100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 25, 1931 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1931-03-25

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

IrHT7 MTruTr.AN

nATI V

WRT)NV.AnAV. MAP.(ITT 25. 1()1

1 1 T H fAN lA T VX~T1~'~hA ifAP(T~ ~1( 1 L:.j Iv 1 %--i 1 a L1 V U H 1L jI vvI, ar i ,Uvac4S

1' % rrl Orel p .1 1 l 1

Annomnc?:7

List

of

Illay

E

N aR PLeTIP
List Patrons, Patronesses, for

|

Autogiros Will Not Sup
Airplanes to Gr
Ponts Out Advantages, Faults,
Inherent in New Type
of Craft.

v
,e

Plant Conventional
eat Extent. Stalker Says I ha$ Goin on
I - -THEATRES
45 degrees, and with favorble wind
conditions can descend almnost ver- Majestic- Eddie Quillan in "Big
Ucally, or hover in the air. For these Money" with Robert Armstrong.
reasons, he explained, it will appeal M h i i g a n-"Royal Family of
to private fiyers an eg nners. Broadway" with ina Claire and
Professor Stalker predicted that Frederick March.

Annual Senior Law
Class Affair.
Preparations have been nearly
conpleted for the annual Crease l
dance, premier social function of
the senior class of the Law school, r
to be held Friday night in the Law- 1
yers club, it was announced last
night by Theodore C. Baer, '31L, E
general chairman of the event. I
Patrons and Patronnesses who
have been asked to the affair in-
elude President Alexander G. Ruth-j
ven and Mrs. Ruthven, Dean Henry 1
M. Bates and Mrs. Bates, Professor
Horace Wilgus and Mrs. Wilgus,
Prof. Paul Leidy and Mrs. Leidy,
Prof. Edwin C. Goddard and Mrs.

u cGetny ccnaide:able improvements will be)
x at nmade in the design of the autogiro,
'.e _t .eli tof iila E n regu twrd the attainment of a ship ;I
ar ar tlansportat n, Prof. E. A of the true helicopter type. Its
Stalke:, of the aeronautical engi- I principle, he said, is net especially
neerhig department, said yesterday. recent in origin, since it was first
Since the autogiro is inherently invented about 10 to 12 years ago.
less eficient than the conventional Explaining the operation of the
airplane, and in addition is more machine, Professor Stalker said
expensive to manufacture, it will that the function of the windmill-
probably never come into extensive like device which is mounted hori-
use, he explained. zontally over the body of the ship,
The main advantage of the auto- (is simply to furnish, by its revolu-
giro, Professor Stalker pointed out,' tion, the wind resistance which re-
lies in the fact that it can be made tards the progress of the craft. He
to maneuver and to land slowly, so pointed out that this windmill is
that the pilot has more time to operated by the currents of air
judge his handling of the ship. The passing over the vanes while the
modern autogiro can easily make a i ship is in motion, and that it is
safe landing at an angle as great as I connected in no way with the en-
gine. Lack of adequate control
Pharmacists to Visit mechanism, he said, is the chief
cause of the limitations of the auto-
Park Davis Company giro as it is today, although future
improvements in design can prob-
Students of the pharmacy college ably eliminate most of these.
will visit Detroit Friday to inspect
the plant of Parke Davis and com- UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO-
pany. A similar trip is made each Construction projects for 1931 in-
spring to some Detroit pharmaceu- elude a large field house, seating
tical house. A second trip to Chi- 7,000 spectators and having 50,-
cago will probably be made later in 000 square feet of floor space, and
the spring, Dean Edward H. Kraus, residential accommodations for 390
stated yesterday. students, available in October.

Auteg~e~, cithough1 they are dot-
nitely past the experimental stage
f i i l J l

W -. r t h-George O'Brien
Marion Lessing in "The Seas
neath."

and
Be-

Soloists
Limit of 300 Couples Nearly
Reached, According to
Committee Head.
With the sale Imited to 300,. al-
most all of the tickets for the Slide
Rule dance, the annual party of
the engineering and architectural
schools given under the direction of
the Michigan Technic, are sold, it
was reported yesterday by Jack
Spencer, '32E, ticket chairman.
The remaining tiets miay be se-
cured at any of the bookstores, at
the desk in the mnain lobby of the
Union, or at the offices of tie Tech-
nic in the East Engineering build-
ing. The dance is to be held from
9 until 2 o'clock Fia ngtin
the ballroom of the Union.
Ace Brigode and his fourteen
Virginians, popular radio entertain-
ers from Station WTAM in Clove-
land, have been secured to provide
the music for the affair.

I

4

GENERAL

Organ Recital-William Zeuch,I
4:15 o'clock, Hill auditorium.
Chamber Music-Detroit String
quartet; 8:30 o'clock, Lydia Men-
delssohn theatre.
Radio Today.
Prof. Anthony J. Jobin, of the
French department, will speaki
at 2 o'clock this afternoon on "AJ
Few Facts About French-Can a-
dian Literature." Professor Jobin
has recently completed a book
devoted to Canadian literature.

