YALE E ICIIT THE MTCHTCAN DAI5LY _. .. A / DAILY OFFIIAL BULLETIN 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). i _..- . - - r v a--- - -- - - - ., -i e- 41. 16.7 T-------Aa wn a%+ a -f Volume VII S*TU RDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1926 Cabinet And Premiers Meeting In Imperial Conference MICHIGAN HIGH SCHOOL DEBATERS Give - h o P E W PREPARE FOR COMNG , CONTEST Give British Dominions Political Eauahitv With England' Number u2 ,_..._. Faulty and Students: The Department of Buildings and Grounds is compelled to make cer- tain electrical repairs on Sunday, November 28. For this reason the following buildings will have no electrical current on that date: Angell Hall. University Hall. Law Buifding. Natural Science Building. Herbert G. Watkins, Assistant Secretary. University Women: Indoor classes of Physical Education begin Monday, November 29th. All students having, required work to do should elect courses at Barbour Gymnasium today. Ethel A. McCormick. Entering jlhoinore and Upperclass Women and Old Students Who Have Iygiene Lectures to Make Up: The fifth Hygiene Lecture will be given on Tuesday, November 30th, at 4:15 in arah Caswell Angell Hall. Bring blue books. Margaret Bell. Freshman Women: The fifth required Hygiene Lecture will be given November 29th, at 4:15 in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall. Bring blue books. r Margaret BelL All Chinese Students in the Campus: There will be an important business meeting in Lane Hall, Saturday, November 27, 1926, at 7:30 p. m. Your presence is urgently requested. A. G. Choy, Secretary. University Lecture:- Mr. Chester i. Rowell, Michigan '88, Regent of the University of Cali- fornia, formerly editor of the Fresno., Cal., Republican, willideliver a Uni- versity lecture Monday, November 29, at 4:15 p. m. ,in the Natural Science Auditorium on the subject "Impressions of Bolshevik Russia." The public is cordially invited.- F. E. Robbins. Universiiy of Michigan lanl: Formation today, 2:00 p. in., Morris Hall, Uniform with cape. Please be on time. NormAn J. Larson. Choral Un0on Ushers: Men who have assisted at Hill Auditorium with the Grid-graph are re-° quested to report Saturday afternoon, November 27, at 1:30, for the Army- Navy game. W. A. Davenport, Asst. Supt., Buildings and Grounds Dept. Choral Union Ushers: All Choral Union ushers are requested to report not later than 7:30 at hill Auditorium on Monday evening for the Moriz Rosenthal recital. W. A. Davenport, Ass't. Supt., Buildings and Grounds Dept. Athena Literary Society: Tryouts for the Athena-Portia Debate to be held December 14, will take pllace next Tuesday evening, November 30th. The subject for debate is: "Resolved, That this house views With alarm the entrance of women into the learned professions and statecraft." Tryout speeches are to be three minutes in length and may be on either side of the question. Fresh- men are not eligible to try out, but all other members of Athena are ex- pected to do so. Florence A. Pollock, President. -With the first round of preliminary vel for schools located in isoated ds- debates completed, members of the ,nrets. Schools requesting to reta&u Michigan High School Debating the ame sides thiough Ihe whole league arelooking forward to the next series vill be aiLwed ts 1on 0tO Icontests, scheduled for the evening 'when utfe y ths odtos of Dec. 10. siated Professor cnrmorc. Latest announcemen ts from Prof. G. -- E. Densmore, direetor o the Lea;o MAIL BEING HELD state thanv ,0i s bool will1 H'ave a change of sidO iiS tih thir i ui i the preliminaryf. n e- ond round, the s1s i . tai.en A .en will be continuAd as far a lossible. Only a fevr schools will be reciuvst ld llAve wi dow mnt i 1)e. 4: to retain the same side through hr Elmer T, r:, . shine 8orich, whole series of preliminary debates, ]arol owditch, We aell S, 1rook , according to the announcemen. Such t; len . Carison, Dr. W. L. Chandler, exceptions are caused by the with- Tsio Hsin Cheng, B. I. Cone, Marvin drawal of some schools after the see- Coiln, J. . Detwyler, eorg N. Evans ond round a'nd the exigencies of tra- Vilbe ' Fisher (2), Mrs. Fred Foss, "! is' , va C .< S 1' Kawamtu" , . ; ;, , . X Y , UNION SERVES 300 """"^a" Lieu, Ant"onyL "o M Edward Lyd ci, Margaret Mann, Mr. Margolis, llarold Meade, Miss Helen Special Thanksgiving dinners at the Mengel, Miss Mai Neif, Paul C. Packer, Union were served to more than 300 L.onad Parr, Maynard Phelps, Kath- Thursday, it was stated yesterday. erine Morre Reed, Robert Riggs, Two hundred of these were served in Pr. Rchard Rossiter, Prof. larry the main dining room, the remainder f ubenkoenig, Mariamn Staub, Maurice in the tap room. Wells, Margaret S. White. British peoples have been grante d a new magna charta by the above members of the British 'Cabinet and premiers of the Empire acting in conference. Hereafter each of the.various dominions included under the term "United Kingdom" will be equal to the mother country, the premiers reporting directly to the King. The term "United Kingdom," due to the insistence of the Irish Free State, will henceforth be eliminated. It is thought that this move will bind the dominions into a closer unit with the King' as a symbol of united strength. Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin does not object, although this action virtually places the premiers who have previously been his subordinates as his equals. J' Lorenz Cites Causes Of Feble Mindnes Of the delinquents who cost the United States $10,000,000,000, one- fourth are feeble-minded and 40 per, cent are psychopathic personalities, both relatively irresponsible for their acts, Dr. W. F. Lorenz, chief of the Wisconsin Phsychiatric Institute de- clared before the Wisconsin Confer- ence on Social Work at its recent meeting in Milwaukee. Dr. Lorenz also outlined sone of the causes and cures of the situation. "It is to be hoped," he said, "that the public attitude towards state hospitals will soon change. Ultimately, instead of a sheriff, a physician will be called: instead of an apylum, a hospital will be used; instead of viewing a nentalj ailment as an offense or a crime, it will be looked upon as an illness that I might befall anyone."I Continuing, Dr. Lorenz laid the whole of the evil of crime and delin- quency to divorce, separation, death of parents, economic stress and illness in the home. He indicated that therer is little that the state can do about these things until the morale of the home and of the families in the home undergoes a radical change, and our philanthropic benefits grow. SMITH TO TALK Ira M. Smith, University registrar, will leave tomorrow for Cleveland where he will address the student body of West Technical high school in the morning on college entrance requirements. During the afternoon he will address a group meeting of the high school principals of the city on the same subject. Subscribe for The Michigan Daily. I i !t 4I i, !t it FIGURES SHOW SEVENTY PERCENT OF M. S. C. MEN WORK AT SCHOOL (By Associated Press) age, the student spending the largest EAST LANSING, Nov. 26.-Seven amount of money totalled expenses of of every ten men in Michigan State $1,141.00 while the lowest report was college are earning a part of their $398.00. The average man at the college had way through school, a study of stu-ialthealess expensethan te aeag dent finances conducted by Prof. L' girl with expenditures of $648 and C. Emmons of the mathematics de- $679 respectively. The non-fraternity partment here shows. IIn some cases men had the lowest average of the the earnings are not large while insh with $625 or $10 below the other individual cases it amounts to school average. The average of the 75 and 80 per cent of the average cost fraternity men was lows however, for the school year. compared to the usual reports of fra- The actual figures of Professor Em- ternity men. mons' report to the president shows ' that the men of the college earn an average of $164.00 per year with in- DECORATIONS TO dividual earnings varying from $12.0* REMAIN AT UNION to $462.00.1 SitLs G. B.-Come early, for the values are great and will not last long. A new hat? See ours before you buy. Specially priced, $5.00 and $6.00. Complete line of Collegiate Iiaberdasher3 Possibly one of the startling results of the investigation was that the aver- age cost of keeping the decrepit cars that suffice the present day student body for transportation was $11.40 per quarter or $3.80 per month. Record of the make of cars piloted was not in- cluded in the report. The average student of Michigan State college spends $635.00 per year, the Emmons report shows. In making his average, Professor Emmons re- ceived a report upon the expenses of every. fifth student in the catalogue list for the last school year, eliminating the students living in Lansing or East Lansing. Above ancd below the aver- Decorations from last night's Pan- lar Saturday night Union dance to be Ilellenic ball will serve for the regu- given in the ballroom tonight, it has been announced by the Union dance committee. Special entertainment by a soft shoe dancer has also been arranged by the committee. Tickets for tonight's dance are obtainable by all Union members, and may be procured at the main desk in the lobby. An automobile made entirely of American parts has been put on the market in Austria. 213 East Liberty St. Fifty university and college schools and departments of journalism of pro- fessional rank gave instruction to 5,532 students in the United States during the academic year 1925-26, ac- cording to the November number of the Journalism Bulletin, quarterly publication of journalism teachers' as- sociations. Graduates in journalism from the fifty schools in June 1926, numbered 884, as compared with ap- proximately 500 for the preceding year. READ THE WANT ADS Rubber Footwear and Hosiery Patent fasteners and four- buckle GALOSHES for - Ladies. All first quality, durable and stylish. . . $3.98 ".d./". '°.o".. "". '".v"yI",. ;, " ®.O".a". ' , +e'. ". ..l ". 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