/ THEMICHIGAN DAILY -iii ILY OFFICIAL BULLETINI III BUREAU MAKES POSSIBLE ENTRANCE OF STUDENTS WITHOUT EXAMINATION . Ii ublication in the f the University. he President until Bulletin is constructive notice to all members Copy received at the office of the Assistant to 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. VOL. XLII. FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1932 No. 139 NOTICES President and Mrs. Ruthven will not be at home on Sunday, April 10. le student tea on Wednesday, April 13, will also be omitted. Automobile Regulation: The Automobile Regulation will be lifted for e Spring vacation period beginning on Friday, 12 noon, April 8, and iding on Monday,.8 a.m., April 18. W. B. Rea, Assistant to the bean. NOTICE TO SENIORS'!-GRADUATE STUDENTS! Diploma Fees Payable Now! Early settlement is necessary for the preparation of diplomas. In no se will the University confer a degree at Commencement upon any udent who fails to pay this fee before 4 o'clock, p.m., May 25. In case .e Faculty does not recommend any payor, the fee will be refunded on rrender of receipt for payment. The above applies also to fees for all ecial certificates. Seldom publicized is the work of the Bureau of Co-operation with Educational Institutions,theadedby SProf. G. E. Carrothers of the educa- tion school. It is this department which makes it possible for stud- ents from 600 accredited high schools in Michigan to enter the University without having to sur- mount the barrier of an entrance examination. The bureau has until this year existed as the Division of High School Inspection. By action of the University council last February, its work was extended to include co- operative activity with junior and senior colleges in the state, in or- der to keep courses of study ap- proximately parallel, and thus re- lieve the-difficulty usually found in REIEW OF FRENCH ART IS PRESENTED Sachs, Speaking on Nimctcentlh Century, Calls It Most Self-Conscious- transferral from one college to an- other. Of primary importance, however, is the routine work that occupied all the time of the bureau before its activities were extended. Ap- proximately 600 of the 725 high schools in Michigan have been ac- credited-several of them, notably Ann Arbor high, for more than half a century. Although most of these are larg- er schools, there arq in the list 51 with only thiee teabhers, and 101 more having only four on the fac- ulty. With figures of this sort, the uninitiated may question the value of the accrediting process. Nevertheless, the decision is so important that the North Central Association of Colleges and Second-I ary Schools, an organization com- prising 2,480 high schools in a wide region, requires that a Michigan school must be accredited by the Uniiversi ty before it can be passed by the associatioo. Michigan has entered 211 of its schools iii the as- sociation, or nine per cent or the total. Tr roe (cofinite standards, relating 1o preparation of teachers, teaching load, and equipment, must be met before a school is held eligible to seid its students to the University withoilt an entrance examination. First, all teachers of academic :subjects must have a college degree. Although at present this railing is limited to academic teachers, the bureau is lookin3 toward extension of pl J>rinciple to include each 's en ii re faculty. A develop- I, ,l; in 1 . his (i reetion is evidenced H rm, jifp'roar worked out by . . V. Mloore of the m iusic chou1, (ral ining a four-year 1)ro- ' IOU ; I i isiteachers to imeet Stieli;:, rtqgii'i~neflt. The programn has hot as yet been approved.. Leder of 'Bolters' TUBIRCULOSIS LOl IN MEDICAL SCHOOL One Case Discovered in Senior Class; 21 Per Cent Found at Pennsylvania. Michigan senior mnecrcal students are healthier than the medical stu- dents of Pennsylvania, at least as far as tuberculosis is concerned, ac- cording to recent investigations. X- ray examinations of the medical students in Pennsylvania authori- tatively reported as showing defi- nite evidence of tuberculosis infil- tratio'in 21 per cent of the seniors. This is an unusually high percen- age. A similar study of MichiganI senior medical students has just been completed with the finding of only one very early case. This is only 0.8 per cent and checks with the health service's other exper- 1 iences with the disease. The Health Service for March this year showed a great increase over; March, 1930, in the number of dis- pensary and room calls, infirmary, and hospital patients, and acute r ir fn infopin rrntirr Confesses Robberies AssociatedPressPhoto Donald Loftus, '6, told Chicago police that he singlehanded had roblwd more than a dozen hanks from California to.Ohio, and taken more than $100,000 loot. ie was arrested at Mishawaka, Ind. Candidates for degrees or certificates should AT ONCE fill out card offlce of the Secretary of THEIR COLLEGE or SCHOOL, pay the ashier* of the University and have card receipted, and file indicated etion of this receipted card with the Secretary of