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October 21, 1926 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1926-10-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Spar'~s New Ambassador To U. S. UNIVERSITY BALLOON MAKES LANDING 1Choctaw yid*i il
Pay Vsi ToPrsientCoiioeNEAR DETROIT AFTER SHORT FLIGHT I sTov'sN
I Due, to the absence, of winds, the w ee detained1 for some time by the
balloon flight made Sunday by Ralph Unilted States immigrhation authorities
Middleton, '281+, Edwin Walker, '271", tiihetauofrjtmCins
passenger albord, was establshedl.
Arthur Schultz, grad, Russcl Hardy,, The balloon is the p~rop~erty of the
grad, and P. Y. Tien, '27E, 0f the U u- Detroit Flying clubi, of which the Bal- , v riy a d G .L al e o e l o l b o h nv riyi el
troit, while wholly successful, lastel hber, and1 the pilot was "lDoc." G. M.
. Le Calico, of Detroit.

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oni.,ly i U iU i e dflioursaaco rct - u anlts.
The ship came upon a calm area, and
(to keep from falling too fast, the stiv-
dents were forced to throw out much
of their ballast. They soon found they
had abandoned too much ballast., and
in order that they would not be caught
in a fresh breeze with insufficient
weight, they made a landing for the
sake of safety.
Although the group left Ann Arbor
at 6:30 o'clock Sunday morning, they
Idid not take the air until 3 o'clock ill
' the afternoon. After recaching the fly-
ing field at Wyandotte, several milcs
.south of Detroit, the m len spent the
morning unrolling the bag and prepar-
ing it for inflation. The inflation took
three hours.
After taking off, the "Highball II,"
held a southeasterly course at an al-
titude of 3,000 feet. It drifted over
Grosse Isle and the pilot expected if

Bbooks In Clements
LibrryCollectio
Printed Before 1500'O
William L. Clement s literary is zat

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926
l[ayor MORLEY T EGI>
WORK IN MA'YA I IL0
(>',ruclge Inslitufe Profess or111
Years in Ventral, Am~erica
STIUDIED HIEROGLYPHICS
Dr. S. C. Morley, associate in z~jddle
American archaeology in Carnegie In-
stitution in lWashington, will- deliver
- - -a lect ure at 4:15 o'clock Tuesday in
Na~tural Science auitorium''on the' sub-
t Y I, jest "'1'he Results of the .1926 Field
Season in the Maya. Field."
Dr. Morley is an international au-
I 11 ority on the hieroglyphic writings
{ >' .kof the Maya Indians, who lived in
Guatemala and Yucatan. Since 1908
he has been doing field work nWen-
; I_ Andi a. During the course of
this time he has done some excavat-
ing and has loca ted a large number
of, cities previously unknown.
For the past several years he has
been in charge of extensive excava-
{s It ions at the ruins of Chichen Itza the
largest city of the new Maya empire
f in northern Yucatan, which was oc-
cupied from about 900 B. C. to 1550 A.
r D. by a Ropulation of about 2'0O60.
In December of last year he deliv-
ered a, lecture to a capacity house
hebre uipon the subject "Greeks of the
New World." The lecture is openi to
the public.
RIO JANEIRO.-The. P 0nambuco
sugar growers' combine will dump
1,000,000 bags of sugar in Europe to
-, solve the crisis brought about by aver-
' I production.

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present conducting an exhibit of books
printed ell)Ifor 1500, known as in-
cunabu,vl, andl their printers. rThe
volumecs on display- include some his-
tories, ,everal copies of the Nurein-
burg Chronicles andl a few of the
ecclesiastical works with which this
period abounded.
The exhibit, though entirely separ'-
ate, still has somen relaftion io a part
of the rare book exhibit in the Gen-
oral library, which also) displays ex-
amples of these incunabula.
Clements library i.; open to the pub-'
lis from 2 f y 5 o'clock daily and from
3to 5 o'clock Salt urdays.

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it

the wind continued to land in the vic-'
inity of Cleveland or Erie Pa. Flowi-
ever the wind shifted to the northeast
and the balloon was brought back to

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LUCiYC)LU5 JCI~ti1 I lU illuiigW4~ JANKOAV. -- The lBrit ishdinerchant
made at a place approximately 20.sisPyn n oo w eefi~
miles northeast of Detroit in Canada.onrctlbyCieeropath-
Although the visibility was poor, chow.
the men succeeded in taking pictures'-
of freighters plying up and down the _________
Detroit river, and of the surrounding I
country. They also secured pictures I NOTICE{
of the gas bag while inflated. At their
ighest. altitude they were able to seel Subscribers of The Daily who
Pt. Pelee on one side and Lake St. {I fail to receive issues are reqpuest-
Clair on the other. While at an alti- ed to notify the circulation de-
tulde of 1,200 feet, they were 'able toI partment, at The Daily offices in1
talk with the men on a freighter just f the Press building on Maynard
below them. s tree~t. The telephone numberj
When the group made their return' is1 21214.
over the Candian boundry line, they ___ ____________

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J. IB. 3cAlester
A Choctaw Indian, J. 13. McAlester,
is the newly elected ,mayor of McAl-
ester, Okilahomia. He L', the son of J.
J, McAlester, the first lieutenant gov-
ernor of ,Oklahomna, for whom the city,
01f McIAlester was named.

