. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received by the Assistant to the Presi- dent until 3:30 p. m. (11:30 a. m. Saturday.) VoL 29. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1928 Vol. No. 9. University Lecture: Walter Pritchard Eaton, the distinguished dramatic critic, will de- liver a University Lecture on "The American Theater and the Univer- sities" on Wednesday, October 3, in Natural Science Auditorium at 4:15 p. m. The public is cordially invited.. F. E. Robbins Dean's Advisory Committee, College of Literature, Science and the Arts There will be a meeting of the Dean's Advisory Committee Wed- nesday, October 3, at 4 p. m., in the Dean's Office. John R. Effinger To Freshman Advisers: The reports on the three regular examinations given to first year students during freshman week are now ready for distribution to Ad- visers. All advisers are requested to call at the Registrar's Office for these reports in accordance with the information contained in my letter of October 3, sent to all advisers through the Faculty Exchange. Ira M. Smith, Registrar Comedy Club: "The Best People" will be cast this afternoon from 4 to 6 in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall. Tryouts are for members only. Notice change in time. Thurston Thieme, Pres. Executive Board: .There will be a meeting of the Executive Board of the Graduate School Wednesday, Oct. 3, at 3:30 p. m., Room 1014, Angell Hall. Ruth A. Rouse Graduate Students:. All students who intend to enroll in the Graduate School this fall but who have not attended to the formality of registration should do' so Wednesday or Thursday. This includes instructors, assistants, and students pursuing research work for the doctorate. Please come to the office of the -Graduate School, Room 1014, Angell Hall. Students who have not filed an election card in the office of the Graduate School should do so at once. There are several students who have not returned to this office the receipt showing payment of fee. Ruth A. Rouse, Recorder Graduate Students: ' Regularly enrolled graduate students who hold the rank of assis- tant professor or above AT OTHER INSTITUTIONS are asked to leave their names at the office of the Graduate School, Room 1014 Angell Hall. This applies only to married students. Ruth A. Rouse, Recorder Junior Engineers: There will be a meeting of the junior engineering class Thursday, Oct. 4, room 348. All new members to the class of '30E are urgently requested to be present.} R. N. Grunow, Temp. Pres. Speech 31: A new section in Speech 31, meeting Monday, Wednesday, and Fri- day at 10 o'clock in room 302 Mason Hall, has been opened to accommo- date those students unable to find places in the other sections. J. M. O'Neill Italian 175: Italian 175 (Dante) will meet henceforth according to the follow- ing schedule: Tuesday at 10:00 o'clock 306RL. Wednesday 1:00 o'clock 306RL. Thursday 10:00 o'clock 306RL. W. A. McLaughlin Pro-Seminar in Kant: Will those who propose to follow this seminar kindly meet with me at 4 p. in., on Wednesday, Oct. 3, in Room 202, S.W. The permanent hours of meeting will be settled then. R. M. Wenley Oratorical Association Lecture Course:1 The preference given to mail orders will be closed on Monday, Oc- tober 8. The committee will begin mailing out tickets within a few days. Carl G. Brandt, Financial Mgr. Oratorical Board: There will be an important meeting of the Board Wednesday after- noon in room 3209 Angell Hall at 4:00 o'clock sharp. Those unable to! attend please notify Dorothy Lyons, Secretary. Robert J. Gessner, Pres. c University of Michigan Varsity Band:t Regular rehearsal tonight at 7:15 at Morris Hall. Every man must be present at this rehearsal, no excuses will be accented. Every man who plans to march with the band Saturday, must turn in signed coupon No. 1 tonight. Gilbert B. Saltonstall, Manager Student Extension: University students desiring to make extension trips for the Student Christian Association are asked to leave their names at Lane.Hall during the hours of 1:30 and 5:00 o'clock during this week and next. The trips j are usually made to high schools, noon-day luncheon clubs, conventions, pep-meetings and nearby churches. The subjects of address are of var- ied natures and students are given ample time to prepare their talks. Harold Husband, Director of S. C. A. Extension ' A. S. C.E.: First meeting of A. S. C. E. at 8:00 o'clock Wednesday evening, Oc- tober 3, 1928, in the Michigan Union. All members are urged to attend.- L. D. Kirshner Ncwberry Residence at 7:30 Wednesday evening, October 3. Retired ReCOrder Louisa Butler, Pres. fIs N oASue s N w A Student Gargoyle Upper Business Staff: There will be an important meeting at 4:30 today. It is imperative CHICAGO, Ot. 2aving kept that everyone be there. . the records of tens of thousands of Carl U. Fauster, Bus. Mgr students at University of Chicago ! Michiganzensian Staff:"for 35 years, Frederic J. Gurney, gat the age of 72, has decided to There will be a meeting of the entire lower and upper business staffs see how the university looks from of the 1929 Michiganensian this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Press the classroom. Age compelling his Building. All Sophomores and second semester Freshmen who wish retirement as recorder, he has en- to work oA this publication during the year should present themselves rolled today as a student. at this time. "I thought I'd get some of this J. Franklin Miller, Bus. Mgr. education I have been watching Sigma Delta Psi Tests: here ever since the university was All men desiring to tryout for the Athletic Tests report at the jump- established," he said. He plans to ing pits, Yost Field House. Claude Snarey is conducting these tests on 'brush up' on foreign languages, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday from 4:00 to 6:00. which he studied a generation ago Intramural Department at