ffM SUMMU MMCMQ N DAMY TTTF::gT)AY_ ATT(""TTTglr 11 19'41 m - WWtflA 'T'T1x'Qth AV4-vuTT(1TTO amaIl Daily Official Bulletin PUblica o in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members O th University. Copy received at the office of the Dean of the hn ' ession until 3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a.m. Saturday. VOLUME XI TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1931 NUMBER 371 Annual "All Education Banquet" will be held at the Michigan League, this evening 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 this evening, Dean Huber will speak briefly to those students 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 The Teaching of English in College. Because of the dinner for all Education students this evening, the evening meeting of this class will not be held. C. C. Fries Public Debate on State League Debate Question. Tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Adelphi Room, Angell Hall, the students in the class, Teach- ing and Coaching of Debate, will hold an exhibition debate on the sub- ject, "Resolved: That the State of Michigan should enact legislation providing for a system of compulsory unemployment insurance to which employers shall be required to contribute." This debate question is to be the subject of all debates held through- out the year under the auspices of the Michigan High School Debating League. No admission will be charged and the public is cordially in- vited to attend. G. E. Densmore Afternoon Conference on Education., At this afternoon's conference Professor Cleo Murtland will discuss "Counseling Girls of Junior and Senior High School Age." All students interested in Education are urged to attend this conference which will be held in the University High School Auditorium at 4:00 p.m. Education D125s and D225s, usually meeting at eight and at nine o'clock on Tuesday, will meet at the William Clements Library at eight o'clock today, August 11. Orlando W. Stephenson Physics Colloquium: Dr. E. W. Thatcher will talk on "Shot Effect and Thermal Agitation of Electricity," at 4:15 today in Room 1041, East Physics Building. All interested are cordially invited to attend. W. F. Colby Faculty Concert: Mabel Ross Rhead, Associate Professor of Piano in the School of Music, will give the following program at a Faculty Concert, this evening in Hill Auritorium at 8:15 p. m. to which the general public with the exception of small children is invited. 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 Phi Delta Kappa-There will be no luncheon today; neither will there be a picnic on Wednesday as announced in the bulletin. Members are urged to go to the Education Banquet which is being held at the Michigan League this evening. There will a final luncheon on Tuesday, August 18, at the Michigan Union. L. O. Andrew, President Miss Lytle of Betsy Barbour invites faculty and students to the last tea from 4 to 5:30 today. The Michigan Socialist Club: Wayne Erickson will speak on "Radi- cal Political Movements" at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening at the Michi- gan Union. Summer Session Men's Glee Club: All men interested in singing are invited to an informal sing and smoker in the Varsity Glee Club room (3rd floor, Michigan Union) this evening, 7 to 8 p.m. David Mattern Mathematical Club: A meeting will be held Thursday, 13th, at 4 p.m. in Room 206 UNIVERSITY HALL. Professor Rainich will speak on "Additivity and non-additivity." All interested are invited. Pi Lambda Theta will hold the final meeting of the year at the Michigan League at 7:30 Thursday, August 13th. Esther L. Belcher The Indiana University Club of the University of Michigan will have a dinner meeting Friday, 6:30 p.m. at the Ann Arbor Golf Club- house. Informal. All alumni and former students of Indiana Univer-1 sity are invited to attend. Please telephone 7448 or University of Michi-i gan extension 673 by Thursday evening for reservation. Dinner 75 cents. 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, 263West 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 REVOLUTION COSTS' 3 LIVES IN CUBA; 'TROOPS ON GUARD10 Uprising Against Present Regime Throws Island Into Confusion. CENSORSHIP PREVAILS President Will Pardon Rebels Who Lay Down Arms; Many Arrested. HAVANA, Aug., 10.-(I)-Martial law reigned in Havana and Pinar Del Rio provinces today in the wake of a revolutionary uprising against the regime of President Gerardo Machado which cost three lives and threw the island into confusion. The president issued a proclama- tion saying that military authority was supreme until countermanded and that all legal action was vested in the military courts, He also. promised that rebels, other than leaders, who laid down their arms within 24 hours would be pardoned. Leaders Not Exempt. "It is intimated that rebels or seditious desturbers who cease in their hostile attitude, delivering their arms or other implements of war and lending obedience to legiti- mate authority within 24 hours, of the publication of this proclama- tion," he said, "will ;remain ex- em.ptedhfrompenalty, except the authors or chiefs of the rebellion and sedition and disorder and per- sons repeating the crime." . The armed forces of the govern- mnent sought by land and sea the slender precise figure of Gen. Mario G. Menocal, Cuban president from 1913 to 1921 and alleged leader .of Rumors Denied. Strict censorship prevented di- rect communication with the in- terior, but there were rumors that there had been fighting in Pinar Del Rio, Camaguey and Santa Clara provinces. Army officials, the interior deportment and the palace itself denied them. In Pinar Del Rio Sunday, 17 men among them Menocal's brothers, Fausto, Guatimon and Serafin, and Dr. Ricardo Dolz, law dean of Ha- vana university, were arrested be rural guards just before they en- tered Pinar Del Rio, allegedly with arms and ammunition in their automobiles. They were brought to Havana and confined in Cabana fortress. Others arrested during the day included Menocal's son, "Mayito" Santiago Verdeja, former speaker of the house and Conservative member from Havana province. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY -Women students here recently demanded that the university es- tablish smoking rooms for their use. WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.-(IP)-A little grayer at the temples and with a few more wrinkles aroundl the face, President Hoover enteredl his fifty-eighth year today burden- ed by international and domestic problems.C But he was smi smiling and ap- parently physically well fit to meet any vexing problem. As he ob- served his fifty-seventh birthday anniversary with Mrs. Hoover, he reviewed a year of accomplishments co-mingled with disappointements, and turned to another period fraught with troubled clouds and holding but a few rays of hope. With the economic depression running into its second year and the unemployment problem loom- ing larger in the forthcoming win- ter, the chief executive continues to bend his efforts to alleviate both situations. In addition, however,J he will be confronted in December with a none-too-friendly congress, where doubt prevails whether the Republican or Democratic party will control. Furthermore Mr. Hoover is plan- ning on the United States taking a leading part in the disarmament conference at Geneva next Febru- ary, in the face of opposition to re- duction in arms by European and other important powers. This sub- ject is close to his heart, he believ- ing that the cost of large military establishments, maintained because of national fears of foreign pow- ers, have contributed more to the world-wide business stagnation than any other factor. Before he celebrates another birthdate, the 1932 election cam- paigns will be well under way. Re- publican leaders see Mr. Hoover as their candidate, it being the his- PRESIDENT HOOVER OBSERVES 57TH BIRTHDAY; FACES DIFFICULT YEAR tory of the party that it always nominates for a second term the presidential incumbent. The con- 1 ventions and campaigns, the un- employment problem and business depression, along with needed na- tional legislauon, are oi paramount importance to him in his new year. Although the last congress over- rode him in granting the World war soldiers large loans on their bonus certificates, rejected some of his nominees to important gov- ernment posts and forced drought loan legislation into enactment, the folks at his birthplace in little West Branch, Ia., overlook those inci- dents in recounting his accom- plishments. The most outstanding achieve- ment of the past year was Mr. Hoover's success in having postpon- ed for one year payment of inter- governmental war debts, so that Germany's financial systems and probably the government might not fall. He threw the forces of the federal government behind the efforts of relief' and other govern- ment agencies to care for last win- ter's army of unemployed and rendered aid to