.. THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESIiAY, M LAST EXHIBIT: Professor Arthur Boak Retires After 43 Years University Lends Sketches for Tours carry on systematic planting and cropping of trees there in the hope of promoting good forestry practices." In reading, Prof. Boak is fond of travel and biography books and is "fairly omnivorous. "I acquire a lot of useless infor- mation," he explained, "and do not use my leisure time for study, but for pleasure." Upon retiring, Prof. Boak plans to stay in Ann Arbor and continue with research and publication in the field of Roman history. "I also hope," he added, "to catch up with a lot of neglected reading and other things of inter- est that academic duties have forced me to postp'one-including a moderate amount of traveling." IHC Appoints New Leaders Inter-House Council yesterday announced the appointment of four committee chairmen for the school year, 1957-58. Heading the committees will be: Publicity and Public Relations, Phillip G. Zook, '60; Scholarship, Carl V. Page, '60E; Orientation, Boren L. Chertkov, '60; and House Service, Peter L. Wolff, '59. SLATER'S pay TOP AMERICAN SCULPTOR-John Bernard Flannagan draws simply but powerfully. Besides "Buffalo;"-the University Museum owns two other pieces of this artists work. . STILL LIFE -- 1953 saw the last of the still life American artist Henry Lee MCFee, born in 1886. FASCINATING LONDON OO--This French artist, Henri Gau- dier-Brzeska, draws two penguins from real life in London Zoo. for Your Discontinued Textbooks are worth real money! if sold to Ulrich's WITH your currently good ones. YOUR BEST DEAL-FIGURE IT OUT Ulrich's sell your discontinued books to over Ann fl"/, 1 t1 1 I-. , 4 r L.. k;r A ~ . A%4^ k ALL YOUR BOOKS t II ........