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December 12, 1930 - Image 8

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The Michigan Daily, 1930-12-12

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PAGE EIGHT

THE MICHIGAN

DAILY

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12} 1930

THE MICHIGAN DAILY FI~IDAY. DECZMB~R 12. 1930

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of
the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the
President until 3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a. m. Saturday.
VOL. XLI. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1930 NO. 64
NOTICES
President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home from 4 to 6 o'clock on
the first two Sunday -afternoons of each month to members of the fac-
ulties, their friends, and other residents of Ann Arbor.
To Students having Library Books:
1. Students having in their possession books drawn from the Uni-
versity Library are notified that such books are due Monday, December
15, before the impending Christmas vacation, in pursuance of the Re-
gents' regulation :
"Students who leave Ann Arbor for an absence of more than a week
must first return all borrowed books."
2. Failure to return books before the vacation will render the stu-
dent liable to an extra fine.
3. Students who have special need for certain books between De-
cmber 15 and the beginning of the vacation may retain such books by
applying to the Superintendent of Circulation on or before December 15.
4. Students who have special need for certain books during the
vacation, will be given permission to draw these books, provided they
are not in general demand, on application to the Superintendent of Cir-
culation after December 15.,
Wm. W. Bishop, Librarian.
INTER-LIBRARY LOANS.
Cessation During Christmas Season.
Owing to the rush of business and to the congestion affecting both
the mails and the handling of express, the larger libraries of the country
have agreed for some years past to stop inter-library loans between De-
cember 15 and January 6. Any persons wishing to have books borrowed
from other libraries for use here during the Christmas holidays are re-
quested to arrange for this immediately with the Superintendent of the
Reading Room, as requests to borrow books will not be honored by most
libraries (including the Library of this University) after December 15,
and ,until January 6.
This notice is issued in order to avoid difficulties which have arisen
in past years. W. W. Bishop, Librarian.
Phi Beta Kappa Prize Essay Contest: The Alpha Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa in Michigan offers a prize of twenty-five dollars ($25.00)
for the best essay on The Influence of the Life and Works of the Poet
Virgil written by a member of the student body.
1. The essays must be handed to the Secretary on or before Janu-
ary 24, 1931.
2. The name of the contestant must not appear on the essay. In its
place some motto or phrase should be used. This must also ap-
pear on the outside of a sealed envelope, which should be clipped
to the manuscript, in which the name of the contestant is to be
placed.
3. The essays should not be of excessive length. Clearness and
forcefulness of statement rather than wordiness are the points
to be sought.
Orma F. Butler, 3233 Angell Hall.
Philosophy 130, The History of Ethics, will be given next semester,
MWF at 3, in 200 SW; and Philosophy 181, British Empiricism after
Hume, will not be given.

"The Structure of Molecules as Revealed by Dielectric Constant Studies" GILMORE SPEAKS
in Room 303 Chemistry building at 4:15 o'clock. SPA KS
ON INDIAN TOPIC'

Treasurer of Schools erid on the treasurer's books as
Reeased U l c. 29 cash items."
Released Until Dec. 291 Ray has been with the board

(I

f La Rue's Discussion Group will meet at 8:00 in 1139 N.S.

Freshman Architects meeting in the ground floor lecture room,
Architectural building, at 4:00 p.m.
Choral Union Ushers: Report at Hill Auditorium before 7:30 p.m.
for concert.
R. O. T. C.-Varsity Band: Rehearsal from 5-6 p.m. at Morris hall.
Program Committee of the Junior Girls' Play meets at 3 o'clock to-
day in the concourse at the League building.
Esperanto: Professor C. L. Meader will lecture on "The Dawning
Era's International Language" at 4:15 in Room 231, Angell hall.
Ann Arbor Stamp Club: There will be a meeting of special interest
at 8:00 p.m. in Room 408 of the Romances Languages building. Mr.
Charles Brisley of Detroit will exhibit and talk on his collection of Cana-
dian issues. All interested collectors are invited to attend.
Lutheran Students: Christmas party at 8:00 p.m. at St. Paul's
Lutheran church, corner of Third and West Liberty Streets. There will
be games and refreshments, and we want you to bring the usual 10c
gift.
COMING EVENTS
Accounting Students: Mr. H. F. Vaughan of Remington Rand, Inc.,
will speak on "Accounting and Tabulating Machines" in Room 206 Tap-
pan Hall at 10:00 a.m., Saturday, December 13. All students and others
interested in accounting practice and office machinery are invited to
attend.
A. S. M. E. Student Branch: There will be a faculty-student banquet
on Tuesday, December 16, at the Union at 6:15 p.m.
Wesleyan Guild will hold its annual Christmas party on Saturday,
December 13, at 8:00 p.m. Eats and games and fun for everyone. Wesley
Hall.
Cosmopolitan Club: Holiday party and dance at Women's Athletic
building, 8:00 to 12:00 p.m., Saturday. Dancing, bridge and mah jong.
Native costumes to be worn if possible. Women admitted free; men:
members, fifty cents; non-memers, one dollar.
Congregational Student Fellowship: Last meeting before the holi-
days to be held in the church parlors, Sunday, at 5:30 p.m. Miss Amy
Loomis, Director of Lydia Mendelssohn theater, will feature a Christ-
mas program.

