THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1934 VOL. XLIV No. 75 Notices Lost And Found Articles: An en- velope containing a sum of money and labelled "Ticket Money, League for Industrial Democracy" was re- ceived at the Business Office, Room 3, University Hall, through the cam- ps mail. The owner may obtain same upon proper identification. hours for Registration and Pay- ment of Semester Fees: Students will register all day Thursday and Fri- day and the forenoon of Saturday, February 8, 9, and 10, in all units ex- cept Law and Medicine. The Cash- ier's Office will collect fees during these days in Barbour Gymnasium under the same arrangements as during the first semester. Doors will be open from 8:00 to 11:30 a. m. and from 1:00 to 3:30 p. m. on Thurs- day and Friday, and from 8:00 to 12:00 noon on Saturday. Students registering in Law and Medicine must pay fees in the Cash- ier's office at time of registration and classification in those units. Shirley W. Smith. University Loan Committee: The Loan Committee will meet on Wed- nesday and Friday, January 10 and 12, at 1:30 p. m., in Room 2, Uni- versity Hall. Students who have filed applications with the Office of the Dean of Students should call at that office for an appointment with the Committee. C. A. Bursley, Chairman. Householders: Householders having moms for men students available for the second semester are requested to list them in the Office of the Dean ofStudents, Room 2, University Hall, as soon as possible. Available light- housekeeping rooms and apartments are also requested. F. B. Wahr, Assistant Dean. Academic Notices Sophomores planning to concen- trate in Group 1 or in English may' take the required qualifying exam- inations (see pp. 30, 102 of the An-' nouncement) on Saturday, January 13, at 9 o'clock in 2225 Angell Hall. W. G. Rice German Ph. D. Candidates: The General Qualifying Examination in History of German Literature will take place Tuesday, January 16, 9:00 to 12:00 a. in., Room 204 U.H. Reading Examination i French: Candidates for the degree of Ph.D. in the departments listed below who wish to satisfy the requirement of a reading knowledge during the cur- rent academic year, 1933-34, are in- formed that examinations will be offered in Room 108, Romance Lan- guage Building, from 9 to 12, on January 20, May 26, and August 4. Under exceptional circumstances, individual examinations may be given at other times. It will be necessary, in each case, to register at the office of the Department of Romance Languages (112 R. L.) at least one week in advance. It is desirable that candidates for the doctorate prepare to satisfy this requirement at the earliest possible. date. A brief statement of the nature of the requirement, which will be found helpful, may be obtained at the office of the Department, and further inquiries may be addressed to Mr. L. F. Dow (100 R. L., Wednes- days at 3). This announcement applies only to candidates in the following depart- ments: Ancient and Modern Lan- guages and Literatures, History, Eco- nomics, Sociology, Political Sciences Philosophy, Education, Speech. Polish Class today at 4:00 p. m. in 1018 Angell Hall. ToAll Men Students: Students in- tending to change their rooms at the end of the present semester are hereby reminded that according to the University Agreements they are to inform their householders of such intention at least two weeks prior to the close of the semester, that is, by January 26. It is advised that no- tice of such intention to move be made at once. F. B. Wahr, Assistant Dean. University Radio Talk: Dr. Allen D. Maxwell, .Assistant Professor of Astronomy, will talk on Comets over radio station WJR this afternoon at 2:00 o'clock. Sophomore Literary S t u d e n t s: Class dues of fifty cents will be col- lected by members of the executive and finance committees during the week of January 8. A table will be in Angell Hall from nine to eleven on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday for the purpose of collecting said dues. Students in the College of Engi- neering who have conflicts in the time schedules for their final exam- inations, should report at once to Professor C. H. Fessenden, room 333 West Engineering Building. Ice Hockey for Women: Until further notice, there will be two weekly practices on Wednesdays and Thursdays from 1:30 to 2:30 at the Coliseum. Sticks are provided. University Council Committee on Student Relations will meet Wednes- day, Jan. 10, at 4 p. m. University Council Room. H. H. Higbie, Chairman. Events Today Botanical Seminar meets at 4:30 Room 1139, N.S. Bldg. Paper by George J. Pierce of Stanford Univer- sity "Observations on sap hydrau- lics." Psychological Journal Club meets in Room 3126 N. S. at 8:10 for re- views of recent articles on learning. Reviews will be given by Dr. E. B. Greene, Mr. Stoddard Curtis, and Misses Edna Gordon and Alberta Hogue. Physics Colloquium: Professor G. E. Uhlenbeck wil speak on the "The- ory of the Positron" at 4:15 p. m. in Room 1041, East Physics Building. All interested are cordially invited to attend. Junior Research Club: Dr. Mott Souders, Dept. of Chemical Engi- neering "Gaseous Explosions." Dr. Herbert 0. Calvery, Dept. of Physio- logical Chemistry-Medical School- "The Study of the Structure of Pro- teins by means of the Proteolytic