PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I I Plans For Two Outings Made B y Foresters Senior Round-Up Will Be Held Today; Field Day Set For Saturday I ,1 'Out To Get' Dean After Graduation What? By Way Of Introduction To The Senior's Most Vital Question -- 'Can I Get A job?' By COURTNEY ALLEN EVANS TH E SCREEN + ;.r .i ..., After graduation - what? This perplexing question is con- fronting the graduating class of 1935 iust as it has confronted those leav- The senior class round-up for all k!' .' l "''vii~u avc'a enorsngrduassrndupfsorsai ng the colleges and universities in senors, graduates, and professors in the past. Undoubtedly, a survey of the School of Forestry and Conserva- sni r thrt tion will be at 8:30 p.m. today in Sagi- naw Forest at the third Sister Lake, three miles out on Liberty Rd. The round-up will consist of a' camp-fire as a finel get-together for members of the senior class and as a last farewell to the forestry professors,' according to Williard Hildebrand, senior class president. The annual Field Day for members of the School of Forestry and Conser- vation will be held in the same place Saturday afternoon and evening. According to Hildebrand, who is in charge of the annual event, open com- petition will be staged to show the practical skill of the students and pro- fessors in the forestry school. Prizes will be given for the winners in various contests, such as canoeing, log-birling, running a compass traverse, chopping and sawing to a mark, rifle-shooting, and running races. The professors, who have tradition- ally lost the faculty-student tug-of- war, have begun to muster forces in an effort to win for the first time in twenty-odd years The Field Day, which is open for all members of the School of Forestry and Conservation, will terminate in a camp-fire. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Concerto in F minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 21, No. 2. .. .Chopin Maestoso Larghetto Allegro vivace Josef Lhevinne Frederick Stock, conductor. Sixth Concert, Saturday, May 18, 8:15 o'clock: "Boris Godunof" (Original Version) ............ Moussorgsky An opera in a Prologue of Four Acts Period, 1598-1605; Locale, Russia and Poland ' s oug1u1 U11UUlum Ue Coun ry asK- ing, "What are you going to do after. graduation?" would result in some variation of, "Look for a job, I guess." The answer, in the days of the "temerarious twenties," had some I significance. Jobs were abundant - the only problem was to pick out the position and go to work. Then came the depression and the "timorous thirties." Anything at all proved the byword, and the graduate who could get any job, much less a good oneI was the exception and not the rule. But where are we today? Has the New Deal taken us far enough away from the depression so that the grad- uate can be reasonably sure of get- ting some sort of a job? The Roose- velt administration has concerned it- self deeply with the problem of em- ployment. The project has not, how- ever, attempted to take care of the college graduate. He has been ex- pected to find his place directly in private business. What then, does private industry think of the 1935 graduate. When he -begins his search for employment, will the job-seeking senior just out of col- lege find the door of the business world open to him? What does the business man think of his ability, training, and possible employment? In the last six months, we have talked and corresponded with a great many leading men in the business and professional worlds. We have asked them these questions, in an endeavor to determine the way the wind was blowing. The results of these cdntacts have been many and varied. Optimism generally prevails among men higher up in industry. The ordinary em- ployment manager is much less im- pressed about the future. Less than two weeks ago we talked with two men in the general offices of one of the large automobile plants -one the employment manager, the other an executive high in official circles. The former gave us little encour- agement for the future. A strike has forced them to close down many of their plants. Employment condi- tions were bad. A sign on the doori read, "The Employment Office will be closed temporarily." The man- ager was practically pessimistic. This condition is quite general. Men who contact the public are wont to continue the philosophy of the de- pression. Men higher up, however, paint a different picture. Conditions are better they say. The college graduate should be able to get a job. His chances are definitely better than they were last year or the year before. Employment men, they say, hire when they're told to, and whom they're told to, and can get no real insight into the business. Quite naturally, reactions vary in the different fields. The professions tend to be less optimistic, with the possible exception of forestry, than are the lines associated with industry. Business is improving. Prosperity may not be here definitely. Perhaps it's not even "just around the corner,", but it is on its way. It brings with, it the opportunities for the college graduate. The problem is, then, whether or not the graduate is pre- pared to take his place in the rise. (Tomorrow: The Value of the Lit- erary Education). 