TTTUM';DA'.'V', JAt;TTI rT T11)", MICHIGAN DAILY PACE TMIM ~rfTUfl$DAY, JA1~fUAflY ~'2, 1931' TI-IF M1C1~IICAN DAILY VAOE 'rH~ mama"* r-Ir -jr rT Germ~an Radio Firm- PIATV CHICAGO9EDUCATORRichfield Company Nj PUO FORle QPln oCOOcst UP ia Pay ybts eI Pas toaBroadcst TO DISCUSS BLIN[I fl T Parliament Debates ~~~TFROI PTW, Prs 13xICF OM £6 TSigma Rho faia1 toCorn tc v nHAy Rewha 1931 ove id fabl e igy s Davis to Take Cruise on. Leave of Absence F D School of Education plans to leave ;n February 3 for a cruise on the Mediterraneau sea while on a leave Ommitte? of ab'e1ce. He expects to visit tifity of F rance, Italy, Switzerland, and Eng- land. He will return in June in time f teach summer school. rHARiKNESS TO SPEAK Canadian Professor to Present First of Lecture Series Tomorrow Night. Prof. W. K. Harkness, visiting in- vestigator from the University of Toronto, will give the first of three addresses on "Fishery and Hydro- biological Work in Canada," at 7:45 o'clock tomorrow night in room 3116, University Museums building. The public is invited. Professor Sprengling Will Give Talk on Taya Husayn on Lecture Series. KN)WN AS PHILOSOPHER Sprengling Calls Husayn Best Mind in Modern Egypt. Prof. Martin Sprengling, of the Oriental institute of the University of Chicago, is scheduled to lectui- at the Natural Science auditorium Feb. 27 on the UniverIty serie,. His subject will concern £aha .Hu- sayn, blind social philosopher, and literary critic of modern Egypt. Concerning Taha Husayn, Profes- sor Sprengling states that "he is in my estimation the best mind in modern Egypt, and very influen- tial." Husayn is the product of both the oriental and occidental schools of education. Trained first at the old Moslem Azhar university, he studied under European profes- sors in later years, such men as Nallino, the two Guldis, and Enno Littmann, in Cairo, instructing him. Regarded as InfluentiaL "As a result he has been much influenced by French social philos- ophy and criticism, and though he is a prominent figure in modern Egypt, he has been regarded with some suspicion in conservative Mos- lem circles. and his book on pre- February 6.. tween the 0;rman broadcasting m- : O ){)JY OIICI I_) r11Lz Ffmfent mnater- Sigma h 'o 'u, enginmeriug in I stump speakers scie y, will om- Sinc tn. , he broadcast- Pete in an intereolheg0 at sc ibition in?; ,rana iz t onl has been tring to debate, Feb. G at a joint meeting onvlnce ti e reihsiag steering; ci the Det;oit Engvin inw s *ty cormmittee h a t citi ; s should! y have an opportunity to isten in by, and the Amuic an Society cifCivil radio whenever vital issues are up Student Store. Four members of the Round# Table club were appointed at al meeting of the club Tuesday night in the League building as a com- mittee to investigate the possibili- ties for a cooperative bookstore on FORSY THE NAMES CAUSE OF STRAIN . . -. _ . 5 ames Poor Classroom Speakers for Student Nervousness. Assocsatca Press Phao W. C. Duffie, Receiver for the Richfield Oil company of California, who is tak- ing cha'ge of the bankruptcy pro- ceedings. He stated recently that the company "probably would be able to pay all indebt'ness." ROUN0 TABLE C LUB Kimball to Head Group in Town Canvass to Find Work for Unemployed. Engineers under the auspices of thef- fo , deba t,. Preparations were made the campus. Associated Technical Sc.iteties of to broadcast a reichst1-ag address "The larger universities of the Detroit, it wa S annoiinced yswter_-- by the then forei-n minister Gus- country are already supplied with; try Sire~'enarm, U .atthe last day by Prof. R. D. Drackett, of the l enimtioul w th- cooperative bookstores that save engineering EngLih dieparmentt. hn the students 7 io 15 per cent on the Speaking of the plans for the de~ During 1930 negotiations were re- cost of books and supplies," said bate, Professor bracktf said : sumed. Stanley Levison, '34, one of the an- I hi wle a co-orer ricon Finally the steering committee pointues, "and there is every rea- ference debate, prodUrled as avipiiee, terxeer ample of the new form 1n dcbaze icgreed to permit installation of son to believe that a similar sav- which is being developed experi-' microphones in the reichstag for ing could be made for Michigan the December debates on Chancel- students, if the bookstore could mentally by Sigma