la I r-17 Mi C H -i %~: IA iN L'" .i. Y j ~ __ _ _ . ,. . __ _ _ .._._. 1.C. L+IdI-,i11~-:1a :I ;1lY"IJikl:- . 1' ,:U _. W4",) Ai4, 4vAj-- ( 2 ( ( QQ || Ti Instructor Receives ENGINEERS MUSV1 Prize fo1 Sculpture I-; D lN PE ISl h instrlr 1'of Ss c u l p t t u i ~ t h c _ a r h i t ec r a l school, has been chosen as the re- 1o IJ'iI1No. M FF cipient of the Detroit ArL Found- ers' soeiety prizo, of $200, for his _.." ea orG y Col " (,, Professor Meefce Arranges Tm1I work w4t1 exlhibitetd a thiI annual Michigan Artists' Show held Last Plans for School's recently at the Detroit Institute of Fiftieth Anniversary. Fine Arts. The show, in whidh ar- tists from tlis and other states ex- LUNCHEON IS PLANNED hibit, included, besides sculpture, paintings and etchings. Another of S ocum's works, "Head Shorts, Lamont, and Boardman of Frank Stoma to," won for him Will Speak at Afternoon i the H lby prize, in the Michigan THESE DELEGATES WILL REPRESEN T JAPAN IN LONDON E iffinger Attending NAVAL ARMAMENT CONFERENCE AT END OF MONTH Washington Meeting U UIUI arr olg nWashington , D CHANCE Dean John R. Effinger, of the lit- :: I arary college, is in Washington, D. C., this week, attending the annual meeting of the association of Amer- Postmaster General f ican Colleges. Whi":n: r k'e rg lr po- qulit1ton of A9 ram of speaker this year, Dea aid to All Cax 9 Fffinger, who is a past president of the association, is expected to take AIR FACILITIES <'r k {a prominent part in the conven- ~~~~ tiarn. He will return to Ann Arbor M Acoatei Friday morning. Jan Ir Y r entire rate scale and a RATE Suggests M4 I LfOliint rvier.. NEED] :A, ED . 14. - The airmail sys- 't I dismiss their elasses at ths time," said Dean Sadler. Final plans are being made by Prof. F. N. Menefee, chairman of the conference, to make thie fiftieth anniversary of the Michigan En- gineering society the most success- ful in the history of the school. Robert P. Lamont, secretary of commerce; Gov. Fred W. Green of} Michigan; Gov. Frank C. Emerson of Wyoming; Regent R. Perry Shorts of Saginaw and other nota- bles in the field of engineering will appear on the program whichf is designing to follow out the gen- eral topic, "The Engineer's Contri-I bution to the Art of Living." Registration of the delegates will be held at 10 o'clock Thursday morn-I ing, followed by a luncheon at Union frith Gerald J. Wagner, pres- ident of the Michigan Engineering society, presiding., President Alex- ander G. Ruthven will deliver the address of welcome with a response by Professor Menefee. Regent Shorts will preside at the Artists' Show heil two years ago. Slocum served on the jury of the show lasrt year. , Japan will be ably represented at the London five-pdwer naval conference by the above delegates. All are eminent statesmen who have been prominent in Japanese diplomatic circles. In the above pictttre Dr. Returns Fron Meeting of State Hashio Yamakawa is at the left, Reijiro Wakatsuki in the center, and Admiral Hyo Takarabe on the right. Highway Departmct The eitire world is interested in the conclusions the conference delegates will reach regarding the size of Japan's navy. It is exoected that the present ratio of the naval strength of the five great powers will be Chicago. changed. HEADS STATE TETING ART CLUB WILL Prof. W. J. mnmons, of the high- HEAR DISCUSSION way engineering department, has i Screen Reflections OF BATIK TOPIC returned from the 22nd annual f# OP B TI_ meeting of the Mississippi Valley conference of state highway de-' Garbo's "Kiss." 1 police sirens was dying out in the J. Gores, Former Louvre partments which met ineChieago Miss Greta Garbo, who since she ears of inveterate "talkie"-goers,' Staff Member, to Speak. last week-( bane come over from Sweden heads comes a new type of gangland epic The object of the association i 'the native feminine movie contin- which, if foI wed by similar pro- Using batiks as his subject, Wal- to meet annually to discuss the gent as a box office draw, opens to- ducts, will soon have students talk- tr' most recent developments in the day at the Majestic in "The Kiss," ing out of the side of their mouths er J. Gores, instructor of decora- field of road and bridge design, to be reviewed in tomorrov morn- and affecting slouch hats. tive design in the Colege of Archi- construction, maintenance, "raffic ing's Daily. "So