PAGE SIXR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1940 PAGE SIX FRIDAV MARCH 15, 1940 Arts Academy Opens Section MeetsToday Convention To Be Devoted To Forums And Talks On Academic Subjects Guthe Is Featured (Continued from Page 1) vene at 9:30 a.m. and again at 2:15 p.m. today in Room 101 of the Eco- nomics Building for a one day ses- sion devoted to discussion of war problems and economics. National defense, war and economic planning are some of the problems to be con- sidered. The forestry section assembles at 9 a.m. today in Room 2054 of the Natural Science Building. The 2 p.m. session will be held jointly in the same room with the geography sec- tion for a discussion of wild land management. The geography section will meet at 9 a.m. in Room 2029 in Angell Hall. Geology and mineralogy will be the order of the day at 9 a.m. in Room 3056 of the Natural Science Build- ing. Dean Edward H. Kraus of the literary school together with Prof. Chester B. Slawson of the mineralogy department will discuss the use of diamonds as cutting tools. Preuss Heads History Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the poli- tical science department will head the section on history and poltical science meeting at 12:15 p.m. for lun- cheon and Professor Reeves' address. At 2 p.m., in Room 122 of the Union, he will lead a round table discussion of the foreign policy of the United States and the war. Landscape architecture will be dis- cusse dat 10 a.m. today in Room 305 of the Union. The meeting will be continued after luncheon at 1:30 p.m. in Room 316 of the Union and the day's events will be concluded by a dinner meeting at 5:45 p.m. in the same room. Under the guidance of Prof. An- toine J. Jobin of the French depart- ment, the section of language and literature will hold sway at 9 a.m. in Room 205, Mason Hall. Among the talks scheduled is "Robert Bridges Ordeal by Fire" to be given by Mr. Andrew J. Green of the English de- partment. The meeting will be con- tinued at 1:30 p.m. The psychology section will meet at 9 a.m. in the League. The discus- sion will continue at 2 p.m. A sup- per meeting will follow at 6 p.m. dur- ing which Mr. Norman Cameron of the University of Wisconsin will dis- cuss "Thinking Disorders." Two Medical Sections Necessitating two afternoon sec- tions, the sanitary and medical science delegates will meet at 9:30 a.m. in Room 1520 of the East Medical Build- ing. The afternoon sessions will both convene at 2 p.m. in Room 2501 and Room 1520 of the East Medical Building. Sociology and its problems will con- cern another section at 9:30 a.m. in the East Lecture Room of the Rack- ham Building. A luncheon meeting will convene at 12:15 p.m. in the Union to hear Mr. George F. Granger of the Michigan Department of Wel- fare explain "Some Problems of Re- lief Administration in Michigan." The afternoon session will begin at 2:15 p.m. in the East Lecture Room of the Rackham Building. Zoological problems will occupy the zoology section meeting at 9 a.m. in Room 2116 of the Natural Science Building. This meeting will be fol- lowed by a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. in the League. The afternoon session at 2 p.m. will hear several papers. Explorer Smith Will Give Final Oratorical Talk Nicol Smith, heir to an oil for- tune who became a camera-toting explorer, will tell of his adventures on the Island of Hainan off China's coast in the final lecture of the University's Oratorical Series Thurs- day, March 21, in Hill Auditorium. Hainan was recently captured by the Japanese and is now being for- tified as a military and naval base. Because it breaks Britain's defense line between Singapore and Hong Kong, Hainan is regarded as of great strategic importance. Mr. Smith, one of the few white *nen to penetrate the island's interior, will show more than 3,000 feet of fiim, the first photographic recoilu of its native tribes. An adventurer since 17, Nicol Smith has paddled the length of the Danube in a canoe, visited the cele- brated Kalabacca monastery in Macedonia and lived in the French P-1n1a'. coli on Devil's Island. Ile has beer captured in the South Seas by a hiusband-seeking daughter of a chieftain, escaping only to be i-i .,xr ,rtz .rl nrl .rph .lwr to ciuil Wright Speaks On Educational Crises Today President Walter L. Wright of Rob- ert College, Istanbul, Turkey, will visit the University tomorrow and Sunday under the auspices of the Near Eastern College Association, Prof. J. Raleign Nelson, director of the International Center and coun- selor to foreign students, announced yesterday. President Wright, who last visited here in 1937, will confer with stu- dents in the University who are graduates of the Istanbul school. He will be accompanied here by Dr. Stephen Penrose, assistant director of the Association which includes, beside Robert College, American Uni- versity at Beirut, Syria; Athens Col- lege; and the American College at Sofia, Bulgaria. Noted for his work in harmonizing schools with the governmental sys- tems of the Near East, President Wright will speak on "International Education in a Time of World Cri- sis" at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Inter- national Center's regular program. To be featured on the Interna- tional Center's program tomorrow is the second conference on interna- tional education to be held from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Center's lounge. General theme of the discussion will be the bearing of the world cri- sis on educational trends in many of the countries of the world. The pro- gram will include