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KRESS COLLECTION CEREMONIES SET One month from today (Nov. 16) the public will get its first look at the new Kress Wing of the Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery, permanent home of an impressive collection of 41 paintings and four sculptures provided for the community by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation. The last of 18 collections distributed to 18 galleries throughout the country, the Lowe acquisition, valued at more than $1,500,000, includes works by 39 European artists spanning the 14th to 17th centuries. Ceremonies in connection with the opening will get underway Nov. 14, with the formal dedication to be held Nov. 15. MECHANICAL SUPER-BRAIN INSTALLED That half-block long moving van which took over most of the Ashe Bldg, parking area last Tuesday afternoon was unloading the first of a new type of computer to be delivered in Florida. Known as the RCA 301 computer, this fantastically complicated unit of mechanical brainpower is now getting into operation under the eagle eye of Dixie Howell, director of data processing. It was installed on the first floor of Ashe, replacing an older computer which had been in use for more than a year. According to advance billing from its makers, the RCA 301 can handle anything from student registration and accounting to medical statistics and up-to-the-minute info on commercial fisheries. In short, a real gamut coverer. HOMECOMERS SALUTE ,fFANTASTIC FIFTIES” Theme of this yearTs Homecoming Alumni Party, to be held Saturday evening, Oct. 28 in the Dupont Plaza Cloud Room, will be a salute to UMTs graduates of the ‘’Fantastic Fifties,” the years when the University began to hit its full post war stride forward. Through alumni chairman John Harlow, T46, a cordial invitation is extended to faculty members and trustees to join the alumni in sharing fellowship and memories. A gala program, including the internationally-famed ”Singing Hurricanes” will be presented. Deadline for dinner reservations at $3.75 each is Oct. 26. NOT BY SCIENCE ALONE, SAYS PRESIDENT Keynoting the meeting of the Florida State Chamber of Commerce Educational Committee at University College, Dr. Pearson stressed the importance of relating new knowledge to the development of the human race. Said Dr, Pearson: ’’The most intense pressure is being placed upon Florida and all other states to produce people adequately and soundly trained in all of the sciences and related subjects. All of us engaged in education are making a most intense effort to meet this most intense pressure, I am confident we shall succeed. But the future of our nation and of our state :oes not depend entirely upon science. Great as science is, man cannot live by science alone because man is not an abstract problem nor an involved equation to be solved. Man is a thinking, feeling, hoping, fearing, believing human being. Let Russia train its narrow specialists. Americans must have specialists who are men and women of culture, judgment, tolerance and ideals.” Following Dr. Pearson’s keynote, Vice Presidents Tharp and Muskat outlined UM’s present programs and future aims in science and research. SPEAKING OF FACULTY Dr. Jack Bensen, director of the Speech and Hearing Clinic, attended the Florida Speech and Hearing Association meet at Tallahassee last week. He is editor of FLASHA, the association bulletin, and member of the executive council... Dr. Fabien Sevitzky, conductor, Jennie Tourel, mezzo soprano, William Lewis, tenor, Julien Balogh and Eugene Johnson, UM symphony members, will appear on WTHS-TV, Channel 2,- at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 20 on the weekly ’’Music with Sevitzky” program. They will discuss and perform the music from Mahler’s ’’The Song of the Earth,” to be presented by the Symphony Oct. 22-23. Dr. Sevitzky also will speak Oct. 16, 8:30 p.m. in the Great Lounge, 720 Bldg., on the topic ’’Music as a Business, Music as Enjoyment and Symphony OrchestrasSamuel P. Messer, UM safety consultant and associate professor of education, will direct a 40-hour course in driver education offered by UM in cooperation with the Florida State Department of Public Safety at Koubek Center starting Oct. 16... Dr. C.P. Idyll, and Dr. Fritz Koczy, Institute of Marine Science, consulted for two days in Washington last week with Donald McKernon, director of the bureau of commercial fisheries, concerning research in fisheries oceanography. Dr. Idyll also is attending the Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission annual meeting at New Orleans. A summary of a trout population study by Dr. Edwin Iversen and Alan Moffett is being presented there. FELLOWSHIPS DEADLINE NOV. 1 Applications for National Science Foundation Cooperative Graduate Fellowships must be in by Nov. 1, Dr. J. Riis Owre, dean of the Graduate School, warns. Fellowships are available in a wide variety of scientific disciplines, including interdisciplinary areas where two or more fields overlap. Seniors planning to enter graduate work next September are eligible. For application blanks and additional info, apply to Dean Owre’s office.
