THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER. 17, 1935 s THE ICHIAN ArIY -ri THE MICHIGAN DAILY I . K Co., Inc., of New York was ordered by the federal trade commission to cease "unfair competitive practices" in the sale of aspirin . .. it is prohib- ited from stating or implying that the word "as- pirin" is the company's trade-mark and from as- serting without proper qualifications that the product has "no harmful after effects," "does not depress the heart" and the like.' "Is this news or a business operation report? Ask your neighbor. Numerous New Yorkers liv- ing in Brattleboro made wager on whether the New York newspapers, which carry large Bayer advertising, would print the government fiid- ings. The next morning the New York newspapers were searched. Everyone reported there was no mention in the Times. But these persons were mistaken. On page forty-one, which is devoted to business news, following a tin plate report, appears a small item with a one column head: 'BAYER BOWS TO AD ORDER.' THE FORUM 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; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Publisned every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. v. MEMBER o0oc ate d &H iatt r rm -=iO34 IitniaflI4e 1935, A OV AScoNsIN i MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or ot otherwise credited in this paper and the local news ublished herein.All rights of republication of special ispatches are reserved.. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as cond class matter. Special rate of postage granted by 'ird Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, tin Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 11 ,est 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave. hilcago, aIll. NAGIN.THOMAS H. KLEENE IAT EDTOR ..,,.... THOMAS E. GROEHN AS .ATEEDITOR..............JOHN J. FLAHERTY SP =ITR .... ........WILLIAM R. REED EN'S EDITOR....JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN BERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORS. .........DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HEALEY EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS News Editor............ ....Elsie A. Pierce Editorial Writers: Robert Cummins and Marshall D. Shul- Night Editors: Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Rich- ar'd G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, and Bernard Weissman. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence H. Davies, Olive E. Griffith, Marion T. Holden, Lois M. King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Leonard Bleyer, Jr., Wil- liam A. Boles, Lester Brauser, Albert Carlisle, Rich- ard Cohen, Arnold &. Daniels, William John DeLancey, Robert Eckhouse, John J. Frederick, Carl Gerstacker, Warren Gladders, Robert Goldstine, John Hinckley, S Leonard Kasle, Richard LaMarca, Herbert W. Little, Earle J. Luby, Joseph S. Mattes, Ernest L. "MCKenzie, Arthur A. Miller, Stewart Orton, George S. Quick, Robert D. Rogers, William Scholz, William E. Shackle- ton, Richard Sidder, I. S. Silverman, William C. Spaller, Tuure Tenander, and Robert Weeks. Helen Louise Arner, Mary Campbell, Helen Douglas, Beatrice Fisher, Mary E. Garvin, Betty J. Groomes, Jeanne Johnson, Rosalie Kanners, Virginia Kenner, Barbara Lovell, Marjorie Mackintosh, Louise Mars, Roberta Jean Melin, Barbara Spencer, Betty Strick- rnot, Theresa Swab, Peggy Swantz, and Elizabeth Whit- n.y. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ....... GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREIT MANAGER ......O...SEPH A. ROTHARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGERS........... ....MARGARET COWIE, ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS: Local advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Con- tracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Advertising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publications, Lyman Bitt- m~an. 'Company consents to Federal Ban on "onl3 Genuine Aspirin" claim. 'Washington, Sept. 19.