fl41' MT~1Z1T(~A~M flATES' SUNDAY. MAY 25, 193~ SCHENECTADY THEA?'E#? AUDIENCE HEARS FIRST TEST p ~flftflAhi epIrI1TI~TAnn Arbor children C ENS VS HECHEASE OF NEWLY DEVPAX)PED RAD!U T4~LE VISION ALL LfIWtflhI ~JUtLIIIIUI to Give Exhibition PLANS ARCTIC TRIP of Art During Week~OUE TO NAVAL BAN Art work by Ann Al bor children Study of Glacial Conditions to ~ from the city sci~ooi~ and Coast Cities Attribute Decline Occupy Major Work of New ~rcm the Univershy high school to Closing of Their Chief Polar Expedition. ~viii be on disphv next week in Industrial Plants. <1 hircl floor e h4ition roo n of -- WE~I7NER 1-lEADS GROUP the arehit ~ctura1 college. TI e dPi- (I V A~. wwh'd I rcss) play will he open to Uw P1 b ~ ~ WASHINGTON, May 24- The (lh ~'IAS0~ WICS I'I(X~) to 5 daily for the entire ~ much discus~ed s~i~Ject o~f naval UMANAK, ~astern Greenk nd- Th~ productions to ~ ~~. ~ ~- I ~i~rrnaxncnt even shows up in the The silent frozen ~vastes Of elude painting~, dr Wln~S, dl ~igns~ ee ort Rhode Is and, aceouni- Greenland are being penetrateti by g for a 9.3 per cent loss in the .~. ...,~ . . ~ ..,::~ :~::~ . an interpl~i band of German scien- tal)O.A ucs, linoleum bloc c wotk, tists who have just arrived, under pottery, metal work, and models in I past 10 years, pointed to the loss in personnel at the naval training the leadership of Prof. Alfred Isoap and clay. Part of these were station and to the decrease in civil- ...,~'...~ Wegener, meteorologist of the Aus- done by students of the junior and ian employcs at the naval torpedo trian university of Graz. senior high. schools, who have had station, the city's principal indus- J The Objt~t i~ to liwestigate training in art classes, but many trial establishz~ent. Newport lost ::::~.:::~w..~ 2 S25 inhabitants. The naval train- meteorological and geophysical PC- pieces are the work of elomentarvL .\...*.*. ~ v~larities of Gree~Xland. E~cept I school childi en a id were clone ~0f.~In~ station decreased from ~,S21 to th~e inaccesAbie Antarctic, Green- p iLid y dPi~1u '.atl, ~ hours.1 l,193 coasts, othev cities, On both ahd is thd o~rii'~ IfiTitOiy where & Anion~ the p~ mt. ng~ are severa looking to their navy establish- vast perrnau~nt ice cap exists. Its oik dh)ne by a fourth grade PUpil. nients, could aedount, in part, for ptes~nt condition of that oV north- The E~xhibit. which i~ beirg given' em ice A during th~ age. '~y im~itatIon of th~ Collegt~ of Arch- I percentage decreases. Greenland is one of the ~ e~tUVO, tinder th~ ~Ppet~lsion of Portsmouth, Virginia, which fell from 54,387 in 1920 to 45,353 in '1' ___ __ woids "cold air centers," me~- ~ ousaPh~ '~iblc. 1930, a 6 per cent decrease, lost Surements of temperatures and va- - heavily in navy yard personnel. In .~.::: .~: nations of air pressure are of th~ Drown ~ Rehuit Soon 1920, the navy had 7,638 men at framing r .*.~ *A. ..~. ~ . ~. ....~ greatest importance for j ~ Portsmouth. The present number ..~w .. .....~.~. ~ Atlantic weather forecasts. They ~ flN'~WNR -' I are indispensible if Greenland is I I Charleston, South Carolina,~ de- to become, as has been suggested ~rnf 0. ~. broWn of th~ Chemical easing from 67,957 to 62,123, Associated Press Photo Audiences witnessed thc fist television iadio talkie in a theatre at Schenectady, N. Y., recently. They a future half-way point for aeria ce ln~ departmeht.. will return ropped from 2,16~ to 502 men in* saw and heard an orchestra in Ihe theatre bcm~ led b~ a life size radio televi~on image ot its conductor. who transportation between America toner I b.iL~ , Oklahoma, 1her navy yard. whord ho t ePd ci h~ nitith an- I I wielded his baton in a laboratQry a few mIle9 di'stanl. 'u, lit, u~ eixcd the music of his men by telephone. The and Europe. 1 nat conv~nt1on of the Natural radio television instruments arc shown in the theati e Inset is Di E F. Alexanderson, radio engineer, who Movements of glaciers and ice- 'Uaso1i~ As~odA ~ of AmeriCa. I developed the television receiver - ____________________________________________________- bergs will constitute an important Prof. B 'o~'n, who has been Di- -_______ - or FIRE part of the investigation of Prof. rector of Research for the associa- [flflflf~ (~j~QjJ egener and his men. Previous I ton since 1926, has done consider-' fl ESCRIBED B Y RESEA H I measurements have shown that able work here on the proper use -- ~- --_____________ reenland glaciers move 100 times of gasoline in motor and aviation fl I than p glaciers; that is, fueL a report on the results of 111 LIVIUIJ ~ ATS ~ WORDK Aic Souce situated far above the earth, but sPeed exact measur- of Prominent men in the