THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, 'ar.' THE MICHIGAN DAILY night, the change should come only after a fair trial period rather than at the conclusion of the hectic first eight weeks of the year which include both rushing and the football season. The student Board of Representatives and Undergraduate Council should defer action for at least one semes- ter, if they desire, first, an equitable criterion for judgment, and second, to be truly representative. The President As A Diplomat... W HATEVER President Roosevelt's shortcomings may be in his ad- ministration of domestic business, it is becoming increasingly apparent that his direction of foreign e affairs is diplomatic. Despite the demands of pressure groups that the ~United States interefere in the domestic concerns of certain foreign governments the President has wisely refused to do so. The latest example of Mr. Roosevelt's diplomatic wisdom is his refusal to grant the request of the Knights of Columbus for an investigation of re- ligious persecution in Mexico. Religious persecu- s tion in a country is to be deplored, but the Gov- l ernment of the United States is not the proper s body to correct internal conditions in foreign countries. Publisned every morning except Monday during th 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. MEMBER 45Citted 6U1miatt ress -=1934 TO19 35 MNAHSOM WIVSCOt4SIN MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of specia dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail $4.59. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Aavertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.-400 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 , i, ;, ., MANAGING EDITOR ..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR...............JOHN J. FLAHERTY ASSOCIATE EDITOR..............THOMAS E. GROEHN SPORTS EDITOR ..................WILLIAM R. REED WOMEN'S EDITOR ..............JOEPHINE T. McLEAN MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORS. ..........DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HEALEY EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS NIGHT EDITORS: Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, Bernard Weissman, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. News Editor.............................Elsie A. Pierce' Editorial Writers: Robert Cummins and Marshall D. Shul- man. 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, Joseph P. Andriola, Lester Brauser, Arnold S. Daniels, William J. DeLancey, Roy Haskell, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton D. Heppler, Paul Ja- cobs, Richard LaMarca, Thomas McGuire, Joseph S. Mattes, Arthur A. Miller, David G. Quail, Robert D. Rogers, William E. Shackleton, Richard Sidder, I. S. Silverman, Don Smith, William C. Spaller, Tuure Tenander, Joseph Walsh, 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- root, TheresaSwab, Peggy Swantz, and Elizabeth Whit- ney. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214, BUS-INESS MANAGER ..........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER............ JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .... MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE MANAGER , 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- ma. BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Charles W. Barkdull, D. G. Bron- son, Lewis E. Bulkeley, jr., Richard L. Croushore, Her- bert D. Falender, Jack R. Gustafson, Ernest A. Jones, William C. Knecht, William C. McHenry, John F. Mc- Lean, jr., Lawrence M. Roth, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Starsky, Norman B. Steinberg, Donald Wilsher. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Adelaine Callery, Elizabeth Davy, Catherine Fecheimer, Vera Gray, Martha Hanky, Mary McCord, Helen Neberle, Dorothy Novy, Adele Polier, Helen Purdy, Virginia Snell. WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE STAFF: Ellen Brown, $ieila Burgher, Nancy Cassidy, Ruth Clark, Phyllis Eseman, Jean Keinath, Dorothy Ray, Alice Stebbins, Peg Lou White. NIGHT EDITOR: CLINTON B. CONGER Experiment First; Then Vote *. * THE ABRUPTNESS with which the Undergraduate Council of the League expressed itself as favoring the rolling up of sidewalks for undergraduate women at 12:30 a.m. Friday nights came as a complete surprise to the campus. Little more than a month ago both sorority and independent women expressed themselves