THE MICHIGAN DAILY
v.
THE ICHIGAN DAILY
Af
.-r - . A
sua----
1936 Member 1937
ssociated Coeiale Press
Distributors of
Cc4e6iate Diest
Published every morning except Monday during the
University year and Summer Session by the Board in
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not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of
republication of all other matter herein also reserved.
Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as
second class mail matter.
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LOS*ANGELES PORTLAND - SEATS
Board of Editors
MANAGIN , EDITOR...............ELSIE A. PIERCE
ASSOCIATE EDITOR ............FRED WARNER NEAL
ASSOCIATE EDITOR ........MARSHALL D. SHULMAN
George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey
Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins
Departmental Boards
Publication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman;
James Boozer. Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure
Tenander, Robert Weeks.
Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman;
Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver-
man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey.
Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman;
Robert Cummins, Mary Sage Montague.
Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman; Fred
DeLano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymond Good-
man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La-
Marca..
Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza-
beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas,
Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine
Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab.
Business Department
BUSINESS MANAGER .............JOHN R. PARK
ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JEAN KEINATH
Departmental Managers
Jack Staple, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na-
tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J.
Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local
Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service
Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class-
ified Advertising Manager.
NIGHT EDITOR: JOSEPH S. MATTES
we eA
Go To The
Dorm Dance...
DANCE is to be held tonight in
the Intramural Building to raise
funds for the construction of men's dormitories
in Ann Arbor.
The need for such dormitories is unchallenged.
Their importance to every group of students has
been thoroughly explained. No social event of
the season will possess greater merit, and few
promise more enjoyment. If you haven't made
up your mind yet, we urge you to attend.
Welcome,
Editors . .
T HE DAILY EXTENDS, for the
University of Michigan as a whole,
a cordial welcome to the editors of the state,
whom we have come to know during 18 years
they have been attending meetings of the Uni-
versity Press Club.
It was the hope of Professor Brumm, in start-
ing the club, that both University and news-
papermen would profit from their yearly get-
together here. It has, we are glad to say, worked
out that way. The faculty me and students
who attend the sessions are able to see better
the views of the practical small town newspaper-
man. And the newspaperman is able to go away
with some idea of the workings of the profes-
sorial mind, and, probably, a better understand-
ing of some of the complex problems that con,
front him daily.
Proportional
Representation.. .
. TO ORGANIZATION has been
Ij,identified much more closely with
any institution over a period of decades than
Tammany with New York City's government.
A beginning step in the dissolution of this un-
savory relationship has been taken with the
adoption, November 3, of a new city charter and
a new system of proportional representation for
City Council elections. The system of pro-
portional representation holds greater interest
for other American cities than does the complex
charter.
Tammany, like political machines the country
over, has flourished under the ward plan of coun-
cil elections. In New York 64 aldermen have
been elected from 64 wards in the past. Under
this system, similar to that of the national elec-
toral college, votes for candidates who fail of
a plurality are not represented in the govern-
ment, although the contests may have been very
close. Minority, chiefly reform and left-wing,
candidates have had to gain the support of the
single non-partisan list, and the nine who re-
ceive the greatest number of votes are the coun-
cil members. But under this plan, too, it is
difficult for minority groups to gain representa-
tion. For example, 18 persons might be con-
testing for office, nine of them opposed to city-
owned transportation system and nine favoring
such a system. Members of the latter group each
could receive 49 per cent of the votes, and still
not gain a single represerntative on the coun-
cil.
Under New York City's new plan, one council-
man will be chosen for every 75,000 votes cast.
The council, therefore, will consist of about 32
members. Councilmen will not be chosen by
wards, as under the old plan, nor by the city at
large, as in Detroit, but by boroughs, of which
there are five. The voter will not indicate his
preference for just one man, or for several men
equally, but will name his first choice, second
choice, third choice, and so on. A candidate
receiving 75,000 first-choice votes will be de-
clared elected and the remaining ballots for him
counted for the second choice candidates indi-
cated. If a second choice already has been elect-
ed, the votes will be counted for a third choice.