distressed agri- cultural regions. He took steps to bring economy in government op- ieration and to improve conditions in the insular possessions, besides aiding in bringing competing east- em railroads into discussions of !their mutual consolidation prob- lems. In addition, Mr. Hoover bore close personal anxiety over his elder son, Herbert Hoover, jr., who last fall became ill of tuberculosis, and only recently recovered at Asheville, N. C., but during that time he experienced the joy of hav- ing the cheerful laughter of three of his grandchildren in the execu- tive mansion. Through it all, Mr. Hoover has worked eight to twelve and some- times more hours a day. He has maintained a record of not missing a day from work on account of illness. When he entered office he weighed 210 pounds, but by play- ing medicine ball each morning with cabinet members and taking exercises on week-ends at his Rap- idan camp in Virginia, he has re- duced his weight to 185 more mus- cular pounds. Mrs. Hoover rushed back from Akron, 0., where she christened the naval dirigible Akron, Saturday, to spend the day with him. She went directly to Rapidan and they plan- ned to eat a birthday cake at the White House tonight. BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard Street Today, 11:30 to 1:30 Spaghetti with Meat Balls Shredded Lettuce Potato Salad, Cold Meat Peach Shortcake Coffee, Milk 30c 5:30 to 7:30 Individual Chicken Pies Pot Roast of Beef with Corn on Cob BreadedkVeal Cutlets Pork Chops Mashed or O'Brien Potatoes Cabbage Salad or Lima Beans 35c 1 .4 ti 5 i ONE SUMMER DAY Affords ample time for a delightful 120-mile round trip cruise on Detroit river and Lake Erie from Detroit to PUT-IN-BAY ISLAND PARK Scene of the Battle of Lake Erie. Golf, bathing, boating, fishing, picnic in the grove or dine at the fine hotels. Perry Victory monument and wonderful caves. FOR THE ROUND TRIP. CHILDREN $1.25 and 65c SUNDAY Return same day Str. Pus-aBay leaves foot of Fist St., Detroit, daily, 9 a.m. Home at 8 p.m., except Fri., lO.15 p..f or Put-In-Bay, Cedar Point and Sandusky, 0. $74PA BARGAIN TWO-DAY OUTING 7 The wt HtelCompany and Ashley & Dustin S team havejoined to offer the extremely low rate of $7fora two-day outing atPut-In-Bay.Leave Detroit any dayat9a.m., arrive12noon.Lunch at Crescent Hotel, also evening dinner and room; breakfast and dinner the next day. Round trip on steamer and dinner on the boat returning. CEDAR POINT The Lido of America. Special excursions every Friday with over three hoars at the Point, $1.50 round trip; other days one hour stopover, fare $L73 round trip, Cedar Point or Sandusky. Return same day. DANCING MOONLIGHTS Le1v Detroit s:45 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday, 60c. Home Finzel's Snappy Band. ASHLEY & DUSTIN STEAMER LINE Foot of First Street Detroit, Michigan Majestic TODAY RICHARD ARLEN PEGGY SHANNON "Secret Call" WEDNESDAY - THE BEST KID PICTURE SINCE "SKIPPY"! "7 n Mitz Green, Edna May Oliver, Louise Fazenda, J a ck ie Searl in another comedy hit by the makers of "Skip- I 4 t py." S t ory by SINCLAIR LEW- IS, author of "Main Street," etc. in paying the diploma fee. The fee must be paid before the end of the summer session, August 21. G. Carl Huber, Dean Bacteriological Incubator: The University Health Service desires to buy or exchange a bacteriological incubator. Warren E. Forsythe Also ANDY CLYDE "GHOST PARADE"_ "THE INVENTOR" SATURDAY WILL ROGERS "YOUNG AS YOU FEEL" i I I - . . VI CARTTER'S 0 E A T IKN/OW//6t1 4 6O00 DIA'tl ~hrX li) rV a L A N '- Graduate School: All graduate students who expect to complete their work for a degree at the close of the present summer ses- sion should call at the office of the Graduate School, 1041 Angell Hall, to check their records and to se- cure the proper blank to be used We have all makes Remington, Royal, Corona, Underwood Colored duco finishes. Price $60 O. D. MORRILL 314 South State St Phone 6615, DINNER 45c .7 Y ilvuul %MLU O. r ev1 ,_..iz .. . . . i'. .r a v s a ! 1 I f _ ... with such new and novel features as to justify the addition to the famous title of the words Michigan Repertory Players Final Offering of the 1931 Summer Season "CA LLE- _ STATIO ERY OA"o " GC F 59 Several hundred boxes with fancy tissue linings. Originally priced $1.00 to $2.00. Sale Price 60c WA HR'S Beginning Wednesday, Aug. 12 1i The Box University Bookstore LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE All Seats 75c For Reservations Phone 6300 "k am