IIURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1930 THE MICHIGAN D Al L Y_. PAGE THREE ~U~SDAY;jANuM~,y ~, i~o TUP MICI-4IC.AN DAILY PAGE TUP~EW F Iii(I L ADERS OF NAVAL DELEGATIONS WHO WILL C niiiiuu UOFICIALSILTHEIR RESPECTIVE COUNTRIES AT LONDON 'P[. REMiNPERPLEXED Y MN STATU _ . . _ .. ... REPRESENT CONFERENCE (''S IDitchy Traces History | GOMBER ELECTL ED L d i Lof City of Washington I LU TO HEAD -HEIiSTS zW='=gto z PLApCEO N EXHIBIT Meion. 01 severys American citizen Public Safety Forces Cut Down? in Attempt to Decrease Enormous Debt. MAYOR VETOES BUDGET Aldermen Doubt City's Ability to , Successfully Meet j January Payroll. ... ........ Outstanding H1onor on University P by National G HOLDS SEVERAL Dr. M. Gomberg, h( chemistry department versity has been electe is Bestowed rofessor roup. the greatest pride." With these words, Clair W. Ditchy, '15A., now, a prominent Detroit architect and vice-president of that city's chap- ter of the American Institute of Architects characterized the na- Art Work of New York Pupils Shown in Architectural Building Display. CHICAGO, Jan. 8. -- The mayor. the council, business men and bankers were still scratching their heads today over the .city....of" Chi-. ::; cago's acute money situation. With fire-fighting forces reduced: because of inadequate funds, the gproptn of fire insraceatues became a matter of concern. With; nearly50 Toliemn ndicaed h fears against lawlessness were ex-. pressed.274,.,......r....s n a rd.- The hneal department frcd at A.::Teh t ...s do without the servicg of dair ind n d h e r d u ct" o f mr a n p o:er m.:r.try::::::t::::ry :.::::::::::::... . t he..U n.....d....at e s.. pctors andoteais was urg- J ing that something be". doeon-- ableit to give prper protection to! the public health. The board of tA education, to whom financial strin-.......y gec is no new thing, was map- ping plans to finance the continued; operation of the city's publicgrme=Pw.W e-EB.kfth rschools.h p pa tp -T't,'re -L ad kd rtmen ad'Adancig te ;e?:ytha"Ar Mayor Thompson indicatedhe py dhai ''saf,^ , would veto the 1930 budget of G55,-, 274,000, which represents a reduc- th tion of nearly $5,000,000 from last Annc tm bxmtedy s PJto year. It was this reduction which These men, who comprise the Bin Five of the London naval parley to be held next week are: Foreign necessitated the cutting of the fire Minister D oGrmandi (above, left) of Italy, Reiro Wakatuski (aboveentet) of Japan Premier Andre and police department personnel;Tardieu (above, right) of France Premier Ramay MacDonald (belowleft) of Creat Brtain, and Sec- nnd the reduction of manpower in;: retary of State Henry L. Stimson 0f the United Statess other branches of the city gov.ern- h-m- the Mdr Lgug C Ie mayor's promised veto has G EEp NBIET SARTS hla TalksatMeetaing A MiEL LRGG given hope of restoring the .ddAeVELn CEofbhyilologhmeallSociety moyicnerestrinthesbuoffultioTfAVhe CrLnEGEy ADDRESS SESSON' strength, for 'the mayor believes . these branches of city government m Prof. Warren E. Blake, of the are not the proper places to prac- The Traversity, a new travel col- Latin and Greek department ad- Advancing the theory that Are tice economies. I ege, under the presidency of Sidney dressed the American Philological tine, an early Italian playwright Doubt that the January payroll Greenbie, author of . educational' association meeting at Boston the' rather than Ben Jonson or Marston could be met was expressed by books, will be instituted this year. lasi of December. Credit was pre- I was the originator of the satin many aldermen. John S. Clark Qualifications for admittance will viously given to another person. chairman of the finance commit-? not be made by examination. Stu- - comedy, Prof. Oscar J. Campbell, c tee of the council, said the salariesj dents showing a serious interest in the h cho English department, read of some 27,100 city emrployes .coulds old probem as, poiis, ek paper, 'Aretino's Influence on Eno not be paid Until additional tax art, liter'ature ,religion, trade and BeuiiainH;s ih oey"bfr h nu warrants are sold. commerce will be among thoseI Bemeettin its ingCoeybf or the drLanua __________chosen. meigo h oenLnug t CARDIFF, Wales.-More than 10,- Applicants will also be subjected± With the stipulation that it be Association, heiq in Cleveland dun 000 work'l ponies are killed, or injured to a rigorous, examination. An in-; used, for the purpose of arousing ing the Christmas recess. The con annually in British coal mines. dividual traveling by 'himself may! interest in the beautification of the! ference was attended by four othe parliament is to be asked to forbid also receive through the Traversity high school ?uilding the University men of the English department use of the animals. They. often the same sort of assistance provided High School has received an anony- Prof. S. F. Gingerich, Prof. H. C wor*p in difficult tunnels in inches of1 for, those traveling in student mous gift to be offered in the form Hutchins, Prof,.:~E. L. Griggs an( water and coal dust. I group's. of awards. Prof. Paul Mueschke. elect for 1930 of th Chemical society, the considered foremost ganization of chemistsi The society has a me 17,500, including nea prominent chemists int many foreign chemists knowledge and industr ed by the society andr offered every opportun abreast of the adva chemical science. The election is the long series of honors conc to Dr. Gomber awarded the Willian medal given by the Chemical society in 19 he was awarded the W medal by the Chicago S society. Iii 1927 he w