field of flflhl Lighuzrng Sto~rns with ~ ~ 30 he gave at the meeting. I OVER r nun IBITIUN of Many )5~res; Strikes ight in its midst. the time for look-out instruments must chemical engineoring and members Located and Charted. io do his best work. With the bolts for a whole ear The oil companies from all parts of j U. m n In I Pre-Convention Delegates A~ue Within the next few days Rich- 1iterally striking all around him, position 'the country delivered addresses. lvii tUb IU an for, Against Wet Platform he must carefully note the exact expedition plans to remain on the En~ertainn~ent was furnished by '"6 as Campaign Issue. ard E. McArdle, who will receive I local;ion in which they hit and for I inland ice ±or 18 i~~onths, and make the Natural Gasoline Supply Men's ______ 'his doctor's cu~gree irom the Uni- the next few days keep watch for 'observations at three bases: one _______ these I on the coast; one at the edge of a I Association COMMITTEEMEN RESIGN versity of Michigan this June, v ill ares to break out at these ~ glacier and one inland. American Foresters Station AIRRACER SPEAKS (again travel west to the Unite The latest instruments, adapta- (By ~4.~so jat d Pre.~) States Forest Experimental ~ tions of the echo-sounders used in Analyze JACKSON, May 24. - Wets and at Portland, Oregon, where he will TO AIRCRAFT CL U1$ easuring ocean depths, have been Occupations ___ taken I PRI CES continue his research work into the to ascertain the thickness of According to recent occupational drys clashed in the Democratic 'cause of forest fires. Edward hill, winner of the Gor- the Greenland ice cap. The heavi- I analyses of the alumni of the For- pre-primary convention here today In telling of his work in his see- don Bennett balloon race of 19~S est ice crust previously measured estry school for the years of UO1- as leaders fought to make prohibi- tion of our country's forests which and now of the Detroit Aircraft I here was 4,000 feet thick, and it 1930, taken at the request of the - I tion the dominant issue in the includes the states of Oregon and Corporation. spoke at the annual is believed that farther inland, the Society of American Foresters, it I I coming state campaign. Washington, MeArdle described the banquet of the Michigan Aeronau- thickness will be 10,000 feet. j was found that approximately one SUITS 2xtreinely rough nature of this tical Society in the Union. Dr. M. S. Pittinan of Ypsilanti, Whether the weight of this pro- I graduate out of flv~ Was employed the keynote speaker, voiced an mountainous country and explained lull was one of the designers of digious mass of ice has pressed in the United States Forest Service. TOPCOATS the resulting varied weather in I the ZMCD, first all metal airship, the land down to sea level, or even I ardent appeal for continuance and It further shows that 66.9 Per cent enforcement of the eighteenth compargitiyely small sections as one I bonatriicted at Grosse Isle, and below it-the natural process in of the graduates aie connected Mirad.eaned and amendment. Opposed to him were of the chief difficulties in learning stated that, "LP~hter than air Scandinavia during the ice age- with fdrestiy and lumbering, while party leaders who were determined jf and fighting forest fires. transportation will supplant all will be sttidied. 33.1 per cent are either in other I Valeteria Form the Democratic ticket must stand "It can be fair weather in one jther forms in the near future." ____________- I lines of work or have not been Pressed upon . away, on the other sid of the her first annual "Air Week" April moist or wet platform if it' place," he said, "and three miles Ther' were about 50 present, a~l I SEATTLE (AP)-Seattle will hold I heard from recently. hopes for success this year. mountain there can be a light hree sectioPs of the society, Glid- Cash There was a meciwy o~ OpInion fling storm. Nothing can be done ~r, Motor Ship, and Balloon, being, 21 tQ 28 to acquaint residents of I and among the four hundred delegates to fight this frequent fire source rep.esented. I the Pacific Northwest with the ad-j gathered here. Some favored re- ether than to co-oper te with the ~±r. Donald Walker, president of vances made in aviation engineer if tarry peal of the prohibition amendment, weather bureau and notify the for~ ~he National Glider Association ing and designing during the last C4led for and some modification and some en- est rangers of any approaching ~ P~~~l~~* feW years. . I forcement, but the majority ap- storms. 