THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'FRIDAY, APRIL 29. 1932 TLY OFFICIAL BUL LETIN fA m n rt r r B 9 V r t^14 " " A ri 7vrV r 4% F- 1 41 L°7 V. lA I t-v Science Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. Pro fessoi W. A. «Oldfathe -, THead of the Classical Department, 'Uni- versit, o( Illinois, will le;ure' on the suiect, "Levels of Culture," at 4:15 p.m., in Room 2003 Angell Hall. 1 f t t ! f 1 i Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members 11 of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to he President until 3.30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. hI VOL. XLII ' * FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1932 No. 149 III EX HBITIONS ,1 NOTICES IfONONRS CONVOCATION / The' members of the faculty, all students, and the general public are invited to attend the Ninth Annual Honors Convocation which takes place in Hill Auditorium at eleven o'clock, on Friday, April 29. Classes, with the exception of clinics, will be dismissed promptly at 10:45. Senior students, in clinical classes, who are receiving honors at the Convoca- tion, may be excused in order to attend. Dr. Harry Woodburn Chase, President of the University of Illinois will give the Convocation address. Seats 'upon the stage will be provided for the faculty, who will assemble in the dressing rooms at the rear. Academic costume will be worn but there will not b a procession. Alexander G. Ruthven. President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home on Sunday, May 1, and Sunday, May 8, from four to six o'clock. These conclude the teas for faculty and townspeople for the present academic year. Student Tickets o o Schoolmasters' Club Programs: Students may. obtain free ticke s, admitting them" to any program of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club, by calling in person for such tickets at any of the following places: Ann Arbor Senior High School, Michigan Union and Michigan Lea.gue, today. Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall, any time today. Students are cordially invited to avail themselves of this opportunity "and will be welcome at any conference meeting of the Club. Faculty Mee'ting, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: The regular May meeting will be held in Room 2225 A.H., Monday afternoon, May 2, beginning at 4:10 o'clock. John, R. Effinger, Dean. A.S.M.E. Student Members: Please sign list on bulletin board in hall above the arch if you plan to attend the joint meeting of the Society at Detroit, Wednesday, May 4. An inspection tripm through the Ford Plant is scheduled for the afternoon and a banquet at the Detroit Yacht Club in the evening-all free to student members. Hillel Foundation: The weekly open house will be held this after- noon at 4 o'clock.' Drawing 1d for students in thl College of Dentistry will be offered in the 1932 Summer Session by the Department of Mechanism and Engineering Drawing. ACADEMIC NOTICES Mathematics 182: The members of this class are excused to attend the lecture on Art and Mathematics by Miss Marie Gugle at 9 a.m., today in the auditorium of the Ann'Arbor High School. Attendance at the afternoon session on Mathematics, C3, Ann Arbor High School is also desirable. / Chemistry 6, Lecture section 2 (P. F. Weatherill): A make-up for the second hour examinationr will be given Monday, May 2, at 4 p.m., in Room 464 Chemistry building. Psychology 31: Mid-semester make-u examination today at 4 p.m., in Room 1 12Y'N.S. Exhibition cf Antiquities from the excavaions at Seleucia-on-the- Tigris in the main floor lobby of the Architectural-building. Open from 8 a.m., to 10 p.m., daily until May 7, with the exception of Sundays. Exhibition: The one hundred and thirty-five photographs of French stattesmena artirs, and men of lettei-s, recen y presornted to the 'Univer- sity by Edouardl Champion, are oin display in Room 103, -,omance( Iangjiag s ildin fcr I'e nfster; i nd (}011ers interlt' sId.1c , O L Frida' il "L"' f " o l wee . , ., AK) kFtUI UG At'I JUP 1Jt0 LLAVILz FRENCHMEN NOW ON DISPLAY HERE Collection in Romtance Language Schoolmasters and others intere Budlding Is Gift of Noted ed.- Frenh Pbliser.The collection offers a cross-sec- French Publisher.