THE MICHIGAN DAILY S. C. .ILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN A. PROHIBITION OPEN FORUMI WILL BE LED BY RAYMOND ROBINS lication in the he University. President until Bulletin is constructive notice to all members Copy receivrd at the office of the Assistant to 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. Socia! Economist, Army dolonel to Defend Dry Law in First Meeting. The first of the weekly forums conducted under the auspices of the Student Christian association XLII. SUNDAY, OCTOBR 11, DJ31 No. 13 NOTICES will be held Monday, Oct. 12, in Iniversity Lecture: Dr. R. Woltereck, Professor of Zoology, of the Natural Science auditorium, it has rsity of Leipzig, will lecture on the subject "Genetics and the been announced by Jule Avers. '32, gy of Lakes and Islands" (illustrated by lantern slides), Thursday, chairman of the committee on open er 15, at 4:15 p. m., in the Natural Science auditorium. The public forums. dially invited. The discussion, on the subject of prohibition, will be led by Col. Deans, Directors, Department Heads and Others Responsible for Raymond Robins, social economist ;is: Kindly call at the Business Office to approve payrolls for and publicist, who will speak "In 3:r 31. This should be done not later than October 19. Defense of Prohibition." E-Ia . eier PyrllClerk. Versatile Colonel Robins, has a Ena M. Geiger, Payroll Crecord of missionary service in Alaska, was a Lieutenant-Colonel -lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts: No course may be of the United States army in the d for credit after the end of the third week. Saturday, October f American Red Cross mission to Russia in 1917, and was identified with the recent political house- cleaning in Chicago. He will lead the forum as part of his three-day program in Ann Arbor. furns in False Alarm to See Brother Work BATTLE CREEK, Oct. 10.-(AP)- "FIres" caused the Jacob family a lot of trouble Friday. Fred Jacob, 19 years old, arrested fo: turning in a false alarm, explained he id it because his brother, John, is city fireman and he wanted to see him in action. While police were hunt- ing for Fred they stopped a speeder, who said he was "going to the fire." It was Henry Jacob, another broth- er. C ae l921, is therefore the last date on vhich new elections may be ap- ved. The willingness of an individual instructor to admit a student r would not affect the operation of this rule. V/owen Students Attending the Illinois-Michigan FootbaUl Game: nen students wishing to attend the Illinois- Michigan football game required to register in the office of the Dean of Women. A letter of permission from parents must be received in the Dean's e not later than Thursday, October 22. If a student wishes to go rwise than by train, special permission for such mode of travel must Lcluded in the parent's letter. A chaperon fee of $1.25 is required of students going by train. This is payable upon registration for the trip. Uraduate womnc are invited to register in the office also. Byrl Fox Bacher, Assistant Dean of 'Women. Houp Presdents: Please return the house personnel slips at once to office of the Dean of Women. Gen. & Phys. Chem.-1 p. m. November 13. Further information concerning these examinations may be tained by consulting Dr. F. E. Bartell, room 160, Chemistry building. ob-I Idents wh~o er may Let r. 23. took M.E. 2.or M.E. 2a from Professor Mickle last thlir final examination papers at his office before ics 11 (L. L. Watkins): The seating list is posted at the Natural Science Auditorium and on the Economics bulletin .se Consu;L the list before the next lecture. EXHIBITION bition of Contemporary American Painting assembled by the AssociaLion is on view in the West Gallery, Alumni Memorial Preliminary Examinations for the Doctor's Degree in Education will be held on October 22, 23, and 24, at 2 p. in. All individuals planning to take these examinations should notify Professor Clifford Woody at once. C. E. 27: I will not meet my class in C. E. 27 on Monday, Oct. 12. C. 1E. 55: I will not-meet my class in C. E. 55 on Monday, Oyt. 12. Jahn S. Worley. All Campus Forum: Col. Raymond C. Robins, colonel of U. S. Red Cross in Russia in 1917-18, will speak "In defense of Prohibition" at 4:15, Monday, in Natural Science Auditorium. The Graduate Lunchcoan for Chemical Eng:neers will be held on Tuesday, Octobcr 13, in room 3201 East Engincering building. Dean Cocley will address the group. Physics Colecuiimn: Frofessor R. A. Sawyer will talk on "llyprfin'. Structure in the Barium Spectrum)' at 4:15 Tuesday in Room 1041, Ea t Physics building. All interested -re cordially invited. AGytes: Meeting Mk7nday, 7:30 p. m., Philosophy