DAILY RATES WILL ADVANICE
f Subscriptions for The Michbi-
Igan Daily must be paid before
INov. 15 to secure the. presenit
rate of $3.75. After 'this date
the rate will be advan~ced to
( $4.25.

lj I

Don Alejandro Padillo, newly appointed Spanish Ambassador to the
United States, (left above), leaving the White House in the company of J.
Butler Wright, Assistant Secretary of State, after having presented his cre-
dentials to Presid~ent, Coolidge.°

1.

foundation, which with the tuition al-
lowance will mean $300 'annual assist-
ance. Sipce this fund is open to those
of the sophomoife grade or above, one
student may receive as much as $900
in three 'years. The group guarantee
will be placed at ten per cent until this
plan has proved itself.
As the Tlarmon-College Co-operative
Loan fund develops, it is hoped that
student paper may grow increasingly
negotiable, so that colleges may, when
necessary, exchange it for cash. This
it is said will work around to the col-
lege making tuition costs equal the
actual expense of an education with
loans filling in where increased tuition
cannot be met by the student.
rPhe chairman of the Harmon fund at
Michigan is J. A. Bursley, Dean of Stu-
dents, to whom applications for loans
should be made.
ROSTOV=ON-DON, Russia.- Five
bandits were executed recently for the
murder of M. Kalmikov, a member, of
the central executive committee of the
soviet union.
MOSCOW.-Four .,Russians, convict-
ed variously of misappropriation. of
state funds, bribery or espionage, were
executed recently.
Subscribe for The licligan Daily.

- FRESHM11AN WRESTLERS
e REPORT IN GYM% TODAY
e
01 All freshmen who are interest-
fled in wrestling Are urged to
s report to Coach Peter Botchen
Iany afternoon from 3 to 5
01 o'clock on the second floor of
Itf Waterman gymnasium.
Y( The team will hold regular
1practices and all freshmen ac-
si I cepted by the Coach will be ex-
a cused from gymnasium classes
eifor the remainder of',the. season.
ICoach Botchen has served as
:I?1 freshman coach here for several
Iyears.
Today and Friday
- n GEORGE O'BRIEN and
f ANITA STEWART
-inl-
Peter lKyne's
- "RUSTLING FOR CUIDI"
-Soon-"MTARE INOgTR11IM"

Miles and miles awa
from dull care,
TISH'S PLAYHOUSE
514 East Liberty St.

rlEAD 2WN AStre to

r... wo

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}Halowe'en Candies
Packed Fresh from Our Own Cases

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in Hallowe'en Boxes

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A Marquardt
Tailored Suit
Comforting in Style, Fabric
and Workmanship
Arthur F. Marquardt
Tailor
608 East Liberty

a 7
a.Tipx~r~~
e TthetPar rd ermpny
I pf i, J nsi lle Wi co n i n.
dopped thisParke StAe
street, 2601 feet bel~oufoldst
@! l 4Onepen jparker Ourersj2
al g ied oih the cem ent si& ,
i ,ll ot he_ a Parker Duofould Jr.-
@ 1~ o h Pavement.
Q It~i U I3 hnpens were Urnediate)
!' ( i I wrefou 1 to be uniharmd Ii
i1[ ~ -- tical Pes and it work~s to Pterfe
I Yours very trul
e 1' l 1 f 1Supt. of Steel Gonstruotlon
s,. j " _r_ ° "George A. Fuller comjpsnn
c r '~d 1 JBuilders of till Stevens Hotel
Where the Pens Landed
Tra ffic stopped to watch 'this test of the
Parker Duofiold 'Non-B rcakable Barrel
Point' fGuaranteed 25 years for-
iticchanical perfection and wear!
TRAFFIC stopped as big Frank Ket-
.cheson, Supt. of Steel Construction for
the George A. Fuller Co., hurled two
Parker Duofold Pens from his perilous
foothold on a slender steel girder atop of
the new Stevens Hotel, Chicago.,
One pen-~s truck on asphalt, the other /
on .cement -away they bounded into the
air, then landed in the street--unbrokenl
We wanted to give the public proof
more convincing than any guarantee. So
we have shown by a series of heroic tests
that the new Parker Duofold Pen with
Permanite barrel does not break. Be sure
no fall on~corridor or classroom floor can
harm it.
Get this sturdy black-tipped lacquer-red
beauty at any good pen counter. r

tevens loceij
il I went
rtes above
-, and
to the

ize LDuOfc~j
'walk. Th6
a~lighted'
'w Picked
tamniation
lese iden.
"etioii.
uiy'

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BETSY ROSS SHOP

;,11111111111111111ll 1111111 111111i II IIIIlI1IIIIItlt i I II IIIIIIIIIII111I1tIIIIII1II1II1 lllll H l I'P±
Oct. 25 COMING Oct. 26
- MIatinee and
Night -
T-HE ROCKFORD PLAYERS
(Formrl y of the U~niv ersity of 31ehigai2
- -will present-
"Expressing Willie"
by Rachel Crothers
_MIMES THEATRE

I

Right Prices, Quality

Cleanline'ssand

Service

r

are factors which govern our businest

and have placed Eschelbach

meats lfl

high favor in Ann Arbor.
BUY, YOUR. MEATS AT

Permanie"-the new Non-Break-t
able Material of which all Parker
Pens and Pencils are now made-is
lusroslight-weight, and does not
break, fade or shrink -
Parker Duof old Pencils to match the Pens: Lady Duof old, $3;
Over-size Jr., $3.50; "Big B~rother" Over-size, $q
THE PARKER PEl COMPANY,* JANESVILLE. WISCONSIN
OMECES AND SUBSIDIA tES: NEWYORK, CHICAGOATLANTA;DALLA8
GAN EFRANCISCO * TORONTO, CANADA LONDON. ENGLAND

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