- The Federal Trade Commission announced today that Bayer Com- pany, Inc. of New York City had consented tc the issuance of a cease and desist order issueC against certain alleged unfair competitive prac- tides in the sale of the company's aspirin ... The commission, the announcement said "makes it clear that its order is not to be construed as preventing the Bayer company from making pro- per therapeutic claims or recommendations based on reputable medical opinion or recognized med- ical or pharmaceutical literature." " And Mr. Seldes comments: ... An important fact is the government de- cision which the Brattleboro Reformer prints, that aspirin, any aspirin, can have harmful after ef- fects and does depress the heart. In Brattleboro the order against the Bayer Company to delete opposite claims is published but not in the Times." That is our New York Times -veritably the outstanding newspaper in the United States - but printing an article which any journalist will tell you is important news on page forty-one, not to mention the other New York City newspapers, the Herald-Tribune, the News, the World-Tele- gram, and the Post. We do not want to seem as old ladies and say that we are in danger of becoming violently ill if we take Bayer aspirin and possibly die. No, that is scarcely feasible, and that is not our point. What we believe wrong is that news was deleted that would have enlightened the American public. Not only do we have screaming bill boards on every highway, mellifluous radio voices, and at- tractive advertisements in newspapers and mag- azines passing bunk to us every day of the week, but when one is accused by the United States government of expressly telling us that something is not harmful to our health when it is decidedly so, it is time to do something about it. The cam- paign of silence on the part of a large portion of the newspapers should come to an end. v e t 4 G Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. The Wicked Freshmen To the Editor: At the Michigan-Indiana game the freshmen appeared on the field carrying a banner which bore the legend "T'Hell with '38." I firmly believe in such displays of class spirit, but strenuously object to the use of profane, blas- phemous and obscene language on a publicly- displayed banner. The word "H-i" is considered by the best circles to be vulgar, and from a relig- ious point of view it is impossible to countenance it. I urge the University to curb this public display of smut by an overzealous group of adolescents. -A.J. [THE SCREEN] AT THE MAJESTIC "Little Big Shot," a Warner Brothers production star- ring Sybil Jayson, Glenda Farrel and Robert Mont- gomery; and "Red Heads on Parade," Fox, with Dixie Lee and John Boles. I* Double Feature As Others SeeIt_ Course In Thinking (From the Temple University News) LET'S LOOK at John Doe. And now Warner Brothers come along with their conception of Shirley Temple. Sybil Jayson, who plays the juvenile lead in "Little Big Shot," is a better actress than her more famous contemporary, but her coaching in the dancing and singing arts was faulty. The current offering is a combination of gang- ster, musical and frank melodrama. Robert Mont- gomery, who has grown stouter, is the small time confidence man who, with his partner, Edward Everett Horton, is the unfortunate receiver of an acquaintance's child, Sybil Jayson. The innocent is left with Montgomery in a restaurant and the remainder of the film tells of his efforts, first to desert her and next to get her back from the orphanage. The plot or plots are obviously built around the homeless babe and were it not for the over-sordid atmosphere of the picture, Sybil Jayson might have gotten much further in her attempts to con- vince her audience that it should cry and laugh at the right moments. For the first time in ages Horton mi'sses fire. His side glances seem a trifle worn and with Montgomery trying to scamper from place to place even with all his weight, the all-round over acting is accentuated. Glenda Farrel who insisted on "soap boxing" Montgomery, finally succeeds in forcing him to get a job instead of trying to wring a living from the sale of fake watches on street corners. The best sequence in the picture is the scene where Jack LaRue practically falls into Mont- gomery's lap after being shot by Norton, the chief gangster of all those which waltz in and out of the shots. Sybil seems a little overworked. She cries or looks precocious in every other scene and the few junctures when she is caught looking natural, her ability is really apparent. As for her adopted god- father, Norton, he looks very worried throughout and just as he cannot find an audience for his gags in Sybil, so does he find it impossible to look comically outraged to the audience. One of his few lighter spots arrives at the end, where, for the first time in pictures, he is seen beating up a thug. Dixie Lee and John Boles in "Red Heads on Pa- rade" hand in a decent job with a dragging story. Boles is his usual singing self and despite the fact that he seems a little old for Dixie, he is fairly convincing as her lover. Dance