THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pr' T H EM-Hr.N..A I. . .w...P..a.. .n..1ar. v 7 Li .O . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ublication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members f the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to ie President until 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. To Those Teaching Architectural and Decorative Design Students: Will you kindly report those of the above students whose work is un- satisfactory, sending the reports in not later than April 7 to Room 207 Architecture building. Emil Lorch. Sorority House Presidents: If any sorority houses are to be open dur- ing spring vacation, please notify the office of Dean of Women at once. Women Students Remaining in Ann Arbor During Spring Vacation: We have in the office of the Dean of Women a list of houses which will be open during spring vacation for girls who are staying in Ann Arbor. istory of Sororities (Continued From Page 5.) scholarships and fellowships. Prominent Tri-Delt alumnae in- clude Amy Ogden Parmelee, for- mer national president, well known in the fraternity world as a former president of the National Panhel- lenic congress. Mrs. Parmelee has also edited the Trident for ten y ears, a position which she still i, CHICAGO GEOLOGIST, Auction of Colonial tamps to Be Held HE RE FOR L ECTUEat Union Saturda VOL. XLI , - Prof. of II. THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1932 No. 138 Bastin to Discuss Original Copper Deposits Today in University Talk. "'I NOTICES President and Mrs. Ruthven will not be at home on Sunday, April 10. I'he student tea on Wednesday, April 13, will also be omitted. * NOTICE TO SENIORS!-GRADUATE STUDENTS! Diploma Fees Payable Now! Early settlement is necessary for the preparation of diplomas. In no ase will the University confer a degree at Commencement upon any :tudent who fails to pay this fee before 4 o'clock, p.m., May 25. In case he Faculty does not recommend any payor, the fee will be refunded on urrender of receipt for payment. The above applies also to fees for all pecial certificates. Can'didates for degrees or- certificates should AT ONCE fill out card .t office of the Secretary of THEIR COLLEGE or SCHOOL, pay the ;ashier* of the University and have card receipted, and file indicated ection of this receipted card with the Secretary of THEIR COLLEGE r SCHOOL. (Literary College students please note tliat blank forms hould be obtained and receipted cards filed in the Recorder's Office, ooom 4, University Hall.) Please do not delay till the last moment, but attend to this matter t once. We must letter, sign, and seal approximately 2,500 diplomas nd certificates, and we shall be greatly helped in this work by early ayment of the fee and the resulting longer period for preparation. Shirley W. Smith, Vice-Precdent and Secretary of the University of Michigan. The Cashier's Office is closed on Saturday afternoons.1 School of Music: Except under unusual circumstances, no course iay be dropped after April 9 without receiving a grade of E. Earl V. Moore. , Final Freshman Pageant Rehearsal Schedule Renaissance ............................Monday, 4:00-W ednesday, Gavotte ................................. Monday, 4:00-Thursday, Strauss Waltz ...........................Tuesday, 4:00-Thursday, Greek Warrior and Greek Priestess ...... Tuesday, 4:30-Thursday, Primitive ........................... .Tuesday, 5:00-Thursday, Modern ...........................Monday, 4:30-Wednesday, Ballet .................. ............. Monday, 5:00-W ednesday, All in Barbour Gymnasium. This is the permanent schedule will continue after Spring Vacation. 7:00 4:00 4:00 4:30 5:00 4:30 5:00 and holds. Among the other prominent alumnae are R. Louise Fitch, edu- cator, lecturer, and writer; Sara Haardt Mencken, young American writer; Louise McPhetridge Thad- en, noted aviatrix, and 'holder of many women's air records; Eunice Chapin, editor and novelist; Marion Laurence Nelson, playwright; har- riet Lathrop Thayer, artist, and Marion Humke, publisher. Surplus Nursery Stock will be on sale at the 'Forest Nursery, near the Botanical Gardens on Packard Road, April 9-1l. N. L. Munster, Forest Techniielan. ACAD)EMIC NOTICE Speech 31, 32, 33, and 34: All students enrolled in these courses expected to attend the University Oratorical Contest to be held in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre tonight at 8 o'clock. LECTURES TODAY are the hail this morning. COlMING EVENTS University Lecture at 4:15, Room 2054 N.S. bldg., Prof. Edson S. Bas- tin, Head of the Geology Department. of the University of Chicago on, "Origin of Copper Deposits." Ann Arbor Art Association announces a lecture by Paul J. Sachs, Professor of Fine Arts at Harvard University and Associate Director, Fogg Art Museum: "French Paintings and Drawings of the Nineteenth Century," at 4:15 p.m., in the West Gallery, Alumni Memorial Hall. Public Lecture: Subject, Some Telling Events in Recent History, Lane Hall, Thursday, at 4:15. Re markablo and little known events in the history of the Baha'i Movement will be recounted by Mrs. Bertha Hyde Kirkpatrick, sponsored by the Baha'i Study Group. The public is cordially invited. Automobile Regulation: The Automobile Regulation will be lifted for pi Spring vacation pcriod beginning on Friday, 12 noon, April 8, anti. Iding on Monday, 8 a.m., April 18. W. B. Rea, Assistant to the Dean. Scholarships in Columbia Law School: A small number of scholar- lips in the Columbia Law School ranging from $300 to $500 are open men of the present senior class. Those desiring further information e asked to come to my office. Application should be made immediately interested. John R. Effinger. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Except under traordinary circumstances, courses dropped after April 8 wifl be re- rded- with a grade of E. Graduate School: Students enrolled in the Graduate School will not permitted to drop courses after the Spring Vacation. A course is not ficially dropped until it is reported in the offce, of the Graduate School, Dom 1014 Angell Hall. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for the removal of completes will be Saturday, April 9. This is in accordance with the ling that if credit is to be given for a course' the work in the coursef ust be completed by the end of the eighth week of the semester ofI sidence next succeeding that in which the course was elected. Students, School of Education: Permission to drop courses without grades will not be given after Friday, April 8, except under extra- :inary circumstances. No course is considered officially dropped un- s it has been reported in the office of the Recorder of the School of lucation, Room 1437 U. Elementary School. Poetry Reading Contest: The preliminaries for the Poetry Interpre- Lion Contest to be given by the Interpretative Arts Society will be held April 28 and 29. The final contest will come in May. Each contest-' t will be allowed twelve minutes in which to talk about and interpret >m memo y a group of lyrics or other shorter poems of his own choos- . Those who have not already given their names to Mr. Hollister, e asked to do so. University Lectures Monday, April 18, 4:15 p.m., in Natural Science Auditorium, Dr. A. C. Seward, Cambridge University, England: "Plant Records of the Rocks" (illustrated). Friday, April 29, at 4:15 p.m., in Natural Science Auditorium, Pro- fessor R. H. Whitbeck, of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin: "Life on the Argentine Pampa" (illustrated). Friday, April 29, 4:15 p.m., Room 2003 Angell hall, Professor W. A. Oldfather, Head of the Classical Department, University of Illinois: "Levels of Culture." Phi Eta Sigma initiation banquet will be held Friday, April 22, at the Michigan Union, at 5 p.m. Alpha Epsilon Mu: This is to re- mind you of a very important meet- ing, the first Tuesday after vaca- tion, April 19. New members will be considered. Faculty Women's Club: The an- nual luncheon will be held at the Michigan League, Thursday, April 21, at one o'clock. Dues may be sent; to Mrs. C. B. Joeckel, 841 Oakland, or may be paid at the luncheon. Spring Vacation: Final reserva- tions for official student specials are necessary at the Parrot from 10 a.m., to 10 p.nm., today.t "The Origin of Copper Deposits" is the title of a University lecture to be given this afternoon at 4:15 o'clock in room 2054 of the Natural Science building by Prof. Edson S. Bastin, head of the geology depart- Iment of the University of Chicago. A luncheon in honor of Professor Bastin, a Michigan graduate, will be given tomorrow afternoon at the Union by the staffs of the geology and mineralogy departments. Three-more University lectures of public interest have been announc- u d for after spring vacation. The first of these will be a talk m Monday, April 13, by Dr. A. C. Sward, ,professor of botany at *tm bridge university, who will talk _n "Plant Records of the Rocks." The lecture will be given at 4:15 'clock in the Natural Science audi- torium. Prof. R. H. Whitbeek, of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin, will give an ilustrated lecture on the subject, Life in the Argentine Pampas," on Friday, April 29, at 4:15 o'clock, also in Natural Science auditorium. Class Cutting Proves to Be Poor Practice' (''I' ualto ',he Daiily) URBANA, Ill., April 6.