a mH- THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~AT~rnrA~ ~7 !11YA~7 i~ I~2ยง 'I f DAILY O FFICIAL BULLETIN 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. in. Saturoay.) I STUDENTS WILL HEAR 'FRENCH PROFESSORS GIVE TWO LECTURES SYNCHRONIZATION REQUIRES MAZE OF MACHINERY IN MANUI ACTURING NEW TALKING MOVING PICTURES TO OBSERVE [ECLIPSE Vol. 39 SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1929 No. 97, Al eThauy Observatory Inteinds To View His Total Eclipse Director Ninth French Lecture: Professor Andre Morize of Harva d University will give the third lecture on the Cercle Francais Prorgam Monday, January 21st, at 4:15 o'clock in Natural Science Auditorium on "La Conversation." Tickets for the series of lectures and plays may be procured from the Secretary of the Department of Romance Languages (room 112, Romance Languages Building) or at the door. Rene Talamon Graduate Students: Students who expect to receive 'he Master's degree at the close of the present semester should pay the diploma fee by Feb uary 9. Blanks for this pu pose are available at the office of the Graduate School, Room 1014, Angell Hall. Rutli A. Rouse Graduate Students: Graduate students should maLz ljhir- second semester elections in 'the office of the Graduate School on Fc :ruAry '7, 3, and 9. New students, or students transferring from other S'-hools or Colleges on the Campus. should register on the same dates. A sLudent t ansferring at this time should ask the Secretary of his School or College to prepare and send to the Graduate School off we an ofiial transcript of his undergraduate record. IRath A. Rouse M. ANDIE MORIZE. HARVARD, WILL SPEAK MONDAY AFTERNOON CONVERSATION IS rOPIC1 M. lazard, Who Soeaks Thursday, Has Been Appointed Professor At French University Two noted French lecturers will add ess the student body during the coming week, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Hugo P. Thieme, of the Romance languages depart- mnent. M. Andre Morize will speak on "La Conversation" at 4:15 Mon- day afternoot in Natural Science auditorium, and Prof. Paul Hazard will speak at 4:15 Thursday after- noon in the same place. Both lectures* are to be delive-ed in French, it was announced. Tickets for Morize's lecture may be procured at the door, or season tickets for the course sponsored by the Cercle Francais, which includes this lecture, may be bought at headquarte.s of the Romance lan- guage department. There is no ad- mission to Thursday's lecture, and all those interested will be wel- comed, according to Professor j{ t 1f ?1 r :c I (i i I l Gi f A r C r t !G I i ii t r r ii i 'i i i February Graduates: All students graduating in February who wish a position, other than teaching, should iegisteil offlee of the Committee on Vocational Counsel Mason all. assistance in securingI immediately at the and Placement, 201 W. E. Parker University Women: Copies of the list of vacancies in the League houses for second semester are now available in the office of Advisers of Women. Grace Richards. Speech Defects Group: , Due to examinations I will not meet any of the group in private interviews until after the start of the second semester. Please call at the office now and sign for interviews during the second semester. List will be postect on the door of my office. P. ). Swann Special Swimming Classes: The Intramural Department is having swimming classes for begin- ners and advanced swimmers every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 7:30-8:30. C.. D. McMahon is in charge. Tit ra mural Department Physical Education Students: The Intramural Offices are now located at the new Intramural Sports Building. Telephone 22101. Intramural Department Zoology I, Quiz Sections 1 and 2: My sections will meet at their usual times in the Main Exhibit Room of the Museums building on Monday, January 21. G. L. Walls Round Table Club: There will be a meeting of the club Sunday, Jan. 20, at 2:45 p. m., in room 202 South Wing. C. S. Yoakum, Professor of Personnel manage- ment will speak on "Recent trends in the American Federation of Labor." Judith Mayer Ilinuds tan Club : The Club picture will be taken Sunday, January 20, at 2:15 p. m., at Spedding's Studio, 619 East Liberty Street. An important meeting will follow, at which time will occur the election of officers for the coming semester Win. B. Palmer, Secretary. Chi Delta Phi: The Chi Delta Phi 'Ensian picture will be taken at Dey's studio on Sunday morning, January 20, at 11:30 o'clock. Members please be prompt. Louisa Butler, President Chinese Students Christian Association: There will be a meeting of the C. S. C. A. next Saturday, Jan. 19, at 7:30 p. m., at Wesley