THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1933 YESTERDAY LOS ANGELES-Thirty-six char- red bodies of welfare workers were discovered after a brush fire swept through a canyon in Griffith Park, where they had been working. Searchers were attempting to find the bodies of at least 20 more miss- ing men. * * * DETROIT-After having collected a large mass of information, the Senate racket investigation commit-~ tee ended its session in the city. The next city to be investigated is Chi- cago. * * * RICHMOND-Virginia was add- ed to the list of states voting repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, final returns showing a 2 to 1 majority for the wets in Tuesday's election. Thir- ty-two states have now ratified the repeal amendment. * * * SULLIVAN, Ind.-One man was killed as an automobile was driven through picket lines in front of the Starburn mine, several miles north of here. CHICAGO-Miami was selected by the American Legion as its 1934 con- vention city. Varsity Debate Try-outs To Be Held Oct. 11 Candidates Are Asked To Register Now; Subject For Trials Announced Tryouts for the Varsity debating team are to be held Oct. 11 at 2 p. m. in room C, Haven Hall, it was an- nounced yesterday by J. H. McBur- ney, varsity debate coach. Candidates were asked to register by signing a a notice which will be posted outside Room 3211, Angell Hall. All except freshmen are invited to participate in the trials which will consist of short argumentative speeches on the subject, "Resolved: That a constitutional amendment making permanent the powers of the Presidency as of July 1, 1933, should be adopted." This is to be the sub- ject of the Western Conference De- bating League for this year and will be used for all University fall de- bates. The trials will be judged by several members of the Department of Speech and General Linguistics. Conference debates with Iowa there and Illinois here are scheduled for this fall, together with preliminary contests with the Colleges of the City of Detroit, Michigan State College, Albion, and the University of Detroit. The spring Conference debates will be conducted in a tournament at Northwestern University. Last year Mtichigan tied for second place and the year before won the Conference championship. Suspect In 20-Year-Old Murder Case Is Found CHICAGO, Oct. 4-- (R) - James Loftus, 49, is in jail pending investi- gation of a 20-year-old murder, which police h a d forgotten, but which he hadn't. Arrested Tuesday during the Amer- ican Legion parade as a pickpocket suspect, police looked up his record and discovered that on January 7, 1913 he was wanted for murder. But the record didn't specify what mur- der, so Loftus came to the rescue. "In January, 1913," he said, "I read in the papers that I was wanted for the murder of 'Buck' Schneider. I told my father about it. He was a politician. He asked me if I had kill- ed Schneider. I told him I hadn't. He said: 'Forget it.'" Samuel Brenan Bossard, 21, stu- dent from Media, Pa., was beaten by four Nazi Brown shirts recently because he failed to salute the Ger- man flag as it passed in a parade in; Berlin. Thousands Participate In Gigantic Legion Celebration -Associated Press Photo It was estimated that 120,000 participated in the gigantic parade of the American Legion during the ex-service men's Chicago convention. Here is a view of the marchers moving south along Michigan Boulevard. Librarians To Visit Here On Way To Meets Two Library Conventions To Be held In Chicago; Bishop Officer In Both A number of distinguished libra- rians of the world will visit Ann Ar- bor through the invitation of William W. Bishop, University librarian, on their way to and from the meeting of the International Federation of Li- brary Associations held from Oct. 14 to 21 in Chicago. Mr. Bishop is president of the In- ternational Federation, which is hold- ing its meeting in Chicago concur- rently with that of the American Li-, brary association and also presides over the International Library Com- mittee. It is the first meeting of the International Federation in America and representatives from most of the important countries of the world will be present. Among those who are sure to visit Ann Arbor are Dr. Isak Collijn, hon- orary president of the International Federation of Library Associations and librarian of the Royal Library at Stockholm, Sweden. Dr. Collijn is an au authority on early printing and has written extensively on subjects of medieval history. Dr. P. T. Sevensma, librarian of the League of Nations at Geneva, perma- nent secretary of the International Federation of Library Associations, and former librarian of the Univer- sity of Amsterdam, will bring with him Dr. Brycha-Vautier from Vienna, the law librarian of the League. Dr. Hugo A. Kruess, director of the Prussian State Library at Berlin, Arundell Esdale, secretary of the British Museum and official repre- sentative of the British Library Asso- ciation, and J. D. Cowley, head libra- rian of the Lancashire County Li- brary, are expected. Others will be: Leon Bultingaire, librarian of the French National Mu- seum of Natural History at Paris; Dr. Wickersheimer, librarian of the University of Strasbourg; Monsignor Eugene Tisserant, head of the Vat- ican Library; and Dr. Luigi de Ge- gori, head of the Casanatense Library in Rome and official delegate of the Italian government. Jan Muszkowski, librarian of the National Library of Warsaw, Poland; and Marcel Godet, librarian of the National Library of Switzerland, Berne, where the committee met last year. Biology provides not one shred of the spontaneous orgin of living mat- ter in the world today. -Dr. James Gray, Cambridge professor. Educated Monkey On Speech Series D E T R O I T, Oct. 4.