twenty Lovesick Maidens a: x'r t est i d fair hich lt of ed on oman outes dsley set," orses, and their 4sey, have bins, rate d the and "As middlemen who knew what luxuries were, these fore- runners of the Ghenghis Khan U Foreign Student Total Shows Decline A total of 699 foreign students are enrolled in the University for the spring semester, according to Robert B. Klinger, assistant coun- selor to foreign students. This represents a decrease of 58 from the 757 foreign students en- rolled last fall but an increase of 93 from the 606 total for the spring semester a year ago. * * FINAL TABULATIONS show that 66 countries or regions are represented this semester, as against 70 last fall. Although cur- rently there are no students from the Bahamas, the Gold Coast, Ice- land, Latvia, Malaya or Trinidad, students from Estonia and St. Lucia are enrolled here for the first time this semester. In the regional totals, the Far East continues to set the pace with 295 students, followed by the British Commonwealth with 136, Latin America with 110, Europe and Independent Africa with 86, and the Near East with 70. Sixteen countries now have ten orcmore students enrolled. They include China (171), Canada (111), India (84), the Philip- pines (26), Turkey (24), Mexico (17), Venezula (17), Colombia (16), Iran (13), Iraq (13), Egypt (12), Brazil (11), The Nether- lands (11), France (10), and Ger- many (10). FOURTEEN countries show en- rollment increases from last fall, due to the arrival of displaced persons and the reopening of edu- cational exchange with Austria and Germany. WHRV To Air Student Show Students from the radio division of the speech department will present an original playeby Lee Wilson on the Workshop Drama at 10 p.m. today over station rWHRV. In the cast of "Money and 'Matrimony," a story about a man Oho must get married by his twenty-sixth birthday or forfeit a two million dollar inheritance, are ?Don Hall, Joe Walsh, Dick Rifen- burg, Francis Benesh, Jim Lynch, Margaret Pell, Betty Jane Holton, Mary McCarty and Beverly Ket- cik. At 10:15 p.m. today over the same station, the radio division will broadcast the Journal of the Air. This week, an original script by Dave Pollock, "Continental Re- pair on the 'Marshall Plan," will be presented. woman preseved by the freezing cold of the mountains. Judging from previous evidence they were probably white, Turkish speaking relatives of the Huns who later conquered Europe, Dr. Beardsley thought. HE ADDED, "I am anxious to learn more of the Russian find- ings. So far they are no more elaborate than the reports of find- ings in that vicinity last year." Vets Receive 38,Bomber Scholarships Chosen from among 82 candi- dates, 38 student veterans were awarded Bomber Scholarships, ampounting to $100 each for the spring semester, Dean Erich A. Walter announced yesterday. Established in 1942 to provide financial aid for students whose education was interrupted by the war, the Bomber Scholarship Fund sought to accumulate enough bonds to equal the purchase price of an army bomber. UNDER THE plan conceived by Arthur Rude, '49L, part of the net receiptsfrom campus social func- tions were donated to the Bomber fund. A total of $22,500 in war bonds has been accumulated. This semester's winners in- clude Gerritt W. DeVries, '49Arch, Richard A. DeLong, '50B Ad; Michael S. Dayton, '49E; Raoul Choate, '50E; Bob M. Brown, '49; Loyal L. Ben- son, '49BAd; Gerald E. Die- kema, '5pArch; Robert L. Eller- busch, '49; Walter Evich, '50M; John P. Hallinan, '49F&C; Denneth W. Henry, '49F&C Joseph A. Hoffman, '49Arch; Lloyd 0. Krueger, '49Arch. The list continues with John W. Lambert, '49E; Sue J. Lehmberg '49PH; Hugh J. Leitch, '49Arch; Roy C. Levin, '49E; John J. Loughrin, '49; Clarence J. Mc- Gowan, '49; William E. McGrew, '50Arch; Jean T. Miller, '49Arch; John E. Moore, '49; Thomas S Parsons, '49. OTHERS ARE Alan Pasch, '49; Jack E. Pearson, '49; Kenneth L. Peterson, '49; James H. Poppy, '50; William C. Prettyman, '49E; Rowland J. Purdy, '49; Vernon J. Ratza, '49; Herbert F. Ray, '49; Alfred B. Reimer, '50E; John T. Rowell, '49; Raymond R. Schwartz, '49BAd; Laverne C. Stricker, '49F&C; Warren C. Tyner, '49E; Clifford C. Voice, '50E; and Lam- bert D. Vyn, '49Arch. ADA Meets Today Plans for active campaigning in the spring Board of Regents elec- tion will be formulated at a meet- ing of the Americans for Demo- cratic Action at 7:30 p.m. today in the Michigan League. ADA will support Mrs. Rosa Faulke and Joseph Arsulewicz, both Democrats, for the regent posts. Daily-Lmnanian DONATES WAR CANOE-Riley Geary (right) presents a model war canoe to Dr. James B. Griffin, hirector of the Museum of Anthropology. Riley "bought" the canoe from a Melanesian huckster for two skivy shirts, an old pair of dungarees, and a broken flashlight. 'U' Receives Dungaree-Bought Canoe -~ Airs Jazz Quiz Show So you're looking for a free ticket to the jazz concert tomor- row night. "The Voice of Chicago House" in the West Quad has come up with the solution in the form of a new quiz show entitled. "Thet Jazz at the Philharmonic Quiz."' WITII THE first broadcast or- iginating Sunday night from the station's studios in 411 Chicago House, the program has awardeld one free pass to the Student Ieg- islature sponsored jazz cocert t every night this week. Designed specifically by Ray Okonski, '49E, and Shel Gates, '51E, to help promote the con- cert, the quiz consists of a 15- minute program which gos on the air at 8 p.m. Two little known jazz records are played each night and the first contestant to mail a post card wtih the correct name of the selection and the band playing it is awarded the free ticket. En- Iries should be mailed to "The Voice of Chicago House." West I Quad. * * * THE FIRST WINNER of the contest Sunday night was Eliza- beth Sneed, '52A, of 4047 Stockwell Hall, who correctly guessed the re- cordings of "Apple Honey" by Woody Herman and "Take the A Train" by Duke Ellington. By means of a relayed telephone line furnished by the University Broadcasting Service late last se- mester, "The Voice of Chicago House" is able to transmit the quiz show both to Stockwell Hall and the West Quad. Several postcards have been re- ceived from the women's dormi- tory reporting that tht reception of the station's programs is ex- By PAUL BRENTLINGER Twenty lovesick maidens arel locking for men. The twenty lovesick maidens are appearing in the women's chorus of "Patience," which will be pro- duced on May 12, 13. and 14 by the Universit's Gilbr ai d Sub. livani Socit.. hlOWEVER, the twenty love-l .ick maidens will require some company on the stage of the Pat - te igill Auditorium, in the form of at least twenty