THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG inena League Offers Foreign, Domestic Films 'Mayerling', With Darriex And Boyer Is Scheduled To Open Season Oct. 10 The Swedish cinema and Pst-War American films will be subects for the eight-picture series which the Art Cinema League will show to its mem- bership this season at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Several current foreign films will also be shown. The Art Cinema League, which is beginning its third season, each year has presented two types of pictures; first, a series designed as an educa- tional study of the film as an im- portant modern art medium, shown exclusively to League members, and secondly, outstanding foreign films and other pictures of artistic value. The educational series, dealing with important pictures of the past, are collected and arranged by the Mu- seum of Modern Art Film Library. The program for this season will include a study of the Swedish film on Oct. 16 when "The Outlaw and His Wife," produced in 1917 and Greta Garbo in "The Story of Gosta Ben- ing" wil be shown. "The Unholy Three," with Lon Chaney and Victor McLaglen, filmed in 1925 will be pre- sented Nov. 13; "Anna Christie" with Marie Dressler and Miss Garbo, pro- duced eight years ago, is scheduled for Dec. 11; andRudolph Valentine in the "Four Horsemen of the Apo- calypse" will be shown Jan. 8. The second part of the series begins Jan. 22 witha stidy of Eric Von Stro- heim and the realist school when "Greed" with Jean Hersholt, Zazu Pitts, and Chester Morris is to be shown. This picture dates from 1923. Three pictures compose the group to be shown Feb. 19 entitled "Comedy and Buster Keaton"; "Dream of a Rarebit Fiend" filmed in 1906, Harold Lloyd's first picture, "High and Dizzy" produced in 1920, and "The Navigator," a picture Mr. Keaton made in 1924. "The Love Parade" with Maurice Chevalier and Jean- nette MacDonald will be shown as an illustration of the movie musical. A gangster film, "Little Caesar" with Edward G. Robinson will conclude the series on April 2. A full membership to the League may be purchased for $1.50 while spe- cial memberships for four pictures in the series cast 75 cents. Membership cards are available at the Michigan League and Wahr's Book Store. "Mayerling" with Charles Boyer and Danielle Darrieux to be shown Oct..10, 11 and 12 is the first of the foreign films to be shown by the League this year. It will be presented at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre and is open to the general public. The Art Cinema was opened in 1932 by a group of students and faculty members and has grown since stead- ily. .Profits have been used to reno- vate the film equipment of the Men- delssohn Theatre. The League is planning to start a library with future profits of books on the motion pic- Luxre. Post Office Forbids, WritingIn Parcels A warning to all students that any third class ,mail or parcel post con- taining .written material will be sent Under the first class rate, was issued yesterday by Assistant Postmaster George W. Tice. During the first part of the year, many parcels are found with writing enclosed, said Postmaster Tice, who emphasized that notes, checks and other documents must be charged the full first class rate. Printed material and books without written marginal notes may be sent as third class mat- ter. New uEnglanders Fight To Save Homes Imperiled By Flood Voting Costs HeavyIn Election 1 -- If the salaries of clerks were the only expenses of the city of Ann Ar- bor for the recent primary election, the average cost per vote could be calculated at 13.3 cents. There were 5,198 votes cast, and 65 clerks were employed to register and tabulate them. The clerks salaries came to $693.25. As election workers are paid at the rate of 62.5 cents an hour. the total number of clerk- hours for the election was 1,109.2, or an average of 17.065 hours per clerk. Averages don't mean a great deal in Ann Arbor vote costs, however, as the cost varied in the different wards. Seven clerks on duty in the fifth ward where 198 votes were cast re- ceived $72.83 for their services, mak- ing an average vote cost of 36.8 cents in that ward. At the other end of the scale the sixth ward employed six clerks to take care of 658 votes, pay- ing them $58.13 for an average of 8.8 cents per vote. With other expenses figured in, as supplies, lighting, trucking and inci- dentals, the actual cost per vote is necessarily higher. II rs " .. M k 5.' ,; 5' 9 . '';fir.,. ,,.. .r r :4 ''i S Se . 2 , P " A _,.,. These workers are just a few of the 1500 who fought desperately at Hartford, Conn., to make the levees hold and keep the Connecticut River from inundating their homes. The flood at Hartford came in the wake.of heavy rains and a hurricane that claimed at least 500 lives. Andrews Joins Forestry Faculty To Teach Land Utilization In PackProfessorship Coming to the University after work with the United States Forestry Service on the Pacific coast, Prof. Horace J.'Andrews will fill the posi- tion of Charles Lathrop Pack, Profes- sor of Wild Lands Utilization in the School of Forestry and Conservation. Professor Andrews' work will deal with an area equal to about half the area of the state and/is expected to effect to better advantages the poli- cies and practices of both public and private forest agencies. Some of the problems will include a classification of Michigan's wild lands with a deter- mination of their fitness for. timber, wild life, or recreational purposes,-and. a study of tax delinquencies and the reasons for them. The work will be conducted as a expansion of the George Willis Pack Foundation directed by Prof. W. F. Ramsdell. The project will involve work in cooperation with the State Department of Conservation, the State Planning Board, Michigan State College, the United States Forestry Service and other state and federal as well as private agencies. Graduates Find Jobs Are Scarce, Employment Bureau Sees' Recession As Cause Employment oft graduating seniors this year has been noticeably slower than in the previous year, Miss Web- ber of the Bureau of Employment and Occupational Information said yes- terday. Na accurate comparison can# be made, she explained,, before the compiling of statistics in the Bureau early in November. 