1GE Fe
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
I'HURSOAV, DECEMBER 19, ]935
LGE FOUR TIIUUSDAY, I)ECEMBER 19, 1935
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
alike in their lack of reserve, their fink and
confident tone.
These rural inhabitants have come to regard
Professor Holmes as a true friend and helpful
adviser, rather than as a "University investigator."
For this reason he is collecting information that
is more accurate and revealing than the data
that can be collected in the customary method
of formal investigation.
This research has not been guided by any
precedent, being the first of its kind, but the
results it has so far obtained presage a growing
amount of work of this type in the future.
Publisned every morning except Monday during the
University year and ummer Session by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
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for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or
not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights off
republication of all other matter herein also reserved.
Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as
second class mail matter.
Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00;
by mail, $4.50.
Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, Ill.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Telephone 4925
BOARD OF EDITORS
24ANAGING EDITOR.............THOMAS H. KLEENE
ASSOCIATE EDITOR...............JOHN J. FLAHERTY
ASSOCIATE EDITOR...............THOMAS E. GROEHN
Dorothy S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed
DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS
Publication Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman;
Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, Ralph W.
Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, Bernard Weissman.
Reportorial Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman;
Elsie A. Pierce, Guy M. Whipple, Jr.
Editorial Department: John J. Flaherty, Chairman; Robert
A. Cummins, Marshall D. Shulman.
Sports Department: William R. Reed, Chairman; George
Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred DeLano, Raymond Good-
man.
Women's Department: Josephine. T. McLean, Chairman;
Dorothy Briscoe, Josephine M. Cavanagh, Florence H.
Davies, Marion T. Hoden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W.
Wuerfel.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Telephone 2-1214
BUSINESS MANAGER ..........GEORGE H. ATHERTON
CREDIT MANAGER ............ JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ...MARGARET COWIE
WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER .. .ELIZABETH SIMONDS
DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS
Local Advertising, William Barndt; Service Department,
Willis Tomlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts,
Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Adver-
tsing, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica-
tions, Lyman Bittman.
NIGHT EDITOR: RALPH W. HURD
It Can Be
Called A Success .. .
THE COMMUNITY SING held last
night in front of the General Li-
brary was what is currently termed a "success."
The mere fact that several thousand persons
braved the cold misty night to attend is evidence
of that.
In another sense it was a failure, just as so
many group activities are failures in America.
The music was excellent, the words - if words
were necessary for traditional carols that should
be known to all - were available, but those present
just did not sing. Instead of shedding the icy cloak
that so many men wear in their everyday life, the
participants stood around glaring at one another
and muttering words sotto voce that should have
rung forth with all the joy that Christmas implies.
When men can slump around frowning and at
the same time sing the line, "Joyful, all you na-
tions, rise," something is fundamentally wrong. It
is true there is, or was, a depression, and social
injustice is prevalent, but certainly there should
be times when we can rise above our workaday
worries. The Christmas season is one of these
times.
This "icy" trait is more's the pity, typically
American. We enter most of our communal activ-
ities half-heartedly, why, God only knows. Per-
haps it is bashfulness, but we are so brash in
many other things that this is hardly a logical
conclusion.
At the Sing last night hundreds of frustrated
looking individuals, standing around in a blue
funk, looked as if they were simply dying to lift
their voices. Why did they not do it?
What we are trying to say is not that Christ-
mas is a time for wild abandon, but that the
Christmas spirit is a very distinct feeling, inex-
tricably bound up with religion, but not entirely
dependent upon it. Anyone can lose himself in
it if he will but cast from his his senseless sense
of frigidity.
The annual Community Sing is one of Ann
Arbor's most glorious traditions. Next year let us
enter into it with all our hearts. And, pray God,
be a bit more cheerful during the balance of the
Christmas season, bearing in mind, if possible,
that a carol is not rendered in the same mood as a
funeral dirge.
Joy to the world! the Savior reigns;
Let men their song employ;
While fields and floods, rocks, hills, and
plains,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat, repeat the sounding joy.
A New Type
Of Investigation. ...
ITHOUT THE BENEFIT of wide
Tv publicity, there has been pains-
takingly developed through the past three years
one of the most significant research projects in
the University.
The undertaking, known as the Rural Sociol-
ogy Correspondence Project has been carried on
through the persistent and unaided efforts of
Prof. Roy H. Holmes, and is an innovation in
the study of sociological conditions.