Minority parties still face the considerable
obstacle of mustering 75,000 votes in a single
borough. With each borough having an average
of six councilmen, it will take an average of 17
per cent of the voters to elect a minority party
candidate. But these 17 per cent are certain
mathematically of electing their representative,
while in Detroit 49 per cent cannot be sure of
one representative out of the nine.
Ideal minority party representation, which
would necessitate city-wide voting instead of
voting by boroughs, would, with a 32-man coun-
cil, give one seat to every party polling three
per cent of the votes.
THE FORUM
Letters published in this column snouldnot 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 more than 300 words and to accept or
reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial
importance and interest to the campus.
Thersites And Sociology
To the Editor:
In view cf the fact that many people have
erroneously attributed to me the authorship of
the article entitled "Sociology Department" and
signed "Thersites," and that it is only just that
all praise or blame the lengthy article entitles
the author to should be given to the true author,
I wish to disclaim any connection with or re-
sponsibility for that letter.
May I suggest to you, Thersites, that the rea
son why you have to summarize certain assigned
readings is because those assigned selections were
written by someone who has studied and knows
far more about the matter than either you,
Thersites, or myself, and the summary enables
the professor to learn whether you comprehend
the author's position. After understanding the
assigned reading there is no necessity for you
to confine your "manual efforts to that of an
assistant filing clerk and your intellectual ef-
forts to that of a parrot." You might raise a
point you consider debatable in class discussion
or you might write a thesis presenting your point
of view fully. Because you are satisfied to do
uncomplainingly, as you admit, "a kind of sub-
servient hack work" might indicate that the de-
fect lies not in the sociology department but in
you, dear Thersites.
For me then, this matter is closed. If you
have complaints to make, the proper and sensible
thing tdr do is not to flaunt them extrovertedly
in The Daily but to see your professor. If your
complaint is reasonable I'm sure he'll do right
by you, Thersites.
-Harold Ross.
LearningOrf'Health
Which Sways The Supreme Court:
(From the Minnesota Daily)
THE SUPREME CORUT has been called many
names in the last few years. The cynics
and radicals have decried the fact that the "Nine
Old Men" could decide the destinies of a nation,
despite the sentiments of the population. They
have pointed to 'the many accidental factors
which may serve to swing the decision of the piv-
otal justice, and therefore of the court. It re-
mained, however, for Irving Dilliard in an article
in the November Harpers to dispel the last re-
maining clouds of sanctity surrounding the
members of the highest court.
Mr. Dilliard considers the minimum wage de-
cisions. Three times a minimum wage law has
been brought to the Supreme Court for a test
of its constitutionality, in 1917, 1923 and more
lately in 1936. In the first case, the Supreme
Court split 4-4 on the constitutionality of an
Oregon minimum wage law, with Justice Bran-
deis not participating. In Adkins v. Children's
Hospital the court was divided six to three
against Washington, D. C. minimum wage regu-
lation; again Justice Brandeis did not partici-
pate because he had a particular interest in the
case. In the New York case this year, the jus-
tices voted the minimum wage unconstitutional
* in a five to four decision with dissenting opinions
from Justices Hughes and Stone. In the latter
Brandeis and Cardozo concurred. However, in
both the two latest decisiofis Justices Van De-
vanter, Butler, McReynolds and Sutherland par-
ticipated. In both cases all voted with the
majority against the minimum wage. Two of
these justices participated in the first case. Dur-
BENEATH ****ITAL
"r----By Bonth Williams .
DEAR BONTH
E Say, some of the fellows here in the shop
sure got a great kick reading that column of
yours about us a couple of weeks ago. Sure was
glad to see you, when you came by that night.
You know Eddie Ward's gettin' married in a
couple of weeks and wants you to try and make
it. All the gang will be there and I figure it will
be about as good as the shop picnic out to Mt.
Clemens last year when you and Jim Mason got
so full.
You remember Old Oscar on number two cat-
erpillar, well he's quit. Too old for the job
and the heat got him, and now they've taken
Oldtimer off nights and put him back in the hole.
