THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1I V (iT'IPTC T A T RTT TT1T IG7 XL).. 'XJUJ' .l d ..[ l.ahf-'.4 I i LJkki.i2a1 . III Pu~bicaton 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; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. S'i I i VOL. XLIV SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1933 No. 311 Notices s~enAte Reception: The members of the faculties and their wives are cor- dially invited to be present at a re- ception by the President and the Sen- ate of the University in honor of the new members of the faculties to be held on Tuesday evening, October 31, from 8:30 o'clock until 12 o'clock in the ballroom of the Michigan Union. The reception will take place between 8:30 and 10:00, after which there will be an opportunity for danc- ing. No individual invitations will be sent out. Women Students Attending the Ilinois-Michigan Football Game: Women students wishing to attend the Illinois-Michigan football game are ,required to register in the Office of the ean of Women. A letter of permission from parents must be received in the Dean of Women's Office not later than Thurs- day, Nov. 2. If a studeflt wishes to ge :otherwise than by train, special permission for such mode of travel must be included in the parent's let- ter.' Graduate women also are invited to register in the office. Byrl Fox Bacher, Asst. Dean of Women. Academic Notices Preliminary Examination for the Ph.D. Degree in English will be given in the following order: Nov. 4-Literature of the Renais- sance. Nov. 11-Medieval Literature. Nov. 18-Criticism. Nov. 25-American Literature. Dec. 2-Linguistics. Lectures University Lecture: Monday, Octo- ber 30, 4:15 p. m., Natural Science Auditorium. Dr. Alfred Zimmern, Professor of International Relations in Oxford University: "A Policy for the Disarmament Conference." Events Today' Harris Hall: "Conversatione" for students this evening at seven oelock. Leader Professor Bennett Weave'r, Director of the Hopwood Awards. Liberal Students Union: "Music Appreciation for the Layman" will be thatopic discussed by Mr. Glenn Mc- Geoch, of the School of Music fac- ulty, at the meeting of this group to- night at 7:30 in the Study, Uni- tarian Church, corner of Huron and State streets. The usual open discus- sion and social hour will follow. Stu- dents new on campus are especially invlted. This morning at 10:45, Mr. Marley will speak on "Rommohun Roy and Annie Besant.' 'Stalker Hall, (Formerly Wesley Hall), Sunday, Oct. 29: Round Table for Freshmen. 10:45 Worship Service at the First Methodist Church. Dr. F. B. Fisher preaching on "Is One Religion as Good as Another?" 12:15 The Half Hour Forum with the Fishers o4 the Sermon. 3:00 The International Student Fo- rum featuring a discussion on the causes of War. Student leaders will be John Brumm and Ralph Seigalman. Tea will be served. 6:00 The Wesleyan Guild. Dean W. R. Humphreys speaking on "The Bible as a Guide to an Adequate Personal Religion." 7:00 Fellowship and Supper. All welcome. -Presbyterian Student Appoint- nienls, Sunday 9:00 Breakfast at the League. 9:30 Round Table on Social and Religious Trends. Dr. Preston Slosson will speak this Sun- day on the subject, "Religion in this Changing World." 10:45 Morning Worship. Theme, "Ex- periencing the Divine Fellow- ship." 5:30 Social hour and supper. 6:30 Student forum. Rev. Harold P. Marley, "Heat in the Coal Industry." Congregational Church: At 10:45 Sunday Mr. Heaps will speak on "Ways of Meeting a Crisis," being the fourth address in a series on "Successful Living." The student Fellowship will be ad- dressed by Dean S. T. Dana of the School of Forestry, on "A Philosophy of Science." The address will follow the six o'clock supper. Student Volunteer meeting on Sun- day, October 29 at 4:30 o'clock, cab- inet room of Lane Hall. All those in- terested in giving service in foreign countries are cordially invited to at- tend the meeting. For further infor- mnation call Mildred Doster, 2-2117. Hillel Foundation: Regular Sun- day services at 11:15 a. m. in the League Chapel. Rabbi Heller will de- Church of Christ (Disciples) will hold a meeting Sunday at 6 p. in. at the church. Lunch will be served at six and will be followed by a dis- cussion period at 6:30. Deutscher Zirkel: Hike Sunday afternoon (October 29), starting from League at 2:30. For members and others interested. Bring a lunch. Philippine Michigan Club: Regular meeting on Sunday, Oct. 29, at 3:30 p. m. in Lane Hall. Scalp and Blade: Important meet- ing Sunday, 5 p. m. at the Union. All members are requested to attend. Vulcan meeting at 5:30 p. m. Sun- day, October 29, Michigan Union. Coming Events Special Assembly: There will be an assembly for all students enrolled in Education classes in the University High School Auditorium at 4:10 Tuesday, October 31. Professor Wm. Clark Trow will give an illustrated lecture on "Experimental Schools in Republican Germany." Organ Recital: Palmer Christian, University organist, will give the fol- lowing program, Wednesday after- noon, at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Audi- torium, to which the general public with the exception of small children is invited: Dubois: Fantasie Triomphale; Schumann: Sketch in D flat; Franck: Cantabile; Franck: Fantasie in A; Guilmant: Fugue in D; Novak: In the Church: Karg-Elert; Impres- sion, Op. 86, No. 9; Diggle: Passa- caglia and Fugue. Adelphi House of Representatives will hold its regular meeting this Tuesday evening at 7:30 in the so- ciety's room on the fourth floor of Angell Hall. Tryouts will be heard for the last time at this meeting. The program for the evening will be a Parliamentary Drill. The Sigma Rho Tau debate has been cancelled by the withdrawal of the engineers' society. Visitors are welcome. Stalker Hall: Discussion on the Grave Crisis in Disarmament. Stal- ker Hall (formerly Wesley Hall), 5:00 p. in., Monday. The Play-Reading Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet next Tuesday, October 31, at the Michigan League, at 2:30 p. m. Comedy Club: Tryouts for the play will be held in the League Rehearsal Room Tuesday and Wednesday eve- nings at 7:30. Michigan Dames, Dramatic and Music Section will meet Wednesday, Oct. 31, at 7:30 p. m., at the home of Mrs. D. L. Dumond, 1501 Norton. Economics Club: A round table dis- cussion of The Monetary Situation, led by Professors Watkins and Rod- key, will be held Monday, October 30, at 7:45 in Room 302 of the Union. Members of the staffs in Economics and Business Administration, and graduate students in those depart- ments, are invited. Rhythms Class of the Junior A.A.U.W. will meet Monday night at 7:30 in Barbour Gym. .l,, Harris Hall: "Hard Times Party," Tuesday, Oct. 31, at 8:30 p. m. Games, dancing and refreshments are planned. Admission: ladies, 10c; Gentlemen, 15c, and a 10c tax. for any but old clothes. All students are cordially invited to attend. Late per- mission is being arranged for girls who attend. Cercle Francais: The meeting to welcome new members will take the form of a Hallowe'en party on Wed- nesday, Nov. 1, at 8:00 p. m. sharp, in room 408 Romance Language Building. Old members as well as new are urged to be present. Alpha Nu meets Tuesday at 7:30 in the Alpha NIu Room fourth floor Angell Hall. Paul Belknap will lead a discussion on the subject of Rus- sian recognition. Material on this subject may be found in the period- ical room of the library. At 7:00, prior to the meeting, tryout speeches will be heard. Junior Mathematical Society will meet Tuesday evening, October 31, at 8 p. in. in room 3011 A. H. Pro- fessor Goudsmit of the physics de- partment will speak on "Mathe- matics: of Patterns." All those in- terested in mathematics are urged to be present. Physics Colloquium: Mr. G. P. Brewington will speak on "The Sec- ondary Structure of X-Ray Absorp- tion Edges" at 4:15 p. m. Tuesday, in Room 1041, East Physics Bldg. All interested are cordially invited to at- tend. Foreign Students are invited to the Student Tea at President Ruthven's residence. Wednesday. November 1. Slosson Will Broadcast On Foreign Crisis Dr. Abbott Will Discuss Sound Intensities On His Program Wednesday Strained international relationships in Europe will