Hall. We will have as our guests the cabinet members of the young people societies from the various churches in town. Members please bear this in mind. ' K. W. Kwan,.Secretary Masonic Students:, Thee gularnmeeting of the Craftsmen's Club will be held in the Large Lodge room of the Masonic Temple on Saturday evening at 7:30. The group picture for the 'Ensian will be taken at 10:15 Sunday morning at Rentschler's Studio. Each one is urged to be present. R. W. Webster, President Phi Delta Kappa: Dr. Charles Fries will address the members of Phi Delta Kappa after the luncheon to be held at 1 p. m. today at the Michigan Union. Reginald 1). Mac Nitt, President Members of Scalp and Blade: There will be a meeting at the Union, Sunday, January 20, 1929, at 2:30. Clifford Keene, Secretary J-l op Committeemen: There will be a meeting of all J-Hop committeemen Sunday at 4 p. m., in room 302 of the Union. Harry W. Wallace, Chairman 'Varsity Glee Club: All members are urgently requested to be in Room 308, Michigan Union, at 7:25 p. m., this evening. Theodore Harrison I- I' te MoIP These photos, giving a brief "Professor Morize has the repu- glimpse into the interior of a talk- tation of being one of the most in- ing movie studio, afford some idea spiring teachers of Romance lan- of the intricacies of synchroniza- guages to be found in the United States," said Professor Thieme yes- terday. "He has published many ROAD ENGINEERS books, is a brilliant lecturer, and a WILL MEET SOON thorough scholar. He will be pleas- antly remembered by those who -' heard him when he lectured here Plans for the fifteenth annual several years ago." conference on Highway Engineer- An army captain during the war, ing, to be held at the University Professor Morize served over here Feb. 19 to 22, inclusive, were an- for some time and was appointed nounced recently from the offices professor at Johns Hopkins univer- of R. L. Morrison, professor ofc sity. Later he was called to Har- highway engineering and highway vard, where he has remained, transport. The program includesE spending his vacations as director many nationally known men in the of the summer school at Middle- field of highway engineering prob- i borough, Vermont. lems, and additional speakers will Professor Hazard, who will speak, be announced later. here Thursday, has been acting At the first session, on Tuesday this semester as an exchange pro- afternoon, the speakers will in- fessor at Harvard university. He elude Dean Herbert Cadler of the has recently been appointed pro- College of Engineering, who will fessor at the College de France, is deliver the address of welcome, R. one of the youngest members of M. Smith, deputy minister of high- the faculty there, and is considered ways in Ontario, Robert Kingery, in the United States to be one of general manager of the Chicago the most brilliant critics of modern Regional Planning Association, and P. J. Freeman, chief engineer French institutions. of tests in Allegheny county, Penn- hazard Is Widely Known sylvania. Tuesday night, Prof. Wil-; Professor Hazard gained wide liam H. Hobbs, of the geology de- reputation in this country last ; partment, will gie an illustrated summer when he delivered a series lecture on his recent Greenland of lectures in the University of expeditions. The lecture will be Chicago's summer session, accord- given in Hill auditorium and will ing to Professor Thieme. be open to the public. The University is one of the three Wednesday will be State High- institutions in the United States to way Department Day, and the hear Professor Hazard before he speakers will be highway depart- sails back to France in a few weeks. ment engineers. Thursday will be He has accepted invitations to County Commissioners' and Engi- speak at the other two institutions, neers' Day. James Schermerhorn Professor Thieme declared yester- will be the principal speaker at the day, only because they were con- banquet to be held Thursday night. venient stops on his trip between At the last session, on Friday Ann Arbor and the port from morning, the papers to be read wil which he is to sail. include one by Robert H. Ford, as- Professor Hazard will be enter- sistant chief engineer of the Chi- tained at lunch Thursday by Prof. cago, Rock Island and Pacific Charles B. Vibbeit, of the philos- Railway, and one by Professor ophy department, and Mrs. Vibbert. Morrison. 0Keep a im l y( ur electric iron burns Out Or any other electric appliance fails to function properly (as they will after bard usage), bring them to the narest Detroit E dison ofhce. T he ctxdin electrical household srv- .:t will be repaired ready for ue '1i,1 i With fn a tewdayS. .us s ou may maintain your electrical appi- n es in tim and efficient working order. There iL no lbor cUargce for this service - charge is made fCr necessary naterials cni:r.r IS THIRD SUMATRAN VISIT NEW YORK, Jan. 18.