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November 19, 1935 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1935-11-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

- THIE MI;CIIU I N 1 AI[Y

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 125

League Council
Votes Earlier
Friday Hours
Reverse Former Decision
And Asks 12:30 A.M.
Closing Rules
(Continued from Page 1)
are bolting their Saturday morning
classes.
(2) House mothers and dormitory
heads have reported cases of 'fatigue'
on the part of undergraduate women
during week-ends.
(3) Saturday classes are now defi-
nitely a permanent institution at the
University, whereas at first they were
believed only tentative.
The Council also passed a motion
intended for consideration by the
Senate Committee on Student Affairs,
asking that the present Friday night
1:30 a.m. permission be retained for
all important dances other than four
to which later permission has already
been granted.
A resolution to permit the four
class dances to continue after 1:30
a.m. was approved by the Senate
Committee a month ago.
The membership of the Under-
graduate Council, with the exception
of Lois King, '37, chairman of the
Theatre-Arts committee, includes
only senior women.
Other members are: Miss Seeley;
Betty Scherling, secretary; Laura
Jane .Zimmermran, treasurer; 'Mar-
tha Steen, chairman of the social
committee; Ruth Sonnanstine, chair-
man of the merit system committee;
Florence Harper, chairman of the
publicity committee; Jane Arnold,
president of Panhellenic Society;
Maureen Kavanaugh, president of
the Assembly; Virginia York and Bet-
ty Chapman, vice-president of the
League; Margaret Hiscock, chairman
of the orientation committee; Jose-
phine McLean, women's editor of The
Daily; Brenda Parkinson, president
of the Women's Athletic Association;
and Winifred Bell, chairman of the
judiciary council.

Accredited Colle
Be Proud', Y

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By DON T. SMITH
"Any college on the accredited list
of the Association of American Uni-
versities can indeed feel proud," de-
clared Dean Clearance S. Yoakum of
the Graduate School yesterday, who,
with Assistant Dean Peter Okkelberg
returned last week from Ithaca, New
York, from the annual convention of
the Association at Cornell University.
Since its formation 35 years ago,
the Association has compiled a list of
those colleges that train students
well enough so that they are success-
ful as graduate students in the uni-
versities belonging to the Association.
According to Dean Yoakum, many
interesting and important matters
were taken up by the group, chiefly
made up of graduate school deans.
Graduate Transfers
The convention discussed the im-
portance of graduate students doing
work at more than one university.
Several cases were cited involving
problems of transferring from school
to school and of relating work in dif-
ferent institutions of learning. In
general the group agreed that the
use of letter grades for admitting
transfers from one school to another
was satisfactory, but they were not
necessarily a true basis for judging
the value of a student's work.
The group felt that there should
be better arrangements for students
to continue with research work when
they have already begun in one school
and find it necessary to transfer to
another. One solution offered was
an exchange of detailed letters ex-
plaining the work the prospective
transferee had accomplished and
what he might find in regard to his
particular line of work at the college
he was seeking enrollment in.
Dean Henry Gordon Gale, of the
physical sciences division at the Uni-
versity of Chicago, speaking on the
relationship between undergraduate
and graduate work, stated that at

C
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7

ges 'May Well
Classfed
oakum Declares
Chicago under their plans in many FOR SALE
cases the graduate student was from FOR SALE: 1934 Buick-67. Sedan, M1
one-half to a full year ahead of low mileage, fender wells, trunki
graduate students from other schools rack, radio, heater, one owner car,
under the ordinary plan. in erfect condition Will consider I
The results of an experiment con- irdecanditions Wilresonside !S
ducted by the Social Science Research trade and give terms to IS2-3268 110
Council were disclosed at the conven -at.Cl e -268 11
tion. The council offered several fel- LOST AND FOUND {
lowships of $1,000, plus tuition, to ._LP
seniors in colleges all over the coun- LOST: Black overcoat -white buck
try who were interested in going on gloves in pocket. Alpha Delt house.
with graduate work. College Board ex- Call Wm. Warner, 4017. Reward. -
aminations were given to these ap- 112 S
plicants in their senior year, and of 1
the 79 who took the tests, only two LOST: Between Pretzel Bell and cor-
actually passed satisfactorily. This ner of Ingalls and Huron, class pin,
was the first time in the history of letters B.M.H. $5 reward. Phone -
these selections of students for fel- 9517.
lowships that written examinations
were given. GOLD RING, letter W, class of '34.
Initialed R.S.H. Reward. Phone
Fitzgerald To Talk 6226. Hadley. 114
On Traffic Rulings Schaeberle M
LANSING, Nov. 18.-R(Pj- Mich- 23Es iet
igan, counting the toll taken by traffic 203 East Liberty
accidents over the week-end, turned Ready to supply you with all your
its eyes to the state capital tonight I for Band, Orchestra, and Home.
for a statement from the governor Department. We would like to
and other state officials of the things satisfied customers.
they are doing and plan to do to sALIsfI s OS
make driving safer. _BALDWIN PIANOS
Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald, who
will be the principal speaker at a mass
meeting of some 3,000 persons,
planned to outline a program of legis- OW .... ,
lation designed to clear the highways
of reckless drivers and make motor- The LastS howing-
ing safer in other ways. L s ~o ig
seen this Grea t Spec
SOCIAL See it By Al
DANCING
Toe, tap, acrobatics.
Taught daily. Terrace
Garden Studio. Wuerth The Scarlet Middle Ages
Theatre Bldg. Ph. 96iv9ganinrmac
1 Open evenings.Iive again in romance
and thrilling spectacle'
Daily 130 - 1 1 P.M.
Adolph Zukor presenls
WHITNEY
15c to 6 - 25c After 6
NOW
FIRST SHOWING!
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CHARLOTTE HENRY
"FORBI DDEN
HEAVEN"
andAlso--
Walt Disney's SILLY SYMPHONY
HOWARD HUGHES
PAT O'BRIEN BY ALL MEANS
"FRONT PAGE"
MAT. 1:45 - 4:00 - EVENING