1 THE CAST Boris Godunof, The Tsar...... . .. ....Maxim Pantefeieff Feodor, his son ........... Hope Eddy Xenia, his daughter. . . .Dorothy Park Prince Vassili Ivanovich Shuisky, his adviser and accomplice ...... Paul Althouse Andrei Schelkalof, Secretary of the Council....... Wilbur Evans Pimen, a monk and chronicler ........ Theodore Webb The Pretender, a novice in Pimen's care ...... Paul Althouse Marina Mnishek, daughter of the Lord of Sandomir . , Myrtle Leonard Rangoni, a Jesuit priest ............ Theodore Webb Varlaam, a vagabond . . Wilbur Evans Missail, a vagabond ...... Mark Bills Nikitich, a police officer ............ Wilbur Evans Mitiukha, a peasant .. . Wilbur Evans The Boyer in ;Attend- ance..............Wilbur Evans The Boyar in Attend- Lavitsky, a Jesuit.......Mark Bills Chernikofsky, a Jesuit ... Mark Bills Boyars, Guards, Officers, Polish Noblemen and Ladies, Sando- mir Girls, the Muscovite People etc......University Choral Union Earl V. Moore, conductor. The-'public is respectfully requested to come sufficiently early, as to be seated on time. Doors will be closed during numbers. Holders of season tickets are respectfully reminded to detach coupons before leaving home and to present for admission, only the ticket for the respective concert. Traf- fic regulations will be enforced under the direction of the Ann Arbor police department. Persons leaving the auditorium during intermission will please present their ticket stubs for re-admission. Cordial cooperation on the part of guests in connection with these simple matters, will be greatly appreciated by the University Musical Society and the Buildings and Grounds Department of the Uni- versity as well as the police depart- ment, to the end that confusion of all sorts may be avoided. Events Today Vocational Series - Students of the College of Literature, Science and -the Arts: A meeting will be held at 4:15 p.m. -in Room 1025 Angell Hall for students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and others in- terested in graduate studies. The meeting will be addressed by Dean C. S. Yoakum of the Graduate School. The final meeting in the vocation- al series, to be addressed by Miss Mar- ian Durell, director of nursing, will be held on May 16. Botany Journal Club meets at 7:30 p.m., Room 1139 N. S. Dr. LaRue in charge. Reviews of recent anatomi- will be held at 8 p.m., 3201 A.H. TheE following papers will be given: Wayne Dancer, "Symmetrical Cut Sets;" Herbert E. Vaughan, "Local Betti Numbers;" and Ching Lai Shen, "Theory of Inverse Sampling." Political Science Concentrates: There will be a meeting of all con- centrates in Political Science in the League at 7:30 p.m. The topic for discussion will be the vocational pos- sibilities in the field. Zeta Phi Eta: Regular meeting in the League Grill Room, at 12 noon. Tau Beta Pi: Dinner meeting will be held tonight at the Barton Hills Country Club. All members please meet at the Engineering Arch by 5:30 p.m. Transportation will be supplied. Annual Poetry Reading Contest of The Michigan Interpretive Arts So- ciety, 8 p~m., Auditorium University High School: Speakers: "Tipperary in the Spring," by McCarty..........Grace K. Gray "Spires of Oxford" andG that you appear at this time, as the guides for the Open House will be chosen from those who attend this meeting. Christian Science Organization: There will be a meeting of this or- ganization at 8 p.m. in the Chapel of the Women's League Building. Stu- dents, alumni and faculty members of the University are invited to at- tend. Bibliophiles of the Faculty Wom- en's Club meet at 2:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. F. R. Finch, 1619 S., University Ave. The program on i Robert Frost will be under the direc-! tion of Mrs. David Mattern.j Coming Events Chemistry Staff Meeting will be held in Room 212, Chemistry Build- ing, Wednesday, May 13, 4:15 pn. m Vocational Series - Students of the! College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: A meeting will be held on Thursday, May 16, at 4:15 p.m., Room 1025 Angell Hall for students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and others interested in nursing. The meeting will be addressed by Miss Marian Durell, director of nurs- ing. This will be the final meeting in the vocational series. Delta Omega (Honorary Public Health Society): Annual meeting for election *of officers, election of new members, and general business will be held Wednesday, May 15, 4:15 p.m., Room 135 West Medical Building. Athena: Election of officers for thel -Associated Press Photo. Dr. Lewis E. Drake (above), psy- chology professor, told a Wisconsin senate committee investigating rad- icalism charges at the