THE MICHIGAN DAILY ThURSDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1935 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Buletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:30 a.m. Saturday. 1 I F Hughes At Opera After Gold Decision THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935 VOL. XLV. No. 102 now before the Supreme Court. are cordially invited to attend. All Ad- mission is free. Notices To Department Heads and Others Events Today N E i S oneerned: Obscrvatcry Journal Club meets at All hourly time slips must be in the 4:15 in the Observatory lecture room. business office Feb. 21,to be included Dr. W. Carl Rufus will speak on "The Gin the Feb. 28 payroll. Problem of Xi Persei." Tea will be Clemency Sought For Edna Gieger Miller, served at 4 p.m. Payroll Clerk Two More Nazi Spies Geological Journal Club: Pro-Sem- BERLIN Feb. 20- P) - Two more Library Committee Meeting: There inar Meeting, 7 p.m. in Room 3065' will be a meeting of the Library Com- N. S. "The Stratigraphy and Paleon- German spies doomed to death may mittee of the College of Literature, j be shared the headsman's axe, it tt hlogy of the Silica Formation of was ndiatedtonghtScience, and the Arts on Thursday.! Scutheastern Michigan" will be dis- w e i n c a t e d t n g h t . F e b .j28 . Peiin~~kn 1 mency for the Fe.2.cussed by Miss V. Kline. 's i ,! , .j i ; Stw bo VCt en,1havebeenes ,itV There is a small balance available two, both men, have been presented for allotment by this Committee. to Adolf Hitler, it is understood, and Members of the faculty desiring to favorable action was regarded as likely because of the sensation that make requests for special grants are greeted the execution of Benita Von asked to have their requests in the Falkenhayn and Renate Von Natz- hands of the Librarian by noon of mar, noble women beheaded Monday. Tuesday, Feb. 26. A spokesman for the minister of, W . W. Bishop, Librarian justice, meanwhile, denied the two . men, who are prisoners in the death University Broadcasting: cells of grim Pletenzse prison from 9:15-9:45. a.m. -Laboratory Pro- which tradition has it none emerges gram for University Speech Class. I ' I a{ Z C 1 2:00-2:30 p.m. - Spanish Language Series - Topic: "Why Study Span- ish," Charles P. Wagner, Professor of Spanish. A talk in English intro- ducing a series of five programs ad- dressed to high school Spanish class-j es. 10:00-10:30 p.m. - University ofR Michigan Glee Club directed by David Mattern, Professor of Public School Music and the Teaching of Public School Music and conductor of the Varsity Glee Club. Iota Alpha: Meeting in the Semin- ar Room (3201 E. Eng. Bldg.) at 7:30 Dr. Leslie A. White, of the Museum of: Anthropology, will be the speaker of the evening. His subject is "Evolu- tion of Technology, Tools and Imple- ments." Every member is urged tof be present. Varsity Glee Club: Rehearsal at Union, 8 p.m., and later at Morris Hall. Details for Friday and Satur- day concerts to be announced at this rehearsal. Sigma Delta Chi: Regular lunch- eon meeting of pledges and actives, this noon in the Union. Black Quill at 7:30 p.m., Michigan League. All members must be pres- ent. Classified Directory TYPEWRITING CLASSIFIED TYPEWRITING AND MIMEO- ADVERTISING GRAPHING promptly and neatly done in our own shop by experi- Place advertisements with Classified enced operators at moderate rates. Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. O. D. Morrill's Typewriter and Sta- The classified columns close at five titonery Store. 314 S. State Street. o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no 1lx ex~tra charge._______________________ Cash in advance lic per reading line (on basis of five average words to FOR RENT line) for one or two insertions. -- - 10c per reading line for three or ROOM desirable for graduate woman more insertions. Minimum 3 lines per insertion. student. Southeast, and close to Telephone rate -15c per reading line campus. Private home. Phone 5929. for one or two insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions.--- 10< -discount if paid within ten days WANTED from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. By contract, per line -2 lines daily, one WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months..........3c suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- 2 lines daily, college year ........7c lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- 4 lines E.O.D., college year ........7c cago Buyers. Temporary oflice, 200 100 lines used as desired ..........9c cg ues eprr fie 0 300lines used as desired ..........8c North Main . 7x- 1,000 lines used as desired ........7c 2,000 lines used as desired 6... c The above rates are per reading line, LOST based on eight reading lines per inch. lonic type, upper and lower case. Add - 6c per line to above rates for all capital LOST: Log Log Duplex slide rule. letters. Add 6c per line to above for Name of owner in case. Liberal re- bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line to above rates for bold face ward for return. Tel. 2-1003. capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point FOUND: A man's white evening scarf type. in Engineering Bldg. Owner May L-Rhave by calling 2-3342. 115 LAUNDRY NOTICE LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. - Careful work at low price. 4x NEW AND USED CARS - Largest - -- selection in the country. Associated STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- Motor Services, Inc. 317 W, Huron. sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. Ph. 2-3268. "Let's get acquainted." 9x .lox :THE S CRE[EN: --b Executive Committee of 'the Inter- Social Directors, Sorority Chap- fraternity Council meets at 5 o'clock erons, Househeads, Undergraduate in the Council offices. Women:i The closing hour Thursday night Hillel Foundation: All second se- will be 1:30 a.m,. mester freshmen students interested Alice C. Lloyd in taking active part in the Hillel Foundation will meet at the Founda- Social Directors, Sorority Chaper- tion at 2 o'clock. This meeting will ons, Househeads, Undergraduate not be limited to second semester Wom~e: Then closing hour for women at- freshmen but also open to anyone tending the Caduceus party at the who has talents or special interests in athletics, dramatics, newspaper work, Union tonight is 2:30 a.m. cr any administrative work. Academic Notices Chinese Students: Meeting of all Make-up Final Examination for Chinese students at 8 p.m., Lane Hall. Geology 11, 12, and 121: Saturday, The purpose of this meeting is to wel- March 2, at 2:00 p.m. in Room 2054 come the new students to the campus. N. S. Entertainment and refreshments. --Associated Press Photo. After the momentous gold clause decision, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes broke a precedent of long standing by making a Monday evening appearance. He is shown with Mrs. Hughes as they arrived to attend a light cpera in Washington. Several other members of the Supreme Court also were present. M U -. AT THE MAJESTIC "WE LIVE AGAIN" and "WICKED WOMAN" "X4Ue ZLiv'e Againi": A Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer picture co-starring Anna Sten and Frederic March, and featuring Jant Baxter and C. Aubrey Smith. Al: o Metro newrs reel. Sociology 238: This class will meet on Thursday afternoons from 3-5 in Room G, Haven Hall. Students wish-, ing to elect the course may confer 1 with Miss Valentine, Room 313, HavenC Hall,+ today, between 3 and 5.! Sociology 51: I will not meet my classes today. Chapters 2 and 3 of the text will be discussed in my class-I es meeting Monday and Tuesday of next week. R. C. Fuller Hindustan Club, meeting at 8 p.m.,. Lane Hall. Dr. Mukerji will speak I on the contributions of India to medi- cine, Music Group of the Michigan' Dames will meet at the home of Mrs. John Johnstone, 839 Oakland, 8:15 p.m. The subject is American Opera. Coming Events Forestry Students: The Foresters' THE GORDON STRING QUARtTET' was clearly articulated and sincere, Without a doubt, "We Live Again" A REVIEW but lacked vitality. is one of the most weird presentations, f th Gordon is obviously the moving of recent years, yet this should not be1 The evening of music from te construed as necessarily disparaging. strings of the Gordon Quartet in Hill spirit of the ensemble and whereas1 Beginning with a horrendous shift of Auditorium last evening was mildly in the Mendelssohn, the interest lay title (from Count Tolstoy's "Resur- pleasant, but uneventful. The music principally in a strong melodic line lrection," to the Hollywocdism "We the music was vigorous enough to be Live Again"), this particular Rouben - I Mamoulian screening starts off in an Sc hoolnmasters listened to without a conscious effort imnocuous way to describe the love to concentrate. afiair of a young nobleman (Frederic C u i 1iThe Beethoven Opus 59, however, March) and his peasant sweetheart a betrayed the fact that the quartet l (Anna Sten). The preliminary ro-' mantic scenes afford an opportunity 19 5 eg is top heavy. The cello was ex- to demonstrate March's leanings to- 1935 ee ing ceedingly pale and ineffective and did ward socialism which are to play so not form a firm base. Bendizky important a part in his later life. April 27 And 28 Selected played in a perfunctory manner, at Herein lies the first disturbing the right time, with an apparent point. Is "We Live Again" poking As Dates For Intra-State ! knowledge of how the music went to- ponderous fun at Socialism, or is it tsense of the im- holding a brief for Socialism, or is it nvention gether, but without sh I trying to be impartial, objective, and portance of the part. The result was merely tell a story? March's ex- The most "auspicious" convention that Gordon soared away with the merely tl aisty? Marme- of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club quartet, the balance was lost and the poundingof his youthfully formed adunclear doctrines relative to { ever to be held in Ann Arbor is being Beethoven was not realized, sharing the land, equality, and an planned for the 1935 meeting it was The "Moods" by Warner was ob- agrarian freedom is so preposterously announced yesterday by Louis P. viously put in to add variety, it ap- done that it seems the producers,C Jocelyn, head of the mathematics de- parently being assumed that an audi- through this medium, are trying toI partment of the Ann Arbor public 1ence could not listen to three quartets conjure up Red bogeys and make so-; schools and secretary of the School- in one evening. The "Moods" were cialism appear lecherous.I masters' club for the last 33 years. distinguishable. Be it admitted that Then, again, some of the local' The meeting has been scheduled for ; they contributed the desired variety, Russian characters are so very beard- April 27 and 28, according to Mr. they added nothing else. ed and so uniformly ugly, that you Jocelyn. The 1935 meeting will markI However, we may find fault with wonder again. But later the thread the fiftieth anniversary of the foun- the music last evening we must ex- turns when the Russian Orthodo:c dation of the club, and consequently press a respect for the manner in church's massive spookery is shown in will be marked by special observances which the members of the quartet a fatal light. Still later, after the and programs for the occasion, approach their work. Music which characters representing the nobility Part of the two-day meeting which falls short of greatness is pleasurable have had their verbal fling at routing annually draws thousands of school when it is honestly played. It is our Socialism. March is pictured benign- administrators, teachers, and instruc- ly turning over his land to the peas- tors in the field of education will be belief that the audience was apprecia- aytunngoerhs an o hpa-i devoted to honoring the four living tive of this honesty. ants, pauperizing himself, and com- -eoe------g.h or iig:pleting the paradox which runs, ~L ,,+.,, ,.,.,..,tm,,,, ., +"., rt~.. f~t...,. ' ho ia t t Il nt a llrn ~ te a through "Resurrection" - excuse us, through "We Live Again." Anna Sten, March's leading lady, is touchingly beautiful. Her change in social station from farm girl to Mos- cow street walker is competen Yqy done. Sten and March are a charm- ing pair. Further oddity: March veering to- ward a revolutionary attitude, yet pausing to devoutly pray. Ill-conceived and trite sequence: March attempting to maie up his mind whether to see Anna at night before he leaves to join the army. "wicked Woman," starring Mady Christians and featuring Jean Parker and Charles Bickford. This is the filler-in show. As such it is good enough. It is, however, over- salted with mother-love and idyllic children. -G.M.W.,Jr. Army-Navy Club To Honor Washington A dinner to celebrate the birthday of George Washington will be held by the Ann Arbor Army and Navy club at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Mich- igan Union. Following the dinner, Maj. A. B. Quinton, Ord., U.S.A. of the Detroit district department, will address the members of the club on the topic of "Industrial Mobilization and Emer- gency Procurement," a topic which has been centered in public interest by the recent Literary Digest poll. A large number of people are expected to attend, this being one of the occa- sions which the Army and Navy Club marks with a special observance. School of Social Dancing Taught daily, 10 to 10. Terrace Gardeni Studio Wuerth Theater Bldg. Phone 9695 ally stay Hauptmann's execution, now Winter Carnival will be held at Sagi- fixed for the week of March 18, until Make-up Examination in 'English naw Forest on Friday, Feb. 22, weath- the appeal is argued. 