ro THE MICHIGAN DAILY LAT E WIRE NEWS DAILY' OFFICIAL BULLETIN llatwn in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the M=114,.C opy received at the ofmce of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:30 a.m. Saturday. President's Mothr Talks With Colonel House Classified Directory Frechette Denies Telling Officers He Killed Brown HOWELL, March 27 -(A)- Clar-. ence Frechette, murder trial defend- ant, completed his testimony and nearly four hours of battering cross examination yesterday, insisting to the end that hobert Brown was acci- dentally shot during a scuffle for Brown's pistol. He said that officers who obtained two statements from him in Cali- fornia, where he was arrested with the body of the young Kalamazoo truck- ing contractor hidden in the trunk of Brown's automobile, failed to record accurately his answers to their ques- tions. He denied specifically that he had told them he shot Brown in self- defense. The defense rested at the conclu- sion of Frechette's testimony, but De- fense Attorney Jay Sweeney said that the defendant might be recalled this afternoon. Senate Action Sought On 'Pink Slip' Publicity Law WASHINGTON, March 27.- (P) - Senate opponents of income tax pub- licity sought to compete congressional action yesterday upon the bill to re-. peal the "pink slip" publicity law. Chairman Harrison (Dem., Miss.) of the finance committee predicted the Senate would pass the measure without any of the tax riders which opponents have threatened to tack on it. "Pink slip" repeal already has been voted by the House. The Senate op- position lined up, however, in a last- minute fight to retain the law re- quiring that portions of income tax returns be made public. lIuey P. Long was much in evidence, charging yes- terday that administration leaders want the publicity requirement re- pealed because "last year fewer men made $5,000, and more made $1,000,- 000, than the year before." Greely RIewarded With Congressional Medal WASHINGTON, March 27. - () - A congressional medal of honor yes- terday rewarded Maj. Gen. A. W Greely for his harrowing adventures in the Arctic half a century ago. It was plain the 91-year-old hero considered the recognition a bit be- lated. "What difference does it make?" he had asked recently. "I'll be dead in a year or two anyway." Greely carried the American flag farther north in 1882 than any man ever had penetrated previously. After- ward the general saw all but seven of his 25 men die of starvation and cold before rescue came. Today officials planned to pin the medal on him with ceremony. "A trip to Boston would kill me now," he opined. Secret Service Breaks Gang Of Counterfeiters BOSTON, March 27.- M)-United States Attorney Francis J. W. Ford announced today that an interstate counterfeit gang which distributed thousands of dollars of bogus money throughout the East by using young women as "passers" had been smashed by secret service agents in Boston and New York. Assistant United States Attorney William T. McCarthy said that two young women from New York told him a story of having been "soundly thrashed and whipped" when they refused to continue passing the bogus money. A CAPELLA CHOIR HERE Kenneth Westerman, '15, former soloist in the Michigan Union Operas and in the Varsity Glee Club, yester- day brought the Adrian High School A Capella choir here to broadcast over Station WJR in a program orig- inating in the campus studios in Morris Hall. The A Cappella choir consisted of 50 members and was a part of the 320 in Mr. Westerman's singing class- es in Adrian. THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1935 1 VOL. XLV No. 1311 Notices University Broadcasting: 9:15-9:30 a.m-Laboratory pro-1 gram for University Speech Class., (Senior Activities.) 2:00-2:30 p.m.-Dramatization of short stories and dramatic sketches, written and presented by students in; the course, Radio Reading and Dra- matics. 10:00-10:30 p.m.