PAGE SIB: THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. JANUARY 21, 1936 TVA Decision Is Held Back By U. S. Court Nine Justices Take Two Week Recess After Final Briefs Are Heard WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. -AP) - The supreme court entered upon a two-week recess today without hand- ing down the much-awaited decision on the Tennessee Valley Authority act. Disappointing a distinguished throng that had gathered in expecta- tion that this last New Deal case' ready for action would be ruled on, the court spoke its mind on several lesser cases in a brief session and then adjourned.l Government counsel had just filed with the court two more briefs in the determined attempt to further the New Deal there. One asked dismissal of the suit by Gov. Talmadge of Georgia to wipe out the Bankhead Cotton Act, on the ground that the suit was really against the government, and the government could not be sued without its consent. The other asked reconsideration of last Monday's order that $200,000,000 in impounded processing taxes be re- turned to the taxpayers. This, it was contended, was inconsistent with an earlier ruling that taxes should be paid into the treasury before con- testing litigation can properly be brought. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETN (Continued from Page 4) speak on Some American Novels of 1935. Tuesday Play Reading Section of the Faculty Women's Club meets at 2:15 p.m., in the Alumnae Room, Michigan League. Michigan Dames meets at 8:15 p.m. at the League with the Book Group in charge. Dr. J. L. Davis, instructor in the English Department, will lec- ture on several contemporary Ameri- can Novelists. Each member is in- vited to bring a guest and the Book Group will have charge of the re- freshments. There will also be a short business meeting. National Student League meets in Room 305 at the Union. Everyone who has attended a meeting this semester is requested to be present. The meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. Coming . Events Geology Journal Club: Prof. Carl L. Hubbs, Curator of the Fish Divi- sion in the Museum of Zoology, will address the Club Thursday, at 7:00 p.m. on the subject "Fish distribu- tion in relation to the Pleistocene history of the West." Professor Hubbs' data sheds considerable light on the origin of the great submarine canyons off the Pacific Coast, a sub- ject of current geologic interest. All are cordially invited. Room 3056 N. S. Psychology Journal Club will "meet on Thursday, Jan. 23, 7:30 p.m., Room 3126 N.S. Mrs. Croft and Miss Bonner will review recent ar- ticles on memory. Graduate Educat:on Club meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday, an. 22 in the Elementary School Library. Mr. Leonard 0. Andrews will talk on the subject: "Pupils' Social Needs As a Basis for the Curriculum." Luncheon for graduate students on Wednesday, Jan. 22, at 12 o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the Michi- gan League bldg. Professor Bennett Weaver of the English department will speak informally on "Students and Scholars." Contemporary: Luncheon meeting Wednesday noon at the Haunted Tavern. Faculty Women's Club will meet at 3 o'clock on Wednesday, Jan. 22, Ethel Fountain Hussey room, the Michigan League. Mr. William A. Frayer Executive Secretary of The Cranbrook Foundation, formerly a member of the University Faculty, will speak on "Freedomversus Disci- pline, or a World in Turmoil." "Der Hauptmann von Koepenick" will be presented by the Art Cinema League Wednesday, Jan. 22, 8:15 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All seats are reserved. The box office will be open 12:00-6:00 p.m. on Tuesday and 10:00 a.m.-8:30 p.m., on Wednesday. IBOOK BINDING IIHave your THESIS bound in 1 He Will Soon Shave -Associated Press Photo. Back in 1932, when he joined the first "bonus march" to Washington, D.C., Mat Riley (above) of Mil- waukee swore he'd let his whiskers grow until he got his bonus. He believes the day soon will come when he can shave them off. Boak Is Appointed To Editorial Board Prof. A. A. R. Boak, chairman of the history department, has been elected to serve as a member of the board of editors of the American His- torical Review, it was announced here yesterday. Professor Boak's selection by the Council of the American Historical Association to serve for a term of six years on the magazine staff was made known at the recent meeting of the Association. The Review is the organ of the As- sociation and is one of the leading historical reviews of the world. Other historians from Michigan who have served on the board of edi- tors are Prof. A. C. McLaughlin, from 1894 to 1914; Prof. Claude H. Van Tyne, from 1916 to 1921; and Prof. Verner W. Crane, from 1927 to 1933. Professor McLaughlin was the man- aging editor of the Review from 1901 to 1905. Students Warned About Scarlet Fever Symptoms A request that all students report to Health Service at the first signs of a sore throat was issued yester- day by Dr. Warren G. Forsythe, director of the University Health Service, Dr. Forsythe's statement was made in an effort to check the develop- ment of more cases of scarlet fever among the students. Two cases are now being treated in the University Hospital. Scarlet fever is always pre- ceded by a sore throat, Dr. Forsythe said. Several Fires In Ann Arbor Over Weekend Firemen answered a call to 606 Mary Court at 11:30 a.m. yesterday to extinguish the most recent of roof and basement fires which broke out in Ann Arbor yesterday and Sunday. They found a blaze which had started in a pile of rubbish under the basement steps of a two-story frame house, and put it out after it had burned through the steps and up inside the wall of the house to the second floor. Damage to the house, owned by the Ann Arbor Sav- ings Bank and occupied by Otto Zemke, was caused mostly by smoke which filled it. A call to the home of Ernest Wurs- ter at 605 E. Jefferson St., came early Sunday morning when smoke from a leaky firepot filled the house. A second fire at the home of Mrs. F. B. Fitzgerald, 523 E. Madison St., was caused by a poorly insulated heating pipe placed too near the roof of the basement. aw Sturgis And Pollard lill Sail On Tour Coincident with the news of his selection on the "1935 Honor Roll of men who made medical progress last year" of the magazine Modern Medi- cine, Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, professor of internal medicine and director of Simpson Memorial Institute, will leave for a one-month Caribbean trip today. Because of "his original contribu- tions in anemia," Dr. Sturgis was named on the 1935 honor roll, ac- cording to the magazine. Dr. Herman M. Pollard, instructor in internal medicince and secretary of the Medical School, will accom- pany Dr. Sturgis on his trip. Sailing from New York Friday, they will stop at Kingston, Jamaica, then proceed to the Canal Zone and Columbia, re- turning by way of Kingston. Faculty Member Is In Washington, D.C Prof. Harlow O. Whittemore of the department of landscape architecture is now in Washington, D.C., attending conferences relating to his work in the University. Sunday he attended the American City Planning Institute and Associa- tion of Professional Schools of Land- scape Architecture. Following the session of the Ameri- can Planning and Civic Association v Rich will also meet on Wednesday Professor MOE4 COL 7-Pieces8 Sol Phone - & CARTER ILEGIANS Band - Girls' Trio -un Sysien - - Ypsilanti 900-W Contemporary February Issue OUT TOMORROW ON SALE Angell Hall, U Hall, Diagonal, Bookstores ERE'S PERFECTION in every sense of the word! 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