THE MICHIGAN DAILY IT DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bullctin is cgnstructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the offce of the Assistant to the President until 3:30: 11:30 a. n2. Saturday. Campbell Car Arrives For New Speed Attempt Girl Waits Trial As Accomplice Ini Jail Murder' VOL. XLIII TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1933 No. 88 NOTICES University Broadcasting-Tuesday: 2 p. m. "The Dark Ages of History" by Benjamin Webb Wheeler, Instructor in History. (This talk is for high schools). 2:15 "The Question of Good English" Albert H. Marckwardt, Instructor in English. Graduate School: Graduate students desiring to make :their second semester elections in advance may do so this week. Please call at the Grad- uate School office for the necessary forms. The regular registration period for the second semester will be from February 8 through February 13. New students, or students transferring from other Schools or Colleges, should register at that time. A student planning to transfer should ask the Sec- retary of his School or College to prepare and send to the office of the Grad- uate School an official transcript of his undergraduate record. G. Carl Huber, Dean Graduate School: All graduate students who expect to complete their work for a degree at the clue of the present semester should call at the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall, to check their records and to secure the proper blank to be used in paying the first week in February. G. Carl Huber, Dean School of Education-February Seniors: All students completing re- quirements for degrees and Teachers' Certificates at the end of the present semester should pay their fees for diplomas and Certificates by February 11. Blanks may be secured at the Recorder's Office of the School of Edu- cation, Room 1437, U. Elementary School. Candidates for Teachers' Certificates: Blanks for the payment of the Teacher's Certificate fee may now be secured at the Recorder's Office of the School of Education, Room 1437 U. Elementary School. All students who expect to be recommended for the Teacher's Certificate at the end of the present semester should pay their fees by February 11. Seniors in Education: Senior Class dues of $1.00 must be paid by Tues- day, Jan. 24. A representative of the class will be in the hall of University High School, adjacent to the Education School offices, on Tuesday, Jan. 24, to make collections. Writing Contest For Freshmen: (Division of Hopwood Awards). All manuscripts should be left in the English Office, 3221 Angell Hall, be- fore 3 o'clock, Friday, January 27. Registration blanks for all those interested in positions (except teach- ing) after graduation, may be obtained at the office, 201 Mason Hall, daily until Friday, Jan. 27, hours 10-12, 2-4. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Political Science: All graduate students in the department of political science .please report to the departmental office, 2033 A.H., at 3:00 p. m., Thursday, January 26. Rooms Assignments for the Examination in English I and II. - 1035 A.H.--Stevens. 1025 A.H.-Baker, Hoag, Nelson. 2003 A.H.-Helm. 2013 A.H.-Weimer, M. Williams. 2225 A.H.-Binkley. 2231 A.H.-Schenk. 2235 A.H .-Hornberger 209 A.H.-Everett. 205 M.H.-Reed, Walter, Web- 225 4.H.-Bebout. ster, Curtis. 3209 AH.--Knode. 103 R.L.--Peterson, Rowe, Proc- 1009 A.H.-Hungerford. tor, Morris. 229 A.H.-Bader. 2203 A.H.-Litzenberg and Pal- Morris Hall-Abbot. mer. Women's Rimming Class at the Union; The 7:30 p. m. swimming class will not meet tonight because of the intramural swimming meet. Charge Is Although Fire Fatal First Degree She Did Not Shots - - - .~------ -- &',ASir Malcolmn Campbell's racinkv cr.i'Blueii~rd 11.i raially lbrol f the present record of 253.96 miles an hour at Daytona Beach, Fl States for a new assault on the speed record. Campbell is show Povey Cross where it was put through its final tests before ship be used. Prof. Densmore 'On Spot' As a., last n standi ment. r By "Dig syllab your it ju Cana E. De ment answ put for h talkie ple I his CKO Let of th north ment ing. tures Th Wrig now tectu throu to 5. Ph Smith sity, Emis tentia p. m. All in attent Bo p. m Mr. R. S intere Alp fourt memb of of ter's Ade regul gell H will to to att Tau 6:15,1 asked get t; be the Radio Fans Citicize Speeches y CHARLES B. BROWNSON this new step in education. In his id you