TAI. MI H16AN DAI~Y THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1932 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN PIt cation iithe Bulletin oI construtive nothe to all membei o th I iior y. Copy receved dl ti V ofie of the e rn of 'tr e Sun n mi VOLUME Xi11 TIl R ZSD Y, JULY 21, 1932 NUMUYER 21 -- Excursion No. 8: Schools of the Cranbrook Foundation. Three notable private schools--the Cranbrook for boys, the Kingswood School for hirls, and the Brookside School for younger boys and girls below the seventh grade-will be visited Saturday morning, July 23. The party will leave from Angell Hall at 7:45 a. m., returning to Ann Arbor shortly after 12:00 noon. Reservations, $1.00, must be made before Friday, July 22, 5:00 p. m. Commander Donald B. MacMillan Lecture: Motion pictures of the Arctic and the progress in exploration will be shown in Hill auditorium ,next Monday evening. The pictures will be accompanied by a vivid word- picture by the dean of arctic explorers-Commander Donald B. MacMil- lan. This is the second special feature to be presented in Hill auditorium this summer. The rickets are priced to cover the actual cost of bringing these attractions to Ann Arbor. Tickets may be secured at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre box-office. Exhibition of Paintings, Architecture Building: A collection of oil and watev dolor paintings by Professors Barnes, Slusser, Chapin, Valero, and Mr. Aldrich is on view in the ground floor corridor of the Architecture Building. Open daily until further notice fron 9 a. M. to 6 p. m. excepting Sundays. Graduate School: Students enrolled in the Graduate School will not be permitted to drop courses after Saturday, July 23. A course is not offi- Scially dropped until it is reported1 in 'the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. Students who have changed their elections since submitting election cards should call this week at the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell hall: This involves the dropping and adding of courses, the substitution of one course for another, as well as the change of instructors. G. Carl Huber, Dean ' hysiological Chemistry 120: The lectures in this course will begin Friday, July 22, at 7:00 a. n., in the West Ampitheatre of the West Medi- cal Building. i/ Liberal Students Union: Robert C. Angell, of the Department of Socio- logy, will speak on "Marriage and Its Problems in Modern Life" to the Liberal Students Union, Unitarian Church; corner State and Huron sts., at 7:30 Suiday evening. There will be refreshments and a social hour after the discussion. Wesley Hall: Dr. Fisher will speak today at Wesley Hall at four o'clock on "Rabindranath Tagore, Cultural Exponent of Modern Oriental Ideal- ism." This is the third forum in the series "Statesmen of the Living East."' , Varsity Summer Band: There will be a special rehearsal tonight at 7:15 at Morris Hall. There, are still vacancies in'the Trombone, Drums, and Saxaphone sections. The band will give weekly concerts for the rest of the summer term beginning next Wednesday evening, July 27 in front of the main Library steps, on the campus. Nicholas D. Falcone Students Invited to Faculty Tea: Students wishing to meet the pro- fessors of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and their wives are invited to attend the faculty tea at the Minhigan League today, from 4:00 to 5:30. Graduate students are especially urged to attend. Summer Session Dance: University men and women are invited to attend the next regular Summer Session dance in the ballroom of the; Michigan League Friday night, July 22, dancing from 9:00 until 1:00. Hostr and hostesses will see to it that men and women coming without partners have the opportunity to -become acquainted. Cashier's receipts for Sum- Smer Spssion or ientification cards for 1931-32 are necessary. Admission 25 cents for each person. Men's and Women's Educational Clubs: A dance will be given Satur- day evening at 8:30, July 23, in the University High School gymnasium under the auspices of the Meh's and Women's Education Club. All men and women on the campus are invited. Admission 25 cents. J. W. Kelder Olympic Swimmer Has Lunch-Native Style Dickinson Sees Need of Change In Present International Law aW SWIM at Newport each P~ortage 1 ak[\e Three factors Aere blamed by Prof.i Edw in Dickinson, of the law school,+ for the retarding of the development+ on international law il a lecturel Tuesday night. The rigidity of many1 of its rules, its incoinp eteness, and! its inadaptibility to new or changing i were cited as reasons for its inade- quacy.1 "Internaitonal society," he de- clared, has been a relatively unor- ganized society-a primitive society.f In such a society legal principles tend to become rigid and unyielding.I They tend to become the rulers rath-7 er than the servants of the men by whom and for whom they are de-+ veloped. Although relatively unor- ganized, international society has been a growing society-a society of swiftly changing conditions. The+ changes which have taken place within nations have been reflected in significant changes in the condi- tions and problems of international intercourse. It is imperative that law should be adapted to these changed conditions." ,, Professor Dickinson, however, saw{ in several forces operating today :, opportunity for further development of international law along modern lines. These forces are the interna- tional administrative machinery, as set up by the secretariat of the League of Nations and the other world organizations, conciliation, ar- bitration and legislation by means of international treaties and conven- tionso covering social, political and economic fields. "But I would urge that for the present and immediate future it is not so much better law observance that is needed as better law," he concluded, "it is not so much new sanctions that are required as the improvement of the methods and in- sfitutions of international inter- course. Order and justice are not to be found force, but in co-opera- tion.'" Communications in the Pacific northwest timberlands will be facili- tated this summer by the use of small radio transmitters by forest rangers on the lookout for fires. BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard Street Waldorf Salad with Cold Pork Sandwichi vegetable Salad with Cod Meat and Potato Chips veal Croquettes Swiss Steak Ruait Pork, Potatoes, Splineh Pru itl.essert-Ice Cream-C'z"ak Colttee Punch , Milk 30c 5,30 to 7:30 SoU Liver and Bacon or Hamburg Steak, Fried Ulons Veal Roast-Jelly sirloin a la creole Stuffed Lamb Breas Roast Pork Roast Beef Mashed or Parsley Potatoes Peas. Carrots - Sliced tomatoes, Applie Pie - bake - Ice Cream Melons Coffee - Tea -- Punch 40c T. Takemura, one of Japan's swimmers in the Olympic games, sees no reason to depart from his customary dining habits. He's shown eat- ing rice with chopsticks at a messhall in the Olympic village. I M - Ae l Y 7 Detroit Plans Five-Day Week For Employees City Council Votes Six to Two for Taxpayer' s Five-Point Program DETROIT, July 20.