THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MARCH 16, w DAILY OFFICIAL I BULLETIN_ TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1937 VOL. XLVII No. 118 Notices' Faculty of the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: The ive- week freshman reports will be due March 20, Room 4, University Hall. E. A. Walter, Chairman, Academic Counselors. Students of the College of Litera- 1 ture, Science and the Arts: A meet- ing will be held today at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1025 Angell Hall. for stu- dents in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts and others in- terested in future work in library science. The meeting will be ad- dressed by Dr. W. W Bishop, Librar- ian and Head of the Department of Library of Science. Students of the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: A meeting will be held on Thursday, March 181 at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1025 Angell Hall for students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and others interested in future work in business administration. The meet- ing will be addressed by Dean C. E. Griffin of the School of Business Ad- ministration. The next meeting in the vocational series designed to give information concerning the nature of and preparation for the various pro- p fessions, to be held on March 23, will be addressed by Prof. E. V. Moore of the School of Music. The University Bureau of Appoint-I ments and Occupational Information has received announcements of Unit- ed States Civil Service examinations for chief, principal, senior, assistant and engineering draftsmen (for work on ships), optional branches-ship piping, ship ventilation, marine en- gines and boilers, electrical (ship), and hulls, salaries, $1,620 to $2,600; for principal, senior, associate, as- sistant, junior, and social science an- alyst .(optional subjects for assistant and junior social science analyst- economics sociology and social re- search, political science), salaries, $2,000 to $5,600. The bureau has also received an- (Continued on Page 4) State AcadeMy Will Meet Herej March 18 -2 0 in the Changing Support of Local cussed by a session meeting at 10 a.m. Gcvernment" will be given by Lent 12:15 p.m. and -2:30 p.m., Friday, Sciences, Will B Annual Arts And Letters Represented In Convention (Continued from Page I) pology section will take place at 9 a.m. and 1:45tp.m., Friday, and 9 a.m., Saturday, in the same place. Among the papers to be given are several on the Philippines, China and early Indians in Michigan.- Initial meetings of sections in bot- any, forestry, geography, language and literature, sanita'y and medical science and zoology will occur at 9 a.m. Friday. The psychology sec- tion will open its meeting at 9:15 a.m., the economics and sociology section at 9:30 a.m. and the landscape architecture section at 10 a.m. Fri- day. Taylor To Head Botany Chairman of the botany section will be Prof. William R. Taylor ofI the botany department. The section will also convene at 2 p.m., Friday, and at 9 a.m., Saturday, in Room 2003, Natural Science Building. A joint luncheon of biologists and for- esters will be held at 12:15 p.m., Fri- day, in the League. A talk on "Social Trends Involved D rivers Must Have 1937 Pla tes Today Automobile drivers were warned yesterday by local law enforcement officers to have 1937 license plates on their cars today for those driving }with 1936 plates will be subject to I arrest. Yesterday was the last day that the 1936 tags could be used, and latecomers were forced to wait in line at the license bureau in the Schlenk- er Hardware Co. store, 215 Liberty St., to purchase the new licenses. Chief of Police Lewis W. Fohey said several drivers had asked him for individual extensions, but that he had recommended prompt action about getting their new plates. D. Upson of the Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research and NTayne University at a luncheon for the eco- nomics and sociology section, 12:15 p.m., Friday, in the Union. Other sessions of the section will be held at 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m., Friday, the former in Room 101, Economics Building, and the latter in Room B, Haven Hall. Samuel M. Levin of Wayne University will serve as chair- man. - FMiller Forestry Chairman -Forestry will be the topic of a section meeting at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., Friday, in Room 2054, Natural Sci- ence Buliding. Allen F. Miller of the U. S. Forest