Beginning unobtrusively by securing the names
of prospective correspondents through local ofli-
THlE FORUM]
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.
Education
To the Editor:
In view of the fact that we are being bom-
barded every day in the year with business and
financial advertisements, as well as with every
kind of propaganda - political, social and eco-
nomic - in addition to foreign propaganda, and
since, moreover, there have arisen among us
what may be called life-savers, such as the late
Huey Long, the living Dr. Townsend and Father
Coughlin, the following passage on education
which I culled several years ago from The Man-
chester Guardian is timely:
"It is the business of education to resist the
business of propaganda and to teach you to weigh
truth's various aspects, so that if you come to
the conclusion that the leading article of your
favorite newspapers persists in laying exclusive
emphasis upon some particular aspect of the
truth, you may be on your guard against accept-
ing as valid any of its conclusions. For pro-
vided that you realize that truth is many-sided
you are unlikely to be influenced by undue
emphasis upon some particular side of it. Here
is one definition of education: 'To prevent a
man from being humbugged by the newspapers.'
If the education you get at school saves you
from that it will not have been in vain. For the
future good government of this country it is essen-
tial that our young citizens should be trained
to consider in a critical and discriminating spirit
the incesant volume of exhortation and advice
poured upon their eyes and ears by press and
politician." - M. Levi, Professor-emeritus.
As Others See It
Cheating
Ohio State Lantern)
T SEEMS TO US that every time University
authorities try to prevent cribbing or other
forms of cheating in examinations, they simply
invite more of it.
We learn that plans have already been made
and sent along to department heads to prevent
cheating in the use of the student purchased
exam tablets for final examinations which start
on Wednesday.
Of course they offer fairly good reasons for
doing so. A student might easily fill up two or
three pages of the axam tablet he brings to class
with crib notes. This would be plain cheating
and of course an unfair practice in our system of
examinations. Since the school is supposed to
be the training ground for good citizenship and
all that goes with it, it is only natural that we
should start here in demonstrating to our future
citizens that they can't violate the law and get
away with it.
But it seems to us that in laying plans to pre-
vent cheating, the authorities are presuming that
students are going to cheat. And while this may
not be an unreasonable presumption, we think
it is an unfair one. An individual isn't born to
cheat or steal or kill. He learns by experience
with his fellow 'men. When a teacher announces
to a class that plans have been made to prevent
cheating, he is saying in other words: I expect a
certain number of you to cheat and I don't intend
to stand for it.
We imagine that if less were said about cheat-
ing in the class room there actually would be
less of it. We also believe that an honor system
could work at the University if it were tried.
It has proved worthwhile in several of the col-
leges, notably in the College of Law, so we see
no reason for not trying it generally. Most students
are good sports and will play the game fairly
if they can gain the confidence of their teachers.
It's silly, it seems to us, for educators to believe
that they are approaching the cheating prob-%
lem rationally when they are merely laying a
network to prevent rather than eliminate it.
All American Nonsense
(From the Daily Pennsylvanian)
B LESSINGS on thee, unknown football star! We
mean you, Joe Smith, who stars for Spearfish
Normal on the gridiron every fall -or is it Mur-
freesboro Teachers? You, and a million athletes
like you, have all the attributes of a great foot-
ball player. You can run, pass, kick, and you have
won more than one close game for your Alma
Mater. But still, we feel sorry for you, because
you'll never be an All-American!
The perennial custom of choosing an All-
American football team probably had its merits
back in the dear, dead days beyond recall when
Walter Camp initiated the habit. At that time
there were only a few teams in the East and con-
seauently a little intelligence could be used in se-
The Conning Tower
Impressions of a Colyumist's Life
Reads in the Papers
Like lunch with lords or chats with kings; 1
There's not a softer life, I wist,
Than that led by a colyumist.1
He works an hour or two a day,
And every week draws down big pay; t
He takes a month each year to rest,c
And dines and wines with all the best;
He finds his name and doings news,
And has a chance to air his views
Of this and that and other things,
Like lunch with lords or chats with kings; c
He knows the wits and gas of town,i
And when they jest he jots it down; c
On Annie Oakleys off he goes,
To view the latest plays and shows;
And should his Muse go on a bat,r
And lease no thought beneath his hat,
He simply tickles readers' ribs,
With verse sent in by poor contribs.t
KENNETH H. THOMPSONt
He also worries day and nightt
About the things he has to write;r
He worires, too, from sun to sun,F
About what he should not have done.r
He lauds a person, play, or book,
And there are those to call him crook.r
He builds the not too lofty linet
When health and happiness are fine;
And, ill or desperate, seeks the laugh
In joyous verse or paragraph.t
His printable verses are but few.t
His others: "This is overdue."
