PAGE sib THE MICHIGAN DAILY THUR-St.)AY, Aft'ftii, !t, MO PA(~E SIX 'I'IIURSbAY, APE~IL ~, i9S~ k Student Group Plans Cicago Sociology Trip Itinerary To Include Visits To Hull House, 'Ghetto' And Juvenile Courts Announcing the third in the series of Student Christian Association so- ciologica field trips, William Wil- snack, '37, president of the organiza- t...... ion, said yesterday that the group going to Chicago on May 1-3 would be definitely limited to 40 persons. Arranged with the cooperation of the University of Chicago, the trip includes in a tentative itinerary visits to Hull House, to juvenile courts, to the Chinese Chamber of Commerce and the "Ghetto," notorious tene- ment section of the "windy city." To Visit 'Hobo College'' The student group, leaving Ann Ar- bor by train Friday afternoon and re- turning late Sunday, will also visit the Plebian Forum, which is a "hobo college" where professors and stu- dents from the Chicago universities and colleges give talks to groups of tramps and hoboes. Following the speeches the ragged listeners ask questions, turning the session into a sort of unique forum. Wilsnack said that he expected to get very low round-trip rates for the railway trip, keeping the costs of the tour to a minimum. The group will stay Friday and Saturday nights in dormitories of George Williams Col- lege, according to Evelyn Maloy, '36, in charge of the trip. Chicago Professors Aid Professors Earl S. Johnson and Samuel Kincheloe, of the University of Chicago sociological department, helped in planning the itinerary. This is the third sociological trip sponsored by the Student Christian Association this semester, groups having made visits to Toledo and De- troit during the past few weeks. In Toledo 'the students numbering 30, met with labor leaders and Y..C.A. leaders, visited slum clearance pro- jects, toured through the Negro dis- tricts and shanty districts of the. city' and. went through the art museum. In Detroit last week, 20 students com- prised the group that visited the Museum of Art, police headquarters, soup lines, rehousingCproject areas and the Negro Y.M.C.A. on Eliza- beth St. Harvard Plans New Course In Tbeaching Work A new joint program leading to a degree of master of arts in teach- ing has been established at Harvard University and Radcliffe College, it was announced yesterday by Dean Edward Krauss, and is open to stu- dents who wish to prepare for teach- ing in secondary schools. The new program includes nine specialized fields of teaching, the classics, English, fine arts, French, German, mathematics, music, the na- tural sciences and the social sciences. The new degree has been made pos- sible, Dean Krauss said, by combina- tion of certain courses offered by the faculties of Arts and Sciences and Education, and will be awarded on achievement evidenced by examina- tions in the subject to be taught, in education and on an apprenticeship in teaching. The degree will be awarded to women through Radcliffe College. Students wishing information con- cerning the new program should call at Dean Krauss' office or write to Dean Henry W. Holmes of the Grad- uate School of Education, Harvard University. Even Shakespeare U1111 Seeking Boiled tThouIht } 1:r r hibyrtauth ,Storoes Dormitories Fooc Of Radio's Squawk William Shakespeare, fouihun- dred years ahead of his time, re- veals his opinion of the modern ra- dio, in "As You Like It," saying "It matters not if it be in tune so itJ makes noise enough." He might well have written for the radio, as an analysis of his plays reveals he used radio jargon, ac- cording to the University Broadcast- ing Service. In "All's Well That Ends Well," the world's greatest dramatist states, "Then my dial goes true." In "Corio- lanus," "Take up some other station," and in the "Taming of the Shrew," "The lecture will be done ere you are tuned" are to be found. Glendower, in "Henry IV," Part I, says, "And those musicians that shall play to you stand in the air a thou- sand leagues from hence." "I think the dial points to five," a quotation from the "Comedy of Errors," and "Ah, stand by," from "Anthony and Cleopatra," reveal Shakespeare's use of modern terminology, although not in their modern meanings. Cercle To Present French Comic Play "Chotard and Cie," by M. Roger- Ferdinand, is to be given April 28 at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre as the annual play of the Cercle Francais, it was announced yesterday. "Chotard et Cie" is a comedy in three acts, and was first presented at the Odeon Theatre in Paris on Oct. 19, 1928. The plot relates to the eternal struggle between art and money. The plays of the Cercle Francais have been given continuous- ly since 1907. Spring Vacation I BUS Reservations, Information and Tickets. ROUND TRIP New York ?2.25 St. Louis 12.60 Chicago .20 Pittsburgh 10.95 and Other Points The Union SPhone 4151 All Special Greyhound Busses Leave The Union. Convenient Schedules every- where. Stopover Privileges. .!__./ .11, !' L \. 