THE MICHIGAN D A I L 1 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ( OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 in the versity. 3:30 p. Bulletin is constructive notice to all members Copy received by the Assistant to the Presi- m. (11:30 a. m. Saturday.) oL 39 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1928 48 rsity Lecture: I. Auguste V. Desclos, Assistant Director of the Office National des ersities et Ecoles Francaises, will deliver an illustrated lecture in sh on Monday, Npvember 19, at 4:15 p. n., in the Natural Science orium on the subject' "University Life in Paris in the Past and nt." The public is invited. F. E. Robbins. ty, Colleges of Engineering and Architecture: 'he mid-semester reports on students in your classes whose work ow passing should be made on cards which may be obtained in iffice of the Secretary, 263 West Engineering Building, or from miessenger boxes. The reports are to be filed in the Secretary's not later than Friday, November 23. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary ological Chemistry 102: 'he final examination for the first laboratory section will be held :onday, November 19, at 1 p. m. The second laboratory section egin on Tuesday, November 20. Thie students in this section should de themselves with a Physiological Chemistry cash ticket (obtain- at the Treasurer's office) and a copy of the Laboratory Manual. nts will report at 1:30 in room 319 West Medical Building. Howard B. Lewis ~ne 101: 'he make-up examination will be given Monday, November 19, t 20, Waterman Gymnasium, 4 p. m. Only students who have ical excuse for having missed the regular examination will be Ltted' to take the make-up. John Sundwall cants for University Scholarships Notice: ie following students are requested to meet the Scholarship Com-. e on Wednesday afternoon, November 21, room 112 R. L. at the indicated in this notice: oynton, Louise, 2:00; Callaghan, J. Calvin, 2:05; Cole, Julia Ellen, Curran, Edward Owen, 2:15; Gendermann, Cyril, 2:20; Gentz, 2:25; Graf,'Otto, 2:30; Griggs, Jean Carolyn, 2:35; Hartwig, Law- Edward, 2:40; Johnson, Agnes, 2:45; Johnston, Vera, 2:50; Kan- Isabel, 2:55; Kelsey, Ruth, 3: 00; Nosenzo, Angela, 3:05; Pollock, W,, 3:10; Rorabacher, Louise E., 3:15; Teichman, John George, 3:20; Vechten, C. C., 3:25; Wellman, Marguerite, 3:30; Whitaker, Paul, Wilcox, Emily, 3:40; Wright, Phineas, 3:45. H. P. Thieme, Chairman T. C. Ordnance: n Wednesday, November 21, the Ordnance Advanced classes will an inspection trip to The Erie Ordnance Depot. Travel will be itoaobile leaving from R. O. T. C. Headquarters at 7 a. m. and :aing about 7:00 p. m. All Ordnance Advanced and graduate stu- and Ordnance Reserve Officers are invited to go. Anyone con- lating going should communicate with me at their earliest con- Ape. L. M. Bricker Jellenic Ball: ie Pan-Hellenic ball is scheduled to close at 1:30 a. m. Breakfasts, ring the ball should close at 2:30 a. m. and all houses at 3 a. m. for breakfasts should be approved by the office of Advisers. Alice C. Lloyd nts Wishing'Work: ill any girls willing to do housework in private homes for part please call at the Advisers' Office for work, Beatrice W. Johnson man Women Who Are Camp Fire Girls: 1ill any freshmen who are or have been members of the Camp Fire organization please telephone Mrs. Frances Pettibone, 22115, Young M's Christian Association, at once? Beatrice W. Johnson, Adviser of Women mural All-Campus Handball: 11 men interested in handball should sign up on the sheets that sted in Waterman Gym or the Intramural Bldg. Four wall courts e used exclusively. Entrees will close Nov. 23. Intramural Department mural Inter-fraternity Handball: e first round of the Inter-fraternity Handball Tournament must ayed off by Nov. 24. The courts will be open from 7:00 p. in. to . m. all next week for this purpose. There is a chart posted both atermian Gym and the Intramural Bldg. Find out which house lay and make arrangements to play. Intramural Department dy Club: he following students were elected to membership in Comedy as a result of the fall try-outs: Hortense Bumpus '32, Eugenie el '32, Josephine Rankin '30, Janet Woodmansee '31, James Cash allace Baxter '30, S. T. Mayers '30, and Paul Showers '31. Thurston Thieme, President iautica Society: 11 members who have not received their membership cards are sted to do so as soon as possible, Room 304 E. Engineering Bldg., ings from 9 to 12 and evenings from 7 on. W. E. Koneczny, President Survivors Of Crew Of Ill-Fated Vestris In Which One Hundred1 Eleven Lives Were Lost Are Photographed On Board S. S. Berlin Telephoto shows occupants of the first lifeboat of the liner Vestris picked up at sea after a night fight- ing the turbulent Atlantic. S S. Berlin was the rescue ship. Vessels which picked up survivors of the Vestris have nearly all reached port, and present count of losses reveals eighty-nine missing, and two hundred fifteen rescued. Identifications are now being made, and survivors being reunited. Consider-able question as to who responsible for the disaster is being raised, and the British Board of Trade officials as well as U~nited States Federal Attorney Charles H. Tuttle are making investigations to determine the cause of the sinking. 1 SWORDS GLITTER I AT WHITE HOUSE (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.-The gaiest White House social function of the year, the diplomatic recep- tion to which more than 2,000 peo- ple were invited to meet President and Mrs. Coolidge, took place last night. Arranged in the order of senior- ity of the embassies and legations, the diplomats, dressed in their gold embroidered uniforms with swords at their sides and plumed. hats in their hands, were received by the chief executive. In addi- tion, numerous other prominent guests had been invited. -w The White House was specially decorated for the occasion with flowers and ferns from its gardens. All the rooms on the ground floor, were open for the guests' pleasure. LEXINGTON, Ky. - Fifty-two horses were sold for a total of 1$130,275 at an auction sale held on Hinata Farm near here. DELEGATES TO ATTEND Opening its program with a noon uncheon at the Union, the Michi- gan College press club consisting of delegates from junior college and Small college publications through- out the state, will hold its first annual convention in Ann Arbor today. Following the meeting, the delegates will attend the Michigan- M. S. C. football game as guests of Fielding H. Yost, and the Board in Control of Athletics. Prof. J. L. Brumm, head of the department of journalism, who with other members of the department of journalism is to be present at the meeting, will present to the con- rention for correction and adop- tion a constitution which has been drawn up under' his direction, ac- cording to an arrangement made at the first meeting of the club last spring. Announce, Junior QUADRANGLE REPLACES TRIANGLE IN LATEST THEATER GUILD PLAY Law Committees Committee appointments for the junior Law class were announced yesterday by John H. Vander Wal, president of the class. They are: ADVISORY: Richard M. Max-' well, chairman, George Rich, E. G Miller, Ralph Lindenmuth and H H. Sullinger. FINANCE: George F. Wright, chairman, John Schrade, Joseph Solomon, Carl Berger, and Robert Barker. AUDITING: Franklin Southard, chairman, David F. Rawson, and Walter North. SOCIAL: John D. Todd, chair-! man, Victor C. Anderson, Ferdin- and Heilman, Miss Katherine Larner, and James K. Travis.- PUBLICITY.: L. Harvey Lodge,! chairman, Joseph H. Burkhard, and W. Carl Bauer. GOULD PUBLISHES BAFFINLAND BOOK As a last contribution to geology I before leaving with Byrd for the! botom of the world, Professor Law- rence M. Gould, in conjunction VT~i-'1 I';c nnlaa~a in'.tha f lrnr Instead of the usual triangle of what found in many productions, S. N. and so Behrman, author of "The Second for eac Man" which the New York Theatre somethi Guild repertory company will pre- of the sent Monday night, Nov. 19, at the high co Whitney theater, has employed a variedf quadrangle for the evolvement of which jE his story. and wh Four principal characters and York T four strikingly different personal- successe ities as well as strongly divergent Thec points of view, are the basic mate- which v rials which he has employed in be show making one of the most brilliant Guild r and sensationally successful plays gagemer New York has seen in several sea- cipal c- sons. for the These people, are a wealthy Elizabet widow