a SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1953 PAGE FOUR TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY m Honor Ten At Engineer Convocation (Continued from Page 1) At the close of Secretary Wil- son's speech ten honorary de- grees of Doctor of Engineering were awarded by President Harlan Hatcher. Recipients of the degrees were: Wyeth Allen, president of Globe- Union, Inc.; Harold Franklin Rob- inson, chief naval architect of the Shipbuilding Division of the Beth- lehem Steel Corp.; Smith J. De- France, director of Ames Aero- nautical Laboratory at Moffett Field, California, and Thomas Daniel Jolly, vice-president, chief engineer and director of purchase of the Aluminum Company of America. * * * THE LIST continues with Lou Revere Crandall, president of George A. Fuller Co.; Harvey Mil- ton Merker, director of scientific relations for Parke, Davis and Co. and James Wentworth Parker, former president and general man- ager of Detroit Edison Co. Concluding the list are Rob- ert Moses, New York City Parks Commissioner; Charles Erwin Wilson, United States Secretary of Defense and Professor-Emeri- tus Alfred Holmes White of the chemical engineering depart- ment. Prof. White's degree was award- ed posthumously. He died Aug. 25 of this year after serving on the University faculty for 46 years. Also part of the convocation proceedings in recognition of "out- standing achievements and con- tributions to the development of the field of engineering" 241 cita- tions were awarded engineering college graduates who had achiev- ed distinction in their individual areas. Former Grad Student Wins Play Contest Miss Leslie G. Cameron, a for- er graduate student of the Univer- sity and past librarian at the Uni- versity Center at Willow Run has been awarded first prize for her play, "Not All of Me Shall Die" in the third annual national play- writing contest sponsored by the Norton Players of West Palm Beach, Florida it was revealed yes- terday. Miss Cameron who attended the University in the early forties re- ceived a Hopwood in 1942 for her novel "Dancing Saints." While at the University she also won two first prizes in the Mid-West Play Writing Contest and received a scholarship to the Yaddo artists colony in Massachusetts for com- posers and writers. Her prize winning play, which was written while she was. at the Univesrity, has been hailed by crit- ics as an especially fine play that is outstanding even for a top notch play. Based on the famous love story of Heloise and Abelard, Miss Cam- eron's manuscript was chosen from among 85 considered. The Norton Players of West Palm Beach, awarded Miss Cam- eron $200 in first prize money and will produce her play this winter in West Palm Beach. Deans Attend AAU Dean Ralph A. Sawyer and As- sistant Deans Robert S. Ford and Harlan C. Koch of the Rackham School of Graduate Studies will travel to New York city to attend a meeting of the Association of Graduate Schools in the Associa- tion of American Universities to be held Monday through Wednes- day. Dean Sawyer is chairman of the group's Committee on the Prob- lems of Foreign Students. Assembly Holds Open Workshop Assembly Association will pre- sent the first open Assembly Workshop of the season from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. today inthe League. Residents from all women's housing units on campus have been invited to attend. At the meeting questions concerning dormitory' and campus life, and the part Assembly Plays in organizing a strong independent women's asso- ciation will be discussed. Michifish To Meet m .1 u--'i1m Minnesota Bound Daily Tours Engineering Open House (Continued from Page 1) Run Research Center, and for1 communication the engineers use electric typewriters, perforated tape, and their own private code. THE MACHINE'S gray matter includes 1100 vacuum tubes and 20,000 "diads," which are involved with "rectifying" something. It seems, however, that the creature displays a human-type difficulty mastering its multipli- cation tables. It adds and sub- tracts (1000 per second) three times as fast as it multiplies or divides (merely 300 per second). The Nuclear Instrumentation lab was next with its gray, silver and blue boxes-with even more knobs, buttons, dials, and sockets than most equivalent boxes-blink- ing and clicking ominously as they' counted and monitored "radia- tors"-or was it "radiation?" In the basement a series of rooms contained only rows of elec- tric motors of all sizes and shapes, seemingly progressively larger from North to South. The conversation centered large- ly around the alums' "Very nice," and the faculty reply, "Yes, we have come a long way." Drive Ends Community Chest collections for Ann Arbor stood at 78.9 percent of the $168,000 goal set for this year as last returns were being counted yesterday. Chest officials expressed hope that the latest returns will up the total to the $168,000 quota. Collections are still coming in although the drive ended yes- terday. 