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March 01, 1931 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1931-03-01

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SUNDAY MAiR,1, 1931

THE FMICHIGfAN DfAILY

'- a as a.. ara. a vaa a viz a. as

A _
oouuP~i RotRSDETROIT YE RANS)
FOR LOAN PAYMENT

ACOUSTIC IEXPERT
TO LECTUiE HERE
Dr. William B. White to Offer
Description of Music in
Noises of Cities.

PAIkREAE
r RIMA E

1 Jws From ther Colege
L 4

City Starts Arrangements

forI

Arrival
Gold1

of American
Star Women.

Applicants in Line Night Before;
7,500 Waiting at Offices
by Twelve O'clock.
ISSUE MONEY AT ONCE
Many Former Soldiers in Need,
Persons Taking Charge of
Registration Find.
(By Associatd 1Pres)
DETROIT, Feb. 28.- With $800,-
000 made immediately available by
Washington to the local office o
the Veterans Bureau for new o103
on veterans' adjusted, compensa-
tion certificates, employes at the
bureau were working at top speed
today filing, and passing-on appli-
cations, the Detroit News said to-
day. First checks will be issued be-
fore the day is over, it was an-
nounced.
Veterans stood all night in line
before the bureau's offices at 318
Jefferson avenue, gathering at 10
p. m. Friday. At 8 a. m. today there
were 2,000 waiting in a disorganized
crowd and the need for additional
quarters being apparent, authority
was received to use the Armory at
Lamed and Brush streets for this
purpose. At 11 a. m. there were 7,-
000 waiting at the Armory.
100 Men at a Time.
At first, 100 men at a time were
allowed to enter the Armory where
12 clerks assisted them in making
out note forms or application
blanks. These were tossed into bas-
kets, later to be transported to the
Jefferson avenue offices for check-
ing.
At 11 a. m., however, the doors
were thrown open for as Inany vet-
erans to enter as could get into the
big room, to keep them from stand-
ing in the cold.
Bureau officials were unable to
say when the checks would cole
through for the majority of today's
applicants.,
Majority in Need.
Most of those in line said they
were in urgent need of money, but
one man said that he was seeking
a loan because the interest rate is
42 per cent and he hopes to in-,
vest it for a return of 6 per cent.
Bureau officials,have urged those,
not in immediate need of money to
wait for 30 days before making ap-
plications so that the most urgent
cases may be taken care of first.,
Lloyd H. Jamieson, chief of the
personal service section, said that
most of the men in line today had
obtained loans previously and are
now applying for a second loan.-
These need no identification but
veterans applying for a first loan
must have credentials.
Thousands Expected to Apply.
Although the men are to be regis-I
tered as fast as possible, the thou-
sands who are expected to apply
will probably have to wait several
weeks for their money from the
loans, Luther E. Ellis, regional
manager, said.
Senator Vandenberg, in a tele-
gramrxeceived by Charles 4. Schultz,
department commander of the
American Legion, also urges veter-
ans to be patient in their demands
for the loans.
Senator Warns.
"One warning should be uttered
immediately to veterans," Senator
Vandenberg's telegram read. "It Will
be really a staggering administra-
tive task which we are putting up-
on the Veterans' Bureau and I am
afraid it will be some time before
the bureau can complete the organ-
ization necessary for making these
new loans."
RICHARDSON SPRINGS - The
advance guard of the Detroit Tigers
have already reported to the train-

ing camp here where they will im-
mediately start drills for the Amer-
ican League baseball campaign.

Using a projection osso, a unique (13v Associated 1P'css)
singamprojectikossoaunue PARIS, Feb. 28.--Paris is brush-
instrument which picks up theing up for the second pilgrimage of
sounds made by a singer or instru- United States gold star mothers
mentalist and projects them on a and widows who are due to arrive
screen as moving lines of light, Dr. in the French capital the latter
William B. White, director of a- part of April.
coustic research for the American. A skeleton staff of United States
Steel and Wire company, will ill- army officers was left herolast fail,
ustrate the points in his lecture after the last party of mothers and:
at 4:15 o'clock Monday afternoon, widows sailed back home. This
!in Natural Science auditorium, at- stafr has been busy all winter mak-
tempting to answer the question, ing arrangements for the coming
"Is Noise Scrambled Music?" season.
The apparatus will be used to W~hile the first pilgrimage lacked
show how musical tone is produced few things, there were small diffi~
and especially how all sounds, par- culties which the army officers aref
andespcialy ow ll ouns, ar-trying to smooth out. The general 1
ticularly the most complex kind, tryingat .sioth. out. he rl
which we denominate as noises, headquarters in the Champs-Ely-
are composed of simple sound ele- sees will remain the same this year
as it was last,, with Col. Richard
ments, each of which is in itself a Ts of thCrm. cors
simple form of. musical tone. Dr. T. Ellis of the quarsistemLer corps
White will show the audience how agGin in charg assisted by Lieut.-
the most unpleasant noises can be Out in the provinces, caretakers
analyzed into scrambled mixtures of the American military cemeter-
of musical tone. The tones, he will of he Aern miltryugemete
sh o w, would produce agreeable ies have been busy throughout the
musical results if they could be re- minterp lanting seeds and reset-
msortedcanprotpey cold er~e~ ting flowers to enhance the appear-
sorted and properly combined. . ances of the scrupulously kept bur-
Dr. White plans to illustrate in
in olro d