Rho Tau. The or Bruening's financial reform pro- have the co-operation of the facul- debate will be staged co-onersvi vc. ly byaten spalkers from h "l ram,-but not for unedited broad- ty and the student body." chapter at Michigan and the Beta casting. Phonograph records of the The Round Table club, at the chapter at Detroit. The affirmative debate first were to be recorded, meeting, issued a general request team will be composed of three then submitted for approval to the to all the students of the Univer- men from Michigan and two men steering committee and broadcast sity to assist in the unemployment from Detroit, while the negative later, if it seemed advisable. committee of the city of Ann Arbor. will be composed of three men from T h e broadcasting organization Prof. Carter L. Goodrich, of the Detroit and two men from Miehi- has suggested that at least certain economics department, addressed gan. prearranged portions of debates be the club on the Swarthmore unem- "The first speaker on each side broadcast direct. ployment conference. will be given nine to ten minutes _--_____-- - ___=-__.-.-----.----- for opening and after this about 35 minutes will be used by each side in completing its argument, this time being disposed of at the ! discretion of the sides. This allows more give and take in the debate and more concentration on the is- sue. The speeches vary, under this I system, from two minutes upward and are determined by the points raised. This gives more spontaneity and better variety. As such a de- bate progresses it is very easy to follow the trend of thought." What's Going On Lydia Mendelssohn - Play Pro- r duction presents "Rebound," by Donald Ogden Stuart. THEATRES. - Majestic-"The Princess and the Plumber" with Charles Farrell anijai Many students suffer from nerv- Professor llarkness is the first ous strain and fatigue attempting man to artificially propogate the to listen to classroom lecturers who lake sturgeon in North America. A do not speak loudly or distinctly graduate of the University of Tor- I eoug fo th nrma peson's n-onto, he was appointed director of enough for the normal person's un- the Ontario fisheries research bur- derstanding Dr. Warren E. For- eau in the University, after having sythe, director of the University ,taught two years at the University Health Service, said yesterday. of Alberta. His direction of the This is seldom due to deficient field work of Ontario graduates and undergraduates during the past hearing of students, as statistics summers, especially in the Lake show only a small percentage have Nipigon district more than 300 below normal hearing but rather miles northwest of Ste. Sault Marie, to speakers who are negligent in has earned him an outstanding finding out whether they are being place in the rank of Canada's fish- heard properly, he said. eries investigators. "The American Student Health His work in the University muse- conference, held recently, urged its ums here will be entirely with the members to remedy such irritating sturgeon. He is studying the rate factors on the various campuses," of growth, food, and other charac- Dr. Forsythe said. teristics of the fish. - - ____-----I- 4 I I'M, The Round Table club, the second Mohammedan poetry was put in the Index of 1926. P r o f e s s o r student group to join the move- Sprengling nevertheless regards ment, yesterday offered to aid in Husayn as the most influential of the work of soliciting the town to the men who are trying to intro- find possible work for the city's duce in Arabic lands a critical mod- ern view of their own history and unemployed, it was announced by culture. Mayor Edward W. Staebler. Graduate of Northwestern. Leonard Kimball, '33, is at the Professor Sprengling, the lectur- head of the group that will do thisI er, is a native of Wisconsin and a work, Mayor Staebler said. The graduate of Northwestern college students who will aid in the cam- in that state. His advanced studies paign of the town are not limited were carried on at the Americantohem brsiofhecuan School of Archaeology in Jerusa- to the membership of the club and lem and at the University of Chi- any others interested may com- cago, where he received the doctor municate with Kimball at 325 E. of philosophy degree in 1914. He Jefferson street. Fanny Pessin, '32, was professor of classics at North- will also receive any further re- western college in 1910-11, instruc- cruits. Her address is 314 N. State tor in semetics at Harvard from street. 1911 to 1915, and has since been a The canvass of the town will be member of the faculty of the Uni- carried out during the examination versity of Chicago where he was week and during the first week of promoted to full professorship in I the next semester. At the same the Arabic language and literature time, a petition asking compulsory in 1927. unemployment i n s u r a n c e as a means to alleviate the present situ- DETROIT MAKES ation and any similar crises which may arise in the future will be cir- PA YROLL SLASH culated for the club. The other student group to take Street Railway Commission to up this work was the Episcopal Abolish 68 Jobs. students' group at Harris hall. Each of the groups will canvass a part (T y Associated Press) of the town in search of odd jobs DETROIT, Jan. 21.--The Detroit and construction work or sales for street railway commission has de- the wood and sand supplied by the cided to abolish 68 jobs now ap- city. pearing on the payroll of the mu- nicipally-owned transportation sys- g tem, in the expectation that an an- gy Aide to Study tiual $204,000 saving would result. at Pittsburgh Museum ThA tict ofj bh aff rted aslu not Ity 0 USe ° izens ti'A .:d -" aY r 1 3 Maureen O'Sullivan. Michigan - Ruth Chatterton in "The Right to Love." Wucrth-"The Widow from Chi- cago." GENERAL. Lecture -Will Durant on "The Case for India, an American View." Library Receives Gift From Detroit Society Prof. John S. Worley, of the transportation library, announced yesterday the receipt of a gift of over four tons of engineering per- iodicals and books, made by the De- troit Engineering society. The society felt that the facili- ties for the preservation of the books was much more adequate here than in Detroit. TYPEWRITER REPAIRING - ploy rte Following gestions- S ii Ii The Mayir Cvmittee for Unem- i f Ies 116 ! JOs anutC wec.U .r.ade public. Announcing the ac- tion, the commission said that heads of families thrown out of employment by the cut would be given consideration in transfers to other city departments. Others, the commission added, will be given .preference in re-employment. Edwin P. Creaser, carcinology as- sistant in the University museum, of zoology, left yesterday for Pitts-, burgh, Pa., to spend more than a week of study in the Carnegie mu- seum in that city. He will do spe- cial research work on the North American crayfish while there. All makes of machines. Our equipment and per- s o n n e I are considered among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. 1 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 i r? ' f t; ,s f If ' f ' ;II ,,,, ME I, I , " I I I I I ", 1 111111, 1 MR= = 11, 11 m Take a Picture of the Women's League Building-Win a Fine New Moore Fountain Pen Read These Ru es ' II, li 1.1 Does your cd 'wr ned cleaning up? Do you have any odd iol that could be done around your homne by a man who really needs and dese;rves work? There are 685 registered ne- ployed men who nave an average of 3 dependents each. . 2. Are you planning any constuction work? Is there an oppor- tunity to employ a skilled workman or to do contracin- work at the present time that would give men employmn iii A contracting job started now niay bring an income to some destitute family. The commitee las at present r.gs Ircd ami ong it's skilled 32 Carpniers 21 Concrete Workers 29 Pa nters 3 Bricklayers and man y other trades. 3. Flirc wood is heg cut by and sold for the tnemployed. ive an order now thou h yOU imy e l un ii later in the year, An ord er nuy tng f o a needy idmily. Sand 25c Per Bag 1 Wood $3.80 Per Cord JDevered If You Ca Hel in Any Way PONE 2-1931 M just take a picture of the Michigan Buildin< from any angle. After you have ex- posed your roll of film, take it to any one of our three stores for developing and printing. You don't need to buy your film from us-all you have to do is leave it with us for developing and printing. Then we pick the winne out of all that we develop. Remember the prize is a fine MOORE Fountain Pen-wjah your nam engraved in gold on the barrel of the pen. If you own a camera, try for a prize! 41 Bring in Your Exposed Film By 6 P. M., Jan. 23rd i i .s t , i I