THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'S'ATUIi)iAlf. 6-RAY ยง 1 I Dr. Hoekstra Will Adress Reigiou's Meet Four Speakers Will Talk To Interfaith Group In League Tomorrow Dr. Raymond Hoekstra of the phil- osophy department will be the prin- cipal speaker at the Interfaith meet- ing to be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow af- ternoon in the Grand Rapids Room of the League, Dr. Edward W. Blake- man, counselor in religious educa- tion, announced yesterday. The meeting will be attended by faculty members and students repre- senting the four religious traditions on the campus, Dr. Blakeman said. Professor Hoekstra will address the group on "Religion and Values." The meeting is not open to the public. . Four speakers, representing the dif- ferent faiths, will give their opinions of the views contained in Dr. Hoek- stra's talk. The Rev. Fr. Allen J. Babcock, of St. Mary's chapel will represent the Catholic church, the Rev. Dr. Charles W. Brashares of the First Methodist Church will speak for the Protestants, Rabbi Bernard Heller of the Hillel Founda- tion will represent the Jewish faith, and Rattan S. Sichon, Grad., will speak for the Eastern faith, includ- ing Buddahism, Hinduism and Mo- hammedism. This Interfaith meeting is being arranged by the faculty committee on a religious education, which includes Professors John L. Brumm, chair- man of the journalism department; Leroy Waterman, chairman of the Oriental languages and literatures department; Dewitt Parker, chair- man of the philosophy department; Preston W. Slosson of the history de- partment; Carl D. LaRue of the bot- any department; Howard Y. Mc- Clusky of the education school; Ra- phel Isaacs of medical school; John P. Dawson of the law school; Erich A. Walter of the English department; and William A. McLaughlin of the romance languages department. Irving Levitt, '36, will preside over the meeting. biank Signing Confession, To Horrible T orch Murder Dodtors Leave L.boItory For (riine Soliution Damaging Evidence Brings Confession From And Breaks Alibi Of Killer (Continued from Page 1) though an examination of the heart showed that it was normal. The conclusive evidence of crime was found in the skin. The extensive burns on the body showed that it had been in contact with an intense fire for at least ten minutes. Though damaging, the evidence" was considered only superficial, so I Dr. Bugher removed the entire re- spiratory tract and brought it to the University Hospital for further ex- amination. Meanwhile, Blank was charged with the murder of his wife. Dr. A. A. Christman began the ex- amination to see if there were any carbon monoxide in the organs. Evidence of this sort would have pointed to asphyxiation by smoke. No traces of monoxide could be found. The agent of asphyxiation was fin- ally found by Dr. Emerson. Chloro- form was found in the brain, liver, kidney and stomach contents when he made his examination. Testimony of Dr. Bugher and Dr Emerson was introduced into the trial of Blank on Wednesday. Before that time Blank had steadfastly clung to his plea of innocence. When the Uni- versity faculty members gave their testimony, however, Blank's alibi soon broke down, and he made a complete confession on Thursday. The de- tails of the confession were in every way consistent with the findings of the scientists. Mae West Suit Is Angell Hall Statistical Machine Pries Imo Lies Of Sudents -Associated Press Photo. Because she "nagged" him about money for their expected baby, George Blank, 24, Maple Rapids farmer, struck his wife, choloroformed her, he confessed to officers Thursday, and set fire to his house in order to destroy the evidence. Hopwood Rules Are Inviolable After Tomorrow (Continued from Page 1) mal expository essays or papers of a critical or interpretative character, preferably on related subjects, the topics being in a broad sense philos- ophically treated; and the third con- sists of "a major piece of formal ex- pository writing in the nature of a treatise, such as a historical work, a biography or a piece of formal lit- erary, aesthetic or philosophic dis- quisition." Other fields of creative writing em- braced in the Hopwood Awards are dramatic writing, fiction and poetry. No definite standards or criteria have been set up for works of fiction and poetry, it being the spirit of the Hopwood Awards that "the new, the unusual and the radicalshall be espe- cially encouraged." In the field of drama manuscripts will be evaluated on the basis of their "potentiality for production in terms of contemporary theatre and the knowledge of stagecraft displayed, the importance of their ideational (philo- sophic, ethical) implication and the literary skill shown in the dialogue considered as writing for the stage." The judges and the literary critic selected to deliver the annual Hop- wood Lecture on Literature, will be announced later in the semester, Pro- fessor Cowden stated. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN *I (Continued from Page 4)I Communism in America " Mid-week Lenten devotional service on Wednes- day evenings at 7:45. Unitarian Church, Sunday: 5:30, Twilight service: "Our debt to the A-Typical." 