THE MICHIGAN DAILY )AILY OFFICI AL BULLET] ublication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all me the University. Copy received at the offige of the Assist e President until 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. Wisconsin Re-Affirms IN War-Revoked Degrees (Big Tei .News Service) MADISON, Wis., Jan. 26.-Hon- embers orary degrees rescinded by the fac- ant to ulty of the University of Wisconsin during the World War were recent- ly restored by that body. Promin- No. 90 ent among those affected is Count Johann Heinrich Von Bernsdorf, German ambassador to the United States, whose LL.D. awarded in 1911 was rescinded in 1917. Proposes Bank BillI ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION RENEWS FINANCING OF MORPHINE RESEARCH A. ..8 L. XLI. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1932 NOTICES Graduate School: Graduate students desiring to make their second ester elections in advance may do so this week. Please call at the duate School office for the necessary forms. The regular registra- period for the second semester will be from February 10 through ruary 15. New students, or students transferring from other Schools ,olleges, should register at that time. A student planning to transfer uld' ask the Secretary of his School or College to prepare and send he 6fflce of the Graduate School an official transcript of his under- duate record. G. Carl Huber,'Dean. graduate School: All graduate students who expect to complete .r work for a degree at the close of the present semester should call ;he office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall, to check their >rds and to secure'-the proper blank to be used in paying the diploma The fee should be paid not later than the first week in February. G. Carl Huber, Dean. University Loan Committee: The Loan Committee will meet Friday, 29, at 1:30 p. m., in Room 2, University Hall. Students who have I applications with the Office of the Dean of Students should call hat office for an appointment with the Committee. J.' A. Bursley, Chairman. Faculty, School of Education: A regular Faculty meeting of the ool of Education will be held in the Michigan League building Mon- Feb. 4, at 12 o'clock. C. 0. Davis, Secretary. Highway Transport Survey Course: The Highway Transport Survey rse, known as C. E. 44a will be given next semester on Saturday, at o'clock. This course will be given by Mr. J. E. Bamborough, of the feral Motors Company. This is the first time a course of this nature been offered, I shall be glad to confer with students-wishing further rmation with reference to the course. John S. Worley, Professor of Transportation Engineering. Sociology 51: Final examination rooms: A-E, Room 25 Angell Hall; 1025 Angell Hall; M-R, 101 Economics bldg.; S-Z, 231 Angell Hall. Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32-Examination Rooms: Spanish 1, N.S. Auditor- ; Spanish 31, 103 Romance Languages; Spanish 2, 32, in Room 231 ell Nlall. French 1, 2, 11, 31, 32 41, 71, 111, 112, 153, 154-Examination Rooms: rich 1, N.S. Auditorium; French 2, 11, in 205 Mason Hall; French 31 ., West Physics Lect.; Freich 31 P.M., 25 Angell Hall; French 32, in Romance Languages; French 41, 71, in 231 Angell Hall; French 111, 153, 154, West Gal. A.M. Hall. Room Schedule for Examination in English I. Feb. 1, p. m.: 25 A.H., m, Butchart; 35 A.H., Hoag; 231 A.H., Abbot, Weimer; 1025 A.H., :er, Ott; 1035 A.H., Everett; 2003 A.H., .Walter and Schenk; 2023 A.H., vens; 2225 A.H., Wells, Davis, Curtis; 205, M.H., Hornberger; Wetzel; 1 .L., Binkley, Morris, Tenxney; Natural Science Auditorium, Bader, in, Bliss, M. Williams, Rowe, Proctor, Peterson. Oratorical Association Ushers: Report at Hill Auditorium before 7:30 n., for lecture tonight. Women's Swimming Class for wives of Faculty Members and friends, ning session Thursday night at 8:15. Classes will be under the direc- i of Ass't Coach MacMahon. For irnformation call Uniom. or 8505. Romance Languages Journal Club meets at 4:10 p. m., Room 403 Ro- mance Languages bldg. Graduate students are cordially invited. Alpha Kappa Delta: Photograph to be taken at 7 p. m., Spedding's. Phi Sigma: The First Semester Phi Sigma Initiation will be held at 7:30 p. m., Room 3024 Museums building. , Dean Humphreys, Professor of English and Assistant Dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts will talk on the subject: "Scientist and Artist." Varsity Band: Rehearsal today at 7:15 in Morris Hall. Gargoyle Business Staff: Meeting of entire business staff at 4; try- outs be in office at 3 to mail out magazines. Frosh Frolic Committee meeting at 8:30 p. m., at the Union. Independents Attending J-Hop: Meeting at Union at 7:15 p. in., in Room 302. It is