ESTABLISHED 1922 thet *ummer 4hp 41P fat.r :4I itq ASSOCIATED PRESS 11 Y AND) NIGH~T WIRE SER VICE VOL. XVIII No, 24 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1926 PRICE FIVE CENTS I GEROULD PRESENT ILLUSTRATED TALl ON SOUTHFRANC[ VISlITING PROFESSOR FROM DART. ,1OUTiI 'COLLEGE DISCUSSES TRIP AVIGNON VISITED ffedIIerranean Watering Places And Villages Along Spanish Coast Pictured Picturesque and historic scenes along the Rhone valley and the Riviera were pointed out by Prof. John H. Gerould of Dartmouth College in an illustrated lecture on "Holidays in Southern France" delivered yesterday afternoon in Natural Science Audi- torium. Professor Gerould is conduct- ing work at the University during the summer session. Starting with the Rhone basin, that part of France which is less familiar to tourists than the well-known cities of the Riviera, Professor Gerould de- scribed by means of slides his trip through the valley west to the Pyre- nees and along the Spanish and Italian frontiers. Home of Popes Visited Avignon, the home of the popes, was the first stopping place of the excur- sion. The palace of the pope, a beauti- ful and massive structure, erected in the 14th. century by Pope Clement the 6th., stands in this vicinity. Here also are the Rhone ramparts and the bridge built across the River in the 11th century. Arle, an ancient city, was the next place to be described. This was form- erly a Greek colony, later taken over by Constantine. The women of Arle are celebrated for their beauty which is a survival of the Grecian type. An arena, used now for bull-fights, an amphitheatre, and a Gothic church are a heritage of the ancient days. Some Corinthian columns are still standing. Monument By Caesar Seen The following scenes were a succes- sion of quaint villages situated along the region of the Spanish coast. The sites abound with remains of Roman monuments and feudal castles built into the rock on the tops of hills and cliffs. In an isolated country spot where a one-time city is buried stands a lone monument erected by Julius Caesar. In one of the old villages the place where Louis the Great started on his first crusade to the Holy Land can be shown. The spirit of ad- venture has not yet died out among these people, Professor Gerould said. The industry of this country was evi- denced in vineyards, cord trees, and great salt manufacture facilitated by stagnant waters. Southern Resorts Included Passing finally to the Riviera over torturous roads, picturesque walls, and beautiful gardens descending to the harbors and flanked by maritime] mountains, the traveler arrives at length at Cannes, Nice, Monaco, and Monto Carlo, the famous resorts of the Italian frontier. BASEBALL SCORES American League nliI MUSIC AND DRAMA LEGL ROFS~lNKansas Negro LEGAL PROFESS/ON KEditor Seeks'HYGIENE SPEAKER IN DENVER MEET Senate Seat GIVES SOLUTIONS DISCUSS DEFECTS F 7 71ToSEX PROBLEMS "BELINDA" A review by William Inglis and Miss Lillian Bronson "Belinda", both the play and that abstract lady, was "perfectly ripping". The audience ripped and pealed with laughter. It is good to laugh for an hour and a half with only two inter- missions. At last night's performance of "Belinda" they were not the usual giggles-they were real laughs. It was laughs, pure laughs. The lady of the play who could be almost any age between 18 and 49 that happened to be convenient, was Frances Horine in the part of Belinda. 4Belinda was officially Mrs. Tremayne, which fact didn't make much differ- ence to Baxter, of Devensh-or to Mrs. Tremayne for that matter. For eighteen years before, when Mrs. Tremayne was anywhere from four to twenty years younger, they had quarreled and Mr. Tremayne had gone off to the Rockies to hunt lions. In the mean time things had become WOMAN TO LECTURE ON EGYPTIAN LIFE Former Professor Of Art, Archaeology At Bryn Mawr College Will Speak Here This Afternoon! SLIDES TO BE USED Mrs. Caroline Ransom Williams who willlecture at 5 o'clock todayI the Natural Science auditorium on "Egyptian Life under the Eighteenth Century", is a recognized authority on Egyptian archaeology, according to Prof. John G. Winter of the Greek department. Formerly professor of art and arch- aeology at Bryn Mawr college and] curator of the Egyptian Collection of the New York Historical society, Mrs. Williams has recently published a catalogue of the New York collection of Egyptian relics, which has been acclaimed by American and European1 scholars as one of the most importantI contributions ever made to the study of Egyptian jewelry. "Especially valuable", says Profes-I sor Winter's review of this catalogue< in te Classical Journal for June, "is the masterly treatment of alloys,r metallurgical methods an danalyses,e and above all the technical processes I involved in the inlaying of gold, gran-s ulated