Enzymes with Special Reference to Egg Albumin." Meeting at 7:30 p. m., Room 2082 Natural Science. Junior Mathematical Society meets at 8 o'clock in room 3011 A. H. All who are interested in mathematics are invited to attend. Special Assembly for students in education in the University Elemen- tary School Auditorium at 4:10. The program will be presented by stu- dents in the Correlated Course of Education. Graduate Luncheon for Chemical Engineers will be held at 12:15 in Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. Professor Robert C. Angell, of the Sociology Department will speak on "The Prob- lem of Liquor Control" Freshman Luncheon Clubs: The Tuesday and Thursday Clubs will hold a joint meeting today. Adelphi House of Representatives will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the so- ciety's room, fourth floor of Angell Hall, for the purpose of nominating officers for the second semester. All members are expected to attend. Alpha Epsilon Mu: Important meeting at the Union at 8:15 p. in. A date will be set for the group pic- ture and the date for initiation will be set also at this time. All members are urged to be present. Kappa Phi: Regular meeting at 5:30 p. m. in Wesley Hall. Pledges will have charge of the meeting. Tau Beta Pi: Dinner meeting at the Michigan League at 8:15 p. in. Varsity Glee Club: Special rehear- sal 8 to 9 p. m. Christian Science Organization: Meets at 8 o'clock this evening in the Chapel of the Michigan League building, All faculty and students in- terested are invited to attend. International Rce a t i o n s Club: Meeting at 8:00 p. ., in Room 2037 A. H. Subject: Pan-Americanism and the Montivideo Conference. All stu- dents welcome. Members of Women's Debate Sqad- General meeting at 7:30 p. m. in the Athena room of Angell Hall. Junior Gils P'lay: An important meeting of the music committee will be held at the League at 4:30. Junior Girls Play: An extremely important meeting of the composers and lylric-writers for J.G.P. will be held at 5 o'clock at the League. Will everyone please try and be present, for all music must be in by eb. 1., according to Mr. McCracken. Professor Valentine Windt of the Speech Department will speak on "The Theatre" at 8 o'clock in room 302 Mason Hall. The lecture spon- sored by Zeta Phi Eta, is open free to the public. Faculty-Alumni Dance: The sec- ond dance of the series will be held tonight at the Michigan Union. Sea- son and single admission tickets aieI available.~ Michigan Dames: Regular meeting at eight o'clock in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League. A large attendance is requested. Faculty Women's Club: The Play- Reading Section meets at 2:15, Mich- igan Union. Coming Events Sigma Xi: The third meeting for the University year of 1933-34 will be held with the Departments of Zoology and Psychology on Thurs- day, January 11. The meeting will be called to order in the auditorium of the Natural Sci- ence Building at 7:30 p. mn. Geological and Geographical Jour- nal Club: Meeting on Thursday, Jan- uary 11, at 8 p. m. in room 2054 N.S. Prof. S. D.podge will speak on "Some Aspects of Town Develop- ment" and Prof. W. F. Hunt will speakon "Some of the Problems of an Editor of a Scientific Journal." The English Journal Club: Regu- lar monthly meeting will be held in the League Building Friday, Janu- ary 12. Business meeting at 4:00 p. m. Program open to the public at 4:15. Speakers: Professor n. J. Campbell, Miss Jeanette Fleisher, Mr. F. X. Roellinger, Mr. A. K. Stevens. Subject: The Graduate Student and the Professor. Luncheon for Graduate Students Wednesday, January 10, at 12 o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League Building. Cafeteria service. Professor Wesley Maurer will speak informally on the "Necessity for New Ideas in Government." Deutscher Zirkel: Meeting Wed- nesday, January 10, in League at 8:00. For members and all interested. Delta Epsilon Pi will meet at the Michigan Union on Thursday, Jan- uary 11, at 8:00 p. m. sharp. All Matinees 10c --- Evenings 15c -- Last Day THE MUSCIAL HIT! "RAINBOW Ogopogo, Cadbo Mjaberwo By ALBERT W. WILSON LONDON, Jan. 8. - OP) - The re- ported existence of an amphibious monster in Loch Ness, Scotland, is proving the most thrilling and most debated subject this winter in Great Britain. Stories appear almost every day in one newspaper or another, and it is easily the prime bit of teatime gossip. 'Monster' Yarns Multiply It has aroused as great interest here as ever did Ogopogo, that al- leged monster which filled United States and Canadian newspapers with hair-raising stories a few years ago. A brand new crop of monster stories has surged into London in the wake of the Loch Ness reports. An Italian equivalent - "many feet long and thick as a child" -is said to be causing terror in the marshy coun- try about Perugia. A Berlin newspaper says Captain von Forstner, a German U-boat com- wander, and his entire crew testify to having seen a 60-foot long mon- ster with short legs, fins and a pointed head thrown out of the mid- Atlantic when they torpedoed and sank the British steamer Iberian in 1915. Eye-Witness Testimony From Canada come reports that a monster known as Cadborosaurus, or "Caddy" for short, has been seen by 30 people off the coast of British Co- lumbia, these including the captain and