THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rx DAY, MARCH 8, 1935 -j LAT E WIRE NEWS DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publicatin the Bulletin a constructive notice to all members of the I~n~er l~.Opy received"ath~e office ofthte Mgstant to the President until 3:30; 11:30 a.m. Saturday. FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1935 Kolebin has spent the last few months VOL. XLV No. 114 in Michigan at the Sunrise Coopera- tive Farms, Alicia, Michigan, so is Notices able to give first-hand information N.ting: regarding this phase of the coopera- U~niversity Broadasting: iemvmn Hs akhodbe 9:15-9:30 a.m. - Laboratory Pro- ye movement. His talk should be gram for University Speech Class. of special interest to all economics 2:00-2:30 p.m. -Mental Hygiene and sociology majors. Free. Public of Adolescence Series -Topic: "Ad- invited. oiescence As a Period for Psycholog-C ical Weaning and Emancipation," :Stanley Chorus tryouts for any Howard Y. McClusky, Associate Pro- upper class women who are iter- t.ci®, wITT Al ha hold fu m 'd t o'.'in Hitler's ClI Upsets Conference Water Systeqi Survey ass red By Ftzgerald LANSING, March 7-(AP)--The ;Provisional Saginaw valley authority received assurance from Gov. Fitz- gerld Wednesday that $15,000 would, ,e available fo rits survey of a pure water system. A delegation headed by George L. Lusk, city manager of Bay City and chairman of the Provisional Author- ity, conferred with the Governor re- garding the necessary State legislat- tion for the progam. 0ov. Fitger- aid said the appropriation would be included i the State buget. $Sflfors Bqlk 4, Plqit For Extension Of NR4 WASiiINGTON, March 7-(-P)- Immediate rumblings of Senatorial protest left an aura of doubt tonight around the future of the -Administra- tion's new 17-point plan for a two- year extension of NRA in a form that would code only those industries en- gaged in interstate commerce. A comment from Sen. William H. .ding Deim.-Utah) that the "recom- mendations for modification are very good, but they don't go far enough" was one of the first reactions. In fact,, a two-hour exposition by Donald Richberg stirred but little outward Senate enthusiasm. King's words ap- parently summed up the thought of many of NRA's Senate critics. Several of these same critics at once announced they would press forward their move to abolish the Recovery Administration and trans- fer its functions to the Federal Trade Commission. Dean Edmouso Taus O Sta7Ite .f Y oahToday (Continued From Page 1) tramming given, Dean Ednonson stated that America is depyin.g thousands of young people the chance to profit by a type of educational training that wold give a zest to life and safeguari their interests until eMployent was ,available. ., Directing his fifth accusation at the crime problem, Dean Edmonson as- serted, "America is increasing the number of potential criminals by its failure to safeguard the moral well- being of youth during the most im- pressionable period of life." He urged that since the awakening of the older generation to the im- portance of this problem is no easy task, the responsibility for correcting these evils be assumed by "those young in years or by those old in years, but young in heart." Dean Edmonson's personal con- structive program which he advo- cated included the following require- naents: "A longer period of schooling for a larger fraction of our young people; more liberal provisions for wholesome recreation in all types of communities - the large As well as the small; the development of increased opportuni- ties for employment on part-time or full-time basis, especially in the kinds of employment that have educational value; anl the greater use of the tal- ents of young people in planning ani in carrying forward undertakings ii our communities, through the various civic, educational, social, and religious ageies." Prof. William Kynoch of the wood technology department, who talked os the same University hour, discussed thet value of wood technology in law suits and criminal cases. Professor Kynoch gave as an ex- ample the ladder evidence in the Hauptmann trial, wtiich was brought forth by Arthur Koehler, a graduate of the University. "This," he asserted, "has directed public attention to the fact that a scientific knowledge of wood consti- tutes one more weapon in the hands of law and order in its war against crime." I i fessor of Educational Psychology. I University Scholarships in thel Graduate School: The Board of Regents of the Uni-c versity of Michigan have establishedt certain University of Michigan Schol- arships to be known as University1 Scholarships in the Graduate Schooll and have directed that these Schol- arships shall be available to students in the University who are residents1 of the State of Michigan and who en- ter upon graduate work in the aca- demic year immediately following their undergraduate curricula and thej receiving of the bachelor's degree. The Scholarships carry exemption from fees in the manner of existing University Fellowships. in the Gradu- ate School. Application blanks for' University Scholarships in the Gradu- ate School may be obtained from the office of the Graduate School and should be filed not later than March 9, accompanied by a transcript of the undergraduate record. C. S. Yoakum, Dean The Bureau of Appointments has received several calls from summer camps desiring Junior, Senior Medi- cal students or internes, both men and women. If interested call at the Bureau of Appointments at once. Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall University Oratorical Contest: Stu- dents who are preparing to enter this. contest are urged to consult with' any member of the department of; Speech and General Linguistics re- garding the composition of the speech. It is hoped that all contestants .will arrange consultations within the next few days.1 1935 Mechanical Engineers: P. W. Boynton of the Socony-Vacuum Oil Company will be in Room 221 West Engineering Building the afternoon of March 11, for the purpose of in- terviewing those men who may be in- terested in employment with this company. Will you please make an appointment prior to March 11. 1935 Mechanical Engineers: D. B. King and S. W. Pickering of the Carbide and Carbon Chemicals Corporation will be in Room 221, West Engineering building on March 12, for the purpose of interviewing those1 students interested in employment{ with this company. Please make an appointment prior to that time. Poi ians for Assembly Offices and ested, wiln oe heid from 4 to ):;3u in the League. The room will be posted. Ccntcmpe ary: Important meeting of the Business Staff at 4 p.m., Stu- dent Publications Bldg. Assignments will be made for the April issue. All members of the Business Staff must be present. Presbyterian students and their friends: Party at the Church House this evening. Dancing and refresh- ments. Admission 10 cents. All are cordially invited. Church Guild: Dr. H. B. Benning- hoff who represents an interesting service for students at Waseda Uni- versity, Japan, will be given an in- formal welcome in the Upper Room, Lane Hall, from 4 to 6 p.m. by stu- dents of the several church guilds. There will be discussion and confer- ence on oriental problems. Hillel Foundation: Services tonight at 7:10, Hillel Foundation Chapel, led by Dr. Bernard Heller. The serv- ice will be followed by a discussion of a biblical personality. Coming Events Acrenautical Engineers' Division A. S.M.E.: There will be a meeting Mon- day, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 116, Michigan Union. Pan-American moving pictures "Flying the Lind- bergh Trail" will be shown. Phi Eta Sigmna members: If you plan to attend an informal dinner to be held at the Union Sunday at} 7:00 p.m., leave your name at the Union desk. Thirty cents will be charged to all who attend. There will not be a speaker. - Cosmopolitan Club: Social meeting on Saturday, March 9, 8 p.m., Lane Hall. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to all students. Appointments of the Disciples (Church of Christ) Guild: Friday Evening: Dr. Hopkins, Dean of the Summer School, will address the group infor- mally on "The Activities of the Uni- versity Throughout World," at 438 Maynard at 8 p.m. Sunday : 10:45 a.m. - Morning worship serv- ice and sermon by Rev. Fred Cowin. 12:00 noon - Upper Room Bible Class taught by Rev. H. L. Pickerill. 5:30 p.m.-Social and tea. 6:30 p.m. - Discussion meeting, topic, "The Meaning of Religion," led i -Associated Press Photo. A "slight cold" caused Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler (left) of Ger- many to postpone the visit of Sir John Simon (right), British foreign secretary, when the statesmen were to discuss European peace and unity. Hitler's cold develope) after publication of an official British crit- icism of German rearmament. MOM - Classified Directory LOST AND FOUND CLASSIFIED LOST Bankbook of Highland Park ADVERTISING (Detroit) Bank. Dial 7740. Reward. 143 Place advertisements with Classified LOST: Purse, navy blue, crocheted: Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. u s a lg t on F rsIe w e The classified columns close at five Tuesday night on Forest between o'clock previous to day of insertion. South U. and Hill. Reward. Call. Box numbers may be secured at no 2-1364. 141 extra charge. Cash in advance lie per reading line - (on basis of five average words to LOST: In 5006 Angel Hall Parker Va- line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or cuumatic pen with initials C.L.G. more insertions. Return to Elaine Goldberg, 820 Hill. Minimum 3 lines per insertion, liberal Reward. Phone 8907. Telephone rate -15c per reading line14 for one or two insertions. 142 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. NTC 10% discount if paid within ten days trom the date of last insertion.I Minimum three lines per insertion. STUDENTS wanted with selling abil- By contract, per line-- 2 lines daily, one ity. Steady employment, good wages. month ..................Sc1 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months.........3C Apply Sam Ellis, 200 N. Main St. 2 lines daily, college year.......7c 7x 4 lines E.O.D., college year ........ 7cI___________ 100 lines used as desired.......-- ®_ 300 lines used as desired ..... ...c BLUE BIRD BOOK NOOK. Nickels 1,000 lines used as desired ....