v THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, Williams Students Satirize Teachers Oath Bill Detroit To See '36 Auto Styles Next Saturday Twenty-Five Corporations Scheduled To Display New Models Three and one-half acres of "mir- ror-polished" automobiles, their sur- faces reflecting the subdued colors of elaborate display lighting and the inquisitive faces of thousands upon thousands of 1935's "more-enthusias- tic-than-ever" motor public - such is the spectacle promised for the De- troit Automobile Show, which opensI at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Convention Hall. Manufacturers of 25 different makes of automobiles and 9 makes of trucks have reserved space for the eight-day run of the auto show. Vis- itors may inspect the motor kingdom from the lowliest vassal to the most dignified courtier. Something For Everyone The more persistently curious will inspect the large arrays of technical exhibits, the "just-ordinarily" curious will watch the movies of productive processes-and perhaps linger awhile before the "fall fashion show" and the "living models" presented there- in. The "kiddies" will see little play- lets of Buck Rogers and Wilma Deer- ing, recently returned from inter- planetary meanderings. The majority of visitors, however, will be coming to "see what's new" in the 1936 cars. They will find im- provements, but no important tech- nical changes. Have New Riding Comfort One of the auto concerns has equipped its new cars with two com- plete braking systems, one of the hydraulic type functioning in every- day service as the regular means of stopping the car, and the other a complete mechanical system, held in reserve in case of emergency. Increased riding comfort has been added through further developments in springing and in improved weight distribution. Many of the new mo- dels have further supplemented rid- ing ease by the use of deeper, softer seat cushions and by mounting the body on rubber, instead of the former metal-to-metal mounting. Safety features include more of the new modes with steel tops and frames re-designed for added rigidity. Perhaps the most noticeable of im- Ralph Clark Is NamedToHead FroshSingers Shirrel Kasle, '37, Will Be Conductor And Manager Of Glee Club; Ralph Clark, Jr., of Ann Arbor, was elected president of the Frosh Glee Club yesterday for the school year of 1935-36. Other officers who were selected in- clude Charles Zwick of Cleveland Heights, vice-president; Thomas Draper of Perry, N. Y., secretary; and Gray Nelson of Ann Arbor and Rob- ert F. Read of Pinkney, librarians. As student conductor, Shirrel Kasle, '37, a member of the Varsity. Glee Club will have supervision of the ac- tivities of this organization. These will include the furnishing of the singing at the Freshman luncheon Tuesday at Dean Joseph Bursley's luncheon soon, and the presenting of smokers and sings with faculty mem- bers as guests, at times to be ar- ranged. The club, which trains its members for the Varsity Glee Club, will also exchange sings with that or- ganization, Kasle said. The leader for this school year is Ernest O. Bacz, of Northville, and the accompanists are Paul J. Kent, of Johnstown, Pa., and Earl Kowalko, of Toledo. The director is Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music. Ilassified ]Drector PROFESSIONAL SERVICES LOST AND FOUND MAC'S TAXI--4289. Try our effi- LOST: Elgin silver watch with gold cient service. All new cabs. 3x chain, knife. Taiu Beta Pi key. Phone 8959. Reward. 98 LAUNDRY STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices reasonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 6x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned.j Careful work at low price. 1x ruKr I T1mr LOWEST PRICES PROGRAMS, BIDS, STATIONERY THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown, North of Postoffice III It's a Week-End of Dances MEN- C Send her a corsage to wear at the dance. Have it something aside from the ordinary. Our corsages are unusual in their individuality. GIRLS- For your dormitory and sorority dances. Let us furnish you with floral decorations in the form of artistic bowl arrangements. University Flower Shop Opposite Michigai Theatre Phone 9055 WE DELIVER -Associated Press Photo. While faculty members of Williams College at Williamstown, Mass., were taking an oath of allegiance to the state and national constitu- tions, students at the college unfurled a large swastika flag and paraded merrily about the campus to the music of a fife, goose-stepping as they went, in a burlesque on the state teachers' oath law. Art Cinema League Shows Its First American Film Tonight .. provements in body design are th die-cast radiator grilles which ar "sported" by most of the new model. Automobile executives expect a 2 per cent increase in production du ing the forthcoming year, which, the basis of an estimated 3,700,00 outputthis year, would bring th 1936 total to approximately 4,700,00 vehicles. Le Is. 20 r- )0 1e DO PRICES MAT. & BALC. EVENINGS - 25c MAJESTIC MAIN FLOOR EVENINGS - 35c - LAST TIMES TODAY - MI RIAM HOPKINS -EDW. G. ROBINSON in cBARBARY COAST" SPECIAL METRO NEWS showing of Outstanding Shots of Last Saturday's Ohio State-Notre Dame Football Game! The dramatization of the Sein Fein. rebellion comes to the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theater tonight. "The In- former," starring Victor McLaglen will continue to Saturday evening as the third offering of the Art Cinema League. The film, first American produc- tion to be shown by the League this season, was selected according to Professor Harold J. McFarlan, chair- man of the League's faculty board, "because the campus has almost be- sieged us with requests for the pic- ture. We do not usually bring other than foreign films, but from my own observations and the newspaper re- views we feel justified in showing the picture. Photograph Startling "Photography as a live art is most startling in "The Informer," Profes- sor McFarlan continued, "and it has been only our resolve to limit our- selves to foreign pictures which has kept it from Ann Arbor so.long." The film was made in the streets of Dublin. Victor McLaglen is a Sein Feiner who has informed the British troops of his outlawed countrymen's headquarters during the Irish revolu- tion. He takes money for his deed and through his weakness he causes the shooting of his friend. Has Dramatic Sequence Throughout the notices which the picture has received there has been one fact consistently noticed, Pro- 2 Will Attend Naval Architects' Session Prof. Henry C. Adams and Prof. Louis A. Baier of the naval archi- tecture and marine engineering de- partment will attend the annual con- vention of the Society of Naval Archi- tects and Marine Engineers, to be held in New York the latter part of next week, it was learned yesterday. Professor Baier will deliver a paper entitled "The Resistance and Wake of a Tanker Model" at the Thursday session. The data with which the paper will deal has been taken largely from experimental observations in the naval tank, Professor Baier stated. DENKINGER SPEAKS Prof. Marc Denkinger of the French department addressed the Alliance Francaise of Kalamazoo yesterday on "Jules Romains-Les Hommes de Bonne Volonte." DAILY 1:30 TO 11 P.M. WHITNEY 15c TO 6 --25c AFTER 6 NOW fessor McFarlan said. "There is an incident where McLaglen's friend is shooting it out with the British searchers. He is kneeling on the sill of an open window firing away, when he is shot. There is silence then, and the dying man slowly slides through the window. The camera is right behind him here and it is focused on him as he moves. He grasps the stone window sill. You can hear his breathing through the silence and as he loses his grip you can hear the scratching of his finger nails as he tries with all his strength to keep himself from falling." Minnesota Doctor To Lecture Today Dr. J. Arthur Meyers, professor of preventative medicine in the Uni- versity of Minnesota, will give an ad- dress at 4 p.m. today in the amphi- theatre of the West Medical Build- ing. His subject will be "Changing Trends of Diagnosis of Childhood Tuberculosis and Its Relation to Tu- berculosis in Schools." Dr. Meyers, who is considered one of the country's leading men in his field, is general director of the Lyman Hurst School of Tuberculosis, and chief of the chest clinic of the Uni- versity of Minnesota. His talk wil] be illustrated with slides and is open to the public. GRADUATE DEANS LEAVE Dean Clarence S. Yoakum and As- sistant Dean Peter G. Okkelberg, both of the graduate school, left Ann Ar- bor Wednesday to attend the confer- ence of the American Association of Universities assembling at Cornel] University. BUY YOUR FRUITS, GROCERIES & VEGETABLES at the FARM MARKET Open Evenings and Sundays 320 EastnLiberty Phone 9778 TODAY and SATURDAY JANET GAYNOR "THE FARMER TAKES A WIFE" Sybil Jason, Glenda Farrell "LITTLE BIG SHOT" Adventures of Tarzan, No. 9 - Sunday - Monday - Tuesday - "CURLY TOP" and "WELCOME HOME' TOMORROW IS THE DAY HIDDEN DRAMA GRAND OPERA'S DIAMOND HORSESHOE NEVER SEES DARRYL F ZANUCK 20th CENTURY PRODUCTION o- Also - TODD & KELLY COMEDY -- "CHIC" SAL E - NEWS r It} I. . 1i . I r ] l J 1 1 i 1 f 1 I, .I First Ann Arbor Showing! ART CINEMA LEAGUE presents "The Informer" with VICTOR McLAGLEN *.*t** N Y. TIMES I- ESQUIRE VANITY FAIR LIBERTY LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Tonight and Saturday NOVEzAMBER 8 -9 Tickets 35c - All Seats Reserved Also - Two Short Subjects a G Im i I r . :: i"> , . , ........::: ....:: ., ,. :,; ........................ .::::.:.:;;.: ;: :: ;;::::::::; :;;:::.,:. v.. . . ..>:..:.."::.o. a .4::. £ " .. v w ' " ... . ..:i4r: ": .o .. ..;;;:2 i; f3ii >i::%:- '; i' t; '.%3s: ii :i :r;: i: :;=:>:.:: :::::. ,::. ::....: : ". I Ip 'II 5 SMICHIGAN 1I Tell us you need $300, $200, $100 or so-and in 24 hours the cash will be ready for you Repay us in small monthly instalments out of your regu ar income. Take up to 20 months, if necessary. 49 on >ossac i Russian Chorus t SERGE JAROFF, Conductor - EXTRA O.S.U. vs. NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL VIEWS Comedy - - Cartoon - - Oddity First Ann Arbor Showing! ANN RUTHERFORD "WATERFRONT LA DY" and DICK POWELL "BROADWAY GON DOL ER" Extra CARTOON NEWS Monday, Nov. 11, at 8:15P. M. ri ====== =H ILL AUDITOR IUM I ®a 'A I-- lI i WHEN YOU SOMETHING WANT SOMETHING REALLY TASTY- COOKED RIGHT- Drop in at the PILG~I'-0M "SHOP OUR SPECIALITIES WAFFLES ... smothered in Syrup and Melted Butter . .. 20c 1 THE DON COSSACK RUSSIAN MALE CHORUS is unique, from the standpoints both of origin and of accomplish- ment. Prisoners of war when the Russian Imperial forces were overcome, they "whiled away their time" in a prison camp by singing simple choral music. Then under the magnetic influ- ence of their diminutive but dynamic leader, SERGE JAROFF, they undertook more serious music. Without music books or instruments, they attempted to substitute for an army band. They attracted the attention of their captors and were ex- tended some few courtesies. After their release they could not return to their native land because they had been expatriated. As a group they did "church singing" in one of the Balkan cathedrals and soon were in demand for concerts. Their tours spread throughout central Europe with ever-increasing en- thusiasm. Their short trips to America on several occasions have been in the nature of triumphal marches. Their pro- grams of sacred music, folk tunes, and stirring soldier songs of the "Cossacks on the March," appeal to the discriminating musician as well as to the general public. lii __________________ - I I BLUE RIBBON COAL CO. IC DOUGHNUTS... that will melt in your mouth. Take some home at 2c dozen. HAMBURGERS . . . the best you've IU 11 I