ms &AM SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1931 u m MV~NJAM ~X SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1931 r~rrn. j Daily Official Bulletin gr Igr ir ll Yll rrrr.rw. i +r w .r w r.. . r .. r r. MUSSOLINI AGREES TO VISIT GERMANY Christens Dirigible 17 PMllctaon In 2w Bu letin Is constructive notice to all members Ne Uniwrity. Oopy received at the office of the Dean of the mr Seion unti l3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a.m. Saturday. a __ _.._ III 1 VOLUME XI SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1931 NUMBER 361 Orchestra Concert: The summer school symphony orchestra, David Mattern, Conductor, assisted by Mary Zolliger Gibson, Soprano; George Poinar, Violinist, and Ethel Stanton, Pianist, will give the following pro- gram Sunday afternoon, August 9, at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium, to which the general public with the exception of small children is in- vited. Guests are requested to be seated on time as the doors will be closed during numbers. Goldmark: Overture, "Sakuntala"; E. Weber:.Concertstuck for Piano and Orchestra (Ethel Stanton); Wagner: "Siegfried Idyl"; Mascagni: Aria, "Vol 1o Sapete" from "Cavalleria Rusticana" (Mary Zollinger Gib- son); Bruch: Concerto in G Minor for Violin and Orchestra (George Poinar) Wilson: Overture "New Orleans" (Mardi Gras). Charles A. Sink Dr. H. M. Westergaard will give an illustrated lecture on "HOOVER DAM" at 1:30 p.m., Monday, August 10, 1931 in room 445 West Engineer- ing Building. This is presented as a part of the course E. M. 24. Those interested are invited. Annual "All Education Banquet" will be held at the Michigan League, Tuesday evening, August 11, at 6:30 p.m. All teachers and those inter- ested in teaching are invited. Speakers will include Professor Arnold Sommerfeld of the University of Munich, Germany, and Professor Thomas Marshall of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Dean J. B. Edmonson will act as Toastmaster. Tickets $1.50. Call University Ex- change 520 of Phone 23763 for reservations. Following the banquet there will be a social hour. This function is sponsored by both Women's and Men's Educational Clubs. To Graduate Students in Education: At the all Education banquet Tuesday, August 11, Dean Huber will speak briefly to those students who complete their requirements for graduate degrees at the close of the present Summer Session. All such students are strongly urged to attend the banquet. Tickets may be secured at my office. Clifford Woody, Chairman Graduate Committee, School Education Faculty Concert: Mabel Ross Rhead, Associate Professor of Piano in the School of Music, will give the following program at a Faculty Concert, Tuesday evening, August 11, in Hill Auditorium at 8:15 p.m. to which the general public with the exception of small children is in- vited. Bach-Tausig: Toccata and Fugue in D Minor; Chopin: Nocturne Op. 27, No. 2; Mazurka Op. 33, No. 4; Etude Op. No. 3; Etude: Op. 25, No. 6; Sonata Op. 35, Grave; Doppio Movimento; Scherzo; Lento; Presto; Liszt: Etude in F Minor; Ravel: Alberada del Grocioso. Charles A. Sink Students, Colleges of Engineering and Architecture: All students in these Colleges, taking courses other than Chemistry and Physics in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, who have not called at the Secretary's Office, 263 West Engineering Building, to give the names of their instructors in such courses must do so before 12 noon on Saturday; August 15, in order to receive their grades promptly at the close of the Summer Session. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary Admiral Moffett Advocates Larger Airships as Giant, New Akron' Is Launched by Navy Duce to Accepts Invitation to Go Berlin; Ministers Reach Friendly Terms. ROME, Aug. 8. - (P) - Premier Mussolini today accepted Chancel- lor Bruening's invitation to go to Berlin for a return visit with Ger- man officials at a date yet to be determined. A spirit of co-operation in thresh- ing out the problems which affect Italo-German relations and indi- rectly the prosperity of the world dominated today's conferences-the second and last between the heads of the German and Italian states. Premier Mussolini's return call on Chancellor Bruening and For- eign Minister Curtius took the form of a "secret" rendezvous at the German embassy, a place where police protection was easy and which might legally be considered German soil. The visitors were to see Pope Pius in separate private audiences later in the day, in view of the fact they are of opposite faiths, and will entrain for Berlin and the troubles of the homeland at 10 o'- clock this evening. Il Duce told his guests at an official dinner Friday night that Germany and Italy as well as all other nations must labor together in the "great common work whose aim is to heal the mortal and ma- terial wounds which the war left behind and from which all peo- ples still suffer. He lauded German culture, sci- ence and industry and expressed sympathy with the Reich's efforts to overcome her financial stringen- cies, not forgetting to praise the Hoover war debt holiday as an im- portant factor in her rehabilitation. Uruguay to Restrain Imports of Luxuries MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Aug. 8. --(P)-A project restraining the im- portation of certain "articles of luxury" and forbidding the en- trance of others until Dec. 31, 1931, has been approved by the National administrative council and is now before Congress. Among the articles banned tem- porarily are radio apparatus, elec- tric refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, phonograph records, motor cars, buses, supply parts for firearms, canned goods and perfumery. CARTTER'6 CATALONIANS FIRMr IN LIBERTY STAND: Will Decide Attitude Towards Refusal of Autonomy at Meeting Today. BARCELONA, Spain, Aug. 8.