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March 21, 1930 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1930-03-21

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

PACE TWO

THE MI.CHICJAN#*DAILY

FRIDAY. MARCH 21, 1030

Eao ~x rcet atl ve rpoe AIff KRNI_ _.Dcor il oo

LORGH ANlNOUNES,
HOOTH FRLOW1 jSHIP'
Annual Competition Provides
for Year's Travel and
Research.
DECIDE ON TIME LIMIT
Reward Given for Best Design
and Quality of Work
i h

Steel Merger; Youngstown Center of Fray H U0I0 IVI L I Wu f ~Baltimore Prof ess
f :Police Charge. UprisingOred
:";by Third Internationale
From Moscow.

S NONmPAYIES oF ENGINEERNC-EGLAS
D UESARE BARRED FROM FUNC TIONS
Student. Counxcil RecQgnizcs Plan troversy _encountered last fall dur-
Prohibiting Participation ing the time cia: electn'wre
in Class Activities, )being held in t~h.. college. One

NO VIOLENCE REPORTED

in ;$cool.
AAnnouncement of the annual '4
competition for the George G.t
Booth Traveling Fellowship in Ar-j
chitecture was made yesterday by
Prof. Emil Lorch, of the College of
Architecture.
Assoclatvd rrm vPhoto
The problem for this year's com- Struggle for control Qf the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company
petition in architectural design will center in Youngstown, Ohio, with Cyrus S. Eaton right) fighting to
will be announced on April 12, in a line up stockholders against the proposed sale to the Bethlehem Steel
program which will be distributed corporation and Eugene Grace Bethlehem president, trying to convince
them that the mergepr will in no waT~v harm Yun-, V ni - -- i~, yterat+

(iBy Associated Press)
HAVANA, March 20.-A 24-hourj
general strike in protest against
unemployment was inaugurated in
Cuba at midnight. The island was
peaceful and no arrests were made.
Police charged the strike was in
compliance with orders from the{
Third -Internationale' at Moscow.
It is estimated-200,000 workmenI
walked out. The cigar makers'
union was the first to call a halt to
all labor until Friday morning.
Street car and omnibus operators M
left their vehicles at 1 a. m. Wait-'
ers and employees of all restaurants Associated Pres IPhoto
and cabarets left their aprons on Dr. William Henry Welch,
the wall .hooks at midnight. Professor at Johns Hopkins uni-
Public utility plants and railroads versity and well-known as the
alone were not affected. The view "dean" of American medicine, who
being taken that these were neces- will be honored by the medicalj
sary to public welfare. Heavy po- profession on his eightieth birth-!
iice guards were maintained in day, April 8.
their vicinity but no trouble was
anticipated.
Havana had but one newspaper Union Registers Teams
today, El Mundo, Spanish language for Bridge Tourament
daily. The typographical union
members, who in Cuba include re- Registration for the Union's an-
porters as well as linotype opera-
tors, walked out of Diaro de la Ma-Inual all-campus bridge tourna-
rina at 9 p. m. Wednesday. Four ment began at the main desk of
other papers were affected similar- the Union yesterday and will con-
The workmen at El Mundo re- tinue for one week. More than 20
mained at their machines in the participants signed up the first
C----.__ -- day. All entries must e hmadie i nmI

FOUR CLASSES AFFECTED
Engineering students who do not
J pay their class dues will be prohib-
ted from participating in class
activities in" the future according
to a petition recognized by the
Student council at its recent meet-
ing. The petition came from a
group of students in the engineer-
ing college.
Theruling will apply only to
members of the four regular classes
of the college, the council decided.
Class activities were defined as in-
cluding voting in class elections,
voting in class meetings, holding
glass offices, serving on class com-
I mittees, and participating in class
athletics. The council, however,
reserved the "right at any time
to redefine the scope of class ac-
tivities."
The petition from the engineer-

class had attempted to bar from
balloting all members who had not
paid dues during the previous year,
but the council decreed that all
members could vote, since the pro-
vision had not becn approved by
the council prior to the collection
of dues. The council is granted by
its constitution the authority of
regulating all class elections.
The entire controversy concern-
ing the collection of dues and the
privilege of .participating in class
activities may be settled by the
inclusion of class dues in the tui-
tion fee, it was brought out at the
council meeting. The proposal to
place the dues in the tuition, <or .at
least the requiring of their pay-
ment on the entering of college,
was inaugurated by the council,
and is now being considered join-
ly by the administration and a

