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CLASS REASURERS
TO HOLD MEETING!
WITH COUNCILM4EN1
Will Continue Collecting Class
Dues Says Auditing
Body.
I
Lewis,,-Former Democratic Leader'in Senate
to Fight Deneen, M'CormkinIllinois Rac
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7. 7 7,
jBIOLOGICAL CAMiP
DRAWS INTE6RES'i
M1ICNIGAN AL.UKI1
'PLAN CELEBATION
!
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
Summer Session Announcement IUniversity Clubs Plan Banquet
to be Sent .to Teachers; in Boston =Before Harvard
Prof. LaRue Directs.
Football Game.
COMMITTEE IS AT WOR
Grop hopes to Make Paymen
. of Fees Compulsory
in University.
Treasurers of the various classe
in the several colleges and school
of the University will meet at 3
o'clock Thursday afternoon in the
student offices of the Union, to ar-
range for the continuance .of col-
lecting dues, it was announced yes-
terday by the auditing committee
of the Student council, which is su-
pervising the paying of class fees.
All Members Not Reached.
Collection of dues began during
the final two weeks of the -first se-
mester but as all members of the
class were not reached it will be
continued. Fees are payable only
on receipt slips distributed by the
council auditing committee. The
council is given power in its con-
stitution to supervise activities in-
cluding the collection of class dues
and it is effecting this authority
through the auditing committee,
which has controlled the finance of
other class activities.
While the council and class trea-
surers- are co-operating in obtain-
ing the payment of as large an
amount of class dues as it possible,
the council believes that not a suf-
ficient number are paying the fees
and it is taking steps toward mak-
ing it compulsory.
Tilley Heads Committee.
A copnmittee, headed by George
C. tilley, '30, is endeavoring through
an appeal to the University ad-
ministration to haveoclass dues in-
eluded in the tuition fee made at
the first of the school year. With
the collection conducted in this
manner, the payment will be uni-
versal and consequently a smaller
amount will be required, it is point-
ed out.
This will be especially true of the
senior class dues, inasmuch as the
class usually has a deficit at the
beginning of the final year, which
must be met by a large fee.
ENINERS "GROUP
r .
DIPLYS_GROWTH
Quarterdeck Society Formerly
Noted for Canoe Regattas
on Huron River.
Last month marked the twenty-
first birthday of one of the oldest
student organizations in the engi-
neering college, the Quarterdeck
Society. Today the society is known
as a technical society rather than
a social group, however, during its
infancy it was noted for its canoe
regattas on the Huron river and
other social functions. ,
Qualification for membership in
Quarterdeck is based upon good-
fellowship and high scholastic
standing. It is recognized in the
engineering college as a Junior class
honor society. Throughout the year
papers are read by members of the
group on subjects relative to the
field of ships and shipping. In pre-
paring these papers the members
spend an unlimited amount of time
reading. They +are under no fac-
ulty supervision, and are not forc-
ed to conform to any University
regulations.
Papers presented so far this year
cover a wide field of subjects in-
cluding "Refrigerated Ships," "Nav-
igation Instruments," "Welded Ship
Construction," and "The Aerody-
namical Theory of Sails."
E. L Moon Will Speak
on President's Religion
Speaking on "President Hoover's
Rleligion, the Quaker Faith," E. L.
Moon will appear in room 231 An-
gell Hall this afternoon at 4:15 o'-
clock. In his lecture the speakerj
will show the attractions the reli-
gion has for people today who are
impatient of the strict rules and
regulations laid down by some oth-
er churches.
The lecture is being given under;
the auspices of the Tolstoy League,
and all who are interested are in-
vited to attend.
Dr. David Barr to Talk
on Pathology Tonight
Although the official announce-'
ment of the 1930 Summer Session
at the University Biological sta-
tion, Douglas Lake, Cheboygan
county, has just been put in cir-
culation, 10 applications and nu-
merous inquiries already have been
received at the office of the direc-
tor, Prof. George R. LaRue.
These announcements will be
sent to all teachers of biology inj
Michigan and to all those teachers!
Mi high schoolsof 2,500 attendance
in the North Central Association
and in some Eastern states also.
Other recipients of the pamphlet
include members of the Botanical
Society of America and all zoo-
ology instructors known to the Uni-
versity staff.
Last summer the total attend-
ance at the biological station was
90. A third of them had been -en-
rolled in the University -the pre-;
vious year. The other two-thirds
came from 21 states and one for-
eign country, Pacific coast and
Southern states being well repre-
sented.
I-
Using the Harvard game as a co-
ordinate drawing attraction for
alumni, the University of Michigan
Clubs of the country are to hold a
meeting in the form of a dinner
-the night-before the contest. Plans
are now under way for the conduct
of the assembly, which in addition
to its somewhat recreational sid
'is to have a serious aspect as well
as is evidence by -the fact that
Presidents Alexander G. Ruthven
of :Michigan and James R. Angell
of Yale are to be the principal
speakers.
Special trains : are to be run
from Detroit and Ann -Arbor for
this meeting, and cars will be at-
tached from Lansing, Jackson,
-Chicago and many other cities. It
.is expected that over three hun-
dred .alumni will attend the ban-
quet itself while many more are
looked for at the informal --break-
fast which is being planned -for the
mnorning -of the -game.
i
l
Ili
.HARVARA. L. Putnam, Uni-!
versity Con ultant on Careers, finds'
that most men decide on their life'
'work in their senior years. and that
many of these decisions are not
carried out. Questionnaires reveal I
Ithat six years after graduation
one-third are not doing What they
had planned.
* * * i
ILLINOIS-Six students were ar-
rested and taken to the Cham-
paign police station where .each
was fined for violation of the city
ordinance against playing { ball in
( the streets.
* * * '
UNIVERSITY OF- WISCONSIN.
-Freshmen women on the campus,
1 here will be instructed by Anna-
b.11A .1 zztllra 3nr~ln H ll+..l
t -
Associated P eos Plota
James Hamilton Lewis (left), party whip in the senate during the
Wilson administration, will be a candidate for the Illinois.senate seat
in the democratic April primary. Congresswoman Ruth McCormiclk and
Senator Charles Dennen, incumbent, have filed for the Republican
nomination.
! PRINCETON UNIVERSITY.- A
survey of the 1927 edition of "Who's
Who in America" showed that 4.3
per cent of Princeton's living alum-
ni were listed in the book. It has
been calculated from these figures
that the average Princeton under-
graduate has approximately 76
times as many chances to become
"prominent" as has the average
male American.
MCGILL UNIVERSITY -Class-
rooms which would separate the
two sexes in coeducational institu-
tions were advocated and success-
fully defended -by the affirmative
on the subject, 'Resolved, that se-
eue a , weal-Known styist, as to arate classrooms for men and woi-
formal apparel and will learn to act en students would improve the lec-
formally' sophisticated. ture at McGill."
iR JDAISM and CRISTINI:TY
A Problem of Relationship.
A small group will investigate this problem historically under the
leadership of
Rabbi ink and the R ev. T. L. Harris
The first meeting will e held at the
Hillel Foundation, 615 E. University
on Tuesday, February 25, 7:30-8:30 p. n. E
't_________________ ______________________________1111111111illllllllllflltl
ACIE CTS PANB ETUR'gER
Meetings Would be Held in German Uniersity Problems
Small Structure to be Erected i of Today' to be Topic
on Corner Near School. , of Schoenemnann.
TO BE SEMI-PERMANENT IS WELL KNOWN AUTHOR
Tentative plans for a proposed
building for the exclusive use of
members of the Architectural so-
ciety and of Tau Sigma Delta, ii-
ternational honorary architectural!
fraternity, were announced yester-:
day by Percy E. Knudsen, '30A,.
Knudsen told of the problem ofI
a smoking and meeting room for
the Architectural society. Althoughj
there are rooms in the architectur-
al building now available for such1
use, he explained, the ever-in-
creasing roll of students and the
consequent increase in need for'
classrooms, makes it quite impos-
sible to give over any room space
for the use of the Archtiectural
society.