1 ivMiss Webber attributed the reduced placement of graduates to the general slackening of business throughout the country. Employment through the summer, she said, seemed almost nor- mal, and with the usual September improvement in business conditions it is to be hoped that a larger number of this year's graduates will succeed. in finding jobs. Michigan Boys Reach Panama By Use Of Thumbs And Wmits Robert Friers, Neil Ball Claim To Have Set New Record ForHitch-hiking Two Michigan lads with a flare for hitch-hiking and publicity have brok- en into headlines in New York, De- troit and Chicago with their tales of hitch-hiking from Saginaw to Pana- ma this summer. Robert Friers, '39, and Neil Ball,; who graduated from the journalism, school last year, claim their trip rep- resented the world's hitch-hiking I record, and even so it was only the insistence 'of the American Counsel at Panama which prevented them from venturing on to South America, This trip brings Friers hitch-hiking mileage to 85,000 miles a result of six summers' travel, he says. Explain Hitch-Hiking The boys, according to Friers, have I contributed their bit to civilization by explaining the significance of the , outstretched thumb to the Central' American natives. It seems that hitch-hikers are an unknown species in those parts, and Friers and Ball used their University Spanish to ex- plain what it was all about. Down around Nicauragua automo-, biles were rather scarce, but a trifle such as this was nothing to veteran; hikers. Several times they hitched rides on passing donkeys and burros. Many interesting bits of informa- tion were gleaned by the adventurers and one bit Ball says he will never forget. In Monterrey, Mexico, he met a local senorita and was all slicked up to call on her. In the nick of time he was warned that such a call signified intention to marry. Wtith visions of shot-guns and irate fathers, Ball and Friers decided American cus- toms were best and left Monterrey without further ado. Red Tape In Nicaragua Entering Ixtepec by courtesy of a banana train, the boys set out to see the sights. They immediately ran in- to .the local baseball team uproar- iously celebrating a victory. In a let- ter to the "Saginaw Daily News," Friers describes the scene as a com- bination "grand opera and horseplay a la Marx brothers." At Nicaragua the boys ran into red tape at its reddest. Passports were demanded every time they turned around. An old Indian demanded 50 cents to give them permission to leave one village. The chief of the "com- mandancia" wanted a mere $2 for permission to leave the country. Then the "big shot" of the local shipping situation informed the boys that they couldn't leave at all, since they wereI \virtually broke, and the captain of the ship didn't cater to their type of passenger. The boys were finally forced to leave uncermoniously by jumping onto a launch as it was cast-, ing o for its last trip. Amid excited souting and arguments in Spanish, English and French, the boys were landed on the ship that was to carry them out of Nicarauga. Funds Diminish Rapidlyg At Panama the two tourists found that they had only $75 of the $200 with which they had started. The American Counsel did not see eye to eye with them on the subject of pre- ceding further southward. Their funds plus those collected from sym- pathetic American residents served to buy their passage on the Santa Paula which took them safely to New York. Friers, who has hitch-hiked in all 48 states, and every province in Cana- da, not to mention a good part of Central America and Mexico, is writ- ing his experiences in a book to be titled "The Clan of the Thumnb." He expects it to be used as a text book by students anxious to emulate his achievements. Co llege-grade tra i n ing for business positions Employers today demand superior training. An intensive business course lifts the high school or college-trained individual out of the crowd, assures preferred consideration. * Practical courses. Independent advancement. * Attractive quarters. Modern 'equipmen. Business environment. ' * Staff of specialists in business education * Employment Service free to graduates. All PLAN FOOTBALL WEEK-ENDS THE -EASY WAY ... BY TELEPHONE Football days mean out-of- town guests and visitors. Make final arrangements with them by telephone. It's swift, sure, economical. Note the low night and all-day Sunday rates shown. For rates to other points, see page 6 in the telephone direc. tory or dial 110. STATION-TO-STATION RATES graduates have been placed. * Day and evening sessions. Co-educational. COU!RS ES. SECRETARIAL CIVIL SERVICE ACCOUNTING CALCULATOR STENOTYPE , DICTAPHONE Infornation vwll be sent free on request. Office open daily for interviews and registration. Visitors always welcomne. BUSINSSCOhLEGE William at".State Phone 7831 ANN ARBOR to: Alpena Bad Axe. Battle Creel Bay City. Big Rapids Cadillac. Charlevoix Cheboygan Chicago Cleveland Columbus Escanaba. Fort Wayne Grand Rap Hastings . Hillsdale . Houghton. lonia .... Indianapoli Jackson. 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