THE MICHIGAN DAILY A I LY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is consti-uctiye notice to all members of the University. Copy received by the Assistant to the President until 8:30 p. m. (11:30 a. m. Saturday.) on State streetat 4:00 p. m. today and tomorrow (Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 27 and 28). Nillas Falcone, Director. TUPPER STATES MICHIGAN WILL SURPASS EASTERN COLLEGES IN UNDERGRADUATE WORK IN INTERVI University of iTichigan Band: Drill today at 5:07 Ferry Field. I Gordon Packer. .Volume 8 WEDNESDAY, SEPTE)BER 28, 1927. Number S. Uniyersity Lecture: Dr. Herbert Speyer, former member of the Belgian Senate, Professor in the University of Brussels, will lecture in English on "Parliamentarism vs. Dictatorship in Europe'' in the Natural Science Auditorium, W e d n e s d a y, September 28, at 4:15 p. m. The public is cordially invited. Frank E. Robins. The Eita Krom Prize in Sociology: The Elita Krom Prize, consisting of the interest on a gift of $1,000, amount- ing to about $50, will be awarded in June, 1928, to the best sociological paper of three thousand to five thousand words submitted by an undergraduate and presenting the results of a study having in view the social betterment of the writer's own community, or of some community with which he is familiar. Papers must be submitted .by iMay 1, 1928. The competition is open to all undergraduates, whether members of classes in sociology or not, but- must show at least such knowledge of that subject as should be gained by work equivalent to the beginning course at this University. There has in the past been almost no intentional competition for this prize and it has simply been awarded to the best paper of the sort'described submitted in the undergraduate courses. C. H. Cooley. Freshman Engineers: There will be a meeting of Freshman Engineers interested in debating at 8 o'clock, Wednesday evening, September 28, room 348 West Engineering Building. F. N. Menefee. Education D101: Education D101 will meet hereafter at 3 o'clock on Mondays and Wednes- days instead of at 9 o'clock on those days, as formerly. Francis 1. Curtis. Mathematics 2 : Theory of Functions of a Real Variable-Class will meet TuThS, at 11, in 202 Mason Hall. R. L. Wilder. Graduate Students in Public Health: Public Health Nursing Students: All students enrolled in the Public Health Training Courses in the Gradu- ate School and in the Public Health Nursing Training Courses are requested to attend a meeting to be held Thursday, September 29, 7:30 p. m. Waterman Gymnasium, Room 2. John Sundwall, M,1)., Director. Alpha Kappa Psi: All members of Alpha Kappa Psi on the campus will meet at the Union Wednesday, September 28, at 7:15 p. m. Clyne Crawford, President. Scabbard and Blade: There will be a meeting of Scabbard ind Blade at 7:30 p. m. tonight at the Union in room 302. All members are urged to be present f )r the first meeting of the year. P. Slayton, First Sergeant. Quadrangle: Quadrangle will meet at 8 o'clock this evening (Wednesday), at 1954 Cambridge Road. Ci rl E. Guthe will speak on "Freshman Week." Former members and members whose addresses have changed are requested to com- municate with E. C. Prephet, Room 17 A. H., or with N. C. Fisk, phone 5238. N. C. Fisk, Clerk. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Sigma Gamma Epsilon will hold its first luncheon at the Union, Thurs- day, September 29, at 12:15. All members are requested to be present. Short business session. D. Stewart, Secretary. The following young men come to my house Thursday evening, 7:30 o'clock: John Ihrig, Arthur Snyder, Howard Stewart, Elhrul Storr, Henry Tisch, Everett Tewkesbury, Edward L. Warner, Frank Weber, Maurice Weichels, Jackson Wilcox, Theodore Wilk, Karstens Kennedy. Philip E. Bursley. Brosseau Foundation: There will be a meeting of the committee on the administration of the Brosseau Foundation at 2 p. in., Wednesday, Sept. 28. in room 2, University' Hall.f Students who have applied for loans from this foundation should arrange to appear before the committee at this time. J. A. Bursley. NATIONWIDE CONSERVATION PLANS ARE STARTED BY WALTON LEAGUE The Izaak Walton League of united Waltonian strength in all cor- America, national conservation and ners of America, will be closely linked sportsmen's organization which is es- with the plans for a memorial-to Will pecially active in this state, is about to H. Dilg, founder of the league and its initiate an expansion program with an guiding genius until shortly before object of nationwide conservation his death last March, it is pointed out. which, it is claimed by local officials, The national headquarters of the will surpass anything ever undertaken league at Chicago has been strength- in this line. ened and enlarged for the work, and "The University of Michigan will inevitably outstrip the eastern uni-1 ersities in undergraduate accomp-i lishments," according to Prof. Walter W. Tupper, of the department of botany, who returned to the Univer- sity this fall after spending a half-] year's leave of absence at Yale, where he was engaged in research work in1 the school of forestry. "because of a leges arrange schedules, exactly as daye the varsity does; however, the cities see3 in the east are so close together, that to h such games do not take a great deal mali of the students' time for traveling,th the1 as would be the case if the freshmen west here played the yearlings from the thez other Big Ten universities. The sys- east tem of freshman contests seems to whic increase the spirit of those who en-we tremendous enthusiasm about the stu- deavor to tryout for the teams. Ath- trou dents here which is not dupliated in letics mark the man in the east to a Sagi any of the large eastern institutions. much greater extent than they do univ The students at Michigan are excel- here; they furnish the ambitious W lent material much easier to work youth the very best chance to ad- Yale matrilvance," he believed. one with, and much more ready to co- "Another peculiarity of the college "Wo operate with the teacher, when the students in the east, and especially ir Ray latter is at all decent in his treatment the schools in the large cities, is the and of them." apparent endeavor to hide the fact and "The freshmen especially, at this that they are college students. There pla university ought to be very glad that are no 'pots,' or other class insignia, pub they did not attend an eastern school," and most of them dress as nearly Bota he continued, "where they would have like the general populace, as they can, per had to eat, sleep, play, and study to- The students and graduates from th, per gether, under the watchful eyes of the more western schools seem to be pati upperclasses. In the east, the fresh- proud of their affiliation with their uat men are segregated, and are easily universities. f found when the upperclassmen-decide "At 42nd street and Broadway, muss that they need a little disciplining, ran across a Michigan graduate; in Spec Here they are scattered so as to fact you meet them everywhere nowa- the escape most of the harmless hazing which they would get at any college ..- in the east. Whereas the upper class- es at Cornell, Columbia, Yale, or 1-ar- vard have definite privileges which the freshmen dare not imitate, the corresponding groups at the Univer- P o rtra i sity of Michigan are not similarly privileged." "The driving of automobiles is lim- ited to sophomores, juniors, and sen- rs indul iof the schools' as is thesauT h a t I right to inmost on foolish stunts about the campus, Professor. Tupper said. Roller-skating, and antics of all kinds hav are forbidden to the poor freshmen. Oten you have h At that, the freshmen are much more docile than a similar class in the Mid- good photography dIe West. In the east, most of the colleges are fed by private schoolsThere Was and the recruits, when they finally are admitted to a school, nearly al- ways have a background of tradition. which does not see anything unusual CHARACTER in being made to run errands for up- prelassmen." ANI "The universities of the east stress freshman athletics to a much greater extent than we do in the Middle West. The Mai The entering classes of various col-S R SUPERIOR the beginning of the new expansion / of the .league points out that this movement is an effort to keep paceY i d with the growing demand of the peo- You will find thai pie for more outdoor recreation. "The objects of the league are three- The Spedding Stu fold," he said. "First, to conserve our tials, and at no m outdoors, to fight on the side-of the outdoor recreation as a' natural re- source of the country which must be considered on equal terms, and in some cases on superior terms, to the H more tangible resources such as lum-P ber, power, and metals. Second, to pro- mote the propagation of wild life, es- tablishment of recreational places, so that there may be more fish, more game, more forests for camping, more clean streams, and more recreation for everybody. Third, to create and foster interest in outdoor recreation, espe- cially among the younger AmericansPHONE to the end that the basic character of this nation may continue to rest on thp 4 4t3} 4 health of mind and body which comes only from association with the out doors." s. And they are always glad to you, which gregarious traist seem i ave escaped from the easterner'. eup," Professor Tupper said. Perhaps the thing missed most, is type of students who attends tern colleges. One also misse- numbers of the students, as in the the various schools and collegef: ch make up one university aro ely separated. If the Medical ool of this University were in iJ:- t, and the Forestry school its jnaw, it would approximate the. versities of the east." hile Professor Tupper was at e, he secured data for six papers of them, on the recognition of ods with Conspicuously Larger s," has been already published; the second, on the identification Lauraceous woods, and woody nts of the Laural family, is to be lished in