CENTRALIED LUEliN: PLATNNED
UNIVERSITY OF WEST VIL-
GINIA-Plans ha; been submit te
:nor erganie uyn mogfa-
ternitics. In viewof t esen
economic situation, campus lead-
ers feel that something should be
done to aid conditions on the cam-
pus. One plan wvhich has been sub-
mitted would have stores deliverj
groceries to each fraternity, charg-
ing 10 per cent above actual coats.
MINNESOTA SURVEYS . ELOiN
UNIVERSITY OF MiNNESO -,
A recent survey macd here showed
the prevalence of 17 religions on
campus. Those having the Agea
number of members were Luther-
ans, Catholics, Methodists, Presby-
terians, Congrigationalists, and
tJews, respecti vely.
EAGKETBALL HEAD SUGGESTED
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY-Due
to the inability of the referees to
stop the charging tactics of Colum-
bia's baskeetball opponents, which

has raie in the ijury of ole of
Columbia' t r players, an aium-
ni has aget d h apoatent
the roCon of the court ofeial
;o tht there may be unpreudce
decisions and consequent stopping
of the presentr t
UNVEZ TY 0? WEST VIR-
GNI'0pcion to the annual
beauy cn wa vced here b
the univi publicaon
Monticola." It woul sb ute an
ideal girl student, to be cholmsen o
the basis of scholarship, itie,
and personality, and to be known
as the "Ideal West Virginia Cirl."
B'ercovici, idrman Gn
Aut or, Ccdl M -
Racket 'Crying Evil'
(Dv Ass wtcd I're ss
NEW YORFb 8.-Kna
B ercovici, R u m anabn. . ah or
was in a pointing-out mood today
and pointed out the music racket
as a crying evil.
Ile is publishing a novel aboutI
this same racket. One of the char-
acters sings and eats like Caruso.
T'{s character 1., blak-ma led l b

Associated Press Photo

Rep. Isaac Bacharach,
Of New Jersey, who sponsored
the compromise bonus bill in Con-
gress that recently passed o v e r
President Hoover's veto.
TOLD FIC pLS[
Inquiry Into County Scandals
Merits Further Evidence'
Says Prosecutor.
(By Associated Press)
TOLEDO, Feb. 28.-The Lucas
county grand jury today pushed its
inquiry more deeply into the affair
of county offices.
The situation in these offices, as
indicated by evidence so far assem-
bled by the jurors, "merits further
investigation," the jury declared in
a report accompanying indictments
against Sheriff Joe Zimmerman and
Clarence E. Honberger, d e p u t y
sheriff, which were returned yes-
terday.
County commissuiers and the
county auditor were critized sharp-
ly by the jury for "gross negli-
gence" in their alleged failure to
examir e carefully bills rendered
for payment.
Sent back to its inquiry with a
vigorous warning from Judge James
Martin to observe strictest secrecy,
the jury today resumed its scanning
of bills and receipts of these other
offices.
Meanwhile, P r o s e c u t o r Carl
Christensen and his staff are busy
with the drafting of additional in-
dictments reported to have been
voted Tuesday against other per-
sons in connection with alleged
irregularities in the sheriff's office.
County Officers Plan
Strict License Drive
Washtenaw county and Ann Ar-
bor authorities will strictly enforce
the law against the use of 1930 li-
censb plates, beginning today.
The deadline for last year's
plates was midnight Saturday. Be-
ginning today, Sheriff Jacob B. An-
dres and Thomas O'Brien, chief of
police, will arrest motorists violat-
ing this section of the motor code.
The secretary of state's office
and other departnents have served
notice that no extension of time
will be granted. A two-month ex-
tension had been previously grant-
ed by authorities at Lansing.

