TH E MlCHIGAX N DA I LY PACE _ __ _A _ Freshmen R a t e Higher Than '36 SHealth Exam Class All Men In Three Grou Which Receive Varied Instruction Supervise Exercise Find Large Number With Low Arches; Only 155 Have 'A' Posture Target Of Striking;Illino is Mine Workers' Bullets The physical examination which the new students on campus went through recently, is for the purpose of determining whether or not they can take physical education and en- ter athletic activities, said Doctor George A. May, head of the physical education department for men. But there is still another reason Dr. May continues. The examina- tion is given by the health depart- ment in order that they might pro- vide the incoming student with ad- vice and -action in the way of pre- vention and protection of disease. Dr. May also said that the men stu- dents were placed in groups exemp- lifying their rating physically and medically, so that their physical ed- ucation throughout the ensuing year would act as a direct benefit to their physical and medical deficiencies. Dr. May Groups Freshmen Keeping this idea in mind, Dr. May has already grouped the fresh- men in various sections depending upon the outcome on their medical and physical examination. Dr. May is under the impression that on the average the freshmen are quite an improvement both in their medical and physical condition in compari- son with the freshmen last year. Based on the total of 871, the freshmen this year have been grouped into the following sections: Group I - in which the students have nothing physically or mentally wrong with them, and received health cards. There are 720 fresh- men in this group. Group II- men having minor defects and are sup- posed to go back to the Health Serv- ice for a re-check, have 182 fresh- men. Group III - this is a mixed group. The first 'part .or A. consists of men having medical defects and whose exercise and activities should be restricted; no health cards are given these men; in this class there are 28. B. of Group III are men with physical defects who have poor posture or have trouble with their feet, or other corrective defects. It l the aim of Dr. May here to correct these men by proper treatment and exercises. There are 118 freshmen in this class and they are all given health cards. Group IV - men in this group are under care of the Health Service, at least temporarily; in this class there are five freshmen. Group V - consists of those unfortu- nates who are crippled and perma- nently disabled, some have rhumatic heart and exercise is absolutely for- bidden. In this group there are 19. Corrective Exercises Given It is interesting to note the condi- tion of the yearlings in respect to their posture. In class "A" in which the person has good posture there are 155 freshmen. In Class "B' which designates fair posture, with only slight defects, there are 598. And in class "C" in which those are placed who have poor posture with one or more major defects, there are 118. Again it is the desire of Dr. May to correct these students posture by the orthopedic exercise to be given in his grouped classes in Waterman Gym. A compilation of the statistics re- garding the condition of the feet, based on the longitudinal type of fat foot, reveals that many freshmen will find it a wise thing to engage themselves with the classes in order to correct their defective feet. There are, in the freshman class 415 men that have feet supported by a nor- mal arch. There are 366 men with low arches, but they are not all nec- essarily defective. And 84 men have have flat feet with their arches flat on the ground. All men who took the examination were explained the exercises which would help them re- gain their normal arch. Dr. May said that his idea is to prevent these rien from having painful trouble in later years by prescribing corrective exercises for their feet ailments. Dr. May said that he had already talked with a half a dozen men who were. complaining of much pain because of fiat feet. WILLARD BACK FROM LEAVE. Prof. Hobart H. Willard returned yesterday after a three weeks' leave of absence from Hartford, Conn., where he has been participating as technical expert for General Motors Corporation in a patent suit brought by United Chromium, Inc. El -Associated Press Photo This auto was one of the many riddled by an army of pickets during a reign of terror at a coal mine at Harrisburg, Ill. At least 15 persons, many of them tourists, were wounded before state guardsmen broke siege. Fritz Kreisler, Violinist Will lay In Ann Arbor November 1933 Business Graduates Find Many Positions Prof. Fisher Announces That 75 Per Cent Are Placed With Firms The School of Business Adminis- tration has recently received definite information that 75 per