to all those who enter the competi-
tion. The contest is open to all
rgraduates of the College of Archi-
tecture or those who have "com-
pleted in residence substantially(
the last two years of the four-year!
course." The announcement also
makes the stipulation that en-
trants must be unmarri'ed men
whose 31st birthday comes after
-April 12, 1930.
Good for One Year.
The award for the best design
submitted in the competition is the
sum of $1,200, to be'used to finance
a trip .'abroad for architectural
study. The stipend, says the an-
nouncement, "under present condi-
tions of exchange is good for about
a year abroad." Judgment of the
winner of the Fellowship is made
upon a basis of the designs sub-
mitted in the actual competition
and the quality of the contestant's}
'work while in school.
The competition will be based on
a time-limit problem. When the
programs are di'stributed on April
12, the entrants will be given 12
hours to make a preliminary
sketch of the design, this to be
done without .reference material.
No Help Permitted.
The problem is to be developedI
by the competing architects during
a two week period beginning Mon-
day, April 14. It is required that
all drawings be made without any1
criticism or help.
Those architects who intend to
compete for the Booth Fellowship
should communicate as soon as
possible with Professor Lorch.
George G. Booth, donor of the
fellowship, is well known as a jour-;
nalist and an art patron. He was
for many years managing director
and president 'of the Detroit News.
He was the founder of the Cran-
brook School for boys at Cranbrook,
Michigan.
The problem in last year's com-
petition was the design of a mu-
nicipal boat-house. The $1,200'
award was won by Frederick J.
Sevald, '29A, who is at present trav-
eling in Europe.
Architectural Society
Pledges Nine Students
Nine students have been pledgedk
to Tau Sigma Delta, international
honorary architectural fraternity,
according to an announcement
made yesterday by Paul F. Jerne-
:gan, '29A., president of the society.
Those architectural students who
have been pledged include Warrenj
A. Koehrner, '30, Lorne F. Marshall,
'31, Claude M. Gunn, '31, Floyd R.:
Johnson, '31, Marjorie G. McGuire,
'31, Albert W. Olson, '31, and Fred-
erick D. Rink, '31. Those from the y
department of landscape design
Who have been pledged are Charles
W. Smith, grad., and Elizabeth R.
Ralston, "31.I
The chapter at the University is
the Alpha chapter, the fraternity'
having been organized some years
ago at Michigan.

!t VAIVAAL U12G4U ultc 122ctgct Will tat 11V Way tliLittl ZVUitattlWtk 1.:1t CL ,7 .

Three Large Wolves,
Coyote and Bobcat
Received by Museum
Three large wolves, a coyote, and
the finest bobcat specimen in his-
tory are the latest acquisitions ofj
the University Museum. The wolvesi
were sent in yesterday morning
from Grand Marais, Michigan,
along with the coyote, while the
bobcat was taken in Marenisco,
Michigan and shipped here earlier
in the week.-
The bobcat weighs 33 pounds, 18
pounds larger than the average
specimen. According 'to Jimmy
Wood, taxidermy expert on the
Museum staff, the creature is one
of the finest acquisitions of the
year. State trappers were responsi-
ble for both catches.
During the year, several 'wolves!
have been sent the Michigan insti-
tution and within a few weeks
Wood plans to have completed al
new exhibit of Michigan animals.
The latest additions to the col-I
I lection weigh approximately nine-!
I ty pounds each, being larger than
the average timber wolf, The
largest ever brought to Ann Arbor
I for exhibit weighed slightly more
than 100 pounds.
Police Close "Theatre
Presenting 'Sex' Show
After running Tuesday night and
Wednesday matinee to audiences
composed of more than 400 wom-
.en, the Rae theatre's presentationI
of the stage show, "Married Love,"
a "For Men (Wtomen) Only" per-
formance was ordered stopped and
the theatre closed to that specificf
production by Chief of Police
Thomas M. O'Brien and Police'
Commissioner William L. Dawson.
The theatre, located at 113 West
Huron street, was closed Wednes-
day night after police officials had
received numerous . complaints
against the "indecent nature" of
the performance which consisted
of a lecture and stage exhibition of
girl models.