be the topic of Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history de- partment when he speaks at 10 p. m. Wednesday o v e r the University Broadcasting Service. The talk will be heard over WJR. Professor Slosson, who last year lec- tured in history in universities in England and Scotland, has chosen the subject "Clouds over Europe" for the weekly adult education program, on which a topic of current interest and one of research are presented. Will Discuss Sound The second speaker on the Wed- nesday night program will be Dr. Ernest J. Abbott, research physicist of the department of engineering re- search, who will talk on "The Loud- ness of Sounds -Instrumental Meas- urements and Human Sensations" and conduct an experiment in sound with equipment installed in the Mor- ris Hall studio. On the regular Sunday parent hour at 6 p. m. today Prof. Lewis W. Kee- ler of the educational school will dis- cuss the place of the superintendent and the supervisor in promoting child development.- Prof. Howard B. Lewis, director of the College of Pharmacy, will speak on the vocational guidance series at 2 p. m. Friday, on "The Pharmacist." This is the second of 17 vocations and professions to be taken up during the year. Prof. Price to Speak On other school programs this week, Prof. Hereward Price of the English department will speak on Shakespeare at 2 p. m. Tuesday, Prof. Everett S. Brown of the politi- cal science department on national politics, at 2 p. m. Wednesday, and Prof. Frank N. Blanchard of the zoology department on Michigan snakes at 2 p. m. Thursday. The radio music lessons of Prof. Joseph E. Maddy of the music school will be heard at the regular hours, instruction in the playing of stringed instruments at 9:15 a. m. Monday, in the playing of band instruments at 2 p. m. Monday, and in elementary singing at 9:15 a. m. Tuesday. March Will Address Exchange Club Here "Significance of Chinese Art to the American Business Man," will be the subject of a talk by Benjamin March, Freer Fellow and curator of the di- vision of the Orient in the Museum of Anthropology, to the Exchange Club at their regular meeting at 6:10 p. m. tomorrow in the Michigan Un- ion. Mr. March has spent several years in China and is recognized through- out the United States as an authori- ty on Chinese art. He came here from the Detroit Institute of Arts. British Newspaperman Likes German Prisons MUNICH, Oct. 28--(P-Facing a charge of high treason for which the extreme penalty is death, Noel Pan- ter, British newspaperman, is spend- ing his fifth day of detention at po- lice headquarters in good health and relative comfort today. Panter, Munich correspondent for the London Daily Telegraph, ex- pressed confidence that with the aid of the British embassy and the for- eign office at London he would be out soon. On the vigorous protest of the British embassy at Berlin, the consul general here was permitted to see Panter for the first time Friday. We Feature A Complete Line of Max Factor Theatrical' Makeup We Also Suggest PERFECTION CLEANSING 'ISSUE 500 Sheets A* & C . By JOHN A. BABING TON a Hidden away in the North wing ofI West Engineering Building is an elaborate bit of research equipment which few students know about, and which fewer realize is duplicated in only one other place in this country.I The University naval testing tank has its only counterpart in govern- ment-maintained research labora- tories in Washington, where experi- mental shapes of ships are tested for the ease with which they will glide through the water. The tank is a concrete box 300 feet long, 22 feet wide, and 10 feet deep. Straddling the tank is an electrically motored car which can tow models through the water at any speed from 23 to 400 feet per minute. Mounted on the towing car is a recording dy- namometer, through whose wiggling pen the resistance of the model is registered on specially prepared graph paper. Models Made To Specifications From the data supplied by these records, students in the naval arch- itecture course compute the most ef- ficipnt shape for the desired speed. And according to model