cent of last year's graduating class have found positions with well-known business firms throughout the country, Prof. Ernest M. Fisher said yesterday. The rest of the class have not been heard from and may have found positions without notifying the school. Although the School maintains a placement service for its graduates, of which Professor Fisher is director, it does not take credit for the finding of positions for the whole 75 per cent since many graduates have se- cured jobs through their own efforts. The purpose of the service, it was explained, is to afford business or- ganizations that are in need of men with the special training whichthe School of Business Administration provides an opportunity tf meet these men and to become acquainted with their qualifications. Professor Fisher acts for the rest of the fac- ulty in making these contacts. Al- though the service assumes no ob- ligations in the matter of finding jobs for the graduates, it does ev- erything it can to help the newly- made business man to find a position in which he can utilize his knowl- edge. The service aids the student, also, in finding the kind of work he likes or for which he is best suited and in making the necessary contacts. The graduate is helped, too, in presenting his qualifications in the most effec- tive manner. Previous to the "depression" the service placed all of the graduates and could have placed more, Profes- sor Fisher said. Last year the School heard of the placement of 85 per cent of its graduates up to the first of October. The difference in the actual figures of placements for this year and last may be attributed to the fact that many more graduates have found positions for themselves due, probably, to increased employ- ment caused by the NRA and they have not as yet notified the School of their good fortune, Professor Fish- er said. FRANK TERRY COLLAPSES Frank Terry, 301 North State St., collapsed about 9 a. m. yesterday at theintersection of Catherine and Di- vision Sts. He was taken to St. Jo- seph's Hospital in an ambulance where attendants announced him dead. Coroner Ganzhorn stated the man died from a heart attack. Adelphi To Debate Against Engineers Sigma Rho Tau Stump Speakers Society, has formally challenged Adelphi House of Representatives, Literary speakers society, to a debate which will be held Nov. 1. Sigma Rho Tau has accepted the subject offered by Adelphi concern- ing the "Civilian Conservation Corps." A formal statement of the question will be announced later. It was announced by Eric Sommers '35E, chairman of Sigma Rho Tau's foreign relations committee, that the first activity of the society this year will be a series of tryouts for the adelphi debates. All men interested in making the debating team of the Stump Speakers society are asked to Snotify Mr. Sommers. State To Ask Local Groups In Welfare Aid Number Of Families On Lists Started Increasing In August LANSING, Oct. 7.--(P)-The state will ask communities to maintain re- lief budgets and to make appropria- tions from new sources to meet a seasonal increased drain on welfare funds, Fred R. Johnson, state emer- gency welfare director, said today. The number of families on welfare lists started increasing in August, after a summer reduction, Johnson said. In that month there were an estimated 147,357 dependent families in the state, with relief expenditures of $3,435,000, as compared with 139,- 776 families and $3,124,666 in July. No comparable figures for 1932 were available. To meet the expected greater de- mand for aid, communities are being asked to deprive themselves in other directions if necessary to maintain relief budgets. In addition counties are being asked to set aside as much as possible for welfare work from their share of state highway funds. The state, under its new $12,000,000 welfare relief law, is receiving $1,000,- 000 a month from sales tax revenues. This is being apportioned to the counties on the basis of need, and not according to population, Johnson said. The index used is the number of dependants compared to local abil- ity to pay. SUPERVISORS TO MEET Supervisors of Washtenaw County will meet Monday morning at the County building. A school examiner will be elected as well as two audi- tors, a commissioner of the poor and a sealer of weights and masures. Hillel Society Will Sponsor COurses Soon Registration for classes given by the Hillel Foundation will take place Sunday morning, Rabbi Bernard Heller, director of the foundation, announced. The courses offered are to be given free and are open to the general public. The classes sponsored by the foun- dation are as follows: "Dramatic Moments in the History of Judaism," which will be led by Dr. Heller. This course will not essentially concern itself with the history of the Jewish people - but rather with its culture and civilization. 'Jewish Ethics" is a course which will be given by Mr. Hirsch Hopkins, instructor in the Department of Romance Languages. The subject matter of this course will be presented from the historical and genetic points of ;view. The ethical precepts and customs will be traced from their very beginning to their fullest development. "Post- Biblical Literature of the Jews," is a course that will represent a survey and a study of the character of the literary creations of the Jew after the completion of the Bible. The method pursued will be through dis- cussions, lectures and readings. Class for this course will meet Friday eve- nings immediately after the service. "Jewish Music,'" led by George Gal- vani, cantor and musical director, of 'the Temple -Beth-El, Detroit, will; be .devoted primarily to the classic music of the synagogue. Its unique1 character and form will be analyzed. The course will consist of lectures and illustrative renditions by Mr. Galvani, who is a graduate of the4 Staats Hochscule of Berlin and the Conservatory of Naples. Rhead Will Appear In McClung Recital Mabel Ross Rhead, associate pro- fessor of piano in the School of Mu- sic, who recently returned from a summer in Europe, wiU appear as piano accompanist before the St. Ce- celia Society in Grand Rapids, on Thursday evening, on the accasion of a voice recital by Marjorie McClung, who received her master's degree in voice last year. Miss McClung is about to leave for special study in Vienna and Ber- lin and is giving a farewell recital in her home town, Grand Rapids, under the auspices of the St. Cecelia Society before departing. Senator Dale Succumbs To Heart At a ck Republican Senator From Vermont Dies At 66 Of Severe Heart Attack ISLAND POND, Vt., Oct. 7.-(A)-- United States Senator Porter Hin- man Dale lay dead today at his sum- mer home in the nearby mountain town of Newark-victim of a heart attack. Dale, a Republican and the senior United States senator from Vermont, was 66. He had been stricken ill about a month ago but apparently had recovered. Three days ago he suffered a heart attack and failed to rally. He was born at Island Pond, March 1, 1867, attended Vermont schools and later studied at Philadelphia and Boston. For two years he was as- sociated with James E. Murdoch, Shakespearean actorand scholar, He studied law under his father, the late George N. Dale. In 1896, hand in hand with the practice of law, he became interested in diver- sified enterprises. He served in the state militia and was made a colonel on the staff of Gov. Grout. In 1910 he was elected to the Ver- mont senate and for several years he was a member of the Republican state committee. He later served five terms-in the house of representatives. The height of his political power came during the more recent years. He was elected to serve an unex- pired term in the United States Sen- ate, Nov. 6, 1923, and subsequently was twice re-elected. He leaves his widow, ,two sons, George, a Washington lawyer, and Timothy, an Island Pond banker, and a daughter. Fritz Kreisler, the world-renowned Austrian violinist, who occupies a place in the world of violin virtuosi, similar to that held by the match- less Paderewski, among pianists, will make his eighth Ann Arbor appear- ance on Tuesday, Nov. 9. His pre- vious engagements have been spread over a span of more than thirty years. He was first heard in old University Hall, Dec. 11, 1900 and again in the same building, March 22, 1910. On Dec. 8, 1916, he appeared for the first time in Hill Auditorium. He appeared there on Jan. 9, 1922, Jan. 31, 1927, Dec. 13, 1928 and Oct. 13, 1930, thus three years will have elapsed since he was last heard in the Choral Union Concert series. Mr. Kreisler, may be termed a uni- versal artist, for his tours take him to all parts of the civilized world. The demand for Kreisler concerts is so great that time precludes engage- ments except in the outstanding mu- sical centers. No violinist of our time has equalled him in his hold upon the public and none has won and maintained that hold by higher qual- ity. Season after season whatever the place or the occasion, his audiences fill halls or auditoriums to the doors. Music lovers .and Kreisler admirers coming from hundreds of miles to listen totheir favorite performance. These eager listeners include not only lovers of violin music but mu- sicians in general and laymen alike who are quick to recognize his great mastery in art. Other attractions in this year's Choral Union Series include: Lily Pons; Rachmaninoff; Poldi Mildner, the cyclonic pianist; Maria Olszew- Regents Name Old Law Building After Erasmus 0. Haven For the benefit