1 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1953 Prof. Heller Gives Talk. On Buildings, South America is awakening to 20th century architecture and there is a fever of building going on, said Prof. Catherine Heller of the College of Architecture and Design speaking yesterday on her South American tour. While attending the eighth An- nual Congress of Architecture in Mexico City, Prof. Heller had the opportunity to view the new Uni- versity which is built entirely upon lava. She toured the west coast of South America, stopping at Bo- gota, Lima and Santiago. CROSSING over to the Eastern coast, Prof. Heller was impressed by the change from provincial Spanish-type buildings to vast skyscrapers. Architects are swamped with contracts to build tall vertical buildings of concrete and glass, and because steel is not avail- able to the South American ar- chitect, all supporting pillars are built of reinforced concrete. This Student Composers Contest Opens Student composers of music will have a chance to win $7,500 in the 1953 Student Composers Radio Awards contest officially inaugur- ated this- week. Conducted under the auspices of broadcasters and music educators, the contest is held to "encourage the creation of concert music by student composers." Awai'ds are to be made for com- w positions, vocal or instrumental,I submitted by students in second- ary schools, colleges and conserva- tories of music located in the United States and Canada. Prizes will be $2,000, $1,500 and $1,000, with $750 going to the next two winners and $500 for sixth place. In addition, four high school students may win prizes of $250 each. Among the judges will be Dean Earl V. Moore of the music school. Further information, together with official rules and entry blanks may be obtained from Russell Sanjek, Director, SCRA Project, Fifth Floor, 580 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. Tickets Orders for the 1953-1954 Choral Union Series and Extra Concert Series are now being accepted and filed in sequence dating from yesterday at the box office of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower. Featurced in the Choral Union series will be the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra and Vladimar Horowitz. Gorden Gapper, Grad., reporter for the New Zealand Herald will lecture at 4:15 today in connection with the journalism department- sponsored film program, "The Land of the Long White Cloud- New Zealand" in Auditorium C, Angell Hall. Gapper, a graduate of the Uni- versity of Otago in Dunedin is Gapper To Lecture on New Zealand currently on leave from the New Zealand Herald and is completing' a year of study here at the Uni- versity. Here -on a two year University Press Club of Michigan fellowship, Gapper will have four internships, each of three month duration, on different Michigan newspapers as a part of his training program. The technicolor films to be shown by Gapper will include in- formation on cattle-ranching, mountaineering, sheep-raising and maritime activity in New Zealand, in addition to giving some samples of the architecture and the cul- tural activities of the people. Scheduled to be shown on the program are "Round-up on Moles- worth," "Mount Cook," "Hawkes Bay" and "Centennial City." The contest ber 31. will close Decem- 4 , f f A MODERN SOUTH AMERI- CAN BUILDING IN SAN PAULOS gives the buildings a look of solidarity, but at the same time throw's the graceful lines off. * * s IN BOGOTA there is only one manufacturing company that has modern streamlined mass produc- tion methods similar to American companies. Custom built furniture is the predominate type. Small shops with only a half-dozen pieces made at one time can be seen i most of the cities. These cus- tom-made pieces are made pri- marily for apartment dwellers and are comparatively expen- sive. Some of the most outstanding and interesting furniture work in San Paulos is done by six young architects and designers who call themselves Les Blanche et Negro. Their use of color is extremely striking and the exploitation of texture in the shop outstanding, Prof. Heller noted. Youth Chorus To Sing Today More than 1,200 Ann Arbor school students will take over Hill Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. today in a miniature May Festival program following the annual Festival this weekend. The Festival Youth Chorus, an all-city elementary school band, combined junior high chorus and a junior-senior high school or- chestra will perform in the Ann Arbor Public School May Music Festival which is open to the pub- lic free of charge. The Youth Chorus is the same group that sang Saturday in the May Festival. Tonight the Chorus will sing a suite of songs arranged by con- temporary English composer Ben- jamin Britten. Lawton's Tribute Dedicated to Yost As a tribute to Fielding Yost, J. Fred Lawton, author of "Varsity," has written another song for the University entitled "Great Friend of Youth." Lawton gave a rendition of the new song when Michigamua paid its annual visit to Mrs. Yost last week at her home on Yost's birth- day. A good friend of Yost, Lawton often gives imitations at banquets of the coach giving pep talks to the football team. The song, suggested to Lawton by Waldo Greiner, '25, is intended to further immortalize the mem- i r i I 0 O I L