almost unanimously as opposed to any change. Further- more, the Senate Committee on Student Affairs decided to postpone consideration of the issue until the second semester, with the idea of not taking action then unless it was deemed necessary. In revealing its amazing action the Council out- lined the following reasons: (1) There have been many complaints by pro- fessors that students are bolting their Saturday morning classes. (2) House mothers and dormitory heads have reported cases of "fatigue" on the part of under- graduate women du'ring week-ends. (3) Saturday classes are now definitely a perm- anent institution at the University, whereas at first they were believed only tentative. Regarding bolting on Saturday mornings, we do not believe that it is reasonable to assume that these bolts - if excessive - are the result of any late hours which undergraduate women have been keeping this year. It is conceivable that other reasons, such as week-ends out-of-town, particu'- larly during the football season, might have some bearing on attendance during these first eight weeks. A survey conducted yesterday by The Daily and published on page one today indicates that cases of "fatigue" reported by house mothers and dor- mitory heads have been comparatively few. Thir- teen of the fourteen officials interviewed stated that their charges did not seem to be suffering from any ill effects. The third reason for the nronosed change is en- THE FORUM Letters published in this column should not bet 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 importance7 and interest to the campus. Let's Pick Our Own Hours To the Editor: Speaking from the standpoint of typical women students in the University, we feel that the con- templated change of hours for Friday night is uncalled-for and absurd. As grown-up young women, we feel that we should be able to judge whether or not our work necessitates the keeping of early hours. Why not leave this question up] to the individual? Those few people who are anx- ious to keep- early hours on Friday night are not prevented by any statute from doing so. It has been stated that there is a feeling of "fatigue" on Saturday mornings. This condition,] if it exists, is probably due to constant application to studies throughout the week more than to the late hours. Why shorten an already short evening by one hour?] What has caused this sudden change in "campus opinion?" Has it been the number of bolts taken by women students in Saturday classes? Per- sonally, we do not believe "campus opinion" has changed. Why should 17 seniors, who obviously are not representing "campus opinion," dictate to thousands of women students? Perhaps they think they are doing right, but aren't they too much weighted down with the sense of their own responsibility?] If eventually it is proven that late hours do affect the health and scholastic standing of women students, then let the hours be changed by unani- mous vote. But at least wait until the hectic days of football games and adjustment are over. -Five Mosher-Jordan Girls.] Admit The Stags To the Editor: It's high time the powers that have charge of the weekly Union and League dances came to their senses and permitted sale of a limited number of tickets to stags. With things as they are, those dances are the dullest social affairs on the campus: unless you and your fair co-ed are lucky enough to be a unit in one of those merry double or quad- ruple date affairs, you must trip the not-so-light; fantastic all evening in unmitigated devotion to each other. Now, quite regardless of her un- deniable personal charm and undoubted terpsi- chorean ability, you are bound, sooner or later, to get distinctly tired of pushing the same clinging female around the room dance after dance ad infinitum; and if you think she doesn't occasionally get sick of your cruising fox-trot together with its two tricky variations and that dip you learned last Christmas, just ask her sometime. All this could be easily remedied by allowing admittance to, say, 25% as many stags as couples, these stags per- mitted to "cut in," or "break" between individual dance tunes, and no cutting allowed until each number ends and the next begins. Such a plan would not only make the dance three times as exciting for the co-eds but would enable you gentlemen to try your fandangos on that air-flow blond you noticed over in the S.W. corner of the ballroom. And if