who is fond of a superficial- Robert ly brilliant, cynical, attractive and not conspicuously successful writer CLA of fiction; a vivid, emotionally ex- plosive and intensely motivated Georg young girl, and an successful sci- Grand I entist who is quite a poor fish when speaker it comes to the matter of love mak- to be h ing. Each of these four people is Lawyer' convincingly drawn and each ex- Amon presses an individual and. distinct evening point of view. They mill about, Law scb each bent on moulding life and cir- faculty. cumstance to the individual notion will be the grand plan should be, become terribly involved, h wants life to demonstrate ng not at all to the liking other three. The result is imedy, a spontaneous and piece of stage writing over Eded New York critics raved ich proved one of the New 'heater Guild's outstanding es.. original ;scenic investiture was seen in New York will n by the New York Theatre epertory company in its en- nt here and the four prin- haracters, especially chosen e presentation will include h Risdon, Peg Entwistle, Keith and Neal Caldwell. PPERTONTO SPEAK e D. Clapperton, '21L, Rapids, will be the principal at the Law Review dinner eld at 6:30 tonight in the s club. i the other speakers of the are E. D. Dickson of the hool, who will speak for the James I. Johnson, '29L the students speaker. ti's ti ti ti rti ti ti ti ti. ti a. ti ti . ti. ti Iti ti 1 . f The Crowned Head of Europe Listened I I 'I 5 rerr,, r.,rrrrrrrr°..err. rrrssrrrrr, ,rrrr. .rerrrr. s .as rr..r. HIM- -I ". o SELF PAUL WHITEMAN with his GREATER CONCERT ORCHESTRA HILL AUDITORIUM Tuesday, Nov. 27 at 8:15 Prices:-$2.00, $1.50, $1.00 and 75c (unreserved) Auspices Michigan Women ORDER YOUR SEATS NOW Address:--Paul Whiteman, Hill Auditorium I I rrr. .rrro .rrrrrr .rrrrrrrrrr,.+rrrr,.rr, ,r~rrrrrr. - tr~r ., 'r, r,,,, I with nis colleague in Uegeogy department, Professor R. C. Hussey, and Dr. A. F. Feorste of Dayton, Ohio, has written a book on the geology ,of Baffinland which was recently published by the museum of paleontology. The book, which is the result of Professor Gould's findings while with the Putnam expedition to Baffin Bay several years ago, de- scribes the region, and analyzes the significances of the fossils which were found. Professor Hussey took care of most of the fossils, which are of the invertebrate or spineless type, described them, arranged the plates, and analyzed them from the geological viewpoint. The - strata of Baffinland was placed in its proper place in the geological time scale by Professor Hussey. The fossils revealed that the land of Baffin was at one time under an extensive, shallow rea. Also the fact that climate of the land was at one time tropical is revealed by the presence of coral fossils there. The contribution of Dr. Foerste in the volume is a paper on the capholopod (a type of fish) fossils in Professor Gould's collection. Members of Scalp and Blade: There will be a very important meeting at the Union, Sunday, No- vember 18, 1928, at 2:30. C. Keene, Secy. Acolytes: There will be a meeting of the Society on Tuesday, November 20, at 7:30 p. m., in 204 S. W. Professor Vibbert will speak on "Descartes's and Bergson's Theories of the Per- ception of Movement." Otis H. Lee 'Varsity Band: Formation for drill and game at 12:30 o'clock at Ferry Field. Uni- forms and instruments. This will be the last opportunity to turn in M. S. C: tickets. Joe Narrin _ ___ - Room Bible Class: higan men are cordially invited to attend this class which y Saturday evening, at 7 p. m. in the "Upper Room" at ever! Hall. George Alder Committeemen: .ere will be a meeting of all J-Hop committeemen in room 304 Union at 4 p. m. Sunday. Harry W. Wallace, Chairman i open forum discussion of war from the angle of the militarist, stitutionalist, and the pacifist will be carried on by Professors a and Onderdonk and Alpha Nu on Tuesday, November 20, in the Nu room, Visitors are cordially invited., M. Hutchinson g of the Michigan Dames Club will be held Monday, ad of Tuesday) at 8 o'clock, at the Faculty Women's h Ingalls Street. Mrs. Ross Bittinger will speak on Designing. Mrs. C. W. Ferris, President NOW READY-LIMITED EDITION OF THE 1929 Michigan Calendar An Excellent Christmas 'Gift-nut un in heavy