SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1930 T1HE MICHIGiAN DAIL Y J 5 w iS z 7 ,, 3 ; ;i 1 t f E 1 1 c t c ., z f I x v t 'c oM'GARRAH ATTRIBUTES HIS SUCCESS IIN FINANCIALWORLD TO HARD WORK EXHIB u PANINGSA..SafWrtr NEWy Donald C. Bolles,I NEW YORK-Hard work is the only road to success in the banking world Gates W. McGarrah ever Sfound. Over it he traveled for 40 years Local Art Association -Sponsors from performing menial tasks in a Regulr MothlyExhiit country bank to a high position in Re ular" Monthly Exhibit WalSre.I... of Faknous Works. At 67, when many men are con- tent to shift the bulk of their PRIZE WINNERS SHOWN heavy burden to younger shoulders he is continuing on the road ;of - Collection Includes Paintin s hard work as a director and prob- by Euene Higins and I able Chairman of the Bank of !International Settlements. Davenport Griffin. McGarrah, who resigned as u.u. chairman of the Federal Reserve Thirty-six paintings, from the Bank of New York, and Leon forty-second annual exhibition of Fraser, New York atorney, are theI American painting and sculpture, American directors. at the Art Institute of Chicago, are When McGarrah counsels young: now on exhibition in the west gal- men he advises hard work, good friends and travel as a winning lery of Alumni Manorial hall. These combination, with patience, loyalty,> A paintings form the regular month- and promptness as fundamentals: $ .°.."..,:. 'y exhibition of art works sponsor- of conduct. ed by the Ann Arbor Art associa- His friends and associates will tion. tell you that those have played a The exhibition came to Ann Ar- prominent part in his success bor from Beloit, Wisconsin, where coupled with an inordinate amount. It has been shown at Beloit Col- of common-sense, dogged determi- lege. From Ann Arbor, the group nation and shrewdness. . bf paintings will go back to Chi- During the World War he cago. After the yearly Exhibition performed many important tasks.. of American Painting and Sculp- Most notable was his direction of I ture, at the Chicago Art Institute, the money pool organied by the the exhibition is divided into sev- greater New York banks to direct __ _ _ _ _ oral smaller exhibitions and these the flow of credit in 1917 and '18. are loaned out to the various art He was chairman of the ex- Like his colleague, Leon Fraser groups throughout the country. ecutive committee of the Chase is no stranger to Europe. Fraser, Several prize-winning paintings National bank when the Federal who is only 41, was counsel for the are includede. A painti entitled "The Reserve board asked :him to 'be- financial experts who drew up the Storm," the workof Eugene Hig- come chairman of the Federal Re- Dawes plan and as active in its gisreceiv the NrkorEan Wi serve bank of New York, in 1927. operation. He was again called to gins, received ther Norman Wait H ac dPr}i 12 hn h ae Harris Bronze Medal, wvhich carried He 'accepted. Paris in 1928 when the Dawes with a cash award of $300. The In 1924 he became American rep- plan was revised. He was the gen- $200 Mr. andaMrs. Augustus Pea- resentative on the advisory council eral counsel of the American dele- body prize went to Davenport Grif- of the Reichsbank, established gation. fin, a teacher in the Chicago Art under the Dawes plan. Fraser leaves the practice of Institute, for his landscape, "Deep He -satiated his love of travel in law here. Born in Boston in 1889, Woods." . that capacity, making 67 trips he is a graduate of Columbia uni- "Tearing Down," by Saul Ber- i across the ocean in two years, and versity. He becomes a reporter, man, was awarded honorable men- 'in addition, became familiar with then a lawyer and teacher. En- tion for an architectural subject, European banking and economic listing as a private in the army he while "The Roundhouse," by Harry problems of the old world. became major judge advocate and Gottlieb, was granted the same re- In becoming affiliated with the overseas was first assistant judge cognition for a landscape painting, world bank he is expected to re- advocate, Service of Supplies. He Anne Goldthwaite, a well-known sign from the Reichsbank council. received several decorations. , t w . . etcher, and one of the foremost of the American women painters, has, contributed a portrait called "Se- ma." "Portrait of the Artist's Son" is another of the collection, this done by John C. Johansen, a very popular portrait painter. Many landscapes are shown, in- cluding "The High Road," by Glenn 0. Coleman; "Silver Quietude," by John E. Carlson, a landscape paint- er of note; and North End," by Jonas Lie, one of the Scandinavian landscapists. Robert Spencer, of the New Hope School of Landscape Painting, has contributed another landscape, painting, entitled "Derelicts.", Samuel Halpert, a teacher of painting in the Arts and Crafts! School, at Detroit, exhibits a do- ,mestic scene called "The Kitchen." These paintings may be seen daily from 1:30 to 5 o'clock and ' Sundays from 2 until 5 o'clock. Indian Nationalist Leader Inaugurates Independence Move (By Associated Press) ~ NAWAGON, India, March 14 -- Mahatma Gandhi, Indian National- ist leader, left here at dawn today with his 79 devotees for their third day's march to the salt fields at Jalapur in inauguration of the, movement for Indian independence.' They arrived shortly at Vasna and' intended