mean to accent the first programs Professor Densmore at- ble of the word 'precedent' in tem ts only to serve as a practical broadcast last Sunday, or was arbiter of good diction. He traces the st 'mike' fright?" demands a derivations of interesting words, dian woman writing to Prof. G. gives their pronounciation after con- ensmore of the speech depart- sulting seven dictionaries and con- Professor Densmore carefully sidering popular usages, and at- ers every letter attempting to tempts to arouse in the general pub- a college professor on the spot lic an appreciation for correctness is diction, because he is now the in spoken English. ng dictionary for countless peo- Ask His Assistance n Michigan and Canada with From all sources come interesting weekly programs over station letters commenting on his own usage K at 1 p. m. every Sunday. of words and soliciting ris assistance tters from all over this section in settling disputes over pronouncia- e United States and far to the tions. This week a woman writes i pour into the speech depart- from Detroit and informs him pleas- offices questioning and praising antly that, although fIs pronouncia- tion of the word 'pecan' given as Tickets for the series of lee- 'pe-KAN' with the short 'a' in 'am,' may be procured at the door. would place him among the illiterate and uneducated in the native South, EXHIBITION his programs were still enjoyable. e fxhil/tion of Mr. Henry "She should know," commented Pro- tt's "Hillside Housing" project fessor Densmore, "the pecan is a in the exhibition room, Archi- soikthern nut and was named by the ral Building, will be conducted Indians, so, although her pronoun- igh January 27. Open daily 9 ciation is given second in most dic- tionaries I would pronounce it pre- ferable when usage was considered." EVENTS TODAY A school boy in Flint writes asking ysics 9,olloquium: Mr. Angus the correct pronouticiation of 'finan- h Roy, of St. Andrews Univer- cian.' A woman in Detroit wonders' Scotland, will talk on "The why so many pronounce 'caramel' as sion Spectrum and Critical Po- 'KAR-mel,' instead of -using all three als of Carbon Dioxide," at 4:15 syllables correctly, 'KAR-a-mel,' with , in Room 1041 E. Physics Bldg. the first 'a' broad. Constant com- nterested are cordially invited to plaints are received on the dictionof id, radio announcers. 'One woman de- plores their butchering.of the 'u's in tanical Journal Club meets 7:30 'student' and 'duty.' ., in Room 1139 N.S. Papers by Throughout the state schools are Jones, James Tuttle, F. A. Post, following the series of broadcasts hah, and John Anderson. All I with greatest interest. An Algonac ested are cordially invited. class asks for the derivation of the word 'Caucasian,' which can be trac- ha Nu meets in Alpha Nu rooms, ed to the Greek name for the range h floor Angell Hall at 7:30. All of mountains near the Black Sea. bers will be present for election Many teachers have made class as- ficers and settlement of semes- signments covering the Sunday lec- business. tures for recitations later in the week. elphi House of Representatives Here Are Tough Ones ar meeting fourth floor of An- Among the words which were re- iall at 7:30. Election of officers quested last week and whose pro- ake plarI. All members required nounciation affords difficulty and in- tend. Refreshments, terest to CKOK listeners are: Cin- cinnati, Illinois, automobile, again, u Beta Pi dinner meeting at envelop, carbriolet, gladiolus, accent, Michigan Union. All actives art economics, office,' coffee, grievous, to make a special effort to conversant, and,-longest of all-anti- ;. this meeting. If you cannot disestablishmentarianism, of which ere call the Secretary. the writer confesses, "I may never be able to casually slip it into a con- NEW YORK, Jan. 23.