decoration, soldering, coloring,< wire-making, and the like. Upon this phase of her subject Mrs. Williams1 has brought to bear both her un- rivalled knowledge of ancient jewelry and her wide experience in modernr laboratory methods." t During the past year Mrs. Williamsr has lectured before many of the so- cieties of the Archaeological institute,s and next winter will return to Egyptt to assist Prof. James H. Breasted ofs Chicago in is work on the monuments. Mrs. William's lecture will be i11-L lustrated with slides. _ _t Announce Marriage Mrs. Adele B. Lally, 1102 Olivia If street, announces the marriage of herr daughter, Mary Felicie, ex-26, to C.e Wells Christie, '26, of Goshen, New York, June 16 at Toledo. At the con- clusion of the summer session, Mr. and Mrs. Christie will go to New York where Mr. Christie has a position with the New York Central lines. i.i pretty serious with Harold Baxter statistician, and Claude Devenish, poe for it was April and Devonshire an Belinda. Along with April came the return of Belinda's daughter Delia who became nominally Mrs. Tre- mayne's neice-also for convenience All this is preparatory to the entranc of one Mr. Robinson, lion hunter. Th rest of the play is spent in proving the fact that Mr. Robinson has the most right to become Mrs. Tremaine's hus- band, chiefly because he is Delia's father and Belinda is Delia's mother. Miss Bronson says that it was a "lovely part", Belinda's. Belinda was Frances Horine who is "very pretty on the stage", according to the same authority. "We" decided that the way in which she used her head and shoulders was the making of this "abandoned" lady. Warren Parker made a truly "stic- iany" statistician. My fellow-critic seemed impressed by his ease in play- lug a comedy. He is fully aware of the fact that he is going to be laughed at, which is good technique. He used his bowler hat, his comedy mouth, and his make-up to full advantage. The two poets of the play are Rich- ard Woellhaf and Wiilliam Bishop. Last night it happened to be the later. He was an idealist with the faith that moves mountains-and molehills chased by lions in the Rocky Moun- tains. BRITISK MINERS STILL UNSETTLED, Enactment of Eight Hour Bill Fals to End Trouble Between Workers And Dune Owers FEW RETURN TO WORK (By Associated Press) LONDON, July 15.-Peace in the coal fields is not yet in sight. The government and mine owners had been confident that after the eight hour bill was enacted, the miners would flock back to work. This con- fidence has not been realized, for there is no sign of the men resuming, except in very small numbers. Today the trades union congress an- nounced it had agreed to give all pos- sible aid to the striking miner, rais- ing funds to support them in their struggle against longer hours and re- duced wages. Religious and other bodies have been trying to find some new way out of the deadlock. Much hope has been entertained of new developments by reason of the rades union congress' invitation to the miners federation for a conference. since the calling off of the general strike, there has existed mad feelings between the two bodies. Their repre- sentatives met today. An official statement issued subsequent em- bodied the announcement of the prom- ised assistance of the miners by the trades union congress. The coference will be resumed to- morrow. Premier Baldwin had another in- formal talk with his colleagues to- night on the deadlock, which the gov- ernment is eager to terminate. Booklet Made Of Radio Programs Programs of the radio entertain- ments presented by the University of Michigan during the last school year ave been printed and. are being dis- triputed to all who call for them at the Summer session office. Approxi- mately fifty speeches delivered over the radio by men connected with the University are contained in the print- ed programs. According to Dean Edward H. Krous it is planned that similar programs will be printed at the conclusion of the next season's radio program but a definite decision in regard to this mat- ter can not be yet made. 2000 of the programs were printed th'is year. The speeches included are{ on various topics such as the Univer- sity, education, politics, science, lit- erature, athletics, medicine and ex- DELEGATES HOPE TO EVOKE MEASURES THAT WILL GAIN CONFIDENCE COMMITTEES REPORT, Members Charge that Legal Profession Has Failed to Enforce Laws Throughout Country (By Associated Press) DENVER, Colorado. July 15.