SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1933 Y EST ERD AY HAVANA - Prominent Cubans blamed the United States govern- ment for the bloodshed in the Na- tional Hotel battle which raged throughout Monday, claiming 44 lives. They held that the United States should have intervened. VIENNA - Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss was slightly wounded when shot by a would-be assassin. CENTERVILLE - Police were in- vestigating the murder on Mondayl night of Fritz Hacker, former, by two bandits who escaped with $40 cash and a considerable number of bonds. LANSING--Rep. Carl F. Delano, chairman of the Liquor Sub-Commit- tee of the Legislative Council, indi- cated that tho sub-committee would recommend the Quebec system of liquor control for Michigan follow- ing the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment and the State prohibi- tion act. LANSING-The State Administra- tive Board rejected the$30,000 bid of Ooseph Zilk of Ann Arbor for the Chelsea cement plant. NEW YORK - Appointment of Merle Anderson, pastor of the First Presbyterian church at Ann Arbor, to the pastorate of the North Pres- byterian Church was indicated by the committee on pastors. 10 Ann Arbor Men Join Civilian Corps Enrolled in the Civilian Conserva- tion Corps between 8 a. m. and 1:30 p. m. yesterday, 33 young men of Washtenaw County, 10 of them from Ann Arbor, left yesterday afternoon for Camp Custer to undergo a two weeks conditioning period before be- ing detailed to camps for the winter. Capt. E. O. Day, director of re- cruiting in Washtenaw and Monroe counties, who was in charge of the enrollment, said that only those ap- plicants who agreed to send home most of their $1 a day wage to their parents or dependents were enlisted. 'Slain In Cuban Fight --Associated Press Photo Robert C. Lotspeich, an American who was Havana manager for Swift & Co., was slain during a battle which raged around the National Hotel in Havana. Exhibition Of Chinese Art Opened Here An exhibition of C h i n e s e art through the ages, which will be cir- culated among the colleges and mu- seums of the country by the College Art Association of New York, is hav- ing its initial showing heie. Beginning today, it will be here until Oct. 14 in the Alumni Memorial Hall, accord- ing to Prof. John G. Winter, director of the division of fine arts. Benjamin March, Freer Fellow and Lecturer in Far Eastern Art in the division of fine arts, was asked to write a catalogue for the exhibition and it will be shown here concur- rently with his examination, Profes- sor Winter stated. The College Art Association always prepares author- itative and informative catalogues, he said which means the shows are able to fulfill the educational func- tions for which they are designed. The paintings, which number be- tween 30 and 40, were selected by C. Edward Wells of New York from va- rious sources and will represent the development of pictorial art in China through 20 centuries. Engineers To Hold Smok'er I Meeting Toda A.S.M.E. Student Branch To Discuss Membership, Dues, And Organization The student branch of the Amer- ican Society of Mechanical Engineers will open the year's activities with an informal social meeting in the form of a smoker at 7:30 p. m. today in the Union, Frederick S. Kohl, '34E, president, announced. The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss memberships, dues, and 'rganization, in addition to formulat- ing plans and programs for the com- ing year. New members interested in mechanical, economical, and indus- trial phases of engineering are wel- comed, Kohl said. Students need not be enrolled in the Engineering Col- lege. Through regular bi-monthly meet- ings, the student group hopes to pro- vide a means of contact between the local society and the parent A.S.M.E. Functions will not be limited to tech- nical discussion, Kohl explained, but will be devoted to topics of interest in the field of mechanical engineer- ing. We must get back to the truth that education is not training nor is it propaganda. -Dr. Robert E.. Vinson, president Western Reserve University. Lily Pons Made By E. JEROME PETTIT covered i Lily Pons, the diminutive opera wounded star who is recognized everywhere as Paris, one the world's leading coloratura so- her progr prano, will be heard for the second hrpor time in Ann Arbor when she appears tened pa Monday, Jan. 29, in Hill Auditorium compositi in the 1933-34 Choral Union Series. and then She made her Festival debut in Ann Gradually Arbor two seasons ago, a few months portance after her debut at the Metropolitan When Opera House. In order to come to she took] Ann Arbor on that occasion, she can- a distingui celled her return trip to South Amer- was ama ica, where a series of 20 operatic en- never be gagements awaited her at $4,000 each. serious,a She was born of French and Ital- mind, ss ian parentage in the French Riviera strictness city of Cannes. Graduating from the severe cri Paris Conservatory as a pianist at-an early age, it never occurred to her or to her teachers that she had a E voice of exceptional worth. She dis- t by accident. Playing for soldiers in the hospitals of e day she included a song in am. After that the men lis- tiently to her playing of ons by Bach and Debussy n would call for a song. y she came to realize the im- of her singing. she was 21 years of age her first singing lesson from uished Parisian maestro, who zed to learn that she had fore studied voice. Young, and possessing a brilliant he studied with military and became her own most tic. In three years she made ther operatic debut in Alsace in the role of "Lakme." Other engagements followed throughout the cities of France with the exception of Paris. While singing in the University town of Montpelier, news of her artistic triumph was cabled to Mr. Gatti Casazza, of the Metropolitan Opera House, and with- in a few weeks she was on her way to America for an audition. She re- mained just one week, during which time she was engaged by that or- ganization for opera appearances and by the Metropolitan Musical Bureau for such concert appearances as she might care to make. The following year, Jan. 3, 1931, she made her Metropolitan House debut singing the role of "Lucia di Lammer- moor." It was the first time in her life that she had appeared in a major opera house. Instantly she was the success of the musical season. At the conclusion of the "Mad Scene," she received one of the greatest ovations ever tendered a Metropolitan prima donna. Her future performances were in keeping with this outstanding in- troduction. and since then she has been recognized the world over as the greatest in her particular field. Nego- tiations were at once undertaken by the Ann Arbor May Festival author- ities, with the result that she was heard in the Festival of 1931. Discovery Of TalentAccidentally YOU CAN GET THEM NOW- j ROB SUPPLY COMPANY Electrical supplies valued at $155 were stolen early yesterday morning from the Posey Electrical Supply Co., 800 Third St'. Thieves made their entry into the store by removing a back window. RAISE CROPS ON SAKHALIN ALEXANDROVSK, Sakhalin Island -Sowing of food crops on this island has been tried for the first time this year with favorable results in the soviet section of Sakhalin. Potatoes were especially good. Fishing has al- ways been the chief reliance of islanders. TI Adr-lmlk An which had been sold out last week are NOW ON HAND AT WAHR UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 316 STATE STREET III _ _ _ . 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