THEIR COLLEGE SCHOOL. (Literary College students please note that blank forms iould b- obtained and receipted cards filed in the Recorder's Office, om 4, University Hall.) Please do not delay till the last moment, but attend to this matter once. We must letter, sign, and seal approximately 2,500 diplomas i1 certificates, and we shall be greatly helped in this work by early tyment of the fee and the resulting longer period for preparation. Shirley W. Smith, Vice-President and Secretary of the University of Michigan. Fhe Cashier's Ofllce is closed on Saturday afternoons. Season May Festival Tickets: The "over the counter sale" of course ekets for the May Festival will begin Monday, April 18, at the School Mu"Isic offece. Orders received by mail or left at the office prior to that date, will filled in sequence in advance. Course price $6.00, $7.00 and $8.00 (six ncerts), except that if Festival coupon from Choral Union season ket is returned, the price is reduced to $3.00, $4.00 and $5.00 each. Students, School of Education: Permission to drop courses without " grades will not be given after Friday, April 8, except under extra- dinary circumstances. No course is considered officially dropped un- s it has been reported jn the office of 'the Recorder of the School of ucation, Room 1437 U. Elementary School. Women Students Remaining in Ann Arbor During Spring Vacation: e have in the office of the Dean of Women a list of houses which will open during spring vacation for girls who are staying in Ann Arbor. Sorority House Presidents: If any sorority houses are to be open dur- spring vacation, please notify the office of Dean of Women at once. ACADEMIC NOTICE Actuarial Examinations will be held in Room 406 Mair Library on nday, April 18, from 9-12 a.m. Afternoon examinations in Room 3201 gell Hall from 1:30-4:30. EXHIBITION An Exhibition of 51 paintings from the 3tth annual exhibition of e Art Institute of Chicago is being shown in the West Gallery of the unmni Memorial Hall under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art Associa- 1n. The exhibit will be open from 1:30 to 5 o'clock until April 12. F O R M I I T ARY B A L L Presentation Sabers Attached to Programs Bearing Seal Selected by R.O.T.C. Miniature black an( gold presen- tation sabers engraved "U. of M. '32" have been chosen as favors for this year's Military ball. The tiny swords are attached by-a blue tassel to a dance program bearing the University seal. These favors are more ornate than those of last year. The scab- bard is of fiber, and the handle inset .with black enamel. They are of the same length, eight inches Purchasers of tickets may secure them at the ball or at Balfour's. Ticket sales to R.O.T.C. men were started Thursday. They will be thrown open to the public immedi- ately after spring vacation. Mem- bers of the Army and Navy club may purchase them during vaca- tion. Although the orchestra will not be made known until students re- turn, members of the music con- mittee stated that it is popular on the campus, and played at one of the largest class functions last year. IT'S A GOOD IDEA- Try dropping in some t i m e, for delicious home made ice cream -It's good!-So are the other foit n ta in specials at Sugar Bowl 109 South Main' Addressing more than 150 persons; in the west gallery of Alumni Me- morial hall, Paul J. Sachs, profcs- sor of fine arts at Harvard and as- ,, iate director of the F mu- Seum, thoroughly covered the a t of Prance d(1 j wrin 1r1 i Wi tee II.n 3 r'y.,I "No period,' id ' ,r>0 IIS -was ever more cncos( t r than was this one. Yet i v pended more u po the isoi jiasi for' theimisirto ha nth(- age preceding them." Professor Sachs correlated the art movements of that century with. the political developments. "The neo-classic movemen, he said, "approximated the revolution of 1789, the romantic movement was, coincident with the revolt of 1830, the period of realism began with the revolution of 1848, ihe time of impressionism came with the agi- tation in 1870 and the cubist move- ment preceded the cataclysm of the World War." Illustrating his lecture fully with many slides, Professor Sachs refer- red to every important painter and drawer of the nineteenth century, dwelling at great length upon the leaders of each movement. "The greatest masters of this century," he said, "copied with rev- erent care the work of their pred- ecessors before tlley felt able to do creative work themselves. Through- )ut this restless century, however, they were always searching for a new ideal in art. Influenced pro- foundly by the political upheavals of the times this endless search found expression in the large num- ber of artistic movements." Professor Sachs is a well-known authority upon this subject, having done a great deal of research in it. He was secured for this lecture by the Ann Arbor Art association and Mrs. Bradley-Moore Davis, its pres- ident. resprauory nieconsi. ie num- . ber of dispensary calls jumped from History of Sororities 7,18 to 10,209; the number of room - calls