ITHE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1935 LATE WIRE NEWS DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin 18 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. Kelly Cets Record Vote In Chicago Primary FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1935 VOL. XLV No. 108 Noticesj President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculties, their friends, and other residents of Ann Arbor on Sunday, March 3, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Recount Amendment LANE igan v c opporti putesf Legisla A j amends place e of the througJ be pla lot. The constit mous v House. canvass tion di scribed Retu Is To Be Voted Upon Faculty Meeting, College of Litera- ture, Science and Arts: SING, Feb. 28.-(4)-Mich- The regular March meeting of the oters next April will have an Faculty of the College of Literature, inity to remove recount dis- Science and Arts will be held in Room from the jurisdiction of the 1025, A.H., Monday afternoon, March ture. 4, beginning at 4:10 o'clock.j pint " resolution initiating an Agenda: ment to the constitution to Election of member of University election disputes in the hands Council, to serve second semester in state board of canvassers sped place of Prof. O. J. Campbell, absent h the Legislature today. It will on leave; Nominating Committee, L. ced on the April election bal* I. Bredvold; Chairman, Peter Field, P. E. James. Senate adopted the recount Report of Executive Committee - ,utional proposal by an unani- Thorpe. vote. It had originated in the R e p o r t concerning University It provides that the board of Council- Aiton. sers assume jurisdiction in elec- Report concerning Deans' Confer- sputes under regulations pre- ences -:Kraus. by the Legislature. Report from Administrative Board - Humphreys. rn To Fatherland Report from Concentration Com- mittee - Shull. Is Celebrated In Saar Report concerning Foreign Books ..and Periodicals-Librarian W. W. 2003 N.S. This will be the only make- up final examination for this course to be given this semester. Geology Make-up Examinations for! the following courses will be given Saturday, March 2, at 2 p.m. in Room 2054 N. S.: Final - Geology 11, 12 and 121. Third bluebook in Geology 11. Lectures Dr. Aga-Oglu will give a talk on Persian Miniature Painting in con- nection with the present exhibit on, Friday. March 1. at 4 o'clock in Alum- ni Memorial Hall. Public is cordially invited.! Esperanto: Prof. Clarence L. Mead- er and Dr. Onderdonk will lecture Friday, March 1, at 4:15, in Natural Science Auditorium on "Why We Be- lieve in Esperanto." Exhibitions E ahhiitir of 1Pari 1 iniatr Classiied Directory WANTED CLASSIFIED WAKEFIELD ERASS CO. offers a opportunity to wide awake student Make spending money elling ti modern study lamp, designed an Place advertisemients with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. recemmended by Illuminating Er The classified columns close at five gineering Society of America. Loc: o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no agent, E. Wakefield, 1443 Wali extra charge. tenaw, Phone 9017, after 7 p.m. Cash in advance lie per reading line 128 (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 1Oc per reading line for three or WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NE: morein ins insertionssuits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 do Telephone rate -15c per reading line tars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Ch for one or two insertions. cago Buyers. Temporary office, 2( 14c per reading line for three or North Main . 