-14 M~ rHT. AN T).ATLYd FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1931 ' L llL .11\1'i M CTf ( 1. 1\ fL t" 1L L'+.arIDAY MrcARCN 0. fl V --AUV7 ~ - f- - - - -A -® w-r > ® - 1 BROTHERS FACES TRIAL IN CHICAGO FOR MURDEROF TRIBUNE REPORTER _.. .. _n.- --- ___ .. _. POND| TRAC FIRT Art Had Beginning SimultaneousI With That of Man, Says Noted Architect. CITES THREE ASPECTS Discusses Relationships of Greek, Roman, Oriental Styles of Construction. "Laying the Foundtions of Ar- chitecture" was the subject of the first of a series of our lectures{ FIRST ISSUE OF JOURNALIST PAPER TTI I T WILL DESCRIBE CAMPUSACTIVITIESM1 ||LEI Labot.ory Newspaper to Have to be printed this year. The idea t o r lour Pages of Featre, of a publication of this kind that [WnVYL News Material. would serve both as a laboratory paper for the journalism depart- U.S.S. Arizona Carries President Dee hoag some of the phases of ment and also as a means of dis- University activities and scientific seminating interesting facts about on Tour of Caribbean research that are of state-wide in- the University was originated a- Possessions. ter;t the Michigan Journalist, a bout seven years ago by Maurer OLD POINTCOMFORT, Va., Mar. laboratory newspaper published by wh atill organizes the work pub- 19-(P)--As batteries boomed from the University journalism depart- Thi issue of the Journalist will; ship and shore, the battleship Ari- ment will go to pre -s next Monday,beBt according to the state t ofnp be rinted at the office of theBat zona steamed out toward the Vir- tarr,to he on t W tle Creek Enquirer News. Each is- x Capes and th « Itis morn- who has charge of tesue is put out at the office of one g, carrying President Hoover to partment,ho of the state's leading newspapers, America's island possessions in the Four solid pages of news and in some nearby city. The Enquirer Caribbean. feature material will comprise the News is headed by A. L. Miller, The recently replodeled dread- issue with no space devoted to ad- graduate of the University of Mich- naught, the Navy's most modern vertising. The 30,000 words of ma- igan and former president of the fighting cryft will carry the Presi- E delivered yesterday by Irving K. terial which has been written by Pond, prominent Chicago architect, the students of four journalism in the audit or:um 01 3c arcnitec- classes has been assigned and su- tural building. In the talk, Pond discussed the growth of architec- pervised by the instructors in the ture through the ages and the bear- journaiesm department. News writ- ing it has had on civilization. ing, editing and copy reading, and "Architecture," he said. "was editorial classes have contributed to born with man because man has the publication. always necded shelter. The profes- It will be the first issue of eight sion might be said even to have -~ - started in the stone age when man first rolled stones in front of his cave to protect himself from ani- mals."p Spiritual Needs Cited. ----.Associated Press PhaJ Suspected for the murder of Alfred "Jake" Lingle, Chicago news- paper reporter, Leo V. Brothers (right), of St. Louis, is now on trial in Chicago. He is shown looking into the courtroom where he is being tried. Below is his mother, Mrs. Rose Jessen, of Webster Groves, Mo., with Elsie Mackacek and Esther Dick, friends. ' Micigan Press club. In the case of Monday's issue, a., well as of those scheduled for the rest of the semester, the members of the classes that participated in writing the material will make a trip to the city where fhe paper is' being printed and will be instruct- ed in many of the problems of pub- lication on the immediate scene of production. Those making the tri1 will have an opportunity to famil-! iarize themselves with various de- tails concerning the newspaper plant that they are visiting. DR. HAYNES CITES I BASIS FOR RATES (Continued from Page 1) including operating room, X-ray, special laboratory expenses, and other incidental fees. Otherwise the dent and his party through 3,000 miles of the Caribbo n to Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Arriving by train this morning from Washington,. members of the presidential party b re ak f a s t e d aboard their cars and we e mo- tored to the dock in Army auto- mobiles. As they reached the embarking point, the warship was but dimly visible through the early morninp: mists, although less than a mile off shore. The President boarded an admiral's barge and as the craft shoved off the Presid:nt's flag was run up the main truck of the Ari- zona. High overhead an Army blimp and two fast pursuit planCs circled the boarding party and as the Pres- ident strode up the gangway 21 huge bombers from Laneiy Field d d f A th ;,t tAsk to A .A Pope Pius to Honor First Arundel Peer ARUNDEL, Sussex, Eng., Mar. 19.