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April 24, 1939 - Image 2

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1939-04-24

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PAGE TWO

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, APRIL 2S, 1939

PAGE TWO TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1939
I I-

French Group
To Give Play
Comedy To Be Presented
At Lydia Mendelssohn
In conjunction with the Michigan
Schoolmasters' Meeting, Le Cerc-e
Francais will present its thirty-third
annual French play at 8:15 p.m. Fri-
day in the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea-
tre.
"Ces Dames Aux Chapeaux Verts,"
a modern French comedy by Albert
Acremant, has been selected by the
members of the club. Mr. Charles
Koella of the romance language de-
partment is director of the play.
The play marks the culmination of
the formal activities of the club for
the year. Officers of Le Cercle Fran-
cais are Helen Owston, '39, presi-
dent; Marcia Connell, '39, vice presi-
dent; Adelita Ortiz, '39, secretary;
and John Stiles, '39, treasurer.
Brumm, Tapping Attend
Dearborn Alumni Dinner
Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour-
nalism department and T. Hawley
Tapping, general secretary of the
Alumni Association, attended the an-
nual dinner of the University of
Michigan Club of Dearborn last night
at Dearborn Inn.
Prof. E. Blythe Stason, Dean-
elect of the Law School and Provost
of the University, will address the
University of Michigan Club of Mil-
waukee tonight
Home Safety Day Named
LANSING, April 24.---PI)-A pro-
clamation by Governor Dickinson to-
day designated May 23 as Home Safe-
ty Day, asserting the loss of lives
"from home accidents and fires in-
creased to an appalling total excefd-
ing the toll of every other classifica-
tion of accidents" in 1938.

Mosher Jordan Hall Houses
436 Women Under One Roof
.t
- 4
By MORT I NDER
If you should ask a girl where she lives and she says "467 Dead End,"
it doesn't necessarily mean she is a fugitive from reform school, but rather
that she lives at 467 Jordan Hall . . . called Dead End because of proximity
to cemetery . . . Mosher Hall-near the hosnital-is called "Sick End" --.
one of the largest women's dorms in any American university, it houses 436
students . . .since the fall of 1930, when it was opened, it has served as
residence for more than 2000 girls . . . the dormitories are named for Dr.
Eliza M. Mosher and Mrs. Frederick P. Jordan, the Univesity's first Deans
of Women . . . operate as separate social units, although the boarding
facilities and actual administration work is carried on under joint man-
agement . . . Student Council, consisting of four dorm class presidents
and 10 corridor counselors, acts as administrative and executive board
half of girls are freshmen, the other half divided . . . new dorm now under
construction to be called Stockwell Hall, containing mostly single rooms-~
M\osher and Jordan are mainly doubles . .. Mrs. Frederick G. Ray in
charge ..

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 President until 3:30 P.M.;
11:00 A.M. on Saturday.

TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1939
VOL. XLIX. No. 145
Notices

Note to Seniors, Juice Graduates,
and Graduate Students: Please file
application for degrees or any spe-
cial certificates (i.e. Geology Certifi-
cate, Journalism Certificate, etc.) at
once if you expect to receive a de-
gree or certificate at Commencement
in June. We cannot guarantee that
the University will confer a degree or
certificate at Commencement upon
any student who fails to file such
application before the close of busi-
ness on Wednesday, May 17. If ap-
plication is received later than May
17, your degree or certificate may'
not be awarded until next fall.
Candidates for degrees or certifi-
cates may fill out cards at once at
office of the secretary or recorder of
their own school or college (students
enrolled in the College of Literature,
Science, and the Arts, College of
Architecture, School of Music, School
of Education, and School of Fores-
try and Conservation, please note
that application blanks may be ob-
tained and filed in the Registrar's Of-
fice, Room 4, University Hall). All
applications for the Teacher's Cer-
tificate should be made at the office
of the School of Education.
Please do not delay unti the last
day, as more than 2,500 diplomas and
certificates must be lettered, signed,
and sealed and we shall be greatly
helped in this work by the early filing
of applications and ,the resulting
longer period for preparation.
The filing of these applications
does not involve the payment of any
fee whatsoever.
Shirley W. Smith.
First Mortgage Loans: The Univer-
sity has a limited amount of funds
to loan on modern well-located Ann

Arbor residential property. Interest
at current rates. Apply Investment
Office, Room 100, South Wing,
University Hall.
Scholarship in Spanish. Bryn Mawr
College is offering two resident schol-
arships paying $400 each for the
coming year, available to graduates
of an institution of recognized stand-
ing. For information and applica-
tion blanks address the Office of
the Dean of the Graduate School,

Bryn Mawr College,
Pennsylvania.

