THE MIiCHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1950 _ .tiD . I A tr I. m F C Meet TT9 C'11"t TZ T1 TT\' '1 !Y 1 :is' het To Open ext We Leaders in World Peace To Speak James T. Shotwell, president of e Carnegie Endowment for In- rnational Peace, will highlight list of world speakers at the third nual conference of the Ameri- n Association of International elations Clubs, to be held here hursday through Sunday. - More than 300 delegates from gional clubs all over the nation ll meet at the University to lis- n to leading international auth- ities on world peace, and to com- re their separate operational ans. * * * THE OPENING luncheon meet- g Thursday will feature a wel- me address by James P. Adams, ovost of the University, and a 1k by Miss Mary Shadow of the mnessee State Legislature. JESSE RIDES AGAIN: Desperado Said To Be'U' Alumnus By PAUL BRENTLINGER Jesse James may have attended the University's Law School. At least, that's what the casual reader of the book "Jesse James Rides Again" might be led to be- lieve. According to this book, written by Frank Hall and Lindsey Whit- ten, "Jesse James was very suc- cessful as a soldier of fortune be- cause of his education. Few peo- ple knew that he was a college graduate with a law degree. Al- Engiiieers 1In Record Race New Collection Used By Many Students Engineers apparently have more culturecthan someiLSA students would care to admit. Or so it seems from figures re- leased by the Circulation Depart- ment of the General Library, which tell how many students from the different schools of the University used the new record library during the first two weeks of its existence. ' * * * though he never actually prac- ticed law, he was graduated with honors at Ann Arbor, Michign." * * * "JESSE JAMES Rides Again," a modest biography of the notor- ious train robber, was acquired last summer by Jim Hemming, Grad., in Missouri. It was pub- lished by a Lawton, Okla. pub- lisher in 1948, according to Hem- ming. While in Missouri, Hemming visited J. Frank Dalton, 102 years old, who achieved nation- al prominence recently by bring- ing action in a Missouri circuit court for the right to use the name Jesse James. Dalton claims that he is the true Jesse. The aged Missourian also told Hemming many tales of experi- ences he had in Detroit and other Michigan cities in his younger days. GOING BACK to the book, it continues by saying that Jesse "went to school" before his re- ported death. This was during the 1870's after he had served for a period in the Texas Rangers. His ranger captain encouraged him to attend a college and suggested the Michigan institution. "Attending under an assumed name, Jesse first started study- ing medicine." Because he couldn't stand the sight of blood, "after a year he trans- ferred to the school of law." A check with the catalogue of- fice in Alumni Memorial Hall re- vealed that the alumni -associa- tion has no record of either a Jesse James or a J. Frank Dalton, as ever having been a student at the University. Of course, the fam- ed renegade might have used an assumed name; as the book sug- gested. roundtable on the atomic en- problem will take the spot- t Friday. Speakers in the dis- ion will be Dean L. N. Ride- r of the University of Illinois duate School Dean R. A. Saw- of the University's Graduate 0ol. Shotwell will act as chair- the all-conference dinner irday night the chief problems Europe will be discussed. isiness meetings and commis- meetings will fill in the gaps reen the general assemblies. QUIREMENTS FOR OPTOMETRY 4ve years of college work are re- red for the degree, Doctor of tometry. he first year must be completed an accredited college of arts and ences. he second year also may be com- ted in such an institution, or may taken at Chicago College of Op- aetry. he third, fourth and fifth years devoted to professional courses ich must 'be completed in an redited college of optometry. all registration isnow open at cago College of Optometry, 350 den Ave., Chicago 14, Ill. Dormi- Y accommodations available on campus. The college is approved veterans. i MUSIC MODERNE: Jazz Platters Spin Weekly As Boppers PlayFavorites ACCORDING to Fred Dimock, director of the Circulation De- partment, tabs were kept on who took out the records in order to find out if students from any one school monopolized the facility. Although