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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.

May 25, 1935 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1935-05-25

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

THE MICHIGAN ILA

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
lication In the ulletfn 13 constructive notice to all members 0
Iversity. Qopy receivedi at the ofmce of the Assistant to theut:eu ud
witih 3:30; 11:3 am. Saturday.
SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1935 Elizabeth Mann
VOL. XLV No. 173 Bourree from Second English
Suite ...................... Bach
Notices Prelude, "Night" ........ R. N. Dett
Attention of All Concerned: Name- "Juba Dance" ............ R. N. Dett
y faculty, administrative and clerical (From the Suite "In the Bottoms"
taff members and students, is re- A charactersitic suite of five num-
pectfully called to the following ac- bers giving pictures of moods or
ion by the Regents. scenes peculiar to Negro life in the
Students shall pay in acceptable river bottoms of the southern sections
unds (which shall not include notes of North America.
nless the same are bankable) all Mary Morrison
mounts due the University before Quietude ...........Carlos Salzedo
hey can be admitted to the final ex- Dcsirade ........ . ... Carlos Salzedo
,minations at the end of either se- Lucille Lawrence
nester or of the Summer Session. No Jane Cohn - Harpist
'ffice in the University is authorized Intrata .................. . Bach
o make any exception to this rule. Lctus Land ............. Cyril Scott
Any specific questions that can be Chester Thalman
oreseen arising in this connection Praludium from the First
hould be taken up with the proper Partita .....................Bach
iuthorities at the earliest possible Consolation in D flat ..........Liszt
noment. Shirley W. Smith Ritual Fire Dance, Manuel de Falla
Richard Bailey
Tc All Members of the Faculty and Sarabande from the Sixth
Idministrative SKaff : If it seems cer- French Suite ............... Bach
ain that any telephones will not be "A giddy-girl" from "Histoires", Bach
ised during the summer months, "La meneuse-de tortues d'or," Ibert
>lease notify the Business Office, Mr. Promenade, Ballett der Kuchlein
Charles Gray. A saving can be effect- in ihren Eiesschalen from "Bilder
ed if instruments are disconnected for einer Ausstellung" .. Rachmaninoff
a period of a minimum of three Humoreske, Op. 10'
nonths. No. 5................Rachmaninoff
Carl Fredrickson4

Vote To Decide Fate Of AAA In Wheat Belt

CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Place advertisements with Classified
Advertising Departmnt. Phone 2-12i4.
The classified columns close at five
o'clock previous to clay ot insertion.
Box numbers may be secured at no
rxtra charge.
Cash in advance 11c per reading line
(on basis of five average words to
line) for one or two insertions.
1e0c per reading line for three or
more insertions.
Minimum 3 lines per insertion.
telephone rate -15c per reading line
for one or two insertions.
14c per reading line for three or
more insertions.
1% discount if paid within ten days
from the date of last insertion.
Minimum three lines per insertion.
By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, ono
month....................8c
4 lines E.O.D., 2 months. .3c
2 lines daily, college year ........7c
4 lines E.O.D., college year ........7c
100 lines used as desired ..........9c
300 lines used as desired..........8c
1,000 lines used as desired........7.c
2,000 lines used as desired.....6cG
The above rates are per. reading line,
based on eight reading lines per inch.
Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add
6c per line to above rates for all capital
letters. Add 6c per line to above for
bold face, upper and lower case. Add
1Oc per line to above rates for bold face
capital letters.
The above rates are for 7% point
type.

NOTICE
FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES
Call the Kempf Music Studios for
artistic piano tuning. Terms rea-
sonable. Phone 6326. 14x
WILL CREDITORS of J. Carl Nat-
chez please keep after him until we
are all paid. 249
TYPE WRITING and MIMEO-
GRAPHING promptly and neatly
done in our own shop by experi-
enced operators at moderate rates.
O. D. Morrill's Typewriter and Sta-
tionary Store, 314 S. State Street.
llx
NEW AND USED CARS
A.M.S. Inc. 311 W. Huron
Phone 2-3267
lox
LOST AND FOUND

--Associated Press Photo.
Farmers throughout the wheat belt will decide whether the AAA
shall continue efforts to control their production in a far-flung poll
conducted by the farm administration. George W. Addison (left) of the
Wyandotte, Kas., county farm bureau, is shown instructing farmers
how to mark their ballots.