the American Journal of- any, in November. Professor Tup is preparing the four other pa- s, which are to be short identifl- ons. He studied at Yale's gradt e school because of the collectio tropical woods which is in the seum there. It has over 10,500 cies of wood, and is the largest in country. ts had a portrait that was *1 I I E , but- French Conversation: Any girl inte-rested in meeting Mlle. Lucette Moulin at luncheon French conversation is asked to see me at her earliest convenience. Alice C. Lloyd, Chairman, Advisers of Women. omething Lacking PERSONALITY for cdonomic Club: Meets Thursday, September 29, at 7:45 p. m. in' Room 302 Michigan Union. Prof. Frank H. Knight of the University of Chicago (formerly of University of Iowa) will be the speaker. All member3 of the staff and graduate students in Economics, and Business Administration are invited. Z. C. Dickinson. A. S. C. E.: There will be a meeting of the stud ent branchof the American Society of Civil Engineers at the Union on Wednesday, Sept. 28 at 8 o'clock. I. M. Salmond, President. Choral Union: There will be a meeting of the student branch of the American Society of to 5:30 and Thursday, September 29, from 4:00 to 5:30, in room 223 of the School of Music. Former members must fill out applications at the School of Music. Seth E. Gordon, formerly executive officer of the .Pennsylvania Game Commission and largely responsible for the famous "Pennsylvania spstem" of wild life conservation, will be in di- rect charge of the conservation pro- gram, which will not only be national in scope, but will penetrate to every county in America. In conjunction with the new 'ob- jective of a comprehensive conserva- tion survey, made with the cooperation of every' one of the 3,000 local chap- ters, a move is being started to en- large the size and scope of the Walton, League so that it will attain a status in keeping with the program ahead of it, and with the great part being played by outdoor recreation to acon- stantly increasing degree in the lives of the American people. The league has been preparing for the new phase of its existence for the past two years, according to national and local officials, and its program contemplates the immediate formation of an organization to embrace a mil- lion member§, and to establish Wal- tonism as the guiding star of conser- vation and of the promotion of outdoor ilffe of a scale never before attempted. The new expansion program, which will be carried on energetically by the plans are being initiated to form a niore closely knit 'state and community oranization for the purpose of carry- ing out the new plans. The Walton League is consideredi the largest conservation organization, in its present status, that ever has been formed in the world, and it has attained a commanding position in recreational affairs of the country. It is a service body in operation, is non-I profitable, non-political. Secretary of Commerce Herbertj Hoover is honorary president and an active member of the directorate of the league. Judge Jacob M. Dickinson, former Secretary of War and former president of the Anerican Bar Asso- ciation, is president, and among na-! tional officers and directors are Hal1 G. Evarts, Irvin Cobb, Robert H. Davis, Jack Miner, George E. Scott, wartime general manager of the Red Cross; Glen Griswold, Col. Theodore Roose- velt. The league is six years old. It was founded by Will H. Dilg, with the as- sistance and backing of such men as Emerson .Hough, Zane Grey, David Starr Jordan, James Oliver Curwood, Dr. Henry Van Dyke and many others promient in conservation and public affairs. Judge Dickison's announcement of MATION n Essentials of Signed: k l , . I' t 1 ft PORTRAITURE t Photographs made at idio possess these essen- ore cost to you. G PHS v eForever 1 Earl V, 'Ioore. Varsity Glee Club: Tryouts will not be held Wednesday but will instead be held Thursday and Friday from 4 to 5 in Room 206, School of Music, and from 7 to 8 in Room 308 Michigan Union. All interested men are, urged to report for tryouts. All old members must tryout again. Any sophomore in good standing who is interested in trying out for the Business Staff report Wednesday between 4 and 5 in room 308 Michigan Union, Franklyn D. Burger, Manager. Additional Tryouts For the 'Varsity Band: More cornet, trombone, baritone, saxophone, alto, clarinet, and bass players are needed in the 'Varsity Band. Report for tryouts at the Band Hall' r ............ Studio 619 E. Liberty St. i...,... ... . _._..__. The Mimes Theatre Will Open Its Annual Season The Week Beginning Monday, Oct. 3 PRESENTING ~6 '1 A Play of Colorful Mexico with is BANDITS and Everything By PORTER EMERSON BROWN MIXED CAST NO T E INCLUDES FRANCES M. JOHNSON, MARY LOUISE MURRAY, LESTER C. CURL, CHARLES LIVINGSTONE, LYMAN CRANE, ROB- The Mimes Theatre Box Office will be open for the advance sale Friday, September 30th, at 10 A. M. All seats are reserved and priced at 75c. Phone orders taken and held until six o'clock day of performance. I I