Bryn Mawr,I

To All Campus Departments: No-
tices of deaths of alumni which may
come to the various campus depart-
ments should be reported to the
Alumni Catalog Office. The courtesy
will be greatly appreciated. Please
report by letter or by phone. Phone
422 Univ.
Lunette Hadley, Director.
Life Memberships: Michigan Union
Life Memberships may now be se-
cured at the business office of the
Unioj by students having paid tui-
tion for the equivalent of 8 semes-
ters at the University. Please bring
cashier's receipt with you.
Hours: 9 to 12 a.m. 1 to 5 p.m.
Academic Notices
Forestry 150: There will be no
meeting of this class on Tuesday,
April 25.
S. W. Allen
Final Doctoral Examination of Mr.
James Llewellyn Lawson will be
held on April 25, 1939 at 2 p.m, in
Room 145, East Physics Building.
Mr. Lawson's field of specialization
is Physics. The title of his thesis
is "The Design of a Magnetic Spec-
trometer and the Measurement of
the Beta Ray Spectra of Phosphorus,

Sodium and Cobalt." Professor J.
M. Cork.as chairman of the com-
iiittee, will conduct the examination.
Bly direction of the Executive Board,
the chairman has the privilege of in-
viting members of the faculty and
advanced doctoral candidates to at-"
tend the examination and to grant
permission to others who might wish
to be present.
C. S. Yoakum.
Co ncerts
Graduation Recital: Gwendolyn L.
Possum, pianist, from Havre, Mont.,
will give a piano recital Tuesday eve-
ning, April 25, at 8:15 o'clock, in the
School of Music Auditorium, in par-
tial fulfillment of the requirements
for the Master of Music degree. The"
general public is invited.
Lectures
University Lecture: Dr. Paul R.
Cannon, Professor of Pathology at
the University of Chicago, will lec-
ture on "Some Aspects of Respira-
tory Infection" on Tuesday, April 25,
at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Audito-
rium. The public is cordially invited
to attend.
American Chemical Society Lecture.
Prof. M. S. Kharasch, of the Univer-
sity of Chicago, will speak on "The
(Continued on Page 4)
- ..~_START
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Reasonable Prices.
SCHLENKER
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Pick Talks On National
Feeling In Local Music
"Nationalism in Music" was the
topic of a discussion conducted by
Prof. Hanns Pick of the Vmusic school
at the second in a series of Interfra-
ternity music appreciation hours,
held from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the
Psi Upsilon house.
The music of different peoples,
stated Professor Pick, reflects the
general tenor of their way of life. He
compared the more vital life of the
Italian nation with the moodier exis-
tence of the Scandinavian, to illus-
trate the tonal differences in folk
music. American "jazz," he said, has
a definite place among the native
music of the world.
Greater Sa ving9s at
MARSHALL
CUT. RATE
231 S. State Phone 5933
Today and Tomorrow
Repeated by
Popular Request-

4

Prof. Cannon Will Speak
Prof. Paul R. Cannon acting head
of the pathology department of the
University of Chicago will lecture on
"Some Aspects of Respiratory In-
fection" at 4:15 p.m. today at the
Rackham Auditorium.

Callaghan Goes To Lehigh
J. Calvin Callaghan, '31, was ap-
pointed assistant professor in English,
in charge of speech and debating, at
Lehigh University, it was announced
in the school's bulletin, released yes-
terday. Professor Callaghan was an
assistant in English at Michigan

4

VACUUM Tits

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FOR RENT
FOR R.ENT-Single, quiet, next, to
bathroom, no other roomers. Graf-
uate or business preferred. Please
uate preferred. Phone 8708, 4i4, E.
Kingsley. 610
WANTED
WANTED-Any Old Clothing. Pay $5
to $500. Suits, overcoats, mink, Per-
sian lambs, diamonds, watches,
rifles, typewriters and old gold.
Phone and we will call. Cadillac
9458. 388

TYPING--Experienced. Miss
408 5. 5th Avenue. Phone
or 2-14]6.

