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February 06, 1958 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1958-02-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


THE MICHIGAN DAILY

ilty Meeting Coverage
Hit by Colorado Paper

TO OPEN FEB. 10:
Plan Wilt Art Show

<"

o Daily has asked,

rwa .

support from Colorado stu-
ts, faculty, and editors of other
ege newspapers, following ex-
lion of editor Ed Kahn from a
ting of the University of Colo-
o, Faculty Senate Jan. 21.
'he Senate voted, 66 to35, to
Kahn from the meeting, which
At with intellectualism on cam-
They voted down an alterna-
proposal that would have ad-
ted the press while allowing
Senate to go into executive
ion.
'hose against admitting Kahn
ued the Senate is not an elect-
body, and therefore has only
nited accountability" to the
>1ic.
Publishes Extra
)n Jan. 23, the Colorado Daily
>lished an extra edition to pro-
t the action. The issue was
Wded by a front-page editorial
which Kahn charged the Senate
els its own sacrosanct privileges
I inviolable status are more im-
tant than the full functioning
a newspaper in a free society."
ormer Dean
t University
gets New Post

Answers to a questionnaire sent
out by the Colorado Daily were
also printed in the extra. The
questionnaire asked 1) whether the
Senate was justified in its actions;
2) whether the Senate is an "aris-
tocratic group," and 3) whether
the Colorado Daily is an "amateur
newspaper."
Wrote Other Papers
The extra, along with a mimeo-
graphed form letter, was sent to
editors of other college newspapers.
Kahn wrote the Colorado Daily
"felt that the meeting was of direct
interest to the students, and there-
fore we should be allowed to cover
it."
He requested letters in support
of the Colorado Daily's position, or
any other comments, to be printed
when the Colorado Daily begins
publication again Feb. 3.
hi

Oils, water colors and drawings
by Prof. Richard Wilt of the
architecture college will be dis-
played at the Forsythe Art Gal-
lery from Feb. 10 to March 10.
In another exhibition, the De-
troit Artists Market is featuring
a display of color lithography by-
Prof. Emil Weddige of the archi-
tecture college and ceramics by
Murray Douglas, to continue un-
til Feb. 18.
Prof. Wilt, who joined the Uni-
versity faculty in 1947, has won
the Detroit Institute of Arts Mu-
seum Collection Prize, two con-
secutive Merit Awards at the
Michigan Academy, and first prize
in oil at the Michigan State Fair
Exhibit in 1957.
He also was commissioned by
the Detroit Edison Company to
depict the city of Ann Arbor in oil,

showing it as an- educational, re-
search and industrial center.
Prof. Weddige, besides having
held several shows in New York,
also did a series of four litho-
graphs for a chemical company N
showing "The Art of Paper-
Making."

%I

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iayward Keniston, former dean
the University literary college,
s recently appointed as advisor
the chancellor in the area of
ciplines at the University of

In a teaching career which be-
gan at Colby College in 1904, he
has held appointments at Har-
vard, Cornell, Chicago, and Duke
Universities. Keniston was dean of
S71 the University literary college
from 1945 to 1951.
Currently directing a compre-
hensive survey of the University
of Pennsylvania graduate school,
Keniston will assume his new
duties on a part-time basis im-
mediately. He will continue his
work at the University of Pennsyl-
vania until July 1 when he will
join the University of Pittsburgh
full time.
Edward H. Litchfield, chancel-
or of the University of Pittsburgh,
cited Keniston's many contribu-
tions to higher education and ex-
plained the task which he will
undertake.
"We are fortunate to secure the
advice of one so well known in the
field of education to help us in the
reorganization of the area of the
disciplines
Group Elects
U' Professor
Vice-President
The American Physical Society
elected Prof. George E. Uhlenbeck
of the physics department to the
post of vice-president during its
annual meeting held Jan. 30 in
New York City.
Prof. Jesse W. Beams, chairman
of the physics department at the
University of Virginia was elected
president.
Prof. Beams is the inventor of
the magnetically supported cen-
trifuge whose rotors, spinning up
to 1,000,000 revolutions per min-
ute, exert a centrifugal field one
billion times the force of gravity.
This has made possible new
methods of studying sedimenta-
tion behavior of various sub-
stances.
The American Physical Society,
a member of the American Insti-
tute on Physics, met jointly with
the American Association of
Physics Teachers to discuss ad-
vances in research and teaching.
University physicist, Prof. Otto
LaPort of the physics department
was named to a National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics sub-
committee on fluid mechanics.
The committee will initiate re-
search programs, advise the main.
committee on technical problems,
review research in both the
U n i t e d States and overseas,
recommend new areas of interest
and coordinate research programs.
Prof. LaPort is one of 500 spe-
cialists who will serve on 28 com-
mittee groupings during this year.
"Their objectives are to anti-
cipate the special problems of
aeronautical science and to sup-
ply the nation's armed forces and
industry with the essential infor-
mation for the design and produc-
tion of American aircraft and mis-
siles of superior performance and
effectiveness," according to the
NACA announcement.
UMM"

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ROBES- GLOVES- SCARFS- WARMER SHIRTS
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I

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Interview Date
February 13, 1958

.I

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