Remember how he used to try to get off nights
because his wife said she'd divorce him if he
didn't, well now he wishes she had, I guess.
Old Pete was through the shop the other day
and said two days off for any guy smokin' even
during relief. The big shots upstairs are gettin'
pretty strict these days, what with a lot of
talk about movin' the shop and all.
SAY, Jim Ward and Norm, and Leo and Me are
comin' out to the game Saturday and we
was wonderin' if we couldn't get together like we
did after the Indiana game. We sure like the
place. Also we was wonderin' if we came out a
little early if you could show us where some of
these social workers live who are always comin'
around and askin' us the craziest questions. They
seem like awful peculiar fellows and I'd like to see
where some of them live.
We was over to Ray Morris' the other nite and
Leo brought along his gal. I guess he told you
he's givin' up South America and gettin' hitched.
Boy, kid, there's gonna be a real Polish wedding
and you gotta make that one. Remember when
Teo tied the knott?
Gus the Turk is workin' on number one where
you used to be and Dooley and me are ridin' he
out of him. He went out to the coffee house
the other nite after work and passed out on the
furnace the next day about 7. Good old Gus.
Joe Probesfledt and Frank that works on days
is runnin' a pool on football scores. Homer won
it last week, and then his wife found out and
took all the dough away from him.
It looks a lot like they're gonna close the
Big House. Sullivan is in a quite a jam I guess
and the sheriff out there is on the spot plenty.
Hank rolled the blackjack table for $30 last night
and Mac has started to hit on the ponies again.
REMEMBER that new line they put in just
beforeyou left up by number four. That
hot- . Well, Ross that was sprayin' there
had to go to transferin'. Too damn much dust,
lost about 20 pounds in a month.
Slim that takes off number one dropped an-
other grate in the cat yesterday and the Enemy
got blue in the face. On top of that a coil
blew out and he damn near burned his arm off
tryin' to change it without the electricians. You
know how he gets, so mad he can't talk, and just
points with those two fingers of his.
Maybe you never heard how he lost them. He
was fidgitin' around speedin' up the furnace one
night around at the back when Old Pete came
through and thinkin' that the guys was loafin',
he pulls the switch. The cogs take two of the
Enemy's fingers off just like nothin'. He never
makes a sound. He just comes round in front,
holdin' his hand, and looks at Pete and walks
into the first aid. You gotta take your hat off
to Dick, he's tough.
Well, Leo just came over to drink a bottle of
beer before we go to work and it is near two-
thirty so I will have to close. Hope we can get
to see you Saturday.
Your friend as ever,
Kingfish.
P.S.: Ed is off the nite beat now, and is over
at the 15th precinct. He is gonna be married
in his uniform, and he says if you don't come,
he won't never speak to you again.
THE SCREEN
AT THE MICHIGAN
"WEDDING PRESENT"
Clanging fire engines, ambulances with
screaming sirens, a hearse, and a troop of po-
licemen is a new idea for a wedding present. All
of these sundry items plus an archduke, New
York's Number One racketeer, and two newspaper
reporters are mixed into this picture. The total
result is light spirited entertainment, if you are
in the mood for it.
Rusty, (Joan Bennett), and Charlie, (Cary
Grant), are gold-medal Chicago newspaper re-
porters. Their main delight is trying to outdo
each other in being eccentric. But Charlie goes
too far-Rusty has ideas that their marriage
should be sane and sacred. The marriage is
called off, and in the course of things, Charlie
becomes city editor of the paper. Rusty be-
lieves he has become too much the high-powered
executive, lets him know about it, and is fired.
She goes to New York and is about to marry a
successful novelist, Conrad Nagel. But Charlie
regains his perspective, flies to New York, and
with the aid of his racketeering friend, gives
Rusty the above described wedding present.
Rusty appreciates the present, and rides off with
Charlie on the roof of the ambulance for the
psychopathic hospital.
The picture does a great deal of talking which
slows down its pace, but it has some hilarious
moments. It would have been funnier if it had
not tried so obviously to be funny.
