S'HE 'IICHIGA DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 2t, 190 THeMCIGNDAL TflUSDA. MA 2&19 'UNG T R, CLUB SHRU : Stump Speakers Seek Missing Bell' EVEN PTA PESTERS: Davies Tells Headaches Of Hollywood Writers By BILL LANOUETTE The members of Sigma Rho Tau are making an extensive search for their lost Tung Oil Bell in the hopes of recovering it for the club's annual Tung Oil Banquet to be held Friday. "The bell has become a tradi- tional fixture at the banquet Since it was found missing from its safe-keeping place in East Hall, the boys have been frantical- ly searching everywhere for it," Robert D. Brackett, advisor, of the engineer's stump speaking soci- ety said. , . _ .., ._: _. _.. e ,_ . PROF. BRACKETT explained the meaning of tung oil: "We have adopted the tung tree as our club shrub because tung oil is a necessary tool for all good speak- ers "- Because the members strive for perfection in speaking, they insist upon this same perfection in guest speakers. After the guest speakers have had their alotted time, the bell is rung so loudly that further ora- tory is impossible. "We must ad- journ on time. Thais ,why the bell is so necessary," moaned Prof. Brackett. "NOT ONLY HAS the bell be- come an integral part of our or- ganization, but it is also a land- mark of Ann Arbor's history. It was used in our first courthouse to call the community to meetings. It also clanged the warnings of Ann Arbor's last Indian raid," he continued. When the courthouse was re- modeled, the bell was given to the Arbeiters Schaft, a union for the town's workers. The organization slowly died out as the community grew, un- til only four men remained on ** * Creative writing is an attempt on the part of one person to con- vey an idea or an emotion, and his career is measured by the de- gree to which he succeeds, Valen- tine Davies, '27, said yesterday in his lecture on "Creative Writing for the Screen" at Rackham Am- phitheatre. "Pictures are a big business and the film writer is the only one Weather Jobs Open in Air Force Reserve Opportunities to acquire a practiced weather eye and a tech- nical rating in the Air Force Re- serve are now open to University men student. According to Dayle D. Rippe, head of the Corollary Weather Service Unit at Selfridge Field, about 40 positions as weather technicians are waiting to be fill- ed by young men interested in weather observing and a rating in the organized reserve. ANY MALE over 17 who can pass the Air Force physical and mental tests is eligible to enter the program. After becoming a member of the unit by signing up for a three-year period, the volunteer will spend one weekend per month in training with the unit at Selfridge Field. Some of the technical jobs to be learned by the new members in- clude ordinary weather observing which deals with atmospheric pressure, temperature, winds and humidity and electronic observa - tion of weather elements aloft, according to Rippe. A voluntary two-week tour of active auty is also offered. Rippe asked those interested in further information to contact him by phone at Ypsi 4556--R13. IT'S A MUSICAL CIGARETTE BOX Available for the first time-this most attractive and unusual novelty for every student of the University of Michigan. The mnsic movement, which plays the most popular of all college songs, has been imported from Switzerland exclusively for students and alumni of the University of Michigan. The handsome cigarette box is, made of dark mahogany-the finsh is hand rubbed. Avail- able only by mail: $8.95 Postpaid. Order your music box today. Send your address and check or money order to: The John A. Hale Company 521 North Van Buren Street Bay City, Michigan ANYBODY SEEN OUR BELL? That's what puzzled members of Sigma Rho Tau, engineering stump speaking society, are ask- ing as they redoubled their ef- forts to locate the missing tro- phy in time for their annual banquet Friday. * * * the board of trustees. Sigma Rho Tau received it as a gift in 1947. At last report, frantically- searching engineers had still not located the bell but one meniber staunchly declared, "We guaran- tee the bell will be heard at our banquet." Reservations for the banquet are available at the Union desk or from Sigma Rho Tau members. The charge is $2.00 per plate. writing in a mass medium," Davies said. Because of this, there are many problems confronting the Hollywood writer, he added. One of these is the system in which he must work, Davies said. When the director, producer, and executive producer all see the story differently the story that is shot is, consequently, the composite view of many people and the ori- ginal one has been diluted, modi- fied and compromised all the way down, he continued. ANOTHER problem for movie writing Davies mentioned, is that every organization has an opinion of what a picture says and does. There are all kinds of