of those puzzled students who have been wandering around the campus vainly attempt- ing to find a building marked "Ha- ven Hall," The Daily is repeating its announcement of the existence of such a building.t Haven Hall is the new name given to the old Law Building. When the law school moved to its new quarters in Hutchins Hall, someone decided that the name of the old Law Build- ing should be changed. The Regents at their last meeting, renamed it Ha- ven Hall in honor of the late Eras- tus O. Haven, president of the Uni- versity from 1863 to 1869. The name is said to be appropriate as President Haven is the only one of the early presidents who has not had a build- ing named for him. The old Law Building was completed in 1863, the first year of President Haven's term. There is also a Haven Hall on the campus of Cornell University named after the same Erastus O. Haven. Dean Orvill C. Snyder of the Col- umbus College of Law has taken to the Ohio Supreme Court a recom- mendation that the court appoint a commission to investigate all Ohio law schools with a view to raising the standards for admission to the bar in the state. ska, opera star and Piatigorsky, the distinguished violoncellist; as well as the famous Vienna Boys' Choir, found by imperial decree in 1498; and three outstanding orchestras, the Boston Symphony with Koussevitzky, wielding the baton over its full quota of more than one hundred and ten players; The Cincinnati Sym- phony, Orchestra, with its full com- plement of performers, with Eugene Goossens, the distinguished contem- porary conductor making his Ann Ar- bor debut; and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, with Ossip Gabrilowitsch, director. Expedition Is Undertaken y Museum Sitaff Creaser And Clanton Will Look For Crustaceans In Missouri Streams Two members of the Museum of Zoology staff left yesterday for a three week trip in the Ozark Moun- tains where they will collect speci- mens for the museum. E. P. Creaser, curator of crustaceans, and Wesley Clanton, research associate in herpe- tology, compose the expedition. They will search the streams and caves 60 miles southwest of Saint Louis in a remote mountainous district for various water animals. The waterflows in this part of Mis- souri are remarkable in that each has a different series of species; the geological history of the country is largely determined by the location of species. Creaser is particularly anx- ious to bring back alive some of the blind fish, salamanders, crayfish, and crickets found in the numerous caves in this section. Snakes gather together in bands preparatory to their hibernation at this time and the party hopes to run across some of these groups in which they could easily capture 60 or 70 for the division of herpetology. Crea- ser will set nets for fish and crus- taceans in the streams. Expeditions were sent to this part of Missouri in 1930 and 1931 and it proved such interesting country that this party was sent. They will es- tablish headquarters in' Ironton, near the famed Iron Mountain, which ge- ologists at one time believed to be of solid iron but, on investigation was found to be merely covered by a veneer of iron ore. Speech Grou'p Gets ManyApplications More than 100 applications have been received from freshmen engi- neers by Sigma Rho Tau, engineer- ing speech society, it was announced yesterday by Saul M. Ferman, '34E. Sigma Rho Tau will hold a smoker Wednesday evening for the benefit of freshman engineers and students with advanced credit who are enter- ing the College of Engineering for the first time this year.. At the regular business meeting the methods of the society and plans for training will be discussed, Fer- man said. Ten circle leaders have been selected by the executive com- mittee and formation of circles will be made at the meeting. Assistant Dean Alfred H. Lovell has been announced as the speaker of the evening. He has chosen as his topic, "Public Utilities." I i w f rm emcounte.r Sale, of CHOAL UI T - AIL .SE TIC mqmr "slop begins "ti.: h App--wk ML s h - Whitmore Visited Lake Man Is By Racketeers The pressure of modern racketeer- ing was felt yesterday at Whitmore Lake when three men approached Chester Wlordarski, contractor, and asked to see his union card. Wlor, darski who is building a hardware store did not have a union card, and the men warned him not to be working there tomorrow if he valued his health. The three men drove away before Wlordarski could get their license number. He reported the affair to Sheriff's office. OCT. I6th PEATMO S 5 makes poor soil good and good soil better . PA~~nc Ah ac n te fn'm r~n4-1. r I--------------------ir at the IC01 OF LILY PONS FRITZ KREISLER I --- -- -, I gf- I ~EE~L IA ErAf SCI-1 4uSIC {, UIII