100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 20, 1934 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1934-02-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

T HE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY,

Law Enforcers
To Hold First
Meetino Here
Officers Institute Plans To
Meet In Four Sessions
On Alternate Mondays
In response to requests from ju-
diciary and police officers throughout
the state, the Extension Division will
sponsor the first Institute for Law
Enforcement Officers beginning Mar.
5, and continuing on alternate Mon-
days for four sessions, officials of
the Extension Division revealed yes-
terday.
The programs of the four sessions
will include 16 lectures and four dis-
cussions emphasizing the utilization
in crime detection of those branches
of knowledge allied to medicine and
the other phases of the work of the
police officer. In general, the pur-
poses of the institute are to collect,
present, and exchange information
which may be used in the prevention
and detection of crime, according to
a bulletin released by the Extension
Division. A
The program for the opening ses-
sion of the institute Mar. 5 includes
an address by Prof. Carl V. Weller,
director of the Pathological Labora-
tories and a discussion of the legal
matters pertaining to the Cadaver, by
Dr. LeMoyne Snyder of Lansing, dur-
ing the morning meeting. In the
afternoon, Prof. Herbert W. Emer-
son, director of the Pasteur Insti-
tute, will speak on "The Definition
and Classification of Poisons" and
Dr. John C. Bugher of the pathology
department will discuss "The Dead
Body."
Future sessions will hear LeRoy
Smith of the Michigan State Police
Department, Inspector Charles C.
Carmody of the Identification Bur-
eau of the Detroit Police Depart-
ment, and Judge Leland W. Carr of
Lansing.
Three Men Held On
Statutory Charges
Arrested on statutory charges, three
men, Floyd Richardson and Melvin
Archer of Whitaker, and Ernest Gon-
you of Ypsilanti pleaded not guilty
yesterday afternoon in Circuit Court
before Judge George W. Sample.
Richardson and Archer, who are
alleged to have attacked a school girl
in Whataker, were bound over to the
next term of court and lodged in
the County Jail in lieu of $2,000
bonds.
Gonyou, who is alleged to have
committed a similar crime while un-
der the influence of intoxicating li-
quor, entered a plea of not guilty,
and was bound over to the next term
of court. Gonyou was lodged in jail
in lieu of a $5,000 bond.

-AssocW';ed Pres. Pnoto
Albert I, beloved king of the Belgians who was killed in a moun-
tain climbing expedition near Brussels, is shown in one of his latest
pictures with Queen Elizabeth, to whom he had been married 34 years.

-Associated Press Photo
Army pilots checked their parachutes closely as they took off on
their first flights with Uncle Sam's mail. Here is Lieut. William Frut-
chey selecting his parachute at Floyd Bennett Field, New York.

Remaining closed yesterday in or-
der to replenish stock and to revise
prices downward, the State Liquor
Store at 113 W. Huron St. will re-
open today.
Despite the efforts of the staff the
store was unable to have the cheap-
est grades of liquor on hand for the
opening day. The sales were much
higher than had been anticipated,
however, with the 725 cash custom-
ers purchasing liquor to the value
of $1,843.
Efforts are being made by the
management to obtain cheaper whis-
key here for patrons who desire tt

pay only from $1 to $2 per quart.
It was estimated that the opening
day sales might have amounted to
$3,000 had there been cheaper brands
in stock.
The bonded whiskies selling at
$7.30 a quart will be reduced to
$6.40; those for sale at $3.20 will be
reduced to $3.10; whiskies at $4.30
will be reduced to $3.90 a quart;
blends at $2.70 to $2.30 a quart; and
those at $2.40 a quart to $2.20. Gins
selling at $1.50 will now cost $1.20
per quart; and those at $2.30 are to
be lowered to $2.10. The reduction
in wines will range from 10 to 20
cents per quart.
_ Frank A. Picard, chairman of the
State Liquor Control Commission,
was reported to have said that the
reductions were made possible by
the generous attitude of the state
and cheaper quotations from distil-
leries.
A species of fly said to be unique
on this continent has been found on
the campus of Fordham University
and is being carefully studied by
biology students at the University.

Brown said the inferences drawn
from airmail conferences held here
in 1930 were hasty and unsupported
by facts.
16 DIE IN ITALIAN WRECK
PIOMBINO, Italy, Feb. 19. - (P) -
Mussolini's agents today were inves-
tigating the wreck of a special train,
loaded with sightseers returning from
a fiesta here, which ran head-on
into another train yesterday, killing
16 persons and injuring 11 near the
village of Populonia.

AW

11

mu neru

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan