THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY OF FICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer SessiOn until 3:30 p. m. (11:30 a. m. Saturday). " Volume V FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1926 Numbcr 201 Excursion: Burroughs Adding Machine Company and the General Motors Building (behind the scenes, power plant, filtration system, etc.) will be visited on excursion number six, Saturday, July 18. Luncheon will be served in the Burroughs Company private dining room. This trip should be of especial interest to business administration students and teachers of commercial subjects. Total expense, about $2.00. Carlton Wells, Director of Excursions. Dean Effinger's Consultation Hours: My last consultation hours before leaving for my summer vacation, will be from 9 to 12 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, of the week beginning July 13th. John R. Effinger.a Shakespearian Recital: The Merchant of Venice will be presented by the class in Shakespear- ian Reading on Monday evening, July 20, at eight o'clock in University Hall. Lionel Crocker. To the Members of the Summer Session Faculty: The Dictaphone Station, located in 101 South Wing, University Hall, is established for the use of all faculty members. All work which is of purely University character, such as correspondence, lecture notes, lecture topics, etc., is done gratis. Dictation, if brief, may be given directly to a steAog- rapher. Give the station a trial. E. Whitchureh, Head of Dictaphone Station. Special Lectures on Atomic Structure: The lectures by Dr. Paul D. Foote of the Bureau of Standards will be given, daily at 4 and Friday at 9 in Room 1041 New Physics Building. His topics for this week will be "Complex Structure of Series Terms" and "Photoelectric Effect in Vapors." F. F. Barker. To the Proprietors of Men's Rooming Houses: All householders who rent rooms to men students are urgently re- quested to list their rooms in the office of the Dean of Students. Lists of rooms for the ensuing session are now being prepared so that they may be available for the use of prospective students this month. All householders are urged-to cooperate by notifying this office immediately so that their rooms may be on the lists. J. A. Bursley. " ° ' taining the two letters of Cortez toJ laden, with their plunder, were Exhibition O f Pictures n his royal master, Charles V; contain- to get away from the city. One ing his version of the conquest. finest; collections of reproductii istoie ell urConques In the last case are the Aztec Writ- Aztec manuscripts is that by ---_ ten Records. Many of the Records Kingsborough; a volume of his were lost due to the zeal of the Span-' Ican Antiquities" is shown in At Clement' Library this week is an graphically what Cortez and his com- ish priests and soldiers. One of the case. ocsibition of the Conquest of Mexico panions found. Among these are those Aztec manuscripts, which still sur- The exhibit, which will cc occasioned by the fourteen hundred of Thedare De Bry who tried to show 1vives in the City of Mexico, pictures throughout this week, has be and first anniversary of the work of the human sacrifice on the top of the "Lo Noche Triste," the tragic night shown for the accommodation of Ilernando Cortez, the Spanish war- teocalli and the shrine of the war- on the causeway when the Spaniards, who did not see it last year. rior, and his companions. In 1524 god. The representations of the Aztec Cortez began his constructive work as god to whom the' human sacrifices governor of New Spain, after the de- were made are taken from Arnoldus COOLER HERE THAN ANYWHERE vastating years of the conquest in Montanus' "Die Nieween Weerld," which he overthrew the empire of Amsterdam 1671, and Peter van der the, Aztecs. Aa's "Voyagien der Spanjaarden, One of the stories of the conquest 1706." which was told by the American his- Among the historians and maps in Starting torian, William Tickling Prescott, is the third case are the engravings of 4Todar upsdtobveyrmniaswell the toaibyFncsXavier Clay- RONALDto COLMANinry er sas etaordinary ells hoa w sev igeroe (1731-177FraThat geographicalONALD COLMA eral hundred Spandiards with a few knowledge of Mexico was slight is and cannon and horses overthrew a high- shown by the map in the 1513 edition BLANCHE SW EET ly organized nation, whose armies of Palmey's Geography. The river ~~-I~~ numbered in the hundreds of thous- with many mouths flowing into the ands, how Cortez managed to get into Gulf of Mexico may be the Mississippi the city of Mexico, captured the em- or it may be the Rio Grande, but is peror, and how he was successful in most contemporary Europeans seem - fighting his way out of the city. to have thought that it was the Geng- The books which are on exhibit this es. There is also a printed book con- week represent of course only a fran- tion of the Library's resources on