PAGE Tm4
~D flTALK
Spec y Sociology Department
F i er ,eatures Today's
Radio Broadcast.
Dr. A'thur E. Wood, of the sociol-
ogy department, will speak to par-
ents and teachers in Michigan on
"The Modern Family" at 5 o'clock
this afternoon from the campus
broadcastig studio. Charles Ru-
genitz will present the musical
numbers for th program.
The third of the series o lessons
in the of band instruments
will be broacast M\onday afternoon.
Mang a -Acre Woodlot Pay"
sbect discussed Tues-
day by Prof. Leii J. Young, of the
forestry school. Prof. John C. Bri-
er, of the chemical engineering de-
partment, wil speak Wednesday on
"The Developmnent and Use of Non-
shatterable Glass."
Dorothy Beise, of the physical
education department, will discuss
soime phase of her work during the
Thursday boadcast.
Two medical talks, accompanied
by a talk on colution, will mark
the Miciga Night program which
goes on the. ar at 7:30 o'clock each
i Saturday nt. Dr. Urdo Wile, of
I the medical s ool, will take as his
topic A fes Foot." Prof. Henry
Fied, Jr., o te medical school,
will discus "Dietary Propoganda."
"The New Evomt.on" will be the
third topic to br discussed by Prof.
Franklin ShuH, of the zoology de-
partinent. TI Men's Glee club
umder the drection of Arthur Hac-
kett will present the musical num-
bers.
'The projection osiso, to be used
in the lecture, was developed col-
1 boraivel by the Westinghouse
le tc ny and the American
teel and Wire company.
ILLINOS R11EIVES GIFT
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS-This
university was one of the 100 in-
stitu[ions to receive a facsimile of
the Gothic Silver Codex, a Bible
writt en in hand by fourth-century
monks. It was a present of the
Unive _.ty of Upsala, Sweden, where
tie riiul s eld

Debaters Oen Season
Against Ohio Weselyan
V rsity debaters will begin their
regular schedule for the second
sempSgtertm hnnrnz xbnq- f

his lecture the way in which the r.~ laqca eevc asCrs
scientific study of the noises of our firmative team meets Ohio Wesley- ciacques, as Bercovici says Caruso
scie tifcssudy of t eeniseCof ourwas.
civilization, which is now being un- S.C.A. Issues New Call an in the intermediate school at
dertakenTin many large cities in the r t Jackson, under the auspices of Young aspirants to opera and'
interest of health, comfort, and ef- for Freshman Tryou Jackson Junior college. the concert ,platform are muleted,
interest of health, coort and e FJackn Comi '31W ert lie asserted, by predatory teachers
ficiency, can be a p p ro a chedcI rsmnn ohooe h Franklin Coniins, 'v1, Wilbert anmnges
SFreshman and sophomores who Hindm an, ',,' and managers.
through research on musical tone. wish to try out for committee posm- iciman, 33., 'r3, and Leonard
Ina.fnlanlss fhi aah insnth udnCrsiaa- Kimball, '33, will represent Michi- Estimating the nu mber of vocal
will project on the screen a se ta,.he tiont tent Chrstianas-gan. There will be no decision in teachers of NTw York alone at
of still views to illustrate the ries seation activities program will the contest. James -1. McBurney 2,000, he expressed a belief that
point. meet at 4:00 Tuesday in Lane hall, of the speech department, who i' not 10 of themi were coinuetent. He
Many curious sound-wave pictures according to an announcement . .'. ha 0
made in the laboratory and on the made last night by Morton Frank, in charge of debating activities for said th'ina t andis opay tlbute
streets of cities will be shown in '33, chairman of try-outs. the t eam.c -o as thonyasts without s
the -eis pany the team. long is the monoy lasts without
e series. Men reporting will be addressed getting very far toward a concert
In a group of easily intelligible by Fenelon Boesche, '34L, president icareer. y
experiments, Dr. White will show of the association, and Lyle Pass- Buffalo Art Director careerdghter Raa studied six
at the beginning of the talk the more, '33, student secretary, who to Hi 1S years in ,Paris conservatoryun-
physical secret of tone quality. He will outline the purpose and work ____dder co' petent teachers, he said,
will give elementary explanations of the organization. The freshmen Significant aspects of the mod- and then was unable to get a New
of how sound is produced and pro- will also learn of the promotion to ernistic movement in art, and their Yor' hearing unless she paid ex-
pogated. offlices. relation to other movements in the orbitant managerial fees.
past will be discussed by Dr. WVil- "Mr experience has been such,"
NEW SPANISH PREMIER IS ADMIRAL, lam M. Hekking, director of the he said, "that aitheugh she is an
STAUNCH LOYALIST,FIEDOKNGet asd' '" re'i sNa*"l
,r ; uf I ,in a xc (n iie, e r vr i ST A U C ,L Y L S ,FI?IE N D O F KI NA G lecture sponscred by the e arts I As i i , sh has turned to h t
department, at 4:15 o' loek Tues- story witin"
Juan Jznar Refuses to Formulate has not been prominent in politics day in Natural Science auditorium. The teachers, Bercovici said, "e-
Program in Advance; Labor during recent years. D. Hekking is noted both as a tort advance fecs, part of their
A pliti fiedi s h critic and as an artist. He has won uromi-e bein; the use of influence
MinisterIs; oWealthY.pr of labo, the Duki of M is- rcogniin as an export in deter- vith concert managers and iim-
It is his fst post, al hough he nng the autnenticity of the presarios"
c1rorks of the early American paint- The minimum tringfeeiS
MADRID, Feb. 2.--Admiral Juan coutld have been a minister fomI3 '
Bautista Aznar, Spain's new premi- many years if he had chosen. i a articularly those of Gilbert r a 20 nute lesson. The maxi-
er, is not given to bombastic politi- father was Don Antonio Maura,
cal pronouncements. He has said former premier, and his brother, shiel.IA"iglsaSoaitladr
And he added that he is not He is one of Spain's outstanding-
given to talking useless words nor I literary and intellectual figures and
to formulating programs before he ineiiber of the Spanish Royal Acad-4-
has had time to study them and emies of History and Language. -
determine whether they are prac- Recently he wrote a history of
tical. the dictatorship, in which he bit- !1,
He is the oldest ranking officer terly attacked Primo de Rivera and
in the Spanish navy and always has these who aided him while he was.
had a marked affection for King in p' wer. He is 52 and very wealtny
mulate a program to head off Sltunnts Demand Rooms. Soi 'at atherine)
threats of another military dicta- -- -
torship and restore political stabili- NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY A
ty to the country. -Women students here demanded
Although a staunch royalist, he that the University provide sine
is known to have liberal tendencies. ing rooms for their use at a mars o rig evc..... 11:00 A. M.
Despite his personal popularity, he meeting late last night.
_ _ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ em- Sei :;-rvx-ce.....7:45 P. M.d