-FP)--Shots fired Nov. 26 in the Raymond Street jail, Brooklyn, echoed today for a girl-widow facing the two-edged haz- ard of child birth and death in the the electric chair. The charge against 20-year-old Cecelia McCormick is first degree murder. The state of New York, bringing her to trial today, seeks to Associated Press Photo convict her for the shooting of the from the machine in which he set keeper at the jail; but it does not year, was shipped to the United say she fired a shot. ing beside the car at his home in Her husband, the father of the The same Florida racing strip will child she expects to bear, died that INovember night, too, turning upon himself the gun .with which he slew McConnell in a foolhardy break for loo Schools freedom. He was Andrew "Red" Mc- Cormick, convicted thief. D escribed A s The blond Cecelia had no part in the gunplay with which the jail rang ( ( that night, but it was she, the state Racharges, who smuggled to her hus- band the pistol which cost the lives of the two men. M,000 Teachers Remain The story told police after the Unpaid With 58c Of shooting was that she had brought Wher husband a gun, but that he had DistrIcts in Debt told her it was to be used for "self- defense" or, if the attempt to escape COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 23.-(.P)- Ilfailed, for his own death. Financially e in b a r r a s s e d Ohio schools were described by the State Education association today as op- erating on "good faith" with 10,000 CLASSIFIED teachers unpaid to date and 58 per cent of all school districts operating with deficits. CLASSIFIED One official termed the situation "Pessimistic."It is worse, he said, in ADVERTISING non-state and school districts than1 in those given financial assistance by Place advertisements with Classified the state. Advertising Dpa tment. Phone 2-11. IThe classified columns close at three "All the schools," he said, "are op- o'clock previous to day of insertion. erating on good faith-how much Box numbers may be secured at no fait we on' knov."Cash in advance-lie per reading line faith we don't know." extra charge. "We do know, however, that cred- t"on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. itors of teachers have reached the Minimum 3 lines per insertion. point where they are commencing to loc per reading line for three or more tighten up. Even the landlady frowns ne rat-15 per reading line on her. When the credit of the for one or two insertions. teacher finally is strangled, it can 14c per reading line for three or more Insertions. mean but one thing-the closing of 1051discount if paid within ten days the schools." from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. The state department of education By contract, per line-2 lines daily, one has a list of school districts in which month-...............-.........8 past-due bills, both for salaries and 2 lines dal, conege year..........c operating expenses, approximate $3,- s lines n. . D. college year.......7c 500,000. 100 lines used as desired ........... 9c 300 lines uised as desired.......... c The education association, how- 1.000 lines used as desired...........7c ever,, asserted "the debt piles up so 2,000 lines used as desired.........6c The above rates ctrc per reading line, fast that no amount of statistics pre- based on eight reading lines per inch. sents the true picture. Before we can Ionic type. upper and lower case. Add compile them for a single week, the fSe per line to above rates for all capital le, etter. Add c per line to above for deficit o h next week or month bold face, 'upper and ower ase. Add' makes them inaccurate." This de- loc per line to above rates for bold face 7 capital letters. spite widespread curtailment of ac- The above rates are for 7 point type. tivities, economies and salary cuts throughout the state. NOTICE It blamed most of the difficulty on - -- -- - - - relinquishment taxes and revision of FINGERWAVE-35c. Shampoo and the tax duplicate. Finance Director fingerwave 50c and 75c. Monday, Howard L. Bevis, however, said a Tuesday, and Wednesday. Raggedy large part of the deficit in state-aid Ann Beauty Shop. Phone 7561. districts has accumulated "from the 9c time of Adam" due to "the extrava- gance of the local school boards." He HAVE-Your snap shots developed is willing, he said, to pay back sal- at Francisco Boyce. 719 N. Univer- aries. sity. Here fine work is the tradi- The "average" Ohio school district jLi. 29c was described by the education de- BARGAINS-Overstuffed chairs $3 partinent as one in which since Sep- to $9. Davenports $10. Study tables tember teachers have received sal- $2. Lamps $1. A & C Furniture, aries for six weeks and thanks for 325 S. Fifth Ave. 22c the other ten. It said the situation dces not apply to the large cities, for TYPING which only scattering and incomplete reports are available. , TYPING - Typing carefully done. TT - - - ...,.A ., _ .; -nfir Slump May Force Abandon tig Section Of Historic Railt vay SALT LAKE CITY, Jan. 23.