-Meshie, the American Museum of Natural His- tory's famous educated chimpanzee, will be the first attraction of the lec- ture course planned by the World Adventure Series of the Detroit In- stitute of Arts. Meshie is coming from New York, and the exhibit is open to the general public at 4:30 p. m. Tuesday, Oct. 17, in the audi- torium of the Detroit Institute of Arts. Dr. H. C. Raven, eminent explorer and anatomist at the American Mu- seum, will introduce Meshie, and will give an illustrated 1 e c t u r e on "Meshie, Child of the Jungle." At 8:30 p. m. he will lecture with motion pictures, on "Capturing Gorillas in Deepest Africa,' and again present Meshie. Amelia Earhart, Count von Luck- ner, Dr. William B e e b e, Norman Thomas, James B. Pont, Dr. Ray- mond L. Ditmars, and Dr. Bruno Roselli will also give lectures during October at the Detroit Institute of Arts. Glee Clubs To Give Concerts In Other Cities May Broadcast Some Of Programs; Also Plan Fraternity Sing Engagements for out-of-town con- certs by both the Varsity and Fresh- man glee clubs have been arranged, officials of those groups disclosed yesterday. A concert in Kalamazoo, with the Symphony Orchestra of that city, will be offered some time during the first semester in addition to concerts in Adrian, Hartland, and several in Detroit. Plans are also being made to have some of the concerts broadcast, it was understood, and to have the Varsity Glee Club sing at one of the Sunday afternoon concerts of the School of Music. An interfraternity sing, in the nature of a contest, is also scheduled for the near future, according to present plans of the organization. Regular tryouts nor the freshman group were held yesterday afternoon and tryouts for the Varsity Glee Club are to be held at the regular full-a rehearsal time, from 7:30 to 9 p. m. today. The opening rehearsals of last week were reported to be un- usually successful, with more than 40 freshmen trying out for places with the first-year group and about 60 upperclassmen contending for posi- tions on the Varsity unit. Hospital School Tag Sale To Be HeldSaturday King's Daughters Arrange Annual Drive To Help Convalescing Children The Ann Arbor chapter of the King's Daughters will conduct its an- nual tag-sale for the benefit of the University Hospital School Saturday, according to Mrs. Hugh E. Keeler, chairman of the sale. The school was established in 1922 and for a time continued without outside help. In 1927 and 1928 the Crippled Children's Commission as- sumed part of the instruction duties and expense. Since that time it has been 'aided by several interested or- ganizations. The purpose of the school is to provide training for those children patients of the hospital who are will- ing and able to go on with their in- terrupted school work while conva- lescing from an operation or illness. The teachers, which this tag-sale helps the hospital to maintain, con- tinue the work of the local schools with study programs designed to meet the needs of the 'children while con- forming with state educational re- quirements. At the same time the long recoveries from such operations as mastoids are made pleasant for the young patients with familiar things to do. The King's Daughters is a non- sectarian organization of about 4,000 women throughout the state which interests itself in such charitable ac- tivities as establishing and support- ing schools, and -the maintenance of a convalescent fund, Sunday School, and a Christian program at Univer- sity Hospital. The personnel of the King's Daughters School at the hospital has been reduced in keeping with the times, but nearly 2,000 children a year are taught in the school. Work in the primary, intermediate, and junior high school divisions is offered both in the classrooms and in wards; *1 I New Organ Will Be Played By Christian Prof. Palmer Christian, School of Music professor of organ and Uni- versity olrganist, will dedicate the new organ in the recently-completed civic auditorium in Wooster, Mass., sometime early in November, accord- ing to a recent announcement. The recital will be under the auspices of the New England chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Last month Professor Christian dedicated the new organ of the au- ditorium recently presented to the Battle Creek school system by W. K. Kellogg. The new Kellogg auditor- ium is one of the finest in the State; Joseph McKee Calls Seabury Olitical Boss NEW YORK, Oct. 4.-(')-Samuel Seabury, whose blast against "boss- ism" opened the fusion campaign for the mayoralty of New York, found himself today charged with being a boss himself. Joseph V. McKee, independent mayoral candidate, in a statement accused Seabury of trying to "hog the show." "He has no more right to name the next mayor of New York than any other boss," McKee said. He added that he hadn't accepted the fusion nomination because "the group dom- inated by Samuel Seabury repre- sented nothing that the people of this city had confidence in." Seabury in another campaign speech again attacked Tammany, as-" serting there was $80,000,000 waste in the construction of the new city- owned subway. Report Asks Cessation Of Japanese Missions NEW YORK, Oct. 4 - A report asking for cessation of foreign sub- sidies in Japanese missionary work was made public today by Albert L. Scott, chairman of the laymen's for- eign missions inquiry. "It is our judgment that the time is near when the process -of foreign subsidization should stop," the report said. "Our commission is convinced that the time has come when the Japanese church should be an inde- pendent, indigenous church.