from 194 to 264; infirmary pa- (Contivitted From Page 5.) tients from 116 to 165; while the ty was established in April, 1885, number of hospital patients drop- with six charter members. It was p!d from 40 to 22. not organized from a local group, The February increase in colds but was founded from the outside. continued until about March. The Prominent Delta Gamma alum- colds were generally'mild, although nae include Grace Abbott, chief of there were the usual complicntions the children's bureau in the Unit- nd (ft death. ed States department of Labor; --------Ruth Bryan Owens, daughter of the late William Jennings Bryan, and Omember of the House of Represen- tatives; Ada L. Comstock, former clean of wmna h nvriyo Minnesota and Smith college, and Flpresidentof Radcliffe college since 1923; Edith Abbott, of the Univer- sity of Chicago faculty, a social Professor Says Junior College worker, and author of several books Transfers Show Better on social service work; Elsie Sing- master, novelist; Margaret Wilkin- Scholarship. son, poet and author, and Mrs. Har- riet Connors Brown, author of the Superiority in scholarship over all famous "Grandmother Brown's other groups is evidenced by junior Hundred Years." college students who enter the University in their fifth semester, Four schools next fall-possibly a according to a recent article by fifth-will have Gopher talent di- Prof. Wray H. Congdon of the Edu- recting their gridiron squads for cation school, writing in the Junior the first time. { College Journal. A statistical study of three groups - students entering from high schools, from junior 'colleges, and from higher institutions - indicat- ed this superiority. The figures were taken from a study of the graduating classes from 1924 to 1928. "So far as this study is indica- tive," says the article, "the follow- ing conclusions seems to be estab- lished; the junior college students have higher scholastic records be- fore entrance than either of the other groups; they maintain this superiority during their period at the University; they have fewer cases of disciplinary action; they graduate more individuals; they have a smaller number leaving with doubtful scholarship records; and more members of the group receive honors at graduation." SUPERIOR. MILK and ICE CREAM Associated Press Photo Solid Brick Tutti Fruitti Cosmopolitan Club .ational Program of EVENT TODAY members are cordially invited to attend the In- the Perry school, Packard street, at 8 o'clock. Mrs. Ruth Haynes Carpenter will head a delegation of bolting Minne- sota democrats to the party's con- vention in Chicago to contest for seats with "regulars" from her state who favor the nomination of Gov. Franklin Roosevelt. PUNCHES-FANCY MOLDS COMING EVENTS University Lectures Monday, April 18, 4:15 p.m., in Natural Scie ice Auditorium, Dr. A. C. ward, Cambridge University, England: "Plant Records of the Rocks" lustrated). Friday, April 29, at 4:15 p.m., in Natural Science Auditorium, Pro- sor R. H. Whitbeck, of the University of Wisconsin: "Life on the gentine Pampas" (Illustrated). Friday, April 29, 4:15 p.m., Room 2003 Angell hall, Professor W. A. ifather, Head of the Classical Department, University of Illinois: wvels of Culture." Research Club: The annual memorial meeting will be held Wednes- y, April 20, at 8 p.m., in the Ballroom of the Michigan League. Papers "Spinoza," by Professor DeWitt Parker, and "Leeuwenhoek," by Dr. ri V Weller will be presented. The members of the Women's Research ub and the Junior Research Club are cordially invited to attend. Faculty Women's Club: The annual luncheon will be held at the chigan League, Thursday, April 21, at one o'clock. Dues may be sent Mrs. C. B. Joeckel, 841 Oakland, or may be paid at the luncheon. Phone 23181 DURING SPRING VACATION DINE AND DANCE AT THE Main Streets' Only Night Club x y '._ , Cy A kN~ : d Featuring "Benny" Benson's Wolverine Serenaders No Cover Charge Dancing-6 to 7; Fri., Sat. and Sun.-10 to (?) STEAKS-CI IICKEN-FROG'S 1.1 'GS-Cl-TOP SUrlY COACH MANN and MICHIGAN SWIMMERS i 6 esbyterian Young People's Society: tudent Forum at 6:30. The,-- in is to be in charge of the r Sunday School- Sunday-Social Hour at 5:30,I1 Its Congratulations! .... -- .p.. .. ..1 ,--- - ------ . __ _ , , .er . - .: : Il 1 R 7s go s OSat col er tea Banners Are Cheaper Now's the time to decorate-For one we we are offering our BANNERS, PENNANTS, BLANKETS, PILLOWS ii 11111I The enviable record you have made during the past month at the Western Conference, the National Intercollegiate, and the National A. A. U. meets has brought to Michigan not only every collegiate title in your sport, but a high place in non-col- legiate competition. We sincerely appreciate the fine work your have done, and extend our heartiest congratulations. Ann Arbor Savings Bank I at lN3 f WAHR'S HO9OKSTOR E Main Street at Huron North University Orgdnized .1869 __.__ u liii'*Jw -A-- -------%&AV---A-ft - - w - . AM Nw - f - IIIjw il r, iy fingerle operated the, open during vacation the