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Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | asu0134000040 |
Digital ID | asu01340000400001001 |
Full Text | KRESS COLLECTION CEREMONIES SET One month from today (Nov. 16) the public will get its first look at the new Kress Wing of the Joe and Emily Lowe Art Gallery, permanent home of an impressive collection of 41 paintings and four sculptures provided for the community by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation. The last of 18 collections distributed to 18 galleries throughout the country, the Lowe acquisition, valued at more than $1,500,000, includes works by 39 European artists spanning the 14th to 17th centuries. Ceremonies in connection with the opening will get underway Nov. 14, with the formal dedication to be held Nov. 15. MECHANICAL SUPER-BRAIN INSTALLED That half-block long moving van which took over most of the Ashe Bldg, parking area last Tuesday afternoon was unloading the first of a new type of computer to be delivered in Florida. Known as the RCA 301 computer, this fantastically complicated unit of mechanical brainpower is now getting into operation under the eagle eye of Dixie Howell, director of data processing. It was installed on the first floor of Ashe, replacing an older computer which had been in use for more than a year. According to advance billing from its makers, the RCA 301 can handle anything from student registration and accounting to medical statistics and up-to-the-minute info on commercial fisheries. In short, a real gamut coverer. HOMECOMERS SALUTE ,fFANTASTIC FIFTIES” Theme of this yearTs Homecoming Alumni Party, to be held Saturday evening, Oct. 28 in the Dupont Plaza Cloud Room, will be a salute to UMTs graduates of the ‘’Fantastic Fifties,” the years when the University began to hit its full post war stride forward. Through alumni chairman John Harlow, T46, a cordial invitation is extended to faculty members and trustees to join the alumni in sharing fellowship and memories. A gala program, including the internationally-famed ”Singing Hurricanes” will be presented. Deadline for dinner reservations at $3.75 each is Oct. 26. NOT BY SCIENCE ALONE, SAYS PRESIDENT Keynoting the meeting of the Florida State Chamber of Commerce Educational Committee at University College, Dr. Pearson stressed the importance of relating new knowledge to the development of the human race. Said Dr, Pearson: ’’The most intense pressure is being placed upon Florida and all other states to produce people adequately and soundly trained in all of the sciences and related subjects. All of us engaged in education are making a most intense effort to meet this most intense pressure, I am confident we shall succeed. But the future of our nation and of our state :oes not depend entirely upon science. Great as science is, man cannot live by science alone because man is not an abstract problem nor an involved equation to be solved. Man is a thinking, feeling, hoping, fearing, believing human being. Let Russia train its narrow specialists. Americans must have specialists who are men and women of culture, judgment, tolerance and ideals.” Following Dr. Pearson’s keynote, Vice Presidents Tharp and Muskat outlined UM’s present programs and future aims in science and research. SPEAKING OF FACULTY Dr. Jack Bensen, director of the Speech and Hearing Clinic, attended the Florida Speech and Hearing Association meet at Tallahassee last week. He is editor of FLASHA, the association bulletin, and member of the executive council... Dr. Fabien Sevitzky, conductor, Jennie Tourel, mezzo soprano, William Lewis, tenor, Julien Balogh and Eugene Johnson, UM symphony members, will appear on WTHS-TV, Channel 2,- at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 20 on the weekly ’’Music with Sevitzky” program. They will discuss and perform the music from Mahler’s ’’The Song of the Earth,” to be presented by the Symphony Oct. 22-23. Dr. Sevitzky also will speak Oct. 16, 8:30 p.m. in the Great Lounge, 720 Bldg., on the topic ’’Music as a Business, Music as Enjoyment and Symphony OrchestrasSamuel P. Messer, UM safety consultant and associate professor of education, will direct a 40-hour course in driver education offered by UM in cooperation with the Florida State Department of Public Safety at Koubek Center starting Oct. 16... Dr. C.P. Idyll, and Dr. Fritz Koczy, Institute of Marine Science, consulted for two days in Washington last week with Donald McKernon, director of the bureau of commercial fisheries, concerning research in fisheries oceanography. Dr. Idyll also is attending the Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission annual meeting at New Orleans. A summary of a trout population study by Dr. Edwin Iversen and Alan Moffett is being presented there. FELLOWSHIPS DEADLINE NOV. 1 Applications for National Science Foundation Cooperative Graduate Fellowships must be in by Nov. 1, Dr. J. Riis Owre, dean of the Graduate School, warns. Fellowships are available in a wide variety of scientific disciplines, including interdisciplinary areas where two or more fields overlap. Seniors planning to enter graduate work next September are eligible. For application blanks and additional info, apply to Dean Owre’s office. |
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