SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1935 'p THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~_ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) . Hill Auditorium. Seats will be re- served until 10:50 a.m. Faculty will assemble in the dress- ing rooms, second and third floors of Hill Auditorium, where they may robe. Enter by rear doors. Commencement - Monday, June 17, 9:00 a.m. Weather Fair Time of Assembly -7:45 a.m. Places of Assembly: Members of the Faculties and in- vited guests, in Angell Hall, Room 1223 Rhetoric Library. Regents, Ex-Regents, Deans and Candidates for Honorary Degrees, in Angell Hall, Room 1011, the Regents Room. Students, and Honor Guard at the same places as for Baccalaureate. Line of March - State Street to Ferry Field. Weather Rainy The sounding of the University Power House Siren at 7:45 will indi- cate that the exercises have been transferred to Yost Field House. Students will proceed directly to the Field House and enter through the North doors. Members of the Faculties will en- ter through the North doors and take their places on the platform in the. Field House. Regents, Ex-Regents, Deans and Candidates for Honorary Degrees will, assemble in the office in the North, end of the Field House. L. M. Gram, Chief Marshal come to Room 231 A.H.; N through Z to Room 35 A.H. Psychology 42 Final Examination: Students with initials A through M come to Room 1025 A.H.; N through Z to Room C Haven Hall. English 32; Sec. 4: The final ex- amination in this course will be given Tuesday morning, June 4, in Room 2203 Angell Hall, instead of in 205 Events Today Methodist Episcopal Church: Today 10:45 a.m. -Morning Wor- ship Service. Dr. C. W. Brashares has chosen as a sermon subject, "Christ's Alternative to Communism." Stalker Hall for Young Men and Women of College Age: 6:00 p.m. - Wesleyan Guild Devo- tional hour. The program will be in the form of an informal discussion of current interest for those who wish to be with us. The usual supper hour has been discontinued until the open- ing of summer school. First Baptist Church: 9:30 Church school, 9:45, Dr. Waterman's class in Old Testament meets at Guild House. 10:45 a.m. -Mr. Sayles will preach on "The Heart of the Gospel. 6:00 Young people of high school age meet in church parlors. Roger Williams Guild. No noon class today. Members of Guild will meet at Guild House at 6:00 p.m. Meeting in charge of Gordon Stow, and a so- cial hour and refreshments will be features. Congregational Church: Service of worship at 10:30 to- day with sermon by the minister. Sub- ject, "Religion and Social Action," including the program now being set up by the Congregational denomina- tion for more closely relating the church in an active way to the social needs of the hour. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services today: 8:00 a.m. Holy Com- munion; 9:30 a.m. Church School; 11:00 Kindergarten; 11:00 a.m.. Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev- erend Henry Lewis. Coming Events Junior Research Club will have its Slave History Discovered In Old Documents, History Department Finds Files Of Old Ann Arbor Anti-SlaveryPaper (Continued from Page 1) slavery and the anti-slavery move- ment. Written in a steady, legible hand, with parts done in the old Pitt- man style shorthand, the documents are voluminous in character. Editor Foster went way back to prehistoric times to begin his history, preparing outlines on all phases of his work. Another set of papers are essays, perhaps meant for editorials in the Signal of Liberty, which deal with al- most every topic imaginable, from the "Character of Woman," - to "Thoughts on After Life." The old abolitionist was an unusual charac- ter, Kooker points out. His uncles were both original United States sen- ators, coming fr'om Massachusetts and Rhode Island respectively. After his paper merged with the National Era, Foster retired from newspaper work until 1852 when he helped edit the True Democrat in De- troit for a year. At the end of that time, his health gave out and he moved to Lansing where he was ap- pointed the first superintendent of the Industrial School for Boys. Kooker points to this as an indi- cation of how rich Michigan really is in historical materials. In ex- pressing his thanks to the Fosters and pointing out the cooperation be- ing given the department's program by alumni, he requested that all per- sons who have documents of histor- ical importance in their possession or know where they are to inform him about it. The division of the history depart- ment concerned with the Michigan history collection now has an office in the