SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 7,1931 THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEWS Of The DAY (By The Asociated Press) Discrimination Charges Against Prison Denied MARQUETTE, Aug. 6.- ) - Charges of "discrimination" against Negro inmates of the Marquette branch prison and that: "Conditions resembled those of the south," cn- tained in a Pittsburgh (Courier) Ne- gro paper were denied here today by Warden Marvin L. Coon. d tn Letters to Sen. Charles Diggs, of Detroit, only Negro member of the State Legislature, and the Pittsburgh paper, containing the charges, were smuggled out of the prison and brought stories that were "stream- ered" in the eastern weekly. Warden Coon admitted that no Ned groes were employed in the prison kitchen or dining room, as charged. Coon reported that there are 136 Negroes confined to the prison here and of these 74 are employed at dif- ferent jobs. There are only few in- dustries working in the prison be- cause of a recently passed law pro- hibiting prison-made goods from competing with privately produced goods. Italian Steamer Missing After Air Attack LONDON, Aug. 6-(I)-The Ital- ian steamer Mongia was missing to- night hours after she and the British tanker British Corporal were myster- iously attacked by unidentified bombing plants in the western Medi- terranean. The Mongioia flashed a brief SOS saying she had been attacked. There were no further reports. The British Corporal, after sending an SOS and then retracting it, reached the Port of Algiers under her own power and apparently not ser- iously damaged. None of her crew of 43 was injured. Both ships were attacked almost at the same time and in the same spot off the coast of Algeria. Both Span- ish Government and Insurgent planes are based within striking distance. Neither ship was engaged in Span-, ish trade. Officers of theBritish Corporal said three monoplanes dropped bombs9 around their ship for about an hour. IDAILY OFFICIAL (Continued from Page 2) tion (Or. Lang. g186s) Monday, Aug. 9 at 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. respectively in 4 Angell Hall. There will be no classes for these two courses, Tues- day, Wednesday or Thursday. The Mathematics Club will meet Tuesday, Aug. 10, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 3017 Angell Hall. Dr. Ralph Hull will speak on "Abelian Algebraic Fields." The Union Pool will be open to any student from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on the evenings of Aug. 10, 12, 17. Men's Education Club Picnic, Wed- nesday, Aug. 11. Portage Lake. An- nual picnic and fun fest. Leave main entrance of University high school at 4:30 p.m. Men needing transpor- tation can be accommodated if prompt in assembling at U.H.S. Senior Engineering Students: All students who expect to complete the requirements for the B.S.E. degree at the end of the Summer Session should fill out the diploma applica- tion blank in the secretary's office, Room 263 West Engineering Build- ing, before Aug. 31. Instructors in the College of Liter- ature, Science and the Arts and Ar- chitecture; Schools of Education, 'orestry and Music: Blanks for re- porting grades at the close of exam- inations may be secured at tthe Reg- istrar's office, Room 4, University Hall, or from the secretary of your school or college. When filled out they should be returned to the Reg- istrar not later than three days af- ter the examination has been given. It is especially important in August' that lists be rechecked carefully by the instructors to make sure that no names are omitted. Report students in Literature, Sci- (Continued on Page 4) Ranger Retains America's Cup 'To Hold Recital IOf Compositions Of R. Bennett Van Deursen, Shaffmaster, Thompson, Creighton To Aid Presentation There will be a recital of the com- positions of Richard Bennett, Spec., (at 4:15 p.m., today, in the School of 1 Donald Horst Shown In Orphanage Skipper Harold S. Vanderbilt's Class J sloop "Ranger" kept theI America's Cuba, symbolic of yacht racing supremacy, in America by defeating T. 0. M. Sopwith's Endeavour II in four straight races. In the final race, the Endeavour jumped the gun and was forced to turn back for another start. Endeavour (left) is shown swinging about whileI Ranger swept by close behind to take the course. Trains Are So Noisy That Colby Colleoe Is Going To Move On WATERVILLE, Me., Aug. 6.-(P)- Colby College officials couldn't move the heavy trains that have rattled the windows of campus buildings- and dis- turbed students for 50 years so-they decided to move the college. Plans to move the entire campus of the 120-year-old institution to May- flower hill, three miles distant, are afoot. A third of the $3,000,000 necessary for the project has been raised, and Colby alumni and friends are carry- ing on the drive. Tian For Expansion A score or more new buildings will! house the college on its new site, a spot believed adequate for further' expansion which present campus sur- roundings prohibit. Educators, fascinated with the op- 0ortunity to institute a model New England college, combining modern- ity with a century of background, have taken a lively interest in Colbys plan for a "moving day." A Maine educational commission reported in 1931, that adjacent rail- road', tracks and yards would hinder growth of the college. To move was the suggestion for escape. President Franklin W. Johnson, formerly of Teachers College, Columbia Univer- sity school, agreed. $100,000 Raised Citizens of Waterville, alarmed at the prospect of having the college It Takes A Lot Of Gadgets To Put A Movie Into Order HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 6.-(A)-If you've ever had spots before your eyes, pity the poor movie actors. With them it's a continual case of gadgets before the eyes. Shut ins? Why the director even puts marks on the floor beyond which actors cannot step. If they did they'd be out of camera range. To focus cameras, assistants are forevere holding tape measures up to an actor's face. There's another little trick that drives neophytes wild. After a scene another assistant .steps up to him with a sign that has a clapper ar- rangement on it. Before the actor can think the clapper is. snapped, whack, right under his nose. This photographs, enabling the cutter to identify the scene later. Color has increased the complica- tions. One new dingus is a meter that registers light intensity, which. must be kept uniforn throughout the scene. Another is the "lily," a color chpart that's held before an actor at every scene. establish a campus in nearby Augus- ta, raised $100,000 to purchase the Mayflower hill site. The depression held up the moving program in 1932 but the goal still re-I mained before Colby men and women,j a challenge to be taken up with re- turning prosperity. The gift of $200,000 by George Hor- ace Lorimer, former editor of the Saturday Evening Post, for a chapel, signalized resumption of the cam- paign which President Johnson hopes wil lculminate in a definite move next year. Ground for the chapel will be broken on Aug. 18. Dr. George G. Averill of Water- ville, and Merton Miller, Los An- geles banker ,each have pledged a building. Alumni, through hundreds of donations, raised $300,000 for a men's union to be dedicated to a former president, Arthur J. Roberts. Students. recently raised $5,000. Maine residents and summer resi- dent friends of! the college, trustees believe, will contribute the remain- ing $2,000,000. Washington Loses To Tigers, 10-3 WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.-(P)-The Detroit Tigers, fighting to regain lost ground, batted out a 10 to 3. victory over Washington today, for their third straight victory. The Senators were limited to eight hits off young Jake Wade, scoring one run in the fifth, sixth and seventh inning. The Tigers got -ne in the second on two hits and an error, another in the third on Fox's double and Gehringer's single and one more in the fourth on Rogell's double and Walker's single. The Tigers got to Syd Cohen for three hits before he was replaced in the seventh by Ed Linke. Gehringer doubled with the bases loaded -to score two and Greenberg singled to push across another pair. Gehringer's single in the eighth scored another run and York hit a home run with one on base in the ninth for the Tigers' final runs. Uusic Auditorium. Marguerite Creigh- ton, mezzo-soprano, Martin Thomp- son, tenor, Hardin Van Deursen, bani- tone, and Frederick Shaffmaster,t baritone will sing Mr. Bennett's com- position, with Mr. Bennett accom - panying them. Ralph Bell will read! the poems to which the songs are set. Miss Creighton will open the pro- gram with "Easter Hymn," by A. E. Hausman. Mr. Thompson will sing "'The Lamb," by William Blake, and< "'Orientale," by, E. E. Cummings. Miss Creighton will sing "Who," .:. written to the words of the famous poem by Heine, and Mr. Bennett's H sr s s arrangement of "Mein Vaterland," by.geM Fallersleben. ~ "John Brown, a Negro Sermon," byl Vachel Lindsay will be sung by Mr.j E- a;. Van Deursen, a member of the SchoolIu, of Music faculty. Miss Creighton Here is Donald Horst as he sat down to his first meal in St. Vincent's will present "Doria," by Ezra Pound. Orphanage in Chicago where he was taken to await outcome of the Martin Thompson will sing two strange case ivolving a "kidnaping" and a birth hoax. Mrs. John songs, "Wae's Mi for Prince Charlie," Regan, who claims the boy as her son, born out of wedlock, "kidnaped" from the Jacobite Ballads, and "Song him from the home of Mr. and Mrs.Otto Horst, who had reared him since of the Full Catch," by Constance birth, and turned him over to police. Lindsay Skinner. Miss Creighton --_--= will follow this with "Lament," by Edna St. Vincent Millay, and will Many ScholarshinMOONEY IS BETTER repeat "Sea Fever," by Masefield,1SAN RAFAEL, Calif., Aug. 6.