7x more insertions.NotMan7l 10%, discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. t .TICE Minimum three lines per insertion. NTC By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one month ...... ............8c MAPLE SYRUP $3.00 Per gallot 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ..........3c rder now for spring live 2 lines daily, college year....... 7c Odrnw frSlil' tiiC 4 lines E.O.D., college year.......7c Write G. B. Wells, 1746 WashtenaN 100 lines used as desired .........9c 117 300 lines used as desired.........80 1,000 lines used as desired........7c - 2,000 lines used as desired.......6e NEW AND USED CARS - Large The above rates are per reading line, selection in the country. AssociatE based on eight reading lines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Motor Services, Inc. 317 W. Huro 6te per line to above rates for all capital Ph. 2-3268. "Let's get acquainted letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10X 10c per line to above rates for bold face ---- -- - - capital letters. .t BLUE BIRD BOOK NOOK. Nick, The above rates are for 7 point Arcade. Latest fiction, biograp type. Acd.Lts itoLo~,rm i r I .n . _a_.:; r .r i -Associated Press Photo. Mayor Edward J. Kelly (lcft), Democratic nayo, of Chicago, is alhiva receiving r ctui ns from mhe primary in which he received a record vote of 479. 7 to sucecud himelf. The R-publican nominee is Emil C. it l SAARBRUCKEN, March 1.- (Fri- Bishop. day) - W) - Hilarious SaarlandersB A large attendance is desired. staged a second new year's celebration lg tn cie d in the early morning hours to wel- University Broadcasting: come March 1-the day the Saaris I9:15-9sty30 ad-cabrtoryPro officially turned back to Germany gv:15-9S:30pa.m.-Laboratory Pro- the League of Nations. gram for University Speech Class. (Student Round Table discussion up- From midnight on they held a "new "g and better time" with beer toasts, vic- Broadcasting," Stewart Cram, '35, tory hails, frantic shouts of glee and rleader.)i patriotic songs. Powerful loud speak- 2:00-2:30 p.m.- Health Series - ers on street corners transmitted mil- itar tues s te rvely cntiuedTopic: "Athletes' Injuries," Dr. Carl itary tunes as the revelry continued 1Badgley, Professor of Surgery, Medi- far into the night. cal School, University of Michigan. In keeping with German tradition i i rx7 LIUnon o n eersian ivt Mnature e Paintings sponsored by the Research Wetten (right), i attorney whc reeived 69,600 vote; to win over two Seminary in Islamic Art. Alumni rivals aftvr a lictlecs campaign. FOR RENT Memorial Hall, South Gallery, to CAMPUS OOMS or March 14. Open daily from 2 to 5 A guests Phone 2-2316. J. J. Spauld- o'clock. Gallery talks to be an- Autoom otiive M aoazine races ing, 118 N. State. 123 nounced.__ ISjLARGE front room for women. One- Ex1alld Scoe Of IndustrV half block from University High Events Todayschool. Phone 7238. 130 Delta Epsilon Pi: Important meet------- -- ing at 8:30, Michigan Union. By RALPH W. HURD per cent of the aluminum, 85 per cent LOST AND FOUND In the year 130 B. C. Hero of Alex- of the gasoline, and proportionate -- t c h Hillel Foundation: Services will be andria built the first steam engine shares of a hundred and one otherELGIthrst a t thsda.wC held tonight at the Hillel Foundation on reCcord. p h oducts. 125e tap otTesa.Cl hedtngta h illFudto nicr.And has Ripley overlooked the facts : 221. Reward. 125 Chapel at 7:30. The service will be For nearly two thousand years en- A a edc:w followed by a discussion of a Rabbini-i gines and motorized vehicles groped Phat motor vehicle plants paid $294,- FOUND: Wrist watch. Francis Marks. folloed bya disussio of aRabbii- gnos ad motrizedvehices0grped0 in wages last year, that mo - i90Grewo.3412 cal personality lead by Dr. Bernard their x.way through the cluttered and 0,00096 Greenwood. 3645. 129 Heller. dust-gathering conglomerations of tOists paid taxes t, the tune of $1,- scientific laboratories, emerging only 160,000,000, that nearly eight billion FOUND: In front of Student Publica- cintificahoato k 'in egng oly, dollars were spent for highway trans- cations Bldg., 2 keys in leather key !CominggEventsr porfationin general? holder. Call at Auditor's desk, Pub- Co igEet popular distrusts and superstitions. lctoz lg Graduate Education Club: Reports The nineteenth century was just Grow More Alike . from the Atlantic City Convention sputtering out, the Gay Nineties were These statisticians have further em- LOST: Gamma Phi Beta pin on cam- at their gayest, when the world finally phasized the rapidly growing trend pus. Wednesday. Call 2-2217. Re- of the Department of Superintendence decided that it had had enough of toward fewer and more nearly sim- watci. 