I PAGE EIGT~t TT-117MTC'IC.AN DTAILY££.. YA.~ A~A~'~~.. a n .. 4 ,r...... DAILY 'OFFICIAL 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). Volume VII WEDNEMDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1926 Number 5. EXECUTIVE BOARD, GRADUATE SCHOOL: There will be a meeting of the Executive Board of the Graduate School on Wednesday, December 1, at 4:00 o'clock. A. H. Lloyd. The third lecture in Hygiene for men will be given in Waterman Gym- nasium, Thursday and Friday, December 2nd and 3rd, at 34 and 5 p. m. This requirement includes all freshmen in the regular physical training classes and others that have been excused from these classes. Geo. S. May. College of Engineering-Midsemester Reports: Midsemester reports for the College of Engineering are now on file in the Office of Assistant Dean Patterson. Students are requested to inquire at that office in regard to them. Geo. W. Patterson. Students of Journalism: The Students' Press Club will hold its semi-monthly meeting this eve- ring at 7:30 in the Editorial Room, 3rd floor, east side, Old Medical Building. The speaker will be Hobart R. Coffey, LL.B.,J.D., of the Law School. His subject will be "Student Life in European Universities." All students of journalism are invited to attend this meeting. J. L. Brumm. History 5: Make-up examination for students unavoidably absent from mid- semester in Room 4001 Angell Hall, Friday, December 3, 3 to 4 p. m. Preston Slosson. Automobile Permits: At the present time there are a number of applications for permission to drive cars being held at the office of the Dean of Students, awaiting more information from the applicants. It should be understood that per- mission to operate a car has not been granted until the permit card has been issued. Students who have filed these incomplete applications must explain to the Dean of Students immediately why they have not been called for, or they must appear before the committee. H. T. Cavanaugh, Ch. Automobile Committee. Attention Students: All Students having cars who will volunteer the use of them for trans- porting delegates of the National Student Federation of America from the station to the Union, Thursday, December 2, 1926, please phone Kenneth Michel. Dial 4418. James F. Boyer. Mr. Frederick A. Tiltn, member of the firm of Haskins and Sells, will speak to students of the Business School at 4:15 Wednesday, December 1st, in the Natural Science Auditorium on the subject "Public Reports of Corporations." This talk will be in the nature of a discussion of an article on the same subject by Profesor Ripley. The article by Professor Ripley is published in the September issue of the Atlantic Monthly, and is entitlel "Stop, Look, Listen." All interea in this subject are invited to attend. F. E. Ross. Senior Edusation: Class dues are payable in Tappan Hall from 9 until 4, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Dues are $2.00. Ernest G. Hildner, Treasurer. Senior Engineers: The fee for the class picture (seventy-five cents) will be collected at the table near the West Engineering library for the last time today. Unless you pay the fee, you will not appear in the class picture. Louis R. IKfsheman, Cmn. Picture Committee. Junior Class-School of Education: There will be a meeting of all representatives of the Junior Class at 7:00 o'clock Wednesday evening, in Room 109, Tappan Hall. Pauline Zoller, Secretary. Junior Education Students: Class dues of one dollar are due now, and payable to group leaders or in the corridor at Tappan Hall, Wednesday and Thursday, December 1 and 2. Non-payment of dues is subject to University regulation. Marjorie Todd. Botanical Seminar: Botanical Seminar meets Wednesday, December 1, at 4:30, B173, N. S. Building. Paper by C G. Kulkarni-"Inves Genetical Investigations in Maize." B. . Davis. Music Section: The Music Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet on Wednes- day, Dec. 1, at 8 o'clock at 1514 Brooklyn. Marion Fisk, Sec'y. Classical Journal Club: The Classical Journal Club will meet in Room 2016, Angell Hall, on Wednesday, December 1, at 4:00 P. M. Faculty members and Graduate students of the Greek and Latin departments are urged to be present. James E. Dunlap. La