OAC"E EIGITT PAEEGT'~TI11I.JTMICMTI~CAN D AT L mm ......,. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a. m. Saturday. VOL. XLI. SATURDAY, NOV. 8, 1930. NO. 36 -. SBSON ADVANCES CURE FOR PRESENT Offers Advertising on Greater Scale as Infallible Remedy. FINDS STIMULANT NEED Calls Prescription Wiser Policy Than Increase in Public Works. AUTHOR OF 'MAIN STREET' HONORED ____ _ NOTICES Medical and Dental Students who have not been able to secure their identification cards may call for them on Tuesday, November 11, between 12M. and 1:00 p.m. or between 5:00 and 6:00 p.m. Please call at Room 4, University Hall. J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information: The Bureau will hold its annual registration for teachers in 201 Mason Hall next week, Monday through Friday; hours, eight to twelve and one-thirty to four-thirty. After Friday the 14th there will be a late registration fee of one dollar, to be paid at the University Treasurer's office.1 Graduate and undergraduate students, alumni, and faculty members are eligible for enrollment. Candidates for advanced degrees should enroll next week, as well as the undergraduates, and complete their records early. The Bureau has oppcrtunities to place well qualified persons in colleges, normal schools, and universities as well as in public school positions. Hygiene Lectures: Names of freshman and upperclass women who have missed one or more hygiene lectures have been posted in Barbour Gym. Will all those attending the lectures please check their attendance with these lists? Make-up assignments have also been posted. EVENTS TODAY Aeronautical Lecture: Mr. Kennedy, of the Boeing School of Aero- nautics, will present a lecture, with moving pictures, portraying methods of modern aeronautical training. This lecture will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1042 East Engneering Building, and is open to the public. Aeronautical Society: The lecture by Mr. Kennedy, of the Boeing School of Aeronautics, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1042 East Engineering Building, and a film depicting Boeing School Training activities should be of interest to Aeronautical Society members. Michigan College Chemistry Teachers Association Meeting. Morning Session, 11:00 a.m. Room 122, Chemistry Building. H. N. Cole: Qualitative Analysis Without the Use of Hydrogen Sulfide. Dr. L. C. Anderson: Some Uses of the Spectrograph in Organic Chemistry. Luncheon: Wom- en's League Building, 12:30. Afternoon Session, 1:30 p.m. Room 1041, New Physics Building. Dr. N. H. Williams: Measurement of Charges of Electrons and Ions. The music committee for the Junior Girls' Play will meet at 2 o'clock today, i'n the W. A. A. office in the League building. Chemical Engineering Students: Football smoker. Returns by radio, Room 3201 East Eng. Bldg., 1:30 p.m. Acolytes: Prof. Etienne Gilson of Paris will speak at a special meet- ing at 3:00 p.m. in Room 202 S. W. Junior Class Hockey Squad: All members please report at the Wom- en's Athletic Building at 3 p.m. for a game with Detroit City College. The Ongawa Japanese Players will present a program of songs, legends, and dances of the Far East tonight at 8:30 in the Lydia Men- delssohn theatre. They will include a play, "The Fox Woman," of parti- cular interest to all students of literature and the drama. The Wesleyan Guild. The first event of the Outdoor Club is scheduled for today. Come prepared. There will be a small charge for food. Leave Wesley Hall at 3:00 o'clock. Upper Room Bible Class meets at 7:00 p.m. in the Upper Room at Lane Hall. The "Upper Room" Forum meets Sunday morning at 9:30. All Michigan men are cordially invited. Craftsmen: Meet at Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.m. Cosmopolitan Club: Initiation meeting at 8 p.m., Auditori'um of Lane Hall. Dr. Frederick Fisher will be the speaker. Members and candidates for membership are urged to be in attendance. All interested are invited. Catholic Students: There will be a mixer for Catholic students and their friends in the Michigan Union ballroom. Harvard game by radio from 2 o'clock on. Music from 3 to 5 by Union Orchestra. COMING EVENTS Second Thomas Spencer Jerome Lecture, "The Life of the People in Town and Country, Part One," by Professor J. G. Winter, Tuesday, November 11, at 4:15 p.m., Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Junior Medical Students: Class meeting in the Hospital Amphi- theatre Tuesday, November 11, at 4:30. The purpose of the meeting is to select a J-Hop committeeman. Candidates must establish eligibility. Alpha Nu will meet Tuesday night, November 11. Prof. Howard McClusky, of the School of Education, will speak. All members are urged to be present. Tryouts are to meet between 7.and 7:30. Howard McCluskey of the Dept. of Psychology will speak on "Tech-Eomplete Line of naques of Private Worship" at the Student Volunteer meeting in the THE MATCHLE fire-place room of Harris Hall (Hur-]H ACL on & State) Sunday morning, 8:30 ' \VICTOR, MA a.m. Those interested in the subject UECLE atre cordially invited. ] UNEXCELLED (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Nov. 7.