THE MICHIGAN ILA: MRSDAY. OCTOtMR'9. 1990 THE M.'HI.A N-)AIL1? T1wTaY Oflxi v... lTvru1aav f . 1Qv'w'fl DAILY OFFICIAL DU.LLETIN 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. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1930 NO. 14 NOTICES University Lecture: Mr. Elmer Kenyon, of the Theatre Guild of New York, and National Director of the Drama League of America, will lec- ture on "Modern Russian Drama" at 4:15 p.m., Friday, October 10, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. This lecture is under the auspices of the Department of Speech. The public is invited. University Loan Committee will meet on Friday, October 10, at 1:30 p.m., in Room 2, University Hall. Students who have filed applications with the Office of the Dean of Students should call at that office for an appointment with the committee. J. A. Bursley, Chairman. Exchange of Rooms (English, History, Geology): Taking effect and beginning Friday morning of this week, English 159, section 2 (Profcssor Campbell), will meet in Room 3213 A.H., M.W.F., at 11. English 47, section 2 (Mr. Proctor), will meet in Room 2054 N.S., M.W.F., at 11. Geology 32 (Professor Hussey), will meet in Room 231 A.H., M.W.F., 11 Geology 31 (Professor Hobbs), will meet in Room 25 A.H., M.F., at 11. History 47 (Professor Crane), the section to be formed W. at 11 will meet in Room 25 A.H., Wednesdays at 11. Attention of New Students: The new students are reminded of the assemblies on "How to Study" which will be held on the afternoon of October 9 and 10, in the Natural Science Auditorium. In case of con- flict between class work and the assemblies students will be excused from class work as attendance at the assemblies is obligatory. Each student is expected to attend only the assembly to which he has been assigned. John R. Effinger, Dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts James B. Edmonson, Dean of the School of Education Earl V. Moore, Director of the School of Music. Notice. The young men who acted as student assistants to members of the Faculty during Orientation Period may receive checks for their) services by calling at the Business Office. Preliminary Examinations in Economics: Preliminary examinations for the Ph.D. in Economics will be held the week of October 27. Can-l didates expecting to write these examinations at this time should get in touch with Miss Mabbs at once. French Versification: Students desiring to take Course 217, French Versification, will please see Prof. H. P. Thieme immediately. The course will be given on Monday or Friday at 4:00 o'clock in room 110 R.L. French 115. There will be created a new section of this course to be given on Tuesday and Thursday at 10, Room 408, Romance Language Building. The instructor will be Mr. Koella. Transportation Course: The details of the new course in Transpor- tatIon were inadvertently ommitted from the Special Announcement of the Colleges of Engineering and Architecture. Those students who are. interested in this course are requested to see Professor Worley, 1026 East Engineering Building, with regard to the arrangement of their work. H. C. Sadler, Dean. Students in Engineering: Students enrolled in any of the followingc courses should report at the Secretary's Office, 263 West Engineering Building: Five-year courses combined with Industry; Combinations of any two courses; Mathematics, or combinations of mathematical and technical courses; Physics, or combinations with other courses; Engineering Mechanics, or combinations;t Engineering-Law course. EVENTS TODAY Political Science 291, Journal Club meets 3:00-5:00 p.m., in 2035 A.H. Review in Elementary Latin: A request has been made for a rapid review, during the current semester, of the first two years' work in ele- mentary Latin. All persons who are interested in such a review are asked to be present in Room 2016, A.H., this evening at 7:00 o'clock. No credit will be given for this work. Chemical Engineers. The first meeting of the student branch of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will be held at 7:30 p.m. in room 3201, East Engineering Bldg. Professor W. L. Badger will talk on "Why is a Chemical Engineer?" All Chemical Engineers and Fresh- men expecting to take Chemical Engineering are urged to attend this first meeting. Electrical Engineers: Organization meeting for A.I.E.E. at 7:301 p.m., Room 248 West Eng. Bldg. All electrical engineers interested int A.I.E.E. activities for this year please attend. No obligations. Choral Union Ushers: The following men kindly report to Mr. Ken-c neth Lundquist at the box-office of Hill Auditorium between 4:00 andr 5:00 p.m. for assignment: Paul I. Bauer, Aaron Beser, Howard G. Brown, Henry G. Dykhouse,t Frederick S. Eastwood, Lloyd K. Friedman, Kenneth E. Hooker, Jack S. Horwitch, Claude F. Hough, Jr., H. Webster Johnson, Clarence W. Moore, George E. Palmer, Herman Ramsey Donald W. Richardson, Harry Stein- berg, Frank J. Ward, Albert F. Wenzel, Harris Westrate, Robert E. Wills. Other names will appear in Friday's Daily. Choral Union Ushers: The following men kindly report to Mr. H. S. Mekeel at Hill Auditorium Box Office between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. for t assignment:n Clifford G. Anderson, George J. Bowers, Harold H. Brueckner, Wil- 1 dam Culbert, Russell N. DeJong, Henry Dlugolenski, LeRoy W. Gilger, Carl O. Grassl, B. J. Graham, Leon Gropper, Henry C. Halstead, Jesse E.' Hatch, John Burton Hoben, Edmond H. Hoben, Herbert T. Jenkins, George W. Killey, Percy E. Knudsen, Lester C. Lemke, Adolph Levy,g T. J. Lyndon, Jack Mayer, Max A. Melick, John H. Moor.C William E. Morgenroth, Tom Moule, Alvin H. Nielsen, Melvin H.n Rabe, Reuben Segall, Norman G. Roth, Henry Rottschofer, Jr., John K.d Schuesler, Jack S. Sample, Robert R. Shaw, Dolph, Steinberg, Herbert E. Varnum, Ame Vennema, Russell Lee Walp,- Harold Warren, Douglas N. West, J. Russell Witmer, Louis Zanoff. Public Health Nurses on the Campus are cordially invited to attendt a fall rally meeting of the Ann Arbor District of the Michigan Stateb Nurses' Association at the Women's Field House, at 7:45 p.m. Studento nurses of the University Hospital will present a playlet. h 'Varsity Band: There will be tryouts for cornet players from 2:00 t p.m. to 3:00 p.m., and also from 4:45 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. l si Pi Tau Pi Sigma: Organization meeting at 5:30 p.m., Union Tap Rm. Inlander business staff tryouts report at Inlander office, Press Building, between 1 and 3 p.m. A All Masonic Students are invited to attend the Annual Masonic S Smoker, sponsored by Craftsmen Club, at the Michigan Union, at 8 p.m. a Negro, Caucasian Club meets at 8 p.m. in the Upper Room of Lane a Hall. All students interested in inter-racial relations are invited to 0 attend. t COMING EVENTS Assembly for Graduate Students: All Graduate School students, in- C eluding wives and husbands, are cordially invited to attend an assembly to be held in the ballroom of the Michigan League at eight o'clock on Friday evening, October 10. There will be short addresses by the Presi- dent of the University and the Dean of the Graduate School, following which there will be opportunity for the Graduate School students toV meet informally. l Professor Philip Bursley, Director of Orientation. B ANN ARBOR N EWS-BRIEFS W A TER TO BE, Commission Will Meet Tonight to Discuss Question. Reports suggesting an increase in water rates to meet the demands' of the water department in the im- provement of the city water dis- tribution system will be made at a special meeting of the water rate commission and the water com- mission, at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Appointed several years ago by the water commission, the rate commission has devoted consider- able time studying expenditures of the department. Seeks Burglars in City Police yesterday were notified by authorities at Lansing and Flint of the activities of several hold-up men in those cities, and who are believed to be in the vicinity of Ann Arbor. An attempted robbery of the Pinkney bank at Lansing was foiled by police early Tuesday. No description of the men was given Ann Arbor headquarters. Officials are also searching for two men who staged a hold-up Tues- day night in Flint. Will Issue Licenses Hunting licenses have been issued to more than 125 persons in Wash- tenaw county, according to a check by officials in the county clerk's office. For the last several weeks, clerks have been distributing books con- taining a digest of the state game aws, which are supplied by the state department of conservation. The only regulation listed in the digest for Washtenaw county is the ban on Sunday hunting. School of Education, Junior Class: All members of the Class of '32, School of Education, are asked to assemble in the Auditorium of the University High School on Friday afternoon, Oct. 10, at 4:10 o'clock to organize, to elect officers, and to transact other important business. Phi Delta Kappa: There will be a business meeting of the Omega Chapter of Phi Delta Kappa at 7:15 .m., Friday, in Room 306 of the Michigan Union. Oriental Women: The Oriental Women's club will give Tea fol- owed by a meeting at the League Building, (place to be posted on the bulletin board), on Sunday, Oct. 12, at 4:00 p.m. Members are urged to attend, and newcomers are espe- cially invited. Important matters will be discussed. 