- ,1)- A 55-mile section of the last railroad built in the mad race of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific in 1869 to link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts is to be abandoned if the in- terstate commerce commission grants permission. The line, now operated by the Western Pacific railroad, lies between Kelton and Lucin, Utah, and is part of the transcontinental route aban- doned for main line operation in 1903, when the Ogden-Lucin cutoff across Great Salt Lake was com- pleted. The Southeern Pacific has been operating one train a week over the 55 miles from Kelton to Lucin, with virtually no business, although .it pays $11,500 in taxes each year on that section of its line. For a time the old line around the north end of Great Salt Lake was maintained as an emergency route should ligh water make the Lucin cutoff impassable. But few trains ever were sent over it, railroad offi- cials said, and the track is too light to carry the present heavy locomo- tives and trains. The section of track to be aban- doned does not include the scene of the driving of the golden spike, which linked the Central Pacific, built eastward from San Francisco, with the Union Pacific, built west- ward from Council Bluffs, Iowa. DIRECTORY, 1 FOR RENT FOR RENT - Attractive rooms for Men, one block from campus. Two rates. 518 E. Williams. Phone 9673. 262 FOR RENT - Single and double rooms. New low prices. Lots of hot water, 332 E. Jefferson. 266 QUIET HOME-for Boys. 109 S. In- galls. Second door from Women's League. 264 FOR RENT-Nicely furnished suite of rooms. $2.00 apiece. Single room 1 $2.00. 1201 White St. 266 STEAM4 HEATED Suite for one man, 2 other roomers, 1007 Forest. 13c FOR SALE ACADEMIC NOTICE Astronomy 107 will meet at the Observatory at 3:15 Wednesday work on Spectral Classification, based on'Hai'vard Annals, Vol. 99. for FINANCE CO.-Is selling late model cars for balance due. 311 W. Huron. 2-2001. Open evenings. 19C APPLICATION-Photographs. Daily service. 12 for $1.00. 25 for $1.35. Phone 6221. 265 LAUNDRIES WASHING-And ironing. Called for and delivered. Silks and woolens guaranteed satisfactory. 2-3478. 611 Hoover. 15c STUDENT - And family washing careful work at lowest prices. Ph. 3006. 6c Business Administration 268, Branch Banking: The course consists of phases of the movement toward multiple type ban king as distinguished from the older unit type banking. Emphasis will be placed on the following fpics: (1) The progress made in the inauguration of branch, group, and chain systems, (2) The records of such systems actually in existence, (Q) The main arguments for and against each type, (4) The practical and social aspects of the gradual replacement of our present system by multiple banking. Prerequisites: Fourth-year standing on campus and Economics 101, 102. By special permission the course may be elected concurrently with Economics 102. Tuesday evenings at 8. Mr. Gardner. 1 hour credit. Sec- ond semester. should report at once at 108 Tappan Hall. This course will be offered if enough students enroll. Those interested i r E s t LOST English 217: Ancient Rhetoric and Poetic will not meet today at 4 p. m. A make-up meeting will be held 8:00-10:00. N. E. Nelson Economics 51: A make-up examination will be given in this course on Wednesday, January 25, at 3 o'clock in Room 207 Ec. Chemistry 65: An examination on the last seven preparations of the course will be given today at 5 p. in. in Room 151 Chem. Bldg. French 71, Second Semester: An additional section, not listed in the Announcement, will be offered in the second semester: Section 4, MTTF at 2, 303 R.L., Assistant Professor Jobin. Sociology: Professor Angell will not meet his classes in Sociology 163; 51 (Sec. 11); and 253 today. Psychology 31: Make-up laboratory discussion periods will be held Wednesday evening at 7 in Room 2054 N.S. Reading Courses in French, Supplementary Announcement for the Second Semester: In addition to the sections of French 12 listed in the An- nouncement, There will be offered in the coming semester a section of French 11 (MTTF 8, 306 R.L., Mr. Evans), and a section of French 41 MTTF, hour to be arranged. The first meeting of the course will be M at 3, 106 R.L., Mr. Dow). Courses 11, 12, and 41 are designed for upperclassmen and graduate students who wish to develop exclusively a reading knowledge of the langu- age, and aim to be immediately useful in preparation for satisfying the French requirement for