-In- dicted by its own members, on charges of failure to hold public con- fidence and inability to enforce the laws of the land against marauding criminals, the American judiciary to- day started the taking of testimony in an effort to place responsibility for its 1 derilection and to find a remedy for existing conditions. Out of the maze of investigations carried on during te last year the legal profession of the United States, ex- emplified by those delegates here, hopes to invoke remedial measures for the restoration of confidence. The re- ports of the committee presented facts as entertained by the lawyers con- cerned the failures and successes of DR. EDSWN ADVISE S EXTENSIVE PROGRAM OF SEX EDUCATION FOR YOUTH URGES REVISIONS Belies es IlonisSehoo ,Churche Should Work Toether in Nation Wide Social Promgra u Solutions for the problem of moern laxness in social relationships of men and women as well as of youth can be foun(l only in a complete and exten- sive program of sex education, is the belief of Dr. N. W. Edsonj, of the Am- erican Social Hygiene Association of Now ork, in a lecture on "Sex Edu- c at o:,' helcin the Dental auditorium - at 4:00 o'clock yesterday. iRelate" liygiee With Li'e "'Tbis education must be one of in- Nick Chiles, owner and publisher of tregation a m n t e on' lie the "Topeka Plaindealer" has filed stated "Mr sex searilnot nomination papers to oppose U. S. statencere sex hygiene will not Senator Charles Curtis in the Repub- intiuene c t, until it is tied up licanintimately with thle life of the boy or lican primaries to be held in August. irl Realzn tis, o e luyaor He stands for strict enforcement ofirealizing this, modern educators are attempting t rn bu co - the 15th and the 18th Amendments to to bring about a co- the Constitution and for the electionoperation of homes and schools tend of a western man for the Presidency churches in a nation wide program of the law, tl tion here, g making age in this qua er in anoth( Reports1 mitteesrane Each repor tions to the for raising1 in order to to the public port and tI adopted wit: mittee of j procedure d prevalency, nesses and testimony"'I belief "that chasable." The repor tions provid expert witn salaries to state and to comment on such testimc Another r "failure of country to law student; The crimi tablishment sus" divisio: "provide fir might be he' tion of the c ANN ARE RE Lewis Ho Arbor high the past fou in this city the actionc which met' salary whic been raised mainly beca recreation grounds. At the pr carrying stu addition to work at Win Womej heir needs for simplifica- in 1928 social instruction. Calls are being reater coordination of law issUed for the revision of such sub- mcies there, more vigilant Shs je's as Natie Study and Biology rter and extension of pow- S ow Students and the intetion of sex with these subjects." er. i were read from 16 com- ObservaIy inimum essentials for the con- d seven sp~ecial sections. 1Jet tT plete social eucation of the start at t tin ecN extW eekthe pre-shool age an extend up to bar ssocatio as eansfull grown manhood. The pre-school bar ssoiaton s manschild should have, first of all, an in- the level of the profession Visitors' night at the University Os- terpretation of lief's origins. Second, present a greater service ervatory will be held July 19, 20 andteetshonldf aie'soritsSa od he soul hae cocree apreifation c. In each instance the re- 21 for the purpose of giving students he recommendations were in the Summer Session a chance to e amyler foses by thea hout discussion. The com- inspect the building under the direc- He and mohe, s of clen urisprudence and judicial tion of Prof. W. J. Hussey, director of H me and habit of seice in home group complete the essential in- enounced "the growing the Observatory. Four hundred and r of the use of expert wit- fifty persons, it. is estimated, will take stPre-Adolescent AgeDifficult with their contradictory the trip through the observatory in pre-Adolescent ge irct which is giving rise to the the three nights. The pre-adolescent age, or the per- such testimony is pur- Admission to the observatory will be is from nine to r by ticket. These tickets may be se-' s more , tIiscult. According to Dr. rt contained recommenda- cured by students at the Summer Ses- rEdsoat this time an added inter- ing for the employment of sion office on the presentation of Pyetatiol of life by Nature Study and esses only at court order, treasurer's receipts. The supply s hysiology should be given. The be fixed and paid by the limited to 450. 