TH E MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCT. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication 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. Cubans Seek To Oust Officers Held In National Hotel . XLIV THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1933 No. 10 NOTICES To the Members of the University Council: The first meeting of the Council for this year will be held on Monday, October 9, at 4:15 p. in., Room 1009 Angell Hall. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary. To University Faculty Members: In response to numerous requests, and in order to accommodate Faculty members, special provision has been made for accepting in payment of Choral Union Concert tickets, checks postdated to November 1. Those desiring to take advantage of this provision are re- spectfully requested to communicate with the President of the School of Music. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information: All candidates previously enrolled with the Bureau, should call at the office and leave their addresses and schedules, if they are in attendance this semester. Meeting of the Staff, Department of Chemistry: will be held in Room 212 Chemistry Building at 4:00 p. m., Friday, October 6. Notice to Freshmen: Those students who have not yet taken one or both of the tests required of all entering freshmen will be expected to make up these examinations today and tomorrow, October 5 and 6. Those who missed the English examination should report at 301 Mason Hall today. Those who missed the Algebra examination should report at 2:00 p. m. tomorrow, October 6. These examinations take precedence over all other appointments includ- ing class work. Be on time. C. S. Yoakum. Voice Classes: Owing to the number of students enrolled for class in- struction in voice and in order to avoid conflicts, an additional section has been formed, meeting at 8 o'clock, Room 223, Mezzanine Floor, School of Music, James Hamilton in charge. Tau Beta Pi: All members who have transferred to the University of Michigan from other schools this fall, please get in touch with Stanley Smith-Phone 2-3173. R. 0. T. C. Tailors will be at R. O. T. C. Headquarters between 8:00 a. m. and 4:30 p. in. today and Friday to measure students for uniforms. ACADEMIC NOTICES English 31, Section 17: On Wednesday, October 4 and thereafter, Sec- tion 17 of English 31, which has formerly met in Room 4203 A. H. at 1 p. m., will meet at the same hour in 2003 A. H. A. L. Hawkins. Applicants for Ph.D. in Economics: All applicants who plan to take the general examinations this fall should see the Secretary of the De- partment of Economics in Room 107 Ec. this week. Shop 4-A students will meet Prof. Gwiazdowski in room 1300 East En- gineering Bldg. this morning at 8 o'clock. EVENTS TODAY Kappa Nu: There will be a tea today at the Hillel Foundation sponsored by the Kappa Nu fraternity. Everybody is invited. Political Science Journal Club meets in the Political Science Seminar room from 3:00 to 5:00 p. m. All graduate students in political science are expected to attend. Interpretive Arts Society: All members who wish to take active part in the Society this year are urged to meet in Room 302 Mason Hall Thurs- day, at 4:00 p. m. Polonia Literary Circle will meet for the first time this year, at 7:30 at the Michigan League. All students of Polish descent are urged to attend it. Quarterdeck Society meets at 7:30 p. m. in room 340, West Engineering Building. Tau Beta Pi business meeting at 7:30 p. m. in Room 348 W. Eng. Election of a new vice-president and member of the advisory board. All members please be present. Dance Club will have its first meeting at 4:30 in Barbour Gym, 2nd floor. All girls interested are urged to come. A tap club will be formed later. National Student League: An open forum will be held in the Michigan Union Lobby at 8 p. in. Topic: Cuban Intervention. Everyone invited. COMING EVENTS Paleontological Journal Club will meet in room 1553 University Mu- seums on Friday, October 6, at 5 p. m. All those interested in a review of recent paleontological literature will be welcome. P1 Lambda Theta organization meeting Friday, 7:30-8:30 p. m., Uni- versity Elementary Office. Important that all members attend or notify Betty Hawes, 2-3225. Transfer members of other chapters cordially in. vited. Ann Arbor Theosophical Society presents E. Norman Pearson of Detroit, president of the Michigan Theosophical Federation, in a lecture entitled, ."The Rebirth of Christianity," Friday evening, Oct. 6. Michigan League Building at 8:00 o'clock. Everybody cordially invited. Drugists Seek Exclusive Right To SellLiquor DETROIT, Oct. 4-(P)-The Mich- igan drug trade group today was em- barked on a campaign designed to make drug stores the exclusive re- tailers of packaged liquor when and if the sale of spirits is legalized in Michigan. Two hundred druggists and phar- macists decided in a meeting Tues- day night that druggists were the logical dispensers of liquor. They op- posed the establishment of state liquor stores, but recommended that clubs, hotels, and restaurants, be per- mitted to sell liquor by the glass. It also was recommended that sales in drug stores be only for consump- tion off the premises; that profits be limited to 33 per cent of the whole- sale price: Mats 15c Nights 25c Now Playing! 