This Is College" I "Woman Trap's" general plot tecture, will give a lecture at 4:15 and administrative policies and gives way to "Oh Yeah" at the about the underworld has been Thursday in the auditorium of the .problems. Professor Emmons has Michigan tomorrow. "Woman Trap" worn out by similar films, and its architectural building. The lecture f charge of testing all road mater- at the Wuerth is reviewed below. particular plot concerning the po- is given under the auspices of the ials for the state of Michigan. More of Sweden is seen and liceman-gunman brother combina..Architectural society. ' "We have a complete unit that is heard in "Hot for Paris," the se- tion is none too ney However, the Gores has had an- uhusual train- independent of the University here r quel to the "Cock-Eyed World," picture is good entertainment, less ing. He attended the Ecole de in East engineering building for now shocking Detroit at the Fox. due to the plot than the wise cast- Louvre and the Sorbonne in Paris. testing road materials for the El Brendel, Victor McLaglen, and ing and, the excellent individual.! He was made a member of the of- state," said Professor Emmons; "we Fifi D'Orsay furnish the excite- character portrayals. ,Honors go to .&c4ial lecture staff of the Louvre test everything from grass seed to merit, the latter lady having been Hal Skelly, star of "Dance,of Life," museum, a position, iarely accorded paint. In the summer approximate- last seen corrupting Will Rogers who ranks with Will Rogers as be- any but T'renchmen. Before com- ly eight-five men are emplayed for in "They Had To See Paris." ing among the few who have been ing to the University, Gores held a carrying on the work. These -Ben;. J. A. able to talk and remain perfectly teaching position in California. either worlk here in the building or- natural on the screen. Little more i Gore's attendance at these materials that are sent in for in- "Woman Trap." could be asked of Evelyn Brent, French institutions was mnade pos- spection, or visit the gravel pits in- Just as the click-click of mach-;who plays her usual part of the [sible by an American Guild Service item of the postoffice department 1111! woul.6 be changed uinder recoin- end a tions outliied here today by S ssster General Brown. ACADEMY PAPER or the first time, the postmas- " ter general gave hi~s "yardstick" of Bulletins Contain Officinl lists, airmail conipensaticn which- would P t fA i n e e Prograns, bittaries ard Minutes of Two Yeavs. KELSEY RECEIVES NOTICE Edited by Prof. Peter Okkelberg, of the zoology department, the thirtieth and thirty-first annualI reports of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters has been published this week. The booklet contains lists of of- ficers of the organization for the past two years, minutes of the var- ious council meetings held during' that period, and complete programs of the last two general meetings of the academy. An obituary of Francis W. Kelsey, written by Prof. A. R. Crittenden. ,and by Prof. J. E. Dunlap, both of Latin department, and an obituary of Frederick C. Newcombe, written by Prof. H. H. Bartlett of the bot- any department, appears. Il H. Bartlett is a'uthor of an article on '"Progress in the Michigan Deeryard Survey." Since 1920, ten volumes of these reports have been published. Prev- ious to 1921, 22 volumes were is- sued under the title, "Annual Re- port of the Michigan Academy of Science." Of these, volumes 1, 21, and 22 are out of print. Copies of the other volumes are still availa- able for distribution and will be' sent on exchange so long as the editions last, it is announced. W' T "V P v s;upplant a system in which one carrier receives as low as 8 cents and another as high as $3 a pound. Numerous con erences, between postal authorities and airmail con- tractors have been held during the past few nmonths in Washington with a view to working out a rate "yardstick." Under the system suggested to- day by Brown, the postoffice de- partment would concentrate its ex- ceptional aid on essential routes, "those that have been traveled by ox team, pony express,, railroad, and auto," and would use planes as it now uses trains, as fixed rates per mile for definite weight spaces." "Declaring Cleveland "an appro- priate place to take an inventory of aviation of today, and to hazard a guess for the future," the