pressure groups, he said, among them the PTA and different psychiatric groups. "There is not one week in which the Screen Writer's Guild isn't asked that this be added or this be omitted from a Holly- wood production," Davies added. "It is an unfortunate necessity, a problem that working in a mass medium presents." Hollywood has also imposed a set of arbitrary rules that govern movie making, he said. "There are no such restrictions on foreign films. The 'Bicycle Thief' has three sequences that could never go into a Hollywood picture," Da- vies added. ONE OF THE greatest disad- vantages to the screen writer is that he arrived on the Hollywood scene late, according to Davies. "When Edison invented the kinetiscope people were so en- chanted by movement that they paid little attention to the story. The writer was pretty much ig- nored until sound came in." A novel element in Hollywood, the writer-director, is the new hope of the industry, Davies de- clared. "Most of the successful pictures produced recently are the works of a writer-director." He predicted that the future of the writer in films will improve and writers will be given a better chance to express themselves. Dental Meeting To tart Today Approximately 50 dentists will attend the annual spring seminar meeting of The American Acade- my of Periodontology todayf through Saturday in the Kellogg Bldg. Speakers during the three-day meeting will include Dr. Edwardj A. Cheney and Dr. Jerome W. Conn from the University Hospi- tal who will talk on orthodontics and endocrinology in relation to the study of periodontal disease.1 Others participating in the pro-j gram wil be Dr. Frank M. Wentz, Ir. Milton B. Engel and Dr. Hugh T. Carmichael, from the Universi- ty of Illinois; Dr. Edward J. Ryan, from Evanston, Illinois; and Dr. L. S. Fosdick, from Northwestern University. The series of lectures on dis- eases of the gums are sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation In- stitute for Graduate and Post- graduate Dentistry. PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S * PAY 1005 Gr. a ASPIRIN MAPSHAL New Judges Selected by Case, Club The Case Clubs of the Law School have announced the selec- tion of next year's judges who 4 will preside over the clubs' prac- tice cases. They are: Lawrence J. Fuller, presiding judge, Gordon Hue- schen, Rex Eames, William Milli- gan, Howard Van Antwerp, David Dutcher, Richard Watson, Shel- ton Penn, Donald Leeper, Thomas Walsh, and Robert Borsos. The alternates .are: Mark Bauer, Wiliam Flashkamp, Paul Harri- son, James McKim, James Rich- ardson, and Marlin Scholl. * * * ACCORDING TO Gordon Boo- zer, '50L, this year's presiding judge, the judges, who are all:Law School seniors, were selected on the basis of prior success in case club work plus a consideration of their scholastic average. The Case Clubs of the Law School are divided into thir- teen trial groups this year, with 36-40 members in each group. Generally, each group tries 4 about nine cases a year. Case club members, freshmen and juniors who participate as lawyers in the trials, are given a hypothetical set of facts to appeal. In the case club trials a student prepares his case and goes through the same procedure that an attorney does in appealing a case from a lower court. The final argument of the case clubs is heard by a bench of visit- ing judges. A faculty member sits as judge with the senior student judge on junior cases.. All cases are open to the pub- lic, according to Gordon Boozer, present presiding judge; -Daily-wany Bartn CAMERAS ROLL-Free lance cameraman Russ Carrier photo- -graphs a group of Korean teachers attending the University Eng- lish Language Institute, while Dan C. Lawler, of International Motion Picture, supervises. The movie will be a State Department information film. * * * * U' Korean Student Group filedy State Department LESS CHA IE AT MARSHALL'S * PAY LESS AT MARSHALL'S - MPAGNE Prices Effective Thursday, M BEER Friday, Saturday (A BEER We Reserve the Right To Limit WINE Quantities. Pint w w w f . By LEONARD GREENBAUM Motion pictures of the life of Korean students at the Univer- sity will soon be shown in an of- ficial State Department informa- tion film throughout the world. The movie is now being filmed on campus by Producer Dan C. Lawler of International Motion Pictures, a division of the State Departmnt, and free lance cam- eraman Russ Carrier. SUBJECT OF THE FILM is a group of Korean teachers who are BusAd Survey Shows Gripes Of Students What students object most to in the School of Business Admin- istration are departmental tests and the lack of coordination in the briefing of lecture sections, according to a recent survey con- ducted by Alpha Kappa Psi, a pro- fessional business fraternity. These, as well as other student opinions, were ascertained in the survey which interviewed 896 business administration students