PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1951 JOVIAL DEMOCRATS-Frank E. McKinney( right) of Indian- apolis, who was named Wednesday new chairman of the Demo- cratic National Committee, and former chairman William M. Boyle, Jr., join in hearty laughter at National Airport, Washing- ton. Boyle, who had given McKinney his support, was there to welcome the new chairman when he iflew in from his home town. Baldwin ,Lane H il Di ector, Un11Iif iesWorksho' Activity By MARGE SHEPHERD Four years ago, when DeWitt C. Baldwin became director of Lane Hall he recognized in the "Michi- gan Plan" of religious activity an opportunity to express fully his interest in student religious beliefs. Under the University plan for a unified inter-faith program religi- ous ideals and principles are put into actual practice in the Lane Hall "workshop" atmosphere. THE JOB of "Uncle Cy," as he is U' Men Attend Med Conf abs Medical School faculty members, Dr. Sibley W. Hoobler and Dr. Frederick A. Coller, chairman of the surgery department, will be attending regional and national meetings this week. Hoobler is now in Chicago at- tending the Midwestern Regional meeting of the American Federa- tion for Clinical Research. chairman of the Midwestern sec- tion. He will also attend the Cen- tral Society for Clinical Research. Dr. Coller will leave for San Francisco today to attend the meetings of the Board of Regents of the American College of Sur- geons and the Clinical Congress. known to Lane Hall frequenters, is to coordinate and integrate this broad religious program and devel- op its many aspects.In this posi- tion he has been able to exercise his real life interest in "building bridges between people." As coordinator, Baldwin acts as advisor or active member of four major campusreligious or- ganizations, on both the student and adult levels. In addition, he is the University representative to numerous state and national religious conferences. ANOTHER FACET of Baldwin's position is his service in referring students for counseling to the chaplains and directors of the stu- dent religious groups. After serving for 10 years fol- lowing World War I as a mis- sionary to Burma, he became in- terested in various cultures and faiths and particularly in spreading this interest to college students. For three years he conducted a survey of college student attitudes toward people of other faiths through personal interviews with from 3,000 to 5,000 students. As a result of this survey the Lisle Fellowship was founded to provide an opportunity to put into practice the attitudes and methods of intercultural living. 'U'BUilding Cornerstone To Be Laid The cornerstone for the new University Medical Research Building being constructed from a $3,000,000 grant from the Kresge Foundation is scheduled to be laid at 11 a.m. Monday. President Harlan H. Hatcher and other University officials will be present for the ceremony, as well as four trustees of the Kresge Foundation. BRIEF REMARKS by President Hatcher and Albert C. Fursten- berg, dean of the Medical School, will precede the actual laying of the stone. The Rev. Dwight S. Large, pastor of the local First Methodist Church will give the in- vocation. The new building will permit centralization, modernization and expansion of medical re- search facilities in an area west of University Hospital. The four trustees of the founda- tion who will be here Monday are: Paul W. Voorhies, president; Amos F. Gregory, secretary; Stanley S. Kresge, vice-president and son of Sebastian S. Kresge, founder of the Foundation; and Howard C. Baldwin, vice-president. Sebastian S. Kresge has ex- pressed "deep regret" over his in- ability to be present. U Alumnus Gauss Dies In New York Christian Gauss, dean-emeritus at Princeton University and for- mer University faculty member, died Thursday night in the Penn- sylvania Railroad Station, New York City. Born in 1878, Gauss received his bachelor's degree from the Uni- versity in 1898. From 1899 until 1901 he serVed as an instructor in Romance languages here. The prominent educator had served on the Princeton faculty from 1905 until 1945, when he re- tired. He was dean for the last 20 of his 40 years there. A former president of the Uni- ted Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, Gauss was widely known as a writer of books and magazine arti- cles on education subjects. He returned to Ann Arbor in 1947 to address a national confer- ence of college and university deans held at the University. BusAd Men WriteBook A new book entitled "Invest- ment Advice for Professional Men," written by Prof. Wilford J. Eiteman and Haword A. Bolton, '54L, of the business administra- tion school, has just been pub- lished. Suggesting ways for profession- al men to get the most from the money they have to invest, the authors directed the book to per- sons receiving relatively stable in- comes, such as doctors, lawyers and engineers. Investment of savings so as to secure the maximum return with the minimum risk is the by-word of the book. Air Force ROTC Needs Linguists The Air Force has announced that commissions as reserve offi- cers in the Tenth Air Force are available for language specialists in over sixty fields. Officer's vacancies can be filled by men or women, veteran or non- veteran. Candidates must either be citizens or have taken out first papers. r'1 r IL O L D P A P A L T RA IN M O V E D-The 19th century chapel coach of Pone Pius IX's train passes throulgh street in P ew' ' F-~~' TP"e- e '.,,; ' l4 AWN L E N S J N T R O D U CT I 0 N - Fips, a new baby dwarf donkey at the Hagenbeck Zoo in Hamburg, Germany, is photo- graphed at age of two weeks, with mother, Paula, as chaperone. 9 I '1 t "- I L U X U R Y I T E M C A S U A L T I E S-Banned during present emergency, last white side- xall tires move along productioniine followed by regular tires in Goodrich plant, Akron, Ohio. Three locations for your convenience MAIN OFFICE: Corner of Huron and Main Streets UNIVERSITY OFFICES: 330 South State Street 1108 South University Avenue Opposite the campus at each end of the diagonal. ANN ARBOR BAaK Mecmber-Fe'deral Deposit Insurance' Corporatfion MAKING PORT IN GOT AM- Italiancadets wave from the rigging of their training ship, the Amerigo Ves- pucci, as they arrive in New York on leg of a 10,000-mile cruise. A, Z 1 T A, Z 1 G S A S C A R S A C S -Zita, two-year-old elephant weighing 1,000 pounds, exits from auto at Providence, R. I., as her youthful trainer, Marsha Hunt, holds the door. 1.1 0-0 SA JE .4 at ':::rT {{:a:}i:{i :iti ?i +:~{::3i :";:: :C:::<;"i;:i" {":P:}"i'.},y '" ". ".!Mi:T; 3 ik: "k:; '} :i ..,:.:::. ....... : g r.r.. ... , :iii ::."i;":a.,":, .,,."N."i.:":i.. ".v ."w..._.,. v: :aa4:" , i3s ,.,._.$,.:"::". ; i7 3". ":":.. ".. .". v.<::".:,Mr: '?. utiii"Li.'p7x i .;: . ~ . :...............yl. ; t. k:Cr. ..}:"F...... ..~ ..n:;...