THE MICHIGAN DAILY -Ar Belden Named As Chairman Of Mieg 10 i raS Third Annual Carnival Set For May 5-6; Ferris Wheel To Feature Fair (Continued from Page 1) mittee for the carnival will be Gil- more, assisted by Jean McKay, '40, and Dennis Flanagan, '40. Other committees are: booths, Miss Sharkey and Haligan; favors and special fea- tures, Donald Treadwell, '40, James Wills, '40; patrons, Marjorie Wills, '41P; decorations, Ellen St. John, '40; posters, Beth O'Roke, '40; conces- sions, Virginia Allan, '39, and Mary Roger, '39. Douglas Tracy, '40E, will be in charge of arrangements for the pa- rade' which customarily precedes the carnival. Mary Ellen Spurgeon, '40, will be chairman of the program committee, assisted by Hadley Smith, '40E, and James Everett, '40. Jane Grove, '41, and Harry Hull, '39, will be in charge of tickets. Requests Received, For Copies Of Talk Requests have been pouring in from various parts of the country for copies of the radio talk "The Signi- ficance of Mental Hygiene for Ado- lescents" given by Dr. Paul H. Jordan, innstructor in psychiatry and psychi- atrist to the Michigan Child Guid- ance Institute, Sunday, Feb. 26, over WJR. About 500 copies of this talk, which is a part of the Marital Relations Series, will be mailed to listeners in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Pennsyl- vania, Tennessee and Canada. This Marital Relations Series which was begun last October, has been one of the most popular programs present- ed by the University, according to Prof. Waldo M. Abbot, director of the Broadcasting Service. More than 6,000 copies of talks in this series have been mailed to listeners. Dr. Jordan in his talk, discussed the more important problems facing the adolescent. These are the adoles- cent's need to gradually become in- dependent of the home, his need to understand and adjust to his own bodily changes, his need to establish a satisfactory relationship with the opposite sex and his need to eventual- ly find suitable employment. Spring Turns Men's Fancies ITo-You Know (Continued from Page 1) the saying took on its literalmean- ing for me. Now that I have grown old and wise, I know that r e a 1 love, if it comes at all, is the same throughout t h e year. Those who take on additional vigor in their love when springtime rolls around, hang on to their joy and satisfaction. As for myself, I'll wait until it can bring real meaning into my life." Edgar Morrison, '42: "Gosh, is spring almost here? You know I had never even given it a thought. To me, the saying means that I shall have to work awfully fast if I am to give evi- dence that the, proverbial saying will apply to me. And I do mean me." Robert Clark, '42: "Ah, spring! Beautiful spring! For, lo, these many months I have been looking forward to * seeing all these gorgeous women strolling about the campus with the gentle zephyrs playing tricks with their hair. I have heard so much about them. Could I but see a beauti- ful woman, my fancy would be turned." New Youth Hostels Established Abroad The cause for youth hostels received considerable impetus recently, ac- cording to a statement by the Ameri- can Youth Hostels, Inc., with the establishment of seventy new hostels along the Swiss-Italian border. These new hostels will afford young people' of Europe as well as America more1 advantageous facilities in crossing this international boundary. The International Youth Hostel Association, of which the American group is a member, has ,establish-a ments in more than twenty nations at the present time, the statement said, representing an encouraging' increase from the single hostel first! established in central Europe twentyE He's Sure:it's Spring --Daiiy Photo by Freedman George Johnson, Union doorman, has found that the proximity of Spring varies inversely as the number of women who try to break through the Union's front door. He's shown. there intercepting one of the fairer sex, whom he later personally escorted through the side entrance. It WILTBE3's p4)4 4 . - s 44- 8 I E A C E t ": 8 NICKELS ARCADE STY LED B Y Huge Extension facilities Aid MillionPeople Fill the stadium to capacity, have every classroom crowded to the full- est and conduct lectures from the steps of Angell Hall and you still couldn't take care of the people the' University helped to educate last year. So great has been the activity of the extension service that over 1,- 334,000 people took part in Univer- sity activity last year, the President's report for 1937-38 shows. Radio broadcasting led all other fields with over 936,000 listening in- to the University's 247 broadcasts over WJR, WMBC and other stations. High school debates arranged by the extension service placed third with over 100,000 in attendance, trailing the 150,944 persons who saw moving pictures from the University film li- brary. Another 100,000 attended the 634 extension lectures given by faculty members, while 23,276 persons heard health lectures ararnged by the ex- tension body. Other large bodies were: 13,861 served by material from the library extension service; 4,253 enrolled in 173 extension classes in 30 cities; 3,232 students in supervised corerspondence study courses, and 1,- tutes. 689 enrolled in adult education insti- Public interest in adult education and University service to the State has grown rapidly in the last decade, extension service figures show. Ten years ago, the University' broadcast only 25 programs while in 1928-29 ex- tension course enrollment totaled a meager 2,259. Architects To Begin Drive For Back Dues A three-day drive to collect unpaid class dues of seniors in the College of Architecture will be begun tomorrow, Ian C. Ironside, class treasurer, an- nounced yesterday. Dues may be paid in stations set up in the second and third floors of the Architecture Building. The funds collected from the dues will be used to finance various class activities during the remainder of the year and to maintain Alumni activi- ties of the class after graduation. years ago. All of the major countries of Europe, North America, and many of the smaller countries are now brought within the reach of youth I I . George Sisler Named To Alumni Who's Who The March 4 issue of the Michigan Alumnus has selected for its "Who's Who in the Alumni University" George H. Sisler, '15E; Alexander Wiley, '04; and Albertus Darnell, '98. Sisler 'recently was chosen for baseball's Hall of Fame at Coopers- town, N.Y. In his 16 years in major league baseball he compiled one of the most outstanding records in the history of the game. Some of his records are still standing. Wiley now is United States Senator from Wisconsin. He has had a bril- liant political career in that state, even though he is a Republican in a state whose recent administrations have been consistently progressive. Darnell now is Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Wayne University, Detroit, having had much to do with the building up of that institution. He has written numerous works and is past president of the Michigan Schoolmasters Club. HOSIERY WEEK at the SMARTEST HOSIERY SHOPPE II The famous BUTTERFLY LACE TOP by "ABERLE" in either two- or three- thread. To get acquaint- ed with this marvelous stocking you can pur- .lr"nI it 'Il mA -l a I 1111 ]iii