maker A. A. Limpert, whose workshop is part of of the naval tank room, the com- plexity of these mechanical calcu-- lations is rather near the limit as such things go. Model making is, to the "man in the street," even more interesting than the naval tank. Half a dozen submarine models, made as long ago as 1918, are exhibited at one end of the room, and another half dozen model sailboat hulls are scattered about. These models are about a yard and a half long, and made largely of wood, because of their delicate shapes. But they are only the fancier products of the model maker. Mostly Freighters Principally the models worked with are the less graceful forms of freigh- ters and passenger boats. These models, made on a scale of 1 to 40, and well over six feet long, are cast in wax in a rough clay mold. The wax slab, weighing about 380 pounds, is then carefully machined to draw- ing specifications. The model is tested in the tank at varying speeds, its shape modified and then tested again. , About ,a dozen wax models are kept on hand at a time. The labora- tory's supply of wax is one and a Christian Will Present Twilight Organ Concert Prof. Palmer Christian, professor of organ of the School of Music, will give a Twilight Organ Recital pathe Frieze Memorial Organ, at 4:15 p. m., Wednesday, in Hill Auditorium. The general public, with the excep- tion of small children, may attend without admission charge. The pro- gram made up of diversified organ compositions, will be as follows: Fantasie Triomphale....D!ubois Sketch in D flat.......Schumann Cantabile.............Franck Fantasie in A......... .Franck Fugue in D..........Guilmant In the Church ........... Novak Impression, Op. 86 No. 9 ..........Karg-Elert Passacaglia and Fugue. ...Digge En gineering Naval Tank Serves. As LaboratoryForShip Design half tons, and old models must be melted to make new ones. Tests just completed on a new German freighter type with a pointed bow revealed that the shape had not the expected advantages. Limpert is now putting the finishing touches on a large, blunt model which is more nearly like the standard freighters now plying the lakes. Demand For Testing Less In normal times there is plenty of demand by shipbuilding compan- ies for model making and testing, says Limpert. In a good year as many as 30 models are made, but since the decline of shipbuilding with the depression, requests for such ex- perimental work have fallen off. The last work done by the local labora- tory for the government was done three, years ago, when some bulbous- bowshapes were teste for the Ship- ping Board. Limpert laughed at the idea of testing models of racing boats. With the machine's top speed fixed at 400 feet per minute the model would have to be made so small that tests with it would have no significance. "Working with high speed hydro- planes is a matter of cut and try on the full-sized job," he said. Prof. H. C. Adams of the engineer- ing school, is soon to begin experi- ments on the subject of "rolling" in vessels. Elaborate electrical, light- reflecting, and photo-film recording apparatus is involved. Besides its experimental uses, the naval tank is used in emergencies as a supply tank of the University high pressure fire system. Zeppelin Departs For Home Hangar AKRON, 0., Oct. 28 - (/) - The Graf Zeppelin, with Dr. Hugo Eck- ener at the controls, lifted from the mooring mast at Akron Airport at 9 a. m. today and, with motors roar- ing, began the long flight back to Friedrichshafen, Germany. A brilliant sun glinted on the sil- very sides of the big dirigible as it headed into the east on the last lap of an ambitious triangular flight to South and North America. The Graf's next stop, barring accidents, will be at Seville, Spain, when she will pro- ceed to Friedrichshafen. The com- mander expected to arrive at Seville Monday afternoon. Two Miners Die Under Dirt, Iron Ore Cave-In NEGAUNEE, Oct. 28-(A)-Buried beneath tons of earth and iron ore, two miners were killed Friday in a cave-in of a stock pile they were drilling at the Maas mine prepara- tory to blasting. toBoth of the men, John Neimi, 