)AILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN bllcation in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the versity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until : 11:30 a. ni. 8aturday. XLII 1''RIDAY, MARCH .31, No. 133 NOTICES csident and Mrs. Iuthven will be at home from four to six o'clock day, April 2, to members of the faculties and other residents of Ann The tea on April 9 will be omitted. culty Meeting College of L.S. & A.: The regular April meeting of culty of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts will be held n 2225 A.H., Monday afternoon, April 3, beginning at 4:10. addition to miscellaneous business and the usual reports of the Dean actions of the University Council and the meeting of the Deans with esident, two other items are scheduled. First, the report of the com- Two Showings Of Shaw Play Will Be Given Two performances of the worship through art play, "Scenes from the Life of Saint Joan," by George Ber- nard Shaw, will be given Sunday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The regular evening performance at 8 p. m. will be supplemented by a matinee at 4 p. i., Omar Pancoast Goslin, director of the play, an- nounced yesterday. T'hAT~nir~ri:-z Vr~a tI n 011" May Be Treasurer A '1 e appointed to consider changes in connection with our procedure of wi L Vk tive itsie p ayU ! will take an active part in the play, Lating students with distinction, with high distinction, with special the Reverend Goslin said. Three se- .on, and with honors; and, second, a discussion of the extent of au- lections will be rendered by them. y given departmental representatives in connection with student elec- play is built entirely around in concentration programs. John R. Effinger, Dean the trial scene and has been con- sidered by many as the best of ~utorobile Regulation: Those students who take advantage of the Shaw's dramas, the Rev. Mr. Goslin year payment plan for license plates should promptly report such ar- stated yesterday. In it music and ment so that their student driving permits may be renewed. The old drama combine to make an effective' it tags issued during the first semester will be void on and after April program, he said. The Ann Arbor 3. Community Orchestra is also aiding 'he 1933 license numbers of cars which are stored in Ann Arbor or are in this production, which is the third n by exempted students should, be promptly reported to Dean Burs- featuring worship through art. nfri (, 2rnn U 7Iilrae rTTl II 'Merry Mount' To Be Directed By Composer Hanson To Conduct Opera At May Festival; Will Be World Premiere Dr. Howard Hanson, composer of "Merry Mount," will personally con- duct his opera in its world premiere in concert form at the concluding concert of the May Festival Saturday I evening, May 20, it was announced yesterday by President Charles A. Sink of the University Musical So- ciety which is maintaining the Festi- val. R. L. Stokes, librettist of the opera, and Mrs. Stokes will accompany theI composer to Ann Arbor for the per- formance. "The premiere of this important American opera in Ann Arbor is due to the courtesy of the Metropolitan Opera Company," President Sink stated. Three of Metropolitan's lead- ing artists, Leonora Corona, soprano, Rose Bampton, contralto, and Fred- erick Jagel, tenor, will sing in the opera. Others are John Charles Thomas, baritone of the late Chicago Civic Opera Company, 'and Chase Baromeo, also of the Chicago opera, Jig Saw EpidemicI Rampant In Ward At Health Service There is an epidemic at the Health Service. The prevalent disease, which has laid a great many patients low, is known as jig-saw-mania. The afflicted students are propped up in bed with improvised card tables balanced on their knees, and are allowed to release all inhibitions. A curious fact in regard to this ill- ness is that patients free from the mania desire to be subjected to it. "More jig-saw puzzles" is the plea from the patients' ward as the scanty stock is passed from bed to bed. Nurses, however, are skeptical; they are kept busy locating stray puzzle pieces which escape from recumbent patients. . j "SHARE COST" RIES Several "share cost" rides to New York City are available at the Union ride bureau, it was announced yes- terday by John W. Lederle, '33, pres- ident of the Union. P amily Called At Fault For Delinquencies The blame in all cases of juvenile delinquency may be traced directly or indirectly to the family, according to Mrs. Maria Peel, probation officer of Washtenaw County. It is between the ages of thirteen and seventeen that young people need careful guidance, and it is dur- ing this period that parents often fail to do their duty. It is the parents' duty to know where and with whom their childrenare spending their time, it was staid. The depression has not caused a noticeable increase in juvenile crime in Ann Arbor, Mrs. Peel pointed out: in fact the opposite seems to be true. Pareits do not have the funds to go out often, and so are spending more time at home with their children. If the young people of today are "going to the dogs," she concluded, it would ,eem that