Sicilienne .. . .B rtte.. P h otNg rop
Transcribed for 2 pianos by Guy mhite luy'i
Malaguena for 2 pianos from the Bea gU sed TB
Spanish Suite E
"Andalucia" ....Erneso Lecuona I--

I

~ a1College of Architecture: All classes.
In the final hours of the five- Tuesday June 11, at 5 p.m.
months session, a number of bills were School of Education: All classes.
shot through to the Governor after Tuesday, June 11, at 5 p.m.
final passage. Among them was the College of Engineering: All Classes.
Dunckel-Baldwin bill. The Senate- Tuesday, June 11, at 5 p.m.
alpproved House amendments and ~School of Forestry: All classes.
sent it along to the Governor for his Tuesday, June 11, at 5 p.m.
signature.TudaJn11at5pm
School of Music: All classes. Tues-
A group of bills demanded by Fed- day, June 11, at 5 p.m.
eral agencies to allow the state to College of Pharmacy: All classes.
participate in the public works pro- Tuesday, June 11, at 5 p.m.
gram, were killed in committee on School of Dentistry: Freshmen
the ground that they were unconsti- Scol fDetsr:Fsh n
tutionald h Class: Thursday, June 6, at 5 p.m.;
___in__.junior class: Tuesday, June 4, at 11
a.m.; senior class: Tuesday, June 4,
Move To Preserve Isle at 4 p.m.; hygienists: Tuesday, Junel
Royae IsAid By .S.4; at 11 a.m.
Royale Is Aided By U.S. Law School: All classes. Thursday,
ESCANABA, Mich., May 24.- (!P) June 6, at 11:30 a.m.
Medical School: Freshman Class:
Saturday, June 8, at 5 p.m.; sopho-
ale for National Park purposes gained more class: Monday, June 3, at 5
fresh impetus today after the Na- p.m.; junior class: Monday, June 3,
tional Park Service in Washington at 5p.m.; senior class: Monday, June
warned that the island would not be 3, at 5 p.m.
Acceptable to the government if some Graduate School: All classes. Tues-
of its area were despoiled by logging day, June 11, at 5 p.m. Candidates
operations. for Masters' Degree: Tuesday, June
Coincident with the warning from 11, at 5 p.m..; candidates for Doctors'
Xt~s~hinp'tnn~ it wg 1nrnad horn that Degrees, Saturday, June 1, at 5 p.m.:

Charlotte Whitman, and Carl
Frederickson
Student of Ruth Pfohl.
Events Today
Varsity Glee Club: Meet this after-
noon at 1:15 at Hill Auditorium stage
for short concert. Informal dress.
University Horse Show: The Horse
Show is to be held at the fair grounds
at 2:30. Admission is free. Bus trans-
portation from the North University
Avenue entrance of the League at
2:15 p.m. Spectators will be welcome.
Coming Events
Sigma Rho Tau: The annual Tung
Oil Banquet will be held Wednesday,
May 29, 6:15 p.m., Union. Special
arrangements have been made with
the R.O.T.C. department for men de-
siring to attend the banquet to take
the final examination at some other
time. Men desiring to be excused
should mention the fact to the seller
of the ticket. A cordial invitation is
extended to all engineers and mem-
bers of the faculty.
Alpha Gamma Sigma: Initiation
and installation of officers at 8:30
on Monday, at the League.
School of Music Orchestra: Full
orchestra and advanced conducting
class will meet Tuesday, May 28, in-
stead of Wednesday.
Graduate Outing Club: The last
trip this year will be held Sunday,
May 26. Any graduate student wish-
ing to attend should meet at Angell
Hall at 10:00 a.m. for the trip to Sil-
ver Lake, 20 miles northwest. (Re-
turn trip in time for supper). The
activities, under the direction of Ira

