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November 30, 1935 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1935-11-30

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

-THlE MICHIGAN 1IATLJY

SATURDAY, NOVEMBERL 30, 1935

Kreisler Violin
Concert Pieces
Are Announced
Selections From Bach And
Haidel; Includes Own
Compositions
Announcement of the program to
be played by Fritz Kreisler, noted
violinist, in the fourth choral Union
concert of the year was made yester-
day by Pres. Charles A. Sink of the
School of Music. The concert will
be given at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 3,
in Hill Auditorium.
The concert will be the first of two
to be given during the month of De-
cember. The second, which will close
the first half of the concert series, will
feature the Boston Symphony Or-
chestra under the direction of Serge
Koussevitzsky, and will be given Dec.
11."
The program for the Kreisler con-
cert is as follows:
Sonata in D major..........Haendel
Adagio
Allegro
Larghetti
Allegro
Concerto in C major ........Kreisler
In antique style (Vivaldi)
Allegro energico ma non troppo
Andante doloroso
Allegro molto
Partita in F&major (Violin alone).
.. .......................Bach
Prelude,Loure, Gavotte en Rondeau
Menuette I and II, Bouree, Gigue
Poeme .................. Chausson
Shepherd's Madrigal(Old German)
.............Kreisler
Vocalise............Rachmaninoff
Three Caprices............Paganini
B flat major
B minor
A minor
Three Spanish Dances.:
1. Malaguena .............Albeniz-
.......................Keisler
2. Jota ................de Falla
(Arranged by the composer and
Kochanski)
3. Spanish Dance-...........
............de Falla-Kreisler
Alleged Ticket
Thieves Given
Bond Release
Three Detroiters, charged with the
larceny of 130 tickets for the Ohio-
State-Michigan football game last
Saturday, were released from the
county jail Wednesday afternoon
when they furnished bond of $500
each. They pleaded not guilty when
they were arraigned earlier in Judge
Jay Payne's justice court earlier in
the day, and their examination was
set for 2 p.m. Dec. 6.
The accused are Frank Horenstein,
26, who has been arrested 13 times
previously in Detroit; Ben Schulman,
23, who has been arrested twice in
Detroit and once in Mt. Clemens, and
Elie Frank, 22, who has been sen-
tenced previously on a charge of fre-
quenting a gambling house. Schul-
man was convicted on a federal
charge at one time.
A fourth member of the group, Irv-
ing Ryke, 17, pleaded guilty when
the charg against him was reduced
to a disorderly charge. He was re-
leased on payment of a $15 fine.
Drain Improvements
Planned By Graham
LANSING, Nov. 29.- (P) -George
Graham, chief of the drain division

of the state agricultural department,
advised county drain commissioners
today to contact Works Progress ad-
ministration district managers to plan
local drain improvements under WPA
work allotment.
The Works Progress administra-
tion has notified Graham a total of
$2,280,424 will be available for im-
provements of county drains in the
state. Of that amount $1,336,265 was
allotted several weeks ago and some
work under that allotment has begun.
The money will be spent to deepen,
widen and clear out present drains.

Jobless Threaten Strikes Against WPA; Ask More Pay

-Associated Press Photo j
A delegation of white and negro unemployed from the Workers Alliance of America are shown as they
appeared before the WPA administration in Washingten, seeking increased relief payments and threaten-
ing strikes on WPA projects where wages are below union scales.