the older genera- tion, which is doing all the complain- ing, is to blame. T: 7 r -Associated Press Photo Mrs. Nellie Tayloe .Ross, former governor of Wyoming, was reported to be under consideration for the post of treasurer of the United States. mey- ornceroomz, un versity H-all. W. B. Rea, Assistant to the Dean To Students Having Library Books: 1. Students having in their possession books drawn from the Univer- sity Library are notified that such books are due Monday, April 3, before the impending Spring vacation, in pursuance of the Regents' regulation: "Students who leave Ann Arbor for an absence of more than a week must first return all borrowed books." S. Failure to return books before the vacation will render the student liable to an extra fine. 3. Students who have special need for certain books between April 3 and the beginning of the vacation may retain such books by applying to the Superintendent of Circulation. 4. Students who have urgent need for certain books during the vaca- tion, will be given permission to draw these books, provided they are not ingeneral demand, on application to the Superintendent of Circulation af- ter April 3. Wm. W. Bishop, Librarian Students, School of Education: Permission to drop courses without "E" grades will not be given after Friday, April 7, except under extraor- dwIary circumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Recorder of the School of Education, Room 1437 U. Elementary School. social Directors; Sorority Chaperons;. Househeads; Undergraduate Wo- men: The closing hour for those attending the Slide Rule dance and the Crease dance on Friday, March 31, will be 2;30 o'clock. Alice C. Lloyd, Dean. of Women NeJ* Gwyn Society Patrons: Owing to the Hillel production of the Dybuk, the box-office for the Nell Gwyn play cannot be operated.on the schedule. announced. Patrons are asked. to notice the revised box-office shedule: Sunday, 10-12 and 2-6; Monday and Tuesday: the same hours, ,:n 6-9 p. m. also. Reservations may also be secured by calling 2-3648 any evening after 6. ACADEMIC NOTICE , Sixth lecture in Hygiene for men, will be given in Waterman Gym- naium, Monday and Tuesday, April 3 and 4, at 3 and 4 p. in. This require- merit includes all freshmen in the regular physical training groups, ath- letic squads and others that have been excused from these groups." LECTURES Count Sforza will deliver a lecture, "Dictatorships in Europe," today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 4:15 p. m. .University Lecture: Dr. W. L. G. Joerg, Research Editor of the Ameri- ca ,Geographical Society, of New York, will lecture on the subject, "The New Era of Polar Exploration and Research Since 1925," today at 4:15 p. m. in the Natural Science Auditorium. The public is invited. . University Lecture: Max Montor, well-known dramatic impersonator, will give readings from Lessing's "Nathan der Weise" (in German) at 4:15 p. n., Wednesday, April 5, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, under the au- spices of the Department of German. The public is invited. EVENTS TODAY Delta Epsilon Pi: A special meeting for installation of officers at 8 p. m., Michigan Union. "Everyman" Performance: The final performance will be given in Saint Andrew's Church at 8:15 p. in., Director, James Doll. Jewish students: Services at Hillel Foundation at 5:30 p. in. Rabbi Heller will officiate. COMING EVENTS Graduate Outing Club: All Graduates and friends: Meet on steps of Angell Hall at 2:30 p. m. Saturday for this week's Supper Hike. Bring fif- teen cents. Will return around seven. ,Woman's Research Cinub: Meeting Monday, April 3, at 7:30 p. m. in 3024 Museums Building. Mrs. Mary C. Van Tyl will speak on "Studies in Monocular Perception of Distance." Upper Room Bible Class: Upper Room, Lane Hall, 7 to 8 p. m. Satur- day. Mr. Chapman will speak on "Being a Non-Conformist." Liberal Students Union: Rabbi Bernard Heller will discuss the atti- tude of Adolf Hitler towarrd the Jewish race in the recent German activi- ties. Unitarian church, Sunday, 7:30 o'clock. p At the morning church service, Dr. J. T. Sunderland will speak on "World Brotherhood." "Fascism" will be the subject of a lecture by Franklin Noel, who will speak in Natural Science Auditorium Monday at 8:00 p. m. There will be an open forum discussion. No admission charge. Four hundred girls attending the University earned $83,422 last year. CLAS SIFTEDDIRECTORY eller Sees Dark Future For German Jews (Continued from Page 1) hypocritical extenuations to the ef- fect that the brutalities, if not the butcherings, are uncontrolled and unfostered acts of individuals. Germans Are Prejudiced "The German people are not like the Russian muzbuks. They are lit- erate and well disciplined people. They act upon orders. From the be- ginning of the Nazi movement until the present day they have been taught that Jews were the cause of all their woes and miseries; that it was Jewish bankers who financed the Allies and induced America to enter into the fray, and in the same breath they accuse the Jews of being the fermentors and apostles of Commu- nism. They are stigmatized as aliens