"Intermittent photography" is the
latest thing.
This new type of photography,
which has been developed here at
the University by Dr. Bruce Green-
shields of Denison University with
the assistance of Prof. Roy S. Swin-
ton of the engineering mechanic de-
partment, is now being used in the
study of child behavior at the Uni-
versity Elementary School.,
The equipment permits the taking
of pictures on sixteen-millimeter film
at pre-determined intervals, and its
major value lies in its economy. Or-
dinary motion picture cameras take
16 pictures a second, and require an
extensive amount of film if they -are
to be kept in operation for any length
of time.
This intermittent photographic
equipment, however, within limits,
can take pictures as often or as in-
frequently as its operator desires. The
time interval between exposures canI
the program. A cordial welcome is
extended to everyone to come. Please
be prompt.
Episcopal Student Picnic: Sunday
afternoon there will be a picnic at
the cottage of Mrs. Henry Douglas
at Cavanaugh lake for all Episcopal
students and their friends. Cars will
leave Harris Hall at 5 o'clock on Sun-
day afternoon. Students desiring to
go on the picnic must notify either
8613 or 7735 before Saturday noon.j
Saint Andrew's Church: Services of
worship Sunday are: 8 a.m., Holy
Communion, 9:30 a.m., Chuch School;
I 11 a.m., Kindergarten, 11 a.m., Morn-
ing Prayer and Sermon by the Rev.
Henry Tatlock. D.D., rector-emeritus
of St. Andrew's Parish; 5 p.m., Young
People's Fellowship meeting in Harris
Hall.
hail.
Congregational Church, Sunday:
10:30 a.m. -Service of worship
and lecture. Mr. Heaps will speak
on "The Tragic Fate of a Prince."
Prof. Preston Slosson will give the
closing le'cture of the series on "The
Evolution of Religion," his subject
being "The Religious Map Of Today."
Trinity Lutheran Church, E. Wil-
liam at S. Fifth Ave., Henry O. Yod-
er, pastor. -Sunday:
Morning worship service at 10:30
with sermon by Rev. Henry Yoder
on "Common Things With Christ."
Lutheran Student Club in Zion
Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30. An-
nual Senior banquet.
Unitarian Church: Sunday morn-
ing service at 11 a.m. Rev. H. P.
Marley will complete the series of
the month with, "Peace-Time Slack-'
ers and the Dead Soldier." Final
meeting of the Liberal Students' Un-
ion at 7:30 p.m., with H. P. Marley
to talk on, "Summer Work for Rest--
less students.'

be varied from one-half a second
to two seconds.
At the elementary school the cam-
era was set up on the roof of the
building and pointed downward at
the playground area. A record was
made for one hour at the rate of one
picture every two seconds for the
activities of a five-year-old group on
the court playground.
Some preliminary analysis of the
material has been made with the as-
sistance of student help under the
direction of Prof. Lowell J. Carr
of the department of sociology. The
general procedure consists in project-
ing a picture of the playground site
and tracing it upon a sheet of whiteI
paper.
The outline pictue is re-drawn with
duplicator ink and a supply of copies
obtained. Successive pictures are
then projected and a trace of the
path of each child is made with a
colored pencilt One minute of film
record suffices to cover a sheet to
the point of confusion with the orbits
of the children.
In addition to the studies made by
intermittent photography on child
behavior, the new equipment is used
in studying the interactions of peo-
ple in a crowd. Such a study wasI
made during one of the football,
games last fall, and the results are
now in the process of analysis by
students in the sociology department.
Professor Swinton and Dr. Green-
Ishields had originally designed the
camera for use in traffic surveys. The
method here was to make three
f ames out of pictures taken of mov-
ing automobiles, with a shutter de-
vice to allow for a constant inter-,
val between exposures of the camera.
The pictures are thrown on a screen
on which lines presenting a scale of
10 foot intervals have been drawn.
The forward movement of the car
can thus be observed in the succes-
sive position of the automobile on
the screen.
Two lines of development which
Professor Swinton sees for the future
of the new photography are cameras
which are completely silent, thus es-
caping the attention of children or
Spersons who are being photographed,
and attachments which will record
the sounds made in conjunction with
the movements of the individuals or
crowds studied.

FOR SALE
FRATERNITY HOUSE, 1223 Hill St.
Bargain for immediate sale. Terms.+
Call Mr. Newton, Office, 2-2571, eve-
ning 6125. 251
FOR SALE: A matched set of nine
Hagen irons. Used only one sea-
Ison. Reasonable price. Ph. 9755.
G. E. Fischer,. 501 Linden. 253
SPECIAL SALE: Big shipment of
fresh evergreens and rosebushes,
Saturday, 8 a.m. Evergreens from
50c to $2.50. Roses, 29 cents.
Harris Seed Store, 303 South Main.
254
ritish Youths
Rally To Call
For Air Force

