T HE MICHIGAN DAILY " E"Nt"SDAYAPRITL,193 Concert Band Leads Band's Concert To Hold Annual SpringRecital No Charge For Admission; Cornet Trio And Flute Solo Will ;Be Given Michigan's 80-piece Varsity Con- cert Band will present its annual; Spring Concert at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, April 27, in Hill Auditorium under the direction of Prof. William D. Re- velli. There will be no charge for admission.' - The program will open with the overture, "Oberon," by Carl M. von Weber. Next will be a tone poem, "Message of the Chimes," by Carle- ton L. Colby. This piece describes the memories that the distant chimes bring back to the Weary Wanderer of the quiet Sunday mornings of his youth. The chimes remind him how he has disregarded the teachings of his youth. . Will Present Concert Trio Everett Kisinger, '37SM, Max Mit- chell, Grad., and Louis Vanmannen, '39, will present a cornet trio, "Flir- tations," by Herbert L. Clarke and "Caprice" by Forest Buchtel. Clarke' was formerly solo cornetist in John Philip Sousa's band. Then, before the intermission, the entire band will give a Spanish Suite, "In Malaga," by Frederic Curzon. This suite, the most ambitious work to date of the young British com- poser, is written in the truest Span- ish idiom. A nocturne from "Two American Sketches" by Thomas Griselle will also be presented. The nocturne's richness of harmony is considered both pleasing and effective. Is Second Formal Concert After the intermission, the band will portray "Slavonic Rhapsody No. 1" by Friedman. Then Eldor Pflug- hoeft, '40, will present a flute solo. The band will close the program with a descriptive piece, "Les Deux Petits Japonais," by Charrosin and a Manx tone poem, "Mannen Veen," by Haydn Wood. This latter work is founded. on four Manx folk-songs taken from the Isle of Man. y This concert will be the second formal concert the Concert Band will give this year. The band's new set of chimes will be featured in the "Message of the Chimes." Health Service's M h/ Rsf~i M dAr11"''Ef A ] -'ROF. WILLIAM D. REVELLI DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Tryouts for the Michigan Technic: There will be an important meeting today at 5 p.m. Dance Club: There will be a meet- ing this evening at 7:15 p.m. in Bar- bour Gymnasium. Fencing, Women Students: The last regular meeting of this group will be held today at 4:15 p.m. in Barbour Gymnasium to practice for the matches on Saturday. All mem- bers are urged to attend. The Peace Council will hold an im- portant meeting today at 7:30 in Room 305 at the Michigan Union. Mimes Michigras Cast: Complete rehearsal at 4 p.m. today at the Union. Room will be posted on bul- letin board. Please be on time. The Child Study Group of the Michigan Dames will hold a pot luck supper and meeting this evening at 6:30 p.m. The meeting will be held in Pilgrim Hall, 608 E. William St. The speaker of the evening, Mrs. A. J. Rousseau, will talk on the .sub- ject, "Some Personality Traits in Children." There will be a short business meeting during which a chairman for next year will be elect- ed. All Dames are invited to come. Call Mrs. Karl Karsian, 6649. Coming Events The Observatory Journal Club will meet at 4:15 p.m. Thursday after- noon, April 22, in the Observatory lecture room. Dr. W. Carl Rufus will speak on "Highlights of Korean Astronomy," illustrating the subject with lantern slides. Tea will be served at 4 p.m. Visitors are cor- dially invited. French Play: The date of the An- nual French Play has been changed from Saturday, May 1, to Friday, April 30. At that time three one- act plays will be presented at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Scandinavian Student Club: Prof. E. L. Erickson of the Engineering School will give a tallk on Denmark I. D. Morrill .HEADQUARTERS S uPARKER INK 31 South State Dial 6615 2 Thuos Loot Village Bank Of_$10,000 DETROIT, April 20.-)--Two robbers whose departure was speeded by a flood of tear gas from an alarm' system looted the Depositors' State Bank of Northville of $10,000 at noon today. They changed automobiles at the Ioutskirts of Detroit and continued their flight. A third man waited in an automobile outside the bank. A fourth man was in the motorcar to which the trio transferred at six- mile road and police assumed he, too, was an accomplice. The gas attack was set off by W. J. Schriemer, of Grand Rapids, a state bank examiner, as he lay on the floor behind the counter. He seized the first opportunity to touch the trigger as the robber who had been scooping currency from the cash drawers into a canvas sack turned his back. Gas spurted from eight jets about the banking room and the robbers fled, coughing and with streaming eyes. The eight persons who were in the bank when the robbers entered also were forced to leave. The two robbers entered the bank quietly. Then they produced pistols. One of them stepped to the teller's window where A. Russell Clark was receiving a 4eposit from Miss Frances Cousins, a Michigan Bell Telephone Co. employe. "Take it easy," he said. "It's a stick up." Then he seized the money that Miss Cousins was depositing. The robbers ordered all persons in the bank to lie on the floor. One of them went behind the counter, trans- ferred the currency from the cash drawers to his money