IGE TWO SUNDAY, APRIL U, 19;G LGE TW~ SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1~)3~ Fisk Jubilee Singers In Program Today At League LATE FWIRE NE WS French Election May Swing Leftist PARIS, April 25. - (') - Po- litical leaders, even in the Right Wing, prophesized tonight that national balloting tomorrow would bring a slight swing to the Left in the composition of a new Chamber of Deputies. Outgoing Leftists held 314 seats to 129 for center parties and 101 for Right- ists. Tomorrow's balloting will be the first voting for new deputies to cope with economic worries and the danger of war. Overshadowing the election is the anxiety over Germany's re- armament and reoccupation of the Rhineland, Italy's war on Ethiopia and the League of Na- tions' sanctions. Unrest and discontent over the continued economic depression figure largely in the campaign, whose main issue has been "Na- tional safety and bread," which is another way of saying "Peace and plenty." Two In Detroit To Investigate Townsendism DETROIT, April 25.-(A) - Rep. Clare Hoffman, of Allegan, conferred today with John J. Barc, United States marshal, on plans for rounding up witnesses for the investigation he will open in Detroit Monday of the Town- send old age pension plan. Spe- cifically, the investigation is de- signed to determine how much money the Townsend organiza- tion is collecting and what be- comes of it. "The principal thing we want to find out," said Hoffman today, "is what becomes of the money collected. It doesn't matter so much how much money is being collected, but it is being collected for a specific purpose and we want to find out if it is being spent for that purpose." 500 Townsendities Rally At Paw Paw PAW PAW, Mich., April25. - (W) -Five hundred delegates at- tending a fourth district conven- tion of Townsend clubs unani- mously nominated Dr. F. A. Ra- cette, former Paw Paw mayor, to- night as a candidate for Con- gress from the district. Racette 'is a Republican who lost the party's nomination for Congress in the last election and then ran as a Progressive, but re- ceived fewer votes than either the Republican or Democratic candi- dates. The meeting was marked by much cheering and singing, and it was preceded by a parade. Modern Plant Now Occupied By Daily News (Continued from Page 1) 32,000 48-page papers an hour, by a. new linotype machine for setting headlines using a different type face fromh the one previously used in the paper, and by an improved photo engraving process. Although tomorrow's paper will be the first printed in the new plant, the Ann Arbor Daily News is planning a Century of Progress edition of more than 125 pages on May 21. The Daily News will at that time be slightly more than 100 years old, and the special edition will trace the history of the city, its newspapers and the University. The new building, a consummation wished for over a period of years, was begun last July and will be opened for inspection by the public May 21, Mr. Stace said. Three Injured As Two Cars Collide Three persons were injured, none _ seriously, yesterday afternoon, when the car driven by John W. Podesta, 26, 905 Edgewood Avenue, collided with the car driven by Albert C. Lange, 53, 306 E. Henry Street, Saline.I The injured were taken by a passing motorist to Dr. Gates' Hospital. The accident occurred when Lange attempted to make a left turn into the Fair Grounds' driveway and was hitI by Rodesta who was driving east on Jackson Avenue. Both cars wereI wrecked. Mrs. Della PcOdeda, 28. suffered minor cuts aOou{ the head, and Po- desta's knee was slightly in.jured and his neck was wrenched. Jchn, Pod-, esta's 7-year-old son, suiered lacera- tions on hlis chin. Alvin Lange, 17, who was riding; with his father, was uninjured. Coil] nmmenem lit f ids So On Sale ThurAday All departments of the University have placed announcements and invi- tations to commencement on sale be- ginning 'Thursday, April 23. Literary announcements and invitations will be sold in the lobby of Angell Hall. The sale will close Tuesday, April 28. Hours of sale: Monday, 1-5, Tuesday, 9-12. They may also be purchased at any time from the chairman of the committee, James S. Richards, up to Tuesday noon. Samples of the announcements and invitations will be on display in the k lobby of Angell Hall during the hours s of the sale. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. tlox numbers may be secured at no e..tra 'ha rge. 