RAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY T rHURSDAY, MARCH 7,1935 R.O.T.C. To Be Given Medical StudyCourse University To Collaborate With Army And Navy In One-Week Program The Medical School of the Uni- versity of Michigan will collaborate with the United States Army and Navy in a one week course of clinical and military medical study for Re- serve Medical and Dental officers, April 14-20, at the University, it was announced yesterday. The tentative program announced by the department of post-graduate medicine of the Medical School will provide for clinical study in the de- partment of internal medicine, surg- ery, and oral surgery during the morning hours, utilizing the facilities of the University, according to the announcement. The afternoon hours and several evening periods will be devoted to discussion and solutions of problems, and to lectures,call on mili- tary and medical subjects in which the reserve officers must be versed if called to duty in case of a national emergency. As reserve medical officers are sub- ject to call by the Federal govern- ment in case of disaster as well as military emergency, it has long been felt by medical experts of the War Department that there was a need of a definite active course of training to supplement occasional tours of active duty, and correspondence work. Lack of sufficient appropriations for an intensive training with government facilities being used caused Colonel Skinner, former Surgeon of the VII Corps Area, to ask the assistance of several lpading medical centers in the training of officers residing in their vicinity. This "Skinner Plan" is regarded by the War Department as offering the practicing physician and dentist an opportunity to refresh his knowledge in clinical study, and to improve his familiarity with his wartime or emer- gency duties and probable problems. The course to be held here in April will be the third annual session at the University of Michigan.Similar in- struction has been given in the past, and will continue at various medical c e n t e r s of - importance throughout the country at large, ac- cording to the announcement. The school here will be open to reserve medical and dental officers of the Sixth Corps Area, Fifth Corps Area, and Ninth Naval District. Officers attend at their own expense, although they are credited with hours proportionate to the length of their attendance here which may be used. against the required theoretical duty. *Officers' of the Regular Army and Navy will be detailed here to instruct in military subjects. Faculty Members Back Ship Subsidy (Continued from Page 1) department of mechanism and engi- neering drawings, stated that while the President's proposal wouuld pro- vide a needed stimulus to qur ship- ping industries, it would amount to a replacement program instead of an increase in the number of ships, an increase which Colonel Miller believes is not to be desired under present economic conditions. "Although the American people will never submit to paying for the con- struction of ships that would remain idle during times of peace merely to supply an auxiliary force in times of war," he maintained, 'a definite pro- gram of replacement for old and worn-out vessels, such as is implied in the President's request for direct sub- sidies, would prove to be a highly valuable measure." Bust Of Goddard GivenUniversity A bronze bust of rof. Edwin C. Goodard of the Law chool was pre- sented to the University at the week- ly meeting of the Ann Arbor Rotary Club yesterday, the gift of an "anony- mous admirer." Professor Goddard, who is the re- tiring president of the club, was guest of honor at the meeting as well aE the senior officer. The presentation was made by Roscoe 0. Bonisteel, past president of the club. The bust was accepted for the University by Dean Henry B. Bates of the Lav School, long a colleague .and friend of Professor Goddard. Shirley W. Smith,* vice president of the University, also spoke, apply- ing quotations from Wordsworth's -Character of the Happy Warrior" to Professor Goddard. Fraternities, Oats Ups 90 Years Ago, It Is By DAVID G. MACDONALD cord, which Ninety years ago the faculty of the withdrawn. University was opposed to frater- The "crim nities. Th reason for its attitude lay fraternities< in a long-standing distrust of secret was formed t societies, which were considered to be by one the s potential breeding grounds and me- to testify, b diums for the dissemination of subver- discovered e sive doctrines. The resulti The reverend professors were natur- ternities and ally jealous of their prerogatives in the vindicat this regard and sought to find an op- ment of the portunity to do away with the fra- campus, but uernities. The chance came, accord- ing to old records, in the year 1845 as a result of a prank perpetuated by students at the expense of their not- very-much respected pedagogues. A line was affixed to the clapper ay of the college bell, which was on top of a high post, probably 30 feet high, l in the University campus. In those days the campus was called a yard and a more utilitarian use had been found for it than that of being mere- Says Ad ly scenic. It was sown to oats. (It is In Rem queer how far one has to go to find the origins of popular practices). Ai rplan The oats had ripened, had been harvested, and were gathered in little Aviation h mows over the forty acres of the Uni- which existe versity grounds. The bell started ring- of Icarus an ing at midnight of a very black night. now attracts The professors and instructors ap- especially yo peared one by one, but all through A. Stalker c the grounds not a student was stir- partment po ring, talk on th In their efforts to