i
iE

Itici Advertisementif

II * ~ K? (~.iruit ourts?
I II cati~i ccto Who's

. ____.. l

s
_. .. _z :, , , ... .. ,s _. ,t- -, _.. ., . _ a. ..ter: _ _,_

the
den'
40
its
open,

I

By the author of "Humanist Religion"
Curtis Reese, Dean of Abraham Lincoln Center of
Chicago will deliver his last lecture this morning on the
topic, "Changing Goals in Religion."
You should not fail to hear this foremost leader
in the realm of humanist religion.
UNITARIAN CHURCH
10:45 a. m.

III

1

--_--_
I
3
'

I!lI

i

Buy your films where you are
sure the stock is always resh.

'il

11

ii

AnouncementExtraordinary!
Definite arrangements have finally been made with
The Theatre Guild, Inc., forihe presentation here of !
Eugene O'Neill's Epochal 9-Act Drama
"STRANGE INTERLUDE"
atthe
WHITNEY THEATRE, M6N% MARCH 16
Enih peesanace-etar#.sr pfy atT.0'. At ,7:40 the
iu dnefr ntestss iln t 9. The nnai curtain descends
t 11 p. m. Lste comrers are seated only between the acts.
SCALE OF PCES-

_- - -
21 DAYS TILL SPRING
Now is the time to get those
SPRING COATS

Bring your films back t
eXpert devlopin.

I

s r

S ( ffers? The jury?
jv 'v'Witnesses? Who
ta?'[ar-andno one
_tm' v-. theway,-we've
x1 cooperate". Now
1! t ttV' aord. When a
ju~ji n~l Inc prosecutor,
'j f". lzc shecrif f, or
ofHIS court,
clrcs, or orders
si to fill'outth"co-operat-
resoec ive person.
Sid frcmo L'ta conoperate with
n1, you. know, the
ral;noreason
lwsa hnIandsa d I
werd phn'yof it, woidence;ra
ho 'mstyutoifill o ut heptec
c aiii eltte empha-
I;!f very pleasant
n. tip. Generaly stopped it
os aMore to tell: but
univ c 'i- Wwant:well first
c <_ nzawith a back-
is hout that
n thsuraeme Court;y
heatie-e
/. ' .- donotrea a single
ave dawn eing held
with bettmng,
a en reverse
aim ~ myrecord. i'rn
LI r 'rug ry services. And
II . ro don't
uer a
on s niohy. fsmt
amai to deciad a

Cle
Men's Top
Coats
Cleaned, Pressed
75c

aned-Pressed

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Ladies'
Plain
Coats
$1.00

a

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.6 _. . i .ln9 ;
..

Orchestra, entire.
Balcony, first four rows.
Balcony, next four rows

.$3.00
*$2.50
* 2.00

4~nrrwwniC ernyet.

made by competent and
epcC ')ritCYS.

experi -

El

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