THE MICHIGAN DAILY Weather School Jses Local Maps Po Aid InStudy ir Conditions Both Here And Abroad Form Basi Of Navigation Courses Meteorologyy G'en r im y Officer Ordginates System Of Foreeasting Local Weather Chaiges A new school for educational Ann rbor, the National Weather and iation School, 804 Monroe St., as been started by Col. John P. Fin- y, United States Army retired, grad- tte of the Fort Meyer army course weather reading and one of the rly workers in the United States eather Service. Daily maps from all the leading ties of the country are received at .e school, as well as maps received sekly or monthly from important untries in Europe, Asia, and all her parts of the world. The school plans to teach metor- ogy, climatology, cartography, zysical and climatic geography, avi- ion weather, climatological surveys r airplane lines of flight, and rout- tg for aviation. The school features practical work the construction and reading of .e daily weather map and in fore- sting weather for different areas. will give consideration to local, ntinental, and world weather in- uences, and will teach the syn- tronizing of station weather reports i aviation maps while the plane is flight. Col. Finley, director of the school, as associated with the United States eather Bureau for from 15 to 20 ars, and spent 12 years in the Phil- pine Islands as governor of the uthern sector. He has devised a system of county eather forecasting which makes it ssible to forecast weather not only r states or sections of states, but r counties composing the states. his information is for farmers, mer- ants, and others who may want re- irts on the weather in a small area. "The Weather Bureau, with which e school will co-operate," Col. Fin- y said yesterday, "has been in exist- Einstein's Taken From Boat Secretly To Avoia Crowds Detroit Alumni Club Entertains 9 Senior Men Prominent Students An d Faculty Members Talk On Campus Activities Entertained at dinner last night by the Student Relations Commit- tee of the University of Michigan Club of Detroit at the University Club, nine prominent seniors and three faculty men talked briefly to the assembled members on the var- ious campus activities. George C. Dillman, chairman of the committee in charge, called up- on Prof. H. C. Anderson, of the En- gineering College, Lieut. R. R. Cour- sey, of the R. O. T. C., and T. Haw- lay Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association, for short speech- es. In addition, he also 'asked Robert A. Saltzstein and Edward W. Mc- Cormick, president and recording secretary, respectively, of the Union, Thomas K. Connellan, Wallace Gra- ham, and Thomas E. Powers, man- aging editors of The Daily, The Michiganensian, and The Gargoyle, Gilbert E. Bursley, Sherwood A. Messner, and Bethel B. Kelley, pres- idents of the Undergraduate Coun- cil, Student Christian Association and Interfraternity Council, and Thomas B. Roberts, head cheerlead- er, to explain their particular extra- curricular activities. The purpose of this dinner, in ad- dition to establishing a closer rela- tionship between alumni and stu- dents, was to give these seniors an YESTERDAY SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - A progres- sive miner was shot and killed as thousands of his fellow workers stormed into Springfield on a pro- test march. PRINCESS ANNE, Maryland-Se- vere criticism of the judge and the state's attorney who allowed the lynching of a negro was meted out by Gov. Albert C. Ritchie. DETROIT -Senator Arthur H. Vandenburg of Michigan, speaking before the Michigan State Federation of Women's Clubs, recommended a law which would make kidnaping a death penalty. * * * HAVANA - Guarding against any future disorders such as have been prevalent recently, soldiers armed with sub-machine guns patrolled all important streets. * * * WASHINGTON - Senator Robert F. Wagner of New York reminded leaders of industry that the heavy NRA penalties stood behind the de- cisions of the National Labor Board. . * opportunity to discuss the problems furnished by their positions with men who have formerly held the same jobs, Mr. Dillman said. He also stated that contrary to custom, the dinner was thrown open to the entire membershipof the club rather than restricting it merely to the Board of Governors as was done in the past. Prof. Orlando 0. Norris To Speak Before Acolytes Prof. Orland 0. Norris, of the philosophy department at l\ichigan State Normal college, will speak be- fore the Acolytes next Monday eve- ning at 7:30 p. m. on the topic, "Cos- mic Pragmatism and Its Humanistic Implications." The meeting will be held in Room 202, South Wing. The Acolytes, a philosophical so- ciety, has been in existence since 1889, and originally included the psy- chology department, but they have since separated. The club meets ev- ery two weeks to discuss philosophi- cal subjects and hear various speak- ers. 