Anthropologist Talks Over Air (Continued from Page 1) I
on University Program. but tle funds were not deposited int
his name. Many times the funds
Most white people are unable to came in by check, payable to the
appreciate or to comprehend the treasurer.
grief and pain experienced by In- "The treasurer, up until the ap-
dians when they saw the native pointment of Mr. Ray, has always
forms of life in America ruthlessly been a membe a comple e charge
and wantonly destroyed, M. . Gil-of the funds. Mr. Ray, therefore,
more, of the Anthropology museum, was not bonded, handling the
said yesterday in a radio talk on money o n ly temporarily. T h e
"The Indians and Nature." treasurer could not withdraw funds
"It was not primarily the realiza- from the bank ceptres dent and
tion of economic loss, the loss of a secretary of the board.
valuable source of excellent food, "In 1928, Mr. Ray was appointed
which caused distress to Indians treasurer, bonded, and all funds
when for instance, they witnessed placed in his name. After he be-
the destruction of wild rice fields came treasurernand the responsi-
and lotus beds, but it was the sense bility definitely fixed, the board
of a fearful void in nature ensuing ordered an audit of the books. No
upon the extinction of a species audit was made the first year, but
where it had formerly flourished," at the close of the second fiscal
he said. "They were pained to con- year an audit was ordered. It was
template the dislocation of nature's then that irregularities first be-
balance, the destruction of world came known."
symmetry," Gilmore stated. Ray, according to Haisley, while
"Among Indians the aim in life acting as business agent, made
was to live in accord with nature." collections which he did not turn
They believed in looking often at over to the treasurer. These items,
the moon and the stars, he said. 1 the superintendent said, were car-

since 1900. For
time, he acted as

15 years of this
secretary.

the
hut

open for break-

f ast after

the

sophomore prom.

the
den

i d U

®res

TRAVEL BRA

Union Side Desk 12-6 P. M.

Presbyterian Young People's So-
ciety will give a party Saturday at
the student center on Washtenaw
avenue.
Catholic Students: There willtbe
a Dance and Reception for the
Catholic members of the Faculty
Saturday afternoon, Dec. 13, from
2:30 to 5:00 p.m. at the Michigan
League.

4.

Men's Class Basketball: Those desiring to enter teams should do so j
immediately. Phone 22101.
EVENTS TODAY.
Zoology Lectures: The Department ofZoology has arranged for the
following lecture by Dr. Arthur A. Allen, Professor of Zoology at Cornell
University: 4:15 p.m. "The University and the Conservation of Wild l
Life." Room 2054 N. S. building._
Choral Union Concert: Jose Iturbi, Spanish pianist, at 8:15 o'clock
sharp.
Senior Mechanical Engineers: All General Electric blanks should be
in today. If you have not yet received one, apply in room 221, and return
to that office upon completion.
Chemistry Colloquium: Dr. John Warren Williams of the Depart-
ment of Physical Chemistry, University of Wisconsin, will lecture on
DANCING
AT THE
MASONIC TEMPLE1

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The following titles are some of this year's list:-
BYRD-Little America . .$.. .. $5.00
BEARD-The American Leviathan ...........................5.00
GARLAND-Roadside Meetings.3.50
MUNTHE-Memories and Vagaries ................3.00
BARTON-Lincoln at Gettsburg ..................4.00
KENT--North by East.........3.50
ADDAMS-Second Twenty Years at Hull House 4.00
GANDHI-His Own Story ...... . ...... 2.50
JEANS-The Mysterious Universe ........... ..........2.25
CABELL-Domnei ..................... 5.00
BRADLEY-The Parade of Living .... . .. 3.00
CRUSE-The Englishman and his books in 19th Century ..3.50
EMERSON-Voiceless India................. . . . 4.00
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