iON WATER SU PL
Urges Necessity of Cooperation
Between -Engineers and
Geologists.
SLIDES ILLUSTRATE TALK
Outlining the work of the geolo-
gist and engineer in furnishing the
water supply of New York City, Dr.
Charles P. Berkey, head of the ge-
ology department of Columbia Uni.-
versity and an authority on the'
subject of foundations for reser-
voir dams, addressed geology antid
engineering students at Z o'clock
yesterday afternoon in the Natural
Science building.
"Cooperation between engineer.
and geologist has become a neces-.
sity to construction, for knowledge
'of ground conditions must be ob-
tained by the engineer before work
can be started, on any important
project" said Dr. Berkey.
"The.geologist'is instrumental in
I keeping the engineer out of trouble,r
interpreting the ground conditions,
and in saving money. In turn the
engineers serves the geologist by
furnishing exact facts, and by de-
veloping the possibilities the ge-
ologist has found to exist," he said.
A complete set of slides demon-
strating the difficulties that were
fovercome by these two groups in
supplying water for New York City
was shown.
Dr. Burkey, who directed 'the
ground testing for the great reser-
voir constructed in the Catskill
mountains for this purpose, is rec-
ognized as an authority on the sub-
ject. He opened the 35th annual
meeting of the Michigan Academy
of Science, Arts, and Letters fol-
lowing the lecture.

ing students arose out

of a con- council committee.

STARTING
TODAY U R H
LIONEL BARRYMORE
IN
rii

Ii

SHOWS AT
2:00-3:30
7.'00- ~9;0

face of warnings that they would
be subject to penalties from their
unions. Every trade and industrial
union joined in the strike except
those connected with the utilities
and railroads.
Labor leaders insisted the strike
would be orderly and that every
effort would be made to conduct it
in a. peaceful manner. The only ac-
tion contemplated, by the police
was to prevent property damage
or personal violence.
Dr. Robbins to Speak
on Stamp Collection
Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant
to the president, will be the speak-
er on the fourth of a series of ex-
hibitions and lectures being spon-
sored by the Ann Arbor Stamp
Club. He will talk at the meeting
Saturday night at 8 o'clock in room
408 of the Romance Languages
building on "Cancellations on Unit-
ed States Stamps.",

pairs.
Games will be played in the Un-
ion lobby with cards furnished by
the Union. It will be necessary for
at least one man of each pair to
deposit his membership card at the
time of taking the cards out.
The rules to be followed 'are
those used by the American Whist
club of New York. No redoubling of
already doubled bids will be allow-
ed.
oilr
802 PACKARD ST.!
FILLET OF SOLE
OR
SALMON SALAD
OR
ROAST BEEF
WITH
SCALLOPED POTATOES
AND BUTTERED PEAS
35c

m44trQU-

The s,,ectacular underseas romance from Jules Verne's
ncvel! Two years to make!

famous

----------

I

G- "NOW!

You've never seen any thing like it, and you
again. Words fail to describe Ai.

never will

i

Also Splendid Added Bill

'TH14t- TURNF.
I-IOLmiff
A Conan Doyle's Story

Go on "shore leave"
with a dozen fighting
U. S. gobs.

: .

. . _ _ _ _
r : ...

: :. .. - - . . .

"He Did His Best" '
TALKING COMEDY
METRO NEWS PATHE REVIEW

NOW PLAYING
Myrtyl Ross Players
L IRST OFFERING
LYNN STARTING'S COMEDY
"eet The Wifte"
-i
New York and London Success
EVENING 75c-50c
MATINEES
T e te WED. .& SAT. 50c

STARTING SATURDAY
Now you hear the diminitive stars voice!

1 __

Suits that give $30.00 a new value
.'...
-
:. ::

t

I

I

Detroit Theatres

-1

WITH GILBERT ROLAND AND SPLENDID SUPPORTING CAST

a.
..

CASS THEATER
The Merriest Comedy Hit of the
S&ason!
"BIRD IN HAND"
BY _JOHN DRINKWATER
Youth and Lo,e at their 'Gayest,

raw.i
r

1

EE i- - - - - - - -

CONVOCATION

I

Rabbi Leo

M. rcanklan

And Hart Schadfner & Marx have put a
world of style in these clothes. Two and three
button models of University styles in all new
colors.

DETROIT, MICHIGAN
IN
New Altars and New Gods"
StundayEveni'g, march 23

'I

I

Extra trousers $6.50
Shirt Specia1
'00 value at $1.55

OP16004MMA ouqRr

II

Hal

1 t i

9

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