50, and Leo Field, 31, were dead when extricated by fellow workmen. PRINTING-Lowest City Prices THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown - 206 North Main Next to Main Post Office Dial 2-1013 WE SELL TYPEWRITING PAPER Faculty Music Concerts Will Be Presented Programs To Use VariedI Talent Of Student And Faculty Groups Twelve programs have been sched- uled in the series of Faculty Con- certs, to be given by the School of Music at 4:15 p. M., on Sundays, in Hill Auditorium. The programs are varied in na- ture and will utilize the services of distinguished members of the School of Music faculty and various stu- dent musical groups, including the Symphony Orchestra, the Varsity. Glee Club, the Varsity R. O. T. C. Band, the University Choral Union, and the Chamber Music Ensemble. No admission will be charged to the concerts, which are open to the public, but the doors of the audi- torium will be closed during num- bers. The schedule is as follows: Nov. 5, Soloists: Arthur Hackett, Tenor; Wassily Besekirsky, Violin; Hanns Pick, Violoncello; Joseph Brinkman, Pianist; Earl V. Moore, Conductor; and the University Sym- phony Orchestra. Nov. 19, Miscellaneous faculty con- cert, Vocal, piano, and chamber music offerings. Dec. 3, University Symphony Or- chestra with piano and 'cello solos. Earl V. Moore, conductor. Dec. 10, Handel's "Messiah." Solo- ists include Arthur Hackett, Tenor, and others to be announced. The University Symphony Orchestra, with Earl V. Moore conducting. Jan. 7, Miscellaneous faculty con- cert. Jan. 14, Varsity Glee Club. Jan. 28, University Symphony Or- chestra, Concertos to be played by members of the senior class. Feb. 18, Miscellaneous faculty con- cert. March 4, University Symphony Orchestra. March 11, University Band. March '18, Miscellaneous faculty concert. March 25, University Symphony Orchestra, concertos to be played by members of the senior class. All of the programs are tentative 4th District Alumni Meet At Gary, Inc. University alumni of Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama gathered Friday afternoon and eve- ning at the Hotel Gary, Gary, Ind., for the annual business meeting and banquet of the fourth district of the Alumni Association. The principal speakers on the ban- quet program were Franklin C. Cap- pon, assistant varsity football coach, and T. Hawley Tapping, general sec- retary of the Alumni. Association. LouisQ. Elbel, '14L, composer of The Victors, was also on nand to lead the singing. The business session was held at 3 p. m. and the banquet was held in the hotel's main dining room imme- diately after it at 6:30 p. in. In addition to members of the fourth district, representatives of the third district and also the president of the fifth district were in attend- ance, according to Mr. Tapping. He also added that there were alumni of the University of Michigan clubs of LaPorte, South Bend, Gosh- en, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Evans- ville, Louisville, Ky., Memphis, Tenn., and of several others present for the pre-game celebration. Havana University To Deny Support To Gran HAVANA, Oct. 28-(P)-President Grau faced the possibility today of losing one of his strongest group of supporters - students of Havana un- iversity. In a hectic general assembly, speakers assailed the Student Direc- tory, which has backed Grau, for "breaking faith" by "continuing to play politics after the downfall of Machado." Three persons were wounded on the street during the night in an exchange of shots between soldiers and snipers. Court sanctions today set Nov. 1 as the date for the open- ing of trials of the followers of the deposed president, Gerardo Macha- do. If we could prevent publishers from publishing novels we might be the happiest land in the world. - Hugh Walpole, British novelist. in nature and may be subject to changes, from time to time, as occa- sion may warrant. I .j ILL CONTINUOUS TODAY! 10c TO 6-- 15c AFTER 6 FOUR DAYS STARTING TODAY (\ C Extra 4dded- JOHN MACK BROWN "tFIGHTING WITH KIT CARSON" News Silly Symphony Novelties .rr \ 11 Ii FESTI °I4 ra v. "Aj% fsr b F WTS r