'1'II URSDAY, AIAY 27,192'G PAGE EIGHT TI-14P M ICTIT...AN DATI _Y r ._ T1-ri~ NAICIIT(AM ~AT1V THURSDAY, MAY 27, 192~ 1 7-- ---' - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Harding Memorial Corner Stone Will Be Laid In Marion Sunday : 1:i Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received by the Assistant to the President until 3:30 p. m. (11:30 a. m. Saturdays). Volume VI TIIURSDAY, MAY 27, 1926 Number US To A Employees of the University: Salary checks will be available Saturday, May 29th, as Monday is a holi- day and this office will be closed. 9Airley W. Snith, Secretary. It is requested that all students intending to transfer from one to an- Other School or College of this University for the year 1926-27 register their names as soon as possible at the Recorder's office, Room 4, University Hall. Ira M. Smith,'Registrar. Conflicts in Final Examinations, Colleges of Engineering and Architecture: Students having conflicts in final examinations must report to my office, Room 3223 East Engineering Building, and fill out blanks not later than Wednesday, May 26. J. C. Brier. Third Year Mechanical Engineering Students and others who have engagedi to work during the summer for ti;e Detroit Edison Co. at the Trenton Channel Plant on special boiler test: The date for starting this test has been set for Monday, June 21st. In- formation regarding the details of reporting for work will be given later. The Detroit Edison Co. has found it necessary to use a greater number of men from outside its own organization than formerly anticipated, thereby opening up this excellent opportunity for summer engineering experience to 42 men from the U. of M. instead of 30-the number originally announced, Those interested may consult me in my office, Room 231 West Engineer- ing Bldg. J. E. Emswiler. 'Members of Professor' Meyer's class in Optics will meet as usual, Thursday morning, May 27. They may call at Room 1046 for concluding pages of notes. 1. W. Randall. Student Recital: Mr. Otto Stahl presents Jack Conklin, pianist and composer, in recital Thursday, May 27th, at 8:00 P. M. ini the recital hall of the University School Qf Music,' assisted by Susan Browne, soprano. Melodie (Gluck-Sgambati), Kreisleriana No. 5 (Schumann), LaCathe- drale engloutie (Debussy), Rigandon (MacDowell), Jack Conklin; Mary Ellen (Conklin), Serenade (Conklin), Scherzo (Conklin), Nocturne (Conk- in), The Brook (Conklin), Jack Conklin. Charles A. Sink. Senior Engineers: By vote of the class each member is obligated to take a subscription to the Michigan Alumnus at the rate of $3.00 per year. Fifty cents of this is for maintaining a class Alumni Secretary. Subscriptions will be taken Thurs- day and Friday afternoons in Room 301 W. Eng. Jo A. Graves, Alumni Secretary. Zoology Journal Club: The Zoology Journal Club will meet Thursday, May 27, in Room 242 N. S. Bldg., at 7:30 P. M. Mr. R.. E. Yeatter will review a paper on "Avian Gonads and Migration" and Mr. G. H. Barone one on "Creeping Eruption in the Southern States." Frank N. Blanchard. Geological and Geographical Journal Club: The memorial meeting of the year will be held on Thursday, May 27, at 8 P. M. in Room 437 N. S. Bldg. Professor Hobbs will speak on "James Hutton, a Founder of Modern Geology." All interested are cordially in- vited to attend. Walter A. Ver Wiebe, Secretary. Pol. Sci. 292: Journal Club will meet in Room 2035 A. IL. Thursday, May 27, 1926, at threeJso'clock. J. S. Reeves. PLAN NEW SCHUOLCampbell Lauds, Choice Of Se( A9T v l l rP i ~ii Burns Mantle's choice of the ten best plays of the 1925-26 season is Walter lines PagerSchool To Present the best list the New York Daily News Oppotuniy Fo, Iternatioaa (iramatic critic Chas ever compiled, in Relations Research l the opinion of Prof. Oscar J. Campbell t e the English department. YOUNG PLEADS AMITY I The plays included in the list will be published next fall in the seventh -- annual collection of plays in Mr. DETROIT, May 26.-An era of Mantle's series of yearbooks on the better understanding of one another New York theatre. by the peoples of the world, and the This year the list consists of: prevention of war by exact under- George Kelly's "Craig's Wife", which standing of its causes, was presaged was awarded the Pulitzer Prize this by Owen D. Young, chairman of the year, John Van Druten's "-Young board of directors of the General Elec- Woodley", Marc Connelly's "The Wis- hric Co., of New York, who told 70(em Tooth", Eugene O'Neill's "The luncheon guests at the Detroit club lGreat God Brown", Channing Pol- yesterday of the plans for the Walter lock's "The Enemy", William Hurl- Hines Page School of International burt's "Bride of the Lamb", Michael Relations, to be founded as a new de- Arlon's "The Green Hat", George S. Burns Mantle's s ason's Best Plays it is a good play considering the limi- tation of its theme. "The Great God Brown" and "Bride of the Lamb"~ might ha"e been looked upon as pos Bible contenders for the prize, he con- tinued. There are moments of great b~eauty" in the O'Neill drama, but the weakness of the last two acts detracts from its quality. The only two light comedies in Mr. Mantle's selection are "The Butter and Egg Man" and "The Last of Mrs. Cheyney." The latter Professor Camp- bell considered to be an excellent choice as a play of pure entertain- ment, combining the characteristics of crook melodrama with those of co.- edies of manners. Coyote Killed In Washtenaw County Michigan's zoological collection was 1enriched to the extent of a coyote presented to the University by Otto Rohn, deputy conservation officer. The animal was shot by a Northfield farm- er recently and was the first to be seen in Washtenaw county for a number of years. The state amateur golf tournament (will be held at the Lochmoor course in Detroit, July 28, 29, 30 and 31. I partment of Johns Hopkins univer- sity.. Seeks To Interest Many "I did not come here to find one man to give the $1,000,000 needed for, the endowment of the school," Mr. Young said, "but to interest many men here, as elsewhere, and to seek small amounts from many for thisl purpose. It would be an easy matterI to get this sum from one individual,I but such a course would obviously miss a great opportunity. "The people of this world must understand each other as they never have before, if we would avoid fu- ture wars and go along together in mutual respect and co-operation. The first step in creating such a world feeling is to make the economic, moral and political facts about the nations of the world known to the people. "This task has never been scien- Kaufman's "The Butter and Egg Man", S. Ansky's "The Dybbuk", and Frederic Lonsdale's "The Last of Mrs. Cheyney".1 "The only play in the list I wouldE have omitted," said Professor Camp.. bell, "is 'The Green Hat'. It is clever theatricalism, but divorced from the, radiant personality of Katherine Cornell, it is very thin. As a substi- tute for that I would have included 'The Goat Song' by Franz Werfel." Commenting on the choice of "Craig's Wife" for the Pulitzer Prize1 Award, Pr fessor Campbell said that 1 ! I j The Ha~rding ?lenaoiial at -athrlomm, Oldo, as -visnaliztl 4y the irfisfl (above) and a g~hpsc of tie faimioims Har ding'1 once ti laire, list 'io front porcli. In Mtheiistrt, 0one of thae late Pi wnddemt's last portra lts. MARION, 0., May 26. - Memorial day here will mean the greatest gath- ering of distinguished personages since the day of President Harding's# funeral. On Memorial day the corner- stone for the great Harding memorial is to be laid, anid impressive cere- monies. Work on the monumental memorial tifically undertaken, as we undertake! dent HardIng was a member have ac- to collect the facts in the field of cepted invitations to attend and take medicine and other sciences, on the part in the services by placing tokens basis of which we combat evils or lay of their orders in a large steel casket the foundations for orderly progress. under the cornertsone. Will Search For Facts "The Walter Hines Page School of Special music for the occasion will International Relations proposes to be be furnished by the famous Republic- an Glee club of Columbus, and the an impartial fact-finding school of an~vt' G~lelubof ('Onrlmimbusand j research. It will have no propagan- Dance at Steven's Lake House Pavilion, Whitmore Lake MUSIC BY Phil Diamond's Eight of Diamonds Every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday VV 11itVi. 11: 11V1L i1L:1-Ll1 11:1 M UL oysV manu oi ue mj-ers anu kaii- has been rushed until all is in readi- ors Orphans' home at Xenia. Accord- ness for the placing of the corner- ing to. preliminary arrangements the stone. Vice-president Dawes who will [Glee club will sing President Hard- deliver the climactic address of the ( ing's favorite selection, "Lead Kindly day and preside at the laying of the Light." stone, will use the trowel which Pres- ident Harding himself used when per- forming a like service at Katchikan, New D scovery Alaska, during his ill-fated Alaskan tour. Epan hf Postmaster Gen. Harry S. New, Un- E S. ited States Sens. Frank B. Willis and In E arth's A,,x"s. Simon D. Fess, and Gov. A. V. Dona- hey have arranged to take part of the program in connection with the cor- One of the most notable triumphs in nerstone laying. the physics of he earth and in exact Among other prominent persons astronomy in the last century, is the who have accepted invitations to at- discovery that the shift of the earth's tend the services are former United axis in the globe is due to the tides States Sen. Joseph