-Habitual -ntting of classes at the University of Illinois is a poor policy for stud- ents, according to a decent survey 'y the College of Commerce. It an- nounces that "cutters" are dropped at the end of the first semester at the rate of one to six, while the . non-cutters" are dropped at the rate of one to 16. EVENTS TODAY Political Science Journal Club meets in the Seminar Room, 3-5 p.n. Observatory Journal Club meets at 4:15, in the Observatory lecture room. Professor L. A. Hopkins will speak on The Three Body Problem. Tea will be served at 3:45.j Applied Mechanics Coloquium: Mr. S.,J. Mikina will give a lecture with experiments including research apparatus on "New Research Work in Vibrations in the Westinghouse Research Department,' at 7:30 p.m., Room 101, Hydraulics Laboratory, West Engineering building. Oratorical Contest: The University Oratorical Contest will be helds in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre tonight at 8 o'clock. The winner of the contest will receive the Chicago Alumni Medal for excellence in oratory An auction of United States' and British Colonial stamps will be held Saturday at the Union at the first annual meeting of the stamp club.; of southern Michigan. This meeting, an ail-day coiven- stamp collecting. A banquet, which is the main feature of the conven- tion, will be held in the evening. One of the speakers will be Prof.' Howard B. Lewis of the physiolog- ical chemistry departmient, who will talk on "Charities." In addition to the auction, there will be a general'bourse. Kenneth D. Lamb, editor of the stamp sec- tion of the Sunday Detroit News, will attend the meeting. Health Service to Be Open During Vacation Spring vacation wiil bring the health service a rushing business with five operations scheduled for each day. While most students leave for home a large number will stay in Ann Arbor and report to the health service. The influenza epidemic that re- cently filled the 24 beds upset the regular routine and forced many to wait for operations. Throughout the vacation doctors will e on call and the health service will be open from eleven to twelve. Phone Phone WOMEN TELL LIES! Girls tell twice as many white lies as boys, according to researches made by the psychology department at Columbia University. Farmers near West Plains, Mo., started 1932 spring plowing in mid- February,favored by total absence of snowfall during the winter. Phone 9000 Phone RED ARROW CAB f and will represent the University in the Northern Oratorical League contest to be held at Cleveland in May. The public is cordially invited to attend. No admission charge. Board of Representatives meeting in the Committee Room of the League at 4 o'clock. Sigma Rho Tau: Special open meeting, at 7.30 o'clock tonight, in Room 302, Michigan Union. A public debate will be held on the question: Resolved, That the immediate com- pletion of the St. Lawrence Water- way project is feasible. An import- ant business meeting will follow. All members are urged to be pre- sent. Political Science 92 examination will be held in Room 1025 Angell Vacation Final Reservations 'roday for Direct Official Student Expresses to SPECIAL TodayOnly! BUFFALO SCRANTON NEW YORK CHICAGO ST. LOUIS CLEVELAND CINCINNATI $6.80 rd. $14.95 rd. $16.80 rd. $5.00 rd. $10.00 nrd. $5.00 rd. $7.50 rd. $2.50 rd. $3.60 rd. trip trip trip trip trip trip trip) trip) All Leather Goods Banners Are Cheaper Now's the time to decorate-For one week we are offering our BANNERS, PENNANTS, BLANKETS, PILLOWS at One-Half Off TOLEDO FLINT at 1-3Off W AHR'S VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES All reservations at these specia rates necessary today at Parrot 10 am to 10 pm Two Campus Bookstores East University Avenue South State Street ngnerlee operated announces pre-spri gVacation dances don loomis bands thursday night- nine until twelve no cover charge-no increase in prices-no minimum BOWLING ALLEYS I- I BARBER SHOP I i I ---I I I TAP ROOM Q T Z. _1 L I I U 'U I' ICHI 0 A UNIO p v i 1 w I w I P