T1THE MTCTIMAN 1IAl ,V it 7AT' May Festival Tickets Now On Sale Here Concerts Feattit-c Ten Top Soloists +. a. v a, s a t.r.t s. s. " . ..s ra .u .III. 9e _... NOVEL APPROACH: t 'U' Doctor Authors New Book on TB Experiences_- Sudden turnabout from doctor in the T. B. ward. IDrawings b'y to patient forms the basis for a Prof. Donald B. Gooch, of the Col- newly-published book by Univer- lege of Architecture, punctuate sity Dr. Robert Lovell, who com- the 100-page book. pleted medical school only to be sent to a sanitarium, the victim "The worst part of the whole of tuberculosis. disease is that you have to drop Called "Taking the Cure-The everything and go right to bed," Patient's Approach to Tubercu- according to Dr. Lovell, who Patint' Appoac to ubecu-learned that he lead the disease losis," the book was written mainly to help T. B. patients re- from a routine chest X-ray on adjust when first put in confine- his graduation day. ment. In his book, Lovell, now a resi- dent physician at University Hos- DR. LOVELL compiled the book pital, described the untiring pas- from his own experience and from times to which the patient must talks with fellow patients while devote himself. _____________ ___________________ *__________ - ASSOCIATED PRESS POCTURE NEWS Series tickets for the annual May Festival are on sale now at the University Musical Society's offices, Burton Tower. Ten major soloists, ,four con-, luctors, two choruses and the Philadelphia Symphony Orches- tra, will participate in the fifty- sixth annual Festival which will be given May 5, 6, 7 and 8 in Hill Auditorium.f Of the soloists, five will 'bej heard in Ann Arbor for the first time. Among the five is Mme. Pia Tassinari, distinguished Italian soprano, who will sing two groups of operatice arias at the closing concert Sunday night. SIJIRLEY RUSSELL, American soprano, will be heard twice - in the BrDhms "Requiem" Friday night, and in the world premiere of Llewelym Gomer's "Gloria," Sunday afternoon.f Tann Williams, Welsh-Amer- ican contralto, will join Miss Russell in the Gomer work Sun- day. Martial Singher, leading French baritone at the Metro- politan Opera, will be heard in Brahms' "Requiem" and in the Gomer choral work. The fifth of the newcomers is Benno Moisewitsch, Russian pi- anist. He will perform Beethov- en's Concerto No. 3, under the ba- ton of Thor Johnson, Friday. ' * FIVE FORMER favorites among the soloists will include Gladys Swarthout, mezzo-soprano; Set Svanholf, Swedish tenor; Harold Haugh, tenor; Gregor Piatigor- sky, 'cellist; and Erica Morini, vio- linist. The Pliladelpia Orchestra will take part in all six concerts. Eugene Ormandy, Thor John- son, Marguerite flood, and Alex- ander HIllsberg will lead the or- chestra for the different per- formances. In addition to the Brahms "Requiem" and the Gomer "Gloria," the University Choral Union, under Lester McCoy, will give the first Ann Arbor per- formance of "Chorus No. 10" by the contemporary Brazilian com- poser, Heitor Villa-Lobos. Single concert tickets can be purchased in April at the Univer- sity Musical Society Offices, Bur- ton Tower. Critic Doubts Shakespeare's Tr .e Identity (Continued from Page 1) pest or Coriolanus could have been written, Prof. Price said., "And, he wrote very stupid verse." Cranks are always coming up with new authors for Shakes- peare, according to Prof. Price. Miss Julia Bacon 100 years ago' proposed that Shakespeare's works were a sideline of Bacon's literary production. "That idea fizzled- out long ago," he said. Prof. Price declared that docu- ments, friends like Jonson and Marlowe, clues in the plays, and thinking professors agree that Shakespeare's plays and sonnets were, are, and will remain written by a Stratford man named Shakespeare. "THE OLDEST WAY to make money is to write a sensational story ' about Shikespeare," he said; "-but stay with him." He cited the case of Sydney Lee, a successful Shakespeare biogra- pher, whom Edward VII persuad- ed to write a biography of Queen Victoria. Edward remarked gentlya after it was written, "Stick to Shakespeare, Mr. Lee, that pays." Sticking to Shakespeare means believing that Shakes- peare was really Shakespeare, Prof. Price said. "I worked up positive proof of Oxford's identity as distinguished from Shakespeare's," he said, "but' it was so unimportant I've forgot- ten it." 