1 - RATE RISE SUGGESTED Hold Night Classes Night classes will start Monday at Perry school on Packard street, with courses open in English I, II, III and IV, high school English, citizenship, arithmetic, algebra, geometry, mechanical drawing, bookkeeping, typewriting, short- hand and reporting. Preliminary enrollment for night sessions shows that only 62 persons have regis- tered. The normal enrollment is between 375 and 400. Leaders of Commerce Will Meet in Chicago (BC A vso iwfd Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 8.-The financial, industrial and commercial brains of America have been invited here Oct. 22 to find, if they can, a prompt return route to national prosperity. The occasion will be the seventh annual conference of major indus- tries. Methods of co-ordinating American industry in a movement to overcome the business depression are to be given first place among the subjects for discussion. W. J. Emmons Departs for Washington Meet Prof. Walter J. Emmons of the highway engineering department left Ann Arbor yesterday to attend committee meetings of the high- way research board in Washington. The sessions will be held for several days during which mem- bers of the committee will be offer- ed an opportunity to visit the In- ternational Road congress now convening in Washington. MRCN IN FANCE PROBED. Parisian Judge Declares That His Court is Meant for Citizens Only. TREATY IS INVOLVEDy WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.--Chargcs of discrimination against Ameri- can property owners in France, which may involve the entire ques- tion of reciprocal Franco-Arneri- can treaty rights, are being inves- tigated by the state department. The attention of the department has been called to the case of Capt. Paul Rockwell, an American citi- zen, who r purchased a home in Paris in 1926 and has been defeat- ed in every effort since that time to obtain possession of his home from a Frenchman who was a ten- ant when the purchase was made. The tenant, it was alleged, upon learning the new owner was an American, declined to move from the premises under the terms of the so-called French rent laws. Under the Franco - American treaty of 1853, French citizens in the United States and American citizens in France were accorded equal right with the citizens of the country in which they resided so far as property ownership was con- cerned. This treaty now would ac- cord these rights to some 155,000 Frenchmen in the United States as compared with only about 12,000 Americans residing in France. Capt. Rockwell, who fought in the French army in the World war and was decorated for bravery, with several of the highest honors which can be given in France, has met with no success, however, in pressing his case as a test before the French courts on five different occasion- occaions L y d ia E AT THE Mendels sohn Don't Miss Theatre I, I 14A THOMAS Freshmen Women, Group 80. Members of this group will meet at the Diagonal walk entrance of Natural Science Auditorium a few min- utes before 3 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 10, for the assembly on "How to Study." b Ij The Lady from Louisiana Miss Thomas' wonderful range of voice, and the sympathy of interpretation with which she renders the Negro spirituals and creole melodies of the dd South harc made her popular in all parts of the- world: $25 in a name The J. E. F. Sandwich Shop (formerly El Patoi) is offering $25 to the person guessing the meaning of the initials J. E. F. They sand for a c o m n o n American name. Everyone is eligible for this prize. Just drop in for a meal and write your idea on the back of yo u r check. Contest closes October 31. AMERICA: "A genuitie artist to N. Y. World. her fingertips." ENGLAND: FRANCE: GERMANY: "Personality and a keen sense of mimi. cry . . . dramatic sense . . ."-London Times. "Invests each song with a great poetry." -LeFigaro. "Her singing is the sort that comes not only from the throat, but from the heart." -Uhr Abendblatt. S I Prominent representatives the contest. s t u d e n t will judge Tuesday, Oct. 14 Only Tickets Now On Sale CALL 6300 Main Floor $1.50 Balcony $1.00 J. E. F. Sandwich Shop 611 William Street ______ ' u 01 ____e _ _ . y II ACI _ at the MICHIGAN DON LOOMIS and His ORCHESTRA UNION II BILL SUTHERS DIRECTING 11 j 1111 III _