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November 06, 1932 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1932-11-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

im Gives H o ove r Receives Crowds Attend Opening Of Russian Dam Prof. Moore Tells 25th Anniversary Fete Plai
...Proof Ballot From Joless GrduANate

r"inedi
iintine~~

To Wo7rk In Townv1
The college graduate who finds,
himself out of a job should retreat
to some small town where he can1
live cheaply and find whatever work
is to be had in the small community,
at the same time keeping in tochtl
with companies which might con
:der him if any jobs were open and
with the employment division of his
school, according to the advice of
Prof. Arthur D. Moore of the College
of Ei igmeering, who spoke yesterday
on "The Unemployment Situation"
over the facilities of the University'
Broadcasting Service from station
WJR, Detroit.
"Young men who have lost their-
jobs because of the maturity of other
men in their firms should not spend
the last of their money dashing about
the country in search of jobs," said
Professor Moore, "because they will
probably meet with failure."
Professor Moore cited examples
from among graduates of the Uni-
versity who had kept in touch with
him after leaving school. Giving
them fictitious names, he told of
some of the jobs which they had
taken temporarily until engineering
jobsi should open up again,
"One of the blessings of this de-
pression," said Professor Moore, "is
that the students who cannot find
jobs are returning to take additional
school work which they would not
otherwise take." Boom periods work
in the opposite direction," he de-
clared, taking students from their
studies when they could well stand
more instruction.
Professor Moore appealed to col-
lege men who might be out of work
to send in their names to their
school so that as positions open up
and personnel men ask schools for
the names of likely candidates, their
names may be among those on file.

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By RALPH COULTER , and to Dean E. H. Kraus, then sec-
Plans for an anniversary celebra- retary of the summer school, for
,on to be held some time during the their foresight, according to Dr. La-
on o b hed sme imedurng heRue. Professor Reighard and Prof,
renty-fifth session of the University Ge. rnsr e ir aculty.
ioloica Sttio at ougas akeGeorge Burns were the first faculty.
iological Station at Douglas Lake
ext summer are already under way, At the same time the University
c crdng to Dr. George R. LaRue, surveying camp, was moved from a
rector. Preparations for the affair point. iear Glen Lake to Douglas
r s being made by a committee head- Lake, where it remained next to the
;l by Prof. P. S. Welch, of the Biological Station for 20 years. In
ology department. 1929, when the surveying camp was
enabled to move out to the Jackson
The celebration, exPected to take Hole country in Wyoming. the biology
ace about, the last of July, will station took over the whole of the
obably be held over ai week-end so tontooke rebuildwh gletof[h
at members of the faculty may at- Douglas lke camp, rebuildin it for
end from Ann Arbor, Dr. LaRue its own use.
;ated. Two or three half-day sessions Instituted Improvements
ill be held, and inspection tours After the close of the 1929 session,
f the buildings and grounds will be Dr. LaRue and his staff moved 99
onducted. buildings, constructed several new
In Cheboygan County ones, built roads, ins'talled electricity
The station is situated in the and a sewer system, and built a water
orthern tip of the lower peninsula, tank, bringing the physical features
n Douglas lake in Cheboygan coun- of the camp into much their present
Y. It is an integral part of the sum- shape.
er session, and regular University Research a-the station has led to
'edit is given for all courses pur- the publication of more than 300 pa-
ced. pers. These are now appearing at the
rate of 20 to 25 a year.

Crowds of Russians are shown at the opening ceremonies of the
giant dam at Dniefrostroy in Soviet Russia, one of the major achieve-
ments in that nations five-year plan.

Ninety-four students attended the
last season at the station, 43 men
and 29 women. Of these, 77 per cent.
were graduate students. Figures show
that while 25 of those in attendance
were from Michigan, the rest came
from 22 states, ranging from Con-
necticut and Virginia on the east to
South Dakota and Texas on the west,
and two were from China.
Established in. 1909
Back in 1909, Dr. LaRue recalls,
Prof. Jacob Reighard, of the zoology
department, and Prof. Frederick
Newcombe, of the botany depart-
ment, were instrumental in estab-
lishing the station in northern Mich-
igan, which at first occupied a single
old log building on the shores of
Douglas Lake. Further credit is due
to Dean John R. Effinger, at that'
time director of the summer session,

Em mnons Advises Two
Pieces Of Pie To Poor
DETROIT, Nov. 5. -- (MINS) -
Reminiscent of Marie Antoinette's
classic "Give Them Bread," Harold
H. Emmons, attorney and former po-
lice commissioner here, gave epicu-
rean and dietetic advice as follows
to his fellow-citizens, 100,000 of
whom are receiving between 14 and
20 cents a day from the Welfare De-
partment for food:
"No meal is complete without two
kinds of dessert. One piece of pie
after a good dinner leaves it as in-
complete as if one course had been
eliminated. Two pieces of pie or one
with an eclair is absolutely neces-
sary."

the
hut

feature

the
den

sunday dinners

potted swiss steak dinner . . . . . a . 50c
spaghetti caruso and chicken liver dinner, 50c
grilled pork chops dinner . . . . .. 50c
roast vermont turkey and cranberry dinner, 75c
roast long island duckling dinner . . . . . 75c
fricassee of swift's premium chicken dinner 75c
drilled texas steer t-bone steak dinner. . 75c

ZY, 7,

y '® s iV 1 war r v - . ..

- and many other dinners to choose from our extensive menu . . quality foods at no
price penalty to you . . service that reflects the manner of fine hotels . . from a
coco-cola to a turkey or steak dinner . . . it is better at fingerle's.

the
hut

fingerle operated

the
den

6 State Street Main Street Opposite Courthouse

Wi erd
Good Food at Fair Prices Predominates

Music at Mealtime

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Alex
Will
Be

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