Glacier Priest To Lecture On
'A Voyage To The Ice Inferno'
5 V

Will Present Movies Of
Recent Explorations In
Alaskan Wilds
The Rev. Bennard J. Hubbard,
known as the "Glacier Priest" to
Americans throughout the nation who
have heard his broadcasts, read his
magazine articles and attended his
lectures, will present his motion pic-
tures of "A Voyage to the Ice In-
ferno"at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday in Hill
Auditorium.
Cited in the "They Stand Out From
the Crowd" department of the Liter-
ary Digest as a man who "climbs into
craters of live Alaskan volcanoes and
calls it fun," Father Hubbard has
combined this "fun" with the acquisi-
tion of a wealth of scientific data
during the exploration trips he has
undertaken.
Father Hubbard is head of the ge-
ology department at Santa Clara Uni-
versity in California, and he returns
there between exploration and lecture
trips. None of his expeditions into
Alaska have had outside backing, and
he has paid his own way through his
lectures, writings and broadcasts.
Popular Lecturer
Probably one of the most popular
lecturers on the American platform,
Father Hubbard delivered 214 com-
plete lectures in 184 days during his
tour of the country last year.
His talk Wednesday, under the
auspices of the Oratorical Associa-
tion, will be a narration of the dis-
covery of a great volcanic crater off
the northern coast of the Alaskan
Peninsula, and will include striking
moving pictures 'of the whole expedi-
tion.
Father Hubbard was accompanied
on the trip by three assistants from
the geology department at Santa
Clara. Moving west along the edge
of the Peninsula for more than a
month, the party finally reached the
Aghileen Pinnacles - weird and
needle-like peaks visible from the
coast but hitherto unexplored.
Find New Crater
These pinnacles marked the goal
of the expedition, but unexpectedly
these pinnacles were found to be
part of the rim of a volcanic crater
more than 30 miles in circumference,
larger even than the Aniakiloch Cra-
ter in the center of the Peninsula,
which was formerly considered the
largest in the entire area.
The explorers climbed these pin-
nacles, obtaining important speci-
mens and geological data, and also
taking motion pictures of their climbs.
Unusual shots which will be includ-
ed in Father Hubbard's motion pic-
tures show mammoth crevasses, some
more than 2,000 feet deep, the huge
Taku glacier near Juneau and a num-
ber of the giant sea lions, weighing

o Convention
Delegates To Be Chosen
For Meeting Of Student
Volunteer Moveneit

approximately three tons, which were
found on Bogoslof Island.
For his lectures Father Hubbard is
dressed picturesquely in his hiking
boots, khaki trousers and logger's
shirt typical of the outfits worn on
khi. nxnlnrn ,nn twins

TWo Women Are
Killed In Local
Auto Accidents'
Others Receive Injuries
In Thanksgiving Day
Tragedy_
Mrs. Ella Sugden, 87 years old,
mother of Mark Sugden, former Ann
Arbor alderman, business man and
mayor of Saline for several years, was
killed late Thanksgiving night in an
automobile accident three miles east
of here on US-12. Her son-in-law,
David R. Cumin, 815 Church St., was
critically injured.
Cumin was still unconscious late
yesterday afternoon, and physicians
at St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital stated
that his condition was extremely ser-
ious. Mrs. Sugden was dead when
she was admitted to the hospital. Mrs.
Nellie Cumin received injuries to her
chest, but she was said to be im-
proved by attending physicians.
Daniel Lysett and his wife, Mrs.
Emma Lysett, Detroit, were in the
car which collided with that driven
by Cumin. They were treated for
minor cuts and bruises at the Uni-
versity Hospital and then released.
Lysett told sheriff's officers that the
Cumin car, going west, skidded and
swung in front of his car, which was
headed east. According to deputies,
the pavement on US-12 was very icy.
Mrs. Hemmell Dies
Mrs. Clara Hemmell, 74 years old,
of Britton, died Thursday night in
University Hospital from injuries suf-
fered Wednesday afternoon in an au-
tomobile collision which killed her
husband William, 68 years old.
The accident occurred when the
Hemmell car, driven by Mr. Hemmell,
collided with one driven by J. L. Gut-
tarman, 24 years old, of Monroe, at
the intersection of US-23 and Ridge
Road. According to Guttarman, who
escaped with minor cuts and bruises,
Hemmell entered the highway from
the east without stopping, and was
struck by Guttarman's northbound
car.
Coroner Edwin C. Ganzhorn, who
examined Gutterman yesterday, said
there were no other witnesses to the
accident. The Monroe youth agreed
to return again if Prosecutor Albert
J. Rapp, who was out of town yester-
day, should wish to question him.
Short Illness Ends
In Student's Death
George Alfred Brooks, 32-year old
graduate student, died Thursday af-
ternoon in St. Joseph's Hospital af-
ter an illness of more than three
months.
Brooks, a member of the Ann Arbor
Flying Service, came to the University
from Brooklyn, and received his A.B.
degree here in 1931. He was em-
ployed here as a barber while con-
tinuing his studies.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. tomorrow in St. Andrew's Epis-
copal Church, and burial will be in
Brooklyn.
NAVAL MEETING TO OPEN DEC. 9
LONDON-()-The foreign office
announced today that the interna-
tional naval conference will open Dec.
9 to suit the convenience of the dele-
gates from the United States who
would be unable to arrive in time for
the scheduled opening Dec. 6.

CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Place advertisements with Classified
?ldvertising Department. Phone'2-1214
The classified columns close at five
o'clock previous to day of insertion.
Box numbers may be secured at no
extra charge.
Cash in advance lie per reading line
(on basis of five average words to
line) for one or two insertions.
lOc per reading line for three or more
Minimum 3 lines per insertion.
Telephone rate - 15c per reading line
for two or more insertions.
Minimum three lines per insertion.
10% discount if paid within ten days
from the date of last insertion.
By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one
month .....................8c
4 lines E.O.D., 2 mcnths........8c
2 lines daily, college year........7c
4 lines E.O.D., 2 months..........8c
100 lines used as desired..........9c
300 lines used as desired..........8c
1,000 lines used as desired .........7c
2,000 lines used as desired ........6c
The above rates are per reading line,
based on eight reading lines per inch.
Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add
Sc per line to above rates for all capital
letters. Add 6c per line to above for
bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c
per line to above rates for bold face
capital letters.
The above rates are for 71 point
type.
LAUNDRY

LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Ladies white gold Elgin wrist
watch - white gold . strap. Phone
3664. Reward. 137
LOST: Round yellow gold lady's wrist
watch. Lost on campus. Phone
2-3159. Reward. 138
LOST: Black silk purse, Saturday.
Finder please return to Miss Pau-
line Frank, 1465 W. 84th St., Cleve-
land, 0. Reward. 140
NOTICES
MAC'S TAXI-4289. Try our effi-
cient service. All new cabs. 3x
HELP WANTED

LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox
Careful work atlow price,

ix

a
1
7
l
7

STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices
reasonable. Free delivery. Phone
3006. 6x

ins explur aulul I toIj.
Reported 'Dead' In a meeting of religious interests
On recent expeditions Father Hub- on the campus, held Wednesday,
bard has taken to the airplane, and plans were made to select the dele-
last summer he flew over the Devil's gates to represent the University at
Paw region in the Upper Taku coun- the convention of the Student Volun-
try of Alaska. It was erroneously re- teer Movement to be held in Indian-
ported that he had "cracked up" over apolis from Dec. 28 io Jan. 1.
this region, and rumors to the effect The Student Volunteer Movement
that Father Hubbard is "dead" are is sponsored by the Student Christian
still circulating in parts of the coun- Federation which is a combination of
try, according to the December Pro- Protestant organizations throughout
gram magazine. America, Europe and Asia. Its pur-
Tickets for Father Hubbard's lec- pose is to further Protestant cluca-
ture may.be obtained at Wahr's State tion among students and to discover
street bookstore at the regular price talent for various missionary projects
of 50 cents, throughout the world. Doctors, law-
yers, social welfare workers and oth-
ers are shown the value and the in-
Debaters To leet teresting features of missionary en-
terprises.
I itnois, Wisconsin At present there are approximately
125 graduates of the University who,
Members of the Men's Varsity De- through their connections with the
bating Squad to meet Big Ten teams Student Volunteer Movement, are en-
during the coming month have been gaged in wor'ktin the Orient and oth-
named by Arthur E. Secord, debate er sectois of the world.
coach. The national convention is held
The affirmative team, which will once every four years, the one this
meet Illinois here early in December, year marking the fiftieth anniversary
will consist of: William Centner, '38, of the movement. About 300 schools
Leo Burson, '36 and Collins Brooks, and colleges throughout the country
'37. are expected to be represented. Mich-
The negative team, which will meet igan has a quota of 26 delegates.
Wisconsin Dec. 13 at Madison, will Several students from the various
be composed of: Fred Densmore, '36, religious sects on the campus will
Harry Shniderman, '38 and Clifford be chosen as delegates. A resolution
Christenson, '37. was passed at the meeting to ask aid
The topic for the debate will be: from the University to send a few ad-
"Resolved, that the several states ditional students to the convention.
should enact legislation providing for The members of the committee who
a system of complete medical service are making arrangements for atten-
available to all citizens at public ex- dance at the convention include Dr.
,Edward Blakeman, counselor of