'PUNCTUAL,' SAY FRIENDS: Student's Blind Date 'Always on Time' Porter Tells About Mexican, Experiences "Mexico was at the door ofj death, but with the revolution of 1921-22 came arenaissance; I saw it," said Katherine Ann Porter, noted novelist and visiting profes- sor at the University yesterday In the lecture, sponsored by the Sociedad Hispanica, Prof. Porterf told of her first adventure into the world, when at the age of 25 years, she and several compan- ions traveled to Mexico to gatherx relics of the forgotten civiliza- tions. No sooner did Prof. Porter arrive than a revolution took place. "I met all the most distinguished1 bandits," the Professor related, "but they didn't seem any more Banditish than a great many of [the foreigners there," she said. By JOEL BERGER To his friends, Larry Morton ap- pears to be a rosy-cheeked, slight- ly gullible freshman. Known to his buddies in South Quad's Scott House as "Fentata- Teeta," followed by two short hand-claps, Morton has consist- ently exhibited a customary desire of University freshmen-the desire to date women. * * -* AS A RESULT, he's signed up for every exchange dinner held by Scott House this year, and has proved willing to go on blind dates at a moment's notice. Two nights ago, four of "the boys in the corridor" arranged to have him take out a girl they claimed was "one of the most impressive things on campus." It all started on an elevator ride to the fifth floor after dinner. Alex Sarko, '56E, Dave O'Brien, '56E, Walter Schrenk, '54E, and Colin Fisher, '56E, were discussing the girl. She was, according to Fisher, "very punctual-always on time." "Fehtata-Teeta" was impressed. He asked the engineers to arrange a date for him with her for Thurs- day night. They replied that they would, as "the pleasure is all ours." * * * MORTON was slightly distressed about the "real doll" after he look- ed through the Student Directory and didn't find her listed. This was explained however, when his friends told him that his date was a freshman who lived in town, "and thus isn't listed in the di- rectory." At the approach of the prom- ised hour for the date, 7:15 p.m. Morton ran through his "four Graham Receives Minnesota Award Prof. Samuel A. Graham of the School of Natural Resources, was awarded the "Ou.tstanding Achievement Award of the Uni- versity of Minnesota," in Minne- apolis yesterday. The award, which was present- ed during the 40th anniversary of the University of Minnesota School of Forestry, is conferred upon former students of the University of Minnesota who have attained high eminence and distinction. S's--shine, shower, shampoo and shave." As the minutes flew, Sar- ko told him "you'd better hurry, your woman is always very punc- tual on dates." When 7:10 rolled around, Mor- ton was waiting for his date at the appointed place--on the Mall between Burton Tower and the League. By 7:15, his date hadn't shown up, but Morton's four friends had slowly arrived one by one to see how he liked his date. "You're in the wrong meeting place," Fisher told him. "You were supposed to, be standing under- neath Burton Tower, as she has a class upstairs until 7:15." Together, the five students walked across the street. Just then, the carillon bells began to chime. * * * FISHER pointed up at Burton Tower. "Do you hear her? She's playing upstairs," he said. "Who?" Morton asked. "Caroline Towers, your date," replied Fisher. Read and Use Daily Classifieds A -Daily-Betsy Smith BOARDING THE GOPHER GOER-Wolverine fans prepare to board the special train which pulled out of Ann Arbor yesterday morning taking students to Minnesota for today's football battle for possession of the Little Brown Jug. The Gopher Goer com- plete with club cars and lounges will be provided with super dome cars from Chicago to Minneapolis. GOING, GOING, GONE : Police Auction Fifty-Five Abandoned Bikes Today Fl Fifty-five abandoned bicycles, varying in condition from the very newest to older, well-worn models, will 'go on the block at 10 a.m. to- day in the Ann Arbor Police De- partment's tri-annual bike auction. The auction, will take place at the police garage at Huron and Fifth Streets. "WE DON'T have as many good ones as we did last spring," Bicy- cle Bureau head Sgt. Howard Rem- nant said. "However, we do have some very good ones, and a few that are almost new." Wielding the hammer at the auction this year will be Sgt. Herbert Kapp and Capt. Roland Gainsley. They are replacing Chapman To Talk On GCeoia gne ies "The Solar and Lunar Daily Changes of the Geomagnetic Field" will be the subject of a talk by Prof. Sydney Chapman at 4 p.m. Tuesday in room 1400, Chem- istry Building. Prof. Chapman, of solar and ter- restrial physics department, is visiting from Oxford University. The lecture will be the fifth in a series of 12 on "The Earth's Atmosphere." The group is under the sponsorship of the depart- ments of Astronomy, Aeronautical Engineering, Physics and Geology. familiar auctioneer Walter D. Schmid who left the force last June. The bicycles are expected to sell anywhereNfrom $1 to $60; some new, special models going at the high price. Proceeds will go to the police and firemen's widow and orphan funds. Organ Recital To Be Given To morrow University organist. Robert Noehren, will present the last in a series of three organ recitals at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow at Hill Audi- torium. His program will be entirely de- voted to organ compositions by Max Reger. Included will be Re- ger's greatest work for organ, "Var- iations and Fugue on an Original Theme, Op. 73," considered one of the monumental works of organ literature and the most difficult to perform. Long considered un- playable, few concert perform- ances of it have been attempted. Other works on the program will include, "Fantasia and Fugue in D minor, Op. 135," "Benedictus, Op. 59," and "Toccata in D minor, Op. 59." I SPECIAL BEARINGS Write MORTON BEARING COMPANY 815 Wildt Street Ann Arbor, Michigon I t i, TONIGHT H ILLEL'S aryap4 9 odic" SQUARE DANCE REFRESHMENTS $1 per Couple SAFEGUARD YOUR MONEY Carry your cash by means of TRAVELERS CHEQUES * CONVENIENT * SAFE * PRACTICAL Inquire NOW at TE ANN ARBOR BANK Main nd Huron Streets State Street at Nickels Arcade 1108 South University FOR THE FINEST IN FOOD EAT AT ihe vSdeh 6pp/e4 RESTAURANT Located in THE TOWER HOTEL (across from Burton Tower). Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, open daily! GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone 2-1121 Wm. C. Bennett, Pastor 10:00'A.M.: Church School. 11:00 A.M.: "Justified by Faith." 7:30 P.M.: "Significant Signs of The Times., Wed., 8:00: Prayer Meeting. A Friendly Church Where The Word Is Preached CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan)'a Washtenaw at Forest Rev. Leonard Verduin, Director Res. Ph. 25-025. Office Ph. 7421 10:00 A.M.: Mornini Service. 7:30 P.M.: Evening Service. FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETING Lane Hall 11:00 A.M.: Sundays. Visitors welcortie. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor William H. Bos, Minister to Students Irene Applin Boice, Director of Music 10:45 A.M.: Worship Service. "The Sources of Christian Strength." 7:00 P.M.: Student Guild. Reverend Theodore Schmale will speak on the "Reformation." 8:00 P.M.: Union Reformation Day Service. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) Hill and Forest Avenue Dr. H. O. Yoder, Pastor Sunday-8:45 A.M.: Matins Service. 9:45 A.M.: Bible Class. 10:45 A.M.: Worship Service. 7:00 P.M.: LSA Meeting. Speaker, Robert 0. Long, Graduate Student in Philosophy, "Cam- pus Gods." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 North Division St. Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Dr. Robert H. Whitaker, Chaplain for Student Foundation Mrs. Elizabeth M. Davis, Social Director 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Commentary. 9:50 A.M.: Student Breakfast, Canterbury House. 10:00-10:45: Junior High and High School Classes. 11:00-12:15: Church School. 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer and Sermon. 12:15 P.M.: After-Service Fellowship, Recreation Room. 3:15 P.M.: Youth Convocation, Plymouth (meet at church in Ann Arbor). FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 East Huron, Phone 7332 Rev. C. H. LouckshPastor and Student Coun- selor 9:45 A.M.: Student Class continues its discus- sion series with "What Students Can Believe About the Bible." 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon Topic, "Called To Be Evangelists,"-Rev. Loucks. 6:45 P.M.: The Rev. Homer Armstrong of De- troit meets with the Guild to discuss "Our Protestant Responsibilities." FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenow Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. Oct. 25-Probation after Death 5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service. 8:00 P M.: Wednesday: Testimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 So'ith Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. The Reading Room i open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 to 5, Friday evenings from 7 to 9, and Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CIjAPEL William and Thompson Sts. Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:30 A M., 9:00 A.M. Sunday at 8:00"A.M., 9:30 A. * 11:00 A.M., 12:00 Noon. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evening i7WJ P.M. Newman Club Rooms in Father Richard Center. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips. Pastor Sunday at 9:30 and at 10:45: Two Opportunities for Worship, with the pastor preaching on "Forewarned and Forearmed." Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Supper and Program. Bible Study of Luke 15, 11-38. MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets Rev. George Barger, Minister 10:45 Morning Worship. Sermon: "Taking The Long Way Home.' Nursery for children during service. 9:45 A.M.: Church School. Meeting at Guild House, 7:00 P.M. for dessert and informal discussion. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH I 11 p HILLEL BUILDING 9-12 I 11 I 11 11 11