FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1952 WAGE SEVEN BAND TAKES OVER: Heyday of 'U' Banjo Clubs Shortlived Eastern Art Japanese Art Exhibition By VIRGINIA VOSS Long before the Michigan Marching Band could get enough money to finance its high-step- ping antics, the University Banjo and Mandolin Clubs strummed their way into campus and alumni -. favor. Victims of changing style, the clubs are non-existent today ex- cept for their watered-down suc- cessors, the ukelele fans. But in their heyday around the turn of the century, they had a musical monopoly on campus and present- ed local concerts and extended tours practically unrivalled by the array of activities flourishing now. CHIEF FUNCTION of the clubs was to spread the mythical "college spirit" among students and the ever-devoted alumni. Their means were "college songs." According to nineteenth cen- tury outlook, "college songs" were no light matter. One of the forerunners to the 'Ensian commented in 1860: "Of all the feattres in College life which fix imperishable associations and r bind indissolubly the hearts of friend to friend, we hail the ad- vent of none with more unquali- 4 fled gratification than that of . College Songs." * Alumni had no trouble going along with, this viewpoint. After a tour performance in Denver in i 1895, the banjo, mandolin and glee clubs inspired this comment in a congratulatory letter: "People speak enthusiastically of the Uni- versity and have had their eyes opened to the fact that U. of M. is a great institution." I BANJO CLUB members them- selves were the only ones able to look at their project in reasonable perspective. They whooped it up at every available opportunity. In 1911 the mandolin and glee 'clubs, joined under the title of SMichigan Musical Clubs, took their 30-odd members and mandolins, guitars, violins, flutes and traps on a month tour to the Pacific coast. According to an account of the trip in the 1912 'Ensian, the much anticipated sight-seeing itineraries usually wound up at roulette wheels. High point of the mara- thon excursion was "the glad tid- ings from President Hutchins that we were granted a four days' stay in Los Angeles." Back In Ann Arbor, the jovial banjoists saw the two chief bene- fits of their tour as "its education- al value and insight into what it means to be a Michigan man." Precceded by numerous but short-lived instrumental organiza- tions, the banjo and mandolin clubs thrived from 1895 well into the 1910's. Their downfall was the growth of more substantial cam- pus groups, and the Regents' 1914 appropriation which gave the band its initial impetus, Campu, Four University faculty mem- bers will participate in a confer- ence of the Near and Middle East committee of the Social Science Research Council today and to- morrow in New York City. The theme of the meeting is "The Near East: Social Dynamics and the Cultural Setting." Taking t part will be: George G. Cameron, chairman of the Department of Near Eastern Studies, and com- mittee chairman; and Professors Douglas Crary, of the geography department; N. Marbury Efimenco of the political science depart- ment and William Schorger. S * * Prof. Louis A. Baier, chair- man of the Department of Na- val Architecture and Marine En- gineering, is attending a meeting of the Hydrodynamics Commit- tee of the Society of Naval Ar- chitects and Marine Engineers in Washington, D.C. today. MORE THAN 4,000 persons are expected to attend the eighth an- nual Michigan High School Con- ference on Citizenship and the third annual state-wide Cheer- leaders' Clinic at the University Oct. 29 and Nov. 8, respectively.. * * * * * * * * .1 BANJO AND MANDOLIN CLUBS STRUCK A SYMMETRICAL POSE FOR 1898 'ENSIAN Emphasizes Trth, Color Speaking yesterday on the sub- ject of "Japanese Sculpture," James M. Plumer, Professor of Far Eastern Art, said that "the aim of a Japanese artisan is nev- er to create the novel but only the truth." Always receptive to nature's products in the rough and retain- ing a taste for color in their works, the Japanese have been influenced neither by personalities nor by copies, he maintained. * * * ILLUSTRATING , the lecture with slides of Japanese works, Prof. Plumer remarked, "Tracing the history of images is as diffi- cult as tracing the pedigree of a hound." The original concepts began in India, the Chinese crystalized and further stylized them, where as in Japan the image is modi- fied and humanized. Since almost all Japanese sculp- ture is of sacred images, the great- est works are still found in the temples. Use of wood has been the most predominant, although bronze, stone, and clay are also conspicuous in the history of sculpture. This was the second lecture of the Japanese Festival which will end Nov. 2. Celebrating the recent signing of the Japanese peace treaty, the Festival has on display in the West Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall a complete replica of a Japanese house and garden furnished with authentic works of art. SL Cinema Guild To Show Movie Student Legislature Cinema Guild will present Ben Hecht's "Specter of the Rose" at 5:30, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today, tomorrow and Sunday in Architecture Auditori- um. The picture, a conscientious at- tempt to deviate from the normal path of commercial films, deals with the story ofdan innocent young ballerina's devotion to a mad, murderous dancing genius. Choreography for the film was done by Tamara Geva, music by George Antheil. A Charlie Chaplin Comedy, "On A.M." is also included on the pro- gram. Admission is fifty cents at Ithe door. -Daily-Malcolm Shatz JAPANESE HOME-University students examine the model home on display at the Japanese Art Exhibit in Alumni Memorial Hall. More than 4,000 students and Ann Arbor residents have already visited the art exhibition scheduled to be taken down Sunday evening. 'U' TV Program. To Discuss X-Ray The X-ray and its contribution to atomic theory will be the sub- ject of the second program in the modern physics series on the Uni- versity Television Hour. The series, consisting of 15 tele- casts, is given in the form of a course and can be seen at 1 p.m. Sunday over WWJ-TV. Prof. Ernest F. Baker, chairman of the physics department, who is conducting the telecourse will give both the historical background and the modern medical and industrial applications of the X-ray. The program will also include a short feature on the life of Wil- helm K. Roentgen, who discovered the X-ray. This is the final week to make Senior Picture appointments. You may sign up from 1:30 to 5:30 until Fri. at the Student Publi- cations Building. ~J~amie /ot L ear] THE GOLDEN APPLES RESTAURANT Now Serving: BREAKFAST LUNCHEON DINNERS BRING YOUR DATE . . . She'll Love It!! rand addition to THE TOWER HOTEL 'U' BAND IN EARLY DAYS LOOKED DOWDY BY COMPARISON y Grad Represents l 'U' in AustraliaF Ben Cochran, a University grad- t uate, will represent the University today when the Australian Na- t tional University in Canberra in- stalls its first chancellor. o Cochran, who received his Doc- tor of Philosophy degree in 1926, is at present Acting High Com- missioner of the United Kingdom in Australia. s Briefs MORE THAN 200 persons from Michigan, Ohio and Indiana will t attend a meeting of the Great Lakes Section ,of the Forest Prod- ucts Research Society, to be held Oct. 31-Nov. 1 in the Rackham Amphitheatre. * * * Lectures PROF. CORA DuBois, research director of the Institute of Inter- national Education in New York, will discuss "Various Concepts of Culture and Their Bearing on Problem Solving' at 8:15 p.m. Monday in Rackham Amphithea- tre. James E. Milligan, Grad., will give a short talk entitled "Be- tween the Planets" at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 2003 Angell Hall as a part of the regular astron- omy department Observatory Visitors' Night. s s s Miscellany A CASEBOOK for law students, "Jurdisdiction and Judgements," which combine cases, text material and statutes, has been published by two University Faculty mem- bers. UNIVERSALISM: New Experimental Religion Embodies Ideas Of All Faithsi Read and Use Daily Classifieds * { Naturalism is a feature of the experimental laboratory for the development of universalism in re- ligious thought, Rev. Kenneth L. Patton said yesterday. Speaking before the Unitarian student group, Rev. Patton said that one of the basic assumptions of this coicept is that the world has been artificially split into cul- tures and religions. Pointing out this fact, Mr. Patton who is min- ister of the Charles Street Unver- salist Meeting House of Boston, stated that all the religions of the world are equally good and that none of them have the truth. * * * THE UNIVERSALIST Meeting House is an experimental idea in religion which incorporates all the symbols of all the faiths from the earliest sun worshippers to the symbols of the great religions to- day. . _ -I s Are You Eligible? DANCING Friday and Saturday Nites Dancing Saturday Afternoon after the game. CLUB Members and Guests 314 E. Liberty St. Ph. 2-3972 You Must Be 21 DON BAILEY Your Singing Host ' HALL RENTALS & BANQUETS 11 1 Uan &haven SPORT SHIRTS FOR FALL eQ 04 YOU CAN'T STOP THE CLOCK! Thi is absltlytelst day osg pfrSno Pictures. Appointment can be made at the Student Publications Building from 1:00 to 5:30 P.M. ..* Pictures will be taken from 1 2:30 till 5 :30 and Evenings from 7:30 till 10:00. We now have a full fabrics and patterns Fall leisure shirts. seletion of of the finest Come in and see them. Note the. shorter, neater collar points. Check the custom features from ocean pearl buttons to matched patterns and squared cuffs. We are sure they will please you. $595 I e {01 llllli Hill I 1 ..w