5~#'~ Delivered peared to be convinced that the Another source of difficulty in Democrats must come out for a flii~ fir~ ~o'h1ino k lim ~tr~no~p nn- . ~. i ~ . t ~1 i I ~JL 1,L1~ .L'.J L~JIU~ IjiUli * .L ~ ~hcal Hillel debating team placed second in the national Hillel debat- ing league of eight foundations, losing only to Ohio State and West Virginia. Indoor and outdoor athletic con- tests have been sponsored with the cooperati'on of the Intramural de- partment of the University uiider the direction of Irving Feldman. I3aeketball, baseball, tennis and bowling leagues conducted tourna- ment play, awarding medals to the team Winners. CoiwentiQn Here Last Year The Michigan chapter of the na- tional Avukali society was also sponsored by the foundation. Aft- er holding the nat~onal convention here in the summer of last year, the society completed a program that ~'ieatured appearances of Maurice Samuels, who spoke on the riots in Palestine, and of Fred Butzel, prominent Detroi~V philanthropist, who spoke on Jewish youth. Hillel Players, the campus' fourth student dramatic organization, arose from the former dramatics oonimittee of the Foundation, pre- ~enting 'Caponsacchi" as its initial 'contribution to University dramat- ~cs. They will produce Ludwig Lewis~ohn's newest work, "Adam," May 27 and May 28, in Sarah Cas- well Angell Hall. Rabbi Adolph Fink, in Ann Ar- bor since the foundation's inception 'four years ago, directed the Foun- r~1~jAY~ *~hc,1- hon 1~ffriv,'iQ 7.urc11ino~ SALtAVA.J. V4A~* V .tAt4tA. .A.VJAJSA. 4J t..d V9 .A. .*SflS~~ '32L, as its president. change. The Republican party was ____________________ charged by spokesmen with being FAJANS TO TALK . "too cowardly" to face the issue. HERE ON MONDAY f Rumors that the Demociatic or- ganization was disrupted by mv- I pending indebtedness were dispell- Dr. Kasimir Fajans, internation- I ed by the appearance of William ally renowned scientist, will speak I A. Coinstock, national committee- to University students tomorrow at I man, who has tendered his resig- 4:15 in room 303, Chemistry build- I nation, Horatio J. Abbott of Ann ing, on "Photochemical and Analy- Arbor, former chairman of the tical Applications of the Theory of state central committee, Henry Deformation of Ions." Heinman, resigned chairman of the Dr. ~Pajans' scientific research I central cimmittee, and other party work has been varied, and he was chiefs. the first to point out radio-active Comstock and Fernsdorf, both of transinigrations. He has been I whom have carried the Democratic working on thermo chemistry, and standard in many campaigns, in- on the theories of solutions and i sisted they would not be condidates of chemical forces from the stand- for any office this year. Similarly, p9int of chemical structure. He is 1 William H. Loutit, executive chair- the editor of a journal of chrystal- I man of the state conservation coin- lo~raphy, *'Zeitschrifht fur Kris- I mision ,and John W. Minor, mem- taW~raphie," as well as author of ber of the state prison commission, a book on radioactivity published I asserted they would not care to in 1919. 'have places on the Democratic Dr. Fajans is an active fellow of ticket. There had been talk of seVeral European academies, as well Minor for senator and Loutit for as an honorary fellow of the Karl- governor. Minor did say, however, sruhr Chemical Society and of a that if he was drafted he might Spanish society of chemistry and run. lie is a staunch opponent of phySIcs. prohibition. Coininuous IT 'L' D rI~ NOW Shows ~J *~ 3~j j SHOWING I :30-11:O0 LOUIS liii CONRAD WOLHEIM liii NAGEL ture in which fires suddenly flain~ up. They may smoulder in a small section for days at a time and then suddenly, with almost no warning, become raging conflagrations with aamcs leaping hundreds of fe~:t into he air and moving at a terrific pace. The work of the lookout is not always one of the most peaceful nature. For day he may have ~othing to do other than to cook, ~is meals and carefully scan the surrounding country at short inter- vals. Then suddenly a lighttiing I sto~'m may break and he finds him- I self not below it, these perches are 802 Packard 5:30 to 7:00 STUFFED PQRK CHOPS CREAMED N~W POTATOES ~3UTTERED PEAS OR FRUIT SALAD WITH CREAM CHEESE SANDWICHES 35c LJxarnon~7Is, Watcfles, ~..Aocis, jeweiry High Grade Repair Service 1~ Send a gift witI~ j your blessing as sh I VISITING leaves school for th CARflS AM) ANN(MflJCPMFNTS II world. For Graduation Personal Stationery $2.00 Box 2~..~.. 1111 South University Ave. 9-- PLEASE NOTE THIS ATTRACTION PLAYS TI-{RU MON. ONLY CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES TODAY 1:00, 3:00, 4:50, 7:00, 9:00 P. M. Creepiest, Wooziest~ Funniest of all the Mystery Romances!