TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1929_ .{.. _ _.._. _ THE M I C H I A N D-1 1 N LL PAGE THREV .... _ . M, .,,~Y, r .. _ _.. ... ....._ ______.,r ._..,_._ ,...._n ,. . .-.4_ ., _ rm. .._. . . .t . ..., I MICHGA L__ _L SLDER PROGRSS C PONSIDERBLE IN PAScT SmUOII vriY i Thought Likely of Nobel Prize WinnerI Award! Thirty Fraternities Are Taking Part in Newly-Arrairged Program. OTH4ER S M1AY YE T ENTER Professor Pawlowski W r i t e s Article in October Technic. LOCAL MEN WIN PRIZES Other Schools, Especially in' Europe, Having Fostered Gliding. During the past year the glider' section of the Michigan Aeronau- Associated Press Photo tical Society has made extensive amssB. unedPrsP- progress. Several gliders were built, men were trained in gliding, the Professor of chemistry at. Cornell first glider pilot licenses, issued by university, who is regarded as the the National Glider Association, most likely winner of the Noble were won by members of the Mich- prize in chemistry. igan society, and' several prizes' were taken at the First National First Number of Year Glider Meet held at Cleveland in Issued by Law Review August. Other schools Interested. Entering its twenty-eighth year. Michigan, however, is not the the Michigan Law Review will ap- only school in the world that has pear today in the first number of made progress in this line, accord- the year carrying features written ing to 'Prof. Felix W. Pawlowski, of by well-known lawyers. the aeronautical department, in Among the leading articles is his article "Gliding at Michigan one on "The Sanitary District of and Elsewhere" in the October Chicago in the Supreme Court of number of the Technic. "Gliding the United States" by Gardner S attracted college students in Ger- Williams, consulting engineer of many some time ago," says Profeg- Ann Arbor who acted in the ca- sor Pawlowski, "and it soon spread pacity of advisor and expert wit- all over Europe, and is now spread- ness on the sanitary matters in the ing in this country due, chiefly, to cases discussed in this article. the enthusiastic efforts and gener- O. John Rogge, Chicago attorney: ous support of Mr. E. S. Evans, a has contributed "Damages upon prominent Detroiter, who created Rescission for Breach of Warranty,' the National Glider Assocation. and Learned Hand, judge of the Gliding Made Safer. United States Circuit Court of Ap- "Many people think that the peals in the second circuit is the glider has served its most im- author of "Is There a Common pOrtant purpose, and that it now Will." remains only a plaything. This op- This volume, which carries more inion, however, is not , just, for than 100 pages, is completed with gliding is serving as a most fas- the usual sections by the studei cinating and safe aerial sport since, uembersof e Board of Editors: due to the inherent stability of a recent important decisions, book' well-built glider, an entirely in- reviews, and books received. In experienced and unskilled person, the book section is a review dfj after ladnched in the air, can al- Prof. E. C. Goddard's new casq1 ways get safely down to the ground book, "Outlines of the Law of Bail- by the simple expediency of aban- ments and Carriers." doning the controls. The glider al- - . so serves as a iiiethod of learning hours. Experiments in taking an! to fly an airplane, thus shortening airplane above mountainous regions the period of training in the pow- and flying them as gliders has, ered machine. proven successful in judging the "New domains in the usefulness disturbances in air currents, pro- I of gliders and gliding are discover- duced by the configuration of the! ed, "Professor Pawlowski says. ground below, and it has made it! Lieutennt Thoret of the French possible to anticipate the effect of! Army Air Service originated glid- sudden and unexpected gusts of ing flights with the engine shut wind, and to utilize them for the off, and in that way established purpose of staying aloft and clear new records of between 8 and 9 of obstacles." For Rent! , ;, : Wth the third. of a series of Fra- ternity-Faculty dinners to be held ,tomorrow -evening, the program. will be halfcompleted, announces Fred Bauschard, '30, chairman of* the committee of arrangements for the Fraternity- Faculty dinners. That the plan, meets with thel whole-hearted approvalof both theI members of the facuity and thel fraternities is shown by the factl that over 30 fraternities and a like' number of the faculty have been taking part in the two previousI dinners. Fosters Closer Bond. The purpose of the meetings is to bring about a closer understand-! ing betwen the student body and their instructors. Believing that this can be accomplished best by having the faculty members be the! dinner guests of a fraternity one night a week, the committee has worked to that end. Some have had the erroneous impression that the faculty man will either deliverI a speech or a lecture. His visit is, merely Qf a social nature whichj HIGH SCHOOL PARACHUTE JUMPER Protects Workers From- STOCKS RECOVER AGAIN ENTERTAINS AIRPORT CROWD Stock Market FailuresFOLLOWING BREAK NEW YORK, Nov. 4.