7:30, Liberal Students Union. Preview of four reels of movies taken recently in Europe and Russia. Johnny Layton ,world famous three cushion billiard player, will appear in the last exhibition in the Union billiard room for this year on Mon- day, March 2, from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., and from 8:00 to 9:00 p.m. Rog- er Dillon, M.A., '32, will compete against him in the evening exhibition. Admission free. Strauss Resigns As English Chairman (Continued from Page 1) this field that he concentrated while ab'oad. He is the editor of several books, the latest of which is "The Intel- lectual Milieu of John Dryden" pub- lished in 1934. He has also pub- lished editions of the works of Pope,. Dryden, and Byron. Professor Bredvold will take up his duties as chairman of the English department as soon as the academic year closes. Tuition Raised, Fees Abolished By Regents' Act (Continued from Page 1) gineering for the year 1936-37 was also acknowledged by the Regents. John Spaulding, Detroit lawyer, gave $300 as payment for a first edi- tion of Euclid to be placed in the Library in memory of Prof. Alexand- er Ziwet. The book will be a part of the Oliver Spaulding collection. From the estate of former Regentl W. L. Clements was received several catalogues and periodicals and cer- tain bibliographical materials to be placed in the Clements Library. The Regents were given $600 by1 the W. K Kellogg Foundation to be used for post graduate education in Medicine. From W. R. Kales, De- troit, $300"was received to be added to other gifts for the construction of the Lake Angelus Solar Tower. Student accounts due the Uni- versity must be paid before the last day of classes beginning with the present semester, the Regents decid- ed. The former rule was that such loans only had to be paid before the final exam was taken. Loans and accounts which are unpaid now are not subject to the new ruling. Sabbatical leave was granted to Prof. J. Waite of the Law School, and Regent James O. Murfin, Detroit, succeeded Regent Edward Shield, Lansing, as a member of the govern- ing board of the Lawyer's Club. Stirange Apparatus Gives Each A Number, Tells Intimate Details By CLINTON B. CONGER In the basement of Angell Hall there stands a battery of machines working on a principle analogous to a player piano, which spends its time, under the direction of Alan D. Mea- cham, prying into the intimate de- tails of student life, and also under- takes a great many other statistical surveys for the University. The machines are the units of the University's sorting and tabulat- ing station in 220 Angell Hall and Mr. Meacham is the assistant in charge of the station. Like 'G-Men' Equipment Similar to machines at tke Depart- ment of Justice headquarters used by the "G-Men" to sort out men an- swering to a certain description or with a certain fingerprint type from their extensive identification files, the machines here will, if they are fed the proper set of cards, tell you in almost no time the number of students whose parent's occupation is listed as blacksmith, the number of students concentrating ina depart- ment, or the number of hours of B granted last semester in the Univer- sity. All this information, as a matter of fact, they can compute from one set of cards, the general enrollment and scholarship card for each student, which is drawn up in the statistical station from !the registratr's card each year. In blank, the cards used by the tabulating machines are about three and a half inches high by seven and a half inches wide, and num- bered so as to be divided transverse- ly into 12 columns and vertically into 80. Process Is Long The surface of the student card is divided into blanks in which the gen- eral information of the registrar's card is typed in. After that the card is placed in the first machine of the battery, which has a keyboard like a typewriter, but punches a small slit in the card in any column or row desired. Thus in the first column of the card is punched the sex of the stu- dent, indicated by zero for a man and one for a co-ed. In the next eight columns are punched the in- itials and first six lettters of the student's name, according to an al- phabetical code in which each letter is indicated by two punch-holes, one in row X, Y, or O, and one in the rows numbered from one to nine. The home town is then punched in according to a code number in three more columns, allowing desig- nations from 000 to 999. Other en- tries on the card, also put in by code number, show the date of birth, date on entrance, class, home state and county, course, and session, as well as the occupation of parent, to which four columns, or 9,999 code numbers, are allotted. Twenty eight columns are devoted to grades for each semester, arranged in such a way that the number of hours as well as the grade can be registered, classified in columns from A to E, I or X, and, totals. General fraternity, professional fraternity, and dormitory or residence are also indicated, as well as the source and amount of advance credit. Columns 