Goddard, Prof. Edson R. Sunder-
land and Mrs. Sunderland, Prof.
Ralph Aigler and Mrs. Aigler, Prof.
Evans Holbrook and Mrs. Holbrook,
Prof. John B. Waite and Mrs. Waite,
Prof. Edgar N.- Durfee and Mrs.
Durfee, Prof. Grover Grismore and
Mrs. Grismore, and Prof. Edwin D.
Dickinson and Mrs. Dickinson.
Others will be Prof. E. Blythe
Stason and Mrs. Stason, Prof. Ho-
bart Coffey, Prof. John Tracy,.Prof.
Burke Shartel and Mrs. Shartel,
Miss Inez Bosorth, Miss Lilly Kohl,
Prof. John P. Dawson anc Mrs. Daw-
son, Prof. Laylin K. James and Mrs.
James, Prof. William W. Blume and
Mrs. Blume, Prof. Homer F. Carey
and Mrs. Carey, Mr. and Mrs. T.
Hawley Tapping, and Mr. and Mrs.
C. W. Avery.
Kraus to Have Summer
Programs Ready Soon
The complete announcement for
the 1931 Summer Session will be
ready for distribution the latter
part jof the week, Dean Edward H.
Kraus announced yesterday. They
will probably be available in the
office of Dean Kraus some time
Thursday, and by Saturday they
will have been distributed to the
registration offices of all colleges'
in the University.
BRIGHT SPOT
802 PACKARD ST.
TODAY, 11:30 to 1:30
SALMON SALAD, TOAST
OR HOT VEAL SANDWICH
POTATOES
BUTTERSCOTCH CUSTARD
COFFEE, MILK
30c
5:30 to 7:30
PORK ROAST, APPLE SAUCE
BAKED STUFFED HEART
KAMBURGER STEAK, FRIED
ONIONS
7GETERIAN DINNER
C IEESE OMELETTE
MASHED, O'BRIEN POTATOES
STRING BEANS, TOMATOES
35c

A

I 1]

Among the Best and at
Reasonable Prices
F -NE- M AN'
D 'f I N I N G " 0" M
Lunches 40c, Dinners 60c
Sunday Dinner 75c
ONLY ONE BLOCK NORTH FROM HILL AUDITORIUM

:l lllltl ll llfi1 lillll l rall min i 11111111111111111 litum to a1111 t111111111 1111
is the rule that this strong and de- -
pendable institution always follows
. . . and that you follow when you
bank with us.
Checking and Savings Accounts
Invited.
arlm rs m& ochianics DankM Ak ftA
205 East Huron 330 South State Street
"Fifty years of Faithful Service"
k :11111111 t1I111illl 111111I1111u1111111111111111111;11111111111 ;,1~1 71111116111111.11111111111

I

-^--'

B

Complete Line of Everything Musical

e :, '

Unexcelled Baldwin Pianos
Victor Mirco-Synchronous Radio
Victor and Brunswick Records
Music Teacher's Supplies
Popular Music

LAST
TIMES
TODAY

e r t

2:00 - 3:40
7:00 - 9:00

UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE
William Wade Hinshaw
Devoted to Music

601 East William

Phone 7515

WE DELIVER

PHONE 8241

Rl

III

FOR
Of Ra IFKNOTSL
+lD. ew~.'.
Most styles just right for Sprang.
Many F lorsheims included. W e can fat you.
C P b59%) P grSTATE
F b4 S Jt E TREET

This is a
and true

brand new tale-a modern tale of the seas where men are tried
warriors-and women are beautiful, brainy spies.

I

. y .3 y J' y _ _____._. _ ______ ___.__ _ . ___ _ R

M4

Daily at
2.0"), 3:40O, 7.00, 9:00

NOW! GUARANTEED HIT!
A decidedly new picture story of a rollicking
racketeer with more nerve than common sense
and a streak of luck a mile wide.

9 n1,

I"

T
" r TES r T , _ '_. ..71

LAST
TIMES
TODAY

iwt-. -Yy ,
:,

I
lolk

It's Everybody's Racey
In most American homes it's a race-Ie-
tween Steady I.com:: and quick-stcpping Out-
o.
Realizing this, you carry life innsrince to
provide the income for your fa'nily in you'
stead.
How do you know, however, that it will
do so?
The simplest and surest way to provide this
- - - ---- . -- .- iT TEL12 NP T P-T

FREDERICH MARCH INA CLAIRE
MARY BRIAN HENRIETTA CROSMvAN
You'll recognize the nembers of this famous family of actors!
You'll howl with glee at this wild satire on their private life!
You eat with them-laugh with them-love with them-even take a
bath with Tony, the black sheer) brother hiding from a Hollywood scandal!
HONESTLY!

,OtEDDIE QUILLAN
ROBERT ARMSTRONQ4
JAMES QLEASON a
MiriamSeegar Margaret Li6ngston
--EXTRA ADDED--
Movie Memories
Glenn Tyrron in
LHappy Little Honeymoon

............
,,J K
®9 Z ^. s
t
:

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan