THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1950 _____________________________________ U I ________________________________________ a i YEAR OF PROGRESS: Science Convention Reveals, Top Achievements of 1949 P 4 Significant scientific achieve- ments accomplished in 1949 were revealed during the Christmas va- cation at the recent convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in New York City. Prof. Albert Einstein presented to the convention his "generalized theory of gravitation"-a series of formulas which seek to weave all known physical phenomena into one master concept: THE DISCOVERY of a previ- ously unknown degree of efficiency in green plants was announced at the convention by Prof. Otto War- burg, one of the world's leading biologists. While the best machines made by man are only 25-30 per cent Kamrowski Art Exhibited Forty-seven works of art by Prof. Gerome Kamrowski will be presented at an exhibition open- ing today in Paris. Prof. Kamrowski, whose most recent works in oil, watercolor, and ink drawings will be displayed at the Galerie R. Creuze until Jan. 22, is the winner of the 1948 Cran- brook Prize and the 1948 Michigan Academy of Arts, Science, and Letters Show. Prof. Kamrowski has been on the staff of the College of Archi- tecture and Design since 1946. His work may currently be seen in the "Works of Progress" ex- hibition circulating throughout the state. efficient, Prof. Warburg has dis- covered that plants are 65-80 per cent efficient in their use of the sun's energy. Prof. Warburg pointed out algae, which are single celled plants, are so efficient that 50 tons of the plant could be harvested from one acre. The plants could be utilized as feed for animals or as a direct source of food for man, he said. * * * SCIENTISTS AT the convention vere also given a mild mental sur- prise when Prof. Vaden Miles of Wayne University revealed that cientific research had shown nany of the old proverbs and say- ngs used to predict the weather o be correct. "Higher the clouds, finer the weather, faster the wind, sooner the change in weather," .was proved by Prof. Miles to be sci- entifically accurate. But "North wind blow and we shall have snow," is just a bit of false mythology, according to Prof. Miles. ANOTHER DISCOVERY which may allow the deaf to hear was announced by Prof. Norbert Wien- er of MIT. The projected device will be worn as a glove, and tiny in- struments in each finger will re- ceive vibrations corresponding to tones of the human voice, which the deaf person may learn to translate. Prof. Elvin Stakman, president of the AAA, also declared at the convention that it is possible for science to eliminate starvation and provide an abundance of food for the world through new breeding, crop control and reducing the de- structive effects of weather. Members of the association dis- agreed as to what action univer- sities should take on scientific re- search projects that are or might become "secret." Some scientists argued that such projects were a distortion of the function of a university, while others held that the work must be done and the universities were best able to do it. Daily Gives Experience In Business Fifty Staffers Handle Finances (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth of a series of articles to ac- quaint students with some of the Influential organizations on campus a'ir how members and officers are chosen.) By PETER HOTTON Unique among campus groups is 'he Daily's business staff, an or- ganization of 50 unsung financial giants who handle the paper's near-$100,000 turnover each year. The distinguishing feature of the staff is that most members deal exclusively with townspeople, ignoring students and faculty members. One-third of the staff are in business administration and all the men, who make up two- thirds of the staff, plan to go into the business world. THE STAFF is neatly divided into three groups: advertising, circulation and finance. Adver- tising staff members collect, write, promote and make up advertise- ments; circulation workers get the paper out to its 7,600 readers and the finance staff has all the fun-they collect all the money. Any second semester fresh- man can get on to the business staff by trying out, which amounts to the freshman seeing if the staff is any good instead of the staff seeing if the fresh- man is competent. After this trial period, which lasts about two weeks, he becomes a servicer, having exclusive re- sponsibility to three or four city merchants, writing their ads or picking up ads written by the ad- vertiser. * * * OTHER JOBS are reading proof and getting acquainted with other departments throughout his freshman and sophomore years. In the second semester of his sophomore year, he can peti- tion the senior managers for paid assistant positions to the heads of business departments. The seven junior staff positions are available through informal petitions to and appointments by the senior managers. They include all department heads who are fully responsible for circulation, compiling all advertisements both local and national, making up ad- vertisements on the page each day, billing accounts for classified and display advertising and a general all-around secretary to anyone on the staff who wants some paper work done. * * * PROMOTIONS manager is al- so a junior, who signs and lets all contracts, usually by the year or semester. After working several years bucking keen competition all the way through the staffs, a staffer can petition the Board in Control of Student Publications for one of four senior positions, listed on the Daily's masthead on the editorial page. Business manager is in charge of the entire staff, acting as a liaison officer between the staffs and advertisers and having the pleasure of co-signing all Daily checks. Advertising manager is overseer of all advertising, from the smallest "lost-one dog" ad to the biggest national cigarette ad. Finance manager has the head- ache of handling all accounts and the myriad of figures in the book- keeping departmnt. Associate business manager trains all understaffmen to bring in the $100,000 a year and to con- tinue The Daily's reputation as having not only the most but the best advertising in college dailies. -Daily-wally Barth "POET'S CORNER"-John Keats comforts his dying brother while his loyal housekeeper looks on, in a scene from Poet's Corner," to be presented tonight by the speech department in a bill of one-act plays. Left to right are Harriet Parrish, John Waler and John Sargent. One-Act Plays Start Tonight At Mendelssohn Theatre U - - To Discuss Time Students interested in a student- f aculty discussion on "Budgeting One's Time" may meet at 8 p.m. today at Lane Hall and go to the home of Lane Hall director DeWitt Baldwin, 517 Oswego, for the dis- cussion. L: 'On the Cam and in Ann Arbor, npus" it's 508 E. WILLIAM An heir to the French throne, an English poet and a human horse will be the featured attrac- tions of the speech department's bill of three one-act plays to be given at 8 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets will be sold from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. today in the Theatre box office. OPENING THE BILL is Thorn- ton Wilder's "Queens of France," the story of the discovery of an heir to the throne of France in Tau Beta Pi Initiates70 N Yew Members Gamma chapter of Tau Beta Pi, engineering honor society, has announced the ini iation of 70 new members. Named to the organization are, John C. Biery, Theodore Birdsall, Carl Bieser, Charles Bliven, Rich- ard C. Brown, Robert Brungraber, Robert Brunner, Cecil Carter, Leo- nard Chabala, Osvaldo Chernit- sky, Robert Collar. ALSO ROGER COLLARD, Dean Clifford, Walter Debler, Jan Dres- zer, Alfred English, Donald Ganz- horn, Stanley Gavern, Selig Gert- zis, Harold Gibbons, Allan Gordon, Richard Gresla, Richard Halatek, Richard Hanns. The list continues with Eugene Hannahs, Victor Harris, Richard Heruth, Herman Kaplan, Ray- mond King, Robert Kohr, Ray Ladendorf, Peter Lashmet, Rol- lin Lemm, Ivan Lyons, Francis Marsh, James McGill. Also included are James Mit- chell, Francis Nidenfuhr, John Olt- man, Lewis Payne, Leslie Peter- son, Donald Phillips, John Powers, Richard Randall. P. D. Randolph, Harold Reiher, James Rice, Ken- neth Ristad, JameA Robertson, John Robertson, Jr., J. C. Rowley, Otto Schiesswohl. * * * OTHER INITIATES are Willis Service, Charles Simmons, Ken- neth Sivier, Richard Smalter, John Soderberg, Ray Stenstrom, Robert Stevens, Carl Studerous, Frank Tendick, Warren Todter, Sumio Yukawa, Robert Warsinski, Edward Ulvestad. Also William Weil, Alvin Wein- stein, Ozelle White, Dean Widrig and David Wise. New Orleans. The cast includes Ted Heusel, Betty Ellis, Doris Clark, Lorel Rodin, Phyllis Zieve and Betty Robinson. Enid Moise, Grad., is the director. Scenes from the life of John Keats will be depicted in the sec- ond offering, "Poet's Corner," by Mary Pakington. Directed by Nafe Katter, Grad., the play features John Sargent as the poet and John Waller, Bruce Huffman, Diane Faulk and Harriet Parrish as the people who influenced his life. A colorful horse, played by Wil- liam Taylor, will bound through Jean Cocteau's "Grphee," the clos- ing play on the bill. The comedy is a modern, symbolistic treatment of the famous Orpheus legend. Len Rosenson and Betty Horwitz will play the lovers Orphee and Eurydice. Others in the cast are Mary Ann Kulas, David Marshall, Herbert Neuman, William Mac- Kenzie and Dan Waldron. Strowan Robertson, Grad., directed the play. Party Will Aid DP Students A Displaced Person's party to raise additional funds to bring two foreign students to the University next semester will be sponsored by the Congregational Disciples Guild from 9 to 12 p.m. today at Lane Hall. The party is for the benefit of the guild's Foreign Student Fund, which, with the University, will provide one year's upkeep for a German refugee and a D.P. stu- dent. A floor show is planned for en- tertainment, along with square dancing. Cookies and punch will be served for refreshments. Tickets may be purchased at the dbor. Boulding Receives Economics Medal Prof. Kenneth E. Boulding of the economics department was awarded the John Bates Clark medal by the American Economics Association on December 29 in New York. The award is made every two years to "that American economist under the age of forty who is ad- judged to have made a significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge. Quiz-Kids Will Face Full House A deluge of ticket requests yes- terday totally exhausted the sup- ply for the faculty-Quiz Kid tussle that will be broadcast over station WUOM at 3:30 p.m. Sunday from the Rackham Lecture Hall. * * * TICKETS ARE STILL available however for the Chicago Round Table broadcast scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Sunday, Rackham Lecture Hall. A limited supply of tickets also remains for Cinderella Week- end - an audience participation show to be televised at 1 p.m. Tuesday from the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. All three programs are part of the week-long dedication of WUOM. "What is Popular Culture Doing to Your Life?" will be the topic for discussion during the nation- wide NBC radio broadcast of the Chicago Round Table. Two of the four participants will be University faculty members, Warner G. Rice, director of the General Library and Prof. Howard McClusky, professor of educational psychology and consultant in com- munity adult education. The third ;articipant will be Prof. Kenneth Burke, of Bennington College. Henry Sans, chairman of the University of Chicago English de- partment will moderate. Maurer Gets Chairmanship Acting Journalism Head Since 1947 Prof. Wesley H. Maurer has been appointed chairman of the jour- nalism department. Prof. Maurer, who has been act- ing chairman of the department since June, 1947, when Prof. John L. Brumm retired, has been active in newspaper and college journal- ism work since 1922. * * * PROF. MAURER first came to the University in 1924, after serv- ing for two years as news editor of the Mexico Evening Ledger, Mexico, Missouri, and correspond- ent for two metropolitan dailies. During this first year, Prof. Maurer organized the Michigan Journalist, the student-produced newspaper of the journalism de- partment. Leaving the University for three years in 1925, Prof. Maurer be- came news editor and editorial writer for the Athens Daily Editor, Athens, Ohio. In 1928 Prof. Maurer returned to Ann Arbor as instructor in journalism, receiving his full pro- fessorship in 1947. Prof. Maurer is also a member of the executive committee of the literary college, the Avery Hop- wood Prizes Committee, and the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications. Freak Accident.. .. GARY, Ind.-(AP)-A load of 31,- 000 pounds of black building paper buried a Michigan truck driver in eight feet of water tonight. Displays showing the life of Chippewa Indians in early Michi- gan will be featured from 7 to 9 p.m. today at the University Mu- seums. Supplementing the natural his- tory exhibits will be motion pic- tures of Indian life in the south- western United States, "Pueblo Dwellers" and "Hopi Indians," to be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 3024 of the Museums building. The exhibit also features dio- ramas of Indian life designed and constructed by Robert Butsch and Carleton Angell, museum staff I NVENT( CLEARAI A Wise Way to S CHRISTMAS IDRESSES Selected Group Wool Jerseys, Rayon Crepes $5--10 Wool Crepes and a I Formerly 10.95 to Junior, Misses, Ha COA TS CASUALS and FUI FITTED and STRAIG 1/3 REDU, Formerly 49.50 to 150.00 SUITS A Selected Gr NOVELTY WOOLS and :a 1 3REDU Junior, Misses', Women's Sizes 8 to 2 NO EXCHANGES or E ...LIBERTY AT N e as au a . : pend Your CHECK 3. 4,- s of , Taffetas, Nylons 15 -$25 few Velvets o 49.95 alf Sizes artists. These were developed from the suggestions of Volney H. Jones, Curator of Ethnology in the Museum of Anthropology. The scenes depict the Chippe- was hunting and fishing, gather- ing and threshing wild rice, tap- ping maple trees for syrup to be made into sugar, and engaged in social rites and customs. The arts and crafts of the Great Lakes Indians, the plains Indians, the Indians of the southwest, and those of the northwest Pacific t coast will be represented in ex- hibits on the fourth floor. 'U' Museums' Indian Display And Movies Featured Tonight I; '.~1. .. y ,,''l R TRIMS HT LINES ICED ..::::V.....:'.:J: :::L{."{'":^i':.::fJ:*J:"".%*.*:::.*.:''.:tti::"J:' *.. . ..'"": :."1M :4 .:.,.....S.:.....:: ::: t.. " -'.: '. Sizes 8 to 2 3 I . i DRY NCE 4 roup GABARDINES ICED and Half Sizes 70 4f "1. 0 r +i.. h Ac rJ %f . :4:' t for brilliant, distortion-free 45 r.p.m. Records REFUNDS >t ,,; MAYNARD i yV5 for the new "45" (above)--world's fastest automatic changer. Easily attached to any radio, phono or TV set .. , plays the new 45 rpm records (up to 50 minutes of music in one loading). Top Favorites on Standard and 45 rpm Records CLASSICAL f That Midnight Kiss. Mario Lanza..WDM 1330 (45 RPM)... $3.51 t Concerto No. 1, in E Minor (Chopin). Alexander Bra ilowsky, piano RCA Victor Symphony. 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