THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I Publication in the Bulletin il constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received by the Assistant to the Prgsident until 3:30 p. M. (11:30 a. M. Saturday.) N11imnr W Vnlnmn 0 WV! NVQTIA V O-rIflRFU 19!_ 11191 L vomme , r ,; r ir V, Uwn.; I, ju u mpier--i To the Deans: There will be no conference of the President and the Deans Wednesday, Oct. 12. Frank E. Robbins. For Sale by Buldings and Grounds Department: Monroe furnace in excellent condition. Suitable for 6 or 7 room house. Price $50. Phone 9512, Buildings and Grounds dept. E. C. Pardon, Superintendent. Faculty of tEa College of Pharmacy: Faculty of the College of Pharmacy will meet Friday, Oct. 14, at 4:10 p.m., in Room 212 Chemistry building. I C. C. Glover, Secretary. Men Students in Physical Education: All men students enrolled in the four-year curriculum in Physical Educa- tion are expected to be present at a meeting to be held on Wednesday evening, October 12th at 8 p,.m., room 20 Waterman Gymnasium. Mr. Elroy Guckert, former "athletic director at Hillsdale college will speak on the topic, "Recre- ational Activities in Edrope." Refreshments will be served. E. D. Mitchell. Students Planning to Teach Rhetoric: Students who plan to teach Rhetoric and English Composition should cor- relate their fields of work early in their college course. Such students are requested to see Professor R. W. Cowden for information and advice. His office hours are from 3 to 5 Wednesdays, in Room 3228 Angell Hall. T. E. Rankin. Seniors: Please make appointments with the photographers as soon as possible. Order slips may be obtained from the business office of the Michiganensian any afternoon from one until five o'clock. The order costs five dollars, two dollars of which will be allowed by the photographers on any private order which may be given before Christmas. The four official studios are Dey, Randall-Maedel, Rentschler, and Spedding. Please act now and avoid a rush at the expiration of the time limiti Economics Club: 'Meets Friday, October 14, at 7:45 p.m., in Room 302 of the Union. Dean Edmund E.-Day will speak. Members of staffs and graduate students in Econ- omics and Business Administration are invited., Z. C. Dickinson. Student Mathematical Society: The Student Mathematical Society will meet Thursday, October 13, at 7:30 in Room 3017 Angell Hall. Two papers will be given. All interested in Mathe- matics are invited to attend. Madelyn C. Kingsley, Secretary. Romance Club Meeting: The first meeting of the Romance Club will be held .this evening at 8:00 o'clock at the Michigan Union. All graduate students in the Department of Romance Languages are cordially invited to be present. Julio Del Toro. lluummers Dramatic Society Tryouts: Tryouts for Mummers Dramatic Society, this afternoon at Newberry Audi- torium, from 3:00 to 5:00. Ithmer Coffman, President. Cercle Francais: There will be, a meeting of Cercle Francais Wednesday, October 12 at 7:15 p.m., in room 202 South Wing, for the purpose of organizing and forming plans for the coming year. All last year's members ai e earnestly requested to be present.' Milo S. Ryan, President. Chi Delta Phi: There will be a meeting tonight at 7:30 in 204 South Wing. $' Kathryn Francis, President. Tryout Manuscripts for Ci Delta iPhi: All tryout manuscriptts are to be in box in Barbour Gymnasium by Fri- day, October 21. Kathryn Francis, President. A.S.C.E.: Important meeting tonight, Wednesday, October 12, at 7:30 at the Union. . M. Salmond, President. Tryouts for Adelphi: All candidates for admission whose applications already have been filed I with the clerk and whose names are from N to Z inclusive, are requested to report in the Adelphi Room, 4th floor Angell Hall, Saturday morning, October 15, at 10:00 a.m. They must come prepared to give a five minute speeeh on any subject of their own choice. Robert J. Gessner, Speaker. Scabbard and Blade: There will be a regular meeting tonight at the Union promptly at 7:15 p.m. It is requested that all members be present for the meeting without fail. P. E. Slayton. NEW EVIDENCE ON FALL BRIBING TO BE GIVEN IN OIL LEASE TRIAL With the government's conspiracy interviewed these men, both of whom trial against Albert 13 Fall, tormer have been abr oad for two years evad- secretary of the interior, and Harry ing government summons. F. Sinclair, oil producer, opening on The Supreme Court (-esterday Oct. 17, government counsel Atlee handed dowvn a decision in the case Pemerene, former senator from Ohio, of the Teapot Dome in which it is hopes to obtain valuable information asserted that the lease arranged be- from Harry M. Blackmer and James tween Secretary Fall and Sinclair E. O'Neill