and outlandish in their creeds and customs, and yet the hue and cry is raised that the Jewish intellect has pervaded and mastered German culture and science.' "The Nazi attitude towards the Jews represents nothing less than a reversion to the bigotry of the worst periods of the Middle Ages (tenth, thirteenth, and fifteenth centuries). At that time massacres of Jews were sanctioned on the ground that they poisoned the wells and brought about the Black Death and the invasion of the Mongols. The fact that the Jews equally suffered in the miseries of modern as well as medieval days, they totally ignore. Willfully or un- willfully, the Hitlerites blink their eyes to the fact that the German Jews fought with valor and gave their lives freely to defend the Vat- erland. They completely ignore the fact that the inflation and the de- pression has played irreparable havoc with the economic status of German Jewry, so much so that there is prac- tically no substantial Jewish banking house left in Germany and that for the first time in history, German Jewry is forced to ask for relief from] world Jewry. Future Is Black "The future of Jewry in Germany is very black," Rabbi Heller con- tinued. "The anti-Jewish persecution and discrimination of the Hitlerites appears to be of the unrelenting and unremitting type. Even if the propa- ganda against them were terminated tomorrow, the momentum is strong enough to last for a decade. The German people have suffered so much during and after the war that anything offering hope and release is grabbed at, irrational as it would seem in sober moments. In tripping, a man kicks the object that he con- sidered was in his way and then he feels a little better. . a will sing the bass role. - P"Belshazzar's Feast," an oratorio Points Way i in n as oe *)LI1by the contemporary British com- poser William Walton which has not "The Jew is used much as a scape- yet been played in this country, will goat. Furthermore the prospects of 'be given at the Thursday evening the Nazis' achieving territorial revi- concert May 18. Although this ora- sion are very slight. Making the Jew torio has not yet played in America, appear therefore as a menace will 'it will be presented shortly before the tend to divert the minds of the popu- May Festival by Dr. Serge Kousse- lace from that major promise and vitsky and the Boston Symphony Or- platform of the Nazi. Hitler may not chestra and later at the Cincinnati order a formal expulsion of the Jews festival. The political and economic condi- Jascha Heifetz, prominent violin- tions, however, will be made so in- ist, will play with the Chicago Sym- tolerable that the Jews will have to phony orchestra under the direction leave, if not en masse, then grad- of Frederick Stock in the latter half ually. of the Thursday evening concert. "The inability and helplessness of world Jewry to aid their co-re- Lecture On Arctic ligionists in Germany is the most de- pressing element," it was said. "The Will Be Presented monster demonstrations and protests on the part of Jews will not bring Polar exploration since the advent relief but on the contrary they will of flying and radio will be discussed even aggravate the plight of suffer- in an illustrated lecture at 4:15 ers. Already reprisals are resorted p. m. today in Natural Science Audi- to. Expression of indignation at the 'torium by Dr. W. L. G. Joerg, re- savage policies of the Nazis on the search editor of the American Geo- part of Christians and humanita- graphical Society in charge of polar rians will tend to make the Hitlerites research. The title of his talk is aware of the hostile world opinion "The New Era of Polar Exploration which their acts are arousing. and Research Since 1925." Mussolini Can Aid Dr. Joerg will show slides illustrat- "On the other hand, in the mood ing many features of the explorer's in which they are in, they consider activities in the arctic regions. He such expressions as examples of Jew- will discuss many famous expeditions, ish anti-Hitlerite propaganda. The including those of Byrd, Wilkins, and only person who can effect some Ellswortp, and explorations made by change is Mussolini, whom Hitler the Norwegian whalers. worships and emulates. As to govern- mental protests, if these emanate Phi Beta Kappa Elects from erstwhile enemies they surely Officers For Next Year will not be heeded. -Even if the United States should through diplo- Phi Beta Kappa held its annual matic channels venture a criticism, election of officers yesterday after- they would easily construe that to be noon. The new president is Prof. Earl meddling with internal affairs of an W. Dow of the history department. autonomous nation. Furthermore, Prof. Joseph R. Hayden of the po- they could retort with the saying, litical science department was elected 'take the mote out of your own eye, to the executive commtitee, and Prof. particularly in your attitudes and Orma F. Butler of the classical treatment of the negroes.' languages department was re-elected "If the United States is sincerely secretary-treasurer. interested in aiding the oppressed- Jews of Germany, it could perhaps