THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMIER 6, 1M35 Six Seriously Injured When Electric Car Overturns Annual Red Cross Veteran Employe REAL ESTATE GROUP MEETS Members of the Michigan Real Es- Drive Opens Today Observes Birthday tate Association will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Michigan Union for The annual Red Cross Roll Call Observing his seventy-sixth birth- a banquet which opens the 21st an- in Washtenaw County opens today, day yesterday, Albert Marsh, who nualconvention of the group. :Addresses and discussions will be and will continue through November ended 46 years of continuous em- held at the banquet and will continue 20, it was announced yesterday by ployment in the anatomy division of through Friday afternoon, when the Mrs. Albert C. Furstenberg who has the Medical School last June, stated session adjourns. charge of the drive, the goal of which that he was celebrating by taking it -_ has been set at a membership of 4,000 easy. "It'stthe only way to do." persons. A number of shops in Ann Arborj will carry special window displays during the drive, and all of the dairies will use milk bottle collars with the Red Cross slogan on them. From November 6 to 20, there will be a lighted red cross in the Court House square, and posters will be placed on all of the city busses throughout the drive. The heads of the committees which will participate in the drive are: T. R. Piersol, special gifts, Miss Irene Smith, schools, Maynards Newton and Earl Cress, business groups, H. S. Slifer, fraternities, Mrs. Russell T. Dobson, Jr., house-to-house, Frank DeVine, factories, Mrs. George Moe, booths, D. E. Conley, churches and Mrs. Jean Noble, supplies. Mr. Marsh was born in England S LC A L ! and has resided in the United States E A for the last 52 years. The celebra- PORK AN D tion was limited only to the family. SA ERKRAUT i with PLATE LUNCH MILLER Drug Store 727 North University Phone 9797 Features Today 50c PROPHYLACTIC TOOTH BRUSH 29c with SPATZEN 25c PANCAKES Just Like Mother Made. Open 7 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Table and Counter Service 0 Aunt Het's 513 East William g -Associated Press Photo. Six persons were seriously hurt and a score of oth-srs suffered minor injuries when a Lrake Shore Electric L inter-city car crashed into an automobile several mijes east of Toledo, injured required hospital attention. 0., and overturned.. Many of the 11111111111==1 r 1 Clements Rare Book Room Is Beautiful But Very Utilitarian Valuable Collections Are Shelburne, whose portrait occupies Housed In Burglar- And the center position above the fire place of the rare book room, is consid- Fire-Proof Vault ered an important part of the collec- tion. The Earl of Shelburne was By I. S. SILVERMAN known as one of the most forceful Priceless old volumes, comfortably English proponents of America inde- reposing amidst hand-carved wood pendence and his works form the I paneling and old English' furniture basis for many existent theories con- 1 complementing the nature of the cerning the American revolution. room, but guarded by strictly utili- A famous document included in the tarian burglar-proof and fire-proof collection is the noted Columbus let- walls of steel, give the William L. ter written in Latin in 1493 and pub- Clements Library's rare book room lished by Stephen Plannek. The first its distinctive mien. edition of the Federalist in its or- The outward appearance of the iginal board binding, published in room does not suggest its significance Philadelphia in 1788, is another ex- and value, but its structure bears out tremely important document owned its importance. The room has an by the library. individual foundation of steel reen- forced with concrete thus insuring its Yost Ta in Will stability against all conditions. Steel- T p g curtained windows, massive portals, Attend Dinner Soon and intricate locks guard the valuable collection of books. Fielding H. Yost and T. Hawley' Begun By Clements 'apping will attend a University of An early foundation for the present Michigan alumni dinner to be held selection of books laid by the late Yriday night at the Hamilton Club, Regent William L. Clements, who was Chicago, before the Michigan-Illinois noted for his interest in the collection football game. Mr. Tapping will leave, of rare books, library officials said. for Champaign following the dinner Within the cases the books are where he will set up headquarters for! chronologically arranged as much as Michigan supporters at the Inman size of the volumes will allow. There hotel, are also special groups such as well- _ rounded Mather, and Revolutionary GUEST SPEAKER ANNOUNCED materialy Millard 11. Pryor, vice-president of One may proceed from one case to the Renown Stove Co., will be guest another and acquire comprehensive speaker at a professional meeting of picture of American history according Delta Sigma Phi, professional busi- to the order of events. It is complete ness fraternity at 7:30 p.m. today at in the sense that several volumes re- 1502 Cambridge Road. late to one historical issue but present various aspects and views which serve as the best available source material. It is also significant to note that 39 of the 41 known Jesuit "Relations" are owned by the library. TYPEWF