-(AP)-Deroit city employees will 'work a five-day, 40-hour week during the 1932-33 fis- cal year. And their pay, as. a result of their shortened working hours, will bereduced 14.5 per cent. The new schedule is not the choice of the employees, but is the result of a 6 to 2 decision by the city council Tuesday night to pave the way for the city's co-operation in tloe five- point program advanced by large taxpayers. The action is expected to bring pre-payment of taxes in .sufficient volume to give city employes their July 16 pay checks before the end of the week. No further reduction in employees' salaries is anticipated during the- coming year. Tax collections, how- ever, must equal the estimated rev- enue of $56,000,000, or about 75 per cent of the levy, to maintain the newly-voted level, Mayor Frank Mur- phy said. In furtherance of its financial pro- gram, the city has applied to the state for permission to refund $13,- 800,000 in debts maturing during the year. These debts are exclusive of obligations of the water board and street railway. The city also is asking bankers to reduce the interest rate on the city's short-term notes from 51/2 to 5 per cent. Isse wWarrants For Thirteen in Pi fsoner's Death MINEOLA, N. Y., July 20.-(AP) --Warrants were issued for 13 county policemen today in connec- tion with the death of Hyman Stark, a prisoner, after lengthy police "questioning." Four of tle warrants charged second degree murder. All 13 policemen were charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice and seven of them were charged with second degree assault. Deputy Police thief Frank Tappen was named in two warrants, once for neglect of duty and again as hav- ing been an dccessory to the third degree beating of Stark which caus- ed his death. Bail was fixed by supreme court justice Meier Steinbring, who pre- sided at the hearing and signed the warrants, at $10,000 each for the officers charged with second degree murder. ~- - WI III V MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS present 8 0 Br keleySqua re" TONIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY AN UNUSUALP- SUPERB CAST A twentieth century American walks into the past - he sees eighteenth century England through the eyes of the present - he knows the future a strange situation novel and in- genius. iW LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATREa L Single Admissions 75c Phone 6300 - W - ho 'w " .. . "..~\ r~ \ \ r l 0' wr./R 'rrl \ . f A dish Three Die When Boat Explodes! On Waterway' ALEXANDRIA, BAY, N. Y., July, 20-AP-The tollBf the explosion of the drill boat America in the St. Lawrence River near here Tuesday reached three known dead, four mi, sing and eight men in hospitals t - day with the death of Earl Russell, 17, years old, one of those previously numbered among the injured. He died this morning from cerebral concussion. Nine other men were injured when a ton and a half of dynamite plant- edon the river bottom exploded un- der the hull'of the 150-foot boat. A second explosion occurred within the boat immediately afterward. The valley for miles around was shaken. e Two bodies were brought from the wreckage of the boat Tuesday ight before a diver found it necessary to abandon his search. Brazilian Troops Push On Against Sao Paulo RIO DE JANERl:, July 20.-(AP) -Gen. Waldomiro Lima, commander of the federal troops engaged in stamping out the revolt in the state of Sao Paulo, informed the govern- memt today he was proceeding north- ward from Itarare, southern city captured from the rebels Tuesday after a brief and bloody bayonet battle. A dispatch from Porto Alegro re- ported Gen. Goes Mbnteiro, chief of the federal command at Rezende, as saying 'the rebels there raised the white flag and then turned their ma- chine guns on federal troops from the state of Minsa Geraes. Bishops Are Due in Port ' Today; Were in Europe William W. BIshop, University li- brarian, and Mrs. Bishop, who have been in Europe for some time, sailed from Liverpool on July 14 on the "Duchess of Atholl," and are'sched- uled to arrive in Monreal today. for active people E a I .,. KELLOGG'S PEP Bran Flakes are a treat you like and need. Because they're just the kind of food that hlps to builds and nourish you. Whole wheat is a natural food for active bodies. It contains iron and other minerals, vitamins, and proteins. Kel- logg's PEP Bran Flakes-the better bran flakes -- are whole wheat -- plus the healthful bulk of bran -plus the match- less flavor of Pep. They're good to eat and good for you. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Quality; i 24 Years Arctic Exploration by -the food is very good-the service eiellent-the sur- surroundings ideal . .- r -try a forty-cent Iuncheon today at the hut or the den. guaranteed. i 0 The most popular ready-to-eat cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg in, Battle Creek. They include ALL-BRAN, Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krumbles and Kellogg's WHOLE WHEAT Bis- cuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee -real coffee that lets COMIMANDER DONALD B. MACMILLAN Explorer, Scientist, Humanitarian, and Foremost Authority on the Arctic - Exceptional Motion Pictures Make This Lecture Doubly Attractive ! This is not "just another lecture." The man himself is today considered to be the leading authority on the Arctic. The authentic motion pictures which accompany make this -grilled sirloin steak or grilled pork chops dinner-for you sleep. I ii