-C.M.T.
THEATRE
Iowa's Progress
By IRVING S. SILVERMAN
U NIQUE in its presentation of an
almost revolutionary ideal and
the theatre, the foundations for a.!
practical development in relation to
fine arts building, the ceremonies of
which representatives from all parts
of the country attended. Represent-f
ing the University of Michigan weret
Valentine B. Windt, director of Play
Production, President Charles A.-
Sink of the School of Music, Prof.x
Bruce Donaldson of the fine arts de-
partment and Prof. Avard Fairbanks
of the Institute of Fine Arts.-
In the establishment of a separate
administrative and integrated unitt
for the study and teaching of fine1
arts the University of Iowa has em-
ployed the most modern technique
and equipment especially in its1
theatre and thus will be able to offer
the students the stimulation as well
as the latest practical utilities nec-1
essary for a greater appreciation of1
art and the production of greater1
artists in all branches of aesthetics.
This past week the University of'
Iowa dedicated this new theatre and'
fine arts building which representa-
tives from all parts of the country
attended. Representing the University
of Michigan were Valentine B. Windt,1
director of Play Production, Presi-
dent Charles A. Sink of thedSchool,
of Music, Prof. Bruce Donaldson of
the fine arts department and Prof.
Avard Fairbanks of the Institute of
Fine Arts.
The proposed art colony, when the
remainder of the buildings will be set
up, is located on the banks of the
Iowa River upon reclaimed ground,
formerly marsh land. The state
board of education of Iowa set aside
30 acres along the bank for the art
colony which is connected with the
remainder of the campus by a foot-
bridge stretching across the river.
The fine arts building costs ap-
proximately $200,000 and contains
studios principally for the study of
- the plastic and graphic arts but 'has
neither the accommodations nor the
facilities for a study of the history
of art such as at this University. The
work done in this building approxi-
mates that done in the College of
Architecture and in the sculpturing
courses.
But the theatre, which is the only
other building upon the fine arts
campus, includes a center section
composed of an auditorium and re-
volving. stage with a wing to house
studios for technical experimentation
and work shops.
The latest ideas in stagecraft are
incorporated in the new theatre-a
set of wagon stages, a noiseless re-
lolving stage 36 feet in diameter
which can change sets in less than 30
seconds, a special cyclorama and a
conventional gridiron. The auditor-
ium seats 500. The lighting and me-
chancial equipment is believed to
match that of any theatre in the
world.
To complete the fine arts unit, ad-
ditional small studios are to be built
about the fine arts building and will
complete the first art colony on an
American university campus. To the
first unit of the theatre will be added
two additional units to provide a
small theatre, a Shakespearian
theatre, work shops, a green room,
rehearsal rooms, library, seminar
rooms, playwrights' studios, broad-
casting studio and a research labor-
atory.
In addition a music building will be
constructed with an outdoor amphi-
theatre beyond.
Those who attended commented
upon the proposed colony as follows:
Mr. Windt: "The University of Iowa
has the beginnings of what will be
one of the best university theatre
units in the country, It is both
simple and useful with the latest
modern devices to meet all the re-
quirements of modern staging."
Mrs. Fairbanks, who accompanied
her husband : "The University of
Iowa has given the students a great
opportunity to develop in the crea-
tive arts and is encouraging them in
this development. When opportuni-
ties such as these are offered, very
likely something great will come of
them. But in addition to furnishing
the artist, the fine arts colony will
develop a more appreciative audience
in the creative arts."
Professor Donaldson: "The Iowa
arts department is remarkable in
that it is a unified plant. There is
a great encouragement for the study
of fine arts and the University of
Iowa regards this instruction as a
very important function. But the in-
struction in the plastic and graphic
arts has been developed far beyond
the instruction in the history of art.
Symphony Concert
To Be Given Sunday
In its first appearance of the year
the University Symphony Orchestra,
directed by Prof. Earl V. Moore of
the School of Music, will give a con-
cert at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in Hill
Auditorium.