ensembles topped with red heads exclusively, are scattered toward the end. It all concludes with a genuine movie wedding, red heads lining the aisle and every- thing. that professors ask a question in thinking, mixed in with the rote knowledge of the semester, before giving final grades. But we ask you not to squirm. If you'll believe the commencement orators and the white-bearded gentlemen who write about "The College Student of Today," you'll find that the thing which makes you different from raccoon- coated students of other decades is your ability to think clearly and logically. THURSDAY, OCT. 17, 1935 VOL. XLVI No. 14 Notices Identification Pictures for all stu- dents are now available in Room 4, University Hall. They should be called for at once. J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students. School of Education, Changes of Elections: No course may be elected for credit after Saturday, October 19. Students enrolled in this School must report all changes of elections at the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall. Membership in a class does not cease nor begin until all changes have been thus officially registered. Ar- rangements made with instructors only are not official changes. Reception to the Foreign Students of the University: All foreign students of the University are invited to be present at a reception at the home of Dean and Mrs. Joseph A. Bursley, 2107 Hill Street, next Sunday after- noon from four to six o'clock. This will give them an opportunity to meet their deans and faculty advisers. This reception is under the auspices of the Cosmopolitan Club of the University. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Judiciary Council Interviews: All Senior women interested in petition- ing for the Senior vacany on the Ju- diciary Council must be interviewed by the Council between 5:00 and 6:00 Thursday afternoon, or 3:00 to 5:30 Friday afternoon. If possible please come at the beginning of the hours designated. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: The Hill Auditorium box-of- fice is open daily from 10 to 12 and 2 to 4 p.m. for the sale of season tick- ets. The Honorable William R. Castle will open the course on Thursday evening, Oct. 31, at 8:15 p.m. Single admissions for this number will go on sale Saturday, Oct. 26. Single ad- missions for the Admiral Byrd lec- ture will be available at Wahr's Book Store beginning Nov. 2. Aero division of A.S.M.E. All per- sons planning to make the trip to Mitchell Races must register at Aero Bulletin Board by Friday noon. Trombonists and Drummers needed for the Varsity Band. Report at Mor- ris Hall for tryouts or call Mr. Re- velli, 5097. Academic Notices English 1, Special Section: meets in Room 3217 Angell Hall, Tuesday 7:30-8:30 p.m., Thursday, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Instructor, Dr. Hornberger. I The freshmen whose names are listed here will be members of the9 special section. Bobb, S.; Browne, Mary; Clark, D. Philip; Cummins, Philip; Gessel, C.; Hailpern, Thurbe; Kiell, Norman T.; Klein, Arthur; Lardner, Rex L.; Leg- man, Gershorn E.; McDonald, Frank; Miller, Mungo; Mullin, Elizabeth; Packer, Loren D.; Peters, Arthur; Reinbeimer,rF. S.; Robinson, Frances M.; Rorke, Elizabeth; Schultz, Kath- erine; Shull, F. B.; Simpson, Henriet- ta. E. A. Walter. Candidates for the Ph.D. Degree ins English: The preliminary examina- tions will be given in the following order: American Literature, October 19. Nineteenth Century, October 26. Eighteenth Century, November 2. Renaissance, November 9. Criticism, November 16. Middel Ages, November 23. Linguistics, November 30. Anyone desiring to take these ex- aminations should register in the English Office, 3221 Angell Hall, by Friday, October 18, at 4:30 p.m. . H. M. Jones. Reading Requirement in German for Ph.D. Candidates: Candidates in all fields except those of the natural sciences and mathematics must ob- tain the official certification of an adequate reading knowledge of Ger- man by submitting to a written ex- amination by the German Depart- ment. For the first semester this exami- nation will be given on Wednesday, Oct. 23, at 2 p.m. in Room 203 U.H. Students who intend to take the examination are requested to register their names at least one week before the date of the examination at the office of the German Department, 204 University Hall, where detailed in- formation with regard to examination requirements will be given. Economics 51 and 52 make-up fin- al: For those who missed the final examination in June will be held Thursday, October 