New Aerial Program Of
Expansion Greeted By
Enthusiastic Rush
LONDON. May 24. - UP) -The I
youth of Great Britain was respond-
ing with enthusiasm today to the
government's appeal for recruits for
the suddenly expanded Royal Air
Force.
Recruiting stations here and in
other parts of the British isles from
Plymouth to Glasgow and Belfast
had a rush of applicants for the 22,-
500 posts created under the new aerial
program designed to give Great Brit-
ain parity in the air with every other
European power,
Of the additional personnel, some
2,500 will be pilots and the others
1 skilled and unskilled workmen.
When the accelerated program is
completed in March, 1937, Great Brit-
ain may have 6,000 military aircraft'
of all types. The immediate project
is to increase the first line home
defense force from 580 to 1,500 planes.
As the air ministry placed its en-
tire energies behind the air program,
the government and representatives
of the dominions agreed on a tenta-
tive plan for a permanent air defense
consultation board.
At the Senior Ball

DO YOU KNOW
-where you can get the mpst
delicious doughnuts, waffles,
or coffee in town?
-the most delightful, conven-
ently located spot for that
after-theater snack?
IF NOT-
and let us show you that all
we say about it is true .
WAFFLES smothered in syrup
and nelted butter, and one
doughnut, the best you ever
tasted . . . . . . . . . . 20c
Fresh Crisp Doughnuts, that
melt in your mouth . 2 for 5c
Fancy ICED Doughtnuts-
............3 for 10c
The BEST COFFEE in town,
correctly made . . . . . . 5c
BOOTHS - - TABLES
Michigan Theatre Building
533 East Liberty Street

LOST: A Wyvern pin between 1520
South University and. Angell Hall.
Finder call 2-2217. Reward. 255
LOST: Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity
pin. Lost on Sate or Haven. Phone
9888. Reward. 250
LOST: Brown folder containing four
keys, Thursday between Ingalls and
Union. Finder please phone 7235.
252
j WANTED
WANTED: Room with piano for sum-
mer~, near Music School. Write
Box 619. 247
WANTED: Position as cook ink fra-
ternity or sorority next fall. Ref-
erences. Experienced. Call 2-3546.
246
WAFTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW
suits. Will pay 3. 4. 5, 6 and 7 dol-
lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi-
cago Buyers. 200 North Main 7x
LAUNDRY
STUDENT Hand Laundry. Pricesrea-
sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006
LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low price. 4x

W. B. Rea George, will include swimming, sail-
ing, baseball and hiking in some of
Seniors, School of Education: Com- the most interesting woods near here.
mencement announcements and invi- Fifty cents will cover the cost of
tations will be distributed Monday, transportation and plenty of good
May 27, on the first floor of Alumni food.
Memorial Hall from 8 to 12 a.m., and - -
2 to. 5Lm

Varsity Band: Meet.at Morris Hall

Methodist Episcopal Church:
9:45 a.m.- Dr. Roy Burroughs'
class for young men and women which
usually meets at this hour in the bal-
cony of the church auditorium has
been discontinued for the remainder
of the semester.
10:45 a.m. -Morning worship serv-
ice. As a thoughtful approach to
Memorial Day, Dr. C. W. Brashares
has chosen for his sermon subject
"Memorials of the Future."
Stalker Hall for Young Men and
Women of College Age:
12:10 p.m. - The noon class for
young men and women will no long-
er meet for discussions.
5:00 p.m.-Wesleyan Guild Out-
door Devotional Service. This will be
the traditional meeting held in hon-
or of the seniors at "The Meadows."
Transportation has been provided for
groups to leave the hall at 5 o'clock.
Prof. Howard Y. McClusky will speak
on "How to Stay Alive." A picnic1
supper will be served at cost after

m

Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre
LAST DAY - MATINEE/and NIGHT
wi th MELVILLE COOPER and N.Y. Cast Intact
Only two more chances to see the sparkling mystery comedy
that has all Ann Arbor chuckling.

I

I

'A

25c

Matinees and
Balcony Evenings

Now --- -
BARBARA STANWYCK
"SECRET BRIDE"
and
TIM McCOY
"Law Beyond the
Range"
DAILY 15c TO 6 P.M.
W HI-- TOMORROW
MARGARET SULLAVAN
HERBERT MARSHALL
in Ferenc Molnar's
"GOOD FAIRY"
and

I

Sofene r
zALT
For All Makes of
Water Softeners
w
2 ERT LER
210 South Ashley

25c
MATINEES

MAJ EST IC

35c
EVI!;NINGS

Next Week -- NAZIMOVA and ROMNEY BRENT

... . .

Nights: 75c - $1.00 - $1.50

1Matinee: 50c - 75c

II

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I

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