-(V)- which she sang at Mr. Bennett's last Holders In War Zone Dr. Leo L. Stanley, San Quentin recital. Frederick Shaffmaster will present(prison physician, reported today Tom the following group: "Indian Sum-(Continued from Page 1) Mooney, convicted 1916 preparedness mer," by Shelley, "The Abbott of- day parade bomber. is "a great deal Derry," by John Bennett, "Dieu Qu'ly gloomy" over the possibility of Jap- better" and is in no immediate need La Fait," by Charles D'Orleans-Ezra anese administrators nullifying their of an operation for a gall bladder in- LPoFund, "RysChans D'ce"a-rk efforts. Another former Michigan fection. Pound, and "Russian Dance," a work student and Barbour scholarship n of Mr. Bennett's which has been pub- holder is Mrs. Martha Choy Chen, lished for male chorus. the wife of a physician at the Peiping Miss Creighton will close the pro- Union Medical College, while a sec- grain with Mr. Bennett's arrange- ond is Mrs. Ikuke Keizumi Shimidzu, ment of "Night Over Shanghai," by a Japanese whose husband is head Harry Warren from "The Singing of a private school for Chinese chil- Marine"- dren. ATi ilb r.Bnetsscn This will be Mr. Bennett's second On campus at the present time are composition recital in Ann Arbor, three Barbour scholars and a pro- his first one being in May. Miss fessor who come from the zone of Creighton also sang four of Mr. Ben- of Dr. Ting, is in the Medical School; nett's compositions on her gradua- conflict. Miss Vung-Yuin Ting, niece tion recital program. Miss Hsi-Yin Sheng of Peiping is a physics major; and Miss Poe Eng Yu, whose brother is director of the Na- tional Astronomical observatory on QPurple Mountain at Nankingsa medical student. The Purple Moun- fi' { 3 Tha_ SnLn e-tain zone, Prof. Rufus said, will, be fx" x. Theatre: Michigan:"Sing And Be of tremendous strategic importance Happy," with Anthony Martin and if the war moves further south, for Leah Ray and the Jones Family in it commands the City of Nanking. Al- "Big Business; Majestic: "The Em- ready officials have militarized it. peror's Candlesticks," with William At the present time Professor Yuen Powell and Luise Rainer; Wuerth: Z. Chang is teaching here on ex- I "Call It A Day," with Olivia De Ha- change from Nanking Central Uni- villand and Ian Hunter and "The versity. Case of the Black Cat," with Ricardo Cortez and June Travis; Orpheum: "Here Comes Carter," with Ross Alex- ander and Glenda Farrell and "Emp- ty Holsters," with Dick Foran. I Play: Repertory Players produc- tion "Accent on Youth." 4 Days Starting Today! Dancing: Summer Session Dance - Shows at at the Union, The Blue Lantern at 2:00 - 4:00 Island Lake and Bartlett's at Pleas- 7:00-9:00 P.M. ant Lake. O 0, A SYOU KNOWSHE'SGREAT1 TOO MUCH MONEY; ARRESTED! LuiseRainer...Academy r GRAND RAPIDS, Aug. 6.--()- Award winner for the Two small boys aroused suspicion year's best acting . at a carnival, buying candy, seeing now happily re-united shows and riding all the rides. They with her co-star of admitted to police they had taken GaZ e .n $400 cash from a department store Great Ziegfeld . . . m cashier's cage, and led the officers to a thrilling, scintillating a hiding place where they had cached romance! most of it. Cih ?A_ tUniz D[I N N E R of one: to Fruit Coupe7. oodle Soup or Consomme Royal apple Juice LUISEj On August 14 a copy of d Olives Sweet Pickles be mailed out to every I ops, Rasher Bacon $1.10 ken, Southern Style $1.10 cepted at the present tim oice Beef, Au Jus $1.10 ops, Pineapple Glace $1.10 special interest to all lane Plate, De Lux $1.10 TEAK DINNER $1.35 rent as it is a most excelle French Fried Potatoes to order group of incoming stude .ana or Louise Potato Baked Stuffed Tomatoes per line. ROBERT YOUNG 2Punch MAUREEN O'5ULLIVAN F RA N KMO R GA N age ... I TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPHING 2romptly and neatly done by expen- ,;nced operators at moderate pnct,. 0. D.MOR RILL 314 South State Stree , i ... . ._ , Last Day "SING AND BE HAPPY" "BIG BUSINESS" ,r ; SUNDAY Choice California] Chicken N Jellied Consommet Iced Pinea Branch Celery Mixe Breaded Deep Sea Scall Fried Half Milk Fed Chic Roast Prime Ribs of Ch Grilled English Lamb Ch( Fresh Lobster Salad UNION SPECIAL S' Tenderloin or Porterhouse with Sweet Potato Louisi NeW Peas Au Beurre or Frozen Matinees 25c Sundays 25c until 2 DLADIES 'i FOUR I AYS STARTING SUNDAY! GREATER THAN "MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY"! . . to thrill you>.. . to touch your heart! A VICTOR F L E MINGproduction !-i f The Michigan Daily will Fall Freshman student ac- e. This issue should be of dladies who have rooms to ent means of reaching this ents at the low cost of 11c I I