English concen- trates led the field by a small margin, the number of engineers followed close after, proving, according to one erudite en- gineer, that many devotees of the triangle and T-square are not as anti-aesthetic as they are made out to be. The total number of students borrowing records during the first two weeks was 126, with practical- ly every school of the University represented. "We are satisfied that the use of the records is being spread well al over campus," Dimock de- clared. By HERB CHESTON "Boppers" and "Molde Olde Figges," the lovers of jazz music, have kept the beat of "Hot Music" going, as the Hot Record Society enters its fourth year, on campus. Organized to further the ad- vancement of "modern beat" and provide intellectual exchange' among jazz music fans the group 'U' Production Names Cast Of 'KingLear' All but two of the main charac- ters of "King Lear" are scheduled to die March 29 through April 1 on the stage of Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. Death from rapier wounds and broken hearts, as well as eye- gouging and madness will all be part of an evening's work for the cast of the Speech department's latest production. The actors, however, will only suffer emo- meets every week on Sunday night for a jazz concert in the League ballroom. Members contribute their rar- est and best recordings and the concert continues on into the night, until discs or audience give out. ONCE-A-MONTH live sessions are given featuring "Lord Carl- tons Swing Sextet," "Hugh Jack- sons Boptet" and "Bob Leopolds Dixieland Group." The live ses- sions are attended by almost 200 persons. In addition to the concerts the society has set up contacts with record dealers in Europe for hard-to-get, and out-of-date issues, unobtainable in the Unit- ed States. Exchange devalua- tions have reduced the cost of these discs to their American equivalents. At 9:30 every Monday night the Hot Record Society goes on radio station WHRV, to bring to the listening public a collection of rare jazz items, in disc jockey fashion, comments included. * *, * - Science, Art Conference OpensToday More than 250 scientists, artists, philosophers and writers des- cend on campus today and tomor- row for the 54th Annual Meeting of the Michigan Academy of Sci- ence, Arts and Letters. The Academy, an affiliation of I the American Association for the advancement of Science, will fea- ture two lectures and 237 papers from individual members in 18 fields ranging from anthropology to zoology, and titled everything fromh "Cultural Anthropology and Television" to "Four Squares." * * * THE MEETING will also serve as a central depot for thesex- change of ideas and works of the Academy. Keynote lecture will be "A Limnological View of the Inland Waters of Michigan," by Prof. Paul S. Welch of the zoology de- partment and president of the Academy, at 8 p.m. today at the Rackham Amphitheatre. A special lecture will be at 4:30 p.m., today also at the Rackham amphitheatre, entitled "The Pro- motion of Beauty, an Essential Element of Wise Living," by Gil- more D. Clarke, dean of the archi- tecture school at Cornell Univer- sity. IN CONNECTION with the meeting, work of Academy mem- bers in the fine arts section will be on display in the exhibition rooms of the Rackham Building. A special display of work by landscape architects of the Aca- demy is on display in the lobby of the Architecture Building. Among the displays is a model of the nearly completed St. Clair Beach near Mt. Clemens, Michi- gan. A $6,000,000 project, the beach contains a mile and a quarter of beach, an athletic department, boating lagoon and parking space for 10,000 cars. Foresters To Aid HelsinkiLibrary Joining an American Forestry Association drive to rebuild the destroyed and depleted forestry li- braries in devastated countries, the Michigan Foresters' Club laid plans last night to aid the Uni- versity' at Helsinki, Finland. Books and funds will be soli- cited from alumni and students of the forestry school, authors of various technical publications, lo- cal bookstores and government agencies. THE INTERVIEWS will be by the Cabinet from 7 to 10 Monday and Tuesday at Union. More than 15 students seeking seats on the University's dele- gation to the annual National Stu- dent Association Congress here in Ann Arbor next August have signed up for interviews