17 at 3 p.m., Room 207 Ec Students of Mathematics: For the benefit of those students who took the recent comprehensive examina- tion and any others interested, the examination will be discussed by the departmental adviser in Room 3011 A. H. on Thursday, October 17, 3 p.m. Students in Political Science are urged to attend the lecture to be given by Mr. T. C. Carr at 11:00 o'clock today in room 100 Hutchins Hall. Mr. Carr will speak on the "Development of Administrative Law." Geology 11 and 12: The make-up Final for these tourses will be given Wednesday, October 23 at 2:00 p.m. in Room 2054 N. S. History 47, Sec. 5, Thursday at 2, will meet hereafter in Room E Haven, instead of 1020 A. H. Mr. Cecil T. Carr, Editor of British Revised Status, Statutory Rules and Orders, etc., will talk on the subject "Administrative Law," today in Room 100 Hutchins Hall, 11:00 a.m. The lecture is open to students of law and political science. Events Of Today Landscape Club Meeting: Herbert Barker, of the tenttlk y State Park Service, will speak at a special meet- ing at four o'clock in the Landscape Department. Cercle Francais: First meeting at 7:45 p.m. Michigan League. All old members are requested to be present. Important meeting. Iota Chi meeting at 7:30 p.m. Meeting room on League Bulletin Board. Phi Epsilon Kappa, Men's Honor-' ary Physical Education Fraternity meets at 8:00 p.m., room 319, Union. It is important that all members be present. Pi Tau Pi Sigma: Regular meeting at the Union, 7:30 p.m., room posted. Imperative that all members be pres- ent. Uniforms requested. Varsity Glee Club: Tryouts and re- hearsal 7:30 p.m. Michigan Union. Sophomore Men and Women in- terested in trying out for the Mich- iganensian report to the Student Publications Bldg. on Maynard St. at 4 o'clock. Hillel Foundation: The first of a series of socials will be sponsored by Kappa Nu Fraternity at the Hillel Foundation, 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. All are invited. Social Work Majors are urged to attend a meeting for Rank and File case workers, Michigan Conference of Social Work, Friday, October 18, 4:30, Michigan Union Ballroom. Crop and Saddle tryouts Saturday afternoon, October 19. Last oppor- tunity for the year. Call Betty Greve, 6654, to make application. All who are interested in studying Esperanto will meet Friday, October 18, at 4:00 p.m. in room 1020 A. H. Party for Congregational Students Friday evening, October 18, 9-12:30, in Church Parlors. Variety enter- tainment, refreshments, orchestra. Admission 25c. Chinese Student's Club Motting, Special business meeting Friday, Oct. 18, 8 p.m., Lane Hall. Please bring vnilr mcayyho,.hirn ft~c if 'rn, la~va ,-.,-' Social Workers Begin Secondt Day Of Meeting Eight Round Table Groups To Assemble At Union This Afternoon (Continued from Page 1) the community and the social work program to the city's residents. In the evening meeting of the con- ference, at which Prof. Arthur E. Wood of the sociology department presided, Dr. Louis A. Schwartz, con- sutling psychiatrist at the Children's Center in Detroit, spoke on "The Modern Family." After tracing the progress of the family institution during recent years, Dr. Schwartz asserted, "The inefficiency of the present economic order, as well as even during the so- called 'prosperous times,' to provide a decent standard of living for the masses of the people, must bear most of the blame for much of the de- moralization that is, at present, Wit- nessed in connection with the family disorganization." This morning's session of the con- ference, meeting at 9 a.m. in Room 319 of the Union, will be in charge of Miss Claire M. Sanders of De- troit, and will consider "Public and Private Social Work - Allies or Com- petitors." Mrs. Blythe Francis, of the Grand Rapids Family Service Association, will speak at this meeting on "The Private Field," and Francis MBroorn, of the Detroit Department of Welfare, will discuss "The Public Field." "Implications of Social Security Legislation" will be the subject of a talk by Miss Lea Taylor ,of Chicago Commons, at 7:30 p.m. Miss Harret J. Comstock, president of the con- ference and sister of former Gover- nor William A. Comstock, will pre- side at this session. Vivisection Is Topic Of Talk By Dr. Stoner Pharmacy Students Told Problems Encounterea In Research Work Vivisection, pharmacy students were informed by Dr. W. H. Stonr of the Burroughs Wellcome Co., is an extremely important, though fr- quently misrepresented, part of re- search. Dr. Stoner, outside contact man for the Burroughs Wellcome Research