sack, then or- dered Clark to open the vault. Clark convinced him the vault was operated by a time clock and could not be opened. and the other Scandinavian coun- tries this Thursday evening at 8 p.m. in the small ballroom on the second floor at the Union. Professor Erick- son will supplement his talk with slides. Following the program coffee will be served. , Red Cross Life Savers and Exam- iners: The Red Cross field represen- tative will be in Ann Arbor on May 10, 11 and 12 to give the course of instruction for Red Cross Swimming and Life Saving Examiners. Until May 10, on each Monday and Wednesday evening from 7:30 to 9 p.m., there will be a supervisor at; the pool in the Michigan Union to help any men interested in review- ing the Senior Red Cross Life Saving examination or preparing for the Eaminers' examination. I L F.A.W19 I ITo Debate Here And Skeleton Cleaner, Aids Museuti,9' lip.. tC rritm. RPP tip,. fliieattl Skull I By JAMES DUNLAP all his meals free of charge and There may be scores of "Rin-Tin-: occupies a spacious, well-appointed Tin's" and "Mickey Mouse's" who are office (at least .:spacious and well-i drawing huge pay-checks from Hol- equipped as far as most bug offices lywood's great producers, but only are concerned) in the basement of the Museums Building. Carrion Beetle can boast that he is His job, which is almost indis- employed by the University of Mich- pensable to the Museum of Zoology; igan. and very valuable to other depart- While he draws no salary and has ments in the building, is to clean any no official title, Mr. Beetle, along skeletons or skulls which might still with several hundred colleagues, gets have some meat on them, according to Dr. William H. Burt, assistant curator of the mammal division of R CA W ill hel the Museum of Zoology under whose guidance the Beetle family works. I Can Clean Skeleton Back Institute "Mr. Beetle is very adept," Dr. Burt stated. "He can clean a skeleton of a fish perfectly without injuring the In Electronics fmost delicate fin." He added that under good teamwork with his col- Announcement was made yester- leagues, he could clean an animal the day by Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, di- size of a rat within two weeks, less rector of the Summer Session, that if the Beetle family were unusually the Radio Corporation of America hungry. will join this summer in helping to "Of course, there are a few annoy- sponsor the University Electronics ing things about the insects. For* Institute, which will be held as part example, they seem to take too great of this year's Session, an interest in the work being con- The corporation will aid in back-3ducted in other parts of the building ing the program and will send two and are over eager to leave their of- representatives from its Electronic fice whenever their door is opened." Research Laboratory at Camden, Dr. Burt did add, however, that N. J., to take part in the research the University tries to discourage and teaching courses. Three other them from this interest by herme- companies are already backing the tically sealing their office and ar- Institute. These are the General ranging a double set of office-doors. Electric Co., the Westinghouse Elec- Employes Have Prestige tric Co., and the Bell Telephone Lab- "And then there are always those oratories, Inc. Each will send two bugs which get so interested in their men from its research department to work that they don't realize just take part in the work. when they're through. They insist The Institute, which was termed upon sticking to their job even after by Professor Hopkins as one of the it has been taken from their office. most outstanding features of the Fumigation of the skeletons takes Summer Session program, will con- care of them." sist of two successive four-week lec- Dr. Burt stressed the great prestige ture sequences dealing with high- held by these industrious employes. vacuum electronic principles. Ac- "No creature has ever been able to companying the lecture programs, - laboratory courses where the ma-- terial may be worked into practical I":: problems will be given. Informal conferences will also behl. The ":: . work is for teachers, graduate stu- dents, and engineers and physicists engaged in work in electronics. emore dVY match the carrion beetle in ability along this line," he said. Approximately 2,0s0 hhshoo 'Are Born F or Job' students from all parts of the state 'Aske ohentlJ hic are expected to be in Ann Arbor Fri- beetles to choose among those wh day and Saturday to hear the state apple fochUniversity position, Dr.high school championship debate Burt replied, "The beetles don't ap- and to participate in the annual ac- ply for the job: they're born into it. tivities planned for them by the SSometime during the summer we University. place a large piece of meat by a! swamp, and after a few days the meat is full of carrion beetle eggs: The eggs are sent back to the Mu- seums and the beetles automatically become a part of the University." This system of cleaning skeletons has been used by the University for 11 years. It was first employed by the University of Kansas and the National Museum at Washington, I Since the carrion beetle is not read- ily available in all parts of the United States, the University ships large quantities of these bugs