higher degrees. Students who have had no French' should begin with French 11; those who have had some study of the lang- uage may be admitted to French 12 or 41 with the permission of the De- partment. For further details consult the current Announcement of the, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, or Mr. L. F. Dow, 100 R.L. No graduate credit is given for any of these courses, but graduate stu- dents are welcome to register as visitors and participate in the work of thea classes.l Kappa Ta Alpha: Meet in front of Main Library at 7:30 p. in. Phi Eta Sigma members will have their pictures taken at Day's Studio, at 12:00. Both last and this year's members are urged to be present. Mu Phi Epsilon: Meeting at the League at 8:00 p. m. All members urged to be ;resent. Christian Science Organization meets at eight o'clock this evening in the chapel of the Michigan build- ing. All faculty and students inter- ested are invited to attend. Play-reading Section of the Fac- ulty Women's Club meets at 2:15, Grand Rapids Roop of The Michi- gan League. Geological Journal Club: Regular meeting will be held Thursday, Jan- uary 26, at 8:00 in Room 4054 N.S. Mr. Duncan Stewart will discuss "The Geology and Petrography of the Antarctic Continent." R. O. T. C. Ceremony: All members of the R. 0. T. C. will attend in uni- form at Waterma Gymnasium 5:00 to 5:30 p. m., Wednesday, January 25. This is substituted for company drills this week. Freshman Men's Glee Club will meet Wednesday in the Musical Ac- tivities Room of the Union at 5:00 p. i. Michigan Socialist Club: Business meeting Wednesday, Jan. 25, at 7:30 p. m., Michigan Union. Election of nffinar ~afnr the nnn,,,,a c~nct,-- versation but I want to know its pronounciation and history anyway."I Called everything from 'potent' to educational, Professor Densmore's I CKOK broadcasts are attracting' great numbers of diction studentsl 'and the professor is indeed placed on the firing line as he faces the microphone each Sunday with a tre- mendous audience of critics awaiting only one little slip in his 15-minute talk to sent them to their desks to write gloating letters, "You made a mistake, Mr. Densmore." College Finds Insecticide With Poly-syllabic Name KANSAS CITY, Jan. 23.-(W- Rockhurst college will enter the manufacturing field soon with a chemical insecticide of its own lab- oratory development. The chemical is- called-take a deep breath-ethylenenitrilocrysan- thocarboxylioleate. After eight months of experimen- tation, the chemical was developed~ by Vanston Ryan, of the Rockhurst faculty and James Moran formerly! associated with the department of tropical diseases of Tulane univer- sity, New Orleans. The two succeeded in placing a pyrethrum essence in solution with water, something which Rockhurst chemists say never has been ac- complished before. Denied Fame, Clevelanid Musician Doctors Throats CLEVELAND, Jan. 23.-W~)-Old- est of a family of nine musicians, Dr. Oscar Eisinger also dreamed of fame and the opera when he was a boy. But his voice never developed to greatness despite the training he gave it at the Vienna conservatory of music, so Oscar Eisinger spends ;his time doctoring the throats of others. Most of his patients are radio and opera singers and stage folk. FORMER CAPTAINS HERE Ed Russell, captain of Michigan's1 1932 track team and Harmon Wolfe, captain of the cross-country team in 1931, are both still attending the University of Michigan. They are taking graduate work. V e r y moderate rates. 0. K.I Thacher. Phone 6734. 10c TYPING-Grad. theses a specialty. M. V. Hartsuff, 9067. 40c TYPING-Notes, papers, and Grad. These. Clyde Heckart, 3423. 35C WILL BUY MEN'S CLOTHING 0 -NEW OR OLD- "Best Cash Prices" CHICAGO BUYER Phlone 4306 LOST-Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity pin. Finder please phone 2-3243. Reward. 267 FOUND FOUND-Green compact. Oblong with silver border. Owner may have same by paying for ad. 263 Michigan NOW SHOWING "The Kindom" Philip Barry's Sensational Drama of Human Love with ANN LESLIE HARDING HOWARD . I 0 LAST TIMES TODAY BO A RL FF ib MASK OF BORIS ' URLJIPFU MANCHU" -., MAJ ESTI C-OMORRO W- JOHNNY MMK BROWN iTH E VANISHING F RONTIER _ WITHEVALYN KNAPP ZASU . S RAYMOND HATTON D aENmowddeUAe DIFERETUNUSUAL! PvTL' 4flflnrYa _ _ ___ "TAXI FOR TWO" A Taxi Boys Comedy I PARAMOUNT NEWS SI EUHTII LAST TIMES TODAY I/1r A a. . ..Um .. ,I I THURSDAY EDMUND LOWPEin [1 I- I