SAX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEI3: ICSI)AYt A, RIL 28, 1937 SIX WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1937 AI-State Band To Give First Concert Here High School Club To Play April 30; Championship Debate Is Same Time The Michigan All-State Senior High .School Band will make its in- itial public appearance as a part of the program of the Annual State Championship Debate in Hill Audi- trium, April 30, it was announced yesterday by Dr. William P. Halstead, manager of the Michigan High School Forensic Association and member of the University Speech department. Harold Bacnman, of Chicago, will conduct the concert, assisted by high school band directors. Mr. Bachman was the director of Pershing's Head- quarters Band in France during the World War. This band became known as the "Million Dollar Band" because of Pershing's remark that its effect on the morale of the men was worth a million dollars to him. Mr. Bachman conducts the band at the University of Chicago, and has given special courses at the Univer-I sity of Idaho, University of Kansas, and Northwestern University. He will take part in the program of the music section of the Michigan School- masters' Club, and will return to Michigan for a special week's en- gagement this summer.' The band concert will start at 7:30 p.m., and will be followed by the State Championship- Debate at 8:15 p.m. the Program of the concert includes: "Sir Galahad Overture" by Hildreds "Pride of the Wolverine" by Sousa, "Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring" by Bach, "Vanished Army" by Afford, "Under the Double Eagle" by Wag-' nei; "Rampage of the Old Grey Mare" by Stacy, "March of Youth" by Olividatti and "The Victors" by El- bel DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) in Room 3065 at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 29. Information regarding the work at the field station will be given. Mr. Rigg, president of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, a national geological frater- nity, will give a student's impression of last summer's field experiences. Moving pictures in color will be shown. Others interested in the work at the station are invited to attend. G. M. Ehiers, Director, Sum- mer Field Courses. Weekly Reading Hour: The pro- gram for Thursday, April 29, at 4 p.m. in Room 205 Mason Hall, will consist of a recital from Macbeth to be given by Mary J. Atlee, Mar- garet Brackett, and Raymond Sho- berg. The public is cordially invited. Swimming, Women Students: All those who signed up for swimming at 9 . a.m. on Tuesday and Thursday mornings and any others interested are asked to report at the Union Pool at 9 a.m. Thursday morning, April 29, without fail. French Plays: The Cerle Francais presents this year three one-act plays: "La Farce du Cuvier" (anony- mous), "L'Ecole des Belles-Meres" by Brieux and "Un Client Serieux" by Courteline. The cast of the latter play is composed of members of the Department of Romance Languages. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Fri- day, April 30, at 8:30 o'clock. Tickets at the box-office Thursday and Fri- day. Aeronautical Engineers, I Ae.S.: The first annual dinner meeting of the University of Michigan Student Section of the Institute of the Aero- nautical Sciences will be held Thurs- day evening, April 29, at the Michi- gan Union. T. P. Wright of the Cur- tiss-Wright Corporation, a national officer of the Institute, will be the speaker of the evening. His talk will be, "Aeronautics-A Brief Sur- vey." Anyone interested is invited to at- tend, and tickets for the dinner should be purchased as soon as pos- sible from any of* the local officers. Graduate Students in History: To meet the members of the History Department faculty and wives, the graduate students in History will give a tea at the Michigan Union, Sun- day, May 9, from 3 to 5 p.m. Tickets may be obtained by stu- dents at the desk in the Union or from Clark Norton, Arnold Price, Stu- art Portner, Louis Doll, or Miss Isa- belle Fisk. The price is 25 cents. Scandinavian Club: The Scandi- navian Club will meet at 8 p.m. this Thursday, April 28, at the Union to discuss plans for a picnic and a pro- gram. The room number will be posted on the Union bulletin board. Lutheran Student Choir: Special rehearsal for the whole choir, Fri- Necessity For I Anti-Trust Law Revision S e e n WASHINGTON, April 27.-(o)- Attorney General Cummings reported to President Roosevelt today the time had come for a revision of the anti-' trust laws to prevent monopolistic practices. The report, read by PresidentE Roosevelt at a press conference, also said the justice department's investi- gation of compalints of alleged col-j lusion in bidding on government steel contracts had produced insufficient evidence to warratn action by that department. Instead, the report raised the question of whether the matter should not be handled at this junc- ture through cease and desist orders by the Federal Trade Commission. The report said identical steel bids, complained of about a year ago by Secretary Ickes in connection with public works .contracts, were produced in part by the basing point system of price determination. It said the whole queqstion of the adequqacy of the anti-trust laws arose during the study and added the time had come for a restatement of the laws. It recommended a committee be appointed to study the desirability of Spring Storm Whips Sioux Falls, S. D. I WPA SUTRVE Y MADE Wheat Farmter Takes Greater iLANSING, April 27,-{i-A sur- vey completed recently by the state Chance Than tcu WPA showed 58,124 persons employed on work relief projects. "Oh, God, give us rain." turned to its former position of ay poaton,e aexharrowed to prevent The fervent and desperate prayer grazing land." This land stores up enough mois- of the Western wheat farmer may This western farm country should ture to grow a crop the next year. sound strange in the Ann. Arbor resi- not as a permanent policy be stripped Thus part of the land always lies fal- dent's ear, but on the flimsy hope of of its grass covering in order to farm Low f po e a aroy. ies ia- rain the Great Plains wheat farmer wheat, he said. Real estate specula- la m