very important that you have your ticket number by' that time in order to make arrange- ments for your booth. Dr. Frederick B. Fisher will meet with the students for the regular Fireside Hour discussion g r o u p which meets at 4 o'clock at Wesley Hall. Hillel Foundation: Review class in Sociology 51 meets at 8 -p. m., at the Foundation. - COMING EVENTS Vandidates for the Doctor's. De- gree in Chemistry:The preliminary examination in organic chemistry will be held on Jan. 29, at 1 p. m., Room 151 Chemistry building. Observatory Journal Club will meet Thursday, Jan. 28, at 4:15, in the Observatory lecture room. Dr. Hazel M. Losh will review the ar- ticle "On the Behavior of Certain Simple Multiplets in Stellar Spec- tra" by Shajn. Tea will be served at 3:45. Associated Press Photo Senator Carter Glass of Virginia has proposed a bill for the relief of closed banks. It undertakes to alter the federal reserve and national banking laws. NAYBRAIHE The Rockefeller Foundation will continue to finance the search for a harmless form of the narcotic morphine, on which the Univer- sities of Michigan and Virginia are co-operating, f o r another three years, it has been announced. This investigation of the chem- istry and pharmacology of mor- phine, with the object of removing the dangerous characteristics of the drug, is being carried out un- der the auspices of the National Research Council through its drug addiction committee. With the funds originally avail- able this committee mapped out a three-year program. At the half- way mark in this program, Dr. Obesity Not Result of Gland Troubles, Says Local Doctor That obesity is not an internal disease in any sense of the word, but rather the result of a greater intake than release of energy, is the opinion of Dr. L. H. Newburgh, of University hospital, who claims this theory is rapidly supplanting, the old one that fat people are obese because of glandular difficul- ties. Dr. Newburgh points out that some people who go on diets find that at the end of the week they have gained weight. This is due to the fact that "there is a. pro-s gressive retention of water by the body and that weight added in this way conceals the loss of weight by the destruction of tissue." However, he points out, if the subject will wait not a mere week, but a month., the weight: will de-. crease when that caused by water declines. Het verifies this state- ment by using as an example atpat- ient who five months ago weighed 552 pounds and who was declared by many doctors as a victim of an internal disease, but when put up- on a careful diet, lost 165 pounds in that period of time. "Why does one eat more than he needs? Because thenprimitive instinct (appetite) is. no longer obeyed or because it has been per- sistently disregarded so long that it has become dulled and notifies its host too late that the bodily needs have been satisfied. "Obese persons commonly tell the physician that they do not overeat. Frequently they are telling the truth as they see it, for they have made the mistake of measuiring their intake of energy in terms of volume. Analysis will show that they prefer h i g h1y concentrated food, so that the amount that, will disten4 the stomach to the point, of satisfaction contains far too much energy." Charles W. Edmunds and Dr. Nath- an B. Eddy, in immediate charge of the work here, reported satisfac- tory progress. Nearly 100 new mor- phine derivatives and closely relat- ed substances have been prepared at the University of Virginia and, examined here. Reports on the chemistry of these substances have appeared from time to time in the American Journal of Chemistry, and the Journal of Pharmacology will publish shortly two papers on some of the pharmacological re- sults. On the basis of these results the Rockefeller Foundation has taken over the financial responsibility for the work and has granted to the National Research C o u. n c i 1 the funds for the continuance of the work for an additional three-year period. The sum granted by the Rockefeller Foundation not only will provide for the extension of the work to Jan. 1, 1936, bu will allow increase in the yearly bud- get so that the investigation can be pushed even more vigorously. Lambda Chis Defeat Theta'Ch is forTitle (Continued from Page 1) Bob Howell provided the margin of victory. In the four years that the Theta Chi squad has been winner, their goalie, Keith Bennett, has allowed but one goal to be scored against him. The winners were unscored upon this season, winning all five of -their games. Summary 25-yard free style: won by Town- send, Theta Chi; second, R. I. Sny- der, Lambda Chi Alpha; third, Ka- gay, Lambda Chi Alpha. Time-:12. 