The program will be an all Tschai-
kowsky presentation by a group of
young musicians who since the be-
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 Preside
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.
FRIDAY, NOV. 13, 1936 1
VOL. XLVII No. 41
Notices
College of Architecture, Midsemes-
ter Reports: Instructors are request-
ed to report any student whose work1
is unsatisfactory. Cards for this pur-
pose have been distributed; these
should be filled out and returned to
the office of the College of Archi-
tecture, 207 Arch., not later than
Nov. 21. Additional cards may be
secured from the office of the College
of Architecture or from the Regis-
trar's office, Room 4 U.H.
School of Music, Midsemester Re-
ports: Instructors are requested to
report any student whose work is un-
satisfactory. Cards for this purpose
have been distributed, these should
be filled out and returned to the of-
fice of the School of Music, 108 SM,
not later thas Nov. 21. Additional
cards may be secured from the office
of the School of Music or from the
Registrar's office, Room 4, U.H.
School of Forestry and Conserva-
tion, Midsemester Reports: Instruc-
tors in divisions of the University
other than the School of Forestry
and Conservation are requested to
report any Forestry student who is
doing unsatisfactory work. Cards for
this purpose have been mailed out;
these should be filled in and returned
to the office of the School of For-
estry and Conservation, 2048 N.S., not
later than Nov. 21. Additional cards
may be secured from the office of
the School of Forestry and Conser-
vation or from the Registrar's Of-
fice, Room 4, U.H.
Freshmen in the College of Litera-
ture, Science and the Arts who have
not received their five-week progress
reports may obtain them in Room
102, Mason Hall, from 8 to 11:30 a.m.
and 1:30 to 4 p.m. according to the
following schedule:
Surnames beginning A through B,
Saturday morning, Nov. 14.
Surnames beginning C through J,
Monday, Nov. 16.
Surnames beginning K through R,
Tuesday, Nov. 17.
Surnames beginning S through Z,
Wednesday, Nov. 18.
Teacher's Certificate Candidates:
All students in the School of Educa-
tion, College of Literature, Science
and the Arts, and Graduate School
who expect to receive a teacher's cer-
tificate in February or June, 1937,
and who have not filled out an ap-
plication blank for this purpose must
do so immediately. The application
blanks are available in the office of
the Recorder of the School of Edu-
cation, 1437 University Elementary
School. The attention of students in
the Literary College is called to the
fact that this application is in ad-
dition to the application made to the
Committee on the teacher's certifi-
cate of that college.
Presidents of Fraternities and So-
rorities are reminded that member-
ship lists for the month of October
will be due Nov. 16.
Health Service: Saturday morning,
between 8 and 10 a.m., will be the
last opportunity at Health Service,
for students to start taking the cold
vaccine for prevention of colds.
Bowling, Graduate Women Stu-
dents: All students interested in the
proposed bowling league are asked to
hand in at the Women's Athletic
Building at least two scores before
Thanksgiving. Instruction will be
given to those who wish it.
A 1936-37 medical examination is
necessary.
A.S.M.E. Members: Mechanical En-
gineering magazines for October and
November are available in the Me-
chanical Dept. office, Room 221, W.
Eng. Bldg., to all fully paid members.
Phi Beta Kappa: The local chap-
ter is anxious to obtain the addresses
of members of Phi Beta Kappa who
have recently moved to Ann Arbor.
Please give street address and the
name of the chapter to which you
were elected.
Orma F. Butler, Secretary.
3233 Angell Hall.,
torium on Nov. 19. The public
cordially invited.
Dr. Andrew Keogh, Librarian of
Yale University, will speak to the
students of the Department of Li-
brary Science and others interested
at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13,
and at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 14.
These lectures will be in Room 110 of
the General Library and are open
to the public.
The subject of his first lecture
will be "The Yale University Li-
brary." This lecture will be illus-
trated with lantern slides. The sec-
ond and third lectures will be on
bibliography.
