THE MICHIGAN DAIY II WEDNESDAY, AUGUST ............. Kahn Gives'Koanzaland'Script To Minnie Maes Root Collection By BILL BAKER Donald Kahn, '10, one of the four writers of "Koanzaland," the third Michigan Union Opera, has recently sent Mrs. Minnie Maes Root,,patron saint of Michigan music, a complete copy of the opera script and press notices for the opera. These articles are being added to the Minnie Maes Root Collection of Michigan Musicana, housed in the Main Lounge oftdhe Union. Mr. Kahn, who is now with the Kahn Construction Company in Hol- lywood, wrote "Koanzaland" with Earl Moore, now director of the School of Music, Robert Moreland and J. Fred Lawton. The, opera was one of the greatest ever presented here, according to Mrs. Root. It included such famous Michi- gan songs as "I'm a College Man," "Under Bohemia's Moon," "I Might," "Bluebook Man," "The American Girl," "The Proper Way to Woo" and one of Michigan's best remembered tunes, "Collage Days." "College Days," for which Mr. Kahn wrote the lyrics, was the first college song ever to be recorded and sold in record form. Hal Stephens directed the opera, which was presented in the old Whit- ney Theatre. The presentation met with such success in Ann Arbor that it was planned to take in on a road tour, but the faculty of the University was against the idea. Included in the collection sent to Mrs. Root by Mr. Kahn is the special "Koanzaland" edition of The Michi- gan Daily. The edition had the blue and yellow title page of the opera on the first page, showing the famous lion looking at the moon in Koanza- land. This cover was designed by Joe Horner, '11. The portion of the Minnie Maes Root exhibit devoted to Union operas of the past now contains programs, scores, clippings and photographs from the first four Union Operas: "Michigenda," February, 1908; "Cul- ture," December, 1908; "Koanzaland," December, 1909; and "Crimson Chest," December, 1910. Another addition has been made to the Band Case in the collection by Mrs. Root, a picture of one of the first orchestras ever organized at the University. The orchestra, organized in 1901, had only seven members: W. B. Chamberlain, D. C. Vogeli, A. H. Brown, C. J. Schroeder, W. H. Dansett, A. F. Traver and B. C. Pos- ton. The Collection of Michigan Musi- cana is housed in three large cabinets in the Union Lounge, constructed through the cooperation of Stanley M. Waltz, of the Union, Alumni Sec- retary T. Hawley Tapping and Uni- versity officials. Mrs. Root has do- nated her entire store of music ma- terials to the University as a per- manent collection to be used in the display, whicli is changed at inter- vals. - Chicago Professor Discusses World's Regional Problems (Continued from Page 1) these patterns to seven regions: western Europe, eastern Europe, eastern Asia, the East Indian region, India, southeastern South America and the United States. He used the international activity of world trade as the basis for his discussion. The United States, Professor Colby poihted out, has long been the sec- ond country in world trade. The present conflict, he declared, may raise this country to first position. For us, Professor Colby told, "the freedom of the seas is an important part of our national security, of our every-day living and of our stand- ards of living. The United States may well view with apprehension any attempt to bring the control of the seas into the hands of a nation dominating all of Eurasia and Africa, and thus backed by resources of land and people far greater than ours." ASSOCIATED PACTURE PRESS NiE WS * F GOO DYEAR'S 3'° k t ? l .: x .. w > <1 _., ' .; Mabel Rugen Gives Lecture On Education Dr. Mabel E. Rugen, in a talk yes- terday before a large group of stu- dents attending the School of Education Lecture Series, outlined "Trends in Health Education." Dr. Rugen emphasized changes that were taking place.' "From the old idea that health education is a special 'subject' to be taught a given number of minutes a week we are moving towards health education as a 24-hour day program related to the factors that influence the growth and development of children." "The old idea was that health edu- cation was largely the responsibility of the nurse and doctor. Now we are rnoving toward having the school ad- ministrator sharing with the teachers, other personnel, and the health spe- cialists this responsibility. "The better health programs plan on a cooperative basis with "experts" from various fields, working with teachers and administrators on the job to determine specific needs of children and how best to meet them; while the poorer health program is the result of a few "experts" in terms of what they think best." Vichy Regime Continues To Hold Against Reich VICHY, Unoccupied France, Aug. 5. -(P)-- French-German collabora- tion talks, involving defense of French colonies and the attitude of the United States toward them, have reached a difficult point at which "delicate problems" must be settled, Fernand de Brinon, representative of the Vichy Government in German- occupied Paris, declared today. The Vichy regime has been report- ed holding out against strong German pressure for closer collaboration DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Wednesday evening at 7:15 in the Michigan Union. Colleges of Literature, Science and the Arts, and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry, and Music: Summer Session students wishing a transcript of this summer's work only should file a request in Room 4 U.H., several days before leaving Ann Arbor. Failure to file this request before the end of the session will re- sult in a needless delay of several days. Edward Everette Dale Lecture: Professor Edward Everette Dale, chairman of the Department of His- tory at the University of Oklahoma, will speak on "Speech of the Frontier" at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. This lecture is spon- sored by the Department of Speech and is open to the public. Graduate Students in Speech: At 5 p.m. Thursday in the Rackham Amphitheatre, Mr. William Tenney of STATE STREET official headquarters for campus clothes as seen in Mademoiselle We've got everything! All the highlights and little ac- cessory tricks hand-picked and approved by the fam- ous board of Mademoiselle College Guest Editors. A *e T O K YO STREET SC E N E-Wisteria drapes this streetlif the Keishigawa residential section of Tolsyo.' HYGIENIC HIGHWAY-Mask to keep out germs is sometimes worn by Japanese traffic officers on duty in Tokyo. B E A N I E-Long fringe bobs H O M E S S P E E D - U P-Prefabricated houses, part of a 650-structure project at indianhead, Md., are K, if they're part of a pert will soon cover these pilings. The houses can be quickly assembled and dismantled. beanie cap like this of green cotton crochet. Run through your new Mademoiselle. Pick your favorites. Then see them at Goodyear's, just ripe for college-wardrobe picking. U I 1 f I N S I D E S T U F F-Intently a workman files the- end of S A Y S W H I C H ?-Belligerent Jimmy Dykes, whose friction 12 1-inch pipe, before welding, on the $8,000,000 Portland, Me., to with umpires enlivens Chicago White Sox games, ran true to form Montreal oil pipe line being built. Overland pipe route will save vocally in a Philadelphia golf match when Walter McGrath dared tankers' 12 days' passage in the St. Lawrence. to question him about his score; it was 94. Most Likely t o Succeed! 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