'Michigan Alumnus' To Print Hopwood Essays The remaining two essays from the collection selected as winners in last year's Hopwood Awards contest will be reprinted in this week's is- sue of the Michigan Alumnus, which makes its appearance next Satur- day morning. Mildred Walker Schemm, Grad., is the author of the prize-winning se- ries entitled "Group of Vermont Es- says." "Calvin Coolidge" and "Bal- sam Saints" are the two essays to appear this week. In the last issue, two others from the group were printed. Mrs. Schemm is also the writer of the novel which was chosen as the best in the fiction contest, and is now in the process of publication. I orbett's -Associated Press Photo Prof. Albert Einstein and Mrs. Einstein are shown as they left their ocean liner to board a tug in New York harbor when they arrived from Europe. They were whisked away in seclusion, apparently to avoid any Nazi demonstration. At Princeton, N. J., Dr. Einstein will spend the winter in research work. The Chief Gets An Alarm And Fire Drives Right Up PASADENA, Calif., Oct. 19-( P)- The quiet of quaint little Sierra Ma- dre, nestling in the mountains near here, was disturbed by jangling alarm bells in the fire department. Chief D. W. Richards picked up his phone and a woman's voice told him a fire was on its way to the station. A few minutes later a smoking auto- mobile stopped in front of the fire house, where firemen turned the hose on it. ence about 60 years, being founded' shortly after the Civil War. It pub- lishes about 5,000 maps a day on the weather in various parts of the coun- try. Other nations throughout the world have now copied the American system of publishing maps." Col. Finley was born in Ann Arbor and attended the University. 'Old Grad' Reminisces About Campus Life Of 50 Years Ago .) {' ' -._. r -: ... v The local officials of the Alumni Association are busy conducting an extensive search of their files for the names of those graduates who are now eligible for membership in the Emeritus Club. At the request of Dr. Thomas H. Trueblood, professor emeritus of the speech department, they are seeking the names of alumni who matricu- lated on the campus 55 or more years ago this fall. "Old Grads" who come under this classification are quali- fied to join the ranks of this society. Last June when the annual con- vention was held, close to 50 mem- bers of the club were in attendance. The fact that. these reunions are filled with significance for these men is demonstrated by the statements of Chester H. Rowell, '88, who is one of the most distinguished alumni of the University, after attending the convention. His column entitled "An Old Grad Looks Backward," which appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, says: "This is written on the train, return- ing to Chicago from Ann Arbor, where the writer has been attending the class reunion on the forty-fifth anniversary of his graduation from the University of Michigan. Five years ago, on the fortieth anniver- sary, he made the University Com- mencement address, but this year, as a mere private member of the next to oldest class to hold a quintennial reunion, there was better opportunity to renew old associations. After the fiftieth, there are no more separate class reunions; the oldsters are then dumped together into the "Emeritus Club," ignoring class years. The old- est here today was of the class of 1868. Last year there was one of '63. '. But the "Emeritus Club" of this college reunion sounded a more cheerful note. Here were no with- ered old men just sitting and waiting with little to remember and nothing to hope, but the selected best of their time, trained and intelligent, looking back on lives of intellectual activity and achievement and still eager, in- terested and interesting, keenly alive. Old age like theirs is something to look forward to; not to shrink from. "These old college towns are al- most timeless. The students are al- ways the same age, and time seems also to stand still for the old trees and the old houses, and even for the human fixtures. George Wahr, who has sold books in the same shop for over fifty years, remembered the stu- dent of long ago who had the freak habit of buying books in strange lan- guages, that had to be searched for at the ends of the earth. Evidently a modern student with that habit would be a freak still. At any rate, the shelves were full of textbooks to learn the usual languages- Greek, Latin, French, German and Spanish -but few other books in even these languages to indicate that anybody ever used the languages after study- ing them, and of course, almost noth- ing in the outlandish tongues. * * * "College students of journalism may incidentally be shocked to learn the equally freak fact that the writ- er's principal educational preparation for his first newspaper editorship consisted of a knowledge of media- eval languages like these, all of them twice as dead as Greek. He had studied in college not one minute of history, economics or political sci- ence, and scarcely any English com- position. Somehow, he managed eventually to overcome part of the handicap of these early educational; deficiencies. But go not thou and do likewise!" Briggs Addresses Engineers On NRA "The NRA has a socialistic, not an individualistic program, with the well-being of' society for its aim. It has its weaknesses, but the present administration has nerve, and if wej co-operate, realization of that pro- gram appears feasible," said Robert P. Briggs of the economics depart- ment Wednesday night in an address to the student branch of the Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers in the Union. In a detailed, thorough-going sur- vey of the whole recovery program, Mr. Briggs said there was nothing certain about the outcome of the present program. His speech con- centrated upon those parts of the NRA concerned with industrial re- covery and public works. 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