-tion of the salient personalities in present day France. The 135 The series of art photographs re- photographs include portraits of cently presented to the University Prime Ministers Clemenceau and} of Michigan by M. Edouard Cham-t Poincare; Marshals Foch and pion, the Parisian publisher, and Lyautey; Ambassadors Jusserand and Claudel; the poets Paul Valery MM. Mamiel, art photographers, is and Comtesse de Noailles; 0h' on displat dutrring the School- dramatist Francois de Curel; the mlalsters' collven Lion in room 103, novelist Georges Duhamel; the omncLa gaeb i. critics Paul Hazard and Gustave Rmm Languages building. - Lanson; and mnany other figurus of This is the first time that the en-theaoradfman o lits C the world of art and politics. ? tine collection has been available r for public inspection. Only incom- FAVOR HOOVER, ROOSEVELT plete exhibits from the collection have been shown previously at the (Special to the Daily) IHANO'VER, N. H., April 28.-Dart- Library. The present exhibit is ar~ mouth students favored Hoover and ganged by M. Louis Ghapard for the Roosevelt in a straw presidential poll. The two issues selected as be- ing of prime importance in the History of Sororities campaign were prohibition /and ___ Prosperity. War debt cancellation (Continued from Page5) and tariff tied for third. BRIGHT SPOT 102 Packard St. 'Foday, 11:0 to 1:30 Salmon Salad or Fresh Fruit Salad Potato Chips Roast Pork Roast Veal Wax Bean Salad Mashed Potatoes CA."r ~ ~ ~ alld Lime W hip Coffee, Milk 5: 1 to 7:10 Soup Baked Stuffed Lake Trout Baby Pike, Cucumber Sauce Vegetable Plate with Pot Roast of Beef and Hard Cooked Egg Potato Salad with Cold Meats, Tomatoes Roa:t Veal, Jelly Breaded Pork Chops Mashed or French Fried Potatoes Head Lettuce Salad, Thousand Island, Dressing Pickled Beets, Spinach Fresh Strawberry Shortcake IceCream Coffee, Tea, Milk 40c J EVENTS TODAY Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy Students: Four reels of moving pic- tures, some with sound, will be shown at the Majestic Th7eatre beginning at 9 a.m. - These pictures are on Transformation of Elements, Atomic Arrangement in Crystals, and Motions of Celestial Objects,. and are brought here by the Physics-Chemistry-Astronomy section of the Mich- igan Schoolmasters' Club. Admission to,students is by ticket. See hotice elsewhere in this column concerning the distribution of free tickets. to students. History Department Luncheon: Membes of the History group of the Schoolmasters' Club are invited to attend the monthly luncheon of the Histor Department, at 12:15, at the Michigan Union. Reservations may be made at the History Office, Room 1004 Angell Hall, before 10 o'clock, price 75 cents. Chinese Students Club: Social meeting at Wesley Hall,, at 8 p.m. All members are cordially invited. Hindustan Club: Social meeting at Lane I Hall, at 7:30 p.m. Hindu students are cordially invited. All Newcomers Section of the Faculty Wo en's Club will have a tea at the home of Mrs. W. Besekirsky's, 1015 Devonshire, 3 to 5 o'clock. Death Takes A Holiday, will be given by The Hillel Players Friday and Saturday nights at 8:15 o'clock in Laboratory theatre, for the bene- fit oi the 'University Loan fund. Reserved tickets may be secured by calling 4121-789, at box office.' Varsity Band: All members be at Morris Hall at 7:30 p.m. .Be 4in full uniform and have marching folios. COMING EVENTS Phi Kappa Phi: Spring initiation and banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m., on Monday, May 2, in the second floor terrace and reception room of the Michigan Union. Members' desiring to attend should notify the secretary, R. S. Swinton,' at Room 308 Engie ring Annex or Campus phion (A9 for reservations. Ecenornics Club: Mr. L. C. Wilcoxen, Assistant City Engineer of Detroit, will speak to the Club on Monday, May 2, on "Money-Metal Stocks and the Price Level," at 7:30 p.m., in Room 302 of the Union. Woman's Research Club: Dinner at League, Monday, May 2, at 6:15 p.m. Regular meeting follows. 'Mrs. Donahue will speak /on "Some Physiplogical Affects of Noise." Mr. Philip C. Nash, National Director of the League of Nations Asso- ciation, will speak on Tuesday, May 3, at 8:15 p.m., in Room 1Q25 A.H., on the subject "Our Interest in the Peace Machinery-Disarmament and the Far East." The public is invited. Illustrated Lecture: Allison Ray Heaps 'will present Tolstoy's novel "Resurrection" with colored slides taken from the motion picture, Tues- day, May 3, at 4:15 p.mn.in Natural Science Auditorium. The public is invited . Melhigan 1amies Spring Party will kbe held in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall at 8 p.m., Saturday, April 30. The Dramatic Group will present two plays which will be followed by dancing and bridge All eligible women and their husbands are invited 'to attend. All Former Resident of Betsy Barbour house are invited to the Alumnae tea, Saturday, four