I m I i-if it iiiJa atlu .C G No. 130 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARtBOR~ MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 2i, 1923 EIGHTT PAGES. w £ ACADEMY IMEETING TOMORROW EOF' RESEARCH ITEN RST ONI PEAKERS d Discussion 'EASTER 0:1APRIL FOOL'S L L UL US L I DAY; FIRST TIME SINCE 'S8 1,_1,,111 11111 . For the first time since 1888, IEaster Sunday this year will " come on April 1. This will not. n ;:E T iE TRIP #occur again until 1934, antid again in 1945. Other, years' in } which Easter Sunday has fallen- 1877. The earliest date on which 1;TL\' V.11IETY )U11'CL N'MBERS (Easter Sunday has fallen in re- ; WLL BE OYFF;IEE IN }cent years was in 1818 when it MI'RI 6 REITAU Ioccurred on March 22. It fell oan t IMarch 23 in 18 56 and in 191. 1, B0} E N D1IR CTOR OF ( EFaster falls mnore often In Ap!rl N A P EE T TO fthan it does in Mlarch. D)uring ___ the 100) years betw-een 18.x) and I1950, Faster comes 'n Blorci but Tw Io Stirring ,Spanish Songs Includ- 23 times. ed tI Vocat Selections; &rches- tra to Mlay Latest lifts The 1 program of the Varsity Glee INITU'M nT club's pre-trip Concert for 8:15 o'clock ANAT MY E PERT tonight at1Hil1 auditorium has been ~5announced. The concert is to be of- feredl under the direction of George TAL STO l f Oscar Bowen, of the School of Mu- {f 1 I }St t t i SPIRES PREVENT COLLE Oxford, Eng., March 25.- Three foot spiked pole., havef been played at regular intervals on the boundary walls of~ the several colleges where the wo- men live in order to prevent any- I 'one from crawling over them atJ jnight. This action was taken due . (to the custom of the women to I slip out after dark for dates and return via the ,garden walls with, ( the assistance of their escorts. E S The spikes on the walls are Isharp and close enough togeth- er to render it difficult for one to get through. It is thought E 1that through this niesuxs the stay in rule will now be lived up to I by the" women. COW1UNCIL CKANBES[ Club to Sott, of the de- and paleontology city, and R. A. t, will head the akers to address my of Sciences, ich will open its tomorrow. I l ELECT 'OFFICERS INSTITUTION WILL GJVE COURSES3 IN BIB~LE STUDY SEPARATE FROM UNIERSITY EXPEC'T$1,200000 TO BE RAISED IN PLEDGESI bSWrijiftrlof o $1QO,OO( Already Made; No Public Canplgwi Election of the officers, executive committee, and a permanent board' of trustees ,of the Michigan School of A~eligion was completed at the meet- Iva of the provisional board of trus- tees. the faculty committee, and oth- er persons interested in the movement, lheld Sunday afternoon at the homie of Mr.. Stanley G. Stevens of Ann Ar- bor. Formal adopition of previously c onsidered articles of incorporation. for the school also took place. t j 0Hgua:I oa"4 of Trustees Electedi ? Ulcers who. were elected Sunday, art; the following, Willard Pope, 'SS,8 t fldtrolt, president, Jludge A. C. Angell, '8014 Detroit, vice-presdent, and Stan- 1e' Stevens' of Ann Arbor, Seceetary- treasurer. All m~embers of the original board of; trustees present at the meeting were reelected. It wvas decided that those who were not able to be present at the meeting would be extended an in- vitationi to become membhers of the permanent board of the school. The partial list of trustees of the School of Religion is as follows, Dean H~enry INT. Bates, of the Low School, Dean Hugh Cabot,, of the Medical school, j DanAlfred 11 Llovd. of the Gradu.