- Roger W. Babson has settled upon a remedy for the present business depression. His prescription is a sure cure, he< says. Diagnosing the reason for the crash as over-production, he points out that this condition will be cor- rected as soon as mass consump- tion can be stimulated to catch upj with mass production. Sinclair Lewis, The necessary stimulant-the in- American author, who has been fallible cure, he says, is advertising, named winner of the 1930 Nobel on a larger scale than the world prize for literature, is pictured here has ever known. with his son, Michael. Stresses Mass Production. "This is the way out from the BANDS GO WITH1 present situation," he asserts in T Collier's today. "It is our hope of making mass production our eco- nomic salvation instead of the dyn- lMichigan, Illinois, Ohio State, amite that may wreck the world. Represent Mid-West. "As one who has studied business depression ii life rather than in (By Associated Press) libraries, I see in current conditions NEW YORK, Nov. 7. - Some 500 the call for advertising. There's bandsmen from the midwest will nothing wrong with the patient but toot on eastern gridirons Saturday. poor circulation. Money is being The Illinois band, 160 strong held instead of circulated. which has been called the finest "Advertising is ideallyfitted and college band, will be at the Yankee competent to accelerate the circu- stadium for the Army game. lation. It is the most effective The Michigan band of 120 will known force for accomplishing the follow its team to the Harvard sta- speeding up of money and thereby dium. As many more bandsmen giving us more business at times wearing the scarlet and gray uni- when more business is the nation's forms of Ohio State will join the greatest need. festivities at Baltimore where the Claims Money Plentiful. Buckeyes meet the Navy. N o t r e "There never was more money Dame, which is famed much more than there is today. Banks hold it, for its football players than its corporations hold it, the people hold musicians, will bring 100 bandsmen it. That is the trouble, the money to Philadelphia for the game with is held instead of circulated. A Pennsylvania. R -1O1 HAD FAULTS;51 DO0CUML" ldENJT SHOWS. Notes of Designer Introduced at Inquiry Points Out Bad Construction.f LIFTING POWER REDUCED LONDON, Nov. 7. -Documents I indicating that major construe- tion faults had been discovered in the dirig ble R-101 before she wast sliced in two for insertion of a 75- foot section were introduced today at the inquiry into the ship's loss One of them was the memoran- dum by Col. V. C. Richmond, de- signer of the craft, who perishedI in the crash of Oct. 5. In it heI noted that holes in the gas bags caused serious loss of lifting power. Sir John Simon, head of the board of inquiry, said these docu- ments had been on file at thej Cardington airship headquarters for some time and he could not understand why they had not been produced before. Col. Richmond's memorandum was filed last July, after the ship had handled heavily in a trial fight. He wrote that his investiga- Lion of the effect of the gas bo holes indicated the loss of lift amounted to about one ton foi each square inch of hole in 12 hours. In his opinion, the memor- andum stated, this was somewhat startling, and indicated the great importance of guarding againsj i such holes. Debating Team to Sell Byrd Antarctic Photos Through arrangement with the photographic division of the Byrd Antarctic expedition, the debating team will offer for sale pictures tak- en during the expedition. These will be on sale the night of Commander Byrd's lectures here in Ann Arbor. They will be sold by members of the team on Mon- day in the lobby of Angell hall. Diamond Broker Tells of Holdup,_Abduction (PBy Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 7. - Diamonds valued at $40,000 were stolen from him Wednesday night by thre bandits who kidnaped him near his home, Abe Rothblum, a dia- mond broker, told police. Barley has been added to the list of winter cover crops sown in west- ern North Carolina for hay and grazing. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8. 1930 University Library to Get Collection of Minister's Notes Six volumes from the collection of the documents of Davild L. Gregg, one-time United States commission- er of Hawaii and minister of finance of the Hawaiian kingdom, h a v e been turned over to the curator of rare books at the University library, it was said in an announcement re- ceived yesterday from Dr. William W. Bishop, librarian. These volumes cover the diaries of Gregg from 1854 to 1857, his offi- cial correspondence with the United States, and his private letters up to 1866, together with miscellaneous letters and papers. They are type- written copies of parts of the Gregg collection of documents now in the possession of the historical commis- sion on Hawaii. The transcription was furnished to the library through Col. Thomas M. Spaulding, of the United States army, an alumnus of the University. Col. Spaulding has done much to aid the library in securing an in- clusive selection of books and docu- ments concerning the Hawaiian is- lands, Dr. Bishop stated. The University has, through stu- dents, many connections with Ha- waii, and is seeking to secure a good collection of books in the Hawaiian language, publications of the gov- ernment of Hawaii, and books about Hawaii, Dr. Bishop said. Bandits Take Baggage, Mail in Train Holdup (By Associated Press) OAKLAND, Calif., Nov. 7. - An eastbound Southern Pacific passen- ger train was held up and robbed at 5:30 this morning at Nobel, a small town north of Berkeley. Reports re- ceived here said the mail and bag- gage car were rifled. BROWN-CRESS & Company, Inc. IN VESTMENT I SECOVITIES Orders executed on all ex- changes.* Accounts carried on conservative margin.c Telephone 23271 ANN ARBOR TRUST BLDG. 1stIFLOOR -~nw.u CARSON'S I 0 A 6Doe H E T R A 0 OHIOiAN LEAGUE beautiful system of piping, a plenti- ful supply of fluid, butthe whole mechanism fails to function for want of the pumpiing power of pub- licity to tell the world of better goods, lower prices and greater service. "The basic cause at which the jobless should shake their fists is not that too few mills are running, but that too few advertising cam- paigns are running. "One proposed plan for reforming bad times is to increase public works. That policy is wise. The need, however, is not merely for works but for workers-and the way to make people work is to arouse wholesome desires through worthy advertising." Women's Education Club w ill meet at the Women's Athletic build- ing on Monday, November 10, at 4:15 p.m. This will be a social gathering and all women interested in education are cordially invited. Tolstoy Anniversary: M o n d a y, Nov. 10, Dr. F. S. Onderdonk wi l give an illustrated lecture on H. G. Wells and L. N. Tolstoy at 4:15 in Room 231, Angell Hall. Faculty Alumni Dance Series: The first dance of the series will take place in the Union at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday evening, Nov. 11. Series tickets may be secured at the dance or from Mrs. A. S. Aiton, 2020 Sen- eca Street. Everything Musical BSS BALDWIN LINE 0f PIANOS JESTIC, BRUNSWICK 1 ADIOS MARTIN BAND INSTRUMENTS Terms to Suit DO-X Finishes First Lap ofOcean Flight (By Assoc fated Press) AMSTERDAM, Nov. 7-The great bulk of the German flying boat, DO-X, largest seaplane in the world, floated tonight in the Schel- lingwoude basin at the end of the first lap of her trans-Atlantic voy- age to New York. F E T y8:30 VI N G TOM ROBERTS OF CHICAGO -IN-OM Tag Dance University Symphony Orchestra: No rehearsal Sunday morning. Reg- ular rehearsals Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday. Beta Kappa Rho will hold a tea in lounge 2 of the League Building Sunday, Nov. 9, from 4-6. Pledges, Tau Beta Pi: Pledges ex- amination will be held Tuesday night, November 11, instead of Mon- day, November 10. UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE William Wade Hinshaw Devoted to Music Cor. Maynard and William Phone 7515 I L T Y w.m MICHIGAN Michigan's Favorite College Songs ...........................$4.75 Michigan Memory Books .......... $1.75, $3.50, $4.50, $6.00, $6.50 Michigan Blankets ........... .. . ....... $12.00, $12.50, $13.00 Michigan Banners, Pennants and Pillows. Michigan Book Ends, Seals, Shields and Jewelry. M;ic;ip,anSttinerv ............75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 Lydia eelssohn Theatre I 1. III I 11 Hil