0 { THE MICHIG;AN DAILY WEDNI Y,JA ADACDLBAYIGURE IN HAWAJ A: T-IIAN UDER CSE' . ."gr -.C ES 9c* O FFp l r [ E R E I AT SUMER ERM I HOB, C'IVES TAL K Ani~rctic Explcrations, Lecture Subject Given. to Graduate Students, Faculty. Lib'lary of Congress Classifying hs Among Special Subjects Contained in 'Session. N 'W'YRKE1R To TEACH Much Second-YFear Work Listed, 11 cludmi Seminar in Bibliography. The 1932 Sumumer Session in li- ~bra*' sdience will offer a variety Sof courss Dr. W. W. Bishop, librar- t an, said yesterday. SMargaret Mann, associate profes- sor of library science, will give the Sfist-semecster elementary course in Scataloging and classiication. Ad- Svanced cataloging and Library of &'ongrss classification will be giv- en by R. FLI Gjesness, former as- sistant University libarian, and now chief of t:(oir)+ rations di- i vision of the New ork Public Li- brary. To Teach Reference. &~S W. McAllister, associate librar- Sian, will teach the course in refer- 'ence work and bibliography, whil Mrs. Vera S. Cooper, librarian o DePauw University, will return tc Srepeat this summer the work sh Sgave last summer in book selectior and yin library administration. Edith Thomas, in charge of l- ''bra~y extension,- wll give th course in care and use of ephemr- ai mnxierial, ~nd Letitia McQuillan librarian ofIKingswod s c h o o 1 Cranbrook, will repeat the coure inw school library work for teacher- librarians v, ich she has given far thlast two semesters. Second Year Corss. In atdl'ion to advanced catalog- ing n~dlibrary of Congress classi- fiatio, the following second-yea courses will be offered: -nationa. and regional bibliography, semina in 'special administrative and bibli- ographical p r o b 1 e in s, and tw courses, offered by C. B. Shaw, li- brariani of Swarthmore College-a iseminar in college library adminis- tra len, and bibliogaphy of Englis lhistor~ and literature. ¢Unriversit Transportation Club Will Hear Economics Prof essor\ "Transitionin #,Transportation" w v;l be .the title of the address whic Prof. Shorey Peterson of the Eco- nompics department will deliver a the Annual .Open Smoer of the University Transportation Club tc be held at 98 o'clock tonight, in Roapm.1,215° of the E. Engineering building. The main theme of the evening's program will be progress in tas trn-portation aiad Professor Peterson is expected to discuss recent advance- riets in railroads and also their Iconditioxn during the present eco- xomiYc crisis i oreign transportation methods specially will yeeive attention where rails qxe considered, and carryi~ng facilities throughout the Vnited States will be brouht out in the riscussion. Hugh-' Hotchkiss, '32E, who is chairman of tho program commit- tee urged yesterday that all mm me-bers in good standing attend this opn smoker and a special invita\ 'tibn was issued to all students in-= ', terested in any phase of transpor- tation. The Transportation Club is not an engineering schlool organization. Its memabers miiay be enrolled in any school on campus. Refreshments will be served. After the 'smoker a sh'ort busines meeting of the club will be held; FAIRY r TALES Professor Prescribes Them. for College Students. (Vii ' Ic, ,''z ., .'r'iC2 COLUMBIUS, Ohio, Jan. ] .-Col- lege students should read fairy tales, but theyr don't! This is the opinion of Professor Josephh R. Taylor of the depart- ment of E.nglish. Ohio State Uni- versity, who, believes that the stu- dent reading diet could be better balanced by such selections. Student yeactions , to :fairy tales are that tVZey are a lot of nonsense and unreal happenings, and,, "when such readtig ,-sulggestions are madeF in class the ;tudnents chortle." "A story such as Alice in Wont- derilnd' does a student much more Mild Local Weather Produces Disc-_ussion Fs!reakish ,weat'er conditions with. the m1tidst; winter recred in miode-rn timws have (excited discu ssi'n and a, rumor thiatv Prof. W-illin-U. Hobbs, Dircrtor of the Geology Laboratory?, has advanced scientific reaso nsfor the current nieteorolog-i r *ca- prices. Yesterday Prof. Hlobbs said that the rumor is unto Tnd- ed. Explani An of th (existence of the rum or ties in the:, fact~ that Professor Hoebbs -,has recently been interested In inestg~tions ilii renlandE1=.wh'_ich mla y !ead to mnethods foir predI,-cting weather conditions far in Lie future.