to five o'clock. its members formed the local chap- ter of Collegiate Sorosis. The Theta kite, of black and gold, surmounted by two diamond stars, a chevron bearing the greek letters and the date of founding under- neath, is the official badge, while the pledge pin is a black and gold enameled shield. The colors are black and the flower is the pansy. Conventions were held almost from the date of founding. The magazine, the Kappa Alpha Theta, was started in 1885, and an inter- esting book, "Sixty Years in Kappa Alpha Theta" has recently been published. At present, there are fifty-nine chapters, and the frater- nity is an international one. In altruistic work, each chapter has established scholarship plaques, and an Efficiency cup is given to a deserving chapter each year. The national project is a Loan and Fel- lowship fund, which is available for undergraduate loanis There is a Bettie Locke Hamilton Social ser- vice fellowship. War work was done by individual chapters as well as the national organization, and many Thetas were active in service abroad. Individual chapters main- tain several community enterprises. Prominent alumnae of theeor- ganization include Mrs.. Herbert Hoover, Jr., Helen Jacobs, second ranking tennis player in the United States, Genevieve .Forbes-Herrick. fiction writer and reporter, Florence Mason, actress, Beatrice Olson, dean of women at the University of North Dakota, Dr. Iva Lowther, dean of women at Syracuse univer- sity, Dorothy Dean Tate. novelist, Ma.uine Atkins, dramatist, Mary Yost, dean of women at Stanford university, Elizabeth Burrows, writ- er, and Louise Goodbody, dean of women at the University of In- diana. TICKETS for the League supper dance will be available for purchase by men today and tomorrpw. They are on sale at the main desk of the League, and are priced at two dollars. 46, ections 2, 3; a'nd 5 will not meet today. ons desiring tickets to the science movies may Burleson, West Physics building, before 9 a.m. Students in obtain them from 9:00 till 1:00 Vv ON TT - 8 - Will personally direct his You Can depend on it that the music at the League is the best. PLEASE READ SDue to the fact that Russ Morgan and his orchestra are dv Saay igh t Gs o C dances. However, the Friday night dances will be held as usual with Russ personally dir~ecting his orchestra. The Michigan League Ballroomd CABARET SERVICE ociology 132 (Problemns of Poverty): The class will. make a trip to Ypsilanti State Hospital 'for' Mentally Diseased today, leaving here c iately after the lecture. All students, except those having other es during the afternoon,1are expected to go. ,ecture by Chrysler Executive: is a part of Shop 7%, Jig and Fixture Design, the Department of 1eering Shop has scheduled a series of lectures to be given by a >er of prominent Detroit engineers. Mr. J. W. Nesbitt, Qu'ality tor of the Chrysler Corporation, will lecture on the subject "Human neering," today, at 4 p.m., in Room 1042 East Engineering building. bers of the faculty, as well as local manufacturers and students, are interested in this subject, are invited to attend. LECTURES 'ODAY Yiivesit I~et~rs:Prfessor R. H1. Whitbeck, of the geography rtent of the University of Wisconsin, will lecture on*hthe subject, on the Argentine Pampa" (Illustrated), at 4:15 p.m., in Natural Notice: All those participating in I the horse show please meet in the League at 9:30 a.m., Saturday. Im- portant practice, be prompt. The largest cargo of refined sugar unloaded at Mobile, Ala., this year comprised 50,000 hundredweight bags. The duty was $106,000. 4 dinner at the hut tonight )ur Natiye Trees DO YOU KNOW We have to offer for your "'TREE" information- SARGENT-Manual of the Trees of North America....12.00 KEELER-Our Nature Trees .. .. ...... . 3.00 APGAR-Trees of the Northern United States. ..........1.20 SPONSLER-Trees-A Simple Glide for Indentifcation. .1.50 SPONSLER-A Bud and Twig Key...35 ROGERS--Tree Guide . .... ........; ... 12 BAILEY-Cultivated Evergreens ... 3.00 KE3ELE--Our Northern Shrubs ...... 3.00 APGAR-Ornamental Shrubs of the United States.. . .. . 1.60 NATURE BOOKS OF ALL KINDS. -featurin an old f ash- ion chicken or fish ditiner tonight at the t ..;. the tax for either is iW trycents .. . I, 1RAIN STREET VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES STATE STREET featured monday wednesday friday Lingerie operated , ._ Meet Comedy Club's AL. ANDLEY THE STAR OF "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW" IN A SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PERFORMANCE EEC'' THE SRI f/ ; f.