AGt TWo THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1931 Local Firm to Begin ress Building Work in June $68,385 *BID0WINS CONTRACT iN NE PUBLICATIO9N HOME Lovering and Longbotham Will Erect New Plant; Chicago Architects Made Plans. OVER 15 BIDS RECEIVED .Jniversity Buildings, Grounds Department Gets Contract for Additional Work. Work on Michigan's new $180,000 Press building will begin the middle of next June, Prof. Edson R. Sun- derland, chairman of the Board in Control of Student Publications, announced yesterday. The contract for the project has been awarded to Lovering and Longbotham, Ann Arbor contractors and builders who constructed the League building. More than 15 contracting firms presented bids on the general con- struction of the new building and the low figure offered by Lovering and Longbotham was $66,385. Pond, Pond, Martin and Lloyd, Chicago architects who designed the Union and the League buildings, drew up the plans and specifications for the project. ARCH ITECT S' PLAN FOR NEW PRESS PLANT TO BE BUILT NEXT SUMMER BUrDSCIBSIFARM ;3a( F A R, Business Adiinistration SchoolI Professor Writes Study of Country's Unit Banks. i Two publications will be issued next week by the bureau of busi- ness r eearch i. the basines ad- AUTHORITY H EAD BOARD N ARBOR TO HEAR MMPUS SPEAKERS, Student Problems of Religious Creeds to be Analyzed in Emphasis Week. (Continued from Page 1) , ly especially in China and Japan, At the present time he is director' of religious activities at North- Newspaper Advertising Named as Best Medium - A s- P (1 dIress) NEW YOR,, Feb. 18-Newspapers have outstandin advantages over other advr isin vehicles in speed and action and furnish the best medium for te rust company, Cha res H. M aho.assistant vice president of «he First National bank of Detroit, Tuesday told the mid- winter conference of the trust comp n v o American Bank- ;er', associtin BUILDINfI0lTHE BOARD INONTLOFSTUDENT PUBU ATION NN Shown here is a drawing by Po tects who designed the Union andI building, which will be started in Ju. of The Daily, Gargoyle, and the Mich linotyping equipment of The Daily. been awarded to Lovering and Long be supplied through these tunnels. The larger rooms of the interior will be finished with cork floors and with sound-deadening ceilings. The walls of the rooms will be of glazed tile and the floors of the staff rooms will be finished in patterned tiles. __re6AAN SR ca c ... pom E8 i3) nd, Pond, Martin and Lloyd, archi- League buildings, of the new Press ne. The building will house offices Ziganensian, as well as the press and The contract for the building has botham, an Ann Arbor firm. Others Present Bids. V- - N 1- _- I Teg ers contBtds . Because of the recent depressionC The general contract does not in- inthe business world the contracts Ash Wednesday Services Initiate iclude the plumbing, heating and were obtained at unusually advan- 40-Day Period of Penitence electrical work, all of which was tageous terms, Professor Sunder- in.Roan. Caholic Church awarded to the Buildings and land said. Roman, Catholc Church. Grounds department of the Ujniver- sity which is also doing such work Is Similar to League. (h, ,Associatd Press) in the new Legal Research build- The plans for the project call for ROME, Feb. 18.-Ash Wednesday, ing. Twelve firms bid on the plumb- a building similar in interiore ap- beginning of Lent, was ushered in, ing and heating and six bid on the pearance to the Union and the this morning in all Rome's 4001 electrical work. These contractors League. It is to be more than 125 churches, the priests placing the do not include electrical fixtures feet wide and will face on Maynard blessed cinders on the foreheads off and switchboards, screens, seeding street. the faithful lined along the altar and planting, and architects' fees. A metal cofferea cupola will rails. When completed, the building crown the two-story building over "Remember man, that thou art 'and the site on Maynard street op- the entrance, enhanced by the ad- dust, and to dust thou must re- posite the Helen Newberry resi- dition of leaded windows and iron turn," the