# December of 1931 ill go on rcerd as the wart-est December ii 1" (Picture of Mrs. Fortes que copyrighted by Harris an The United States Senate lhas ordc tred Attorney Genexal Mit i> tions on the Island ofl av yp e se 3 : awiaheiinP -,i a d m Joseph Khh ',Mrs :-an v ilILI e Fortesqlue (upper N w Yr Wa h n t n lf) eywvinadhrLieut. Thomas H.Msie(pr right), United State. navalof- cer, have b. en charged wit -I3 t-11 miurde.r, Kahahawai was oni; (of have me c tried for an attack + Mr4.ls. Thaia MS°;i", the lieut- nlantswfin rs rteoo daughter. % br)eak of a-4 a.e on methods of pro- tection. Mf. Vernor will also speak to pupils of the Ann Arbor and Uni- :versity high schools, while Harry K. Rogers, known' as "Smoky" Rogers, from the sane bureau as Mr. Ver- nor, will present a clown act before, the grade-school children of the cit. The ~act is an exceptionally entertaining one, calculated. to in- press simple safety truths upon the minds of the young audience. The aim of the campaign is to remove. every fire hazard in Ann Arbor. A report of all, dangerous conditions will be submitted to the state fire department, which will later send instructions' for the re- mnoval of lthe hazardous condritins. _ajesti 7:00-9:00 : .: i r; . I ; ; , a; 7 t W olverine Nix. ,rugra " ; Franca ise du .VIII siecle" is the I 1 ---- subject of a lecture to be delivered WCo-ztiTvued fr-omPage 1) The Hsia school, which is in French by Prf.John W. Eaton, ed the end,. Haley put on a terrific ; supporte- d by the King's Daughters,' head of the German department, , drive in an effort to score, sending Kiwanis_, 0al': Society, and pri- at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon in menbutthegoaie ownthevat dos t ; a he ubjct f Froom 103, Romance Language build- ill, melu h oledw h aedntos a h ujc fing. The lecture will be the third ice. Tompkins fought them off de- jya lk by 1rf.L. . Keeed; of the; of a series that is being sponsored spite weak support at times, and" psychology t-,rtent, yesterday by Le Cercle, Francais, honorary Michigan cashed in on his work by after noon over the University-of- I French organization. ~priniting down the ice to s cor e -irIe~ Professor Eaton shall devote his three more gas. lecture largely to' illustration, with During the third canto, when Em 'Ii sbOil si rofessor Kole examnples from eighteenth century my Reid, s k a t in g exceptionally ler, "C w, ts mebership from French literature, his belief that hard,,evaded the entire Haley te;am I thejveIle(I tiets undergoing! the Englishman has succeeded 're- ioa score,' thle crowd, n rberig io'i l e~tei and ranges in markably in maintaining an imdi- ,mly about GM, provided, suc'h an l,, ,,n r , viduality and independence. MAE CLARKE-_:KENT DOUGLASS EXTRA ADDED EDGAR KENNEDY "~THANKS AGAI"N" HEARST WORLD NEWS 'EVENTS ____ ____COMIG SA URDA -__ ____ /GLORIA SANSONin / uproar that the officials -to 1d VZ. ju1 1y II rUI 11.1I A) Il 'he game for more than two mm-hih choL utes. After the game players showed praiseworthy reserve, although the spectators were stopped in incipi- ent brawls by the appearance. or police. Officials, it was understood, disapproved of the actions of thei ,roved during and after the game. The most serious casualty of t hr evening was e badly wrenched leg' suffered by Abe Bigham, Haley ~en- uer. Bigham played out the game, :ut on his way to the dressing room collap'sed on t~ie stairs. He was restored and managed to limp from the building. Coaches said a seri-- ous muscle injury had torn svlp- porting tissues.# .Reid and Crossm nntook tKc honors on offense, although in the-- first period their stellar passingj game was held in check by Meyers,1 Haley defense,. Later in the game, as the Haley team went farther, down the ice, Reid and Crossman went down on individual dashes that drew roars from the crowd. Captain Tompkins continued 't play the same brand of hockey that has made cr'itics declare that he is of International league caliber. In the last period Michigan show- ed its best scoring hockey. Reid. with thr~ee minuf~s left to go, pu-tI on a solo act, taking the puck in front of h-is owvn goal. His defexs men blocked a path for him, ,ften 1 'n-ic purpose of the ,;a hoojl is toI keep rp.1 i f rorri 'thinking too muchabou thir ilnesesProf es- sr I : e tistalda ndto make it possibe forchilde iitocontinue in I eteia~the hospital. which e o he { p-ckpdcwn thel ice alion, Heor,;,ated the last defns ma, ndhook, ed the disk hIntoanunretd corner of thel net to scor e. our'soe SuC ma V Crp1 '1n had previ- in tha.,t period with a ci. , r &D . a _. C _ eyr E. zBigh_:111 ~Ti'liarh, -Iaggety, Trmo, Ken}c-d. Refe ree, F o,, of t ,n, is ere:Crsmr ec on,-': o:A.dhm :4) m~d oeiid GrSsmlan '7:55), Reid ):) i.'. cYna.t. : C.Uunln II oe Advetsn ay?, Here i the Activitpj Schedule of a Michi~qn Student. He rises In the morning, washes with agodoafrde- tisements sa.y that it is, puts -on a well advertised Suit, eats bi~ea.k- fast ine a well advertised spot and undcrneath .an advertised coat I, p and ora n-nc publicly proclaimed shoes he attends classes. Here I he ;putahes an advertsed pen o reads an equally well broa- aed ok After* the day full of uses cf elladvertised corn I Irnocdities he gocs"Lo sleep on mattress pronounced as worthy 4t h1,is rest. I IIt is tvue that advertising pays. Students a1e always oil the~ r to purchase only those articles which can and are f ariessly prc,-es_1. to the { 41 market. Merchants who have something meritorious to sell should watch I ~the college student and see how he purchases that which is pulblicly I ~proclainied. i j/ ,a ' :,.;i< Year a :). W . 3:1 '. ' :' " i ' ~ a 3 r: ',,':F{ y . . w pr..: '.. ',app', . . 'r .r s :: ... II JAET ~- AT7, CHARLE' 74 - s_._ . ..~' -. ._. _ .. . - _. ... E L .,a __ ' I ..,.__ .. ' ..to P''__._ _. I B!Mf~O 'Y_.A..L.._K a_ V ii{N i 1l I I ',,