to other mu- seums and educational institutes in various parts of the country, Dr. Burt said. Teaching Fellow Gets Chinese Professorship Maurice E. Bates, Grad., teaching fellow in the engineering college, has been appointed associate professor of mechanical engineering at the Na- tional Pei-Yang University in Tient-' sin, China, it was announced yester- day. Mr. Bates, whose home is in Ro- meo, received his bachelor's degree from the University in 1934 and hi, master's degree from the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology in 1935 He has received six scholarships and fellowships at Michigan and attend- ed the Massachusetts school on a Phi Kappa Phi scholarship. Mr. Bates will leave July 24 for Shanghai. The debate finalists are Flint Nor- thern High School and Ionia High School. The subject for debate is "Resolved: That All Electric Utilities Should be Governmentally Owned and Operated." Flint will take the affirmative and Ionia will support the negative. The presiding officer this year will be Dr. W. G. Henderson, director- emeritus of the University extension division, which is the sponsor of the debate. President Ruthven will in- troduce Dr. Henderson. The three judges of the debate as announced by the speech department will be Prof. V. A. Ketcham, head of the speech department at Ohio State, and professors Gail E. Densmore and Carl G. Brandt of the speech depart- ment. Each of the six debaters compet- ing in the finals will be awarded a gold watch. Cups will be given to the two finalist teams by the Extension Division. GIVE LIQUOR LICENSES Twelve local restaurants, hotels and taverns were given licenses to sell liquor by City Council Monday night. State Finalists Jewelry and Watch Repairing HAL L ER'S Jewelry State at Liberty I!' I' ..___ .____ _ _--.-_--- _ .._.._-q# III IJarcn e v ort ae During the month of March there were 13,739 dispensary calls at the Health Service, according to the monthly report released yesterday by Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of the Health Service. The large number of calls was due mainly to the increase in acute colds, the report stated. There were 1,228 students treated for colds during the month' and 835 were treated during the same period last year. Mental hygiene interviews were given to 1,846 students and dispen- sar.y nurse treatments to 1,323, the report said. There was an increase in eye refractions, 193 being given during the month. The report said that each year 15 per cent of all en- rolled students receive this attention. There were 14 cases of acute ap- pendicitis and 12 cases of pneumonia during the month. X-ray examina- tions were given to 375 students and physiotherapy treatments to 1,374. Laboratory examinations were given to 2,726 and dietitian conferences to 282, the report showed. SPHINX MEETS TODAY Sphinx will meet at 12:15 p.m. today in the Union. Plans for the Michigras booth will be discussed, as well as the possibility of sponsoring a float in the Michigras parade, ac- cording to an announcement made yesterday. John McFate will ex- plain the booth and assign duty there. Tours & Cruises ENGLAND, FRANCE. GERMANY, Etc. Make Tout and Steame Reservations NOW Phone 6412 Steamer Speciolist Since 1917 A1 Moaor Lin.1- 6. L4e 6' ocan - KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU 601 E. HURON ST.. ANN ARBOR. MICH. Interviews for Jewish Students: M. J. Karpf, of the Graduate School of Jewish Social Work, will interview students desiring admission to that school on Thursday at the Michigan League. See bulletin board. ll i ANNOUNCEMENT Wm. C. Roney & Company Members Detroit Stock Exchange Announce the Opening of a Branch Office at 206-208 Nickels Arcade, Ann Arbor STREETs are deserted. Homes are service, one that stands ready to dark. Night has wrapped the com- serve any one, anywhere, any time. munity in slumber. And always with the same prompt- In one building, however, a light ness and skill and courtesy. is still shining. It shines on steadily All that modern telephone service through the hours of darkness until, can mean - all its protection and at last, the dawn heralds the stir of convenience and comfort --is yours another day. . . . to command twenty-four hours a day. That light sums up the eter. It takes no holidays. It is, in an nal vigilance of the telephone. old familiar phrase, "always It is truly a beacon of public e on the job." MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY | I E "IT Ladies' Half Soles. . CALKS FOR GOLF SHOES . . . Either attached or inserted' .49c . . 75c LISTED and UNLISTED SECURITIES Phones: Ypsilanti 10546 (no toll charge) Ann Arbor 2-3289 i An added service! Zipper Jackets repaired. NU -WAY SHOE REPAIR 516 EAST WILLIAM STREET RICHARD W. HURDLEY, Managcr WORDEN E. GEER, Associate American owned and operated by Gordon Backus !I DON'T cultoattendtheAnnual BOOK During This Week Only - We Offer Drastic Reductions On FICTION - NON-FICTION - REPRINTS - BOOKS OF ALL KINDS STATIONERY G MICHIGAN PENNANTS - LEATHER NOTEBOOKS - FOUNTAIN PENS - and Hundreds of Items Too Numerous To Mentior SALE IREATLY REDUCED! n. PRINTED UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STATIONERY 20 Sheets - 20 Envelopes - Per Package--10~eI GLOBES - Reduced 331/% I Kadette Radios-Only $9.95 -®- -m---® - ® ..