-The stock "There he is!" dred feet, the cord was pulled and'market, reopening today after the This was shouted by about the large chute opened, abruptly three-day holiday, was swaped three thousand, persons late Sun- checking the fall and drifting day afternoon when the crowd at eastward in the strong westerly with selling orders, which carried Ann Arbor Municipal Airport sud- wind. Bob made frantic efforts tos denly saw Bob MacMillan, young) land on the airport. Nearly all the........................tonearys$2pashaet woen parachute jiumper who is attend-! way, down he was pulling on the. igbustogbynsporwa ing Ann Arbor High School, .cords at one side, causing the quickl supplied, and recoveries of plunge through a bank of clouds chute to "side slip" in order to de- $1 to $6 a share from the low levels more than a mile above the ground' scend more rapidly and thus avoid were quite common before the end fall approximately twelve hundred being carried, off the field. ur. Blocks of 10000 fall apritely The wind was too strong how- to 50,000 shares were frequent in feet and then float gracefully t-Iteinitial transaction. ward the eatth. ever, and he soon was east of the h Governors of the New rYaork Sunday's jump was announced State street road. He made aGornr f heNwYk as a "delayed" leap. Lieut. Leon- graceful landing in a cornfield just stock exchange voted that the ex- ad Foplinan e ckbeyond the tracks of the Ann Ar- change shall be open for business ard S. Flo, piloting an open cock-'bynthtrcsoteAnA-i between 10 a. in. and 1 p . m pit, three-place Spartan biplane, bor railroad, and after gathering epnda . T . and Fri.ay climbed to nearly six thousand feet up his chute he was back at the otdsek, Tndrsday bedcFrid before signalling' to Bob to. jump. airport soon after the crowd had 'kd At that time, the plane was hidden started homeward.. * all day Sa.turday. from the crowd by clouds, and few . While Bob was drifting earth- Assoc ated T r i.P The New York Curb market fl- if any saw the young man actually ward, Lieut. Flo easily overtook Julius Rosenwald. lowed- the action of th. "big board" leave the ship. him with a power dive, and after Chairman of the board.of Sca s, 'and announced that it, would oper- The crowd obtained its first circling the jumper the aviator Roebuck & company, who pledg' d ate on the same schedule'for the glimpse of the hurtling body as it entertained the crowd with sev- his personal fortune to guara i- remainder of the Vweek. Tuesday, emerged from the ' clouds, and eral loops. He followed Bob to his1tee the stock market accounts of election day, is, a he liday here and then, after a fall of several hun- landing and circled over the corn- the 40,000 employees of his com- the exchanges will -be closed. field. It was dark when he brought pany. United States Steel common, Future Armament Plan his plane to a landing. which opened at $8.25 a share lower tlied byM usson Another jump will be made Twelve hundred freshmen at tie at $85.25,quicklyraled to $191. yt snext Sunday. The demonstration Pennsylvania State College ha re Sharp recoveries also took place in has been announced for an earier, Standard Oil of New Jersey, Amer- ROME, Nov. 4.-Benito Mussolino, has be anoud for a e- organized a unique band consis t- ican Can, Interna tional Telephone Italian dictator, told Italians Sun-e scended rapidly Sunday afternoon. ing entirely of harmonicas. aid other leaders. day what would be his probable # A wall of black clouds came out - course of action in the event Italy, ss is nvovedin noter ar.Theoc-of the west, just as the jumper left. casion was theeleventh rannver- the plane, and befor he landed 2 00 f A. REAL'S SERVICE CAR; sary of the victory at Veneto, whichwas almost dark. - for an ' "FIXALL" m nar r aof th e vict ory at V e n t roL w h b h. _ _ _ _r__ _ _ _ _ _ _ t Is th e sam e lo w ra te as , carries that personal touch that marmie in theier 01 Wole a tLiali ! rmesin the World war. heretofore has been lacking. "History