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March 05, 1938 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1938-03-05

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PAGE TWO

T H IP M T C 14 T (~ A N " A T T V

d T7tt 1'1 A' 7' Afi A "err I"ttt. C i Q d

_ 1M C U r A N T t T ' 1

LTXDY IW~~ V MARCH 5, 1838

I

City Financial
Heads ToForm
Michigan Unit
Move After Being Warned
That Local Governinents
Are LosingAuthority
LANSING, March 4.-(P)--A group
of municipal finance officers from
many sections of Michigan voted to
fprm a state association today, fol.
lowing a warning that local govern-
ients were sacrificing authority.
Carl H. Chatters of Chicago, execu-
tive secretary of the Municipal Fi-
nance Officers' Association of the
United States and Canada, accused
the federal government of "sapping
the authority and influence" of cities
and said state government treated
the municipalities like "unwanted
stepchildren."
The meeting paved the way for test
litigation to determine whether the
Legislature, in creating a state land
Office Commission, had jeopardized
the collection of delinquent city taxes
on property assessed at millions of
dollars. A committee was appointed
to study the feasibility of a friendly
suit to test the new law, and to de-
termine what sections needed court
interpretation.
Another committee was appointed
Mto recommend a course of training
and study for municipal finance of-
ficials and to lay the groundwork
for organization of a Michigan Asso-
ciation of Municipal Finance officers.
Long Life Forecast
For Geneva League

!

I

Instructor To cet
Scarab Club Medal
Beaver Edwards, instructor of
modeling in the College of Architec-
ture, will be presented the gold medal
of the Scarab Club of Detroit to-
night for his outstanding sculpture,
''The Herons."
The medal was awarded to Mr. Ed-
wards by a vote of the artist member-1
ship at the annual exhibition of
painting and sculpture.
Mr. Edwards, who has been at the
University five years, was a pupil of
John P. Wicker at the Detroit School
of Fine Arts and also studied under'
Albin Polaset at the Art Institute of
Chicago. He has served four years
apprenticeship as an architectural
ornamentalist and has spent three
summers in Europe studying the re-
lation of architecture to sculpture.
An example of Mr. Edwards work
may be found in Ann Arbor in the'
turtle fountain on the estate of James
Inglis.

Alumnus Presents Collection
Of Photographs To University

DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLET
SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1938
VOL. XLVIII. No. 110
Faculty Tea: President and Mrs.
Ruthven will be at home to faculty
members and residens of Ann Ar-
bor, Sunday from 4:00 to 6:00.

University Archives To Get
Portfolio Of Informal
Views Of Campus In '77
By CARL PETERSEN
The congenial group here pictured
is one of many included in a photo-
graphic portfolio soon to be presented
to the Committee on University Ar-
chives by Willis R. Roberts, '77, of
Norristown, Pa.
The meatier gentry in the picture
are the members of an 1877 histology
cls. h viden'tly didnSAJ't hli ~vtL ini

cial groups on campus at the time
that Mr. Roberts was an undergrad-
uate. The value of such a collection
to the University is, according to Mrs.
Elizabeth Adams, curator of the
Archives, that many years hence, a
photograph of a certain group may
be the only connection the University
has with that group and may provide
the only means of identifying stu-
dents and faculty members who were
connected with the University then.
"It usually happens," she said,
"that the secretary of an organiza-
tion, upon graduating, takes all the
records of the organization away with
him, and they are lost to the Univer-
sity. Then we must try to find out
members of certain organizations by
comparing different photographs to
see if persons whose names and faces
we know appear in ther groups. We
find many in that way, but it is a te-
dious process."

De Lorey Analyzes
Persian Art Here
Since the Persian artists were for-
bidden to paint on religious subjects,
through the ages they have turned
mainly -to -the- great national poets
for inspiration, Prof. Eustache de
Lorey of the Ecole du Louvre, Paris,
stated yesterday in a University lec-
ture in Natural Science Auditorium.
Based on the works of the famous
poets of the 11th and 12th cen-
turies, Professor de Lorey said, Per-
sian art has been filled with repre-
sentations of legends and stories of
early Persian history. Firdausi, who
wrote 60,000 verses in his "Book of
Kings;" is the dean of these poets
and chief source for the artists, while
Behzad is the greatest artist.
Professor de Lorey showed slides to'
illustrate the different conceptions in
different periods of the same subjects,
pointing out that forms around the
14th and 15th centuries became the
best.
Dr. Little Scores
Modern University
(Continued from Page 1)
that the adult generation is so mixed
in its own thoughts and program
that it is the adults who are now
the wild-eyed, hair-brained ones. The
student has become the conserva -
tive class. And anyway, with things
as they are, there isn't much left
to'save any more. It isn't like it was
back in times of prosperity when one
could afford to be smug and com-
placent."
As a program for youth, Dr. Little
held forth the idea of a political
organization of voters under the age
of 30, not associated with any polit-
ical party or economic group.
Dr. Little added, somewhat apolo-
getically, that he hasn't much faith
in labor leaders, even though, he con-
ceded," they have done a notable job
in arousing and organizing the labor-
ing classes.
Emphasizing that he spoke in no
spirit of bitterness, Dr. Little ad-
mitted that he is more happy in his
cancer research and education work
than he was as a college administra-
tor. "It is not," he paraphrased with
a grin, "that I loved them less but
that I love this more.