-(P) -With the greatest secrecy sur- rounding his movements, Provision- al President Macia has called a meeting of Catalonians tomorrow which is expected to formulate a definite attitude in case the central government should fail to grant the province autonomy, it was learned today. Following an overwhelming vote in favor of the autonomy statute, Macia declined all interviews, but it was authoritatively learned he has been subjected to great pressure on the part of radicals wishing abso- lute separation from Spain and others who adopted a more con- ciliatory attitude. He was understood to have con- ferred secretly with leaders of vari- ous groups who insist that the statute must be accepted by Madrid in its entirety and are said to have proclaimed their willingness to fight for their ideals. Until a few days before the vote he was understood to have favored the same principles. Col. Macia's secretary said the President was undecided concern- ing a visit to Madrid to present the statute and described his hesitancy as due to unwillingness to lay him- self open to a hostile reception which is already heralded by Mad- rid press comments on the voting. Should Col. Macia receive an un- favorable reception, it was said, the people of Catalonia would be in- clined to accept the fact as an un- friendly act in "a diplomatic sense." TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPHING and A speciality for twenty years. Prompt service . . . Experienced oper. ators . . . Moderate rates. O. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 A Mrs. Herbert Hoover, Wife of the President, yesterday christened the new navy dirigible, 'Akron', before a crowd of more than 100,000 people at the Akron municipal airport. SIXTEEN INJURED WHEN BUSCRASHES Two Passengers Seriously Hurt as Montreal-to-New York Coach Turns Over. VALATIE, N. Y., Aug. 8.-()- Sixteen passengers in a southbound Montreal-New York bus of the Champlain Coach Line were injured today in a crash on the Albany Post road, near this village. The top and one side of the bus were ripped off, and the machine overturned after striking first a cherry tree and then a telegraph pole. Baggage was strewn in all directions. Passengers were extri- cated from the wreckage by passing motorists and taken to the Hudson State Hospital and to residences nearby. Two of them, Mrs. A. Hendis, 60 years old, of Newark, N. Y., and Mrs. John Hilburn of Irvington, N. J., were seriously hurt. 11 13' ONE SUMMLER DAY Affords ampe time for a de h ul 120-mile rtm d m crson r river and LAkeFoie frown Detroit to PUT-N-BAY ISL AND PARK Scams of the Battle of Lake Erie. Golf, bathing, boating, hfiing picnic in the grove or dine at the fine hotels. Perry Victory nonnmnent and wonderful caves. 7 5c R THE ROUND RI. CHIL[E40c WFEKDAYS. $1.25 and 65c SUNDAYS. Return msn day Str. PW*6Bay leaves foot o Fist St., Detroit, daily, 9 a.m. Home at 8 p~m., emetPd, 2t15p b.for P~io-Bay, Cedar Point and Sandunky,O. $7 A BARGAIN TWO-DAY OUTING $7 The Crescent Hotel Company and Ashley & Dustin Sta Lirahave joined to offerthe extremely low rate o $7 fra tom outing atPut-In-Baby.Leave Detroit any dayat9a~m., arrivell1aoonu.c at Crescent Hotel, also evening dinner and room; breakfast and dinner the next day. Round trip on same and dinner on the boat returning. CEDAR POIT The Lido of America. Special etc.uiwi every Friday with over thse hoas at the Point, $1.50 round trip; other days oneohour stopover, fase $1.7 S run trip, Cedar Paint or Shdy. Return same day. DANCING MOONLIGHTS Howe 11:30 pad. Satrdy unday, 75c. Finzel's Snappy Baal. ASHLEY & DUSTIN STEAMER LINE ?bot of First Street Detroit, Michigan AKRON, O., Aug. 8.-(P)-Con- struction of the second of two giant naval dirigibles with a 7,500,000 cubic feet capacity was advocated today by Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics. Speaking at the christening by Mrs. Herbert Hoover of the new dirigible Akron, Admiral Moffett de- clared that to retain the world lead- ership in airships the United States must increase steadily the size of its dirigibles. "I hope that our second airship, the ZRS-5, will be enlarged before completion," he said, "and made of 7,500,000 cubic feet volume in- stead of 6,500,000 (the volume of thex Akron). He estimated the present limit of airships was 10,000,000 cubic feet in volume. Some funds for the second crafti have been appropriated and the1 Goodyear-Zeppelin Corp. is ready to start its construction pending the, Navy's approval. If Admiral Mof- fett's plan is followed it will be nearly one-sixth again as large as launched. the Akron, the biggest dirigible ever "We do not lead the world in our merchant marine nor, alas, in our navy," said Admiral Moffett, "but we do, by the construction of this great airship, now take the lead in lighter-than-air craft. "Everyone connected with this project should be justly proud of this accomplishment. We should be ashamed were it otherwise for with our practical monopoly of hel- iium we have a nopportunity which At would be a national disgrace to neglect." Great commercial air liners car- rying the American flag to far cor- ners of the earth were predicted by the admiral as an outgrowth of the Navy's leadership in building the Akron. I M 0 N 0 E T 1KA'OW/2I 61W A coon DINNER~ HE , 4 DINNER 45c 0 A K L A D k w Michigan Repertory Players Final Offering of the 1931 Summer Season "Camille1 with such new and novel featuring as to justify the addition to the famous title of the words In Roaring Camp" Beginning Wednesday, Aug.12 Historical Note: Soon after the great gold rush in '49, the first theatrical companies began to tour the camps of the sierras. Among the first dramatic novelties came "Camille" from the writings of Alexander Dumas; the people of the camps we have from the pen of Bret Harte; the Roaring Camp scenes were written by Thomas Wood Stevens. STATIO ERY '/, Several hundred boxes with fancy tissue Originally priced $1.00 to $2.00. linings. Sale Price 60c WAHR'S The Box Univerilty Bookstore LYDIA MENDEL SOHN THEATRE For Reservations Phone 6300 All Seats 75c 'I IE ,,i'll 11 Ip SPECIAL! . rr*w "'Y"' 0 FIFTY CENT STEAK DINNER Monday and Wednesday Nights-5:30-7:30 THE UNION TAPROO 1 4 ic*