Service will be chairman of the section. The section of geography will hold a session at 1 p.m., Friday, in addi- tion to its Friday morning meeting. Both meetings will be in Room 18, An- gell Hall, and will be presided over by Bert Hudgins of Wayne University. Wildlife management will be taken up at a joint meeting of the geog- raphy, .forestry and zoology sections at 9 a.m., Saturday, in Room 2116, Natural Science Building,.,, Stewart Heads Geology The section on geology and min- eralogy will meet under the chair- manship of Duncan Stewart, Jr., of Michigan State College at 8:30 a.m., Friday, in Room 3056, Natural Sci- enee Building. A symposium on! Michigan geology will review accom- plishments of the 100 years since the state geological survey was estab- lished. The section will continue at 1:30 p.m., Friday, and 8:30 a.m., Saturday, in the same room. The history and political scienceJ section will convene at 2:15 p.m, Fri- day, on the Union terrace with S. W. Fagerstrom of Michigan State Nor- mal College as chairman. Landscape architecture will be dis- and at 9:30 a.m., Saturday. All meetings except the one at noon Fri- day will be in Room 401, South Wing, and the other will be in the Union. Prof. H. O. Whittemore, director of the Nichols Arboretum, will be the section chairman. Prof. Charles A. Knudson of the French department will preside over the section on language and litera- ture, which is scheduled to meet at 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., Friday, and 9 a.m., Saturday, in Room 209, Angell Hall. Mathematics Section Meets The Michigan section of the Math- ematical Association of America will convene with the Academy's -mathe- matics department at 9:15 a.m. Sat- urday, in Room 1025, Angell Hall. C. C. Richtmeyer of Central State Teachers College will be the chair- man of the meeting.I Philosophy will be the subject of a section meeting at 9:30 a.m., Sat-' urday, in the Union under the chair- manship of 0. O. Norris of Michigan State Normal College. A section on psychology will con- vene at 2 p.m., Friday, in addition to a Friday morning session in Room 11121, Natural Science Building. Prof., Willard C. Olson of the education school will act as chairian. Medical Advances To Be Noted Sanitary and medical science ad- vances will be described in a section meeting at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., Fri- day, and at 8 a.m., Saturday. The Friday morning meeting will be'di- vided into two groups, one -to as- semble in Room 1514. East Medical Building. with Prof. H. B. Lewis, head of the biochemistry department, as chairman and the other in Room 1520, East Medical Building, under the chairmanship of Dr. Joseph A. Kasper of the Detroit Department of Health. "The Patenting of Medicinal Agents" will be discussed by Prof. Charles W. Edmunds, director of the materia medica department, at a luncheon for the section Friday in the Union. Dr. McCoy To Lecture Dr. George W. McCoy, director of the National Institu e of Health, Washington, will lecture on the "Comings and Goings of Epidemics" at 8 p.m., Friday, in Room 1528"East Medical Building. A joint session of the Academy section and the Society of Michigan Bacteriologists will be held at that time. The section on zoology will meet at, 9 a.m., and 1:15 p.m., Friday, in Room 2116, Natural Science Building, with H. D. Ruhl of the state conserva- tion department presiding. A business meeting for the election of new officers and reading of society reports will conclude the three-day session Saturday afternoon. --NOW --- -, -NO MICHIGAN AtVi AST!GRct 00ORE GOES7 TOTOI4 J4 CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP 203 East Liberty Phone 2-2973 Flowers for All Occasions MRS M R NJOH NSON in her motion picture lecture Jnge Depths oreo " tT , 8 : 1 5B p m EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS ai R ' i! . , .. cuA * xu ,;1ZL AU 3.T .i131 4CWS..U til,. Regular routine tuberculin-tests for Democrats and Republicans have children were advocated by -Dr. John forgotten their party affiliations as L. Law of the University Hospital, far as child labor is concerned. The Sunday, in an address broadcast over issue has apparently resolved itself WJR. into a question of sectional, economic "If at any time the test becomes and. religious interest. The SouthI positive, an x-ray of the chest should -has proven -a big obstacle as far as the be taken. Through this procedure the backers of the movement have been time of onset of a first infection concerned. This has