-"The Tennessee Valley Project," Walter V. Marshall, Assistant Professor of Architecture. "The University of Michigan Sum- mer Session of 1935," Louis M. Eich, secretary of the Summer Session. "University Broadcasting," Waldo Abbot, director of the broadcasting service. Automobile Regulation: Those stu- dents possessing driving permits is- sued during the first semester who have failed to renew them. are re- quested to do so immediately. This request appliesto those who will use their 1934 State license plates until Aug. 1, as well as those who have pur- chased 1935 plates. All old permit tags are void as of March 15, and their continued use will constitute grounds for disciplinary action. Ap- plications for renewals must be made at Room 2, University Hall, and new aSts of permit tags will be issued at no addition cost. W. B. Rea School of Education Seniors: The deadline for the class dues has been extended until March 30. This will be the last chance to pay your dues. Those failing to pay the dues will not have their names on the class roll and will not be allowed to buy commence- ment irvitations. The dues are pay- able to Keith Davis, Helen Gillespie and Oskar Frowein, members of the financial committee. All Non-Affiliated Girls: Petitions for committee chairmanships and committee memberships must be filed in the Undergraduate Office of the League on March 28, 29, and 30.-, All Jewish Girls living in or very near New York City who would be interested in a camp position for the summer will please call at the Bureau of Appointments before Spring Vaca- tion for further information. Office hours: 9:00-12:00 and 2:00-4:00. A Midsummer Night's Dream - Play Production's newest offering, "A Midsummer Night's Dream," will be given in a special matinee perform- ance this afternoon at 3:15. An- other matinee performance will be given Saturday afternoon. Evening performances will be given at 8:30 on Friday and Saturday. Special rates will be extended to parties of ten or more. Tickets are priced at 50 and 75 cents for the evening performances and at 35 and 50 cents for the mati- nees. For reservations call 6300, or call at the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn in the League. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Except under extraordinary cir- cumstances, courses dropped after Friday, April 5, will be recorded with a grade of E. Academic Notices Sociology 153: This class will not meet today. Examination will be held next week, as announced. Lectures The Loud Letureship of the Wes- leyan Guild Corporation and the Uni- versity of Michigan Committee On Religious Education announce a ser- ies of four addresses on "Man's Place In God's World," by Dr. Arthur H. Compton, University of Chicago. Nobel Prize, 1927. / I. Freedom versus Law; a Peren- nial Conflict. Tuesday,-April 2, 4:15 p.m., Natural Science Auditorium. II. What Determines Our Actions? Wednesday, April 3, 4:15 p.m., Nat- ural Science Auditorium. III. Intelligence In the World Of Nature, Wednesday, April 3, 8:15 p.m. First Methodist Church. IV. Is Death the End? Thursday, April 4, 8:15 p.m., Hill Auditorium. tomorrow, Friday, at the same place, but at 8 p.m. on "Life After Death." You are cordially invited. No ad- mission charge. Vecaticnal Series - Student of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: A meeting will be held at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1025 Angell Hall for stu- dents in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and others in- terested in future work in Architec- ture. The meeting will be addressed by Prof. Emil Lorch, director of the College of Architecture. The next meeting in the vocational series will be addressed by Dean H. C. Sadler of the College of Engineering on April 18. Applied Mechanics . Collcuium: Prof. R. T. Liddicoat -- "The Damp- ing Influence of Automobile Spring Eye Bearings." Review of Literature. Meeting in Room 445 West Engineer- ing Building at 7:30 p.m. All inter- ested are cordially invited to attend. A.S.C.E.: Important meeting at 7:30 p.m., Room 311 W. Engineering Building. All members please be pres- ent. Slides on Catskill Water Sup- ply. A.S.M.E. Luncheon Meeting: C. E. Davies, secretary of the parent so- ciety, will be in Ann Arbor today for a luncheon meeting at the Michigan Union at 12:10 p.m. The price will be 75 cents per plate. All members of the Student Branch and all mem- bers of the Mechanical andAeronaut- ical Faculty are urged to attend. Please sign the list posted on the bulletin board beside Professor And- erson's office. This list will be re- moved at 11 a.m. Thursday. Junior Mathemaics Club meeting at 8 o'clock, 3212 Angell Hall. All students interested in Mathematics are welcome. Swimming - Women: The average ability test will be given at the Union Pool this evening at 8:30 and Tues- day at the same time. All freshmen wishing to fulfill one of the indi- vidual sports requirements in swim- ming should. report at one of these times. Freshmen Men are urged to try out at the League today between 4 and 5 p.m. for the following posi- tions for the Frosh Project: Master of ceremonies, tango danc- ers for the chorus, and for a specialty number also, and singers. Freshman Women are also urged to try out for dancing parts for the Frosh project between 4 and 5 p.m. Coming Events Delta Epsilon Pi will meet at the Michigan Union on Friday, March 29, 8:30 p.m. Members should be prepared to give full accounts of their dance tickets. Plans for the An- niversary celebration will be dis- cussed. Polnia Literary Circle: Important meeting Friday, March 29, 8 p.m., Michigan League. Members Of ROTC Advanced In Rank In a recent order 19 members of the basic unit of the University R.O.T.C. were made corporals, and other men named to positions during the last semester will retain their offices ac- cording to the order. The men named are George H. Can- non, '37, Paul F. Kraus, '37, Donald J. Parry, '37, Richard J. Pennoni, '37E, Franklin W. Pierson, '37E, Ralph A. Price, '37E, Elmer J. Cousineau, '36E, B. Guaille Cox, '37E, William R. Hagen, '36E, John W. Hays, '37, John R. Wood, '37, Daniel S. Hulgrave, '36, Hugh A. Weld, '37, Charles F. Brickel, '37E, James E. Colovin, '37E, William A. St.Jean, '37E, Earl H. Getkin, '37E, Peter J. Mognetti, '38E and Thomas A. Jensen, '37. WANTED -- TO RENT FURNISHED APARTMENT OR HOUSE UNTIL JUNE 15th .... CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Ad; ertising, Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Sox numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance lie per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Teephne rate - 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. 10 discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion, By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one month..................8c 4 lines EOMD., 2 months ..........3c 2 lines daily,, college year.......7c 4 lines E.O.b., college year.......7c 100 lines used as desired .........9c 300 lines used as desired.........Sc 1,00 lines used as desired.......7c 2,000 lines used as desired.... .6c The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Sc per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add lOc per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The aboverrates are for 712 point type. LOST AND FOUND -Associated Press Photo. The "good neighbor"' policy outlined by President Roosevelt with re-pect to world relations found a domestic application when his mother, Mrs. James Roosevelt, dropped into the New York apartment of Col. E. M. House, wartime adviser of Woodrow Wilson, during her morning I walk. They are shown as they chatted on affairs of the day. LAUNDRY STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. i 9x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x NOTICE TUXEDO for sale or rent. Almost new. Size about 36. 101 N. Ingalls. Phone, 2-2483. 170 NEW AND USED CARS - Largest selection in the country. Associated Motor Services, Inc. 317 W. Huron. Ph. 2-3268. "Let's get acquainted.' lox RAGGEDY ANN BEAUTY SHOP, 1115 S. University. Special Monday and Tuesday, shampoo and finger wave, 35c. Rest of week, 5±c. Per- manents $3-$6, end permanents, $2. Phone 7561. 12x RESCUE FLIERS PALM BEACH, Fla., March 27 - (P) Two men identified as Charles Whitehead and Thomas E. Eastman, both of New York, were rescued to- day by the crew of a freighter after their airplane fell into the ocean eight miles south of here. ___Ends Tonight POSITIVELY LAST TIME GRACE MOORE "ONE NIGHT OF LOVE" - Plus - PAUL MUNI "BORDERTOWN" Friday - Saturday -_ _ CLAUDETTE COLBERT "GILDED LILY" W. C. FIELDS "IT'S A GIFT" Latest Library Exhibit Covers Sany Sub jeets Many Works In Various Sciences Make Up New CorridorDisplay The latest exhibit in the corridor cases of the University library has been arranged by Miss Ella M. Hy- mans, curator of rare books, and the display covers anthropology, botany, zoology, geography, forestry, geology, and mineralogy. Each occupies a case and is represented by the fore- most material on the subject in the possession of the library. Several of the books are very old, and are con- sidered unreplacable. The anthropology section features the reports of the Smithsonian Insti- tute of Washington, D. C., and in- cluded here is a report of the exca- vations of the great temple at Chich- en Itza in Yucatan, and reproductions of contemporary artistic products made in certain New Mexico pueblos. Along with several other books on general scientific research and voy- ages is found "A Naturalist In a Uni- versity Museum," a privately pub- lished work by President Alexander G. Ruthven. One of the rarest books in the cases is