25-yard back stroke: won by Mil- ler, Theta Chi; second, R. A. Sny- der, Lambda Chi Alpha; third, Schaubel, Lambda Chi Alpha. Time .-14 and two-fifths. 25-yard breast stroke: won by Hartwell, Theta Chi; second, Ash- ton, Lambda Chi Alpha; third, Mohrhoff, Lambda Chi Alpha. Time -:15 and tw6-fifths. Diving: won by Ashton, Lambda Chi Alpha; second, Howell, Theta Chi; third, Earle, Theta Chi. 100-yard relay: Won by Lambda Chi Alpha, R. A. Snyder, Kagay, Schaubel, R. I. Snyder. Time- :48 and two-fifths. (Continued on Page 6) mics and kinematics. However, e: cept where I have been a victim circumstances, I have endeavor to follow, in my acquisitions, tl advice of a sagacious old teache His rule was to buy only encycl pedias. However, his definition the term was a broad one; it h eluded any book that he wished read over or even to consult mo than once." It has been said by those wl ,know him intimately, that Profe sor Cross can read a pfge over on a n'd know accurately everythii presented on the page, so remar able is- his memory. He has an i exfhaustible supply of ,anecdot( and his stories about historic characters have always been source of immense interest amoi his students. He likes to take motor tou around Europe and spends most his summers abroad, either in En land or on the continent. 01 summer he went to Tahiti, in t) South Seas, to visit a former Ha yard classmate. He likes golf, playing a gar marked. with accurate, well-aim shots. For pure recreation he rea books upon historical subjects. He is chairman of the Michigz Committee on Rhodes Scholarshil a Fellow of the Royal Historical S ciety, a member of the America Historical Association, and a cc responding member of thy Mass chusetts Historical Society. Professor Cross is always at hor to his friends and students, exce for a short period immediately a ter noon. Then comes the perm allotted to his after-luncheon na and, like other times included his systematic schedule, it is sa redly reserved for that purpo alone. Says Craft Is Best Airship Ever Constructed; Seek Possible Construction Errors. WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.-(IP)- Criticism of the world's largest air- ship-the Akron-was met_, today be ore the House Naval Committee wi h the statement that "she is the best airship ever constructed." Rear Admiral William A. Moffet, chief of the Navy Bureau of Aero- nautics, made that answer to pub- lished reports of defects in the Ak- ron at the opening of an investi- gation of her speed, weight, and safety. Rep. James V. McClintic, of Okla- homa, ranking Democrat on the committee, and sponsor of the in- vestigation, said his only interest was to determine whether her effi- ciency was impaired and whether she "offers the safety she should." He recalled dirigible accidents of the Roma, the Shenandoah, and the R-101, and said: "I felt it the duty of this commit- tee to see that no errors had oc- curred in construction of the Akron which might be duplicated in the siter ship." The sister ship to the Akron is now being built. w L D! 0 i BE- A A d Awmftw mom N S' T A T E , Special Steak Dinner 50c Served from 5 to 7:30 P. M. Try Our Noon Luncheon 25c or 35c BIRNEY'S 516 East Williams CONCERT TODAY ilight Organ Recital: Dr. Sigfrid'Karg-Elert, Professor 1 at the Leipzig Conservatory of Music, will appear t at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium. of as Com- guest Members of Thursday Group of! Dean's Luncheon Club: All members of this group are requested to be present at the meeting on Thurs- day, Jan. 28. Dr. O. S. Duffendack will give a demonstration and talk on Liquid Air. Have your shoes repaired by experts at low rates. STATE SHOE REPAIRING 301 % South State Street Next to Wagner T 'I. MEETINGS TODAY University Girls' Glee Club: Important rehearsal in the Union Ball- >m at 7:30 p. n Everyone must be present. Varsity Glee Club: Important "Robin Hood" rehearsal at 7:30 p. m., Union ballroom. No rehearsal Thursday evening, Jan. 28. I ~ ychology 31: Students who ed the last experiment (Rea- ng) report ,for make-up 7-10 ., at Pharmacology building. irestry Club meeting, '7:30 p. m, ,oom 2039 Natural Science bldg. Carl L. Hubbs, Curator of .es in the Museum of Zoology give an illustrated lecture on "Game Fishes of Michigan." >ne interested is cordially' in- 1. athematical Tea in Room 3001, ,at 4 o'clock. You wor name on n't find our Victor rec- i TONIIGHTI AT HILL AUDITORIUM / John B." Kennedy a 8 O'CLOCK ords but it has ap- peared on I- Speaking on many chqcks paying for good music. "What Makes Personality" j !I MAX LEWIS Gail-Corbett 4917-6470-5870 Oratorical. Assoclation FOURTH LECTURE OF SERIES 75c COPYRIGHT FICTION (Three for two Dollars) 75c / IN TICKETS $1.00 1932 World- Teleram Almanac, 60cA 'I - M1 , T C l A T