and 481 non-business students. When questioned on past final exam schedules, most students voiced their displeasure with the fact that too many exams occur consecutively. They also were dis- satisfied with early exams. Objective tests also were cri- ticized. About 70 per cent of the business students interviewed be- lieve that the meaning of many questions on such tests are ob- scured by vagueness of wording. Gne iea Lion Those who submitted mater- ial for Generation may pick up their manuscripts any time in 2213 Angell Hall, according to Charles Olsen, managing ed- itor. attending the University's Eng- lish Language Institute. Ranging from university professors to ele- mentary grade teachers, the Ko- reans aie studying scientific me- thods for teaching English as a foreign language. Their daily activities from the time they get up in the morning until they go to bed at night are being recorded in the film. Shots of the group in class, eat- ing in the East Quad cafeteria, watching a footbal scrimmage and touring the campus are typical of the scenes to be included. LAWLER AND CARRIER have been shooting the group's activi- ties for a week,'and if the weather holds, expect to finish by Satur- i " ~lsV1 liu, o "OQ . Narration tracks in 27 lan -Miller, chairman of theRevision guages will be attached to the Committee of the United States movie by the State Department Pharmacopoeia,. will speak on prior to release. The film will then "New Tools for Revision," at 7:45 be shipped to embassies and con- p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- sulate offices throughout the theatre. world for distribution in foreign The lecture is open to the pub- countries. lic. StatePharmacists To Attend Dinner Approximately 150 members of the Michigan branch of the American Pharmaceutical Asso- ciation will be present at the an- nual May dinner at 6:30 p.m., to- day, in the League. Following the dinner- L.nl dC A I -J -J UN' -J -J JI Q -J Q1 a- U.S.P. RUBBING ALCOHOL 9, Bk Fountain Special. Sat. 1-5 p.m. Only DELI Cherr Clip C PET, Tall Limit 3 withc Popular CIGAR Buy the plus 125F WA PAP CIOUS y Soda Coupon MILK Can 9c coupon r Brands ZETTES Carton [69 tax Memorial Day Needs AIR CORPS STYLE SUN GLASSES 93c, with case CLEANSING 1W TISSUES Genuine Oil Tanned CHAMOIS 1.50 Value Ili 39ge r JI fili, ........ fIiii HOLIDAY SPECIAL - Rubber BEACH BALLS and WATER ANIMALS from i, Du Pont U Cellulose SPONGES Large Size '4 I .1 "O -a "( - 1 (A r I- m (A (A r- r - m (A (A (A - m (A b. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) Carillon Recital by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 p.m., Thurs., May 25, all-Mozart program, including Romance from "Eine kleine Nachtmusik", selec- tions from "Figaro", Andante with variations from Sonata 18, and selections from "Die Zauberflote." String Quartet Class, pupils of Oliver Edel and Paul Doktor, will present a program at 4:15 p.m., Thurs., May 25, Rackham Assem- bly Hall. It will open with Haydn's Quartet, Op. 74, No. 1, in C major, followed by Beethoven's Grosse Fugue, Op. 133, and Quartet, Op. 22 by Hindemith. The public is in- vited. Exhibitions Photographs of the work of Wil- ham Muschenheim, architect of New York, now visiting lecturer in the College of Architecture and Design; through June 10. First floor corridor, Architecture Bldg. Canterbury Club: 10:15 a.m., Holy Communion. Camp Davis Registration for Geologists: Registration of all ge- ology students (both graduate and undergraduate) for the Camp Davis summer session will be held in 3065 Nat. Sci. Bldg., 7 p.m. Come prepared to deposit $40 for transportation and accommoda- tions on the trip out. All students who expect graduate credit must pick up their election cards at the Graduate School in advance and bring them to the meeting. American Pharmaceutical Asso- ciation, Michigan Branch; open meeting. "New Tools for Revision." Dr. Lloyd C. Miller, Director of Revision, United States Pharmaco- peia, 8 p.m., Rackham Amphithea- ter. Persons interested invited. Aiee-Ire presents the General Electric "House of Magic" show. 8 p.m., Natural Science Auditor- ium. Everyone invited. Student Affiliate of the Ameri- can Chemical Society: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Dean Ralph Sawyer will show his motion pictures on the Atom Bomb Project and will also give a short talk. (Continued on Page 7) I 4 8. SALE! SKYWARD GOLF BALLS 93" 3 for Genuine Pennsylvania TENNIS BALLS $149 Can of Three Speeds Tan! SUTRA Sun Ton Lotion 59c RECORD THE HOLIDAYS FRESH KODAK FILM - ALL SIZES 33C 1 _ ,, III.ll I lt..,...........Iull Spray 'cm1 Slay 'em! AEROSOL DDT BOMBS 98 1Oc bar PALMOLIVE SOAP 5'a Thursday Friday Saturday v1 I. - . $20 TRADE-IN SALE reg. 69.50 ROYAL PORTABLE WITH CARRYING CASE She's Got Her Date for 4 floor corridor, Architecture Bldg. 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