any of you pseudo-sophisticates think it would be "improper" or "undignified" to allow breaking without introductions, just forget it: they've been doing it at "dignified" eastern colleges for years; and what Michigan needs is a little less hauteur and a little more geniality. At present it takes grim determination, hours of amateur sleuthing with a campus Directory, and several inches of crust for a Michigan man-espe- cially one unaffiliated with a fratenity - to get even on speaking terms with an attractive co-ed whom he happens to see at the Union of a Friday night. One parting shot: if the plan outlined above were adopted - as it probably won't be --it would be quite your privilege, you one-woman love-birds, to refuse to request to break, if you so saw fit; so don't claim that anyone's trying to disrupt your Fine Careless Rapture. -E.H.M. "A truly well bred man," says the Los Angeles Times, "conceals how much he thinks of himself and how little he thinks of others." The Conning TowerI NEWS Four glasses of wine a week we all should pote Is the firm conviction of Mr. Joseph H. Choate. Senator Borah Is for Old Glorah. Many persons bitterly feel About the purchase of German steel.1 Commissioner Moss is in a curlycueE Trying to ban the Minsky burlycue President Roosevelt, not unclever, Wants George Norris to be in the Senate forever. Many a usurer into the law bucks,f But I'd like to borrow a couple of sawbucks. Add It Can't Happen Here: A ruling requiring the -4,000 employees of the District of Columbia public schools to certify each month that they have not 'taught or advocated communism" in order to qualify for their pay checks was served on the commissioners governing the city by J. R. McCarl, Comptroller General. What ought to happen to the teachers who taught us United States history? It seems to us that they ought to give back their pay, with interest to the Chicago Board of Education. Fort we were taught that our dear friends of today,E the British, were a lot of grasping, mercenary,E cowardly redcoats. Historian's Peekly-Weekly Log of the Explorer XXVII-B; or a Flight to the Stratosphere in a Football Built for Two 8:00 a.m. --Take-off from fake-kick formation. The Fighting Irish were completely baffled by the play, a double criss-cross spinner, doped1 out by S. S. Van Dine, Agatha Christie, andJ E. Phillips Oppenheim.E 8:15 a.m. - All's well. Those aboard now includeE Admiral Byrd (in the interests of Science),E Haile Selassie (in the interests of Long Draw-E ers), and Postmaster General Farley (in an interest to be announced later).; 10:07 a.m.--Passing over the Army goal postsE for a point before touchdown. Doctors sayI there's nothing like a song before breakfastE and a point before touchdown to make you1 healthy, wealthy, and proverbial. 10:25 a.m.--Barometer falling fast. Our sci- entist, Mr. Caspar Milquetoast, declares that1 the stratosphere is full of holes caused by tapT dancing radio amateurs singing ear to ear. 11:17 a.m.-Fuzz has started to gather on our gondola, making us fuzz in war, fuzz in peace, and fuzz in the hearts of et cetera. 11:28 a.m.- America's Little House is being razedI ten miles below us, but we can still hear the rumble of America's Little Sixth Avenue El. 11:55 a.m.- Over Ethiopia. The war is beingI held over for a 9th Colossal Week - to cele- brate Armistice Day, and to give the song writers a chance to catch up in their home fires. 12:10 p.m.--Radio message from Babe Ruth. The Babe wants to know if there are any big_ league teams up this way looking for a man- ager. We informed the Babe that his appli- cation had been received and that we'll be glad to let him know if anything turns up. 12:30 p.m.-Hey, Babe! A blue eagle just turned up on our port side! Veteran stratospherists say we may be declared unconstitutional any1 minute now. 1:05 p.m.-We are now directly over President, Roosevelt's Thanksgiving Day proclamation,1 which we are as thankful for as the next strato- spherist - and as eager to read. 2:47 p.m. --Official unofficial altitude now 71,000 miles above first base. Atmospheric pressure 29 millimeters - or about six billion less than the pressure on a Jerome Avenue express during rush hours. 3:13 p.m.- The five Dionne sisters, who have developed into a sort of quintuple-threat, have just come aboard with Dr. Dafoe and five Fox Movietone cameramen. It may be necessary to drop ballast (played by Percy Hammond) if we are to be the first stratosphere balloon to break the all-time altitutde record with all- time quintuplets aboard. 