THE MICHIGAN DAILY Lnnounces - tions For 3rt Season Programs Scheduled;. sa Ponselle ies October To 22 Open; Season Tickets le Of Prices Be Advanced, al Union Head Will Says e of the most promising arrays tsigal talent in the history of Choral Union concerts at the ersity has been arranged for the 35 series, according to Charles nk, president of the School of c, who has announced this sea- schedule of programs. tstanding musical celebrities and organizations will combine to nt a well-rounded series of con- embracing nearly all phases of cal activity. spite of the splendid offerings i will be heard, President Sink ndicated that the schedule of s for season tickets will be kept' e reduced level of the past year. sa Ponselle, brilliant 'soprano e Metropolitan Opera Company, pen the program of ten attrac- when she appears at Hill Au- ium on October 22. Miss Pon- who has long been an out- ing favorite before Ann Arbor rces in both Choral Union and Festival programs, has consented ake a special trip to the Uni- y for her engagement this fall. e national favorite of radio, e, concert stage, and opera, Law- Tibbett, will appear in the sec- oncert on November 1, to repeat! 'iumph of two years ago in Ann -. Tibbett will be followed on No- er 19 by the Don Cossack Chorus, n as the "Horsemen of the es," and composed entirely of er officers of the Russian Im- pe"al army. They will be under the direction of their diminutive but highly magnetic conductor, Serge Jaroff. Josef Szigeti, famous violin vir- tuoso, will make his debut here when he appears in recital on December 3. For the fourth consecutive year, Dr. Serge Koussevitsky will bring his great organization, the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra of more than 110 musicians, on December 11. The con- cert here will be one which they will make while on their annual tour. After the winter holidays, the series will be resumed when Lotte Lehmann, the great new operatic and recital star, will come to Ann Arbor to make her initial appearance here January 23. Miss Lehmann will be followed on February 13 by Jose Iturbi, Spanish pianist, whose first recital three years ago in Hill Auditorium created tre- mendous enthusiasm. Mr. Iturbi has recently also won great distinction in the field of conducting. The Gordon String Quartet, led by Jacques Gordon, for many years con- cert-master of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, assisted by Ralph Silver- man, 'second violinist; Paul Robyn, viola; and Naoum Benditzky, 'cellist, will make their local debut on Feb- ruary 20. On March 4, Artur Schabel, the fa- mous German pianist, will make his local debut. He is recognized by com- petent music authorities, critics and music-lover, as the greatest-Bethov- en performer of this generation, if not of all times. He will present an all-Beethoven program. The series will be completed on March 18, when the Cleveland Sym- phony Orchestra, under the baton of its new conductor, Artur Rodzinski, will make its first Choral Union ap- pearance. STEWARD TESTIFIES NEW YORK, Sept. 17-(/') -A dining room steward on the burned liner Morro Castle today testified be- fore a federal board of inquiry that he escaped from the ship in the No. 1 lifeboat, that it was ordered low- ered by the chief engineer, and that the chief engineer "got into the boat himself." r Alumni Clubs Start 10-Year Program Fund To Be Used In The Work Of The Summer Camp Of The Forestry School The University Clubs of the elev- enth alumni district inaugurated a Ten-Year Program Fund during their recent convention at Manistique. The fund is to be used as part of the national program to assist in the work and the improvement of the summer camp of the School of For- estry and Conservation. Each club in the district is to contribute funds during the coming year that are to be used as directed by succeeding district conventions. President Emory J. Hyde of the General Alumni Association was the Ann Arbor representative present at the convention. The meeting opened with a noon luncheon, with the business session of the eleventh district following. In the afternoon a golf tourney and other sports occupied thedelegates, while the evening was featured by a dinner-dance. Some of the winners of Michigan Alumni Undergraduate Scholarships and of Michigan Honor Trophies were guests of honor of the alumni. President Ruthven has assured alumni officials that he will be able to visit the eleventh district during the fall, and the preparing of his itinerary and the handling of the other details of his visit were assigned to the dis- trict president. Charles M. Humphrey, Jr., '86L, succeeds Arthur F. Hall, '20, as dis- trict president. LIGHTER EACH YEAR W. A. "Bill" Ingram, football coach at the University of California, said that a player's outfit will weight eight and a half pounds this fall, compared to 22 pouyds 10 years ago. Workers in the University physics laboratories have discovered that ul- tra-short radio waves may be used in the investigation of molecules and atoms as well gas in communication. After theoretical physicists had ad- vanced the theory that certain mole- cules should respond to ultra-short waves, Prof. N. H. Williams, of the physics department, and Mr. C. E. 'Free Show' Nets Profit And Jail For Salesman CHICAGO, Sept. 17.- (P)-The spectacle of thousands passing, free! of charge, into Soldiers' Field, police said, ran crosrsgr ain to Sam Millard's enthusiasm for profit. He posted himself at an entranceI last night, police said, and sold ticketsf to the gullible at $1 a seat for the "Drama of Chicago on Parade." Police said they found a number of World's Fair tickets Millard had col- lected, on the pretense of returning them after the show. One complain- ant asserted Millard sold him 100 votes on a mythical bathing beauty contest. Radio Short Waves Are Used In Molecular Investigations Cleeton set out to study the ammonia molecule by this method. Their experiments have verified the idea that each atom and molecule is in a sense a radio receiving set, and' in so doing have opened up a new field of scientific investigation. The desired information about the am- monia molecule was obtained by this method. The radio transmitting set devel- oped to conduct these experiments is probably the smallest every construct- ed. It consists of a tube one-fourth of an inch in diameter and one inch high; the short radio waves thus pro- duced were one centimeter long and were the shortest continuous radio waves on record: With this new equipment for study- ing molecules it may be possible to render invaluable aid to the field of medicine. Ultra-short radio waves may take their place in treatment of dis- ease along with the X-ray, ultra- violet, and infra-red rays. WillMeet To Arrangre Late Penalty Rule Before any definite arrangements are made for lateness penalties this year, a joint meeting of Judiciary Committee, and the chaperones of the dormitories and sororities will be held, according to Kathleen Car- penter, '35, chairman of judiciary. It is probable, Miss Carpenter said, that the penalties for violation of the lateness rules will be more severe than before, but it is believed that the house mothers will have valuable sug- gestions to offer. BARBER SHIOP When You Write, Think of HI1' WILL FIND The 11 Men of '38 Ready to Serve You Expertly NICKEL'S ARCADE PENS $1.00 to $10.:00 PAPER 500 Sheets -8%/2xl1 40cadu All makes of Typewriters, Rented and Serviced 302 South State Street ROYAL TYPEWRITERS Authorized Sales and Service SOON TO BE 'NEW YORKER' Bill Bonthron, Princeton athlete, is expected to wear the New York A. C. colors in competition this winter. Phone 8950 ; University Flower Shop OPPOSITE MICHIGAN THEATRE PHONE 9055' Corsages--Ta1pe ;$ervice--quq uets We give special service to Fraternities and Sororities for rushing parties and dances. c ROSES GROWN IN ANN A RBO R" -t at the NEW LO N DON'S 1116 - South University --- 1116 EXTRA EXTRA! Subscribe NOW to The Daily Official Bulletin Associated Press Sport News Women's Pages Campus Gossip Sunday Rotogravure Section LOCAL SUBSCRIPTION 00 Per YEAR Mailed Subscription $4.50 per year Apply Campus Salesmen or Student Publications Building