And he hasn't the energy or timer
To perfect this conventional sort of rhyme.
According to the Board of Aldermen, that}
Star-Spangled Banner shall wave, provided it is
of the right dimensions, failure to be which shall
constitute a violation of the ordinance. All
patriots hereafter will carry tape measures,I
which should be provided by Mr. Hearst.1
Whether they will get Dr. Sokoloff out of the
W.P.A. music directorship is a matter of con-
jecture, but if his band gives a farewell concert
it might play "Good Bye, Woowinds and Brasses1
and Strings, I'm Through.",
"Wipe the bottom of the plate," we heard TonyI
hiss at his stupid assistant. "Wipe it, you hear?"
- From "Model Wanted," by Albert Halper inz
Esquire.
Tony might do it, but neither his stupid as-c
sistant nor we can.t
Planetarium
WE HAVE seen it twice in company with the
editor of the Lowell Astronomy Magazine.
You've never heard of him because he's only ten,
and the distribution of his quarterly is private.
His mother and I will not say we are glad hec
has only a dozen subscribers. But did you
ever try copying a ten-year-old's scrawled manu-
script on a typewriter four times, three carbons
to every insertion of a four to six-sheet maga-
zine? You've scarcely finished the job before
you're starting on the next issue three months
later. It's all worth the trouble. There's some-
thing about a boy's interest in astronomy that
lifts his parents out of themselves.
His eyes sparkled under the North Star shining
straight overhead as the sun, circling to the
right low above the city skyline, emblazoned
a six months' day in three minutes. The celestial
tapestry that tented Peary wrapped us in awe-
some proximity. Three minutes more and the
magic carpet of the heavens had set the whole
family down under the spot where the South
Star would shine if there were one. Now as the
sun circled to the left, low above skyscrapers and
apartment towers, the boy was Byrd keeping
lonely vigil under the Southern Cross.
In the Planetarium man is indeed "little lower
than the angels." As the bejeweled pageant
rolled north across the bottomless blue while
we were speeding from pole to pole we could
have reached up and plucked the North Star
just before it disappeared from the horizon.
That keyboard of switches and rheostats
through which the curator invokes the music of
the spheres projects us back into the past and
on into the future. We see the comet of 1858
because what becomes part of man's conscious-
ness is ours forever. And if we wish to see just
what design of light will dot the blue centuries
ahead, the curator at the keyboard will paint
that picture for us, a preview of a flashing moment
in the long sleep's dream.
Here yesterday and tomorrow become today,
the immensity of space contracts itself to a
forty-foot ball which the mind can embrace, the
planets run their courses fast or slow, the Joshua
at the keyboards commands the sun to stand still
and it so stands until he wills it on his way.
And by noon next day, calling in his assistant
editor from next door, the boy has built a solar
system in his own playroom.
Venus is a baseball, Mars a rubber ball (the
dog wonders what's become of it), Saturn a globe
with gaily painted rings, and the tin foil moon,
hanging between the center light bulb and the
tiny earth where you and we live, dots it with
the shadow of a perpetual eclipse.
Stride into that playroom with your head
smothered in earthly matters and you run smack
into a planet. Push the switch and you light
the sun. If you've forgotten where you are, read
the signs that tell which planet is which. Blun-
dering beast that you are, you've probably knocked
down the moon. But man that can be, lift it
high in the heavens again.
A Washington
BYST"ANDE.R
By KIRKE SIMPSON
WASHINGTON, Dec. 18. - (iP) -
Luck having a lot to do with po-
litical fortunes, the situation in which
Senator Borah finds himself just nowt
through circumstances over which hej
could have no control, is worth not-t
ing. Two of his long-cherished pett
issues are much to the fore or soonI
will be.'