University of Wisconsin, he was "out to get" Dean Chester D. Snell of the Milwaukee ex- tension division whom he termed a "menace to the administration of the Milwaukee center." Contemporary's Last Issue Will AppearMonday The final issue for the semester of Contemporary, campus literary maga- zine, will be out Monday afternoon, May 20, according to an announce- ment made yesterday. This issue, which will be the last of the year, will be on sale at news- stands and on the campus, according to the announcement. Contained in it are stories by Jean Keller, Rosalie Stech, and Horace Ott. Prof. Ben- nett Weaver, Arthur Carr, Marian Wiggin and others are represented by poetry. The essay section is covered by Ed- ward Litchfield, Ralph Carson, Elsie Monroe and others. The review sec- tion is particularly large in this issue, with "Of Time and the River" being reviewed by Prof. Howard M. Jones, Gertrude Stein's "Lectures in Amer- ica" by Dr. A. L. Bader, Play Produc- tion's "Midsummer Night's Dream," by Prof. H. T. Price, and other re- views of William Faulkner's "Pylon," and Forrester Blake's "Riding the Mustang Trail." The present staff of the magazine requested that all those interested in joining the staff next year leave their names at the Contemporary office in the Student Publication Build g sometime this week. fall semester will take place Wed- nesday, May 15, 7:30 p.m., Athena room. All meiribers are required to be present. Pi Lambda Theta meeting for the installation of officers Wednesday, May 15, 7:30, University Elementary School Library. All Members of Sphinx, junior hon- orary society of the literary college are asked to be present at the regu- lar noon luncheon Wednesday at the Union. Undergraduate Council Mecting at 3 p.m., today in the Union. All mem- bers are urged to be present. Contemporary: All members of the business staff are requested to meet with the Business Manager at 4 p.m., Wednesday, May 15, Contemporary I office. Please be there promptly. AT THE MICHIGAN "SEQUOIA" Enhanced by some of the screen's most remarkably beautiful photog- raphy, clarified by a pleasing, senti-! mental, well-planned human story, and intensified by simplicity, "Sequo- ia," the latest of the animal pictures, achieves an excellence that has never been approached before in similar attempts. Jean Parker, as a young animal lov- er living in the California mountains with her writer-father, discovers a motherless baby deer drinking from a small lake. She adopts it, and on her way home with it, finds a baby mountain lion lying beside its mother who has been killed in a trap. With Prof. Ford Terms Moore Bill Unfair (Continued from Page 1) intentioned property owners became unable to pay their taxes. As a re- sult, much land has come toothe state through tax sales. If all land on which taxes are now unpaid is sold, the state will become over-burdened with land, which at present property' values will not be worth anything, and will be deprived of current tax payments. If the bill becomes law, not only will the state be relieved of an excess of land, but its treasury, badly in need of immediate funds, will receive current taxes. True, it will lose 280 million dollars in de- linquent taxes, but it would lose them even if the taxes were not cancelled. In refuting these arguments, Pro- fessor Ford emphasized his belief that the bill is unfair to those who have paid taxes. "The proponents of the bill speak as though we would never experience another depression," he said. "When we emerge from the present depression, one of the best things that might be done would be to prepare for another one." "If these delinquent taxes are can- celled," he continued, "we have no reason to assume that many people, who have paid conscientiously during the past few years will refuse to pay in the next depression." Professor Ford called the cancella- tion of the 280 million dollars "a sub- sidy which would work a hardship on the rest of the people because of the necessary additional levies to make up for the cancellation." As another reason for opposing Senator Moore's plan, Professor Ford explained that it has been estimated that delinquent taxes in Michigan have been pledged to the amount of nearly 50 million dollars in short term notes and refunded bonds. "Cancel- lation of such collateral," he asserted, "is obviously unfair." Professor Ford believes that collec- tion of delinquent taxes is not as hopeless as it seems. He mentioned estimates which state that nearly 60 million dollars were collected last year and the survey of the Michigan Municipal League. This survey, he said, indicates that out of 16 counties during the fiscal year 1934, in seven counties collections of current taxes Th;rty-sixth Year - An Accredited Law School. Evening Law School with Day School Standards. Courses Lead to LL.B., LL.M. and J.D. Degrees. Text and Case Method. Moot Court Practice. GEORGE F. ANDERSON (LL.B., Northwestern) EDWIN C. AUSTIN (A.B., Wisconsin, LL.B., Northwestern) ARTHUR