University of Michigan. Erwin Prieskorn Post No. 46: The first fall meeting of Erwin Prieskorn Post No. 46, The American Legion, will be held this evening at 7:30 at the City Hall. All World war veterans are urged to attend this meeting. Reuel I. Blake, Commander Comprehensive English Examination: A make-up meeting for those who failed to take the Comprehensive. English Examination last week will be held at 9 o'clock, Saturday morn- ing, in Room 2225, Angell Hall. This examination is required of all mid- year seniors who expect to teach English as either a major or minor subject, and of all other students now enrolled in English 196 (or Edu- jcation D110). C. D. Thorpe DR. EDMONSON TO A TTENDSESSIONS Dr. J. B. Edmonson, chairman of the executive committee of the School of Education, left Monday for Washington, D. C., where he will attend the meetings of the Na- tional Commission on Articulation of Units of Public Education. The sessions of the commission will last the remainder of the week. S. C. A. Cabinet: The meeting of the S. C, A. Cabinet will be held today at 12 o'clock at Lane Hall. A luncheon will precede the business meeting. Martin Mol, President Landscape Club: There will be a meeting of the Landscape Club on Wednesday even- ing, at 8 o'clock in 400 S. W. All the new students in the DepartmentI are cordially invited to come. All members are requested to be present. Miriam L. Horton American Chemical Society: Professor James Lewis Howe, Head of the Chemistry Department,; Washington and Lee University, will speak on "Some Amenities of' Platinum," Thursday, October 4, at 4:00 p. m., in the Chemistry Amphi- theater. All interested are cordially invited.I B. A. Soule, Sec'y. f Michiganensian Tryouts: Men and Women who wish to try out for the business side of the Michiganensian will meet at 4 o'clock in" the Press Building, today, Wednesday. J. Franklin Miller, Business Manager Masonic Smoker: The Annual Craftsmen Club Smoker will be held in Room Nos. 316, 318, 320, of the Michigan Union, on Wednesday, Oct. 3, at 8:00 p. m. All Master Masons of the student body and of the University Teaching staff are cordially invited. R. W. Webster, President Mimes: There will be a meeting of Mimes on Friday at 7:30 p. m. at the Theater. Harlan Christy, President . Chi Delta Phi: There will be a meeting of Chi Delta Phi in the playroom of Helen I Fraternity System To Be Investiga.ted. AUSTIN, Tex., Oct. 2.-With a I view to possible abolishment, a I complete investigation of the Greek letter fraternity system was 1 ordered at the University of Texas today following the death Sunday night of Nolte McElroy during his initiation into a campus fraternity. I Investigating thoroughly the I circumstances leading up to Mc- Elroy's death is a faculty commit- itee, which the Board of Regents Monday night asked President H, Y. Benedict to appoint at once. The popular 19-year-old football player died in a hospital a few minutes after his collapse from crawling over a pair of electrically- charged bed springs. Though this case did not furnish excuse enough for' the "boarding" of the frater- nities, the Board of Regents in- dicated, nevertheless, that it had brought to the foreground an un- dercurrent of sympathy against them. A grand jury investigation was asked Monday, but this promised to be a mere formality, as District . Attorney Moore said no indications were been considered. :. I1I1IlpIlI 111111111111111111111111 1111111ppp111111 I 111plppptllllll111pli lplplp11111 pplpp ipp Iplfp, Dance music eaCh afte- noonfrom 30to . Aso m usic during ner "To spe '. lili iil lil -il -~-- DR. H IC K EY GIV E N CALD WELL AWARD Dr. Preston D. Hickey, head of the X-ray department of the Uni- versity hospital, was given the honor of delivering the Caldwell lecture last week before the annual convention of the American X-ray Society. The meeting was held in Kansas City this year, and the Caldwell lecture, an annual event in commemoration of Major H. D. Caldwell's contribution to Roen- tgenology, was as usual the out- standing part of the program. Speaking as the second American on the list of Caldwell lecturers, Dr. Hickey reviewed the details of the progress of the X-ray since the time of , Caldwell's death. He out- lined Caldwell's work and experi- mentation, also telling of the mys- tery which always surrounded the ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION L NINE OUTSTANDING NUMBERS Soilgy 245: Social Psychiatry: This class wi11 meet for the first time this evening Room 102, Economics Bldg. at 7:00 p. m. in A GREAT EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY A. E. Wood Sociology 155 (Experimental Sociology) The available hours for this class are Monday 4-6 and Wednesday 2-3. The first meeting for laboratory work will be today (Wednesday) at 2 in Room 104 Ec. The Monday meeting will be in Room 201, Ec. L. J. Carr R. 0. T. C.: All R. O. T. C. students who have not been measured for uniforms must report at R. 0. T. C. Headquarters between 9 and 5 on Wednesday, October 3, for measurement. Reinold Melberg Choral Union Ushers: Choral Union ushers may register tonight at Hill Auditorium from 6:00 - 7:00 p. m. Use east entrance door. W. A. Davenport Roentgen rays in those days. In view of Dr. Hickey's contribu- tion to the science of X-ray, he was presented by .the members of the American X-ray Society with a tea set to show their esteem and ap- preciation of his work. Season Ticket Prices: $3.50 X3.00 $2.50 Address 3211 Angell Hall BOOKSI X00 SI i COUNT VON LUCKNER Germany's Famous Sea Devil New and Second-hand AND SIX OTHER DRAWING INSTRUMENTS RICHARD HALLIBURTON Literary Vagabond Youthful Romanticist GREAT NUMBERS STEiPHEN LEACOCK The Canadian "Mark Twain" and Engineers' Supplies WAHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Mail Order Preference Closes On Monday, Oct. 8 Known For Their Quality the Country Over Photographs _ - Since 1890 _ . .