'U' Welcomes Alien Students An inf ormal receptiou welcom- ing new foreign students to cam- pus will be held at 8 p.inh today in Rackhamn Lecture Hal.? lhe program will be opened by RED HOT HISTORY-New York Public scrapbooks of 40 years in show business Tucker, last of the "Red Hot Mamas." Librarians examine presented by Sophie ELONGATED ABE: Lincoln Provided Tempting Tar get for 'Punch' Cartoonist Fourscore and three years ago Sir John Tennien decided Abe Lincoln was not such a bad fellow after all. Until the assassination, how- ever, Sir John, cartoonist for Pundlh, a contemporary British magazine, had wielded a satyric quill over Lincoln's political moves, County Official Would 'Clear' WillowVillage Plan Urges Building Perlmanent Homes A recent recommendation by George D. Hurrell, director of the Washtenaw County Planning Commission that Willow Village, as such, should be cleared away may eventually effect the housing of some 1,700 students living in the government owned housing project. Hurrell advocated that the pres- "t buildings and dormitories be replaced by one and two-family homes and businesses. Although he made no specific proposals on the question, he indicated that he felt that the Village's present "emergency" housing status should be changed to that of a regular residential area. ALTHOUGH NO action of Hur- rell's proposals will probably be taken for some time, it might con- ceivably cause an acute housing problem for some of the 1,300 married students and 400 single students living in the Village. un- less the present housing problem in Ann Arbor is solved in the fu- ture. Originally the Willow Village housing units were built to ac- commodate some of the thous- ands of workers employed at the Wil1°w Run bomber plant dur- ing the war. After the worker housing prob- lcm became less acute. the govern- II- ment provided approximately 2,- 200 housing units for veterans at- tending the University. Red Cross To Be ojn AnnuaI Fund Raising The annual Red Cross drive for funds will begin next month with a quota of $1,800 for the student body. Fund raising activities which are expected to yield over $34,000 in Ann Arbor and will take place throughout the month of March were announced by the local Red Cross chapter. Herbert Wagner, Business Manager of the Univer- sity Food Service, will be direc- tor of the drive. s u: au WAShITENAW COUNTY will retain 75 per cent of the collec- tions for local work and the re- mnaining will be used nationally. Last year $3,300 was loaned to students who were in need of emergency funds. Tn addition to the $1,800 quota for students, $4,800 has been set fr- th ftvili. unri 41 Inn fr- Colton Storm, assistant director of Clements Library, related. LINCOLN, in one of the car- toon proof sheets owned by the Clements Library, was caricatured as a raccoon in a tree with "John Bull" below threatening to shoot if he did not come down. It referred to the Trent af- fair in which England demand- ed that Lincoln give up Mason and Slidell, two Confederate ambassadors, which the North seized from the English ship Trent, Storm explained. The idea came from a Davy Crockett story, he added. A swashbuckling Abe is mixing "bunkum, bosh, and brag" to turn victory into defeat in another of Sir John's jabs... IMMEDIATELY following his second election, Sir John draws an elongated Abe captioned "Long Abe Lincoln A Little Longer." But following the assassina- tion Sir John suffered a mirac- ulous change of heart,. Storm said. His 'final Lincoln cartoon por- trayed a reverent Britain mourn- ing for the Civil War president whose 140th birthday we com- memorate today. These cartoons among several others will be televised at 5 p.m. tomorrow over WWJ-TV in a pro- gram on "Lincoln Humor" with Assistant Director Storm and Ken Manuel of WWJ. P lan ,Meeting To Orientate 011i Politics Alphabet Groups Will ExplainOrganizations' In an attempt to acquaint stu- dents with the range of political j clubs on campus and their prin- ,iples and accomplishments, a Po- litical Orientation Meeting will take place next Tuesday evening. The meeting is focused primar- ily on new freshman and transfer students who are interested in po- litical activities but may have be- ome understandably bewildered ay their alphabet nomenclature. * * * IT WILL CONSIST of a talk by Preston Slosson, of the history department, short explanations of the clubs by their officers, and then the meeting will be thrown open to the audience for ques- tions. The organizations which will participate include the follow- ing partisan and political ac- tion group: Americans for Dem- ocratic Action, American Vet- erans Committee, Inter-Racial Association, United Nations Council, United World Federal- ists, Wallace Progressives, the Young Democrats and the Young Republicans. The Political Orientation Pro- ;ram has been initiated this se- mnester, and is being sponsored by. ADA. They hope it will become an annual or semi-annual tradition introducing the political clubs to new students an encouraging par- ticipation in political action clubs. "THIS PROGRAM is designed to provide a convenient meeting- ground for interested students and ampus political leaders,"stated Quentin Fulcher, chairman of ADA. The 'meeting will be held Tues- day, Feb. 15 at 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan League. All students in- terested. in political activity on uampus are cordially invited and urged to attend. "READING WAS a big activity, and everyone could do it," Dr. Lovell said. "Anything requiring arm motion was discouraged to al- low complete rest." Treatment given the confined patients consisted of arresting the progress of the disease and give the body a chance to over- come and wall off the infection. After the disease is halted, Dr. Lovell said, the T. B. victim can lead a fairly normal life, though