post- master general sketched the growth of the airmail to its present status: "Two hundred planes tand 250 expert pilots engaged; 25 contrac- tors over the regular routes aggre- gating 14,368 miles, flying approxi- mately 40,500 miles each 24 hours, about 60 per cent of which is flown at night." The postmaster general told of the accompanying acceleration in the commercial flying business and its apparent serious results. "The public poured its hundreds of millions of dollars into the avia- tion industry," he said. "Factories sprang up and air lines were inau- gurated, some in accord with i the best practice, others less well con- sidered. But the experience of all in 1929 was substantially the same. With a paying load of only 16 to 4 per cent of capacity, all closed the year with operating deficits so great the very life of the passenger transport industry today is in the balance." He declared this was because the air enthusiasts forgot that children must creep before they walk, and must toddle from chair to chair before they engage in marathons. A I afternoon session with "The Field the state. In the winter only about; of Engineer in Business" as the- forty-five men are employed. The general topic. The subject will be equipment for carrying on this, developed by W. A. Starrett of the work includes the cold room, ce- Starrett-Thompson company of ment, concrete, soils, sandstone, New York, and Major J. P. Halliday, and bituminous laboratories" ;he chief engineer of the Detroit Rapid concluded. Transit commission. - .1 Hon. Robert P. Lamont, secretary n of commerce, is scheduled to speak neer in Government." Sergius P. in the evening on the topic,"En- Grace, assistant vice-president of inteeveCnig on te topic, "En- the Bell Telephone laboratories in gineers Contribution to the Art of f New. York, will attend to demoi - Living." Secretary Lamont is one ofsd the most enthusiastic of the Uni-Iti b t lp io d versities graduates, and his talk tion between Hill auditorium an1 willbe ne f te imortnt ea-steamships at sea. Gardner S. Wi- tures of the program. L. W. Wallace,arms, nresulting eninee ohe mnnet executive secretary of the American i r l luig. Engineering Council, will preside at! The conference will close with this session. a banquet at the League at which "Field of the Engineer as Edua-rof John SWorle of the en- tot" will be the subject of Dr. H. S. Prof Jo n Worey of tepen- 'Boardman, president of the Uni- gineering transportation ddep.rtl versity of Maine, at the session Fri- m ,iprd. day morning. Howard Coffin, vice- ._ president of the Hudson Motor Car Nominations Made for company of Detroit, will cover the New Adelphi Election field of the engineer in industry. Governor Green will speak at the Nominations for speaker, clerk, luncheon following the morning treasurer and sargent at arms were session. Dean Elmeritus M. E. Cooley held at the meeting last night of of the engineering college will pre- the Aelphi House of Representa- side. The afternoon session will be tives in the Adelphi room on the opened by Governor Emerson who fourth floor of Angell hall. The will speak on the "Field of Eng- election will take place next week. in p C ue guns, the crack of gangster istols, and the whirr of pursuing 'LEVELAND COUNC MANAGER AF? . (Py Assncial Press) CLEVELAND, Jan. 14.-'rhe turb- frigid-but-still-nice heroine. 'fellhip to study in French li- L. M. M. versities. ulent course of Cleveland's city manager system of government had reached its bitterest climax today with the summary removal of City Manager William R. Hopkins. In the stormiest political spec- tacle since the days of Mark Han- na and Tom L.Johnson, the city council by a vote of 14 to 11 last night ousted Hopkins from the po- sition he had held since the mana- ger plan was adopted six years ago. The immediate outcome of the council's action is the suspension of Hopkins, effective at once, with his final removal ordered Jan 22. Before that date he will be given- a , T U1YNE Y E'"T1V ( IL OUSTS CITY Ward, Rickert Return RMFROM OPERA TION TER POLITICAL WAR' From Dental Meeting (By Associated- Press) public hearing, which he demand- Dean Marcus L. Ward and Dr. U. NEW YORK, Jan. 14-Gene Tun- ed as provided in the city charter. ;G.Rickert of the dental school, re- ney, former heavyweight champion, On Jan. 27, former State Senator turned