jority of representative American raise the immigration quota for the Jews who are strongly opposed to it. refugees. England could at least be In the first place, a boycott imposes less exacting in the admissions of suffering upon the innocent as well Jews into Palestine. At present a Jew as the guilty. Secondly, it is stoop- cannot settle in the Holy Land un- ing to physical forces rather than less he is within the quota and pos- to 'moral persuasion. sesses a minimum of 1000 pounds. "Despite the spirit that prevails to- "As for the suggestion that Jews day in the world and particularly in retaliate by abstaining from; pur- Europe I still believe in the Spinoz- chasing German-made goods, I am istic doctrine that 'minds are con- thoroughly in accord with the ma- quered not by arms (force) but by I love and generosity.'" I _ - "- "" "- - I f- m CLASSIFIED, ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. S The classified columns closerat three o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra, charge. Cash in advance-11c per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. Minimum 3 linen per insertion, 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. 'telephone rate-I 5c per. reading line for*one orvtwo insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines pertinsertion. By contract, per line-2 lines daily, one month .. .............8c 4 lines E. 0. D., 2 mfonths ......... 8c 2 lines daily, college year.........7c 4 lines E. 0, D., college year...... .7c 100 lines used as desired.........9c 300 lines used as desired.........Sc 1.000 lines used as desired .......... 7c 2,000 lines used as desired... .6c The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading .ines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Ge per line to aboverates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point type. LAUNDRIES STUDENT - And family washing careful workP at lowest prices. Ph. 3006: 6c LAUNDRY -- Soft water. 2-1044. Towels free. Socks darned. 13c LOST LOST-White gold bracelet (3 dia- monds, 4? square-cut sapphires) . Reward, Daily Box 39A. LOST-Parker lifetime fountain pen. Large size. Black and red, with gold trimmings. Call 6017. Reward. HELP WANTED WANTED-College man for summer employment. Apply Michigan Daily Box 40B. 378 TYPING - Stenography. Miss E. Wells, Phone 4546. 24c NOTICE FINGERWAVES-35c. Shampoo and Fingerwave 50c. Frederick, Nestle and steam oil waves, reduced to $3.00. Raggedy Ann Beauty Shop. 7561. c BLUE BIRD BOOK NOOK, lending library. 5c daily. Clean covers. Uni- versity Music House. 10:30 to 5:30. 21c HALF SOLES and Rubber heels 59c. We will call for and deliver. Phone 8736, 534 Forrest Ave. 376 BRING US-Your garments to be cleaned, pressed, dyed, repaired or altered. Excellent work. We call for and deliver. 15% for cash and carry. Eureka Tailors. 104 N. 4th Ave. Phone 2-1769. 377 WANTED SITUATIONS EXPERIENCED COOK-Would pre- fer fraternity. 20 years experience. German nationality. Phone 2-1352. 372 WANTED WANTED-Round trip ride to Char- leston, West Virginia, spring vaca- tion. Call G. Gosling, 2-3225. 375 FOR SALE WILLYS-KNIGQT-,e. Luxe sedan, 9600 miles. Extra tires. Fender wells. Sacrifice for immediate sale. Box 40A. . 374 Increase in exports 'of petroleum from Soviet Russia is held to be likely by observers in the interna- tional petroleum trade. ALL HAIRCUTS. REDUCED TO Same Efficient & Sanitary Service IDEAL BARBER SHOP 216 E. Washington Don't Be APRIL'S FOOL! Come to the f I ROOM AND BOARD ROOM-And board at 807 S. State for $3.25 a week. Come and see. Good food. Two in a room. Show- ers. Call 8912. 373 TYPING TYPING-Notes, papers, and Grad. theses. Clyde Heckart, 3423. 35c ! lo, MICHIGAN NOW SHOWING WUER T1H ----Last Times Today Joan Blondell in "CENTRAL PARK" PAL -Saturday Only - JOHN WAYNE- in "RIDE HIM COWBOY" and "LOST SPECIAL" No. 1 CAMS CABARET BARBARA STAN'WYC in Tomorrow Nite 11 LAST DAY ZAN E GREY'Sa "Wild Horse Mesa" The Bitter Tea OF General Yen 41reshmen Question Worth Of Acilvities The great majority of activities fos- red by the student body on this' tImpus are of a distinctly superfi- al nature and do not concern them- Ives with the situations which must met in later life, was the opinion Faith Ralph, '33, a member of the ry panel of the preparatory fresh- an parley which was held last night Wesley Hall to give the freshmen me idea of the nature of the Spring City Democrats Will Close Drive Satuirday Ann Arbor Democrats will close their city campaign at 8:15 Satur- day at the Whitney Theatre with a pre-election rally which will have as its chief speakers Gov. William A. Comstock, George Bushnell, Detroit, candidate for justice of the supreme court, and Franklin Cook, candidatel for the Board of Regents. The party's nominee for mayor of Ann Arbor, Rolla Frisinger, will be introduced to the assembly but is not expected MAJ ESTIC Tomorrow.' THEY MARRIED TO BE FREE! 4J fWUJJfr J NLS ASTH"ER GAVIN GORDON in the LEAGUE BALLROOM "I KNOW EVERYBODY" Walter Winchell PARAMOUNT NEWS Sunday -Featuring- SCINTILLATING CAST o0" CAMPUS STARS Special Songs, Dances and 'Nauu,.1 4".,' Vii Y:f7r 11 1 I