F. Frelinghuysen, in the Pacific ocean, stated Capt. T. J. Archbishop John T. McNicholas, Cn- J. See, U. S. navy mathematician andI cinnati, George B. Christian, Washing- government astronomer in a recent ton, former private secretary to Pres- interview. The phenomenon of polar ident Harding. motion has interested scientists for Officers of the fraternal grand lodg- many years and the newly discovered es with which the President was af- process for keeping track of the mo- filiated and representatives of various tion of the axis of the earth will be organizations of which the late Presi- of scientific value. (Ia. Its establishment, as a branch of Johns I-Iopkins university, will soon i be followed, we believe, by similar university schools throughout the world. The co-operation and inter- change between these schools, with the occasional publications of the act- ual facts pertaining to the economic, political and moral life of the -peoples of the world, can not fail to bring them to a better and a permanent. basis of mutual regard, co-operation and helpfulness." The value of the doctrineslies in the manner in which it will simplify the calculation of polar motion. Here- tofore it was necessary by actual ob- servation at many stations about the earth, to calculate the amplitude and period of the oscillation empirically. Patronize Daily Advertisers.-Adv I1 A U FIRST NATIONAL BANK ORGANIZED 1863 Savings Department 4 I Trust Department Oldest National Bank in Michigan _ ----- I ESCORT FOR HONOR SECIONSELECTED0 (Continued From Page One) Leslie W. Krieger, '26, has been named cass historian and will speak in that capacity on the Class day pro- gram which will be given on June 11. The class banquet will be held that night in the Union. From the College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts, those named for the wnard of Honor include G. Ham- mo d Harrington, Mark Kearney, Stuart C. Johnson, Joseph'E. Gandy, Joseph J. Finn, Kenneth G. Smiles, Robert Mansfield, Frank P. Weaver, Robert M, Grab, Frederick Sturmer, r Miles C. Reinke, Richard F. Doyle, Byron W. Parker, Neil Nyland, Fred D. Dunakin, William J. Walthour I McKenzie Shannon, Charles D. Spen- cer, Glen Donaldson, Allin B. rouch, Steven F. Wilson, Richard Barton, Douglas Ginn, Rensis Likert, Kenneth C. Kellar, Thomas Lamoree, Fred Feeley, William J. Howard, Charles' Highley, Robert J. Brown, Frederick Parker, Gwyn Hughes, William L. Diener, Richard Griest, Walker G. Everett, Charles Grube, Jackson Stith, Alonza C. Allen, Nathan P. Feinsinger, Raymond Hutzel, James E. Newton, Thomas P. Henry, Jr., Ray Callahan, Robert E. Weadock, George W. Ross, Jr, Edwin C. Mack, Robert Weide-I man, Richard H. Freyberg, Joseph F.1 Whinery, Earl Krickbaum, George W.I Davis, Frederick Phelps, Robert C. M.' Winter, George Alderton, Robert# Straub, Peter Jablonowski, John H.! Elliott, Lee W. Ensel, H~owa'rd L. Bow- man, James W. Fernamberg. From the Law school, Lucian Lane, L. Beaumont Parks, Charles J. Munz, Jr., Weldon Bettens, Rodger I. Mar-. quis, Richard Roe, Frank Lewellen, and Egbert R. Isbell have been ap- pointed, From the College of Pharmacy, those selected are H. D. Grieve, and L. D, Powers. W. H. Arnold, Richard Earhart,1 Post Office Holds Mails For Students Mail for the following persons is at th'e Ann Arbor Postoffice, undeliver- able. It may be claimed by the own- ers if called for at the General Deliv- ery window,.Main office, on or before June 2, 1926. Chester Howard Adams, Norman Herman Amos, Nellie Bernita Block, William H. Bonham, Zelina E. Clark, Edwin H. Coachman, Albert D. Dotter, Prof. Crawford C. Edmonds, John Hos- kins, 1st Lieut. Warren C. Hunter, Mrd. Res., Ben Wilson Lewis, J. S. Lewis, Carl J. Marman, Ted Masser- man, A. Naeter, J. Marston Nelson, Buela North, Charles A. Reinke, C. K. Robinson, Harold Rosden, Dr. Schoepfle, I. Shane, Miss G. E. Shaw, Fred Sherrick, Perfecto Talavera, Prof. G. S. Van Fleet, Luang Kai Vib- bag, Hymen A. Vogel, Dr. Lewis E. Wehmeyer, A. R. White, Earl Chas. Wrightman. Medic Association Gives Survey Fund By 'recent action, the Medical Re- search committee of the American Medical association has made a grant of $2,000 to Dr. A. S. Warthin and Prof. G. R. LaRue of the Medical school for a survey of the occurrence of the fish tape worm. This disease is especially prevalent among the fish of the Great Lakes and is now be- coming increasingly common among Ehumans. The survey will also in- elude an investigation of the relation between the tape worm and pernicious aenemia. ford H. Lay, Julio Luzunaris, Ruth M. Mountain, Paul B. II. Pike, Louis Schultz, and Leonidas H. Williams have been chosen. Patronize Daily Advertisers.-Adv.'I 9 _____________ e IEE-I . 05.. r 0 f i. '." 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