first officer of the American liner Santa Lucia. A young man is reported to have sworn that 14 peo- ple saw Caddy, about 40 feet long, rear a head like a horse out of the water and gulp down a seabird. Another rival to Scotland's McJab- berwock is claimed by an amateur collector in New Zealand This is stated to be the world's most perfect specimen of the unicorn ribbon fish, which are reputedly 12 to 30 feet long tickets possible should be turned in at this time. The meeting will be very short. Transportation Club: Meeting will be held Wednesday, Jan. 10, at 7:30 p. m. in room 1213 East Engineering Building. Professor John S. Worley will speak.tAll students interested in transportation are invited. French Club: Members are asked to be at Dey's studio, Thursday, Jan- uary 11, promptly at noon. The pic- ture for the Michiganensian will be taken at 12:15. Please be on time. Scabbard and Blade Picture for the 'Ensian will be taken Wednesday, Jan. 10, at 8:30 p. m. directly follow- ing the regular meeting which will be at the Union at 7:30 p. m. It is important that all members be pres- ent in uniform. Stump Speakers Society: All mem- bers are reminded that Wednesday night at 7:30 Alpha Nu and Sigma Rho Tau are holding a joint meeting at the Union in rooms 316-318. The program of the evening is a debate between the two organizations on the following proposition. "Resolved, that the Federal government should own and operate all commercial broad- casting stations." Alpha Nutwill up- hold the affirmative side of the ques- tion. The meeting is open to the public. Garden Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Wednesday, January 10, 3:00 p. m., room 3024 Museum Building. Professor S. A. Graham will give a lecture entitled, "The Relation of Insects to Plants.' Esperanto: A free course of Esper- anto under the auspices of the FERA Adult Education program will be con- ducted by Dr. F. S. Onderdonk; the class meets Monday and Wednesday at 7 p. m. in the Senior High School on State Street: students are welcome but no credit is given. Prof. Cl. L. Meader will lecture on "Esperanto the International Language" Tues- day, Jan. 16th at 4:15 in Natural Science Auditoriaum under the aus- pices of the Tolstoy League. Mathematical Club: The January meeting will be held Tuesday, Jan- uary 16. r saurus, And ek Thrill Scotch and is supposed to be in captivity although dead. A potential monster; an eel larva nearly 6 feet long, is reported on dis- play in Denmark. Full grown it would be 25 to 30 yards long, says Dr. Vedel Taaning, head of the Danish Marine Biological Laboratory. It was found in waters off South Africa. Scotland's monster is in a differ- ent class from those of Denmark and New Zealand in that it is still suc- cessfully evading captue. The latest report published in the Daily Mail is that an African big game hunter, M. A. Wetherell, has found marks on the shore similar in character to those left by hippopotami on African river banks. The "patches, as he called them, were reportedly about 20 yards from each other, ranging from pear shape to elliptical and cov- ering five to 10 square feet each. A Sheep Stealer Too Among the many reports published about the Loch Ness monster is one that it has been seen carrying off a sheep and another that it was ob- served lashing its tail in the Loch, which is part of the famous Cale- donian canal. The London Evening News found the subject so important as to merit= a full column editorial. "Something must be done about the Loch Ness Monster and done soon," it says. "There must be something in Loch Ness, be it a tree trunk, a bottle- nosed whale, a sea lion, an ichthyo-- saurus or an india rubber apparatus skillfully manipulated by the canny denizens of those parts with the ob- ject of attracting visitors and bring- ing money into the neighborhood."' Troyauovsky And Roosevelt Confer WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 - (A) - Alexander Troyanovsky, the first am- bassador of Soviet Russia to the United States, presented his creden- tials to PresidenttRoosevelt in the White House late today. In receiving the credentials of Troyanovsky, the President said: "A deep love of peace is the common heritage of the people of both our countries." "I fully agree with you," the Presi- dent said, "that the co-operation of our great nations will inevitably be of the highest importance in the preservation of world peace. The successful accomplishments of this mutual task will be of immediate and lasting benefit not only to the peo- ple of our country but to all peace loving peoples everywhere." The Soviet Ambassador hailed the new relations of the United States and Russia as of "great historical significance and of direct far-reach- ing moment in the cause of world peace." Emma Goldman Attempts To Gain Entry Into U. S. NEW YORK, Jan. 8. - (/P) -The Sun said today that Emma Goldman was in Toronto today waiting for the Administration to grant her permis- sion to return to the United States, from which she was deported Dec. 21, 1919. The Sun says she was told that permission would be forthcoming if she agrees to make only literary speeches, but that she had refused to consent to "wearing a gag." If not admitted unconditionally, the Sun said, she may go ahead with a Canadian lecture tour and press the application for entry into this coun- try again in March. Because he displayed "a lack of enthusiasm" for the Nazis ideals, Dr. Walther Schuecking, director of the Institute of International Law of the University of Kid and German mem- kber of World Court, was curtly dis- missed from his teaching position last week. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Phone 2-1214. Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. The classified columns close at ifve o'clock previous to day of insertions. Box Numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in Advance-Uc per reading line (on basis of flvt average words to line) for one or two insertions. 1Oc per reading line ofr three or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone Rate-15c per reading line ofr one or two insertions. 14(,per reading line for three or more Insertions. 10 , discount if paid within ten days from,)th~e date of last insertion. Mii~nmus three lines per insertion. By Contract, per line-2 lines daily, one mornth...................8c 4 linie , T.O.D., 2 months ......3c 2 lines daily, college year . 7c 41lines E. 0. D., college year . . 7c 100 lines used as desired ......9c 100 lines used as desired.......8c 1,000 lines used as desired ......7e 2,000 lines used as desired ..6c The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per inch of 7? point Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 6c per line to above rates for all capital liters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10 per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. WANTED ROOM RENT: Young woman to share home with three other young women. Call 6916 or 5606. 237 WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main. 5x LOST AND FOUND LOST-Grey double-breasted over- coat, make Parker-Bridget. U. Hall. Finder notify 2-2286. Reward 235 LOST: Pi Beta Phi sorority pin be- tween Hut and Majestic Theatre. Phone 8354. 241 LOST :Long rhinestone earring be- tween Helen Newberry residence and North University. Finder please return to Helen Newberry office. Reward. 244 TAXICABS TAXI-Phone 9000. Seven-passenger cars. Only standard rates. lx GROUPS formed for beginners in Russian. Also individual instrue- tion. Phone 6239. NOTICE ARCADE CAB. Dial 6116. Large com- fortable cabs. Standard rates. 2x BUY NEW AND USED CARS FROM FINANCE CO. 311 W. Huron 22001. 1933, 1932, 1931, 1930 models. 12x LAUNDRY PERSONAL laundry service. We take individual interest in the laundry problem of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Call for and deliver. 2-3478, 5594. 611 E. Hoover. 9x WE DO your laundry work for one- half the usual price. Phone 2-3739. 8x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x FOR RENT FOR RENT: Two lovely attractive single or double rooms. Neat and clean. Shower bath, steam heat, excellent board, good variety, fresh vegetables. S. E. section, Dial 7796. 242 Internatiidnal Lang awe Course Will Be Offered Students will have an opportunity to learn Esperanto, an international language, in the course which will be conducted by Dr. Francis S. Onder- donk, formerly of the architecture college faculty. The course is one of the series which is being presented free of charge by the Federal Employment Relief Administration. Dr. Onderdonk is giving another course in the appreciation of archi- tecture. 9 INSTRUCTION in Mathematics and mechanics offered. Phone 239. 243 CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY TUTORING Fergy Absorption Froin Light To Be Filmed By Harvard Men By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE (Associated Press Science Editor) CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 8. - ( P) -'The absorption of energy from light, a mysterious process which is the chief source of life on earth, will be photographed by a huge new vac- uum spectroscopic camera at Harvard university. This absorption is the familiar thing felt when sunshine warms the body. It is the source of sunburn and of the healing of skin tubercu- losis. It is half the source of all plant food. That absorption is done, science believes, by individual atoms or groups of atoms called molecules. No one ever has seen an atom, but the new camera is equipped with the latest devices which reveal the ac- tions of small groups of atoms. The camera is a large metal pipe set up by Dr. F. A. Crawford, assis- tant professor of physics. A powerful light is set close to the "eye" of the instrument. Between the light and the "eye" is a glass tube full of gas through which the rays must pass before entering the camera, These rays, passing into the camera. fall on a miror with a grating scratched on its face. The grating spreads the beam into a -fan-shaped rainbow - the spectrum - and re- flects it to a photographic film. Not all the light gets through the gas. Some of it is absorbed, and this absorption shows as shadowy lines on the film. The lines are easily vis- ible to the eye although they repre- sent action in the gas which takes place in a space of no more than a billionth of an inch. The lines correspond to spinning of the molecules, internal vibrations, and other movements still more complicated. Those m'ovements in the gas particles come directly from en- ergy absorbed as the light passes through the gas. 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