with the Student Legislature Cabinet, ac- cording to Dorianne Zipperstein, '51, chairman of the local NSA committee. Miss Zipperstein emphasized, however, thatrstudents who wish to be interviewed for one of the 14 delegate and alternate posi- tions may still sign up from 3 to 5 p.m. today at the SL office in the Office of Student Affairs. * ,, * * Although the delegates will' be selected partially on the basis of an applicant's knowledge of. SL and the local NSA commit- tee, Miss Zipperstein urged all students to petition "regardless of their background in campus activities." "We're. especially anxious to have a delegation which is truly representative of° all University students and if an applicant has had no previous experience with NSA we will make special back- ground material available to him," she said. Built around the theme of "The Role of the Student in the Edu- cational Community," the Con- gres will bring hundreds of dele- gates from colleges and univer- sities all over the country to Ann Arbor to discuss student problems and set NSA policy. m. today at Hillel Foundation. 4p } STILL TIME TO SIGN: SL Cabinet To Conduct NSA Meet Intev-ew v 'U' Debaters To Start Ohio CollegeTour The University debating squad will start a one week tour of ver- bal battles with Ohio colleges and universities when it meets Bowl- ing Green State Monday. Debates with Heidelberg, Wes- tern Reserve, Kent State and Den- ison round out the week's schedule. Those making the tour are Vic- tor Gladstone, '53, Alan Kidston, '52, John Madden and Thomas Murray. They will be accompan- ied by Raymond Nadeau, debate coach. Fireside Series Dr. Ralph Rabinovitch, chief of Children's Service, of the Neuro- Psychiatric Institute of University hospital will discuss the "Child is the Father of Man" in the fifth of the "Twentieth Century Un- limited" fireside series at 8:30 p. Im. today at Hillel Foundation. A held p.m. the t .A FULL OF ENERGY- AND 50 SWEET- 11H at all leadi candy con TOOTSIE ROLL'S E SNACK TO EAT! ing nters Moak. tionally in what is considered ON OCCASION they form a Shakespeare's most calamitous radio-panel to discuss jazz music production. forms and terminology, and their * * * merits. KING LEAR, a petulant, iras- A wide variety of collections cible, but kindly 80 year old Bri- that members own, ranging from tish king will be played by John strictly negro folk music to the Sargent, '50, with Warren Pickett, newest and frantic bop of the Grad., taking the part of the Earl "real gone boppers" adds to the of Kent, loyal adviser to the king. range and color of the sessions. Ann Husselman, '50, and Joyce In addition, occasional Friday Atchison, '50, wil take the parts of night excursions are made to cities Regan and Goneril, both selfish, and towns in Michigan to join cruel daughters of Lear. The third other hot record societies in jam daughter Cordelia, loving, noble sessions, from the rarest collec- but stubborn like her father, will tions in the state. be acted by Marilyn Gegole. In the role of the gullible Earl Purdom Sa s of Glouchester will be Ted Heusel, Grad., and the jester who attempts to give his king PositionsOpen advice through foolery played by Arthur Flemings, Grad. The June graduate can wipe the Tickets for the performances perspiration from his brow and be may be obtained beginning Mon- assured that a job will be available day from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. at for him if he proves competent, the Lydia Mendelssohn box of- according to T. Luther Purdom, fice or reserved by calling 6300. director of the University Bureau The production is under the di- of Appointments. rection of Prof. William P. Hal- The number of job recruitment stead with set design by George interviews scheduled for the next Crepeau and costumes by Bar- two weeks is the greatest the Uni- bara Hamel. versityB uireauof Annnintments E. 4 '-'I ( :A 1 5 4 ,s4 JUMBO SIZE ANNIVERSARY SALE .A ENTIRE STOCK of MEN'S SHOES 20% 0off Limited Time Only NATIONALLY ADVERTISED NEW SPRING STYLES , NI, A A SPECIAL SALE I WINTHROP 4;uncc I Direct connections for Washington - Philadelphia - Newark - New York and all points East Fares increase April 1, 1950. All Fares subject to 15% Federal Tax. Reservations close at 12:00 o'clock noon Thursday, April 6. A. hl a, C L.;. -= . , I iNew JIIui1Ie[II 1 0- .JFI% lLa I II IA O