Cannot Be Evaluated RE NI It would be folly to evaluate the individual books as being more im- portant or more valuable than the rest, library officials say, because of SPECIAL RATES the abundance and importance of the entire collection. However, several of ALL MA K ES A the volumes are more famous than others and some are more frequently quoted or written about. New Portable and best qu An entire case in the rare 'book room is filled with DeBry publications A large and select stock in a which were the main interest of the applyopUr late Regent Clements. DeBry was a ent may onp continental publisher during the six- teenth and seventeenth centuries who immortalized the paintings of the Roanoke colony made by John White. His publications are of great signifi- cance and importance in American 0 oM history and the library contains one 314 South S of the most complete collections of his works, according to those in THE STATIONERY ANI charge. In addition a comprehensive col- Since 1908 If You Write, lection of the papers of the Earl of Hope Is Given For Restrictions B Fitzgerald Assurance was given a delegation of Washtenaw Avenue property own- ers yesterday by Gov. Frank D. Fitz- gerald that the establishment of the Michigan Children's Institute on the Hoover property would be discussed with George R. Thompson, budget di- rector, before further action is taken. The property owners are protesting the establishment of the Institute in the highly restricted residential area around the Hoover property. A proposed change in the city's zoning ordinance to permit the state to go ahead with its plan was de- scribed by Prof. W. C. Hoad, of the engineering college, and Dr. S. W. Donaldson, members of the delega- tion, as detrimental to the whole community. A friendly suit against zoning changes was suggested by Gov. Fitz- gerald, who pointed out that should the state lose, condemnation awards would prevent the establishment of the Institute on the Hoover property. The delegation's spokesmen replied that, while ready to fight for deed restrictions, they were reluctant to defend the zoning ordinance also. BUY YOUR FRUITS, GROCERIES & VEGETABLES at the FARM MARKET Open Evenings and Sundays 320 East Liberty Phone 9778 RITERS S 6I T E D Seniors, Make Your Appointments NOW For Your Ensian Plhotog raphs PHOTOGRAPHER 332 SOUTH STATE STREET - DIAL 5031 I r 0 TO STUDENTS AN D MODELS tality Office Typewriters. a complete range of prices. chase. Easy payments. Work a Specialty. State Street D TYPEWRITER STORE We Have It Phone 6615 10,000 footcandles Upwards of 1,000 I:4' 500 footcan'dles NE "footcandle" (the unit used to measure light) is the amount of light cast on a screen by a candle one foot away. Sunlight measures about 10,000 footcandles. Too bright, perhaps, for comfortable reading but not bad at all for playing golf. The intensity in the shade of the old apple tree may be 1,000 footcandles or more. Ideal for reading. Easy on the eyes. A great place for an afternoon of reading. We enjoy sitting on the porch--a nice place to use our eyes -with perhaps 500 footcandles. We sit inside during the daytime, pull our chair close to the window and think we have good light. Yes, it is reasonably good-200 footcandles. Then at night, when many of us use our eyes more than in the daytime for close vision, we blithely turn on a 40-watt bulb in a bridge lamp and proceed to read our newspapers under a lighting intensity of 3 to 5footcandles! Here we are, doing close visual work with a hundred times less light than we have in the shade of a tree-the ideal intensity for reading. The amount of light you need depends upon what you are doing. The larger the object, the easier for us to see it. Then there is contrast. If you read a well printed book under, let us say, 25 footcandles, and then pick up a newspaper wherein the contrast of the type on the paper is not nearly so high, how much light do you require? You require three times as much light to read with the same ease. Sewing, the most brutal visual task, generally deals with very small objects and materials of very little contrast, and requires tremendously high intensities if we are not to strain our eyes or consume too much energy. When you use your eyes for reading, sewing, studying, play. ing games, writing, or other close visual work, there are cer- tain minimum amounts of light you must have for proper seeing conditions. These standards, developed by the Science of Seeing, are based on thousands of actual experiments. P BOEKS which should be of interest to MUSICIANS and MUSIC LOVERS Burney: A GENERAL HISTORY OF MUSIC, 2 volumes. Oscar Thompson: HOW TO UNDERSTAND MUSIC. John Erskine: A MUSICAL COMPANION ........ . Stokowski: THE LAYMAN'S MUSIC BOOK ....... . O'Connell: THE VICTOR BOOK OF THE SYMPHONY. Richard Specht: BEETHOVEN AS HE LIVED ..... Theodore Finney: A HISTORY OF MUSIC ...... . Eric Clarke: MUSIC IN EVERYDAY LIFE ..... . Philip Goepp: GREAT WORKS OF MUSIC -- HOW TO LISTEN TO AND ENJOY THEM. Ernest Newman: STORIES OF THE GREAT OPERAS AND THEIR COMPOSERS ................... Pratt: THE HISTORY OF MUSIC.... . . David Ewen: COMPOSERS OF TODAY - A Biographical and Critical Guide to Modern Composers 4... . . $7.50 2.75 3.00 2.75 3.50 2.00 3.75 3.00 1.59 1.47 3.00 200 footcandtes L .O IA 11 4.50