this BONSTEGLE lendale 9792 episode. The exhibit is divided into PA LFCT HF I aTueslay tursday . four parts: The Early Chroniclers, woovdward t Eliot. yves. 75C-7 13 '1 ' 1 1turiy.5o675C Mexico of the Aztecs, Historians Downtwn Ticket Office at Grinneil's, atiYN ant- and Maps, and the Aztec Records. TUFSDAY MATINEE ICUR Among the Early Chroniclers , is Te Bonstelle Co. Francisco Lopez Gomara (1510-1560), In a comedy of Life by Philip Barry -Keith Feature- -Others- the biographer of Cortez, but as he [Author of "Youand I6 "WHIRl OF SO AND "AIR TIGHT" seemed to over-emphasize the work DANCE A Chiie Comedy of Cortez, Bernal Diaz (1492-1591), ALSO Wit E CistirCme undertook to correct him. The Libra- 'A DANCR DIVERTISSEMENT' Roy Zermain Frances Farraringams ry pArrangedhbv VICTORIA CArS ' N and Marie Walter Orchestra ry possesses numerous editions of the' Cjrtaini riss on thesDneDitissement at SundCay-LEWS STQNE in "THE TALKER" $ :ro nights'I aul rtissem_ tya various writings of these two men. Theatre cooler than home or office.ST in THE TALKER" The Franciscan, Bernardino Sahiagun, was more sympathetic with the Mex- ican point of view. He spent 60 years his story only to have it suppressed! WWAP The- Campus Credo ministration of honors courses com- mittee must be rigid. But, I would en- courage, beside this, a system whereby the effort and intentions of various students be taken into consideration. The progress may not be so notice- able, but there is a contribution to society. As to the limitatn of the high school curiiculum in elective studies, I think the remedy is more the re-definition of culture," by the head of his order. It was final- ly published in 1829, and the Library hlA this first edition. One of the earliest historians to assemble the findings of the Axtec chroniclers was Juan de Torquemada, of whose "Mon- arquia Indiana" thenLibrary has two editions published in 1723. In the second case, the Mexico of the Aztec, are shown engravings by early European artists which portray 92d TIME AERIG Eves. - 50c to $2.50 WedMat.50cto $1.50 11th Big WVeek Sat. Mat. 50c to $2.00 The .Yiracle Play of America ANN NICHOLS' "Abl's Iish oi" ts""IiN* 0 0 0 New and Second-H and Text Bool A co plete line school suppliE XWAHR'S UNIVERSITF WAH9SBOOK STORI - The question: .Do you believe the honors courses, with the independ- ent study it encourages, to be a good Warsaw, Poland, July 16.-The sen- thing in the collge? Is individual ate today ratified the commercial SEE IT! VrlilNzeNVY®NO WOW work in the high school a hinderance modus vivendi with the United States. SEATS NOW . to this? The diet passed the agrement July 1. For This and Next Week. Where asked: Tappan hall. The answers: L. J. Call, Ginn and I-................................s_ company, Ann Arbor: "I believe that the student should follow prescribed IT'S ALWAYS COOL AND COMFORTABLE NOW and strictly foundational work in the ,L-110= tia 4x : a SHOWING high school, but in the university the student becomes proficient enough to 2:00-3:30 follow what work he thinks best." :s9 Gertrude Wickes,' visitor at the School of Education, Holland Mich.:c "Too wide a range of elective work A Fascinating, Dissipated King is not a good thing in the high school. and His Spirituelle Bride; The student as a rule, follows the line of least resistence. In the col - lege he is as responsible as he ever is, and - quite capable of pursuing his own work to advantage." G. W. Willett, member Summer ses sion faculty: "There is no question about the worth of the honors courses." If the student has shown ability in research work, in his senior year he is able to proceed in independent fields on his own responsibility." Prof. S. A. Courtis, professor of ed- ucation: "In giving my opinion of they new honors courses, I give, what are r to me, the three elements in the <31 question of marking the student. First, ' 1 there is the element of effort. The student is to be praised and blamed Added according to the effort he has shown. Attractions Second, the element of competency. 1 Nobody Works , That is, graded as to his competency. But Father" Third, the rewarding for contributions International given to progress by the student. In News my opinion, then, the honors courses Pathe-o-Color I L.u- are for those coming under the sec- ond and third elements; and the ad- --,. -,...-- ... ._.... . Classified Ads In the Summer Daily bring results. So if you want to buy or sell anything if you have lost or found anything-if you want to get work, or have someone work for you, run a classified ad. Call 21214, or bring your ad to the Press building on Maynard street across from the "Maj." I I I .,r The Wiseonsin Players Present TONIGHT " ANTIGONE" ;? i d "FASHION" Iy Anna Corafrowatt 21y Sophocles SATURDAY, July 18 x In UNIVERSITY HALL at 8:15. Admission to each performance, 50 and 75 cents. Tickets on sale now at Graham's, Slater's, and Wahr's.