Si
irectory IL
ter
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NOTICES
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count you among our many J
SCHILLER PIANOS!_
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NEWS -------
"WHO KILLED COCK ROBIN"
'COME EARLY
G SHOWS 6:45 - 9:00P.M.

igma Rho Tau To Hold S.C.A. CABINET TO MEET
InterChaper Dbate The Student Christian Association
nter-Chapter Debate cabinet will meet at 8 p.m. today.
The first in a series of inter-chap- Discussions of finance are to be fea-
debates will be held between the tured. Budgets must be complete and
iversity branch of Sigma Rho Tau filed with the president before Nov.
tnorary engineers' speech society, 2dithathenopreden. eoeNv
d the Wayne University chapter, 26, it was announced.
9 p.m. today in the Union.
The debate will be on the subject:
esolved, That the Federal Govern- wa's
ent Continue to Build Rigid Dirig-
es." George Malone, '37E, Robert R o e
usins, '37E, Bruce Rohn, '38E, Lyle YOU ARE SICK
eading, '36E, and Leon Highhouse, YO U CONSULT 1-
8E, of the local chapter, will uphold YOUR DOCTOR
e negative side. Im.
ass"~
NOW I YODU NE E D
NS THE TIME . . . LEGALADVICE
YOU CONSULT t
For you to clear your com- YOUR LAWYER
plexion of summer tan and
freckles, and to make it
soft and smooth, in grand
sn.T1-lon e 1,fnuYOiU NEnE

snDon' be cauhrt o
guard. Come in today.
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FACIALS
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1402 Washington Hgts.
Phone 2-3413

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MOHREY
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E , SONA L
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Room 208, Wolverine lidg.
Cor. Washington & 4th, Ann Arbor

..

I

LAST TIMES MA H IG N ALL SE
TODAY ! MtPCj L Gfl *MATINEES
EVENING
STAGE and SCR EEN
ON STAGE - IN PERSON
The Famous Song Writer and Impresario

'A TS
:S 30c
S- 40c

-II1

moo&

KU F-RTI

YOUR
PHOTOGRAPH
and a Letter!
The gift of gifts
to a friend at
CHRISTMAS
Phone 4434
1ichiganensian Photographer

LAST TIMES TODAY
"ANNAPOLIS FAREWELL"
and
"GOOSE & THE GANDER"
Wednesday - Thursday
JEAN PARKER
"MURDER IN THE FLEET"
and ELISSA LANDI
"WITHOUT REGRET"

I

DAV

and HIS "STARDUST RE)
featuring a Stage full of Stars of T
BENNY DAVIS is the writer o
"CHASING SHADOW
He is the one who sponsored ELEANOR
and on the Screen
GEORGE RAFT JOANI
"She Couldn't Ta!

_

VfUE"
romorrow
of
Z POWELL
BENNETT
eIt"

11

,PO - . I -'. v4 i, . I. - I,- , .

z

kh"

STARTING

SATURDAY,

OV-OMB 2rd
And Every Saturday Thereafter
Start the week off right through the charted channels of
the Michigan Daily's Market Page. match for your mer-
chant's week-end specials and keep in touch with what's
new in Meats and Foods.

LY

-COMPLETE COVERAGE -

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