for next years crop. The wind engages in a venture that makes stocktr nftehpaf ha orue trnms for which the West is noted c tors and the hope of wheat fortunes have an easy time blowing away this market gambling seem a safe bet, ac- are responsible for the vast immigra- plowed earth into fine dust particles cording to Prof. Preston E. James of tion of wheat farmers westward, Pro- that blind your eyes and make you the geography department. fessor James continued. choke-and devastate the crops that A variable climate and wind ero- War Prices Caused Migration are growing. Sion aggravated by a dry farming The story of the westward move- Sixty-five per cent of the Great ailu in the Great lains region, ment into the Great Plains of wheat Plains region is damaged by the wind he said. This region extends from farms begins shortly before the erosion, and 15 per cent is severely Canada to Texas and cuts through World War, he explained. Deficien- damaged, Professor James said. the western parts of Kansas and Ne- cies in the world market during the And the farmers continue to pray braska. World War and a few years of humid for and bet on rain. 22 Years At $35 A Year 'climate gave promise to those wes- Talk about Wall Street! How much o a gamble wheat tern immigrants of continued large farming really is in these western yields of wheat for export, he said. TYPEWRITERS - Associated Piress Photo The.se motorists had to get out and dig when their car beacame stalled huge drifts mear Sioux FaiL, 8,1D., in the state's worst spring blizzard years. in in _ . lands can be seen in the fact that for 22 years an average wheat farm in a county of Western Kansas pro- duced an income of $35 per year. In the one other year, in a 23 year per- iod, the income from the same av- erage farm gave its owner $20,472. "The only permanent policy which can be applied in these areas," Pro- fessor James explained, "is one of government subsidies to help theI farmers, or a shift of about one-third! of the present population out of this region. Then he land could be re- For a few years the farmer enjoyed a period of humidity in a climate whose fickleness makes it impossible to predict the rainfall. Around 1916 the climate reversed itself as it has always done periodically, Professor James explained. Many farmers, he said, were ruined, others managed to survive by heavily mortgaging their farms. One lesson of this bit- ter experience was the introduction of a dry farming technique. Dry farming consists in letting part of the crop lands lie fallow, care- All makes and models, Bought, Sold, Rented, Exchanged, Repaired. 314 SOUTH STATE STREET REMAINDER OF THE WEEK LADIES' TOPLIFTS .... 15c Three Minutes Needed By Boys To Spot A Line, Hullaballoo Says amendments to improve enforce- ment.{ Architecture Fraternity To Initiate Tomorrow Tau Sigma Delta, honorary fra- ternity for architecture and the al-c lied arts, will initiate 11 members to- morrow night at the Union, it was, announced yesterday by Philip Hau- .hey, '37A, president of the organiza- tion. Those who will be taken into mem- bership include Helen Shapland, '37A, Berta Knudson, '38A, Florence Mc-j Conkey, '38A, Delos Seeley, Grad., Charles Anderson, '37A, Emory Le- land, '37A, Chester Moy, '38A, Stew-I art Van Keuren, '38A, John Vander-( Meulen, '38A, Harry Morris, '39A, and Nai Jen Chien, Spec. Membership in Tau Sigma Delta isI based upon scholarship and creative1 ability and originality If a girl has a line the average boy will recognize it within three min- utes .and unless it is a good one, the conversation will end in four minutes, according to a campus survey con- ducted by the 'Iulane Hullaballoo. Different campus Casanovas when approached on the subject agreed that there were three major types of lines. The first, and worst, is the hero worship type---"Oh you great big wonderful man." combined with the clinging vine type-"protect me." tory female on the trail of some un- suspecting male is the antithesis of the above type, "I am a sensation." The usual approach to this type of line is "Guess who I was out with last night?" Type (a) of this grou; is the gal who tells about her date with the campus big shot, while type (b) tells where she went but veils the name of the unlucky man in mys- tery. (N. B. It usually turns out that she couldn't get where she professes to have gone if she were a combina- tion of Greta Garbo and Loretta Young and her date were a combina- U U a U U U U U U U U U U I U I I I U I I I I I I I I I I U I I I I I .""""""""""""""""""""""""" Get the world's good news daily through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper Pub:blgd by THE CHRISTIAN SGIFCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY One; Norway Street, Loston, Massachusetts Regular reading of TrE CHI-RISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR is considered by many a liberal education. Its clean, unbiased news and wall-rounded editorial features, including the Weekly Magazine Section, make the MoNITOR the ideal newspaper for the home. It is S cents a copy, or 3 cents a day on sub- Iscription, delivered to your door, and is obtainable at the following location: a CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 206 East Liberty MEN'S OAK LEATHER HALF SOLES......... Men's Oak Leather Soles and Rubber Heels. Men's Leather and Rubber Heels ....,.... . 75e 35c NO NALS All Soles Sewed On- White Shoes Cleaned .... 15c Zippers and Zipper Jackets Repaired Shoe Repair 516 E. Williams Another high ranking line used tion of John D. Rockefeller and Rob- when the girl is "on the make" is ert Taylor), the Hullabaloo says. the inferiority complex type-"Oh no, If you recognize your type here, I hardly ever go anywhere, I'm so un- girls, it's time for a change, because the Tulane Casanovas say they are popular," according to the Hullabal- all definitely trite, and agree with loo. I Dorothy Dix in advising, "Just be na- Next in popularity with the preda- tural, girls," the Hullaballoo advises. NMmNe.... . .. . .....NUUE ..NE ... 3. ,, w, " w 0# (:9U In the Big Town, you see lots of empty packages. That means that pack after pack of refreshingly mild, good tasting Chesterfields have satisfied hundreds .. .