Company, in a talk to pharmacy stU- dents ,discussed the opportunities aid problems which are encountered in research work, at the same time enumerating the companies which employ research laboratories, the po- sitions which such firms offer college graduates, and the salaries which the various jobs may be expected to pay. Students were advised that in this sort of employment the wages are more directly proportional to one's value to the company than in any other field. "Beware of the small company re- search departments," warned Dr. Stoner; many such firms use thei laboratories as "scenery" with which to impress customers. The directors have little or no qualifications, and can appreciate no special geniu which those under them might ex- hibit. On the other hand, he said, a large company realize the valuable contributions which a research lab- oratory can make in te way o in- creased efficiency. "Women fill one of the most im- portant positions in a research lab- oratory," Dr. Stoner said. They are of great value as research librarians; it is the librarian who, with a trained group of interpreters and experts, must read through countless dusty volumes to find every available bit of material on the problem with which the laboratory is concerned at the time. Faculty Cinema Group To View 8 New Pictures Eight pictures in Russian, French, German and English will be privately screened prior to their public ex hibitions under the auspices of the Art Cinema League, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Harold J. Mclar- lan, a member of the League's faculty board. The screenings will be attended by the members of the League and their appropriateness will be passed upon. The French production; "La Mater- nelle" will definitely appear in a few weeks but those about which' no plans have been made include "bon Quixote," a musical drama starring Chaliapin: "Mme. Bovary," an ad- aptation of Flaubert's novel: "blue Light," an Austrian picture: and 2 3USINESS ASSISTANTS: Jerome I. Balas, Charles W. Barkdull, D. G. Bronson, Lewis E. Bulkeley, John C. Clark, Robert J. Cooper, Richard L. Croushore, Herbert D~. Fallender, John T. Guernsey, Jack R. Gustaf son, Morton Jacobs, Ernest A. Jones, Marvin Kay, Henry J. Klose, William C. Knecht, R. A. Kronenberger, Wil- liam R. Mann, John F. McLean, Jr., Lawrence M. Roth, Richard M. Samuels, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Star- sky, Norman B. Steinberg. VOEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betty Cavender, Bernadine Field, Betty Greve, Helen Shapland, Grace Snyder, Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Mary McCord, Adele olier. NIGiIT EDITOR: ELSIE A. PIERCE I)j Thumbing the Catalogue. . . NE LEARNS a few things in three or four years of college. One of hiem is what is wrong with college. There was a time when we resented warmly any ttempt to force compulsory courses upon us. |nglish, said we, is bad enough, but we'll tolerate - but the thought of having to study Latin, iathematics, or history was too much. And so we agitated, along with the enlightened ducators who thought that these classical courses 'ere so much extra baggage in this modern world, nd would never be of any "practical" benefit. .nd thus freed, we took courses of practical bene- t, in economics, education, and political science. Now that we're old timers, the awful realiza- ion sometimes creeps over us, like fog coming pthe river, that we're ignorant of the things that elly constitute knowledge. We're dishearteningly e tobacco or whisky that's artificially cured, Cssing that mellow flavor that results from proper ging. These things we know constitute the im- lements of a middle-class mind, isolated from the istorical and philosophic background through 7hich it has been derived. A familiar argument, perhaps, but it is none the ,s true that the universal elements in our con- enporary knowledge are the classical elements. tithout a working familiarity with the classics and .assical fhought, the awfulness of the human iso- iion becomes a terrifying reality.. We wish that we knew Greek. We'd like to be ,ble to read Plato and Homer; and if we knew atin, we would hunger for Virgil's polished verses. )nte's "Inferno" would be a treasure house if miy we had learned Italian. Well, we couldn't learn all that, perhaps, but we >uld begin, and if we had come to know any part f it well, we would leave school with a stronger nse of security than we have now for our incom- eted structure built without a foundation. reedom Qf ehe Press . . John is the professor's standby. He's the fellow