caused many could be determined and . many in- political observers to feel that Presi- defmite symptoms of illness in chil- dent Roosevelt will have a difficult dren explained," he said. job securing the support of the South "Roentgenology is particularly val- in any extensive reform moves. uable in detecting the childhood form The American Bar Association has' of tuberculosis. More than any other raised the objection that the amend- part of the body,. the Jungs present ment cannot become law because so a structure in which small changes great a time has elapsed since it wasI may. be visualized by the x-ray," he first presented to the state and be- continued. cause it was originally rejected byI Dr. Law attributed tuberculosis in- more than one-fourth of the states. fection in infancy and childhood to ., n the other side, however, it has direct contact with a person -suffer- been claimed that since no time ing from the disease; from dust or limit was affixed to the proposal, it articles harboring the bacilli or from will become law after 36 states ratify milk. ..it, no matter how long the process "For this reason," he added, "tu- takes. berculosis may be considered a am- Every President since 1924 has ily disease. Exposure of children to -been in favor of the bill.. Only two an open case of consumption is par- months ago former President Hoover ticularly dangerous where the family seconded President Roosevelt's plea to live in close contact in one or two the states which had not ratified the rooms." amendment to do so. - 2- CKLW--1030 Kilocycles P.M. 6:00-"MagicaIsland." 6 :15-News "and Sports. 6:30-Lane Prescott's Ensemble. 6:45-Enoch Light's Music. 7:00-Shadows on the' Clock. 7:15-Michael Zarin's Orch. 7:30-Trans-Radio News Bulletins. 7:35-Freddy Berrens' Orch. 7:45-Howard Lanin's Orch. 8 :00-Romance in Rhythms. 8:30-Rick Roberts' Revellers. 9:00-Hugo Mariani's Orch. 9:15-Console and Keyboard. 9:30-Echoes of the Stage. 10:00-Wailenstein's Sinfonietta. 10:30-"Poe's Tales." 11:00-Canadian Club Reporter. 11 :15--String Ensemble. 11:30-Freddy Martin's Orch. Midnight-Horace Heidt's Orch. 12:30-Red Normo's Orcb. 1:00-Hugo Mariani's Orch. 1:30-Weather Forecast. WJR-750 Kilocycles P.M. 6:00-Stevenson News. 6:15-Envoys of Melody. 6:45-Pretty Kitty Kelly. 7:00-Poetic Melodies. 7:15-Diamond City News. 7:30-Alexander Woollcott. 7:45-Boake Carter. 8:00- Hammerstein's Music Hall, 8:30-Al Jolson-Sid Silvers-Martha Raye with Victor Young's Orch. 9:00-Al Pearce and His Gang. 9:30-Jack Oakie'sBCollege-with Benny Goodman's Band-George Stoll's Orch. 10 :30-Musical. 10 :45-Americana. 11 :00-Headline News. 11 :35-Peacef I valley. 11:45-Wismer Sports. 11:50-George Olson's Orch. Midnight-Marvin Frederic's Orch. 12:30-Bob McGrew's Orch. WWJ 920 Kilocycles P.M. 6 :00-Ty Tyson's Sport Talk. 6:10-Dinner Hour. 6 :30-Bradcast. 6:40-Odd Facts 6:45-C. Herbert Peterson. 7:00-Amos 'n' Andy. 7:15-Dramatic Moments. 7:20-Evening Melodies. 7:30-Dudley Brothers. 7:45-Piano Duo. 8:00-Leo Reisman's Orch. 8:30-Wayne King. 9:00-Vox Pop. 9:30-Fred Astaire. 10 :30-Jimmy Fidler. 10:45-Soloist. 11:00-Tonight's Hockey. 11:05-Northwood Inn Club. 11:30-Dreams of Long Ago. Midnight-Webster Hall Orch. 12:30-Weather. WXYZ-1240 Kilocycles P.M. 6:00-The Two Redheads. 6:15-The Fact Finder. 6:30-Day in Review. 6:45-Lowell Thomas. 7:00-Easy Aces.ma 7:15-The Original Jesters. 7:30-The Green Hornet. 8:00-Log Cabin Dude Ranch. 8 :30-Sweet Music. 9:00-Ben Bernie, 9:30-Husbands and Wives. 10:00-To Be Announced.' 10:30-Ray Shields' Revue. 11:00-Paul Ash's Orch. 11:30-Frankie Masters Orch. Midnight-Morrey Brennan's Orch. -t r ;v } iM Johnson's riverboat Natices;enjoy, and.Chinese junk -Johnson hospitality A THRILLING STOkY OF ADVENTURE SENSATIONAL PICTURES TICKETS AT WA HR'S NOW 316 South State Street I aI ! , . _- A fanily of Orang-Outangs Main Floor $1.00 1st OaI. 75c 2nd Bal. E(unreserved) 50c --igh School Students 25c in 2nd B t I I m I ai tG , -- -- I- Normal Choir Bach Festival This Year's Excerpts from B Minor Mass 300 Singers -Normal Choir and Guest High School Choir FREDERICK ALEXANDER, Conductor se Auditorium Friday March 19, 8 p.m. Exactly Ypsilanti No reservations. Seats 25 cents. }Peas I .i j attwaa va w1 J #. I Last Times Today I VICTOR McLAGLEN tt, PRESTON FOSTER ils"' I Michiganensian Abounds in new and delightful novelties. You'll surely want one. To -make sure of 'I w NMEEMMMMMMNWM STARTING WEDNESDAY - Three Days Only - A Great Actress Brings cZJJJ *1 your getting one, order it now. Of last I tl I. - - _.