Classified Directory

WANTED
WANTED: Used portable typewriter.
Remington, Underwood or Corona.
Alice Ambrose, Phone 212494. 136
WANTED: Man to share apartment.
Call at 216 South Ingalls. Apt. 15,
from 6 to 7 p.m. 128
CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY. Any
old and new suits, overcoats at $3
to $20. Don't sell before you see
Sam. Phone for appointments.
2-3640. lox
FOR SALE
FOR SALE: First class violin and
clarinet. In excellent condition,
514 E. William, Ph. 2-3611. 122
TASTY home-baked pastries, sweet,
plain rolls, bread on sale at Mrs.
S. L. Hampton's Tea Room. We
deliver. 605 Forest. 135
FOR SALE: Alto saxophone, Conn.
" Cost $165. Good condition, sacri-
fice for $35 cash. Phone 2-2192.
129
FOR RENT

GOOD ROOM, one block from cam-
pus in exchange for janitor work.
Call 3330. Day hours. 130
Represent School
At Ford Exposition
The University of Michigan was
represented on the staff of the Ford
Exposition of the California Pacific
International Exposition at San Diego
during theapastesummerby three
men: Douglas Reading, '36, Adward
T. Aldinger, '32, and Rollin M. Sam-
son, '22.
Reading, who plans to return to
Michigan in February to continue his
pre-law studies, was a courtesy driver
at the Ford exhibit. He was active
in forensics at the University. Al-
dinger, who was on the debate team
and wrestling squad, was a lecturer
on the Ford staff. He also plans to
resume his study of law started at the
University.
SAVE 20%
by our
CHRISTMAS
LAY-A-WAY
PLAN
The TIME SHOP
1121 So. University Ave.

( I3
7

FOR RENT: Furnished apartment.
Living-room, bedroom, kitchenette,
private bath including utilities and
extension telephone. Swezey, 513
Thompson. 139
FOR RENT: Single room $3.00 per
week. One half block from campus.
514 Cheever, 8628. 134
--- ENDS TONIGHT
"PAGE MISS GLORY"
and
"WOMAN WANTED"
Sun. - Mon. - Tues.
"BROADWAY MELODY
OF 1936"
and
"THE MURDER MAN"
"GOOD LITTLE MONKEY" - Cartoon

Last Day
JAMES CAGNEY
"The Irish In Us"
and
PAUL MUNI
"SCARFACE"
Daily 15c to 6--.25c after 6
WvvH ITN EY
SUNDAY
First Showing !
'$1,000 A MINUTE'
Roger Pryor
Leila Hyams
- and
"DIAMOND JIM"
with
Edward Arnold
Binnie Barnes

pense.