to proceed to Matar, where they will halt for the night. In an address before the villag- ers at Nawagon, Gandhi congratu- lated the eight head men who re- signed as protest against Vallabhai Patel's imprisonment. He exhorted them to manufacture and to wear homespun cloth and to volunteer as civil resistance workers. His exhortation for severance of government connections als o brought about resignation of police head men at Vasna and Mahalal. The villagers vowed in Gandhi's presence not to fill the vacancies. Gandhi and his associates are journeying from Ahmadabad to Jalalpur on the Bay of Cambay, where they will manufacture salt in violation of the British govern- ment monopoly. The action is ex- pected to be the first definitely se- rious move in a campaign of civil disobedience to bring about com- plete Indian independence. Mayor Leaves for Trial. CALCUTTA, India, March 14-J. M. Sengupta, mayor of Calcutta, who is under arrest on a charge of sedition, left his home in a motor car procession today for the docks, where he embarked on the steam- er Sirdhana for Rangoon. He must answer the government's charges , there. I Scores Injured When FIme Smnepn Manila I _ _ .._.. ._._. . ... j TECHNIC P.EPARESobservatory Adds CHEMIAL NMBER SpeCtrohelioscoj to ItsEquipi Pe , meati Ansel, '31E, Announces Article on Military Explosives' by Col. H. W. Miller. WILL APPEAR THURSDAY Featuring the article. "Military. Explosives" by Col. H. W. Miller, of the mechanism and drawing de-' partment of the engineering col-! lege, the chemical number of the1 Technic will appear on the campus, Thursday morning, it is announced by L. Verne Ansel, '31E, editor. A paper on "Architectural Con-' struction in Earthquake Regions" has been prepared by Prof. W. H.I Hobbs, of the Geology department, "Garages and their Development" will be discussed by Louis Kamper,1 architect; and a paper on "Motori Fuel Research" has been written by Prof. George Granger Brown, of the chemical engineering depart-; ment. A feature on the "Paper In-' dustry" has been prepared by Ward! 0. Wheeler, '30E.I The frontispiece, a drawing of the Paris Gun which has been de- scribed by Colonel Miller in his re-I cent book, is the work of -Theodore' Rogvoy, '27A, former member of, the Technic staff. John J. White,+ Purchase of a new spectrohelio- scope by the University observatory was announced today by Prof. W. C. Rufus of that department. This' instrument, which is sometimes called a "Hale" due to the fact that it was invented by Prof. Hale of the Mount Wilson observatory, is a very valuable machine for it allows the observer to see the sun in the light of a single element, such as hydrogen. Hydrogen clouds are often suck- ed into the sun spots, which are whirling vortices in the atmos- phere of the sun's surface, at a great velocity and the spectrohelio- scope permits the observer to watch the changes that take place. Qualifiers of Indoor Interscholastic Meet: (Continued From Page I) Stump (Sidney), Smith (Lakewood), Freese (Toledo Scott), Kahler (Redford), Zapalski (Detroit West- ern), and Roe (Detroit Northwest- em). Best time 2:07.5. 50 yard dash-Hart, Perrota and I Smith (Froebel), White (Lakewood), Wagner (Ann Arbor), Watson (De- troit Eastern). Best time by Wat- son :05.7. '32A, prepared the cover design. 440 yard dash - Breshanan * (Grand Rapids Central), Stone (To- Nine members of the ;Technic ledo Scott), Schatte (Monroe), Wil- staff will attend the annual con- son (Northwestern), Dykas (North- vention for college engineering eastern), Feister (Froebel), Hershey publication editors which will be (Western), and Martin (Oxford). held next November at Boulder,IBest time by Dykas of Nortlheast- Colo., it is announced by Ben C. ern, 53.7. Landale, '31E, business manager. 65 yard low hurdles T- Ward The convention will last three (Northwestern), Mullins (Froebel), days with several members of the Zimmer (LaGrange), Malmberg! staff taking part on the program. (Waukegan), Lillig (LaGrange), It has not been decided who will Scwenger (Detroit Central). Best attend the meeting, as part of the time by Ward, :07.5. This estab- reservations will be filled by stu- lishes a new record, the previous dents selling the most subscrip- mark by Beatty of Northeastern, subsrip-:07.6. tions next fall. 880 yard relay-Froebel High of Gary, Ind., Detroit Northwestern, McClusky to Speak Lakewood, and Toledo Scott. Best time by Froebel, 1:33.1. This es- on Tolstoy s Works tablishes a new record; the previous mark by Columbus East, 1:37. Pole Vault-Wonsowicz and Div- Prof. H. Y. McClusky, of the ich (Froebel), Hull (Grand Rapids Psychology department, will speak Central), Ramsey (River 'Rouge), on Tolstoy's 'My Confession" at Myers (LaGrange), Lasky (Ham- 4:30 o'clock Tuesday in room 231 tramck) and Moore (Northwestern) Angell Hall. Qualifying height, ten feet, six This is to be the second lecture inches. on this subject to be sponsored by 12 pound shot-Fundis (Detroit the Tolstoy league this year. It is Northwestern). Daniels tCass). expected that Professor McClusky Zimmer (La Grange', Mallard will present a slightly different (Froebel). Turrell (South Lake) viewpoint from that given at the Best effort, Fundis of Northwest- Ilast talk. ern, 44 feet, 8 1-4 inches. . __._____.__._. ..Running High Jump-Ward - 4' *E * . * . _ i;Northwestern), Hague (Northeast-j