Assuming, as many political writersk
do, that the Idaho senator is far moref
interested in framing the issues of ther
coming campaign than in achieving
a presidential nomination himself,
this would seem to be a break for him.I
Certainly he could not have defi-
nitely anticipated any such develop-{
ment in the Italo-Ethipoian situation{
as the Franco-British peace gestureI
to dramatize in such striking fashion
Borah's die-hard opposition not only
to American entry into the League of1
Nations; but to any intimate coopera-
tion with European political arrange-
ments. Against the background of
President Roosevelt's plans for a new
neutrality act and his original re-I
quest for discretionary powers, that{
might become an important matter in
the campaign. Apparently Senator
Vandenberg thinks so. He brokeuanc
unusual spell of silence to issue ar
statement approving Roosevelt neu-
trality acts, but disapproving any ex-
tension of presidential powers.
** *
THE OTHER Borah issue clearly1
destined to have an increasing
tempo in debate is his anti-monopoly
stand. The overthrow of NRA codes
which were based on the Roosevelt
government-and-businessh partner-
ship idea, followed now by an open1
rebellion in business circles against
Roosevelt policies generally, is ex-
pected to bring that monopoly issue
out sharply soon or late. Borah him-
self had a monopoly on it for quite
a while.
The point is this: If the New Deal
business-and-government partnership
is definitely dissolved, what attitude
of government toward business would
logically succeed it? A return to the
role of anti-monopoly policeman for
Uncle Sam would seem in order. That
might imply not only restoration of'
anti-trust laws softened by the re-
covery act, but putting new teeth in
them and a rigid enforcement pro-
gram.
T IS CONCEIVABLE that such a
development would prove about as
objectionable to big business as have
Roosevelt policies. Coupled with the'
Borah leaning toward inflationary
measures,, there hardly can be any
doubt that the Idahoan looms to the
aroused spokesmen of big business
as a danger only second, probably,
to the prospect of another four years
of Roosevelt.
That being the case, it is a fair as-
sumption that underneath the open
attack by large business groups and
important industrialists upon the
New Deal, lies a less publicized cam-
paign to see that the Idaho senator
does not write the Republican plat-
form for next year, or any part of it;
and that he is barred from having
any real hand in naming the ticket.
""BOOKS V:
THURSDAY, DEC. 18, 1935 1
VOL. XLVI No. 67
Notices
Faculty Meeting, College of Litera-
ture, Science and Arts: The regular
January meeting of the Faculty of
the College of Literature, Science and
the Arts will be held in Room 1025
Angell Hall Monday afternoon, Jan.
6, beginning at 4:10 o'clock. Shortly
before that date the itemized agenda
for this meeting will be mailed to
members of the faculty.
Lists of Students in the College of
Literature, Science, and the Arts, ad-
mitted to Candidacy for a Degree,
Grouped accoiding to the Fields of
Concentration, are now posted in
Room 4, University Hall. Please
check to see that your name is posted
correctly. Any change should be re-
ported to the assistant at the counter.
University Bureau of Appointments
and Occupational Information: A
representative of the National
Theatre Supply Company will be in
our office Thursday, Dec. 19, to inter-
view seniors for employment next
June. Kindly make appointments
with Miss Webber at the office, 201
Mason Hall, telephone, Ext. 371.
Social Directors, Sorority Chaper-
o n s, Househeads, Undergraduate
Women: Due to the Michigan League
Open-House, the closing hour on
Thursday night, Dec. 19, is 11 :00 p.m.
Househeads, Sorority Chaperons,
Dormitory Directors: On Dec. 20
please send to the Office of the Dean
of Women a list of all students leav-
ing Ann Arbor before that date.
Jeannette Perry, Assistant Dean
of Women
W. E. Boeing Scholarships: An-
nouncement is made of the Seventh
IAnnual Boeing Scholarships. For
further information see the Aeronau-
tical Engineering Bulletin Board.
League Library Books must be re-
turned to the library today. No books
will be issued over the vacation period.
Varsity Glee Club: No rehearsal to-
night.
Bowling: The bowling alleys in the
Women's Athletic Building will not
be open during the Christmas vaca-
tion at the regular hours.sIfma group
of four or more wish to bowl, they
may make reservation by 'calling Uni-
versity 721.
REGISTRATION
A new system will be used at the
Gymnasiums in February, which is
intended to eliminate the necessity of
students standing in line for long
periods of time. The Student Body
has been divided into groups (alpha-
betically) and each group has been
allotted a definite time when all stu-
dents in that group will be admitted
to the Gymnasiums. The schedule
follows:
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1936
1:00-1:30 He to Hof inclusive.