131 will be given by various members of walkinlg and bicycles and horses and ilar automobiles. While the layman ---- the School of Education faculty who buggies; and thereupon it challenged can easily see how much alike the LOST: Phi Epsilon Pi pin. Initials were in attendance at the meeting of its engineers and its inventors with 1935 automobile appears to be in "G.K.C." on back. Reward for re- the Graduate Education Club, Mon- an imperative demand for "self-pro- general outward shape and design, the tuin. Phone 5618. 127 day, March 4, at 7:10 p.m., in the peled" vehicles. statistician thumbs back through the Library of the University Elementary Inventars Now Numerous the records and finds that three com- School. Men whose names are now to be panies produced 91 per cent of all the I THE SCR" EEN conjured up with awe, took up this 1934 automobiles.I; most Saarlanders greeted the day of return in cafes. Promptly at midnight the patrons arose with upraised steins and at a word from a speaker gave a lusty three-fold "victory hail" fol- lowed by a Hitler salute. German Students Held By Czechs For Spying Students, College of Literature, Science, and The Arts: No course may be elected for credit after the end of the third week. Saturday, March 2, is therefore the last date on which new elections may be ap- proved. The' willingness of an in- dividual instructor to admit a stu- dent later would riot affect the op- eration of this rule. PRAHA. Czechoslovakia, Feb. 28.- (R) - Three German students, includ- {Social Directors, Sorority Chaper- ing the former president of the Nazi ones, House Directors, and Under- students' organization at Praha Uni- raduate Women: versity, were under arrest today, The closing hour for those at- charged with espionage. tending the Sophomore Prom is 2:30 Secret police first arrested a youth ;am. they identified as Fritz Kamm, former I president of the Nazi student organi- Sigma Xi: Nominations for mem- zation, yesterday afternoon. ,.bership in Sigma Xi are due Friday, After Kamm's hearing they made a March 1. midnight search in the German stu-'7 L. S. Ra rsdell, dents' organization headquarters and I3078 Natural Sc. Bldg. took in custody the other two, whose names were withheld. S.C.A. Tryouts: Students interested in working into the general curricular Minnesota F armers program of the S.C.A. are advised to s make the necessary arrangements in Threaten Demonstration the very near future as appointments' are being made at the present time. ST. PAUL, Feb. 28. - () - Leaders Those interested in publication work of Minnesota farmers, seeking relief may still be included on the various for themselves and suffering livestock, staffs now at work. This opening warned the legislature today that 20,- includes general publicity work. 000 to 30,000 of their number will de - t I scend onthe capiti viarchb 0 topress their demands. The notification came as Governor Floyd B. Olson signed the legislative appropriation of $500,000 . for feed which was a partial answer to yester- day's "near-starvation" exhibit of livestock at the state house. Gar Wood Receives No Harmsworth Challengesj DETROIT, March 1-Friday -VP) - Gar 'Wood, internationally known speed boat champion, who has beat- en every foreign challenger for the Harmsworth speedboat trophy since 1920, will not have to defend his trophy this year. The deadline for challengers passed' tonight without any of the interna- tional speedboat pilots coming to the front with a bid to race Wood and his Miss America IX. Plans Made For Peace Conference In London LONDON, Feb. 28. - (R') - Doctor Nicholas Murray Butler announced today plans for an international con- Jamboree Tryouts:6 tudents inter- ested in working on the coming All- Campus Jamboree are urged to call Lane Hall and make an appointment at your convenience. The range of work will include advertising, stage arrangement, publicity, tickets, busi- ness, and other jobs suited to individ- ual tastes. These jobs are open to both men and women. Contemporary: Subscribers who have not yet called for copies of the February issue may get them at the Contemporary office, Student Publi- cations Building, Friday and Saturday afternoons of this week. A few copies