also talks on ed- cational problems, community ser- vice and national and international problems. The conference will be at- tended by students and faculty mem- bers who have, attended universities and colleges in foreign countries. Exhibit Shows Photographs, Design Plans Landscape Constructions On Exhibition At Meet Of MichiganAcademy An exhibit of landscape designs sponsored by the College of Archi- tecture and Design opens today in the third floor exhibition room of the Architecture Building, and will be open daily except Sunday until' next Friday. Held in connection with the meet- ing the the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters, the exhi- bit features plans and photographs of gardens, home grounds, housing projects, roadside developments, and general city planning. The plans represent actual constructions by landscape offices in the United States and Hawaii, and by Federal agencies. Plans showing the design and treatment of the proposed Interna- tional Peace Gardens to be built between the United States and Can- ada are featured in the exhibit. This park will be constructed, to com- memorate the friendship of the two countries, on the border between North Dakota and Manitoba on Tur- tle Mountain, the geographical cen- ter of the North American conti- nent. The planned Panama Canal- to-Canada Highway will also run through that region. Photographs by E. H. "Chinese" Wilson, botanist of Harvard Uni- versity who opened up China and Japan to naturalists, student models for city gardens and student draw- ings of plants will be shown in the landscape seminar room in connec- tion with the other exhibit, which, according to Prof. G. G. Ross, "indi- cates the present trend of landscape architecture from private to public works." Students Favor Dies Probes, Poll Shows That the majority of the students in some of the leading colleges in the United States believe the Dies Committee for investigating un- American activities should be con- tinued was shown in the poll taken by the Student Opinion Surveys of America shortly before Congress con- vened again. Although 56 per cent of the stu- dents questioned signified their ap- proval of the continuation of money appropriations to the Committee, complete approval of all the legis- lator from Texas and his committee- men have done was not signified. Many of the interviewed students voiced their dissatisfaction with the methods and results of the ceinmit- tee. Seventeen per cent of the students who had no opinion, admitted that they had never heard of the co-m- Roy Meets Girl In JGP's 'Wi Falutin' - Daily Photo by Bogle. Betty Kepler as the guy who runs the bookshop, and Annabelle VanWinkle as the gal from the seminary, take the leads in the 1940 version of the campus all-women drama classic. The play's run at the Lydia Mendelssohn Thcat e will continue through Saturday. Medical TalKs Begrin In April Doctors Throughout State Are To Participate The spring series of extramural postgraduate lectures for practition- ers, sponsored by the Department of Postgraduaute Medicine and the Michigan State Medical Society, will begin the second week in April and will continue through the first week in May. The lectures will be given in Ann Arbor, Battle Sreek, Kalama- zoo, Flint, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Jackson, Mt. Clemens, Saginaw, Tra- verse City, Manistee, Cadillac and Petoskey. The doctors will also deliver the lectures in the other cities through- out the state and in addition to other men from the University medical school, practitioners from other ci- ties will participate in these lectures. The Postgraduate course in Ap- plied Anatomy, under the direction of Dr. Rollo E. McCotter, which strat- ed Feb. 15, is being given each Thurs- day through May 30. Isaacs Denies Existence' Of Any 'Jewish Type' Debunking the belief that a Jewish type exists, Dr. Raphael Isaacs, as- sistant director of the Simpson Me- morial Institute, asserted last night at the Hillel Foundation that there is a tendency for any groups residing together to resemble each other in course of time, regardless of inter- marriage. Much of the so-called Jewish type is a matter of personality, he con- cluded, and has nothing to do with physical make-up. Thomas Calls PartyA Need Doubts Election Success In 1940_Campaign (Continued from Page 1) and social security. There are Amer- ica's real needs, and the campaign for them should not be made merely by Socialists, Thomas pointed out. But before we can think of a truly Farmer-Labor party that will be able to win political importance, there must be more democracy in the organized labor movement, Thomas stressed. The majority in organized labor still supports Roose- velt, although John L. Lewis has bitterly attacked the President. Mr. Thomas said he agreed with much of Lewis' criticism, but added that the feud between the Labor leader and the President lay in their per- sonalities. Mr. Lewis was never the driving force behind the old New Deal and his present criticism of New Deal retrenchment is of a negative character. The CIO legislative pro- gram is a construction measure, but Mr. Lewis has not vigorously pushed it, Thomas declared. America must remain out of war, Thomas continued strongly, or she will lose her own democracy. The real fight is on the domestic front. President Rooseveit predicated his budget on the strength of a war boom that is now failing miserably, Thomas said. Tht and political ex- pediency are the main reasons for the retreat of New Deal policy. Even if Roosevelt were reelected this fall, it is