M. BARNHART (A.B., Princeton; LL.B., Harvard) G RENVILLE BEARDSLEY (A.B., Knox; J.D.. John Marshall) HTERBERT BEBB (AB., U. of Ill.; J.D., U. of Chicago) CHARLES CENTER CASE (LL.B., Northwestern) MORTON C. CRESSY (A.B., Yale; LL.B., Harvard) PALMER D. EDMUNDS (A.B., Knox; LL.B., Harvard) REUB3EN FREEDMAN (A.B.,U. of Manchester, Eng.; J.D.) MICHAEL GESAS (LL.B., John Marshall Law School) GEORGE E. HARBERT (LL.B., Notre Dame .University EDWARD B. HAYES (A.B., U. of Ill.; LL.B., Harvard) the deer in one arm and the lion in the other, she goes to her father, an- nounces that she is going to raise them together, and prepares a bed for each. In spite of their remark- able compatability, the lion is too hungry for meat, which he steals from a neighboring ranch. Both the animals have to be freed. But their friendship does not cease, and in sev- eral later incidents (superbly pre- sented), they befriend each other. Even those who are bored beyond description by animal pictures, "Se- quoia" should not only entertain but thrill. Some of the photographic shots alone are worth the price of ad- mission, and the "performance" of the animals are convincing beyond the point of speculation as to how it is done. One does not see the usual ele- phant stampede, the charging rhin- ocerous, or the chattering monkeys. Rather, one is lead into the life of the animals concerned, and he expe- riences something fresh, something vital in the way of good entertain- ment. There are two cartoon comedies, one good and one fair, Paul Tompkins at the organ, and an above-the-aver- age news reel. -C.B.C. exceeded 10 per cent of the total cur- rent 1934 levy; in 4 counties 90 per cent; and in five counties, 80 per cent. Finally, Professor Ford declared, "the constitutionality of the Moore bill is questionable." He called at- tention to a recent decision of the Minnesota Supreme Court holding a similar measure invalid because it violated a clause in the constitution requiring taxes to be uniform on the same class of subject. "The Mich- igan constitution has just such a pro- vision," he said pointedly. Scholars," by Letts .. "In Service"... . . "Carcassonne," by Nadaud .......... "Nay But You," by Browing .......... "Danny Deever," by Kipling .......... .Grace K. Gray Grace K. Gray Grace K. Gray Grace K. Gray Ralph S. Bell 1 Shanghaied by a Silly Salt? "Hannah Bind Shoes," by Larcom ...........Ralph S. Bell "Killers" and "Chicago," by Sandburg .......... Ralph S. Bell "The Barrel-Organ," by Noyes .......... Dorothy E. Ohrt "Musical Instrument," by E. B. Browning .. .Dorothy E. Ohrt "Recessional" and "Tomlinson," by Kipling .......Phyllis Blauman "Boy Blue" by Field .......... Wilma Rattenbury "Crossing the Bar," by Tennyson ..... Wilma Rattenbury "The Famine," by Longfellow .... Wilma Rattenbury "Patterns," by Lowell.......Marian M. Sanders "Childhood Is the Kingdom," by Millay.....Marian M. Sanders Judges: Prof. Marion F. Stowe of the Mich- igan State Normal. Prof. Clarence D. Thorpe of the Department of English. Prof. Erich-A. Walter of the Depart- ment of English. Prof. Raleigh Schorling of the School of Education. Miriam Moore, former teacher of Speech. This contest is free to the public. The program will last about an hour and a quarter. Adelphi House of Representatives annual banquet at the Union at 6:00 o'clock. Prof. J. A. C. Hildner, of the German department, will speak.I All members and former members of Adelphi are invited to attend. Reser= vations may be made by calling Vic Weipert, telephone 6175. Engineering Open House: Will all men desiring to act as guides in the Engineering Open House please meet in Room 348 East Engineering Build- ing at 5 p.m. It is most important 9.. MAY FESTIVAL 1. Wednesday, May 15, 8:15 P.M. Artist Concert. Festival debut of HELEN JEPSON, Metro- politan Opera Soprano. World premiere of "Drum Taps." Howard Hanson, composer, conducting. The Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra, The Choral Union, Frederick Stock, Con- ductor. 2. Thursday, May 16, 8:15 P.M. Artist-Choral Concert. Festival debut of MARY MOORE, coloratura soprano of the Metropolitan. "King David" by Honegger. Ethyl Hayden, soprano; Myrtle Leonard, con- tralto; Paul Althouse, tenor; Paul Leyssac, narrator. Choral Union, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Earl V. Moore and Frederick Stock, Conductors. 3. Friday, May 17,2:30 P.M. Young People's Concert. RUTH POSSELT, violinist. Or- chestra accompaniment. Young People's Festival Chorus. World premiere of "Jumblies" by Dorothy James. Eric DeLamarter and Juva Highee, Conductors. 4. Friday, May 17, 8:15 P.M. Artist concert. GIOVANNI MARTINELLI of the Metropoli- tan Opera, tenor. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Fred- erick Stock, Conductor. 5. Saturday, May 18, 2:30 P.M. Symphony concert. JOSEF LHEVINNE, pianist. Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Frederick Stock, Conductor. f_ Satirdav. Mnv 18. 815 P.M. } I 1 I