are yet for sale and may be purchased at the same time and place, or at Swift's Drug Store, Wahr's or Ul- rich's. Academic Notices Antropology 31: The make-up final examination will be held Saturday, March 2, from 9 to 12 o'clock, Room 3024, Museums Building. Antropology 103: The make-up fin- al examination will be held Satur- day, March 2, from 9 to 12 o'clock, Room 3024 Museums Building. Contemporary: Important meeting of the upper editorial board, Satur- day, March 2, 4 p.m. in the Student Publications Building. Any members who can not possibly attend pleaseI let Marian Wiggin know before that date. Outing for Graduate Students: The Graduate Outing Club will meet Sun- day afternoon at 3:00 at Lane Hall to skate or hike, depending on the weather. If it is too warm for skat- ing, it may be possible for the group to cook supper out of doors. If so there will be a charge of about 20 cents. All graduate students welcome. Bring your skates. A Mixed Splash Party will be held by the U-M Outdoor Club Saturday evening from 8 to 10 in the Intra- mural pool. Any student interested is invited to attend. Bring your own suits and towels. A fee of 10 cents will be charged. Disciples Guild: Members of the Guild and their friends are invited to attend the Guild's hay ride Satur- day evening. The party will start from the Guild house, 438 Maynard St., at 8 o'clock. A small charge will be made to cover expenses. Lutheran Student Club: "The Pow- er of My Influence" will be the sub- ject of the discussion on Sunday eve- ning. The discussion will start at 6:30, following the supper which will be served promptly at 6 o'clock. Municipal League Will Change Headquarters' The Michigan Municipal League will move to new headquarters at 205 S. State Street within several months,, according to Harold D. Smith, secre- tary. Present offices of the League are located on the second floor of Haven Hall. The new location is a building known as the Goodrich property, which is being made over for the League. challenge; and in 40 years the miracle Three makes of cars have accounted of the modern automobile has come for over 70 per cent of the entire auto- to pass. Ransom E. Olds, David D. mobile output, with Chevrolet leading Buick, Roy D. Chapin, Henry Ford, by less than 1 per cent over Ford. And Gottlieb Daimler, the Duryea broth- looking beneath the shining exterior ers, George B. Selden (who had a of the modern automobile, the investi- patent on automobiles and received gator finds that here, too, all is pretty ioyalties on every one produced from much the same. There are 59 different 1895 to 1911) - these are names that models of cars, but all save one use the are inseparably connected with the same kind of read springing, only five rise of an "automobile age." makes of wheels are used. six kinds of In the last 40 years over 600 differ- brakes, 3 types of clutches, and corre- .nt automobile companies have been sponding similarities throughout all hopefully conceived, have had their the "innards" of the autos. moment of glory, and as rapidly have With standardization, increasing disappeared in the desolate wilderness 1uniformity. and the monopolization of of their self-created junk-piles. the industry recognized as predom- How many persons remember the inant trends of present-day motor Star, the Haynes, the Apperson (bet- don, what lies in store for the future? ter known as the Jack Rabbit), the Lay Makes Predictions Case, the Crow, the Rambler, the Statistics do not give any indica- Sheridan, the Pope-Toledo, the Lam- bert, the Dispatch, the Moon; or to tions of this, so we refer to Prof. make it easy the Chalmers-Detroit, Walter E. Lay of the automotive en- the Peerless, or the Maxwell? gineering department. Professor Lay Conjecture At Future predicts that the automobile has only But now it is 1935, the fanfare rushed the surface of its possibilities, and trumpets of the new year's auto- hat it does not even approach the mobile shows are just dying away, degree of perfection that engineers and the motor public is wondering of today could achieve, and that the how extensive their automobile in- automobile is waiting impatiently for dustry has becoime, what