Allen,
2-2935
79

FOR SALE
FOR SALE-Gas range, good looking
in perfect condition, very reason-
able. Phone 8708. 414 E. Kingsley.
611
FOR SALE-Modern 7 tube console
radio, wired for phonograph. Also
crystal pickup. Reasonable. R. Kell-
gaard. 335 E. Ann. Phone 6284. 613

LOST-Hamilton wrist watch, gold,
broken crystal; between Starbuck's
and, campus Friday. Reward. Call
4638 Please!! 607
LOST-One Gamma Phi Beta Soror-
ity pin in vicinity of State Street
and Main Library. Helen Rhodes,
4121 University. Ex-2145. 606
MISCELLANEOUS
WASHED SAND and Gravel, Drive-
way gravel, washed pebbles. Killins
Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 17
CASH PAID for your discarded
clothing. Claude Brown, 512 S.
Main. 311
HOME DECORATORS-Decorating,
painting. Budget plan if desired.
Dial 7209. 181
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASIIED
ADVERTISING
RATES
Effective as of February 14, 1939
12c per reading line (on basis of
five average words to line) for one
or two insertions.
10c per reading line for three or
more insertions.
Minimum of 3 lines per inser-
tion.
These low rates are on the basis
of cash payment before the ad is
inserted. if it is inconvenient for
you to call at our offices to make
payment, a messenger will be sent
to pick up your ad at a slight extra
charge of 10c.
For further information call
2 -24-1, or stop in at 420 Maynara
Street.
Make Mine A Want Ad

German Jews 'T
Aristocracy Re
German Jews ascended to social
leadership principally through po-
sitions "despised" by ,the German
aristocracy, a factor which contribut-
ed largely to the failure of Jewish
assimilation, Dr. Hans Gerth, visit-
ing lecturer in sociology, declared in
a talk Sunday night at Hillel Founda-
tion.
Jews, driven from Eastern Europe,
were quick to take up the "indepen-
dent" positions which the upper
classes were unwilling to pursue, the
former yBerlin newspapermen said.
They filled the only posts open to
them with great efficiency, in the
fields of finance, commerce and
journalism, Dr. Gerth maintained,
and were greatly respected for their
labors.
Jews Received Titles
Jews were honored by titles of no-
bility for their wor'k in finance and
commerce and these jobs were the
last to be seized by the Nazi regime,
Dr. Gerth explained. In 1933, initial
attacks were made in the professional
fields and in journalism, where Ger-
mans of high mirth were compelled to
compete during the economic depres-
sion.
When the Hitler forces came to
power in 1933, Jewish officeholders
were not only replaced by Aryans,
Dr. Gerth said, but many vocations
and professions were bureaucratized.
Social reforms are being main-
tained simply as war precautions, the
sociologist claimed.
Jews Divided
In 1933, there was very little unity
among German Jews politically, Dr.
Gerth explained, and among them
were conspicuous leaders in every
party, ranging from extreme conser-
vatism to radicalism. They were also
outstanding leaders in the arts, he
continued.
Zionism offers no solution to the
Jewish problem, he said. since there

ook Positions
fused, Gerth Says
is a definite numerical quota which
will limit immigration of the many
millions of Jews to Palestine.
H. W. CLARK
English Boot and Shoe Maker
9 Our new repair department, the
best in the city. Prices are right.
438 South State and Factory on
South Forest Avenue.
Caps, Gowns & Hoods
For FACULTY and GRAIDUATES
Complete Rental and Sales Service
Call and inspect the nation-
ally advertised line of The
C. E. ward Company, New
London, Ohio. 1
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sterilized before each time
used, complete satisfaction
guaranteed. Get our Rental.
Rates and Selling Prices.
VAN BOVEN, Inc,
Phone 8911 Nickels Arcade

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DAILY 2 - 4 -7 -9 P.M.

50 for 28c
200 For $1.09, plus tax
GenuineWILSON
WALKER-CUP
GOL"tF BLS'
3 fo0"r69C
500 Gloria May
Cleansing
Tissues
'19C

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LOMBARD-STEWART
Made for'
Each Other
-STARTING WEDNESDAY-
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DIE"

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Sweetheart
Soap
4 for 17c
Quart

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Imported Russian
Mneral Oil,
49c
Genuine American Made
Tekamin Style
T ooth Brushes
6 for 54c
Made by Prophylactic Co.
S AVE
"Buy the Economy Sizes"
40 Tompx ... 98c
68 Modess . $1.00
60 Kotex ... 95c
Phone 5933 Free Delivery
1939, Stock
PENNSYLVANIA
Tennis Balls
3 for $1.09
Now 15c
Formerly Sold at 35c
JEEVES TOBACCO
Now 15c
100 Genuine 5-Grain
ASPIRIN
25c ENERGINE
SHOE WH ITE
CLEANER
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Barber Shop
now under the
Management of
Donenic Dascola
D)OMNIC DASCOLA
at the
UNION BARBER SHOP
for Seven Years.
Specializing in scalp treatments, facials, manicures, and per-
sonality haircuts.
Glen Lichty, who has operated the Groomwell Barber Shop

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