-(P)-After 336 years, the skeleton of the first Earl of Ar- undel, who died in 1595, has been exhumed from the vault of an- cient Arundel Castle. Pope Pius XI requested the ex- humation for purposes of identi- fication in connection with plans to beautify the earl, a loyal Cath- olic peer of his day. In the presence of the Duke of Norfolk, a leading English Catholic peer; the Right Rev. P. E. Amigo, bishop of South- wark, and several priests, the body was identified from a cop- per plate on the coffin and parchments inside as that of 'Philip Howard, first Earl of Ar- undel." i Pond also reiated how the diner- gI LU1I .L i1L I L ent forms of architecture have been influenced by man's psychic_ and spiritual needs as well as by Dr. Plaut, Hamburg University, his need for shelter and hunger. Will Speak on Insurance Architecture, he added, took on a for Unemployment. three-fold aspect in its early de- velopment because of this. The first Dr. Theodor Plaut, professor at was that of structure alone as evi- denced in Greek architecture; the Hamburg university, Germany, will second was a superficial structure speak here March 30 on "Unemploy- as bakgrundillstrtedby heni ent Insurance and Its Effect on as a background- illustrated by the the Economic Position of Germany." Roman style, while the third, that Dr. Plaut stid oa anrmpnyti of s decoration, includes the c l economy according to the Ger- Arabian, East Indian and Roccoco man custom at Berlin, Munich, and types. Freiburg universities. He took the The architect went on to explain degree of doctor of political science how the different forms of archi- at Freiburg in 1912, after working tecture have been influenced by the under the famous e d u c a t o r, philosophy of the people to whose Schultze-Gaevernitz. countries the architecture belongs. For two years, Dr. Plaut took He illustrated this by the Grecian postgraduate work at the London column, which symbolizes man's School of Economics of Political resistence to fate, and the Roman Science. In 1920 he became lecturer arch, which is symbolic of power. at Hamburg university and was Illustrates Development. I advanced to a professorship in 1922. Pond described Romanesque style Dr. Plaut has conducted special as the best example of artistic en- researches in commercial policy, gineering in the world today. The banking, industrial problems, sta- Gothic architecture, he added, is tistics, and state finance. the culmination of the development from the Greek philosophy. He also illustrated the develop- ment of the Arabian, Moorish andl , Egyptian architecture by black- board sketches. -- JOEE. Progress in Engineers' I BROWNsk_ Dance Plans Reported__ I I I rats relowr ha th bllwoud 1on1e u )ot 01 al y)V. rates are lower than the bill would join in the Navy's welcome to the imit." chief executive. Dr. Haynes also claimed that the I The planes continued flying in kind of treatment demanded by the formation until 8ao'clock, when the more serious cases has justified the signal for the departu (,re wasiven. present rate. The presidential salute, 21 guns, The measure also would permit boomed forth and was answered by the probate judge to send any of the batteries of Fortress Monroe. his patients to any hospital approv- With the President were Secre- ed by the state health commission- tary Patrick J. Hurley and Ray er, with the same charge limit as Lyman Wilbur, whose departments proposed at University hospital. have supervision of the islands to Itemized statements of charges be visited; Lawrence Richey, one of would be presented to the probate his secretaries; Capt. Joel Boone, judge for approval before payment. White House physician; Capt. Rus- The bill follows an extensive in- sell Train, naval aide; Col. Camp- vestigation by Representative Hol- bell Hodges, military aide, and Mark b e c k i n t o University hospital Sullivan, political writer. T h e r e c.arges which, he said, he found were also 18 newspaper writers and "excessive." six photographers. FOREIGN STUDENT GROUP WILL TOUR' Hildner to Lead Trip Through, Five Michigan Cities. Rapid progress of the arrange- Plans for thl 1931 spring trip ments for the 1931 Slide Rule dance, through Michigan for foreign stu- to be held March 27 in the ball- dents have been announced by room of the Union, was reported '. f. J. A. C. Hildner, of the Ger- by Ben C. Lonsdale, '31E, chairman, ma> xartment, who is in charge yesterday. I of ai. ements. Thos., w:,ho go on the trip will' become familiarized with Michi-I gan's chief ildustries and inst.- tutions, as sec:. in the five cities, visited. Ace Brigode and his broadcast- ing orchestra, from Station WTAM, Cleveland, will provide music, for the dance, which will be sponsored by all classes of the engineering college. _ E m"Vil c Ex I I . III Il I II I A LA. 1/VI i - If- E J w-A- --W 7a t4 1