still needing daily rest. In his two years as a T. B. pa- tient, Dr. Lovell spent most pe- riods of his time in discussion with his roommates-a Chinese chest doctor, a Turkish engineer, and a former classmate in medi- cal school. He also worked up a corre- spondence with people in 15 dif- ferent countries. Gift Adds New Art Magazin To 'U' Library Insurance Magnate Gives Subscription A luxurious, costly new fine arts magazine will be added to the col- lections of the University libraries, thanks to a recent gift. George W. Carter, president of the Michigan Insurance Company, has donated two $150 a year sub- scriptions to "Nation's Heritage" to the University. * " ': ONE COPY WILL grace the shelves of the rare book room of saUshelveswillRFGRFtaoin RRR the Clements Library, while the other will appear in the periodical room of the General Library. "Nation's Heritage" attempts to give a dynamic picture of America, based on the philos- ophy of the contents of the Freedom Train. The magazine spares no expense to present photographs, etchings, and woodcuts illustrating every phase of Anerican learning, homes fine arts, and industry. In view of its valuable artistic content, "Nation's Heritage" will be used as reference material in Fine Arts I. Since individual copies sell for $30. fine arts studercs will oenefit in more ways than one Iron the latest of the University's sifts. Iat'percd Cats EGYPT --Information uncov- ered by the World Book Encyclo- pedia indicates that the ancient Egyptians thought a lot of the cat. When a feline died it was made into a mummy and buried in a special cemetery. Mummified mice and saucers of milk were placed alongside the cat to take care of its needs in the after life. C U A R D I N G F R E N C H MI N E ..S.tl-helmted umbile giuards patrol the Charles mine in the St. Fdtienne district of o'ltral France after takin it over froA striking orkmen. .k. INTERN1A TIONAL AID: Committee Maps Campaign To Collect $5,000 for WSSF Campus grouls lined up to a throughout Europe necessitated the World Student Service Funlld F setting up rest centers for stu- drive for $5.000 yesterday as the dents and segregation of those central committee announced its with the active disease from' plans. other run down students. Iitcr Guild. TFC. the Newman Up to 10 per cent of all students Club, hillel and the Barnaby Club were found to have infectious tu- have undertaken work for th(' berculosis in some parts of Greece. drive- according to a W.S.S.F. report, 3 The W.S.S.F. is an international MEMBERS of the lter Guild organization set up to give aid toI will man the tag day buckets lo- students in war torn countries.I cated all over the campus Feb--- ruary 17 and 18. IFC, the New- man Club and Barnaby Club will BOYS AND THE LAW: also help, P. T. Austin is in charge. ; 0 C Y C. L £ B U I L I - R T N - The old-time "Bicycle Built for Two" was a toy com- pared withf tis Belgian inodel made to carry ten persons or a weiht of 2,201 ponids. The wheels, shown at tlie Bruels motoreycle and Cycle Show wil have special heavyweight tires for the road. Members of Hillel and resi- dents of Helen Newberry have mapped a poster campaign. Lew Fowler, drive chairman, has contacted student presidents of various groups. Basking for in- dividu al or groun p teon trib .tiuc is. Groups making pledges will be listed on a special honor roll. A special appeal has also been made to members of the faculty. MONEY RAISED by the drivel will be used to provide food, drugs, medicines and books for students in tuberculosis sanatoria in Eu- rope and Asia. Spread of the disease ROiT Rolls Slww Dec hnte Spring Smeter' ROTC enroll- (nent suffered a slight decrease from last term's registration, ac- ordin, in 1 moh militn a mrv d rt INovel BigBrother Sentence Helps Delinquent Youngsters i Four Ann Arbor boys who might have been in reform school today are free instead, and looking for- ward to a future of worthwhile fun and respect for the law, under the guidance of newly acquired "big brothers." For this, they can thank the wisdom and sympathy of Probate. Judge Jay H. Payne, who placed the boys under probation, in charge of four Ann Arbor men who will serve as the big brothers. The men were appointed special probationary officers for a year. EACH MONTH they will meet with the boys, who admitted cadg- iog several automobile ornaments recently at the Elks parking lot. T'he meetings will be purely recre- ational. Already planned are a party at a school in the boys' neigh- only a few days before January 25, when tlie parking lot thefts took place. One of the program's aims, said Judge Payne, is to achieve volun- tary parental cooperation when obviously stolen items are brought into the home, rather than over- looking the thefts as childish pranks. Economist To Lecture Here Two lectures on economics will oe given Monday and Tuesday by Prof. John H. Williams of Har- vard University in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Williams will speak before L11 EonImic ,, C l o _ Wj, :.. ......... ..... .... .. ... .. .. ..... ..... ... ... . .. . ....,} .. a.