are the pr- the public to become prepared for rev- dustrymasberneswatrehesrye-olutionary changes that are inevitable. domilnant trends in the industry, and "For' instance," Professor Lay said, what can be looked forward to in the "if there were some way by which the' automobiles of the future. ter ere soeray toy bihe TheAutmptve ndutris mga-engine in the modern automobile The Automytive Industries maga- could be moved back to the rear of zinc h as taken tim e out to publish t c ar dito utd th ek pu blic's ek rowl a special statistical issue in answer edge. it certainly would have been to these insistent queries of motor- ; done long before now." dom. They have found, for instance, djSprings that will .-ank" a car that there were 3,699,283 motor ve- around curves, stream-lining under- hicles produced in the world last year, nedth the car as well as on the top- an increase of approximately one mil- side, engines that will use only one lion units over the previous year, and two mllios ovr 1932.gall(.n of gas for 50 or' 60 miles, znov- two millions over 1932. able seats in the interior that could They have found that the automo- be conveniently arranged for a nice tive industry as a customer has bought foursome of bridge - these serve 80 per cent of the total output of nerely to illustrate the possibilities rubber, 70 per cent of the plate glass, that Professor Lay sees within the iron, 3 scope of modern automotive engineer- ing. - -uma - Saturday The ART CINEMA W-FEL' 'and WOOLSEY } Hips, Hips, Iooroy A n AT THE MICHIGAN "THE WHITE COCKATOO" i A Warner Brothers' picture co-fea- turing Ricardo Cortez and Jean Muir. Also an extended program of five short subjects, to wit: Betty Boop cartoon; Grantland Rice Sportlight about lions, tigers, and other nibers of the cat faiiy; a Pete Smith Goffy Movies - entertaining as ever: Bob Crosby and Ans n Weeks musical short; and a news reel. "The White Coakatoo" may be ef- fectively categorized as falling within the class of spook stories remarkable for the number of individuals who snoop, about, fire guns, look shifty- eyed, steal identification tokens, and get murdered or kidnaped. Burly Ri- cardo Cortez and demurely blonde Jean Muir have the joint leads in this particular exemplification of the art of murder. The setting is laid some- where on the French coastline in a ghoulish old hotel. A dyug American heiress must prove her identity to ob- tain a million or so dollars; lots of other people want the money too, and they'll kill for it - actually. R.I.P. "The White Cockatoo." Again the short subjects are more deserving of mention, both honorable and dishonorable, than the "feature." As for the Pete Smith Goofy Movie, with its old-fashioned crackpot-in- vented airplanes, its melodramas with their quick-flitting characters and its sneEring villains, praise is richly mer- ited. -G.M.W., Jr. Studet Treaisre Tours sca udinavian - Russian Tour - June 28- Autg.s i8--53 days - 10 countries - $695 - Tourist Class - All expenses including tip: - Other toums $310 - x735 - Circular upon request. CLARA S. BUCHANAN, M.A. 116 i Seward Ave., Detroit A LEAGUE presents khAVJru1II I ference to open here March 5 and said, "We are going to try to find a' Philosophy 31: Make-up examina- way out of the hopeless deadlock tion will be held Friday, March 1, at which is endangering world peace. 4 p.m. in 202 S.W. "The conference will seek solution of the problem of the political future Make-up Final Examination in Bot- of the League of Nations, currency, any I will be held on Saturday morn-- stabilization, and trade barriers." ing, March 2, from 9 to 12 in Room A - -- ..-- ----- ., p H 0 N L New Cars for Taxi Service CAMPUS CABS 24-HOUR SERVICE p 0 N 'C ARD ATLEN "H E LDORADO" First 'Ann Abor Showing ~~, undy - ouda' T uesda - "Flirtation Walk" SUNDAY. 15c til 2 -- After 2, 25c This fim cannot honestly be omittec fron any ten-best filns selection for the present season, ac- cording to the screen critic of the N. Y. Times. a III ... MICHIGAN NOW SHOWING I I IIWHTE M mm4 - Friday ood Saturday Eveni ngs at R.: hnkA .. , tib .' . f } t- ,t .: . Starts / Tonight !/ Al a sReserve( d I Slit QV Zt4.7 .C1G7CA YGU I III uII