the Charles Frederic medal by the Chandles of Columbia University the Holland Chemical outstanding onganizatic fists elected him to hog bership, and in Decemr was given the honorar doctor of science by1 sity of Chicago. Dr. Gomberg has bee of organic chemistry in sity since 1904, and has man of the chemistry for the last two years. Miniature U.S. for Chicago W Dr. Henry A. Beuhler, ogist of Missouri, is pha plica of the whole Unite a scale of one foot tot the Chicago Century celebration in 1933. Th be about half a mile quarter of a mile wide. Bodies of water, acco proposal, would be rep actual water, and thei be flowing streams. It posed that a narrow built over the area f HONORS tion's capital, in. a lecture on the SUBJECTS ARE ORGINAL Washington, Plan Commission De- ead of the . velopment at 4:15 yesterday after- Work done by students in the of the Uni- noon in the Natural Science aud- New York School of Fine and Ap- 'd president- torium under the auspices of the e preienArchitectural aociety. , plied Arts forms the current exibi- e American In his talk, which prefaced a tion in the third-floor exhibition largest and three-reeli moving picture on the room of the architectural building. of any or-dc in the world. development! of the city of Wash- Four departments of the school are mbership of ngton, Mr. Ditchy traced the city's represented: interior architecture rly all the history from the revolution up to n itg America and the present. and design: costume design and s. Chemical The lecture especially lauded Ma- construction: graphic advertising y are foster- ' jor Pierre Chare Is L'Enfant, a and illustration: and . teachers members are young French engineer, wnose or- training departments. nity to keep iginal plans for the city, abandoned The department of graphic ad- .ncement of for a time, are now destined to be vertising and illustration exhibit a carried out itn a greater building collection of advertising posters. latest in a and beautifying pogram in the As the ideas are developed in small that hae near future. layout form before being enlarged ,0' He Ifor the full-sized poster, both the aV He wasd e- 4p y. I w w'soriginal designs and the completed SoH.cholsa viou ramnso h ee n I-I. Nchols IApeV Flstet fs W1 keF protes areshown in many cases. A merican p r y ad rigt lTes historicdroph nel has 114. In1925, e1 Upype p trand into hodn lds ilard Gibbs lteeitrnnatdnitomodrnad rys awred of jWit wr hav ing 1 prgEe trayreinoenir a ndeprcmn p en- ection of the u hivertising decoration with the por- vs CandlerdU I IU [I F I Ud' ters equipment, of riding equip- F hondeor ment, and even of children's toys. the~~~~~~~~~~~ UnMuclyasuigsae.idctn hesowreidinalityrsshoyneinde y. In 1928! Ne'w Women's Dormitory Takes Mc rgnlt ssoni h various treatments of the several Society, an3 Shape Fasteut as Workmen prbessonjOeo h rb on ofthem- mtrolems ho tuesuted in - iorarymer- Labor Day and Night. lems is a "Kindergarten to College" 192Ahm poster, advertising school supplies ry degree of With work having progresed carried in ar department store the 'niver-d steadily during the vacation period, Designs for and illustrations'of , costumes are a notable part of the four campus structures are ghdu-exhiition. The greater parco the poesors ally assuming shape, indicating these were done for style advertis- been chair- that they will be completed by the ;Ne purposes, while a few are illus-. department time specified in their building con- trations of the costumes used in a tracts. pa. A number of designs for interior Of. these potential campus addi-t decoration are also. shown. Among Pl anned t1rions, the new women's dormitory these the period designs re especi- drld Fairhas taken form with the most ra- LG ally important. g T ork rewshebe tAll of the designs wereexecuted rsetGeol- biriy obrking, ctes av n fte considerable research onthe stes u l thLari sg bot un , and d y ni e part of the students of the New i ed States onpt ih h result that the ;Yorkinstitution. The xcoodich the mile for structural steel work is more than is incorporated under the regents of of Progress 25 per cent completed. At this rateNew York University, also hasa e model will the contract, requiring readiness nI h oolAi Paristw fromperich long and a for occupancy by July 1, isexpect-E much of its work is carried on, ed to be easily fulfilled. AGRNWEC KILSOR zrding to the The other three projects, the legal ___ presented by research building, the addition to (BAsociaedPr~s rivers would the Lawyers' club, and the Univer- ALGIERS, Algeria, Jan. 8A--Efforts; is also pro- sity High School addition, are con- continued today to extricate bodies railway be tracted to be finished by September of ten or more victims from the ollowing the 1. The steel work on the legal re- debris of a- passenger train wreciz ttrunk lines search building is 25 per cent fin- I between Tunis and Algiers, Monday. Lture trains ished, while the Law club addition nfight. At least twenty persons visitors. The; is more than a quarter finished and were killed and as man~y injured. n c of a al es -t - r routes of the principal t, equipped with mina C. large enough to carry d round trip would cover about one the addition to the High and a half to two miles of riding. 50 per cent completed. School is 'Ten bodies already have been 'e- covered.. - - - - - - -- ---- ----- x , v a i f Irv. i_. .' 1 ANNUAL WILL EGIN 0 PAY A This Willrbehinunusual opportunity toobtan Booka Stationery asnd Supplies amt EC E;PTIIMR- AL p.CES Wa .tc fir Further Announcements I.NCORPAgmhRA - - - - -