4 Persons Held
AfterHoldup
2 Men, 2 Women aken;
Lodged In Alpena Jail
ALPENA, Mich., March 4.-(JP)-
Two men and two women were lodged-
in the county jail here today to await
questioning by state police in con-
nection with holdups during the past
week of three state offices that netted
a total of approximately $4,800.
One man and the two women were
arrested on a Detroit-bound train at
Bay City, and state police said they
had found $2,634 in cash and secur-
itics and two automatic pistols in
their possession
Those arrested are:
Maxie Awsiukiewicz, 21, Detroit.
Edna Etchelos, 22, Detroit.
Margaret Stewart, 19, Detroit.
Stanley Angel, 22, Detroit.
ICapt. Joseph Kearney of the state
police said Aws:ikiewicz admitted to
him having taken part in the holdup
yesterday of the Alpcna branch office
of the Secretary of C[ate's office,
in which approximately $1,500 was
taken by two armed men.

Rep. Robert F. Rich (above),
Pennsylvania Republican, threw
the House of Representatives into
an uproar by shouting that Presi-
dent Roosevelt never had done a
day of work in his life. He assailed
the President during debate on the
Interior department appropriation
bill.

Automobile Regulation: Those stu- keeping their skeletons in closets,
dents who possess driving permits is- and, incidentally, close inspection of
sued while their cars bore the 1937 the jug at the bottom of the picture
State license plates and have failed will reveal that it did not contain sul-
to rnewthem ar reuestd t dofuric acid.
to renew them, are requested to do The greater part of the collection
so at once. All old permit tags are of photographs is given over to class
void as of March 1, 1938 and their groups, campus organizations and so-
continued use will constitute grounds -
for discinlinarv action. An Anliationc141-N -

'

MARSHALL Cut-Rate Drug
231 SOUTH STATE - Phone 9242 - 8 Doors North of Kresge s
TED'S DAILY DOUBLE PRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY
PINT of 50c
MINERAL OIL Molle Shaving Cream
19c B 29c
5c CANDY BARS .- 3 FOR 12c EVERYDAY

3
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(Continued from Page 1)
sible, because of the great differences
among the various conflicts.
The League director holds that the
Eden - Chamberlain crossfire has
served a very valuable function, say-
ing, "Britain's stand is very much
clearer now. We were formerly con-
fused as to British policy-liberal,
conservative, or what have you. Now
we know."
It must be emphasized that the
League may not continue in its pres-
ent form," asserted Mr. Sweetser, "but
we are in a League era. Some kind
of international organization is essen-
tial at the moment."
64 Candidates Vie
For Senate Posts,
(Continued from Page 1)
'39; Independent: Robert L. Gill,
Grad.; Unaffiliated: Betty J. Mans-
field, '39; Cooperative: James M. Vic-
ary; Liberal Independent: John R.
Wieneke; Unaffiliated: Emanuel
Knobloch, '40 and Marion Clark, '38;
Pre-Medic: Saul M. Sacks, '39.
Conservative: Philip W. Buchen,
'39; Frederick A. Collins, Jr., '38,
Fred Cushing, '38, Helen Douglas, '38,
Earl R. Gilman, '39, Horace W. Gil-
more, '39, W. Scott Harkins, '38, Nor-
man E. Kewley, '40E, Richard Knowe,
'39E, Samuel J. Krugliak, '38, Phil
Simpson, Walter F. Stebens, '40, John
R. Stiles, '39 and Ernest A. Jones, '38.
I---Classified
c sl

AU rs i1t4Juo.pp s
for renewals must be made at Roomj
2, University Hall and new sets of
permit tags will be issued at no ad -
ditional cost.
Students who have cars stored in

