PACE EIGHT THE MICHTGAN FDOTBU,9 MTn-A -', QCTOEER 4, 1929 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLET'IN, 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) English 125: I shall not meet the class until Monday. English 183: I shall not meet the class until Monday. L. A. Strauss L. A. Strauss SVol. XL FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1929 No. 5 English 211: (c) Professor Campbell--Monday at 4:00, 407 Library. (d) Professor Rice-Tuesday and Thursday at 10:00, 403 Lib. Oratorical Association: 0. J. Caipbell The University of Michigan Oratorical Association Lecture Course will include the following series. IEnglish 211 (e): October 23-William Shepherd. Section (e) will meet in Room 2220 A. H., Monday, October G, a, November 14-Louis Anspacher 1:30. November 21-William Beebe. S. R. Ashby December 5-E. H. Sothern. (, January 15-William Hard. February 27-Carveth Wells March 11-Phidelah Rice. April 3-Lorado Taft. Henry Moser Rhodes Scholarship: Candidates for Rhodes Scholarships kindlyj Cross in Room 1011 A. H. on Tuesday, October 8, meet Professor A. L. at 10 A. M. A. L. Cross.... To All Department Heads: Kindly call at the Secretary's office to O. K. the payrolls with the payroll clerk, BEFORE October 25. Also, please send to this office with the least possible delay, all recommendations for appointments of as- 3istants in order that their names may appear on the October payroll. Shirley W. Smith, Secretary Faculty, School of Education: The first faculty meeting of the academic year will be held on Monday, Ictober 7, at 4:10 o'clock in the Physics Lecture Room (Room 1022--first floor) of the University High School building. Please note change of place. C. 0. Davis, Secretary Graduate Students: Instructors and assistants who are planning to take graduate work and have not attended to the formality of registration should do so this week in the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. Ruth A. Rouse, Recorder Graduate Students: Graduate students who are on leave of absence from other uni- versities where they hold the rank of instructor, or above, are re- quested to leave their names and addresses at the office of the Grad- uate School, 1014 Angell Hall, for the use of the Faculty Women's Club. Ruth A. Rouse, Recorder Notice---Upperelass Women: New upperclass women who wish to take an examination in lieu of the required Hygiene series please come to Sarah Caswell, Angell Hall, at 12 o'clock Friday for this examination. Margaret Bell, M. D. Engineering Mechanics 13, Applied Elasticity: The classes will meet on Wednesday and Friday at 5 o'clock, in Room 340. The first meeting will be on Friday, October 4. Engineering Mechanics 15, Theory of Thin Bars, Plates and Slabs: Classes meet Wednesday and Friday at 3 o'clock in Room 340. The first meeting will be on Friday, October 4. Seminar in Theory of Elasticity (E. M. 16 and C. E. 65a): The meetings will be on on Tuesday and Thursday at 11 in Room! 307. The first meeting will be on Tuesday, October 8. S. P. Timoshenko Freshman Week Faculty Advisers: Faculty advisers who have not already handed in the naic of theist student assistant during Freshman week are requested to, do so at once. P. E. Bursley Aero 14: Students who have elected this course will please meet in my office at 5:00 P. M., Friday, October 4, to arrange the work. F. W. Pawlowski Course 151, Political Philosophy: This course will have its next meeting Monday. The next lecture will be upon the Greek City-State in the light of Plato's Republic. R. W. Sellars English 233: The Studies Course in 17th Century Drama will meet for the first time Friday at 3:00 in Room 2212 Angell Hall. Paul Mueschke New Sections in Speech:. The following sections in Speech have been opened: Speech 31 Section 13, M. W .F., 3:00 P. M. Room 4203 Angell Hall. Section 14, M. W. F., 9:00 A. M. Room 302 Mason Hall. Speech 32 Section 5, M. W. F., 2:00 P. M. Room 4203 Angell Hall. C. E. Densmore Mechanical Engineering 32: Students electing this course in section 1 will meet at 4:30 P. M. Friday, October 4. Semester arrangements will be made at this time. W. E. Lay Mechanical Engineering 52:1 This class will meet in Room 222 West Engineering Building onI Tuesday, October 8, at 9:00 A. M.I G. L. Jensen Mechanical Engineering 53: This class will meet in Rotm 222 West Engineering Building on Friday, October 4, at 4:00 P. M. G. L. Jensen Piano Class-School of Music-A15: The section for adult beginners in Piano will meet Tuesday at 4:00 P. M., Room 305, School of Music. No previous Piano study is re- quired for entrance. The section for Intermediate students-those who have had a little training, meets Tuesday at 5:00 P. M., Room 305, School of Music. Students who have paid the annual University fee may enroll without additional fee. Special students may enroll upon payment of nominal fee at Office of School of Music. Guy Maier i Both are lines of national defense T HE Mississippi was a menacing flood. The telephone was the first line of defense, for over its wires the work against the