Socidad Hispaniea: The first of -the series of Spanish Lectures will be given Wednesday, December 1st, at 7:30 o'clock in Room 25, Angell Hall. S. D. Felipe MVolina, of Toledo, Ohio, will speak on "El Quixote." Tickets will be distributed through the various classes, or may be procured before the lecture from the treasurer, Charles T. Lee, President. Alain Locke, professor of Philosophy at Howard University, will spea on "The Negro Renaissance" at the Natural Science Auditorium on Friday evening, December 3, at 8 p. m. Admission free. Prof. Roy Wood Sellers, chairman. :V. . howard, Pres. The Negro-Caucasian Club. College Conclls: Important Meeting of the College Councils and the Student Council tonight, December 1, 1926, at 7:30 p. m., in Room 304, Michigan Union. H. Thomas Cavanaugh, Prs. Studnt Council. University of Michigan Baud:I Rehearsal tonight, 7:15. Concert program will be rehearsed. Norman L. Larson, Director. Faculty Woman's Club: Tea for the Michigan Dames at the home of Mrs. Henry M. Bates, 1921 Cambridge Road, Thursday afternoon, December 2, from three to six o'clock. Mrs. William Frayer. Forestry Club Meeting: Professor C. D. LaRue will speak to the foresters tonight at their regu- lar club meeting. Dr. LaRue has traveled considerably in unmapped regions and always has something interesting to say. Seven-thirty o'clock, Wednesday, December 1, 1926, Room 213 Natural Science.Building. Randal McCain. Scabbard and Blade: There will be an important meeting of all members at the Union to- night at 7:30 p. in. J. 11. hickman Graduate Women's Tea: Dean and Mrs. Lloyd will entertain the graduate women at a tea given at their home, 1735 Washtenaw, Thursday from four to six o'clock. Jane Ludgate. Graduate Women's Club: All graduate women are invited to ieet with members of the Grad- uate Women's Club for supper at the Green Tree Inn, Wednesday at 6 p.m. Jane S. Ludgate. Eastern Schools Warn Wonien Against Over-Indulgence In Social Activities NEW YORK, Nov. 30.-Young wom- Pres. Henry N. MacCracken, of Vas- en who wish to tread the primrose sar, said that possibly because the col- path of social entertainment at the lege "has for many years had so much expense of intellectual activties, are stricter requirements as to residence frowned upon at some of the leading than most of the other colleges for wo- women's colleges of the East. men," the problem of non-residence Responding to a query, the heads of has not been acute. five institutions said that while social Pres. Ellen F. Pendleton, of Welles- activities properly have a place in the ley, said: "I presume that there are life of ther students, the official atti- no colleges of first rank who are not tulde is that intellectual pursuits seeking means to impress upon the should constitute the main purpose of students that colleges are primarly for the student bodies. the prosecution of scholarship and that In general the heads of women's they are not designed for students who colleges agree with Pres. William Al- wish to make them headquarters for lan Neilson, of Smith college. He re- engaging in the social activities which cently told the students that Smith naturally cluster about aa academic college was not going to be turned in- community." to "a center of engaging social life Admitting it would be difficult "to with a few duties to give a kind of rel- divide Into hours and minutes the time ish to a perpetual holiday" and assert- I which should be spent in scholastic ed he was going to insist that the "in- sand social purspits," Pres. Mary E. tellectual life here shall be the main Woolley, of Mount Holyoke college, life, even if we have to dispense with a agreed with lpr. Neilson's attitude. large number of admirable and effec- Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve; of tive persons." Barnard college, said her college faces The response of Pres. Marian Ed- a "rather different problem" from that wards Park, of Bryn Mawr, was in the of Smith college. "As our students form of an excerpt from her opening are already in New York," she said, address to the students when she said: "we are not confronted with the dif- "That Bryn Mawr believes fully in ficulty of their going away over the the importance of out-of-the classroom week-ends. For the most part, our hours is shown by its insistence on students are fairly serious and do pret- residence away from the world." The I ty good work." college, she explained, "regards itself I 1 first of all a place for instruction and WASHINGTON.-Sec. Herbert Hoover, the life here must bear the right re- as chairman of the American section lation to such a direct aim and not be lof the International commission on the merely or pleasantly appropriate to Great lakes ship canal project, has desultory intellectual interests, or to called a meeting of the section. a purpose frankly amusement seek- ..,, 11. 9i A.. Jila fa. + .Lwa l nlAJi Jn aii . nnUal Union Opera Will Open Monday COPELAND PL4NS MODIFICATION OF PROHIBITION BIL (By A sociatul Pre s) (NEW YORK, Now 10 ,..) l 'Copeland, a phy ic ii, t sthat , ,o. .. per cent beer1 w ould n t b it' in- lie is assemn h r f a ical data onthe atter with the Ple of ntoduin a.111il inCongessL' cause lie views the heavy ma-jo.iily in the recent state p'rohibito x1 ren- s '. um as a mandate to him. iAnd so far as his close afiliatio ~ ~. ~with Methodist"Eiscpao!_c lin rch11is, ' concernied, he1says he'i.willI g to -- _ : ":::.e ;; jburn all his brdges bin h im ifnec- a{2 $ y~ 4 mo" r }E'.3 3ryinithis nmatterc . \ ' '4" }:"< Senator (opeland said, however, that he thought there was very small chance of affecting modicl:ation on tiw "olsted:l act at this time, expresin the belief that a long process 01 ei- :. "< ' -: .- "' cation would be necessrbeo ti can1be brought about. Left to right :Charles L. Pettibon e, '28, William M. Lewis, Jr., '29, Rus- sel A. Gohring, '27, Watson D. Harbo ugh, '27, and William S. Ramsay, Jr., PTCIAREST.-The Ru ian h- '28, who will appear in "Front Page Stuff" at the Whitney theater begin- ernment has placed an o n- ning Monday. anr "nts amounting to $l5, 'r ; ( M OLINA, WILL SPEAK TO SPANISIHSOCIETY E1 Sociedad Hispanlea To Hear Talk By Head Of Spanish Department Of Toledo College Tonight OPENS LECTURE SERIES Prof. Felipe Molina, head of the Spanish department of the Collegetof lie City of Toledo, will open this year'sy series of lectures under the auspices of El Sociedad Hispanica at 7:30 o'- clock this evening in room 25, Angell hall. The tales of Don Quixote will be Professor Molina's theme. The lec- ture will be given over to an explana- tion of the idealogy of the book and its signifcance in Spanish literature, and will be given in Spanish. Another out-of-town speaker will ap- pear on the program next spring, when Sanitago Gutierrez, of the Spanish de- partment of Ohio State university will speak on "The Literary Values of Spanish Literature." Other lectures of the series will be given on Jan. 11 by Gustave L. Michaud on the subject, "Costa Rica"; on Feb. 15, by Nelson Eddy; and on March 8 by Prof. Her- bert A. Kenyon, all of the romance languages department. Tickets for the entire course of lec- tures may be obtained by non-mem- bers of the society at a cost of 50 cents. Members of the society receive tickets free. The chief attraction planned for next spring by the society will be a group of three plays, tracing the origin and development of the paso, a type of Spanish play. The plays will be of the 16th, 19th, and 20th centuries. They will probably be produced in March. A special feature for the meetings of this year is being provided for, ac- cording to Prof. F'rederic Sanchez, fac- ulty advisor of the club. Vhrious stu- dents from South American countries will give talks in Spanish on the sub- ject of their native lands. LONDON-:-Foreign Secretary Sir Austen Chamberlain will leave for Paris to talk over affairs with Pre- mier Raymond Poincare and Foreign Minister Aristide Briand of France. PANAMA-A. H. F. Schiffely, who started from Buenos Aires April 21, 1925, on a horseback ride to New York, 10,000 miles, arrived at Colon last week. z a - _u.. ..... ..,... _., DCBRHT DECEMBER THE FIRU The Torch Bearers:. PARADE THEIR ART in University Hall Auit oriui II AT 8:30 P. M. Tickets at Wahr's and Goodyear Drug Co. 75sc and S-Oc I _____________ I 7 Send for Dr. Meanwet's b "The Makin Athlete SM W. 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