PAGE SMX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1953 KINCAID AND THE YOGI: Versatility Adds Spice to Life of Flutist - - - - Stan Swinton MICHIGAN WON, 10-6: Sees Victory By BECKY CONRAD First chair flutist for the Phil- adelphia Orchestra, William Kin- caid may not be a yogi addict who suspends himself in midair, but he can double up his legs and walk on his knees, no mean feat for a 58-year old. "But this is only a parlor-and- special-occasion trick," he ex- plained, "because you must be cor- rectly attired in sport' clothes or it wears out the trouser knees." THE SIX-FOOT tall, white- haired flutist learned this accom- plishment from a Japanese nurse as a child in the Hawaiian Islands. Kincaid spent ten years in the Islands where his father was a Presbyterian minister. Destined to become the flutist generally conceded tops in his field, Kin- caid picked up the rudiments of flute-playing in Honolulu. Honolulu was hometown number two for the Minneapolis-born flut- 1st. His family left for the Ameri- can possession when he was three years old and Kincaid swears that he can remember vividly the de- tails of the Pacific crossing and his arrival. From the Islands Kincaid moved to home number three near Char- lottesville, Va. Kincaid often makes short jaunts during tours back to his 212-year-old family homestead, Hatton Grange, a rambling Southern mansion with five hundred acres along the banks of the James river in Albemarle County. KINCAID'S interests are many and varied, but gambling and card- playing do not number among them. "Cards bore me, but I like to watch people throw their money away gambling, although I just can't see the point of it myself." He quit bridge-playing 35 years ago when the game became infested with too many experts. Now and then on the special Orchestra train he'll sit in on a hand of pinochle, "but only for 20 minutes, or so. "I find it more interesting to sit and look out the window or read a book. I like biographies, especial- ly autobiographies, and tours pro- vide the only chance for me to read." KINCAID'S platinum flute, made by Verne Q. Powell of Bos- ton for the '1939 World's Fair in New York, is one of seven of its kind in the world. "And the dif- ference between a platinum instru- ment and the ordinary silver flute is $5,000. Another difference is that since platinum is denser than silver, it doesn't vary as much with temperature changes."' Commenting on the worth of Jazz in the modern music world, Student Orator AwardedBond Richard Pinkerton, '55, has won a $100 defense bond in the fresh- man-sophomore division of the Detroit Times sponsored "Tourna- ment of Orators" held in Detroit this week, it was announced re- cently. Defeating n i n e contestants from Michigan colleges, Pinkerton will compete Thursday with senior division victor Guy Vander Jacht from Hope College to determine the representative in the zone con- test. The topic for the contest's pre- liminary rounds which were held in the University Speech Depart- ment last week, was "John Mar- shall, Frontiersman, Soldier, Dip- lomat, Statesman and Jurist." Heller To Lecture On Architecture Prof. Catherine Heller of the College of Architecture and De- sign will give an illustrated talk on contemporary South American Architecture and furniture and de- sign, tomorrow, at 4 p.m. at the architecture Auditorium. Prof. Heller attended the 8th an- nual Congress of Architecture at Mexico City where she had the op- portunity to view the new Uni- versity City which is built entirely upon lava. Exhibit To Open An exhibit featuring drawing, painting, architecture, city plan- ning and landscape design by stu- dents in the College of Architec- ture and Design will open at the Museum of Art in Alumni Memor- ial 'hall today and continue through May 31. Fountain Pens School Supplies For DeGasperi (Continued from Page 1) ca and held for years in British concentration camps." But economic rehabilitation and physical reconstruction have pro- gressed rapidly, he said. Rome is witnessing what Swin- ton feels may be a Renaissance of the Arts. Rome is probably roughly equal to the Paris of the Twenties," he said. Thousands of students have flocked to the ancient city to study painting, sculpture and architecture. There is a good chance that out of Italy will come the Fitzgeralds, the Hem- ingways and the Eliott Pauls who came out of Paris." Swinton has gathered news in 67 countries, as Stars and Stripes correspondent, during World War II, and since then with the Asso- ciated Press. He had followed war around the world-fought with Italian parti- sans and witnessed the stringing up of Mussolini, covered the Indo- Chinese revolt in 1946, war in Si- am, the Malayan revolution and was AP Chief in the Near East A Friday at Ferry F ielid * * * * * I .A -Daily-Frank Barger BACKSTAGE WITH KINCAID Kincaid said, "You can find jazz in good music but you can't find good music in jazz, "Of course, you never know who will be considered a classic com- poser in a hudnred years. Debussy was an utlra-modernist. Now his music is considered as not at all out of the ordinary and a stand- by for many programs. It's the same for Brahms and Bach and Beethoven." Although his retirement is in the far-off future, the flutist may re- tire to an island in Little Sebago Lake, Maine, where he can hu- mor his liking for fresh-water fish- ing. Fisherman Kincaid also owns a Chriscraft speedboat and one can easily imagine the colorful figureI of a man who can walk on hisI knees racing around the Mainel I -. lake in his nineties. area and later the Middle East. O OPENS MAY 5 05 o CORNER Maynard & William Phone 9629 Opens May 5 SPECIAL - WHILE STOCK LASTS IMPORTED PERFUMES Three Qualities . . , from 90c FURS " TAILORING * UNIFORMS Nn -o< -yo -yo - yo< y o >o > < -> a <-->o o<-- > o-- i< I. .3 O OttP IQain /9tea utre NON-FICTION Battle Cry ........ Men Like Shadows . Hotel Talleyrand.. . The Echoing Grove .. Leon Uris......... .... ..Dorothy Charques.,. .......Paul Hyde Bonner . . .Rosamond Lehmann. ........3.75 ........3.75 ........3.50 ........3.95 JET-PROPELLED-DON EADDY LURCHES FOR FIRST ON SINGLE FICTION Annapurna .............Maurice Herzog .............5.00 The Unfair Sex .......... Nina Farewell ..............2.95 The Fabulous Fanny ...... Norman Katkov .............3.95 Seedtime of the Republic. .C. 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