°The time has come for the Japanese peo- ple to have the' leadership in work- ing out the type of church and in the form of Christianity which fit their stage of life and thought as a people.", Elaborate System Needed To Keep Locks, Keys In Order By JOHN O'CONNELLI Every door in the University hasI a key to fit it, and every key or its duplicate is kept in a special rack in a small office-workroom on the sec- ond floor of the Storehouse Building. The man in charge of the key room, William C. Bruch, is responsible for the distribution of keys to the peo- ple who have a right to them and he must keep track of every key that goes out of his office. This last is a job in itself. Mr. Bruch uses a card index system by which he can tell at a glance who has a key or keys and what keys they have. There is also a file for deposit slips as a deposit must be paid on every key before it leaves the key room. A grand master, the key that will open every door in a certain building requires a $2 deposit, and room keys require a deposit of 50 cents, demanded of part-time in- structors only. Mr. Bruch reports that there is only about one percent loss in keys during a year. Mr. Bruch likens the system of locks in any one building to the root structure of a large tree. There is a grand master, the key that will open any lock in the building. The next most important key is the sub-mas- ter which will open only the doors in one department of a building - the botany department in the Nat- ural Science Building, for example. Keeps Carpenters Busy Then there are the various room keys which will open only the doors for which they were made. The cyl- inder locks which are used on the doors of offices may look identically the same to the casual observer, but in some types there are as many as 100,000 changes or keys that can be used to make them different. Among others who keep the locks and doors of the University working smoothly are the carpenters. They work about six hours a day planing off doors and drawers and fixing locks that refuse to work. But keys and locks are not the only things that k e e p Building and Grounds men, who are specialists in their own line of work, busy. The de- partment has two men who do noth- ing but replace burned out bulbs and fuses. They also make repairs which do not require special tools or equip- ment. Other specialists in the electrical department are the men who take care of any repairs necessary in the high tension system of the Univer- sity, and a man who spends most of his time winding burned out motors. The high tension work is usually done by men from the Edison Com- pany, but the department also has I a man who can do this work. In the paint department there is a man who ordinarily spends a third of his time lettering signs, but since so many departments have changed their location two men have been kept busy with this work ever since the shifting of the offices began. There is one man who devotes his working hours to the ice-machines and vacuum pumps which are located in the science and medical buildings, dormitories, hospital, and legal re- search library. The machine shop employs a number of welders and men who build special apparatus for the research a4tivities of the various departments. Special plumbers take care of leaky faucets and sewer stoppages. Lawn Mowers Are Experts The grounds department has its own specialists.:: There are men who are expert tree trimmers, others who have a knack for landscape design- ing, and, believe it-or not, the fellows you see cutting the lawns on the campus are expert lawn mowers. Edward C. Pardon, superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, claims that a good deal of experience is neces- sary before a man can cut a lawn with a power mower without making the finished product look like a first- class jigsaw puzzle. The department is keeping the spirit of the NRA although it is not obliged to conform to the rules since it is a State institution,naccording to Mr. Pardon. There are now three in- stead of two men employed to take charge of the University heating sys- tem during the night hours. Their job is to shut off the steam in the buildings at ten o'clock every night and to turn it on again at three in the morning. The same plan is evident through- out the department, Mr. Pardon said. They are employing as many men as they possibly can, although it means part-time work in many cases. The department wants and needs men who are specialists. One of the most important and arduous tasks of the staff is to train new employees in the character of the work. They cannot use men who "can do everything." The University of Texas and the University of Chicago jointly are building the new McDonald Observ- atory in the Davis Mountains in southwestern Texas to house the sec- ond largest telescope in the world. The largest telescope in the world is the 100-inch reflector at Mount Wilson, California. Medieval Royal, Found Under Crown Pavement COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Oct. 4.- (P)-A medieval royal crown of pure gold and intricately designed was found today under the, pavement of the public square in a small town near here. With it were a golden chain and crucifix. Some persons believed the crown probably belonged to King Christian II, who hid in the town in 1532. King Christian probably buried his treasure before crossing to Jut- land, pursued by his former subjects., according to one view. A r. . --I MICHIGAN DECORATIONS The best and most complete stock in the city of MICHIGAN BANNERS, BLANKETS, PENNANTS, BOOKENDS, PLAQUES- Also an attractive line of Michigan jewelry. AT UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 316 STATE STREET N ! ' U! i 240 -f A' F y ,. Open Kitchen Cooking . 0 0 for there is nothing to hide in this sparkl- ing clean cafeteria! -well prepared whole- some food -at lowest possible cost to you! Dinner Special Tonight Fried Soft Shell Crab, Tartar Sauce.... 15c Grilled Smal l Sirloin Steak........ .. 15c Baked Virginia Ham . ..............15c the original nickelodean cafeteria where each food portion Are you "choosey" about your STATIONERY? You'll find our selection of styles by Crane contains numbers to please the most discriminant... 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