73 and 74 are two sinister headings entitled "withdrawal date" and "withdrawal cause." And last but not least, confirm- ing long-standing suspicions, appears evidence that every student here is designated by a number as well as a name, and that number is punched in the last columns on the card. The cards, when thus filled out and punched, can be fed into a sec- ond machine which will sort them alphabetically, by "serial number," or according to any one item in the list. Still another machine will run the cards through a second time, either removing, or just counting the num- ber of cards punched to indicate any particular item. At the time the machines were running through a special fish study for the Institute of Fisheries of the University Museums. The cards, after being put through the machine to extract from them a particular col- umn, were fed into the master ma- chine of the entire outfit, the machine which takes the cards by groups and types out a report. Into this machine, for example, was fed a set of cards on a fish study to show the kinds, size, total length, and number of fish caught, arranged in groups by columns. FRUITS VEGETABLES GROCERIES WE DELIVER FARM MARKET Again Reopened EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS] 6 :00-WJR Musical Moments. WWJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ Aviation Interview. WXYZ Girl Friends. 6:15-WJR News of Youth. WWJ Dinner Music. CKLW Joe Gentile. WXYZ Federation of Women's Clubs. 6:30-WJR Al Roth's Music. WWJ Press-Radio: Soloist. WXYZ Day in Review. 6:45-WWJ Religion in the News. WJR Musical Masters. WXYZ Don Orlando. CKLW Old Bill. 7:00-WJR Gov. F. D. Fitzgerald. WWJ New Yorkers. WXYZ Town Talk. CKLW Shadows on the Clock. 7 :15--WWJ Popeye the Sailor. WJR Nazar Kurkdjie's Ensemble. WXYZ Lady in Blue. 7 :30-WJR Edward D'anna's Band. WWJ Kavanagh's Music. WXYZ Musical Moments. CKLW Serenade. 7:45-WXYZ Sandlotters. WWJ Hampton Singers. CKLW Washington Merry-Go-Round. 8:00--WJR "Ziegfeld Follies of the Air." WWJ "Your Hit Parade." WXYZ Gray Gorddn's Music. CKLW Bob Albright. 8:15-WYXZ Boston Symphony Orchestra. 8:30-CKLW Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. 9:00-WJR Nino Martini: Andre Kostelanetz' Music. WWJ Jan Peerce: Rubinoff's Music. 9:15-WXYZ World Adventures. 9:30-WJR Leap (out of character year). WyWJ Al Jolson. 10:00-WJR Gov. Alf. M. Landon. 10:30-WWJ Celebrity Night. WXYZ 400 Club. CKLW Scotch Varieties. 10:45-WJR Rackets Expose. 11:00--WWJ Russ Lyons' Music. CKLW Star Dust. WXYZ Baker Twins. 11 :15-CKLW Jack Hylton'siMusic. WJR Abe Lyman's Music. WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. 11:3-WJR Ozzie Nelson's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Ray Noble's Music. CKLW Freddy Martin's Music. 12 Midnight-WJR Bert Stock's Music. WW/J Dance Music. WXYZ Carefree Carnival. CKLW Kay Kyser's Music. 12 :30-W/XYZ Griff William's Music. WJR Bernie Cummin's Music. CKLW Orville Knapp's Music. 1 :00-CKLV/ Jack Hylton's Music. 1:30-Will Osborne's Music. DON'T FORGET ... We serve: BREAKFASTS NOON SPECIALS DINNERS 1 j - NEW YORK, Feb. 27.-'0P)--A Supreme Court order was sent to Los Angeles authorities today to authorize service upon Mae West of a suit by Frank Wallace, an actor, who seeks to enjoin Miss West from denying he is her husband or that she is mar- ried. The order was signed by Justice John E. McGeehan. Wallace stirred a turmoil in the screen and stage world a year ago by his assertion he had married Miss West in Milwaukee. "I never heard of the guy," was Miss West's retort. A marriage license clerk, hunting around in the records, found a mar- riage license issued to a Mae West and a Frank Wallace in 1911, but Miss West remained firm in her de- nials she had married. 320 E. Liberty Open Evenings Phone 9778 and Sundays l r if 1h 'aim Yc~u pa 'ow in Anoyance for Do you get hot water ONLY- after a dash downstairs to light an old-fashioned water heater? after waiting for what seems to be hours for the water to reach the right temperature? Or, does your faucet suddenly stop giving hot vater at a most inopportune time? If you get hot water only after much trouble and inconvenience then investi- gate automatic GAS watet heating imme- diately. For equivalent service-the same quantity of hot water at the same tem- perature-GAS is the cheapest way for the average family to heat water. Enjoy the experience of having all the hot water you need whenever you want it. See the THRIFT Heater which en- ables you to BUDGET your water-heat- ing costs. You know in advance what the cost will be. The HANDLEY BROWN Automatic Gas Water Heater 30-gal size, $79.50 $5.00 Allowance For Your Old Heater. (0 I r k yl 4 or I If you lose something, let people know about it. Blow your horn! No one will blow it for you. The best place to sound off for the return of Lost Articles is the Michigan Daily Classified Section. 30c CALL 2-1214 or is a small price to recover arti- STOP IN at the Office, cles you prize2Manard highly. 420 St. .Vi I'll SPECIAL TIN ROOF SUNDAE with Marshmallow 10c "a. $2.50 Allowance for your wasteful furnace coil! iii I j I , -___