2 FIRST-RUN PICTURES Anita Page Alan Dinehart Allen Vincent I Have Lived" and John Darrow Gloria Shea "Strange People" Extra- I]ATEST Fox MOVIETONE NEWS N n A. C. L. ?s1111/f i BETTER -Associated Press Photos Enlisted men in the Cuban army are shown in action as they sought to oust several hundred officers barricaded in the National Hotel at Havana. At least 44 were killed and 89 wounded in the battle. r I momm.ft Rev. Lewis Calls Col. Robins Fascinating, Fearless Speaker A fascinating and fearless lecture the problems of working people grew, is to be expected when Col. Raymond and Robins entered social service Robins, probably one of the best au- work in Chicago, working with Miss thorities today on Soviet Russia,wokn ChcagoHworkn wt rMs comes to Hill Auditorium Dec. 12 on Jane Addams of Hull House for a the Oratorical Association lecture period of years. series, according to the Rev. Mr. Althouglh a progressive Republican Henry T. Lewis, rector of St. An- in politics, a member of the admin- drew's Episcopal Church. istration of Theodore Roosevelt, and Mr. Lewis, who knows the lecturer a candidate for senator from Illinois personally and has heard him speak I on the Progressive ticket, Robins was on Russia since his visit there last appointed in 1917 by President Wil- year, says hat Col. Robins, who has son as an unofficial observer in spent his life in social work, favors Russia. the recognition of the Russian gov- Robins arrived in Russia when the ernment by the United States. Kerensky government was in power, Robins was born in New York Mr. Lewis said, and remained there City and received a degree in law through the Revolution, coming to from George Washington University know both Lenin and Trotzky very in 1896. As a young man just out of well. When he returned to this coun- college, Robins followed the gold rush try after the war, he spent most of to the Klondike, and there he be- his time lecturing on conditions in came interested in the condition of Russia and other European countries. the miners, Mr. Lewis said. Last year Col. Robins went back From this beginning his interest in to Russia for eight months, studying TWO FIRST-RUN FEATURES JAMES CAGNEY in "A YO3R O~F H E L L" Cagney, as the big brother of today's wild youth in the BIG HOUSE FOR LITTLE MEN and also--- with CHARLES RUGGLES - JOHN HALLIDAY Murder moves at Midnight -and is "Charlie" Scared! Austrian Chancellor Celebrates Birthday A WARNING HAT RACQ Ol EDC Cleaners and Blockers of Hats, who are not real hatters, .FACTORY destroy the rich finish and shapeliness of 'a good hat the 11I 9 TH,r very first time they clean and block it, so that after a few WEARE days wear the hat gets fuzzy and cheap looking FACTORY HAT STORE (W:W.Mann) 611Packard Street (near State I 2 E. 3 Ik Man Is Killed As Picketing, Strikes Go On Flare-up Occurs As 400 Workers Try To Enter Ambridge Steel Plant SULLIVAN, Ind.. Oct. 4 - (A') - Frank Stalder, 30, was killed today by an automobile driven through a crowd of pickets assembled at the Starburn mine several miles north of this city, AMBRIDGE, Pa., Oct. 4-(P)- Three workers were beaten and one picket was wounded by gunfire in an outbreak of strike violence at the Ambridge steel plant today. One worker was reported in a serious con- dition. The flare-up occurred as a group of 400 pickets attempted to halt em- ployes trying to enter the plant of Five Acquitted On Charges Of Banking Fraud HARRISON, Act. 4-(P)-Five of- ficers of the closed Clare County Savings bank today stood acquitted of accepting deposits knowing their bank was insolvent and with intent to defraud, and the verdict contained a charge that the state banking and securities commissions had "failed lamentably in the purpose for which they were organized." The defendants were James A. Mc- Kay of Detroit, the president; Clark H. Sutherland, the cashier; Fred O. McGuire, the assistant cashier, and Elmer Anderson and Homer Douglas, directors. Judge James S. Parker of Flint, who heard the case without a jury, said in " his verdict returned late T u e s d a y that they had "clean hands," and that there was no evi- dence to show that deposits were loaned for speculative purposes.