-Dr. Heber D. Curtis, director of the Alleghany Observatory, Pittsburgh, sails from here Sunday on the Laurentic to observe the next total eclipse of the sun which will occur on May J of this year. This will make the ninth total eclipse that Dr. Curt's has observed and the third timz that he has viewed one from Sum- atra. Dr. Curtis received his A. B. degree from the University of Michigan in 1892. Within a week after their ar- rival in Sumatra, which is sched- uled for Feb. 27, the party expects to reach their destination, Taken- geun, in Achina, up in the moun- tains near the northern tip of Sumatra. Takengeun is located on a lake at an altitude of 3,600 feet, and has a total population of about 600, mostly Malays. The en- tire land trip will be undertaken by auto and auto truck. The length of this eclipse, five minutes and six seconds, will make it the best opportunity until 1937 and so the atronomers will spend nearly two months in advance of the eclipse setting up and adjust - ing the cameras,nspectographs, and technical instruments which will be used to study the sun's sur-. roundings during the event. Dr. Curtis, who was astronomer at the Licks Observatory from 1909 to 1920, has been head of the Al- leghanydObservatoryasince then. jHe served as acting astronomer in. charge of the D. C. Mills expedition to the Southern Hemisphere from 1906 to 1909. New York Listed Stocks. Private wires to all Markets Conservative margin accounts solicited Telephone 22541 Brown-Cress & Co., Inc. Investment Securities 7th Floor First Nat'l Bank Bldg. I ion. (1 Lupe Velez, recording a song number for sound production. 21 Studio theater projection room -howing the amplifier rach, powei >anel and sound film reproducer. 13) Closeup of the projector. (4) The motor generator room. (5) Another view of the amplifier room. (6) The "mixing room" with an operator at the "mixer table." Frederic H. Aldrich Reviews Art Exhibit1 Now On Display In Alumni Memorial Hall t (Continied From Page One) Many find it interesting to ob- gether and is certain to be the serve the painters' different man- .ause of stimulating discussion ners of introducting buildings into during the time the canvasses are a landscape. Mts. Johnson follows on display. -Many will reaffirm a one of the modern tendencies to! conviction of the rightness of mod- the extent of never venturing be- ern or of academic painting. Many yond the edge of town with her; will more sturdily declare a dislike paint box. for one of the other manner. Some The manner of treating still life will find it another evidence that too is distinctive and follows di-E what is good is good without de- vergent convictions. In portraiture, pendence on the manner of its both more definitely follow one execution or the declaration made. tradition. In this, the first opportunity that The comparison of differences many have had to see a compre- and simihiarities can be carried hensive exhibit of the work of these further but what is important is two painters, the remaining im- that each painter has well declared pression is of high merit of their his appreciations and that an ex-j work, but those who enjoy a con- amination of their work leaves the troversy will not forget that their impression of two interesting per- exhibits represent modernism as sonalities with important declara- opposed to academic painting. tions to make."! II..w.... r I I- OUR BARGAIN TABLE OF Becomes More and More Attractive Every Day 50c Each UNIVERSITY 'SBOOK STORE I!'" t The Trojan Laundry A Firm that has built up a reputation for Speedy Service in delivering Laundry work guaranteed to be perfect in every respect. Start using Trojan Service today. Dial9 495 I-Ii dI NATIONAL FEDERAY ON UNIVERSA Relative to the announcement of Phi Eta Sigma, national honorary freshman society, that the attempt would be made to install the honor, system in the University college next year is the report of the Na- tional Student Federation of Amer- ica which convened just before the holidays. If was reported at the convention that the honor system was being TION REPORTS RY HONOR SYSTEM the honor system works best In small colleges with an enrollment of from 200 to 1,500 students. But at the University of California with an enrollment of nearly 15,000 students the system is working suc- cessfully. The honor system was urged at the convention on the grounds that it is a worthwhile educational fac- tor. It was asserted that the honor system trains students for good!