The building, which will be a
one-story semi-permanent struc-
- ture, will be situated on the south-
west corner of the plot now occu-
pied by the architectural building
itself. It will be constructed of red
brick, to harmonize with the achi-
tectural building, which it will re-I
semble on a smaller scale.!
Present plans call for one largej
general meeting room, with severalI
smaller rooms for offices. A large
fireplace will be included in the
assembly room.
A workers' casino and sports yen-
ter has been opened at Valbuena
adjoining the aviation field at Mex-
ico City, Mexico.
Norway shipped, last year, nearly
twice as much cod liver oil to other+
countries as in 1928.
Delegates to Fi'ne Arts C
Coordinated Prograr
Dr. Frederich.Schoenemann, bril-
Iint scholar and head of the
American division of English sem-
inars at the UTni-versity of Berlin,
will speak at 4:15 today in room
2225 Angel hall on "German Uni-
versity Problems of Today." The
lecture will be in English and is
open to all iembers of the faculty
and students-interested in the prob-
lents of mnodern German education.
Dr. &achenemann has distin-
guished hinself both as author and
educator. He has spent several
years in this country in the capa-
city of special lecturer on the his-
tory of American literature and civ-
ilization. At various times he has
been visiting professor at Hunter
college, New York, at Wesleyan Un-
iversity, Connecticut, and at Har-
vard University.
.At the present time, Dr. Schoe-
nemann is finishing the first vol-
time of a series on America today,
"From Colony to World Empire."
Collection of material for the sec-
! ond volume of this set is the pur-
pose of his present tour of the coun-
try. His writings include "Mass In-
fluence in the United States," and
"Mark Twain as a Literary Person-
ality." He has also been inciden-
tal in several translations into I
German among which is "The Re-
volt of Modern Youth" by Ben
Lindsay.
His recent work in German edu-
cation, combined with his experi-
ence in America, make him emin-
ently fitted to deal with the.lecture
subject he has chosen.
Conference Arrange
for Higher Education
Returning Sunday night from the known New York
University of Iowa, where he had and producer said
been attending the Second Fine of the stage lies in
Arts conference, Prof. Bruce M.-f atre movements wt
iDonaldson, of the division of fine ing more and mor
arts, said that the main theme of the colleges and sm-
the conference was a co-ordinated The problem of 1
program of fine arts in higher edu- and architecture in
cation. riculum was discu
Professor Donaldson emphasized Moore, who is chair
the fact that Fine Arts was used tional Commission
in the name of the conference in Moore is especially
a broader sense than that in which problem of the dev-
it is understood here. Drawing, city of Washington
sculpture, painting, music, and the the L'Enfant plan.
drama are all included in the term C. Howard Walke
as it refers to the conference. -ed Boston a'rchitect
The speakers in the various fields architect of the Io
all brought out the fact that there also on the confer
was need for some sort of co-ord- John Shapley, presi
inated curriculum in the universi- lege Art Associatio
ties and colleges that would give traced the- history
a broad outlook in the study of fine higher education
arts. Other speakers were rather Greek times up to t
pessimistic about the idea, Profes- "The nearest apl
sor Donaldson declared, pointing ideal in the teachin
out in their addresses the practical a liberal college,"
difficulties that lie in the way of Donaldson, "is the
introducing a fine arts program in I Fine Arts. This s
a college. under one head t
At th-e meetings, which were held well as the historic
in the main building of the Uni- arts."
versity of Iowa, formerly the State Professor Donal
dramatic critic
that the future l
n the little the-
hich are becom-
re important in
hall towns.
andscape design
a fine arts cur-
ssed by Charles
rman of the Na-
of Fine Arts.
interested in the
elopment of the
as specified in
r, a distinguish-
t and consulting
wa campus was
rence program.
dent of the Col-
n of America
of fine arts in
from the early
he present.
proach to the
g of fine arts in
said Professor
Yale School of
school combines
he practical as
cal study of the
dson gave as