University Press building on May-. nard St., which Kooker makes his headquarters. Indian Earthquake Kills Twenty Thousand Q -...doQUET TA .JKARAT ;" (9 -4 *,AIVA IN D I A Boy of SengoI $SCA,.E OF MILtS -Associated Press Photo. This map shows the location of Quetta, Mastung and Kalat, hardest hit cities on the northwest frontier of India by three rumbling earth shocks which killed an estinated 20,000 whites and natives. Observers feared the toll would go much higher with receipt of additional reports from outlying districts. TICKLISH WORK FLINT. Mich., June 1-A)-Police were searching today for the thief who, John Bonski complained, re- moved $45 from his sock without even tickling his feet. Bonski said he could not remember removing his shoes., IL IHF iii F. ~_ BLUE BOOKS Fountain Pens, Dramatic Season: The Revue "Up to the Stars" with songs and sketches by Noel Coward and including the distinguished stars Walter Slezak, Ilka Chase, Romney Brent, the Rocky Twins, Nina Tarasova, Jessie Royce Landis, Imogene Coca, Felicia Sorel and Demetrios Vilan, Helen Gray and Patricia Calvert will open at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater tomorrow night at 8:15 and play through Saturday with matinees Wednesday and Sat- urday at 3:15 and a special evening performance Tuesday evening, June 11. Choice seats are still available for all performances. The fifth play of the Dramatic Sea- son, the world premiere of Robert Raynold's "The Ugly Runts" with Tom Powers and Jessie Royce Lan- dis, will open with the gala premiere with Mr. Reynolds present, Monday, June 10, and continue Wednesday "matinee and evening June 12, and an added matinee and night Friday, June 14. The sixth play, "The Bishop Mis- behaves" with Violet Heming and Estelle Winwood and others will open Thursday, June 13, and play the fol- lowing. Saturday matinee and evening Monday, and Tuesday nights. The closing play "Ode to Liberty" with the original co-star Walter Sle- zak will open Wednesday matinee and night June' 19, Thursday, an added Friday matinee and night and the gala closing matinee and night June 22. "The Ugly Runts" Extras: Robert Henderson, director, will see students and local children desiring to appear as extras for rehearsal and perform- ances from June 4 to June 14 Tues- day, June 4 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Garden Room of the Michigan League. Academic Notices Aero. 6- Final Examination: This examination will be given on Thurs- day, June 6, at,8 o'clock a.m. in Room 104 East Engineering Building. Geology 12: Place of Final Exam- ination: A-P (inclusive) in Natural Science Auditorium, Q-Z in West Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall. Sociology 110: Final examination- This code letter should be B instead of K, as listed. Examination will be held Tuesday a.m., June 4. Sociology 51: Final examination- Thursday a.m., June 6. Mr. Fuller, Natural Science Aud.; Mr. Hartung and Prof. Holmes, 25 Angell Hall. History 48: The sections in this, course will meet for the final exami- nation in the following rooms: Sec- tion 4 in G Haven; sections 1, 2, 3, 5 in C Haven, Sat. p.m., June 8. Political Science 2-Final examina- tion, Friday, June 7, at 2:00 p.m. Professor Cuncannon's sections in 1035 AH. Dr. Dorr's sections, 231 AH. Mr. McCaffree's sections, 25 AH. Mr. Kallenbach's sections, C Haven Psychology 34 Final Examination: Students with initials A through M Inks, College Outlines. E BOOK EXCHANGE Bring in your USED BOOKS to be sold for you at your own price, a nominal fee for selling. STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE 1111 South University Avenue - Phone 2-3476 .1.1 annual dinner Tuesday, p.m. at the Union. President Alexander will be the speaker. June 4, 6:30 G. Ruthven -_,,, . . -..a -._. . r- , " - --="L SUDDEN s SERVICE i. "T " i w " i = . i lm Save STO hm - - - - -- - -- - -- - -0 ,0000%ftq - , I.I.-W Ir- i bothered with lugging your winter clothes home this sutnmer . Wool Garments Cleaned...Stored... and Insured the "GREENE" way to save them for wear next fall. FURS Cleaned ... Glazed ... Stored in Cold Storage Vaults . . : Insured by "Travelers" - all with the aid of Science's most modern achievements, the Furriers' Method. I PANAMA HATS - WHITE LINENS PALM BEACH - WHITE FLANNELS Greene's is the only cleaner equipped to do "WHITES" as they should be done." Mothers- If your child has a Hernia here's good news. Prof. D. H. Agnew of Guy Hospital, London, said re- cently, "All forms of Hernia are curable in children, provided the Hernia be restored and held in position.. This can only be accomplished cLEANERs8'ODERS I C ROCLEP i m I f U 1 11