teaches us when there A few excerpts from the letters A fewexcepts rom he ltes are serious crises it is arms and war received from members of the which solve them," Il duce said. faculty show their desire to co- "If I had the terrible responsibil- operate, along with their opinions, ofpthier a . a m intsthed apnds ity of governing a country in war- of the idea. I am terested and time I would make a clean sweepl feel h ni f of all sowers of discord and de- meeting students informally. I sin- featists. I would impose stern dis-, cerely hope that every effort will fe behind tie war front. ciplinebeidtewrfo. be made to make the fraternity "I would eliminate the spectacle. students feel that faculty members to soldiers returning are fellow students of "somewhat ome on leave from muddy, bloody! older standing." The program ap- trenches of brilliant carefree merryI peals to be as a plan well worth 'life led in the big cities. trying to secure more intimate re- "I would take from war factoriest lations between students and mem- all able-bodied slackers who think1 bers of the faculty. I should wel- it more useful to manufacture hul- come more extensive acquaintance Ilets, shells and bombs than to shoot with students and shall be glad to and throw them." take part in they arrangements you The premier said there was en- propose." tirely too much talk about peace Series Half Over.i and disarmament. Although the series is half over, there is yet a chance for fraterni- The University of Wisconsinmen I ties and faculty members to take eating at dormitories and res- part in the program. Fraternities taurants eat three -cents more will be, given their choice of fac- worth of food than women eating ulty man they would like to enter-I at corresponding places, while! tain insofar as it is possible. Those fraternity men's appetites cost interested may get in tuch with them four cents more per :lay, fig- V the committee in charge at Lane ures compiled at the university hall. there indicate. EBERBACH & SON CO. STIALISH ED84 14 SCIENTIFIC Union Member Cards, ! Q81 Are Obtainable by Mail Men students may now obtain their Union membership cards by mail if they will send the following information to James E. Thayer, re- cording secretary of the Union: Treasurer's receipt, Ann Arbor ad- dress, telephone, home address, class and department in which they are enrolled, and a self-addressed,' stamped envelope for the return of the membership card and the treas- urer's receipt. fey can *A" work} broughtto my Repair Replace. :Shop.. Open 7,A. M. to 9 '25.OO0REWARD For any article worth repairing that I can't repair and make as strong or stronger than new. Free repair for any item that I can't name its occupation. I want the repair work that others turn down. One trial will win your everlasting confidence.. Keys manufactured from. the first one to the last. Reduced rates in quantities. Get my prices for Faculties, Fraternities and Sororities. Keys for your auto, your aoartmeht, homes, stores, offices, trunks, mail boxes, suitcases, hand bags, vanity cases, desks drawers, lockers, pad- locks, etc. i i No membership numbers will be assigned unless the application is accompanied by the Treasurer's re- ceipt. A. REL, Master Mechanic 440 South State Phone 9200 What Are Your Troubles? Fret Plaza Apartments Only seven apartments are left- in Ann Arbor's newest and finest build- ing. Gas, electricity, re- frigeration, water - all furnished. All floors carpeted. Furnished or unfurnished as desired. Location is unexcelled. 341 E. Liberty Street Two five-roori and one four - r o o m apartments left in this fine building. E I e c t r i c refrigeration. All floors completely carpeted. We own this building ourselves and g u a r a n t e e the finest possille service and maintenance. Excellent location; easily access- ible to both University and downtown districts. Many other rentals, in both homes and apart- ments, $50 and up. Sec us. B uilding set back from the street, is beau- tifully landscaped and there is plenty of sun- shine and -air on all sides. Elevator service. Rentals reasonable. BROOKS-NEWTON, INC. Brooks Bldg.. Phone 22571 LABORATORY SUPPLIES. 200-20-22 . LIBERTY ST. Greetin for Every ccasion BIRTHDAY FRIENDSHIP GET WELL WEDDING CONGRATULATIQN5 I' = Ira - ' No matter what your needs may be they car be Satisfied by the use of Classied Advertini. 1. Have you found anything" Have you anythm o se t 1?9 Do you want to buy something? Have you rooms to rent? Have you lost anythig? is I It Pays to Use . . . It Michiant ii ly r C~assific I