the earliest English Dictionary of Science, published in 1704. Under the subject of geography are included some of the earliest maps of the Western Hemisphere as they were pictured by geographers of the 16th Century. The zoology section is represented by works of the great German scien- tists in the early part of its history. Later, examples of modern American research are shown, included in which is the last plate of the famous Audu- bon's series on Birds of America. Under botany, the earliest work is that of the English Theater of Plants, printed in 1640, and another isthe volume by the famous Swedish bot- anist, Carl Von Lune, in which he proposed and outlined his binominal system of plant nomenculture. Two cases have been devoted to botany and show the most complete history of the science. One ancient text of 1682 shows an interest in the dandelion. Another important volume is the Spanish version of the work of Diosconides Pedanius, from whose "Materia Medica" the modern nomenclature of botany has been de- rived. n the geology and mineralogy sec- tion are the first copy of the first report of a Michigan State Geologist, reports of geological expeditions throughout the world, and the first volume of the Geologist, one of the eldest scientific publications. THDE SCREEN AT THE MAJESTIC "ONE MORE SPRING"I A Fox Picture, starring Warner Bax- ter and Janet Gaynor featuring Waiter King, Jane Darweil, Roger Imof, Grant Mitchell, Rosemary Ames, and Stepin Fetchit. If you want to find out how to starve in Central Park (with Eddie Duchin's music adding to the gushy sentimentality), "One More Spring" is right down your alley. It is a third rate attempt at tear-jerking which has virtually nothing com- mendable in it. Janet Gaynor is an orphan looking for work in New York. Warner Bax- ter is an antique dealer whose busi- ness has failed, leaving him with one bed as his sole possession. He meets a starving violinist (hair and all), and they set up the bed (one in which Napoleon is supposed to have slept) in the park. In the process of steal- ing a chicken from the kitchen win- dow of the Central Park Casino, the hero knocks down the heroine - a meeting indigenous to this sort of trash - and she is taken into the fold, which has become the stable in which street cleaners park their implements. Of course, they eventually fall in love, but it takes them forever, and in the process they have to save a defunct banker from suicide so that he can end the story by giving them all jobs and making them happy ever, ever afterward. Five-cent philosophy and silly mor- ality make up the rest of the sub- stance of "One More Spring," and it's all pretty trying. Janet Gaynor is herself, as usual, and you know what that is. So is Warner Baxter, except that he acts as if he realized how rotten the vehicle is. The best Our Gang Cmedy in years saves the program at the Ma- jestic. In it a bit of "Strange Inter- lude" is applied to the child prodigy, Spanky, with unusually delightful re- sults. There is also a good news reel. But the feature is to be avoided. -C.B.C. ART CONGRESS TO MEET The Art Congress, usually held once in four years in some art center of Europe, has been announced for the last week in July, to be held in con- nection with the International Art Exhibition in Brussels. The Congress arranged for Vienna in 1932 was postponed. MAJESTIC '5 c Matinees Evenings in Balcony 5c Evenings on the 3 Main Floor The stars that belong together in a drama of today, from the remarkable novel by Robert Nathan. - T~,. LOST: Between Martha Cook and North U. Last Saturday night, blue leatherette key case. Reward 2-3225. Lois Jotter. 170 LOST: On Washtenaw, Delta Sigma Delta pin. Finder please call 3526. 169 LOST: A long black velvet wrap at League last Saturday night. Re- ward. Call 6581. WANTED WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main . 7x 4 ' MILK-ICE CREAM Specil THREE-LAYER BRICK VANILLA, FRESH RASPBERRY and BLACK WALNUT Superior Dairy Company Phone 23181 4 -'t a MICHIGAN Weei(-da2sc 3sc a wek-ayMatinees Main Floor Evenings in Balcony Evenings . .* S 5: A . - ......se .MA I ,r, SOCIAL 'DANCING Toe, tap, acrobatics. Taught daily. Terrace Garden Studio. Wuerth Theatre Bldg. Ph. 9695 Open evenings. r ,i . '', ........s'- c 11[i A I - . /qq/, , " i' c - i," a . r i ,. - ° i - t v' / i _ f d I r - -Added Fun LITTLE PIRATE" I I 11 I ii 11 .. '::::: :".::::: ". ::. .. .. t::"::.:"::."::::'::.:'::::::"' ":":'.'.'.": i.'':':':':.': '.':::"::':.'. ............... .. . ....... ::ti}':. r ... ...... . ":ltiY.