1 t.Ca 1. AL Wb i S All persons having extra rooms which will be available for Ann Ar- bor guests attending the May Fes- tival, May 13, 14, 15 and 16, are urged to call the student offices of the Union and register such accomo- dations there. Union officials stated that an efforta was being made to enable all those. in Ann Arbor during the Festival season to find suitable rooms for their stay in the city. The Union, League and hotel facilities will be filled very 'arlv, officials pointed out, and by having a register of available acco- modations guests will be able to get; .ettled easier and sooner. The rooms will not be vacated forc the entire Festival, officials said, and' even those having rooms open forI one or two nights of the week' were urged to call and have themI registered. Later a committee from the Union' council will inspect the rooms regis- tered, and they will be graded ac- cording to quality and price. How- f ever, it was emphasized that all' registrations should be made at the earliest convenience of the personsz having such rooms, so the classifica-. tion and compilation could be made! By JENNY PETERSEN Three floors below the main floor of University Hospital is an under- ground city which is little heard of but whose activity is of vital import- ance to at least one-fourth of the student body. This city is composed of the of- fices and labyrinthine storerooms of the Hospital Stores, which supply food for Mosher-Jordan, Betsy Bar- hour, Helen Newberry, Adelia Cheev- er and alumnae residence dormitories and the League. They also furnish food and equipment for the various departments of the hospital itself. Staggering amounts of food are handled in the underground store- rooms, for everything-meat, vege- tables, staples, fruits and milk is first shipped there, and then delivered inI University trucks to the different dormitories and the League. In one day 900 to 1000 gallons of milk and cream and two tons of meat are checked through. In one year four train carloads of sugar are sent out. Ilospital Important Customer After the main unit of the hospit- al, Mosher-Jordan and the League are the most important customers of the Hospital Stores. On the food order blanks sent from the dormitory, which list the needs for a week's menus, appear such items as eight bushels of spinach and two hundred fifty pounds of pot roast for one meal. The League's requisition for one day sometimes calls for 320 half pints of milk and 340 heads of let- tuce. Most of the fruit and vegetables in the Stores are purchased in De- troit and sent to Ann Arbor by truck twice a week. Meat is contracted for periods of thirty days from va- rious packing houses and must con- form to all government specifications. Only parts of animals, such as shoul- ders or ribs, are bought, for whole carcasses contain too much rough meat to be economical purchases. 'Spuds' Occupy Cellar Almost every size and sort of room is found in the subterranean maze of storage rooms. Meat is suspended from hooks in sixteen-foot refrigera- tors, while sugar is kept in dry heated chambers which are twelve feet high. Although the stock of 5,000 bushels of potatoes which was delivered in the fall has been considerably de- pleted by now, "spuds" still occupy most of the long wood-partitioned root cellar. Supervised by the director of the We are well stocked with Fertilizer and Seeds for your Spring planting . hospital, the stores are one a group of three organizatici ing the needs of the Universi# Chemistry Stores provide sup) the work of all the science ments, and the Storehouse s plumbing and hardware fixt the maintenance of Universil ings. FLIP FOR COUNCIL SE ALPENA, April 8.-(AP)-' of a silver dollar permitted A. Kurrasch to retain his sea A CORRECT ION flic" Daily was at fautlt yegterdaty Whet it annloilcfd that 20 geology students were to leave eriday on a u n i o f c o n d u c te d o u r o f t h e n e w te o i n g ty. Ter camp at State Bridge, 001lo. That trip plies for' is to take p~lace next summer. depart- Prof. I. D. Scott will take students ends out enrolled in an advanced physiography ures for course to study the physiographic ty build- provinces in several southeastern states during spring vacation. The party will leave Friday. EAT The flip Herbert t on the city council today. He and Wesley Habermehl received the same number of votes in Monday's election. Nib= SUDDEN tow SERVICE W MOT z I . You Can Go "Wild" Again This Spring! BRAND NEW STORE will open soon on State Street, Men ... .but the name above its door will be as familiar as any business institu. tion you wish to name. It has taken many weeks of work to restore what a few hours of fire destroyed that night ...,but the new store will open its doors with the same deter- mination to uphold a reputation of showing only the newest styles in men's clothing and accessories. On or about May 1st ... you men with well-dressed ideas will be able to come to your favorite store and select your SPRING toggery from a stock of strikingly new merchandise. Wild's will be open in time for you to replenish your wardrobe .. . everything new ... all from a store with a grand aid name. State Street on the Campus MEE-Mciadm ZIP-119"Tq Irdti) . ..I 0- Vigoro Peat Moss SIuperior MILK-ICE CREAM EASTER Rabbit Center Brick SPECIAL Egg Center Brick Bone Meal Milorganite Pulverised Sheep Manure Lawn Seed HERTLER BROS. 210 SOUTH ASHLEY ST. Phone 2-1713 Chicken Center Brick Superior Dairy Com any Phone 23181 I. I I I U __________ ., t a 0 A OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO The most important single attribute of cigarettes, other thwri the tobacco itself, is moisture content. To its influence we owe Here's What You Have Been Waiting For... Band Box offers a special, quick, cleaning service for the Easter suit or dress. It's never too late for last-minute cleaning with the Band Box special cleaning services al- ways at hand e Free Call For and Deliv- ery on all orders. * Shoe Repairing carefully done. Ph.8722 I tII">~