Exhibitions
Exhibit of Buddhist Art, with spe-
cial emphasis on Japanese Wood
Sculpture, under the auspices of the
Institute of Fine Arts. South Gallery,
Alumni Memorial Hall, Nov. 2-14, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Exhibit of Color Reproductions of
American Paintings comprising the
First Series of the American Art
Portfolios, recently acquired for the
Institute of Fine Arts Study Room,
On view daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
in Alumni Memorial Hall, North Gal-
lery.
Exhibition of Oil and Water Color
Paintings Made in Spain During the
Past 10 years by Wells M. Sawyer,
shown under the auspices of the In-
stitute of Fine Arts. Alumni Mem-
orial Hall, West Gallery. Opens Sun-
day, Nov. 1, 8 to 10 p.m.; thereafter
daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sundays, Nov.
8 and 15 from 3 to 5 p.m.
Exhibition, Architecture Building:
An exhibition of the Ryerson Compe-
tition drawings including those of
teams working here under the direc-
tion of Professors Hebrard and
Bailey is being shown in the third
floor exhibition room, Architecture
Building, Nov. 11 through 14. Open
from 9 to 5 p.m. The public is cor-
dially invited.
Events Of Today
English Journal Club meets this
afternoon in the League, with
business preliminaries beginning at
4 p.m. The program, open 'to the
public at 4:20, will be a colloquium
on the subject, "Recent Mediaeval
Scholarship.". Mr. Weimer will dis-
cuss recent articles concerning biblio-
graphy and method in mediaeval
study. Mr. Houck, graduate student
in the Greek Department, will pre-
sent a short paper on "Byzantine Lit-
erature in the Middle Ages." Mr.
Giovannini will review Etienne Gil-
son's "The Spirit of Mediaeval Phil-
osophy." General discussion will
follow. New members elected at the
last meeting are John Zebrowski,
Warren W. Wood, Frederic Weigle,
Catherine Reigart, Max Brussel, J. D.
O'Neill, Oscar Bouise, Milton Halli-
day and Robert Campbell.
School of Music Seniors: There will
be a meeting of the members of the
senior class of the School of Music
in the School of Music auditorium,
this afternoon at 4 p.m., for the pur-
pose of electing class officers and the
transaction of any other business
which may be of interest to the class.
Theatre and Arts Committee: Im-
portant meeting today at 5 p.m. at
the League. Room will be posted on
the bulletin board. All members
please be present.
Esperanto: TherEsperanto class
will meet today from 4:30 to 5:30
p.m., Room,1035 Angell Hall.
The first sheets may be gotten at
any time today in Room 402 R.L.
The Disciples' Guild will sponsor
the usual weekly recreation program
tay 8 to 1 ~.a h Recreaion
Hall, Church of Christ, Hill and Tap-
pan Sts. There will be a wide variety
of games, including table tennis,
shuffle board; darts, quiet games and
a period of special music and group
singing. Those interested in table
tennis should be present for the be-
ginning of a tournament. All stu-
dents are invited. No charge.
Hillel Foundation: A liberalized
service will be used at the Friday
evening services held at the Hillel
Foundation tonight at 8 p.m. Follow-
ing the service there will be a social
hour. All students are cordially in-
vited to attend.
Coming Events
Graduate Outing Club: Trip to
Camp Newkirk at Dexter on Sunday
afternoon. Party leaves Lane Hall
at 2:30 p.m. and' will return early in
the evening. At this meeting, elec-
tion of officers will be held. Refresh-
ments and transportation provided.
All graduate students are cordially
invited.
Mimes: There will be an important
meeting Monday afternoon, Nov. 16,
is
Academic Notices
Economics 181: Examination
be held in Room D, Haven Hall.
Robert S. Ford.
willi
Sociology 141: Bus for the trip for
Criminology students to the De-
troit House of Correction will leave
the Union at 8:30 a.m. Saturday
morning. Quiz sections as usual for
students not going on this trip.
Lectures
University Lecture: Dr. Salo Fink-
elstein, of Cleveland, well-known cal-
culating genius, will give a lecture-
demonstration under the auspices of
the Department of Psychology at