\...7c Arcade. Latest fiction, biography, 2,000 lines used as desired A.r.c.... ..6ca d ae ft , o The above ratesare per reading line, etc., c a day 13x based on eight reading lines p)(r Inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add NEW AND USED CARS - Largest le per line to above rates for all ci al selection in the county.Associated letters. Add 6c eper" line to above ?or in heconty. sole bold face, upper and lower cage. Add Motor Services, Inc. 317 W. Huron. 10e per line to above rates for boldi P.2- 68 Le'fgtacuine. capital letters.Ph. 2-3268."Let's get acquainted, The above rates are for 71 ,point lox FOR SALE LAUNDRY GIRLS' Ballard ice skates. Size 51/. PERSONAL laundry service. We take For only two dollars. 2-2907.144 individual interest in the laundry WANTED problems of our customers. Girls'__ ___ __ silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- Call for and deliver. Phone 5594. lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- 611 E. Hoover. 2x sago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main 7x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x FOR RENT STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- FOR RENT: Beautiful, large room ira sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. private home, for one or two women. 9x 605 Oxford Road. Phone 8510. 140 Courts Will Solve resent-Da Problems Sharfman Contends -4 rTHE SCREEN E I I t f f t f i 1 i i 1 I 1 i AT THE MICHIGAN AT THE MAJESTIC "CHARLIE CHAN IN PARIS" AND Double Feature "CRIME WITHOUT PASSION" "LIMEHOUSE SLUES" and "Charlie Chan in Paris" is a Fox "STUDENT TOUR" picture starring Warner Oland and The current Majestic program is featuring Mary Brian; "Crime With- two and three-quarter hours of Chi- out Passion" is a Hecht-MacArthur nese-English melodrama and raw raw picture starring Claude Rains; also college stuff, and if either of these the usual program of shorts; and we types of entertainment do not appeal give you fair warning that in the to you, you will probably squirm in evening the second show of the double-Deader is repeated only half- your seat and wonder why you ever# way through, so if you don't go early let yourself in for such rot. you may leave the theatre more than George Raft, who has been every- a little peeved. thing from a gangster to a night club I This column notes that in the lat- entertainer, subjected himself to the est edition of the familiar "Ask Me make-up experts long enough to be Another" book there is a 100-ques- made into something which resembles tion affair at the end which the edi- an eskimo in the tropics. In "Lime- tors have dubbed "The Ultimate Hor- house Blues" he tiptoes his way across or in Quizzes." One of the feature the screen as a half breed Chinaman at the Michigan - Claude Rains in who runs the Lily Garden in London's "Crime Without Passion" - might limehouse and who holds forth in his well be called "The Ultimate Horror idle moments in an oriental penthouse in Mystery Shows." Although it has on the top floor of a storage building. none of the downright ghoulishness Yes, be smuggles opium and all the of Dracula, or the weird make-up of. rest; and what's more he falls in love Dr. Frankenstein's monster, it is with a white girl, and after employing+ cloaked throughout with a weird, un- all the oriental methods of trying you earthly atmosphere that fits in re- know what, gets his just deserts in markably well with its surprising the typical melodramatic fashion. The climax. Ben Hecht and Charles Mac- girl is Jean Parker and the picture Arthur, two of the "than which there is awful. is nothing whicher" writers of Holly- What is probably the worst college wood collaborated on the story. For picture ever produced, aside from the chief weird one of their opus Claude fact that Charles Butterworth and Rains was secured. The three of Jimmie Durante supply it with some them with the incidental aid of other worthwhile comedy and the fact that quite gruesome characters, do the it contains the song "A New Moon is thing to a fare-thee-well. The pre- " Over My Shoulder," is "Student lude which deals with the sneering Tour." Of course,-it has the disguises harpies and the sardonic way they that attempt to make it seem dif- observe the aphrodisiacal advances of ferent and new, but it is still the same certain select members of society will old stuff, and even though there is a bring shivers to many bored and mys- crew race instead of a football game, tery-burdened spines! and an ocean liner setting instead As for "Charlie Chan in Paris," it of the customary campus atmosphere, As sarcaimprovement over his i it reverts back, in Hollywood meth- is scarcely an o i ods, to what collitch was ten years other films, yet again it is scarcely on ago. You know the rest. a lower plane. Evidently Warner -C.B.C. Oland is not only typed as to role,---C.B.C. but as to film stories. Just see - the studios are now too lazy to think up original titles for his detecting ad- ventures! And so we have "Charlie Chan in London," "Charlie Chan in. Today - Saturday Paris," etc., etc. BING CROSBY The mystery fans certainly have "Here Is My Heart meat on the table at the Michigan. And -G.M.W., Jr. VIC McLAGLEN & EDMUND LOWE in I "U 1Ar r DPrwcssarho" The chief issues facing the Amer- i well as the Minnesota Mortgage and icali public today will be solved in the New York Milk cases, have been issued "judicial forums" and not in legisla- with regard to a "realistic" considera- tive halls, declared Prof. I. L. Sharf- tiorn of the facts surrounding them, mar, chairman of the economics de- according to the speaker. partment, in a speech on "The Gold The majority of the Court has Cases" before the Econcentrics Club weighed each issue that faced it, not Wednesday night at the Union.sh by a strict interpretation of its con- Taking the important decisions that' the Supreme Court handed down in stitutionality, although this was not the last few years as a background for disregarded, but by taking into ac- his talk, and pointing to the Federal count the sum total of facts fl'at make legislation that will be brought to a up the policy of a state or the Fed- judicial test soon, Professor Sharf- erai government, he'declared. man said he believed that the Thus, Professor Sharfman con- actions of the administration will de- tinued, the Court made its decision pend more on what the Court says in the "gold cases" by considering the than on what any particular group, fact that the Congressional move to either to the left or right, desires to abrogate the gold clause in public and accomplish, private debts was prompted by the The decisions of the Supreme Court desire to effect recovery through a on the now 'famous "gold cases," as reformed monetary policy. positions on .StandingCommittees, by Don Anderson. Membership, Activities, and Bulle- 7:30 p.m. -Evening worship serv- tins, are to be filed in Undergraduate ice. Office of League, March t, 8, and 9. Lutheran Student Club meeting on i hn 10 th Contemporary: All manuscripts submitted for the December and Feb- ruary issues not called for by Satur- day, March 16, will be destroyed. Acaderilic Notices Political Science 1: Make-up ex- amination for first semester, 1934- 35, Saturday morning, March 9, at 9 o'clock, Room 2029 A.H. Geology 12: Dr. Belknap will meet his 8 o'clock quiz in Room 3055 N. S. English 172 will not meet Friday. W. G. Rice Events Today English Jothrnal Club: Regular meeting in the League. Business meeting at 4 p.m. Program open to the public at 4:15 p.m. Subject: Modern Trends in Biography. The discussion is in charge of Mr. Modder, Mr. Procter, Mr. Hart, and Miss Pol- lard. The public is cordially invited. Vanguard Club Edward Kolchin of New York will speak on "The Pro- ducers' and Consumers' Cooperatives -Success or Fairire?" before the' club. Michigan Union, 8 p.m. Mr. { unday evening, Marcn ,i au ie Parish Hall of the Zion Lutheran Church at 309 E. Washington Street. The supper will be .served promptly at 6 o'clock. All Lutheran students on the camp- us are invited. A skating party will be held by the U-M Outdoor Club at the Coliseum, Saturday from 2:30 to 3:00. Any student interested is invited to attend. Admission, 15 cents or a regular coup- on. Billiard Exhibition: Charles C. Pet- erson, nationally famous trick shot artist and billiard expert will be at the Union billiard room all day to- morrow. He will give exhibitions at 4:00 in the afternoon and at 7:30 in the evening. Admission free. Graduate Students: All graduate students, whether they have previous- ly gone on trips of the Graduate Out- ing Club or not, are invited to attend the annual banquet of the club at the Washington Scout Cabin on Satur- 11 A MAJESTIC Matinees 30c Evenings 40c ENDS TONIGHT TWO FEATUJRES - an intriguing mixture of adventure and comedy. GEORGE RAFT with ,ANNA MAY WONG and JEAN PARKER Showing at 2 - 4:46 - 7:12 - 9:58 __________also= CHARLES BUTTERWORTH Laugh Star of "Forsaking All Others" JIMMY DURANTE "STUDENT TOUR" Showing at 3:20 - 8 20 LATEST METRO NEWS ---- day. A steak dinner will be served for 30 cents and there will be a special program. This is a good opportunity to learn about the club and its activi- ties. The3 group will meet at Lane Hall at 3:00 and hike out to the cabin which is at the entrance to the Hur- on River Drive. Congregational Student Club: Dancing, bridge, and ping-pong. Congregational Parlors, Saturday, March 9, 8 to 12. Admission 25 cents. DAILY 15c to 6 P.M. WHITNEY -Now Binnie Barnes Frank Morgan in Ursitla ParroIt's Always I Tomorrow" and -Sunday - Monday - Tuesday GINGER ROGERS - FRED ASTAIRE "GAY DIVORCEE" Mickey Mouse "Orphan's Benefit" MI C H IGAN DOUBLE FEATURE All Mystery Show! .. i 4* $V'' PUT THE SHOT but rushing around to classes and W ing in the lab burns UP energy too.*you need nourishing, easy-tO-igest foo. I PLAY PRODUCTION ]resents TDOCTOR KNOCK Try a bowl of Kellogg's Corn flakes for breakfast tomorrow.-You'll like these en flakes. And you'll feel better during the ay. They're rig"t too, for that snack before you retire. after a dlance, or a log session with the books. They help you sleep, cause they digest so easily. Always fresh and crisp, in the.inner WAX- AE y bg. Made by Kellogg in Rattle Creek. A Hilarious Farce by Jules Koniains Friday and Saturday atch 8 -R- 9 _. . : : L \ ., :r h c JOE E. BROWN "Six-Day . ---_ f(dtq#l F rv~gl," v -F ,u l i. II I I