apprehend the series broadc offenders, the faculty members ran tion WJR, d all over the 40 acres, stumbling over studios in M the mows and colliding with each "The maj other in the darkness. Finally some- Professor St one procured a ladder and cut the enough equip _____--they seek so 30StudentsTO have little c field." He en in aviation b "s the proper t Inspect Stinson be placed ag several years Aircraft Plant fneoers ne stated for ordinary More than thirty members of the pendent onI Aeronautical Division of the A.S.M.E airplanes ex will visit the Stinson Aircraft plant anyone enter in Detroit Saturday on an inspection Professor Sta tour which has been arranged by Carl fected by ho Sorgen, '35E, chairman of the inspec- fects in the a tion trip committee. In answer Of particular interest to the stu- soon this wo dents will be the new Stinson Air- swer is neces liner, a recently developed tri-motor I think that transport ship of the low-wing mono- torergoing ei plane type. Another feature of thecare plant to be closely observed is the pn sn in t] highly-developed modern welding of aircraft qu equipentof aircraft in S hurpose of the inspecoti tours are planning time, officials stated, is to acquaint cuethe be students' of aeronautical engineering ment will on with industrial operations and to af- having the ford them an opportunity to see their ground." theoretical learning practically ap- plied. The Stinson assembling plant is one S of the largest and best equipped in A Compl the country. Only recently its six 95e ea hundreth plane was turned off the production line. Stinson has pioneer- Chas. Doi ed in the development of cabin and 1319 transport planes. et Faculty Dr. Bishop To Revealed Attend Meeting was then mysteriously Of Librarians le" was laid to the secret International Congress Of and a court of inquiry o find the offenders. One Libraries To Be Held In tudents were called upon . ut the culprit was never Madrid And Barcelona ven by the fraternities.I ing war between the fra- Dr. William W. Bishop, librarian the faculty ended with of the University and head of the de- ion and irm establish- partment of library science, will rep- t ~ rp sri tia n thiI ... _ ., _ I i 0 rdinance Of Ann Arbor' is 'National Body Called Masterpiece Of Humor Of Pharmacists v rsecr et soc~e es on ns this is another story. er Points To Entry o Aviation Ivancement Lies ledying Defects In ris has a certain romance d long before the days Ld his aerial flight and great numbers of people, ung people, Prof. Edward of the aeronautical de- inted out in his radio e Vocational Guidance cast yesterday over Sta- direct from the campus Morris Hall. ority of these people," alker said, "are not well Aped for the work which that the vast majority chance of entry to the couraged those interested saying that people with ;raining are beginning to ain in the industry after s of no opportunity for that the opportunities advancement are de- how rapidly the use of1 pands. "The future of ring the industry," said i"ker, will be greatly af- w soon the present de- irplane are remedied." to the question of how uld be, he said. "The an- sarily a speculation, but some of the schemes now investigation in labora- ult in a very marked ex- -e next five years - for adrupling of the number use." Stalker advised those who to enter aviation to ac- t general education, be- est chances for advance- the whole come to those best educational back- PRING TIES ete New Line Selling at ch - 3 for $2.70 ukas - Haberdashery South University resent the University at the Secondj International Congress of Libraries and Bibliography to be held in Madrid and Barcelona, Spain from May 20 to 30. Dr. Bishop is president of the International Federation of Library Associations which is calling the Con- gress and besides presiding over the organization and closing sessions will deliver the address at the opening session. The congress is meeting in Spain at the invitation of the Spanish govern- ment and the opening session will be presided over by the Minister of Public Instruction and will be attended by the president of the Spanish republic. Also, a reception at the Presidential Palace has been arranged for dele- gates to the congress, according to reports. According to Dr. Bishop, a large and widely representative attendance is expected. Librarians in many na- tions are planning to attend, and out- side of the customary large delega- iions from this and European coun- tries, it is expected that persons will be present from other countries scat- tered all over the world such as Ja- pan, China, the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Mexico, Brazil, and Peru. Librarians from the United States will have active part in the meetings of the congress. Besides his duties as president of the International Fed- eration of Library Associations, Dr. Bishop will serve as chairman of the section devoted to discussing profes- sional training. Other Americans tak- ing prominent parts in the activities of the congress are Mr. C. H. Millam, secretary of the American Library Association who will act as chairman of the section on popular libraries, Mr. Milton E. Lord of the Boston public library, who will participate in ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF ANN AR-1 BOR. Compiled by Carl A. Lehman. City Attorney. Published by City Clerk Fred C. Perry. Ann Arbor. 1930. Free. Without doubt this edition of the City Ordinances is one of the most instructive volumes ever to roll off the local presses. Really a monumental work, pre-! pared with skillful scholarship, it covers such things as the carrying of lighted lamps and candles into hay barns and the licensing of Turkish Coffee Houses. Several of the chapters suffer from obscurity, one of these being that en- titled Fence Viewers. It states that "it shall and may be lawful for the Common Council annually to appoint one Fence Viewer in each ward," but it omits to mention just what a Fence Viewer is; one's mind runs rife at the possibilities. This reviewer is inclined to the 'rail bird' theory, although equally plausible alternatives are sug- gested in abundance to the reader's mind. Fully two pages of this enlightening work deals with the regulations gov- erning street cars. For instance before Itarting a street car the motorman shall give timely warning by sounding the gong, nor may a street car cross a boulevard without first coming to a complete stop. Both quick and dead horses and other dumb animals are well provided ficr by this interesting collection. TO ATTEND MEETING Registrar Ira Smith will head the Michigan delegation to the annual convention of the American Associa- tion of College Registrars to be held at Raleigh, N. C., April 16-18. Plans of the Michigan representation are as yet tentative, but a group 4f two or three yearly attends from the Uni- versity. the section on cooperation between libraries and Dean Wilson of the Uni- versity of Chicago, who will take part in the section on professional train- ing. and Mr. Charles Compton, presi- dent of the American Library Asso- ciation, who will help in the section on hospital libraries. When a horse-drawn vehicle is backed to the curb in pursuance of Section 28, the horses shall be turned in the direction in which the traffic is pro- ceeding with their heads at right angles to the vehicle.. It is unlawful to drive any horse faster than six miles an hour except that the Com- mon Council may by resolution desig- mate a street within the limits of this city to be used as a place for the Ispeeding of horses in the winter. It must have been a sad day for the social climbers of yesterday when the Council passed an ordinance that hitching posts could not be over 12 feet high. Such sport as chasing squirrels is explicitly forbidden, nor may any per- son fire any cannon within the city limits. If any criticism or an adverse na- ture is to be levelled against this priceless gem it must be on the ground of style, not content. Redundancy is its greatest fault; the Gertrude Stein influence is clearly discernable in such passages as: "No person shall permit or cause any- stones, brick, sand, gravel, lumber, building ma- terials, coal, wlood, boxes, barrels, bundles, ice, paper, wire, glass, tacks, rubbish or any other thing, article or substance to be dropped, delivered, left, scattered, or piled up in any street, alley or other public place ... Rumor is being bruited about in the publishing world that since this edi- tion of the Ordinances the Common Council has been busy making the book even funnier. And devotees to American humor must surely await the next edition with a keen anticipa- tion of pleasure. Honors Glover Prof. Clifford C. Glover, secretary of the College of Pharmacy, was ap- pointed last week for 10 years to the Committee on U.S. Pharmacopeoia of the American Pharmaceutical As- sociation by its president, Robert P. Fischelis, it was disclosed yesterday. The appointment to the 10-man steering committee of the organiza- tion, whic his the national profession- al organ of pharmacists, is the first ever granted to a University of Mich- igan professor, according to reports. The functions of the committee are mainly in connection with the formation and revision of the U. S. ' Pharmacopoeia, the United States government standard of medical preparation. Work on the Pharmo- copoeia, which is published every 10 years, is constantly going on, and it is the duty of the committee to facili- tate and aid the work of the National Committee of Revision of the U.S.P. and also to correct any errors in it. Besides, according to Professor Glov- er, "it is the function of the organi- zation to ascertain the general wish- es and requirements of the profession. throughout the country in regard to any desired changes or improvements in the making up of medicines." I SPRING BOUQUETS Potted Plants GENERAL MARKET Flower Department 113 East Washington Phone 2-3147 WEEK-ENDSPECIALS I Sup erior MILK-ICE CREAM Special VANILLA and BLACK WALNUT FUDGE Superior Dairy Company Phone 23181 55c POND'S COLD CREAM 39c a jar $1.25 Size PARKE DAVIS HAL IVER OIL' 50 Capsule Boxes 98c each $1.00 Size LUCKY TIGER HAIR TONIC 79c each 35c Size VICK'S VAPORU B SALVE 29c. CIGARETTES Camels - Luckies Chesterflelds - Old Golds Raleighs e20 Carton 2 Packs for 25c F-R-E-E-! A large Moth-proof Storage Bag with every Qt. Can of FLIT INSECTICIDE for only 79c $1.25 Combination 60c Size of Campana's ITALIAN BALM with a 65c Home DISPENSER Both for only 55c $1.00 Pacquin's HAND CREAM 79c a jar $1.00 Size HIND'S Honey & Almond CREAM 83c LARGE OVA LTIN E For Restful Sleep 57c $1.50 Size UPJOHN'S Citrocarbonate $1.00 These Specials Available Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Camp-us Cut Rate Drug Co. 218 So. State St. (Goldman Bldg.) Phone 9392 (We Deliver) TAKE ME AL I 9 ra Choose panion. me for your com- I don't tolerate the bitterness, the acrid sting of undeveloped top leaves. Why should you? I don't tolerate the harshness of gritty, tough, bottom leaves. Neither should you. I give you exclusively the fragrant, expensive center leaves -the mildest, the best-tasting of all. They permit me to sign myself "Your Best Friend." 4 We are sure we can satisfy your every want for Excellent Food at a Reason- able Price. i ii l iffi''tf. ir 1 'i,':,:;T"r::"i.:ti r: :i'_:: f l frr r."r r.. : :r. :: .::":::":"sSr:". ? Mg iI(F ERLAE ILUCK[E4 E'ER LEAVES