flood was directed. Maintenance crews performed the same service as did tele- phone..men in the signal corps in the war. In the daily life of the nation,'just as surely as in emergency, the telephone meets an ever-growing stream of demands. To do this successfully the Bell System's expansion program embraces trans-oceanic telephony through the ether and under the sea, to ships at sea and planes in the air- and above all, wire facilities that will carry the voice, the typewritten word, the picture to every corner of the land. 1 " BELL SYSTEM to' ntion-wide Jyrtem of inter~onn:ecting I'/I'phonff A lp 4 Cosmopolitan Club: The first regular meeting of the University of Michigan Cosmo- Chamber Music B33: politan Club will be held Friday evening, October 4, at eight o'clock in All students who have registered for the course in Chamber Music, Lane Hall. Dean Cabot will give the address of welcome. All foreign School of Music B33, are requested to meet Friday, October 4, at 4:00 and American students are cordially invited. P. M. in Studio 218, School of Music to arrange for future hours of Helen Ruth Dow, Secretary meeting. Hanns Pick 'Varsity Band: All of those men who have not yet obtained their uniforms may do so Friday night between 7 P. M. and 8 P. M. at Morris Hall. A de- posit of ten dollars is required before a uniform can be issued. This will be the last opportunity. The tickets or their value for the M. S. C. game must be turned into me before Saturday. Elbert E. Trail, Asst. Mgr. Choral Union Ushers: Choral Union Ushers may register tonight at the box office of Hill Auditorium between 4:30 ahd 6:00 P. M. E. S. Warren Hindustan Club: There will be a meeting of the Hindustan Club on Sunday, October Gth, 1929, at Lane Hall. All those who are interested should be at Lane Hall at 2:30 P. M. S. A. Rahman, Secretary Faculty, Colleges of Literature, Science and the Arts: The first meeting of the Literary Faculty for the year will be held Monday afternoon, October 7th, at 4:10 P. M. in Room 2225 Angell Hall. Election of Committee members. John R. Effinger Freshman Women, Hygiene Lectures:{ Lectures begin Monday, October 7, Sarah Caswell Angell Hall,I 4:00 P. M. Remaining lectures and examination are on each MondayI at 4:00 P. M. until October 18. Margaret Bell, M. D. Dr. Hutchins' Sections, English 31 and 32: English 31, Sec. 16, 1:00, Room 1269 A. H. English 32, Sec. 2, 10:00, Room 1209 A. H. English 32, Sec. 4, 2:00, Room 1209 A. H. ,i We41 The Age of Conquest is Not Dead! 1Tr lthe Norsemen no longer scour foreign shores for land and plunder. For this is the era of peaceful conquest . . . by commercial enterprise rather than force of arras. You Need Capital Capital is as necessary to the expansion of your business as ships and swords were to William the Conqueror. This bank solicits your business . . . wants to help realize your plans for more profits. Commercial Department Farmers & Mechanics Bank i t( 1 __ i i i r I i I I i N "OUR PIONEERING Iv ( // WORK I ' /tl UF L Lf GET #. / AN AWFUL BIG/KICK OUT ( O OTHI.ITLEC(ASEJ K/4 YlAS J U ST l~ \ B E G U N " uM C-the kind you want, when you want it, and where-it's all yours with the Columbia Portable. Why, it's just like having a private band right at your elbow! And the price leaves no headache! Just let your Columbia dealer put the Viva-tonal Columbia Portable through its paces for you-and you'll want it if it's the last thing you lbuy! It has the tonal beauty and volume of an expensive cabinet ma- chine. It looks like a million-yet it costs only $50! If you like your melody in a more elab- orate case, there's the electrically operated Columbia Portable at $60. But if you feel economical, there's a Columbia Portable for only $25. Whichever one you pick, be sure these 9' i snail meet my classes Lvaay as scaeuumu. H. C. Hutchins I ft ft MERRILL, LYNCH & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange Chicago Stock Exchange Cleveland Stock Exchange * Detroit Stock Exchange New York Curb Market Accounts Carried on Conservative Margin 201 First Nat'l Bank Phone 4294 i R t tI 1 t si I _ e 1 exhilarating hits are in the record compartmeit: -A TV f I I l ". JI " J./ ", /« ./t11./1,/l,/t./J./.01. ./«/~lJ11././"./l. f./1.P./l./J ~ New York Listed Stocks1 Private Wire Connections will all Markets Securities bought or sold on - - Record No. 1938-D, 10-inch, 75c SWEETHEART-S HOLIDAY . . . . Fox T1rott HUGGABLE KISSABLE You Ted Wallace and His Campus Boys. Record No. 1942-D, 10-inch, 75e SINGIN' IN THE RAIN-(from Talking Picture Pro- duction "Hollywood Revue"). Fox Trot. MY SONG OF THE NILE (from Motion Picture "Drag")- Waltz-Ferera's Golden Hawaiians. Record No. J937.0, 0=ibch, 75.e How An I To KNoW?--- (from Motion Picture "Dynamite")-Fox Trot. IvE WAITED A LIFETIME FOR YOU---( froin Motion Picture "Our Modern Maidens")-Waltz -Ben Selvin and His Orchestra. Record No. 1927-D, 10-inch, 75e (You MADE ME LovE You) Wby Did You? You BELONG TO ME, I BELONG TO You x Tro Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians. TEXT SOQK' and STUDENTS' SUPPLIES H-1 i I