4:13 p.m.-We have begun to fall. Our com- mon is down 3 from a previous high of minus 8, and our preferred is nothing bid, everything asked. The ticker is two hours and thirty minutes late, having been detained on a Thirty- fourth Street crosstown trolley. Tell Mrs. Astor's Horse to stand by for an upset. Bill Hay, speaking for the Pepsodent Company, bids you all - toodle-oo! YE OULDE AL GRAHAM They keep on awarding prizes for "diction.". Now diction, according to the dictionaries, means a choice of words; a mode of expression, as "Milton's flawless diction." It is true that dic- tion, through misuse, has come to mean pro- nunciation and articulation. But it is bad diction. Miss Lynn Fontanne, who got a merited award for her manner of speaking, got it for "diction," but Miss Fontanne has little choice of the words she says so trippingly on the tongue. She says Shakespeare's words these days; and she has been saying Noel Coward's and Robert E. Sherwood's words. Our diction, such as it is, is more praise- worthy than our Cook County pronunciation and intonation. This department is all for the American Civil Liberties Union, which objects to the suspension of the Republic Theater's license. The Republic puts on a Minsky burlesque show, allegedly in- decent. Indecency is a matter of opinion. In our opinion no burlesque show that we have seen recently was anything but dully indecent, loud, and boringly stupid. And if everything answer- ingo +fl ernmhndrv'sannraisal wP stunnned on Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE HENDRIK VAN LOON, the writer, was having a time for himself teasing AAA officials. He wanted to know how they counted hogs in the reduction program. Then he solemn- ly outlined a possible method: "I have a friend who is a sheep estimator," he said. "One day riding an express train in Holland he looked out at a pasture and announced there were 570 sheep in the meadow. "I was amazed and aksed how he could tell. He replied it was per- fectly easy. He just counted the legs and divided by four." The letter to the President was from a man who evidently mis- understood governmental meth- ods. He asked for a loan of $150. He added that if the loan could be arranged he would "not say anything about it." SENATOR 'HAM' LEWIS of Illinois was inveighing against those crit- ics of the "new deal" who raise con- stant cries of, "Oh, the constitu- tion!" They remind him, said Lewis, of Samuel Johnson, the English writ- er, who one day at his boarding house was served a soup he didn't relish. "What kind of soup is this?" he asked. "It's oxtail," was the reply. "Seems to me you're going a long way back for a little soup," said Johnson. BLACK champlain marble has been used for the floor board in the corridor outside the bureau of fish- eries offices. In the slab beside the door there is a little sot. lighter in color. One day as two of the bureau's re- search scientists returned from lunch one fell suddenly to his knees and peered excitedly at the light colored spot. His specialty is the earliest known forms of fish life. The spot was an unusually good specimen of the "nautiloid cephalapod," which by a freak of chance had found its way to so appropriate a place. It is esti- mated the nautiloid was caught in its present bed 85,000,000 years ago. MAGNIFICENT as the new supreme court building is, the lawyers who practice there need no longer appear in formal dress. The rules in past years were so rigid court attaches kept a medium-sized tailcoat in the cloak room with an assortment of collars and black ties into which forgetful attorney were poured before they entered the court. PEOPLE who go to the library in the new archives building to ex- amine the government's valuable documents will be under the constant watch of a man seated on a pedestal at one end of the room. If he suspects that anyone is trying to cut out a signature of Abraham Lincoln for his private autograph collection, the watchman will push a button and the building doors will lock automatically. Visitors to statuary hall in the capitol sometimes are startled by the sound of a voice which seems to come up out of the floor. The illusion is caused by a strange trick of acoustics. There are two spots in the hall that seem to act as a telephone. When people stand over one spot and whisper they can be heard in the other, 25 feet away, quite dis- tinctly. Their voices seem to rise from the stone floor. 11. .1 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1935 VOL. XLVI No. 43 Notices To Department Heads and Others Concerned: All hourly time slips must be in the Business Office No- vember 22 to be included in the No- vember 30 payroll. Edna G. Miller, Payroll Clerk. Freshmen from the following schools are reminded of the confer- ences with their principals in the Registrar's Office Thursday, Novem- ber 21: Albion, Ann Arbor, Battle Creek, Bay City, Birmingham, Chelsea, Chestnut Hill, Cranbrook, Dearborn, Detroit (Cass, Central, Chadsey, Cooley, Country Day, Denby, Eastern, Miss Newman's, Northwestern, North- ern, Northwestern, Pershing, Red- ford, Southeastern, Southwestern, Western), Detroit University School, Dexter, East Grand Rapids, Fenton, Ferndale, Flint, Fordson, Grand Rap- ids Central, Grosse Pointe, Ham- tramck, Hazel Park, Highland Park, Howe, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Kings- wood, Lake Forest, Lansing, Man- chester, Marshall, Midland, Monroe, Montague, Morenci, Mt. Clemens, Muskegon Heights, Niles, Northville, Owosso, Plymouth, Pontiac, Pt. Hur- on, River Rouge, Romeo, Royal Oak, Saginaw, Trenton, Wayne, Wyan- dotte Ypsilanti. Ira M. Smith, Registrar Upperclassmen: Former students of the schools listed above are invited to stop in at the Registrar's office November 21. If you will call Exten- sion 373 you can learn at what hours your principal will be having inter- views. Ira M. Smith, Registrar Freshman Instructors: Principals and teachers from seventy-one high schools will be in the Registrar's Of- fice Thursday, November 21, to con- fer with their former students. You are invited to stop in to meet the principals and talk with them. . Ira M. Smith, Registrar Faculty, College of Literature, Science,yand the Arts: Midsemester reports are due not later than Friday, November 22. More cards if needed can be had at my office. These reports are understood as naming those students, freshman and upperclass, whose standing at mid- semester time is D or E, not merely those who receive D or E in so-called midsemester examinations. Students electing our courses, but registered in other schools or col- leges of the University should be re- ported to the school or college in which they are registered. W. R. Humphreys, Assistant Dean. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for the removal of in- completes will be Saturday, Novem- ber 23. In cases of extenuating cir- cumstances this time limit may be ex- tended, but a petition for extension of time must be filed in the Secre- tary's Office on or before Friday, the 22nd of November. Presidents of Student Organiza- tions. The following list of organiza- tions, which have not submitted the names and addresses of officers to the Office of the Dean of Students, are requested to do so at once. Aeronautical Engineers Alpha Alpha Gamma Alpha Epsilon Mu Alpha Kappa Delta Am. Society of Civil Engineers Assembly Avukah Beta Kappa Rho Black Quill Cosmopolitan Club Delta Epsilon Pi Forestry Club Freshman Girls' Glee Club Graduate Outing Club Interfraternity Council Iota Alpha Kappa Phi Sigma Michigan League Mimes Michigan Public Health Club Omicron Kappa Epsilon Oratorical Association Pan-Hellenic Association Phi Kappa Phi Phi Lambda Upsilon Pi Lambda Theta Polonia Literary Circle. Quarterdeck Rendezvous Club Scalp and Blade Scouting Fraternity Sigma Alpha Iota Sigma Gamma Epsilon Sigma Xi Sociedad Hispanica Sociedad Latino-Americana Tau Beta Pi Toastmasters Transportation Club Triangles Vanguard Club Women's Physical Education Club Women's Research Club Zeta Phi Eta Students, School of Education Courses dropped after Wednesday noemhr 9.7 will h recorded witl phone 303, by five o'clock today (Wednesday) November 20. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Cover design for Children's Theatre programs wanted! The approximate size of the cover will be 6 inches by 7 inches. The play will be "Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp." All de- igns must be submitted by Nov. 23 to Miss McCormick at the Michigan League. Orginality and appeal to children will be the sole basis on which cover designs will be judged. For further information call Marg- aret Ann Ayers any night after eight o'clock, Phone 4326. Events Of Today Botanical Seminar meets at 4:30 p.m., Room 1139, N.S. Bldg. Extracts will be read from the diary of Pro- fessor Bartlett now in the Philippine Islands. Research Club meets at 8 p.m., Room 2528 E. Med. Bldg. The follow- ing papers will be read: Professor Ev- erett S. Brown, "Ratification of the 21st Amendment"; Dr. Frank Lev- erett, "Earth Tilting in the Great Lakes Region with Reference to Tec- tonic Adjustment." There will be a meeting of the Council at 7:30 p.m. Chemical and Metallurgical Engi- neering Seminar. Mr. Edward G. Yee will be the speaker at the Sem- inar for Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers at 4 o'clock in Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. His subject is "Applica- tions of Pressure-Volume-Tempera- ture Data to Thermodynamics." A.S.M.E.: Prof. A. E. White, director of the department of Engineering Research, will speak to the A.S.M.E. at the Union at 7:30. His subject will be, "Modern Trends in Engineer- ing Research." Everyone is invited. Scabbard and Blade: Regular meet- ing at 7:30 in the Union, room post- ed, uniform required. Initiation ban- quet and dance will be Friday, Nov. 22, in the Union. Tickets may be ob- tained from Mrs. Kinney at $1.00 per person. New initiates receive one ticket. Phi Sigma meets at 8:15 p.m., Room 11139, Natural Science Building. Dr. Van Tyne's subject will be "The Orni- thology of Guatemala." The fall election of new members will be held after the address, and annual dues of $1.50 will be payable. Alpha Nu Meeting: Prof. Densmore of the speech department will be the speaker at the Alpha Nu meeting at 7:45 p.m. Members and pledges are urged to be present." Kappa Tau Alpha meeting at 8 p.m. at Professor Maurer's home, 1317 Fountain St. Ceree Francais in Room 408 R. L., at 7:45. New members will be initiat- ed at this time and it is important that all active members be present. Luncheon for Graduate Students at 12 o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League Building. Cafe- teria service. PFrofessor Clare E. Griffin, Dean of the School of Bus- iness Administration, and director of the Bureau of Research, will speak informally on "Bases of American Prosperity." Vairsity Otnd Waiting List Glee Clubs: Every member report at 7:15 sharp tonight at the Union. We sing for Rotary convention at Union fol- lowed by intensive rehearsal for big alumni glee club banquet next Satur- day evening. Complimentary tickets given active club by Judge Robert Thompson, Supreme Court, New York. Freshman Glee Club: Important meeting at 4:30 in the Union Music room on the third floor. All members please be prompt. Any freshman is welcome to join. Women's Rifle Club: There will be a meeting of all women interested in rifles at 4:15 at the Women's Ath- letic Building. Hillel Tryouts: Upper class and sophomore volunteers of Hillel stu- dent activities and committee ap- pointments, meet at Foundation Tuesday at 4 p.m., or call Shirrel Kasle at 3779 from 3 to 5. 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. Ten Years Ago From The Daily Files NOV. 20, 1925 Ferry Field will be entirely sold out for the third time this year when the Wolverines go into action in the last game of the season, as an esti- mated crowd of 47,200 will attend. The famous water bottle which was stolen from Michigan by the Gophers back in 1903 and which has been the object of nine gridiron games since that time has been repainted a glossy brown and now bears the two "M's" of the universities that seek its pos- session. The Austrian government has ne- gotiated an American loan of $2,000,- 000 to run for 25 years at 9 1-6 per cent interest. Dedication of the new University Hospital last night markedthereal- ization of plans laid more than sev- en years ago by Dr. Christopher G. Parnell, director of the hospital from 1917 to 124. Frank F. Rogers, Michigan state highway commissioner and president of the American Association of State Highway Officials, told that organiza- tion Wednesday night that another Contemporary: Luncheon this noon at the Haunted Staff members are urged to meeting Tavern. attend. Coming Events Observatory Journal Club will meet at 4:15 Thursday, November 21st, in the Observatory lecture room. Mr. Kenneth O. Wright will review the paper on "The Intensity of Fraun- hofer Lines in the Region 4036-6600 A" by Allen. Tea will be served at 4:00. Hillel Players: Important meeting Thursday evening, Nov. 21, at 7:30 ThP hisinnes to he taen in is in the