T IV MIC:HIIAN VXII TR'UPSD.,iY; APRTL 10; 1W TI MC GN1VTT HUSAY ARL G014 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS, May 20 to May 26, 1942 Time of Exercise Time of Examination it 8:00 Friday, May 22 2-4 it 9:00 Wednesday, May 20 2-4 MONDAY )it 10:00 Friday, May 22 8-10 at 11:00 Thursday, May 21 10:30-12:30 t 1:00 Monday, May 25 2-4 at 2:00 Wednesday, May 20 8-10 it 3:00 Thursday, May 21 8-10 at 8:00 Tuesday, May 26 8.10 at 9:00 Thursday, May 21 2-4 TUESDAY at 10:00 Saturday, May 23 8-10 Tat 11:00 Saturday, May 23 2-4 at 1:00 Tuesday, May 26 10:30-12:30 at 2:00 Saturday, May 23 10:30-12:30 at 3:00 Monday, May 25 10:30-12:30 SPECIAL PERIODS :I German 1, 2, 31, 32 Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32. Music 32. Zoology 1 Botany 1.............. Music 2. Speech 31, 32 . French 1, 2, 31, 32, 51, 52, 61, 62, 91, 92, 153 Political Science 1, 2, 51, 5 ,English 1, 2. Psychology 31 .. Economics 51, 52, 54, Sociology 51 Physics 25. .. Friday, May 22 Friday, May 22 Friday, May 22 Tuesday, May 26 Tuesday, May 26 Tuesday, May 26 Wednesday, May 20 Wednesday, May 20 2 ..Monday, May 25 Wednesday, May 20 Wednesday, May 20 Monday, May 25 Thursday, May 21 Friday, May 22 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 2:00- 4:00 2:00- 4:00 2:00- 4:00 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 8:00-10:00 8:00-10:00 8:00-10:00 10:30-12:30 8:00-10:00 8:00-10:00 Honor Work Interviews To Be Held Designed to develop critical and analytical abilities in students, the Degree Program for Honors in Liberal Arts is now accepting applicants to the program. Students interested in taking the course, which has as its main purpose the provision of standards for living, will be interviewed from 3 to 4:30 p.m. tomorow in Room 1204 Angell Hall. Four students studying "Recent Trends in Social Science" under the tutelage of Prof. Mischa Titiev, of the anthropology department, are do- ing work illustrative of that carried on under the honors program in three fields-science, social science and lit- erature. Emphasizing the fact that students are urged to express their own opin- ions and are never bullied into ac- cepting ideas, Professor Titiev as- serted that the purpose of the course was to study trends in social sciences by developing the modern back- ground through investigation of works since Compte, and by analyzing the generalized fields of sociology, social psychology and cultural an- thropology. New tendencies are stressed in the course of study, and factors, such as the tendency in sociology to reduce problems to mathematical formulas, are discussed. Senate To Hold MeetingToday Administrative Plans Set For Discussion Topic The new student senate will take another step in its organization when it holds a meeting at 4 p.m. today in the Union to discuss plans for setting up its administrative branch. The administrative organization of the senate hasbeen set up toput into practice the decisions of the nine- man policy-forming branch, which is elected by the campus at large. The administrative branch will be or- ganized in approximately the same way as the Union and Daily staffs, consisting of freshman, sophomore and junior staffs and headed by a senior administrator. As in the other organizations, appointments to jun- ior and senior positions will be made each spring. All students interested in working on the administrative branch of the senate are urged to attend today's meeting, it was emphasized by Wil- liam F. Ager, '43, president pro tem. A committee has also been appointed to report on the new constitution of the senate at the meeting. The date of appointments for the coming school year has not as yet been determined, Ager explained, but more specific plans are expected to result from today's meeting. ASSOCIATED PRESS ' POCTURE N-EWVS .I I. r' M A D E T 0 M E A S U R E F O R A B 0 M B I N C-At the Midland Army Flying School in Texas, there's this bomb dump where 100-pound practice bombs used by U.S. Army bombardier cadets.on their training flights are loaded. Here, the bombs get 90 pounds of sand and five pounds of powder inserted at the fin end of projectile. This school is one of the world's largest training centers for bom- bardiers. and the bombing range covers an area about 80 miles in diameter. Cadets are sturdy fellows, 18 to 26 years old. 314- 17,18 9 IO 11 12 t3 14 Is 18 17 is r 19 d 21 2- 23 + 25 1 f .r GREYHOUND TERMINAL 116 WEST HURON STREET Phone 2-5511 GREYHOUND LINES REM EM B E R?-Few traces of his recent grave illness remain on the broad face of Babe Ruth, king of swat, who's recovered from his pneumonia attack. S P R I N C C A R 0 L-Carol Jean Kirby, 8, grins happily from a frame of white Iris, in full spring bloom for the third annual iris show at the Hollywood Garden club in California. There were thousands of flowers on display. R E P O R T-Recent new photo of Gen. George C. Marshall, chief of staff of the U.S. Army, shows him at the White House, for a report to F.D.R. on his con- ferences in Britain. #44 FARMS, like factories, are being converted: Instead of produc- ing for the market they are producing for war. To wiN a war, food and fiber are as important as steel, and tremendous quotas have been set up for 1942 farm production: More than a hundred billion pounds of milk, more than four billion dozen eggs, nearly a hundred million hogs, more vege- tables than ever before. STHIS hattle of nroduetion. our Farm Service Division stands TURNCOAT-Pierre Laval, new power behind Vichy's aging De- tain, is reportedly so crafty that he can spell his own name backwards without anyone knowing the dif- ference. " . ' -- :->- -' ' ?ka: '"aa....aatw _M J C'vW.'' BGJF.... MIN 0Y. ' : "l 4::'". ,.- "tame . . ...,...". ..... W ::S'