Office. Professor Langford will speak Economics Club: First meeting Monday, October 12, at 7:30 p. m., in Room 302 of the Union. Professor C. F. Remer will speak on "Some Economics Problems of Modern China." Members of the staffs in Eco- nomics and Business Administration, graduate students in these depart- ments, and others interested are invited to attend. Junior Mathematics Club will meet Tuesday, October 13, 7:30 p. in., in room 3011 A. H. Dr. Baten of the Mathematics Department will speak. All interested are invited. Mathematical Club: The regular meeting will be held Tuesday, Oct. 13, at 8 p. m., in Room 3201, Angell Hall. There will be an election of officers and membership fees wil be due and payable to the incoming treasurer. There will be papers on the following topics: "A substitute for Duhamel's theorem," "Polynomials conected with Pearson's equations," will be presented by Professor T. H. Hildebrandt. All who wish to attend will be made welcome. Phi Sigma: Dr. R. C. Hussey, of the Department of Geology, will speak on"Hunting Extinct Animals," Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., October 14, in Room 1139, Natural Sience building. Jewish Students: First public meeting of Avukah, student Zionist organization, will be held Tuesday, Oct. 13, at 8 p. m., at the Hillel Foundation. Mr. Maurice jB. Pekarsky, national secretary and former president of the Michigan chapter, will address the meeting. Pi Lambda Theta will meet Tuesday, October 13, at 4:15, at the WOMEN MAE PLEA FOR DISRMAMENT Jane Addams Heads Peace Body of 200 Cars; Drive Backed by 125,000 Women. WASHINGTON, Oct. 10-(/P)-The plea of 125,000 women for peace to- day was brought to President Hoo- ver by a coast-to-coast caravan. With Jane Addams and Helen Taft Manning at its head, the 200 feminine-directed cars r e a ch e d their goal bearing the gigantic peti- tion against war. "Total and universal disarma- ment" is its demand. The United States government is requested to instruct its delegates to the Febru- ary, 1932, disarmament conference In Geneva "to take the necessary steps to achieve disarmament." Veteran peace campaigner Jane Addams, 71, accepted in Baltimore the invitation to join the caravan for its swing down Pennsylvania Ave. to the White House. She is honorary international president of the Women's International League for Peace an1 Freedom, which sponsored the peace-petition tour. Helen Taft Manning, daugher of the lat^ chief justice, came directly to the capital to speak for the group in its ilea to the president Leavang the White House the car- avan had two further meetings be-I fore dibanding: A dihner tonight to permit ca avanners to tell how they pece-petitioned in 125 cities of 25 states, and a mass meeting Sunday with Miss Addams presid- ing. Thu was Miss Mabel Vernon former sufrage campaigner, to cl- waX her 15-year coast-to-coast car avanning carecr. Never, befo e did Miss Vernon make such a whirlwind finale. Wit- a reputa'.ion for keeping cross- country dates with Pcnnsylvanis Ave. to a dot, she arrived today s days ahlLad of schedule. When she left Los Angeles Jun 25, she had set Oct. 16 to end the 10,000-mile trip to the White House allowing only three rest days. But tires and roads had imp oved even more than she had reckoned. The caravan sped smoothly, adding more states than planned, in less time than figured. On her first trip in 1915 cars got lost in the desrt,. and stuck in mud. Then she led a women's suffrage caravan, which collected 500,0001 signatures for White House deliv- ery. The next year Miss Vernon was again on the trans-continental trail for suffrage. in 1919, she was engi- neering the prison special for the National Women's party, out for the vote. In 1926, with suffrage won, she made the coast-to-coast trip petitioning for more women in con- gress. Of the 4,283,753 persons over 10 years of age in the United States unable to read or write in any language, women surpass men on the literacy list. The 1930 census reports show women 4,275 illiterate, and men 4,401. BURIED'i'CIRIN GOLD' BOYS FOUND . PROVES TO BE $6 WORTH OF BRASS Windsor Youths Have Feet Back 'mony given before Magistrate I., on Earth After Several |M. Brodi in the Windsor Polce Ecstatic Days. Court Friday afternoon in the case _ of Cecil Smith, one-time "king of the bootleggers," who was charged DETROIT, Oct. 10.