concerning the allegedl "was made fraudulently bye means of bribing of Fall. Senator Pomerene collusion and conspiracy between went to Europe recently where he them.' Corr ptio Chaged business and professional life after - college. H-i declares that the pre- In Glass Elections valent belief that high scholarship in -' college does not presage success later OJn Indiana Campus is mistaken. As a result of an investi- it tngation he proved that 14 out of 15 (tyo Associted Press)g n BLOOMINGTON, mnd., Oct. 11--"Po- honor students attained success while litical corruption" if charges are true, but 1 in 46 of the other graduates were has found its way into campus a ucc- as successful as the honor students. tions at Indiana university. - Student politicians have been aros bd over revelations by the Indiana Daily Swtunt, camp cnewspaert lAmnd So the "Corrupt"in onn withrte usnssad rfesonllieafe elections of class officers last week The "corruption" has been confin- ed to under class elections, accor isng i to information appearing in the Stu- YOU HAveN'T Ao dent which outlined the situation s)his WORLD *S rOU STA way: I$EE TME BEST TEA1l4 Nine of 12 signatures on a nominat- hn sd st AS e HAS HAl ing petition filed in the sophomore .oe rUa YOUR AN election were forgeries.-I The nominee for sophomore presi- / dent was expelled from school two days before the election, while the nominee for treasurer never enterede nd S otheA / chek u f i niversity credits of hh candidates revealed that a nomjinee for senior treasurer was not a mem- for junior nresident was not a jun- everalunerclssetons, avng obtain12 ioi and a nominee for sophoSAre president was not a sophomore.I 'ie12signatures oapoosed omslat-of '111111 H S A ing spet son sl d n th o ph o m re w P E UF120 R freshman officers, iroceeded to erase the names of nominees and sustitute SO da differe t slate without consulting the signers ot the petition. DEBA TE TR YOUTS .SowNBFOE TE TO DISCUSS NEW WTA CRIME PRINCIPLE A Chek f nivrstycrdit oAP1' expense o e a ? . va' .s, 1 o s an~c st a are1s, ".h )t'r'C 011nt and course, with the individual and with general expenses 2.8 per cent. the kind of course he takes. The total income cliargeal)le to the Of the total about three-fourths is business of education was $4,356- personal expense to the student, or 194.27. The total expense, accounta- his parents. The remaining thousand ble in the same way, was $4,379,098.- (Icilars or so is the investment the 68. The (lifterence was carriedl over aeieu lmuioao lezapalI o1p puhe alt from the previous year as part of the in him as evidence of their faith in current assets. the value of higher education. Students this year will pay a larg- Pased on the annual financial re- er share of the cost of eperating Ohio port of the University for the year State University, since fees in all but ending June 30 last, it cost, on an the Colleges of Medicine, Dlentistry, average, $3:36 per student to operate and Law, where they already weie Ohio State University during the last much higher, have been advanced $5 academic session. There were 13,023 per quarter to $20. students. The University estimates the ex- This amount, it is worth noticing, pense of the average student coming showed a marked decline over two here from out of the city at $658 a years ago and was also smaller than year, including fees, laboratory de- lie figure for four years ago. In posits, books, board, room, and gen- 1925 the cost of maintaining Ohio eral expenses. 1tate University was computed at - $432 per student. Two years earlier eT th it was estimated at $352. The shrink- DeanDay TO Return age lies chiefly in the fact that the building and other capital equipment . ursday Forisit, program last year was comparatively - small. New buildings, additions to Edmund E. Day, dean of the school buildings, and purchases of land, of business administration now on however are regarded as permanent investment rather than ordinary ex- of absence for one year, for the pense, purpose of research work, will re- Of thQ total expense of operating turn to Ann Arbor for a visit Thurs- the University the state and the Fed- day, to sthy until Saturday night., cral government bear about seven- Dean Day will hold a conferance Seighths of the cost, while the stu- resident Clarence co dent (or his parents) meet the re- t se Cookittl mainder. That is tow say, the fees during his stay here, and will also received from studentp last year to- address the Econdmics club at its taled $556,159.31, but averaged only meeting Friday night at the Union. about forty-three dollars per student or 12.7 per cent of the cost.- Of the amount expended for edu- Detroit Alumni Will cation there last year 79.4 per cent came from state appropriations, 12.7 H ve pecial Trains per cent from students, 4.7 per cent from department earnings, 2.2 per Special trains to all out of town cent from the Federal Government, football games have been arranged half of 1 per cent from the endow- for Detroit alumni by the U. of M. ment, and only three-tenths of 1 per Club of Detroit. These will include cent from gifts to the University.. trips to Madison October 15, Urbana On. the side of expenditures, in- October 29, and Chicago November 5. COST OF COLLEGE E $4,000 PER YE It costs, on the average, about $4,- 000 to put a student through a four- year university course, figures re- ently compiled at Ohio State Univer- sity shew. This sum includes the Z personal cost to the student and the vflnlu, to-n thin' cflt t it rflria f DUCATION IS :AR, FIGURES SHOW struction cost the greatest share, 63. per cent. Buildings and other capi- j tal betterments cost 13.4 per cent. upkeep and operation of the physical pllnt 12.4 per cent, administration 3.8 cr cent, the Library, including1 b k~r n1d - In iC ':f e ., 1r In honor of thiree student editors of the l'dichigain Law Review who a re from Toledo, Ohio, the University of Michigan Club of Toledo held a .pecial meeting yesterday at which Dean I enry M. Bates of the La\v shchol delivered the principal address. This is the first time since the found- img of the Michigan Law Review in 1902 that three of the twenty stu- dent editors are from Toledo. Those who were thus honored are Leslie Henry '28L, Julius Jacobs, '28L, and Oscar Sattinger, '28L. In aldditioln to being elected to the Law Review editorial board, Henry was awa-ded the class of 1908 memor- ial scholarship, awarded annually to that member of the senior class who has attained the highest scholastic record on the work of the preceding year. Dean Bates presented the award in the absence of its donor, Attorney Guy B. Findley of Elyria, Ohio. Prof. Ralph W. Aigler, Prof. Ho- hart R. Coffey, Prof. Joseph H. Drake, Prof. Grover C. Grismore, Prof. Vic- or 11. ].aiie, Prof. Paul A. Leidy, and Prof. l orace L. Wilgus, all of the Law school and former Ohioans, ac- corn-panied Dean Bates to the gather- ing as guests of the alumni associa- tion. In addition, more than twenty fortier student editors of the Law Review, now practicing law in Tole- do, were present as guests of the association. NORTHWESTERN- Contemporary thought lectures are being broadcast from WNMAQ, The Chicago Iiaily News station under the direction of Baker Brownwell, professor of the course and director of the department of contemporary thought, Northwestern university. AT ALUMgNIFUNCTION Tlhi'e IAIW Studenits FeIC4I at Spceial 3leetlng hld Tuesdmay; Seveni Profesors Also Attend TOLEDO EDITORS iONORE,') ii ) y Was Utterly Ruined aBysBRIOGS ?i N T-HE RTi OUT 1T4 7 THAT DEAR~ V? IN YEARfS joENT RIVAL. A 1OUH AND -IbU HAVE A CTRAND GA FEsr WITH AL-L- THEi OLD GANG You HAVE'T -,E.E SINE LA AA ~'M1$kE'KEND7ALL GIVES YOU OPZ5 OF3 TcI,AND Irr5 (31AN.DLARCENY To-TAK~r MC'S aN - aO'RE ON FOR ANA 5So THE -PAY: )5 UJTTERLY( RVIN. I _ GAMsE is Entertainment of Speakers on Oratorical Lecture Course: Will individuals or organizations wishing to entertain speakers on Oratorical Association Course, kindly communicate with me. It. D. Hollister. University Club Members: First Club Night is on Friday the 14th at 8:15 p.m. This is a good portunity to bring new faculty nmbers as guests. Program Committee. the op- Garden Section, Faculty Womei's Club: The first regular meeting of the Garden Section willI Cctober 12, at 3 p.m., at thq home of Mrs. A. B. Moehlman, Dora L. be held Wednesday, Barton Hills. Dice, Secretary. Speeches on either side of the question-resolved: "That the prin- ciples of the Baume's law of - New York should be enacted into law by the other states," will constitute the tryout speeches of the candidates for the debating team squad, according to Prof. James M. O'Neill, of the depart- ment of speech. The speeches are to be limited to five minutes, and all men wishing to try out should register in the de- partment of speech office, in Angell hall, before October 25. The tryouts will be held Tuesday, Nov. 1, in the afternoon and evening,I in room 4203 Angell hall. The con-!, tests are 'to he limited Ito under- graduate students, as the Central League debates are likewise limited. The University will debate North- western and Ohio State universities, meeting Northwestern here, and Ohio l State at Columbus, on January 20,J 1928. HONOR STUDENTS ARE SUCCESSFUL According to Prof. Hugh Allison of the University of Wisconsin men and women who have been successful in f college workare usually successful in SIWVAS-\- 74 16 ANP THEN YO U :5UDENLY 1>15COVER YcU'VL SMOK