officant recited, in Lat- dence, where the new building will grills. Stone ornamentation is pro- in, to each recipient of the sign of be constructed, will represent an in- vided for the entire structure and mourning. Solemn music featured yestment of more than $150,000 ex- the entrance will be on the north the few high masses sung. clusive of equipment. This entire end of the front of the building. Romans always turn out in good sum has been raised by the stu- The first floor of the interior pro- force for this initial service of the dents of the publication staffs dur- vides space for two offices, a com- penitential period, although Ash ing the last 20 years and the build- posing room, a paper store room, Wednesday itself is not a "holy day ing will be the finest of its type and the press room. Provision is of obligation," requiring attendance anywhcrce in the country. made for the installation of at least at mass. The day marks a lull in :exterior of Stone. five linotype machines and a Lud- all entertainment and general fes- The eterior of the building will low machine, used in the casting of tivity, to be broken only at "mezza he of cut stone and brick construe- the advertisements. quaresima," better known as mi-! tion and tUe interior will be almost Will Spend $20,000 for Equipment. careme, which this year falls on entirely fireproof. No wood is to be The second floor will be given Thursday, March 12. used in tie interior with the ex- over entirely to the ofiices of the ---- --------- - ceptlon of some of the doors and student publications. Two small Press building will be moved to the fittings. It will be provided with rooms and a large general office are new quarters. heat, light and power from the to be included. Work will be completed and the University heating plant through More than $20,000 will be s'ent building will be ready for occupa- the 'eating tunnels. Compressed for equipment for the new buildin'l'. tion by the fall of 1932, Professor air and hot water will probably also The flatbed press now'in use in the Sunderland stated. nminht? ion school, it :as an-; nouincecyestrda y. 1Thcy are ' .Man- agement of Unit Banks," by Prof. Charles L. Jamison, and "'A Prob- lem in Businees Policy." the fourth in a series of Michigan business cases. Professor Jamison's bulletin, con- taining a study of the management policies and profits of unit banks, is confined particuiarly to banks which are not members of the Fed- e r a 1 Reserve system, concerning which there is little other publish- ed information. He presents in the study a ser- ies of comments on standard prac- tices in unit banks, and gives aj detailed survey of bank revenuesl and expenses. The publication also, offers answers to such questions as, "How small may a bank be and! still earn satisfactory profits?" "A Problem in Business Policy" deals with the affairs of the Stod- dard Stove works, a company man- ufacturing ranges, showing a his- tory of twenty years of operation, ending in an operating d e fi c i t which requires changes in all de-I partnents of the organization. What's oing On THEATRES Majestic-Beatrice Lillie in "Arej You There," with John Garrick andI Baclanova; also "Laurel and Hardy Murder Case." Michigan -- Edmund Lowe and; Leila Hyams in "The Part Time Wife." Wuerth-Joe Frisco and Lila Lee in "The Gorilla." LECTURES Oratorical Association - Grand Duchess Marie of Russia on "My Old-World Background for a Mod- e-n Life," 8 o'clock, Hill auditorium. Univer'sity Lecture - Dr. Robert Hegner on "The Invisible Fauna of' the Human Body," 4:15 o'clock, Na- tural Science auditorium. Engineering Schoal -Prof. Boris! A. Bakhmeteff on "Advanced Hy- draulics of Open Channels," 4 o'clock, room 348, West Engineering building, and "Hydraulic Engineer- ing in Russia," 8 o'clock, room 445, West Engineering building. 