159 (Professor Campbell's class) will er permitting. Transportation will Col. Kimberlin visited Hauptmann be given Saturday morning, Feb. 23, be provided and there will be a charge in his death cell for the first time at 9 o'clock, in 3221 A.H. of 50 cents to cover meals. The group, today, talked with him for 10 minutes will leave the east entrance to Nat-{ and later said the prisoner was eating Le -e ural Science Building at 9:30 a.m. and sleeping well. All freshman and sophomore pre- _ University Lecture: forestry students are urged to be pres- l 'O.WMp oraryl To Dr. Frederick A. Coller, Professor ents re eof Surgery in the Medical School, will lecture on the subject "The Prog- [Cosmopolitan Club will meet at 8 Come Out Tuesday I ress of Surgery in Recent Years" (il- pm. Saturday, Feb. 23, Stalker Hall lustrated), at 4:15 p.m., Thursday., Dean C. S. Yoakum, of the Graduate The second issue of Contemporary, Feb. 28, in the Natural Science Audi- School, will speak. The program of student literary magazine, will ap- torium. pear Tuesday, Peb. 26, according to This is the sixth of a series of Uni- Norwegian singing by Mrs. Koella an announcement made yesterday by versity lectures by members of the and refreshments xvill follow. All Donald B. Elder, '35, business mana- University faculties, which faculty friends are cordially welcome.rla ger. members, students, and the general iel The issue will contain the prize- public are cordially invited toattend. winning essay in the .contest recently All Women Students: There will be sponsored by the magazine. The win- Dr. Aga-Oglu will give a talk on a skating party leaving the Women's ner, who will be announced Sunday, Persian Miniature Painting in con- Athletic Building Saturday at two will receive $10 in books from Wahr's nection with the present exhibit on o'clock. Bring your own skates. Skat- bookstore. Friday, March 1, at 4 o'clock in Alum- ing will be either at the Coliseum or A review of the current exhibition ni Memorial Hall. Public is cordially at Burn's Park. of the Ann Arbor Association being invited. held in Alumni Memorial Hall will Homemaking Group of the Mich- also appear, as well as reviews of re- Public Lecture: Angelo Herndon, igan Dames will meet at the home of cent books. Negro unemployed organizer, sen- Mrs. George Carrothers, 1128 Olivia, There will also be stories by Frances tenced to twenty years on the chain next Tuesday evening for supper at Carney, '36, Marian Wiggin, '35, Dor- gang, now out on $15,000 bail pend- 6:30. Those planning to go please othy Wilton, '36, an essay by Charles ing appeal, will speak in Natural call Mrs. Frank O'Beirne, 8658, for Orr of the economics department, Science Auditorium, Thursday, Feb. reservations. and poems by Otto Bird. '35. Ivan 21, at 8:15 p.m. The speaker, who I i charter members of the club. These men who have been connected with the destinies of the club since its original conception half a century ago are Prof. John Dewey, famous edu- cator of Columbia University, Prof. B. L. D'Ooge of the Michigan State Normal College at Ypsilanti, Profes- sor-emeritus Joseph Drake, formerly on the faculty of the University of Michigan Law School and Levi D. Wines, emeritus head of the mathe- matics department of the public l schools of the city of Ann Arbor, the position now held by the secretary of the club, Louis P. Joselyn. A I one quartet pLayed as an encore at the close of the program, "The Nar- rative of a Troubador," by the Span- ish composer, Turina. It is an en- tertaining bit of composition and was amusingly played. -M.L. Enjoy the GOOD FOOD and QUICK SERVICE the club offers you- Cafeteria Style. THE Michigan1W olverine in Lane Hall MATINEES 30c - EVENINGS 40c An Unusual Double-Feature Program TWO ... who went through hell to find their heaven! Tolstoy's immortal novel of Old Russia comes to throb- bing life... _- -. ~ a -A L COM EDY CL UB Tonight is 'Opening Night' SToo gabby for her own good!" is S ON being sponsored by the National The Lutheran Student Club party tudent League, will lecture on his scheduled for this Saturday has been wn case and on the Scottsboro case, postponed a week. Remember'! it's 25c until 2 P.M. on Sundays only ! MICHIGAN NOW M 2n