'cash in advance 11e per reading line en basis of five average words to line) or one or two insertions. 10c per read- ing lne for three or more insertions.. Minmum three lines per insertion. 'eleihone rate -- 15c per reading line f(r two or more insertions. Minimum t.ee lines per insertion. 10 discount if paid within ten days fum'bie (date of last insertion. per line --2 lines daily. ane month.....- .....................8c 2 t~nl oege year ...... 4 i .es O)., 2 months.............8c 49 i' E.Ou~Da.2 mots.......S 100' ine used as desired ...... ,....9c :1100 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 Tonic type, upper and lower case. Add 6c 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. TYPING NOTICES STATIONERY: Printed with yomr name and address. 100 sheets, 100 envelopes. $1.00. Many styles. Craft Press, 305 Maynard. 9x NOTICE: We clean, upholster, repair and refinish furniture. Phone 8105. A. A. Stuhlman. 15x MAC'S TAXI--4289. Try our efli- cient service. All new cabs. 3x EYES examined, best glasses made at lowest prices. Oculist, U. of M. graduate, 44 years practice. 549 Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll buy old and new suits and over- coats for $3 to $20. Also highest prices for saxophones and type- writers. Don't sell before you see Sam. Phone for appointments. 2-3640. lox EMPLOYMENT JOB WANTED: Cook, experienced in fraternity and sorority cocking wants position for next school year. Also wants sumner work. Excel- lent references. Box 120. 441 Classified Directory I 8c Typing 8c Phone 7728 Apt. B5 Anberay Apts. The Fisk Jubilee singers of Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn., will give a choral program at 4 and 8:15 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The octet is 65 years old and has toured this country and Europe. Yale Phi Beta Kappa Changes Attract WidespreadAttention Scholarship Ratings Not Sole Requirement In Plan Of Proposed Amendment An attempt at Yale to frame new requirements for membership elec-I tion to the Phi Beta Kappa Society Chapter is attracting widespread at-I tention. According to the provisions of an amendment now under con- sideration, high scholarship ratings would no longer be the sole require- ment in the election at the end of the senior year. The type and dif- ficulty of courses taken by a student and his improvement or decline in his four years also would be con- sidered. A chapter committee would be formed in the Fall of the senior year to consider those eligible for election and report its findings at election time. "In making its recommendations," the amendment reads, "the commit- tee will give prior consideration to averages, but will give due regard to such factors as the difficulty of courses taken and the quality of prep- aration for college as judged by the preparatory school attended and the EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 6 :00-WJR Eddie Cantor: Louis Gress' Music. WWJ K-7 Spy Drama. WXYZ Jack Benny. CKLW Bulletins: Melodies. 6:30-WJR Phil Baker; Hal Kemp's Music. WWJ Fireside Recital. WXYZ Bob Ripley; Ozzie Nelson's Music. CKLW Freddy Martin's Music. 6:45-WWJ Sunset Dreams. CKLW Laugh Parade. 7:0O-WJR Jimmie Stevenson. WWJ Major Bowes' Amateurs. WXYZ Evening Melodies. CKLW Master Musicians. 7:15-WJR Rhythm Review. 7:30-WJR Last Outpost of Romance. WXYZ Orchestra Pit Echoes. CKLW Joe Sander's Music. 8:00-WJR Sunday Evening Hour. WWJ Manhattan Merry-Go-Round. 8:30--WXYZ Walter Winchell. WWJ Album of Familiar Music. CKLW Vincent York's Music. 8:45-WXYZ Paul Whiteman's Variations. CKLW Upton Close. 9:00-WJR House of a Thousand Eyes. WWJ Soloist: Symphony Orchestra. CKLW Dance Scene. 9:30-WJR Musical Program. WXYZ Adventures of the 1loriet. CKLW The Follies. 9 :45-WJR Penthouse Party. 10:00-WJR Bulletins; Vincent Traver's Music. WWJ Dramatic Half Hour. WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. CKLW Al Kavelin's Music. 10:15-WXYZ Shandor. CKLW Kay Kyser's Music. 10:30-WJR Ghost Stories. WWJ Press-Radio: Dance Music. WXYZ Sid Austin. CKLW First Baptist Church of Pontiac. 11:00--WJR Ben Bernie's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Baker Twins. CKLLW Dick Messner's Music. 11:30-WJR Harry Sosnick's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Carl Rayazza's Music. CKLWL Ted Weems' Music. 12 Midnight--WJR Sam Jack Kaufman's Music. WXYZ Bert Stock's Music. CKLW Dance Music. 