4 tt Ij ,1 1 i C iestern univelrsity.He will be with TA COjMPLE TED the Wesleyan group. / TheHon. J. Stitt Wilson will be ON C L D HEAL TH at the Presbyterian church. He is ra graduate of Northwestern univer- Finidings of edical Scciuon of Asiy and is at the present time a prominent figure in the Labor party OOVe (oi 1rencc frdwn, in Great Britain. He is a former ' - mayor' of Berkeley. Calif. In connection with the period, WAS-INTON, Feb. 18. -Data Joseph A. Bursley, dean of students, from the lics of more than 177,000 said.childctin f'ueday will go under the "The program for Religious Em- microscope 01 the medical section ssoc?a ted (dshto phasis week cannot help having of the White I-louse child health James C. Stone good results. The fact that all the conference. Vice-chairman of t h e federal religious interests are combining in The physicians' group will gath- farm board, and noted authority the effort and that it has the sup- er here to draw its report to the on agriculture, who has been men- port of a considerable body of stu- residnt. ile other sections of the tioned as the probable successor to dents makes it significant." confetence already have turned in Alexander Legge, present head of The arrangements have been un- most of their recommendations. the body der the direction of three commit- Dr. Phillip Van Ingen of New Lees. They are one on student con- York, ehairmai of the committee tact which includes Rev. Allen J. for medical care, sid today the Babcock, L. F. Passmore,' F. W. group's work covered white, Negro Boesche. William Kand Indian children and their CKearLs, Alen health problems in all sections of Cheever, Katherine Wilcox, AlbertteUnedttts Donahue, Ruth French, Katherine the U oited tes wVan Zoren, Bertha Howard, Jane po dvihti el 56 il IU IYearnd, Byron Novitsky, Josephine , ---Stearn, and Edward Skae. uo our Negro citizens and the facili- Says oistoi Would be Pained is e Faculty relations committee ties to meet them, he said. It has b~ Man c s ofPt sis composed of Ralph R. Johnson,areotnhalhcdiosad by any Acts o Rssia Rober Reed, Josep Akau facilities among the Indians. Present Government. Peoples, Alvin N el le r Geraldine Grover, Gertrude Cook, George Al- RIGHT SPOT Tolsloi would be deeply pained by der, and Katherine McMurray. The iGH2 T ACKAR SPTEE many of the activities of the Soviet publicity committee comprises Rev. government if he were active in Howard R. Chapman, T. Hollister TODAY, 5:30 to 7:30 Russian social life today, is the be- Mabley, Donal H. Haines, Richard LIVER WITH BACON lief of Prof. Clarence L. Meader, of Purser, and Walter Wilds. HAMBURGER STEAK, FRIED the Latin department, who spoke ONIONS yesterday afternoon from the cam- STUFFED HEART pus broadcasting studio. ! evotees o Checkers, ROAST BEEF He would strongly condemn the l Chess Will Form Club ROAST PORK, JELLY imprisonment, exile and executions MASHED OR AU GRATIN whic tie SoietPOTATOES which the Soviet g o v c r n m e n t The formation of a University SPINACH OR PEAS thinks it necessary to inflict upon chess and checker club will be un-S A 5 E its enemies, he stated. Professor dertaken at a meeting to be held WE DFLIVE c PHONE 8241 its enemies, he stated. at 8 o'clock tonight in room 302 of "But when it comes to the eco- the Union. nomic ideals of the Bolsheviks, Students and faculty members, which involves the extinction of all those in charge said, would be eli- classes based upon economic ad- gible for membership. A constitu- vantage," he said, "it would coin- tion will be submitted and persons cide with the professed ideals, if interested in either game will be 2:00-3:40-7:00--9:00 not the aEtuol cundu?; of the So- given an opportunity of becoming NOW PLAYING vic't governmment." charter members. i k "r E STARTING TODAY 77 2:00-3:40 7:00-9:01 1' LILA LEE JOE FRISCO h77 '4 0 e ' Y. -;' - "l 4 . s. .I lot MlA Y 1 f' Y - ----------- t E3 Which is the larger of these IN Out go the lights. On go the thrills. In comes the gorilla. And up in the air go Mulligan and Garrity, the two detective nitwits who see all, hear all and know nothing. It's a riot of fun and mystery! QMI ARILYN MILLED in "SUNNY" two white squares? Don't trust to your eyesight alone. YOUR E MAY FOOL you BUT YOUR TA Sl r tells te7 E f / eW R A N D y'r t 5 THE uth! rLCAA I L D E R A b E TT E TA; Cast includes John Olga Garrick Baclanova Directed by Hamilton MacFadden EXTRA LAUREL & HARDY E I 5 MAL*= ,''' I