very uncertain whether he could take up where he left off because the terms of his election would prob- ably prohibit it, Thomas declared. School Board Receives Land Hearing Today Right To Purchase Tax Deliiquent Properties Will Be Determined As the City of Ann Arbor and the Ann Arbor Board of Education failed to send representatives to a hearing of the State Land Office Board Wednesday, a second hearing has been scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today, at which the right of the city and school board to buy tax delinquent property at the recent state salvage sale will be determined. The Land Office Board has advised the city and school board that they will be required to furnish proof that the property was purchased for pub- iic purposes and not for re-sale. In the event that this cannot be proved, the city and school board will be re-' quired to give up the property. Representatives At the same time, the city and school board are not expected to have representatives at the hearing today, preferring to rest their case on argu- ments advanced by City Attorney William M. Laird in a letter to the Board. Laird stated ir his letter that the city was already making plans for the use of theuacquired property, but would be unable to make any statement to the effect at today's hearing as it did not yet know exactly which parcels it would have until the redemption period elapses. Today is the final day on which the original owners of the property sold at the state sale may redeem their parcels by matching the city's bids. Laird said the information could be supplied the Board Tues- day, following the meeting of the city council Monday night, if the list of unredeemed property is then available. School Board Willing The school board has made known its willingness to abide by the ac- tion of the city council and Laird in the matter, taking no action of its own. Intervention of the State Land Board in the question of the pur- chases was requested by a protest by a group of 35 Ann Arbor property owners, asking that the purchase of the land by city and school board be declared void. Many Courses Offered By Extension Service Knowledge and culture in America and the world could be discussed un- til 10,000 A.D. -- and authorities would have only begun. . . . Realizing the vast amount of in- formation that should be aired the Extension Service offers the state lectures covering every topic from the evolution of man to why people play. Not only are talks of cultural and scientific interest available, but there are also health lectures to be had practically for the asking. A limited number of health lec- tures are assigned to schools, parent- teacher organizations and other groups interested in health educa- tion. 40/* -,. -e .. and now a report to the Foundation, Miss G." YOU'LL find resourceful, well- paid Katharine Gibbs secreta- ries fromw,Singapore to Seattle as well as in no less glamorous stay-at-home jobs. e Special Course for College Women opens in New York and Boston, September 24. d OPTIONAL AT NEW YORK SCHOOL ONLY-same course may be started July 8, prepar- ing for early placement. Ask College Course Secretary for "RESULTS," a booklet of placement information, and illustrated catalog. BOSTON . 90 Marlborough St. NEW YORK . 230 Park Ave. E GIBBS 0%1 ~JACQUEL1NE corn- uew~'sawlback 1CO." 6s50 , Cross Bows Concealed Weapons, State Says LANSING, March 14-(/P)-The Attorney General department has de- cided that the modern high power crossbow is just as deadly a weapon today as it was in the olden days. It informed Oscar G. Olander, state police commissioner, that cross- bow fans are subject to the concealed weapons and dangerous weapons law the same as those who go in for shooting with firearms. Olander raised the question when he learned that a manufacturer was advertising crossbows that would shoot .a bolt through a big city tele- phone book backed by sheet steel 3. 32 of an inch thick. (Cla ssified i cory _ THE MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Effective as of February 14, 1939 12c per reading line (in 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 15c. For further information call 23-24-1, or stop at 420 Maynard Street. FOR RENT ROOM for graduate girl. Adjoining shower. Two blocks from campus. Phone 2-2139 between 5 and 7 p.m. only. 327 TRANSPORTATION -21 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 LAUNDERING--9 SCE HAND LAUNDRY-Wants only one trial to prove we launder your shirts best. Let our work help you look neat today. 1114 S. Univer- sity, 19 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 TYPING-18 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist and notary public, excellent work, 706 Oakland, phone 6327. 20 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 WANTED -TO BUY-4 HIGHEST CASH PRICE paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 STRAYED, LOST, FOUND - 1 TWO-INCH silver bracelet left in, ladies' lounge, Union, Sat. nite be- tween 11:00 and 11:30. Reward. Phone 4121; Ex. 436. 3221 LOST-Diamond wrist watch. Black band. Call Agnes Craw. Reward offered. Ph. 2-4514. 325 WANTED-TO RENT- 6 WANTED--Room by male grad. student; preferably where no other roomers. Tel. 3652. Lubar. Noon or 6-7 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS-20 SPECIAL-$5.50 Machineless Per- manent, $2.50; $3 oil cocona, $1.50; end permanent, $1; Shampoo and fingerwave, 35c. Phone 8100, 117 Main. 36 t'; $it Penf.snk San- -A.. 4,95 d * AC~fJE'S py hoi n :.:sor... be. * vo. "*'' in~ C0NMES ows~~ St. Patrick's Day SPECIAL Its coniin! I II IS I