Ann Arbor and those who are in the New Organizaiion Plans
exempt classifications are also re-r n
quested to report their 1938 license Program For Racing
numbers if they have not done so to
date. Michigan's canoe flotilla on the
Office of the Dean of Students. Huron River may draw big time op-
position in the annual spring race
To The Members of the Faculty of to open water, for last night was
the College of Literature, Science, formed the Michigan Sailing Club,
and the Arts: The fifth regular meet- which plans to have four class D rac-
ing of the faculty of the College of ing dinghies on Whitemore Lake be-
Literature, Science, and the Arts for fore spring vacation.
the academic session of 1937-38 will. At an organization meeting attend-
be held in Room 1025 Angell Hall, 60 prospective members, the
club held elections and presented
Edward H. Kraus. plans for races with eastern col-
(Continued on Page 4) leges and with Wisconsin and In-
diana, Big Ten schools boasting sail-
Diabetes Hits 500,000 ing teams. Among the members is
Tom Galner, veteran of two ocean
Persons A Year In U.S. races, and other men who have won
hncin o tnfitinnn nhro

Campus Sailing
Grou Formed

Material such as Mr. Roberts' port-
folio will go into the Michigan His-
torical Collections, which includes
historical material of the University
' and the State, as contrasted to the
Archives, which is the official record
of the University recorded in minutes
of Regents' meetings, president's re-
ports and statistical data. Dr. Lewis
Vander Velde is director of the com-
mittee on University Archives.,
When Mr. Roberts was an under-
graduate, according to Robert O.
Morgan, assistant general secretary
I of the Alumni Association, through
whom the gift was presented to the
University, he was shortstop on the
1875 baseball team, and he includes
many photographs of that team in
the collection.

ART CINEMA LEAGUE
presents Europe's Greatest Actor
a, HARRY BAU R
Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre
Friday and Saturday, MARCH 4 and 5, 8
SPECIAL SATURDAY MATINEE - 3:15 P.M.
All Seats Reserved. Also Disney and Benchley Short Ticket'

i

s15
s 35c

Mor tanhaf mlloncups in competiton on ootn coasts.
More than half a million persons
a year are stricken by diabetes in the - - - -
United States, according to estimates Rendezvous Group
the Department of Hygiene and Pub- roIear McClhsky
lic Health, in an article appearing in
the current issue of Public Health
Reviews. Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the
An article in the Daily yesterday school of education will speak at
made the erroneous statement that Rendezvous reunion at.8 p.m. tonight
diabetes claims half a million victims at Lane Hall under the auspices
a year in the United States. of the Student Religious Association.
The reunion will include councilors
- and students who attended the SRA
* f Rendezvous Camp at Patterson Lake
t1his September before the first se-
mester. Motion pictures taker at the
camp and sound films of the last
422 E. Washington. 432 Olympic Games will be shown.
The SRA sponsors the camp each
FOR RENT: Rooms for girls. Clean year for 150 men in the freshman
and comfortable. 915 Oakland. class. This is the first reunion for
Phone 2-2868. 426 the current year.
Campus CUT- RATEDrugs
218 S. State - NEXT TO GOLDMAN'S -_--- Phone 9392

.i

ACTION
C 04N
. .. . ...

FOR SALE
FOR SALE: Large residential lot on
Vinewood Blvd. Exclusive and re-
stricted section. Cash. Phone 8544.
431
FANCY APPLES, popcorn, fresh sweet
cider. No preservatives. Will deliver.
Phone 3926. 1003 Brooks. 417
WASHED SAND and Gravel. Drive-
way Gravel. Killins Gravel Co.
Phone 1112. 7x
LAUNDRY
STUDENT LAUNDRY. Shirts 12c.
Call for and deliver. Phone 4863 for
other prices. 360
LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low prices.
NOTICES
ACCURATE typing done. Reasonable
price. Phone 7791 evenings. 423
LADIES tailoring and dress-making;
formals, suits, coat relining, all al-
terations. Expert service, reasonable
rates, work guaranteed. 320 E. Lib-
erty. Call evenings. 2-2020. 8x
CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY: Any
old and new suits, overcoats, at $3,
$8, $25. Ladies fur coats, typewrit-
ers, old gold and musical instru-
ments. Reads cash waiting for you.
Phone Sam. 6304.
LOST AND FO(TND
LOST: Yellow envelope, containing
snap shots and negatives. M. Smith.
Phone 2-2543. 430
LOST: Fountain pen, Parkette, mot-
tled red, between 718 Tappan and
Natural Science. Reward. Call Davy
2-3203. 422
LOST: White gold pin. Crescent-

75c
TUSSY
COLOGNE
29c

TODAY ONLY

WE LEAD
OTHERS FOLLOW
Phone Your Needs
9392
WE DELIVERA

IVORY
SOAP
Large size
9c

We Believe the Most Thrilling Picture in History is

I

11

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Publications Building, on Maynard
Street.
II,1~

iii

gyp ....y .:.. ...
i .. ": ....2 Eb._ ffi ..ate. ..;^: ?A":. .r .. ...

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