PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1936 i The Daily News Marks Century Of Publication Development Traced From Early Days To Erection Of New Building Tracing its origin back to the days when Michigan was a territory, The Ann Arbor Daily News yesterday cele- brated its one-hundredth birthday with a 136-page newspaper, made up of nine individual supplements. The outside supplement titled the "achievement" section devoted its 12 pages to articles about the new build- ing housing The Daily News on Huron ' and Division Streets. Other stories introduced the staff, and told of the paper's development since 1835 when it was founded under the name of the Michigan Argus. Since then it has been published under various names, but in unbroken succession. Originally published as a weekly and as an organ of the Dem- ocratic party --there was no Repub- lican party then- it is now one of the state's leading daily newspapers. In 1900 the Argus was leased by the Ann Arbor Printing Company and combined with the Washtenaw Times, a daily. It was not until 1928 that it became known as The Daily News, owned by the Booth Newspaper Pub- lishing Company. Besides the general news section, other supplements in yesterday's cen- tennial edition were devoted to sports, activities, commerce, industry, society, transportation and the University. The "University" supplement of 12 pages besides containing many stories concerning the University and campus activities, offered numerous pictures of various buildings on the campus as well as photographs of the seven Presidents of the University since its inception more than a hundred years ago. Titled "New Building" a 12-page supplement told of every phase of The Daily News' new home into which it has just recently moved. The new building is built of an even, smooth texture with carborundum stone. The ornamental plaques of cast aluminum, placed upon the black art granite spandrels between the windows, are distinctive and in keeping with the modern character of the architecture. The plaques represent figures in bas relief symbolical of phases of activ- ities and culture dealt with by the newspaper. There are 22 of these panels running around most cf the building, representing history, j us- ............. tice, science, printing, drama, lit- erature, sports and photography. The building is described archi- tecturally as modern American. The treatment of the exterior which is of the same order as that of the Em- pire. State Building in New York has a double motif -that of beauty and durability. Dr. Townsend Hits At Old Age Pension Inquiry Followers Applaud Move; Financial Motive Denied By Leader WASHINGTON, MaY 19. - - () Dr. F. E. Townsend today struck out at the administration as the "hostile force" behind the Congressional in- quiry into his Old Age Pension move- ment and denied assertions he was acting from selfish financial motives. Testifying in a packed hearing room, with men and women standing in the aisles, the elderly pension leader told a special House investigating committee that his pension program "needs millions and we are going to get millions." Townsend supporters in the audi- ence applauded when the California doctor said his followers "feel the same way I do about, the two old parties" and that a Townsend third party would be formed "as soon as the opportunity presents itself, probably after the next election." He called the administration a "hostile force" and asserted the com- mittee's attitude was "unfriendly" as he defended a recent appeal in the Townsend weekly for a "defense fund" to be placed at his disposal. The appeal, signed by the Townsend Board of Directors, intimated the investigating committee planned to impound T o w n s e n d organization funds. Chairman Bell (Dem., Mo.), of the investigating committee denied such a plan and Townsend under persistent questioning conceded he was aware the committee had no power to im- pound funds. Representative Hoffman (Rep., Mich.), insisted Townsend was "sail- ing under false colors' in condemning the Democratic and Republican par- ties and at the same time asking his followers to support candidates of those parties who are favorable to hiqnonsinn movement. Invents 'Electric Eye' As Aid For Blind Room 323 in the Union. Everyone is invited. Coinag Events English Journal Club meets Friday afternoon May 22, in the Michigan League. Business meeting for the elec- tion of officers starts at 4 p.m. The program, open to the public at 4:20, will be a colloquium on the Southern Agrarian Movement with Mr. Hart and Mr. Aaron leading the discussion. The Outdoor Club is having a canoeing party next Sunday evening, May 24, from 6 until 9 p.m. The gioup will leave Lane Hall at 6:30. An outdoor supper is to be prepared up the river. The cost will be about 75 cents. Every student is welcome. The Transportation Club will meet for the last time this year Thursday, May 21, aththe Unicn, at 7:45 p.m. There will be an election of officers. Refreshments. Alpha Epsilon Mu: Attention of members and initiates is called to the initiation and banquet on Thursday, May 21, at the Union. Members note that this is a changed date from the one previously announced. The in- itlation will take place at 5:30, fol- lowed by the banquet at 6:15 p.m. The rooms will be posted. For further in- formation, communicate with Maur- ice Dreifuss, 4779, or Ralph Matthews, 2-1617. Dr. Ali-Kuli Khan of Washington. D. C. will deliver a lecture Thursday evening ,at 8 o'clock at the Michigan League on the subject "Baha'u'llah's Message of World Peace and Prog- ress." Dr. Khan is a distinguished dip- lomat. Besides missions to European Affaires to the United States during the Taft and Wilson administrations. He is also an authority on Per-an art and culture. The public is cor- dially invited to this lecture which is sponsored by the Baha'i Study Group. A.I.Ch.E. Vote for date f picnic on bulletin board in the East Engi- neering Bldg. before May 26th. Kappa Tau Alpha: Important mect- ing tomorrow at 4 o'clock in Room 213, Haven Hall. Hillel Players: Last regular meet- ing of the year will be held at the Hillel Foundation on Thursday, May 21, at 7:45 p.m. There will be elec- tion of officers for the coming year,I and an interesting program has been planned. All members must be, present. Hillel Council and Hillel Indepen- dent Club: Important meeting fort combined groups Thursday afternoon at 5 p.m. at the Foundation.+ Hillel Foundation: A Tea Dance will be held at the Foundation Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m. Refresh- ments will be served. Everyone is invited. Roger Williams Guild: The annual Retreat will be held at Patterson Lake, Fresh Air Camp, Friday after- nocn to Sunday afternoon. Members of Council and everyone interested welcome. Will you telephone 7332 for information and reservation by Wed- nesday, 10:00 p.m. SrI inlesInitiate 13 New Men Today At 3 p.m. today, initiation will commence for 13 men who were picked by Triangles, junior engineer- ing honorary society, in front of the library. This will be followed at 1 p.m. by the traditional washing of the Triangle in the engineering arch- way. According to the announcement of Robert J. Beuhler, '37E, president, the new members are: Donald M. Alex- ander, William C. Barclay, Carl H. Clement, Hubert C. Fones, Carl A. Gerstacker, '38Spec. E; Charles Gray, Alfred Karpinski, Neil T. Levenson, Marquis L McCarty, Jr., Harry A. Rieke, Jr., Goff Smith, John G. Young and Robert S. Young. Play By Local Man Given At Northville "Where The Tree Falleth," a one act play by Dr. Harold Whitehall of the English department, was given its debut Monday night, May 18 at the Penniman-Allen theatre in North- ville by the Hampshire Community players. FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK Case System Three-Year Day Course Four-Year Evening Course Co-educational College Degree or Two Years of College Work with Good Grades Required for Entrance Transcript of Record Must Be Furnished Morning, Early Afternoon and Evening Classes For further information address CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar 233 Broadway, New York --Associated Press Photo. Emil Ranseen, graduate student at Northwestern University, is shown at Evanston, Ill., demonstrating his "electric eye" by which it will be possible for the blind to "read" ordinary books and newspapers. Held over a page the "eye" focused on the print, tranmits impulses to a machine on which the blind reader places his hand thus feeling the letters. The only machine of its DAILY OFFICIAL Bureau of Research, United States Department of Commerce, will lee- uvnn e -- ALX0" tueon "eeachby th eartment LLE ' of Commerce,", today at 11 a.m. in oBULLETIN Rom 205 Tappan Hall. Visitors are invited. (Continued from Page 4) - - Stanley Chorus. Meet tonight, 7:15 Union at 7:30 p.m. today. Officers in room 305, at the Union. All voices for the coming year will be elected come. Special rehearsals to start this and installed at this time. Pictures 11 week for program. of the air-ground communications! demonstration will be shown. Uni- Polish Engineering Forum: There forms are requested. Please be on will be an important meeting at the time. Union today at 7:30 p.m. Organiza- j tion plans for next fall will be. dis- Merit System Committee will meet j cussed. All members are requested to today at 4:15 in the League. All attend. members must be present. Student Alliance: There is an open Dr. Wilford L. White, head of the meeting this evening at 8:00 p.m. in 1 i, I it I a a .I countries he served the Persian gov- ernment at Washington as Charge d' TYPEWRITING and MIMEOGRAPHING, Promptly and neatly done by experienced operators at mod- erate rates. Student work a specialty for twenty-eight years. 0. D. Morrill 314 South State Street _ 500 camshafts can be inspected every hour by an automatic machine which has been designed and built by the Ford Motor Company. It is the only one of its kind. It has a gaging accuracy of one ten-thousandth of an inch. It gages Ford camshafts at 25 points. Any dimension not within the specified limits causes elec- trical and mechanical devices to reject the camshaft as it leaves the machine. There are ten inspection sta- tions. The carnshafts are placed in registered position in carriers mounted on an endless linked conveyor and carried into the machine. At each station the conveyor stops momentarily. Au- tomatic centers engage the ends of the camshafts and hold them rigidly. Then 25 floating gage kind heads lower automatically, mea- sure the shafts, then rise. As the conveyor moves the shafts to the next station, other mechanism rotates and indexes them for the next set of gage heads. The gage heads contain hard- alloy-tipped measuring plungers which are linked to amplifying levers. Variations in shaft sizes, beyond set limits, close a set of contact points which operate two solenoids. One sets the rejection mechanism; the other raises a marking plunger which puts a daub of copper sulphate solution on the shaft where the dimension is over or under size. When shafts come out of machine they are automatically passed or rejected. All told, there Ford are 54 inspections on every V- 8 camshaft. F OR D M O T OR COMP A N Y la m- - _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ Think a Minute!I ,v rbody's eadingTh Michegan alY Want Ads! r )Yes, DoI'llUbe Clad to Go" i i~y ,f , l PARENTS with growing children naturally want them to have, whenever practical, the same al vantages that their companions have. Few advantages inean so much, and cost so little, as a tele- phone in the house. The boy or girl whose home lacks a telephone thereby loses one important way of forming friendships. In this age, when most invitations are sent by tele- phone, such a boy or girl is often left "out of things"-cut off from many opportunities for harmless ress. It reduces the risk of fire ar*l theft; it safeguards health and property. In emergencies it is a swift, dependable ally. It takes much of the old drudgery out of housework. For the telephone runs errands quickly and cheaply.It eliminates hours of worry. It combats lone- liness. By enabling her to shop from her own home, it frequent- ly saves the modern housewife from exposure to bad weather. The telephone service in Mich- igan today is as good as any in the world. The constant desire Our rcOd rs ho vefon -mc' FA)Y I- Ili 1 I RouLT . y uve~sto tOs1 , O s h7iret use our Ec tThe Min tree-lir'- ) Mihigan DM1 0Inserted One lime Ndditioflal slttlc mre. tAd vertiQ i9 tiO has brought or have nm/bin .y .rNT WV, Pt # id easure. But its value in lthe social de of life is only one phase , _ s . -- -- of this company is to make that service even more prompt, more efficient,