12:30-WJR at Close of Day. CKLW Dance Music. 1 :00--CKLW Dance Music. improvement or decline in grades since freshman year. "The committee will make careful study in each case of the transcript of courses taken and grades obtained, of the College Master's record, and of the Bureau of Appointment's rec- ords, if available and will consult the class officer and the head of the de- partment in which the student ma- jored. "No consideration will be made of personality or extra-curricular activ- ity or scholastic ability as opposed to achievement." The proposed amendment was drafted by a committee of six. Be- fore it can become effective it must be passed by a two-thirds majority of the chapter and then receive the unanimous approval of the graduate committee. Strong opposition to the change was expressed by Dean Clarence W. Mendell of Yale College. Discuss- ing the proposal, he said: "My own views are that it seems wise to stick to the scholarship marks as given covering four years of col- lege work as the only fair path to membership in the scholarship so- ciety. If we depart from it there is danger that membership selections may be made upon qualifications quite far removed from the tests of the marks secured. Over a long pe- riod the general scholarship aver- ages do represent, we find, the value of the college work done by a stu- dent." University Press Prints New Book, Within a month or later the Uni versity will receive copies of a boo] on Roman Glass from the finding of a University Near East Expeditior in Cairo Egypt, Dr. F. E. Robbins, as sistant to the president and Manag. ing editor of the University press, an nounced yesterday. The book on glass has been pub lished by the Oxford press in Englan and will be sponsored as one of th regular University publications, Dr Robbins said, Several other manuscripts hav been accepted by the University Pres and will be published soon. These in elude one written by Prof. W. R. Tay for of the Botany department on th marine algae of the North Easter? Atlantic coast of North America. Al so the correspondence concerning th bringing of Robert B. Angell to th University will be reprinted in boo] form. This book will be edited b; Wilfred B. Shaw. 434 LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned Careful work at low price. lx 14 WRONG GUESSES MACKINAW CITY, April 25. - (A ) -Fourteen freight steamers whose captains guessed the weather wrong have been fast in the ice here Personal STATIONERY One Hundred SHEETS nd One Hundred ENVELOPES Printed with Name & Address THE CRAFT PRESS 305 Maynard St. Phone 8805 M A J E S T I C TODAY - TOMORROW and TUESDAY 25c Till 2 P.M. i- Le =c is L- k y F O R S P R I N G N E E D II S Hundreds of single and married people are getting their Spring cash from us-on their own signatures --why don't you? You get the cash without delay. The payments are arranged to suit you and you can. have a year or longer to repay. Use this personal money service. Add up your Spring needs and see us NOW. Loans Up to $300 --- 30 Months to Repay! Second Floor Room 208 WOLVERINE BLDG. (formerly Ypsi-Ann Bldg.) Ph. 4000-4001 202 E. Washington St., Ann Arbor PERSONAL FINANCE CO. a. i r k Y :, Social Dancing Class Tonight 3 p.m.. enroll now. Ter- race Garden Studio in Wuerth Theatre Bldg.j Phone 9695. It Mm% /z _ 7 01 C t A' Continuous 1:30 - 11 p.m. 15c to 6 --25c after 6 Now Playing URSALA PARROT'S "NEXT TIME WE LOVE" - with - MARGARET SULLAVAN and "BRI LLIANT MARRIAGE" Joan Marsh, Ray Walker NOWA Until 2 p.m SC cON THES c4 4 O I. i .ln r A LL NJ NKI N 9,.LA ,RE t00 N. n.,. P , * Wq,.,t# '* With SYBIL JASON THE YACHT U EBOYS I CAB GALLOWAY & BAND EDW. EERETT HORTON ALLEN JENKINS CLAIRE 000 3 New Songs by "arborg & Arlon Directed by William' Keighley Coming " Wcdniesday 1DOUBLEFEATURE -ATTRACTION -- Feature No. 1 - I - A gripping chap- ter in our great war on crime! ~I Take a World Cruise_ 1I H I Puzzled A Ph1J(Otl'raphe' ad vice healps those little minor problems you run into occasionally wilh your camera. I'm never too busy t) help yOU et bett-r t sut I li yoi V'r cvi. 'a . AIw.vys gld I t S rldc 1 mi. 1' d I il s01 UtetsO clearl free rrt 11arg $2.50 FRDI AY, May 8th BARBOUR GYM 9 till 1, j'.. with PRESTON FOSTER MARGARET CALLAHAN Alan Mowbray. Ralph Morgan, "Big Boy" Will, iams.MaxieRosenbIoonm. Directed try CIARLIIS I1DOR. Pandru s. 1&3rmnn P K C i'RtuJ I 1 I l11 it i ______________