'child shouldI be given practice in per- be fxedandpai bythe mitd t 45. .sonal hygiene aind taught self respect. permit the trial judge to The observatory will be open three ['ar'ents should be careful to provide the value and weight of hours each night. Fifty people willPa entortecret oe ony in instructing a jury. be shown through at a time. Each ansement for their children at home eport severely scored this I trip lasts approximately one hour, and aot foemt h to s the set the law schools of the no one will be allowed to take theI for amusement. This is alsouIe h, a- teach the constitution to trip who has not secured a ticket at g0(o whereskillsare acquired and s. the summer session office for the a girls should learn to playatheriano nal law section, urged es- ticular night he wishes to go. and sew and cook to some extent. The of a "special crime cen- _boy, also, should have his work and n in the census bureau to WIN [.N aMIlINfhis hobbies." st hand information that Care In C'hioosing Friends ipful in arriving at a solu- IU L UVIIIUIIU "The beginnings of a disrimina- rime problem." cltion in companionship should he rdimIeta POTIN taught early," Dr. Edson believes Children should be given a basis for 100 COACH ,choosing friends and their choices di- (By Associated Press) Ireeted. An acquaintance should early NEW YORK, July 10.-The finger be made with great characters, such of the National Crime commission was as those of history, and the admiraltion pointed at the weak spot in criminal of the children stimulated. The be- law today. ginnings of other-mindedness. or hap- liway, coach of the Ann From a six months' study to de- piness in the presence of othe's, the school athletic teams for termine why 90 percent of major crim- acquisition or self control, and the de- r years, has been retained inals are not apprehended, and why velopment. of loyalties to groups are for another term following 75 percent of those caught escape I other social manifestations which of the board of education punishment, the sub-committee on should be well directed. Wednesday evening. His criminal procedure and judicial ad- Adolescence. the period of growth :h was formerly $2,800 has ministration emerged with recommen- into manhood. gives the real concrete to $3,5q0; this is granted dations for putting the criminal in ideals which govern later life. A use of his community jail and keeping him there. spirit of happiness. self reliance, and work on the city play- The provisions contained in a report respect for others should e taugh d made to the commission recommend, Plenty of opportunity should be given resent time Hollway is among other changes in criminal law, for sex social relationships on the best idies in the University in jthat judges be allowed to comment on terms. directing the playground evidence, that attorneys be permitted "Not fewer dances in High Schools aes field. to draw inference from the failure of a and Communities, but more dances and defendant to testify in his own behalf, games should bring about the best n's Tennis i that the power of district attorneys to conditions. give the young people quash proceedings be modified and something to do." List Is Posted that activities of professional bond- men be curtailed. the Women's Athletic as- "Under the provisions," Herbert S. Starts Vacation iletin in Barbour gymna- Hadley, chancellor of Washington lists for the tennis tourn- (university, St. Louis, chairman of the Dean Alfred H. Lloyd, of the Cral- order for the tournament committee, said, "'the trial of the uate school. leaves Ann Arbor the end d off promptly the first criminal will become less a game of of this week for his summer home in les must be finished by skill, cunning and endurance between the Adirondacks Miountains. It is July 21. For the benefit opposing lawyers and more a judi- situated at Piseco, New York. He will ant the telephone number cial investigation under the trend and return to Ann Arbor the middle of nent is also listed. Miss impartial direction of a judge bent on September. gson, who is in charge of discovering the truth." lent, is very anxious that lxports of newsprint from Canada be played off as soon as PARIS.--Abd-el-Krim, the Riffian for the 12 months ended April 30, 1926, order that the second chief who surrendered to the French, were valued at $102,95,286, and in- for those in the regular will be exiled to Reunion Island in the crease of $11,000,000 over the previous oa ran. v,.1an nlswaIin cen.year.I Detroit 7, New York 2 Cleveland 4, Boston 2 Cleveland 2, Boston 6 St. Louis-Philadelphia (rain) Chicago-Washington (rain) National League St. Louis 11, Brooklyn 5 Chicago 3, Boston 1 Pittsburgh 3, New York 0 Piladelphia 7, Cincinnati 6 i I IOur ear hr~anj ' I Says: Somewhat unsettled with pos.- sible thunderstorms. Slightly YOST TO ENTER MOVIES (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, July 15.-Field- ing "Hurry-up" Yost, football coach at the University of Michi- gan, is going into the motion pic- tures. The Famous Players- Lasky today announced that he had been engaged to supervise the football scenes in a picture to be produced soon. Yost will direct scenes made up largely of former university players, but whether he will do this from the sidelines or play the part of a referee has not been determined. Posted on sociation bu slum are the ament. In1 to be playe round matc Wednesday, of each entr of her oppo] Pauline Hod the tournam the matches possible, in tournament i II