this morning from Chicago was reported 'resting comfortably Daniel E. Morgan is scheduled to where they have been for the past today following a serious but suc- become the new city manager. five days, attending the mid-winter cessful operation for a kidney ail- Beyond this, however, lies the convention of the Chicago Dental ment. open enmity between Maurice Society. Several Michigan men are A splendid physique which stood Maschke, Republican county lead- ;representatives of the University him in good stead in winning and er, adHopkins.Hopkis,itsgenyearly at the convention, although defending the world's champion- e rally taken for granted, refused to neither of the 1930 delegates were ship was aiding the retired title- follow the instructions of the party on the program as speakers. holder in his convalescence, which, leader in the matter of patronage Dr. R.hH. Kingery, also a mem- his physicains predicted would be at the city hall, which has been up- ber of the dental faculty here, left I speedy. 1held in four municipal elections, terday for Kansas City, Missouri, The operation, which may be the charged that the ousting of Hop- owhere he will attend theNati annual last, for a time at any rate, of a kins was the first move to make the convetioftheH1ational Societyseries of misadventures which have chief governmental office a polit- sthetists. He is the official I beset Tunney since his retirement Iical one. Maschke has made no representative of the University at 'and marriage, was performed at statement. the meeting which will last for the the Presbyterian Hospital Monday _remainder of the week- by Dr. George Winthrop Fish, noted w surgeon and kidney specialist. SHOWS RTH2:00-3:30 ""w"":"""" 7:00-9:00 1 AAi,"YnuRpaI1 I I i F- | Detroit Theatres I CASS THEATER FET.IEL BARRYMORE TN LILI HATVANY'S G E LOVE-DUEL G.MARTINEZ SIERRA'S THE KINGDOM Of GOD Mats. Wed. and Sat-$1-$2.50 Nights--$2-$3.00 AI - I I I I NOW SHOWING W E EVELYN BRENT HAL SKELLY T1 AL LV 4. 1 i. 1 Business Excutie? RESERVE A SEAT IN * Ening1iRoom j't e an f - 200 CHAIRS Washington at Thayer One Block North from Hill Auditorium - Lunch and Dinner $6.00 Per Week With Breakfast $7.50 Per Week "~Woman Trap" Two Brothers at the Mercy of a Woman's Vengeance. hIal Skelly of "The Dance of Life," Chester Morris of "Alibi" and Evelyn Bent of "Interference," all in one melodramatic super feature with 3 great stars. H I VLITZ MAS'TER VIOLINIST Choral Union .Series 4 - - me ON -- - - G AN. ,o I Starting Today Na, the Living ScreetPresents Living the last w6 rd in contnental love. Daringly French. With CONRAD NAGEL And HOLMES H ER BER T 14 ~. T. FI r vast pubic will hail his as on e of the fanous st's1 10 a 0o rumpls. A colorful, vivid drama, .rgaina a a -K ;.' -l l 'i'lrn n at Are you prepared for business? Do you know enough about Finance; Management, Production and Distribu- don to QUICKLY develop into at ex- ecutive in' the business world; or will you, after leaving college, drudge along for years in the"school of hard knocks" and possibly never achieve the business success you desire? Ii just nine months you CAN- prepare! B-abson Institute offers'you exactly the kind of training you will need most when-you are out of college and on your own. Here you may receive a practical and thorough training under the direc- tion of business experts. Here you will learn business fundamentals and, what is more important, you will- gain the necessary experience in- the practical application of those fundamentals. Students at Babson Institute keep regular office hours. They dictate r- prs, take part in conferences, and the basic "how" and "why" of business. Babson Institute is a place for work, nor play; for the kind of "brass-tacks" train- ng every ambitious young man wants! Lhe instruction is intebsive-no a tel Tiedie on trifles ok useless thwotie;,o Send for Booklet You owe it to yonehite faidnd oathow th An insirite Cotie may provide a direct route to t inr achievement foryou. Send fora copy of out booket "Training for tusiness tLadetship" which gives filiinformation. It well be sent free wi h bt a y cfli a tion on your art. MaUS his Coupon NOW! lIAR SON lnsttte - A College Picture on a College Campus, under sanction. That's why it's good! Better come! Wih s a 01, -Thursday Jan. i, - i-v_' 1T w-.v sirt!v-, 'i-wy'? -r r e4~wV r A'4WVF 111 : In I