--(A)-Four with fleecing Hamneed Shamus, an- Windsor boys had gone back to other Windsor man, of $600. Magis- "Treasure Island" for their thrills trate Brodie dismissed the charge today. Only in fiction does one come when he decided that both men had upon buried treasure, they decided, been involved in the smuggling of after they had been informed by Shamus testified that Smith had the Ontario Provincial police that told the police that he, /Shamus, "gold" estimated to be worth $4,00f had buried the "gold." S1-amus de- which they found several days ago nied any knowled1ge of the "gold," in a woods near Sandwich, Ont., is possession of which is illegal in only brass. Canada. Smith testified that the Two tins of granulated metal "gold" was obtained from a Toronto were found by the boys on a hike, wholesale house by Shamus' mother buried at the foot of a small tree and was given to Shamus in Toron- In Yawkey's Bush. A rag on the to. Smith said the "gold" was~ tree had attracted theirrattention, brought to Windsor in his automo= The police decided a gold smuggler bile when he and Shamus returned. had buried the metal, 'and took it "The bras;-gold racket has been to W. G. Avey, Windsor jeweler, who worked for a long time in Northern said it was "virgin gold." Ontario," the mining company offi- Friday, G. C. Bateman, secretary cial said, in explanationwhenhe of the Ontario Mining Association,'h e mdtal .vrt " took the "gold" to Kennedy Colle- in awhile somebody fails for it." giate and in a laboratory, in the presence of two Ontario constables placed the "gold" in acid. It dis- solvd He.hey placed a piece of our e gold in the acid and it re mained unchanged. The constable;.I returned the remainder of the met- al, regretfully informing the boys that their "fortune" had dwindled to about $6 at current brass prices. Staic Board Approves Brucker's Discovery that the "gold" is brass Plan for Emp9loyment of proved a puzz ing sequel to testi- 30,000 on Jobs. la gT o p cLANSING, Oct. 10.-(P)- Armed Swith cx raordinar authority g: ant- "--ed by the tate admnfistrative board, WASHINGTON, O c t. 10.--P) Goy. B:uk.r and hs cabinet set 'o Topographic mapping of the Unit- work today to whip a $10,000,O0o ed States is much more than the cmersen'cy highway program into work of "a lifetime." shape. Already Uncle Sam has spent 50 It is designed to b in speedy re- years on less than half of his at- lief to an estimated 3J,00 unem- las. Completion of the job at the ! ployed men. present rate is expected to require Te board voe, the emergencq 75 or 80 more years. T-P-itre in a e Ial meeting lac Between 3,600 and 3,700 quadran- Friday. It was the first time i gle maps have been finished, cost- the state's history so elaborate a ing from $5,000 to $12,000 each. winter construction schedule has There will be about 7,500 such been undertaken. Projects will be maps for the entire country. scattered through the upper and lower peninsulas, allocated accord- Peter Licavoli Pleads ling to the acuteness of uneinploy- ment distress. Not Guilty to Charge This morning members of the state administrative board met with DETROIT, Oct. 10. - (/P) - Peter the governor, G. C. Dillman, state Licavoli, fourth man to face a court I highway commissioner, and mem- on a charge of slaying radio an- bers of the executive committee of nouncer Gerald E. Buckley in July, the governor's unemployment com- 1930, pleaded not guilty when ar- mission to start selecting the pro- raigned in recorder's court. jects to be built. MEETINGS TODAY I Blade: Meeting at the Union, at 2:30 p. m. a.ll: At 12 o'clock noon Dr. E. W. Blakeman, Drector of dation, leads a discussion upon "The Religion of Jesus." 11 be addressed by Miss Ellen Moore and the Graduate n Pryor, '26. J hour, 6 p. m., will introduce Prof. Bennett Weaver, English on "Personalities About U's." 0i: Breakfast 8:45 a. m., 9:30 a. m., class in "The Christian Life" held by the Rev. Henry Lewis; 6:00 p. m., supper. le evening is the Rev. Duncan E. Mann. tional Student Fellowship: Social half hour at 5:30, fol- Fellowship supper at 6. At 6:30 H. N. Dukes, a graduate of mbia Universities, will speak on 'The Need of a New Social All students are cordially invited. COMING EVENTS R. 'Woltereck, Professor of Zoology at the University of ig, Germany, wil deliver the following lectures: Oct. 15, 8:00 p. m.-"Present State of the Marine and 3iology in Europe." Room 2116, N. S. ct. 16, 4:15 p. m.-"Stratification, Movement, and the Shape ,docera." Room 2116, N. S. ions for Candidates for tle Doctor's Degree in Chemistry: ifying and the preliminiary examinations for those working octor's degree, specializing in chemistry, will be given in mistry building, on the following dates: Chemistry -1 p. n., HIGH GRADE REPAIR SERVICE Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry -J Michigan League. Women's Business Staff of the Michigan ily : There will be an important meeting Monday after- noon at four, in the Press building. 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