1:30-1:45 Hog to Hz inclusive
1:45-2:00 I to Joh inclusive
2:00-2:15 Jol to Ken inclusive
2:15-2:30 Keo to Kol inclusive
2:30-2:45 Kom to Lap inclusive
2:45-3:00 Lar to Le inclusive
3:00-3:15 Li to Lz inclusive
3:15-3:30 Mc and Mac inclusive
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1936
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the
University. Copy received at the office of th- Assistant to the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.
the fact that their registration periods
are on other dates.
S. W. Smith, Vice-President and
Secretary.
Geology II: The make-up for the
second bluebook will be given Friday
at 9:00 a.m., in the Science Audi-
torium.
Sociology 141, Criminology: Mid-
semester make-up examination on
Thursday, Dec. 19, 3:00 p.m., 310
Haven Hall.
History 81 will not meet today.
B. W. Wheeler.
English 237 ("Studies in Criticism")
will meet this afternoon at 3:00.
C. D. Thorpe.
College of Engineering, schedule of
examinations: Feb. 1 to Feb. 12, 1936.
NOTE: For courses having both
lectures, and quizzes, the Time of Ex-
ercise is the time of the first lecture
period of the week; for courses hav-
ing quizzes only, the Time of Exercise
is the time of the first quiz period.
Drawing and laboratory work may
be continued through the examina-
tion period in amount equal to that
normally devoted to such work during
one week.
Certain courses will be examined
at special periods as noted below the
regular schedule. All cases of con-
flicts between assigned examination
periods should be reported for ad-
justment to Professor J. C. Brier,
Room 3223 East Engineering Build-
ing, before Jan. 29. To avoid misun-
derstandings and errors, each student
should receive notification from his
instructor of the time and place of
his appearance in each course during
the period Feb. 1 to Feb. 12.
No single course is permitted more
than four hours of examination. No
date of examination may be changed
without the consent of the Classifica-
tion Committee.
Time of Exercise Time of Exam.
Mon., at 8.
Mon. at 9.
Mon. at 11.
Mon. at 1.
Mon. at 2.
Mon. aft 3.
Tues. at 8.
Tues. at 9.
Tues. at 10.
Tues. at 11.
Tues. at 1.
Tues. at 2.
Tues. at 3.
Mon., Feb. 3-8-12
Fri., Feb. 7-8-12
Mon., Feb. 10-8-12
Tues., Feb. 11-2- 6
Mon., Feb., 3-2- 6
Tues., Feb. 11-8-12
Mon., Feb., 10-2- 6
Fri., Feb. 7-2- 6
Tues., Feb 4-8-12
Tues., Feb. 4-2- 6
Wed., Feb. 12-8-12
Wed., Feb. 5-2- 6
Thurs., Feb. 6-8-12
By JOHN
NANCY SHIPPEN:
SELBY
HER JOURNAL
BOOK, compiled and edited by
Ethel Armes; (Lippincott).
E THEL ARMES has done much re-
" search on the Lee family. One
day, going through old papers in the
Lloyd Shippen storeroom in Wash-
ington, she found a small journal
book, and then another, and some
letters. She knew she also had dis-
covered a romance of the first water.
Nancy Shippen: Her Journal Book
is what she calls the volume she has
put together. Its subtitle is more re-
vealing: "The international romance
of a young lady of fashion of Colonial
Philadelphia with letters to her and
about her."
The nicest thing one could say
about the book is that while perusing
it, the reader finds he cannot remain
in the twentieth century. This is
true. Nancy was a contemporary of
Washington, and the other revolu-
tionary dignitaries; Philadelphia was
the capital of the United States for
most of the journal period, and the
young man whom Nancy should have
married, Louis Guillaume Otto, was
an official at the French embassy, a
few squares from the Shippen home.
This last still stands at Third and
Locust Streets; the embassy has dis-
appeared long since.t
But although Nancy's mother sided!
with her, Nancy's father preferred a,
most unsavroy chap named Livings-
ton - or rather the money Livings-
ton had. Nancy married Livingston,
and then found that her husband in-
sisted on an eventual distribution of
his fortune which would cause
Nancy's baby to share with a large
brood of vari-colored illegitimate
children.
For that and other reasons, Nancy
left her husband. This worthy re-
8:00-
8:15-
8:30-
8:30-
8:45-
9:00-
9:15-
9:30r-
8:15
8:30
8:45
8:45
9:00
9:15
9:30
9:45
9:45-10:00
10:00-10:15
10:15-10:30
10:30-10:45
10:45-11:00
11:00-11:15
11:15-11:30
1:00- 1:15
1:15- 1:30
1:30 -1:45
1:45- 2:00
2:00- 2:15
2:15- 2:30
2:3,0- 2:45
2:45- 3:00
3:00- 3:15
3:15- 3:30
M to Mav inclusive
Maw to Mil inclusive
Mim to Mun inclusive
Mim to Mun inclusive
Mur to Nz inclusive
O to Paq inclusive
Par to P1 inclusive
Po to Ran inclusive
Rao to Ri inclusive
Roa to Roz inclusive
Ru to Sca inclusive
Sch to Se inclusive
Sh to S1 inclusive
Sm to Sp inclusive
St to Su inclusive
Sw to To inclusive
Tr to Vi inclusive
Vi to Weh inclusive
Wei to Wik inclusive
Wil to Woo inclusive
Wop to Z inclusive
A to Ao inclusive
Ap to. Ban inclusive
Bao to Bel inclusive
Bem to Boe inclusive
E.M. 1, 2; C.E. T. *Sat., Feb. 8-8-12
Surv. 1, 2, 4; Spanish. *Sat., Feb. 8-
'2-6
ME. 3; French. "Thurs Feb. 6-2-6
E.E. 2a; Shop 2, 3, 4; German. *Sat-
Feb. 1-2-6
Draw. 1, 2, 3; Economics. *Thurs.,
Feb. 6-8-12
*This may be used as an irregular
period provided there is no conflict
with the regular printed schedule
above.
Concerts
St. Louis Symphony Orchestra Pro-
gram: Vladimir Golschmann, con-
ductor, has built the following pro-
gram for the concert which that or-
ganization will give in Ann Arbor on
Jan. 14. The program is given at
this early date in order that those
interested may have opportunity to
familiarize themselves with the num-
bers.
Overture to "Oberon" . . .von Weber
Symphony No. 7, in A major, Op. 92
............. ...... Beethoven
Poco sostenuto: Vivace
Allegretto
Scherzo: Presto
Allegro con brio
Tone Poem, "Tod und Verklarung,"
Op. 24 .... ................Strauss
Symphonic Fragments from the Bal-
let "Daphnis and Chloe" (Second
Suite) .....................Ravel
a. Lever de Jour (Daybreak)
b. Pantomine
c. Danse General
Exhibitions
Architectural Building Exhibition:
Drawings and designs submitted in
the . collaborative competition in
architecture and landscape design,
by students from six middle-western
institutions for the Edward L. Ryer-
son Traveling Fellowships, are now on
view in the Architectural Building.
Open daily nine to five. The public
is cordially invited.
Geology Journal Club: Regular
meeting at 7:00 p.m. Three papers
will be discussed.
Iota Alpha meeting at 7:30 p.m.,
Seminar Room, 3201 E. Eng. Bldg.
The speaker of the evening will be
Professor H. F. Adams, of the Psy-
chology Department, who has selected
for his address the subject, "Applica-
tions of Psychology to Salesmanship."
It is urgently requested that every
member be present.
Phi Tau Alpha: Societas honorifica
Latina Graecaque, die Jovis, Decem-
bris undevicesimo, hora 2:30 p.m. in
Hospitium Mulierum Michiganensium
conveniet. Comites urbis Detroit ad
theae Boheae potum bibendum in-
vitabuntur. Comoedia jocularis Dick-
ensiensis agetur.
Friday, Feb. 14, 1936
8:00-
8:15-
8:30-
8:45-
9:00-
9:15-
8:15
8:30
8:45
9:00
9:15
9:30
9:30- 9:45
9:45-10:00
10:00-10:15
10:15-10:30
,10:30-10:45
10:45-11:00
111:00-11:15
11:15-11:30
Bof to Bre inclusive
Bri to Bz inclusive
C to Cha inclusive
Che tohCol inclusive
Com to Cr inclusive
Cu to Dem inclusive
Den to Dr inclusive
Du to Er inclusive
Es to Fis inclusive
Fit to Fr inclusive
Fu to Gim inclusive
Gin to Gra inclusive
Gre to Hal inclusive
Ham to Iaz inclusive
Any student may register from 1:00
to 3:30 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 15, 1936
Any student may register from 8:00
to 12:00 noon.