FARLEY PREPARES FOR '36 DRIVE
NEW YORK -(W) - Democratic
hopes of victory in the 1936 presiden-
tial election were bolstered today by
a claim of Postmaster General James
A. Farley that 18 states already are
definitely in President Roosevelt's
column.

religious education, chairman; Miss
Alice C. Lloyd, dean of women;
Roderick A. Norton, '37M; William
Wilsnak, '37; George Abernethy,
Grad.; Mildred E. Sweet, Grad.; Jane
M. Kretschmer, '36; Prof. Howard
McClusky; Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson;
Canning K. Young. '36A; Ren-Bing
Chen, Grad.; and Vung Y. Ting,
'39M.

q

Y

lk.

1

MAJESTIC
NOW SHOWING......

SATURDAY MATINEE and SUNDAY
until 2 p . ............25c
SATURDAY EVE N i AND SUNDAY-
ALL SEATS........................35c
Matinee 2:00 and 3:30 - Evening 7 and 9

Religious Activities

"THE GREATEST SHOW IN THE WORLD"

11

i

MICHIGAN

ALL SEATS
MATINEES ......
EVENINGS ... .

25c
40c

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
at the MASONIC TEMPLE
327 South Fourth
Ministers:
William P. Lemon
and Norman W. Kunkel
9:45 -Westminster Forum. Dr.
Lemon, Leader. Subject: "Why
Religion Anyway?"
10:45-Dr. Lemon preaches:
"THE WORLD LOOKS
FOR A MESSIAH"
5:30 Fellowship Hour with waf-
fie supper.
6:30 -The Westminster Guild pre-
sents aMusical Program by mem-
bers of the group.
8:00 -Inter-guild meeting at the
First Congregational Church, Prof.
Wilhelm Pauck, speaker.

Professor Pauck
Lydia Mendelssohn
8 P.M. - Sunday
"The Relation of
Church & State in
Nazi Germany"

TODAY and TOMORROW ONLY
Saturday and Sunday
IN PERSON
The Comedy Riot from Rudy Vallee's "Sweet Music"
FRANK and MILT
BRITTON and Band

I

FIRST METHODIST
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
State and Washington Streets
MINISTERS:
CHARLESW. BRASHARES
and L. LaVERNE FINCH
Music: Achilles Taliaferro
10:45 a.m. -Morning Worship Ser-
vice:
"SINGING"
Dr. Brashares.
12:10 a.m.-- Class at Stalker Mall
on "The Social Responsibility of a
Christian." led by Prof. Lowell
Carr.
1 - 6 p.m. - Dr. and Mrs. C. W.
Brashares, 1901 Washtenaw Av-
enue. will be at home to students.
5:00 p.m. - Wesleyean Guild. Dr.
Bessie Kanouse will speak on
"Personal Religion and the Stu-
denti." Supper and a fellowship
hiour will follow.
HILLEL FOUNDATION
Corner East University and Oakland
Dr. Bernard Heller, Director
In order to cooperate with the
aeries of lectures which are spon-
sored by the faculty committee on
Religious Education together with
.he various guilds, the Hillel Foun-
Jaticn will this Sunday dispense
with the separate Service Forum.
Profes sor Wilhlelm Pa-dek, Theo-
logcalSeminary. will speak at the
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre on -

III

Il

WALTER
POWELL
TITO TRIO

Stars of the Ziegfeld Follies
The Maddest, Craziest, Cleverest
Musical Show This Side of Sanity.
CRAZY RHYTHM
A Melody Mad Revue
Beautiful Girls - Riotous Comedy
25 - STAGE STARS - 25

Modern-Age
Dancers
TWO
VALORS

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Roger Williams Guild
R. EDWARD SAYLES and
HOWARD R. CHAPMAN, Ministers
10:45 Worship and sermon by Mr.
Sayles,
"THE GRACE OF GOD"
Mr. Chapman meets students at the
Guild House.

DO NOT
NEGLECT
YOUR RELIGIOUS

t . .t i'n T T T E®

III

M .. YEA .lFtxhI

111

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