with the glasses who sits on the third row of your Latin class. You'll find him in sta- tistics, too. A better-than-average student, he got four B's, two A's last semester. When there's a difficult passage to translate, the professor calls on John. John prepares his lesson. John scintillates in a mass of conjunc- tions. John is smug in placid ease. The professor labels him "an intelligent, thinking boy." Then John strays into a course in logic or in political theory. The professor wanders from the original premise and asks for opinions on good government: "What's the matter with our gov- ernment? What does good government mean?" John squirms. The rest of the class squirms. The class utters the "er-ers" of not knowing what to say. They can apply the formuli of al- gebra. They can memorize a translation of Cicero. They have an abundance of the two-plus-two- equals-four kind of knowledge. But they have a const'itutional deficiency Which makes them abhor thinking. This isn't a soap-box editorial. We aren't ask- ing you to spend 15 minutes each day in the perilous process of thinking. We aren't asking that a course in thinking be included in the curric- ula of the University. We aren't even demanding Ten Years Ago From The Daily Files Of Oct. 17, 1925 Directs Work Of 310,000 Women By SIGRID ARNE r HE OFFICE is in an old building not far west of the White House. The walls are scarred. The furniture is old and unmatched. Maps cover the walls. Telephones ring. Letters pile up to be signed by the auburn-haired lady at the desk. She starts her day at 8 a.m. She nibbles belated lunch at three. She stops to tell a secretary she will see a textile manufactui'er at 8 p.m. She has the responsibility on her shoulders of the 310,000 women who are on work-relief. Her name is Ellen Woodward and she comes from Mississippi. She makes two small concessions to femininity; she has a huge bouquet of flowers on her desk, and she likes smart clothes. Her small, alert figure looks well in that orchid and white suit. Her voice is gentle and her blue eyes kind and calm. Perhaps no other woman in the world today has the fate of so many of her sisters in the palm of her hand. Right now she is engaged in setting up a huge sewing room which will employ a great number of these women. They will turn 150,000,000 yards of cottAn in the nevx tiV months iin r+h, fr- dole," she says. "Anyone capable of contributing to the country should have the right to do so. "Have you heard what the women's committee did in Charleston, W. Va.? They went from door to door and placed 1,100 penniless women in jobs, and the town has only 60,000 population. "And do you know about my state manager in Missouri?" She laughs mischievously. "She had women working in an overall factory. One day she felt so proud over the perfection of their craftsmanship she scooped up an armful of over- alls and went to see a manufacturer she knew. He ended by hiring all those women right off the relief rolls." Perhaps, for her own comfort, Mrs. Woodward can see too far into the homes of those without money or jobs. She feels that each plan, if it involves only one of the 310,000, may be the turning point in a hitherto unfortunate life. So no letter leaves her office she has not seen. She came to Washington first when her father, William Sullivan, was senator. Later, at 19, she married a young lawyer and settled in Louisville, Miss. There "Ellie" Woodward took her first big dose of civic work. She planned and talked until the town bought a deserted, wooded piece of Coach Yost's Wolverine jugger- naut, since that time generally re- garded as Michigan's greatest foot- ball team, trampled Wisconsin, 21- 0, in the Badgers' homecoming. Benny Friedman starred with his ac- curate passing. Every ticket available for the Navy game two weeks distant had been sold within an hour after they were placed on sale, and the athletic of- fice returned more than 100,000 ap- plications. Selection of Ann Arbor as the place for the 1926 convention of the State Federation of Women's Clubs was made at the annual convention in Benton Harbor. Each of the women in Betsy Bar- bour House contributed a small sum, put their names in the hat, drew four out, and made plans to send the own- ers of the lucky four names to the Michigan-Illinois game at Urbana the next week-end. The Freshman Glee Club held its annual tryouts. Announcement that the Fourth Annual Panhellenic Ball would be given Friday, Nov. 27, in Granger's Ballroom was made. The Lawyers' Club made plans for a dance they intended to give the evening of the Navy game.