- END DUE TO R ATTACK 01 Probes French Action In Ruhr DIES AT DEATHI COZIES QUJI LONG STRUGOGLI 1 EWVED L iLast Appeare I Made In i n I' give the presiden- ,lock toinorrow ev- itorlum. His sub- and Economic bur- The experfimental vey in Charlevoix past year has been advantage, and it np the work un- r counties of the vered. The survey :e and complete re- nic status of the Ith will speak of the work, and its whose works on Ieontological su'b- een recognized as tients of the sub- t 4:15 o'clock F'ri- ution." Professor of "The Theory of :ory of Land Main- ,tern Hem~isphere", onographs on sim- ext book: "An In- i Err. Char-les Stoek-ard, of C ornelf Tells of Importance and Use of Thyroid Gland In AnimalI Growth. PROVES TJHEORY OF SIPECIES f IETELOMjENT BY EXAMP LFS The program for the concert fol- lows: 'Laudes :Aque Carmina". I "The Ifeavens are Declaring"-beet- hoven-Glee club. 2. (A) "Rose o1f the Rio Grande;" ,"Michigan Memor- ies."' (b) "Aunt Hagger's Children's Blues." (c) "Gray Morn." 3. (a) "Hunter's Farewell" - Mendelssohn.j (b) "Shadow Malrch'-Protherio. (c) I "Troubadour" -- Walt. (Numbers 2 f r i i a ji i Student Goveratug ~DAT Epet Comfpd. Coistderautof Provisions MEETING TOMORROW NIGHT AML BlE OPEN TO CAMP to ?Us Dr. Charles R. St",jurd, profess;or of anatomy in the Cor"nell Mledical } .,t.... '.. '~x s. L -A rt,. n,r~ - - -n I r chool 0of£New ) orlit ~y, spo'~e on ,1an4 3'by Glee club.) the "Origin of Iluman Types and the, 4. Assortments, "Deep River", Influence of Intenl Secretion" be- "Lonesome, That's All"'-Midmnight forea lrgeauden~ intheNatralSons Quarts tte. 5. "B~eloved, It is for©a lage adiece Wthe natual orn"--A w ard, "The Star"-Rodgers Science -auditorium last night. --George Qua, '251), tenor. 6. "Sword Showing how the thyroid gland is of Farrarac"-lullard-Glee club. 7.E necessary to the physical develop- (0) "Who Cares?" (b) "Buddy" (c) meat of all animals, Dr. Stockard "Rose of the Itio Grande"-Varsltyl demonstrated by illustrations the ef- Blanjo quintette. 8. "Ann ArborDays", fects following the absence of this "Tanlkardl Song", and~ "Old Friar's gland. Dogs are subject to the same ! Soug"-Var sity quintette. 9. Ha- influences as humrans, he stated. For wanlan selections--Tang and Tavarres. instance, the Bassett hounds. Pekin- 0. College Songs--Glee club. gese an Engishbull dogs are. x Tonight's concert includes the same gese an Engishnumbers which the Glee club is to am~pler of dogs4 that lack normal de- peeto t srn rpt ei velopm~ent, characterized by the ex- April 7. The itinerary of the trip tremely short and 'bent legs comnpared thus far includes three large Ohio ci- to the rest of the body. Humans sim- ties. Forlty men are scheduled, to ilarly undergo the sam~e deform~ed de- make the trip. velopment when the thyroid gl~md is Tickets are now on sale at the UPn- misig I ion and at Wahr'q and GQ hm's book- . However4, tis undeveloped type& of stores at 50 cents apiece.! hum an should not be~ confus d w ith - --te m d e y e . T e m d e s i go d p o o t o , b t u d r i e ; t eC 1 foMdv l p e t r s l i g f o a k o , ##lthe thyroid gland is not proportional.Y O T Further proof of this property of the , T O CT O Cth r i gl n a e t e ex r m n s.n developed to a noi-mal state by use of the thiyriod gland. ARtUVE AT wrESTFRN SCHOOL Dr, Stoekard is one of a series of TUSA papers of general 1 be open to the ; d in the Natural; at 3 o'clock to- "The Length ofa ased on Observa- Field of Physical c of a paper which tim'e by Prof. Wit-E. ad. of the _depart- he lecture will he ern slides. Prof. Ethe ancient his- il speakc on. "The3 he Mchigan Pap- speakers lbeing brouigbt to, be "nt versity by the zoological department. Ile his been engaged in the study of zoologcal and biological subjects for. mnany-.years, and is~ actively connect- ed with many leading .scientifescie- To various sections of 'ties. be held as follows, opoogy, room F214, '" BL afternoon, 'March 29,.ll ; ~ ii ~ ~ I r'oom at 10 o'clock R M rh 3 . S cin8 -Q -1 1 O 8272'tra cec ock Thursday morn-- on Page Two) Tickets will be sold for the third -- annual Military ball, to be held April tve' j,~ I27 in the combined Waterman and f ( !lfi ll fBarbour gymnasiums, from 1 to 5 LL V U'o'clock this after'noon anid tomorrow tson $peaks Ur begvnalproswoepli, iand F~rday ? Lons~ were accepted, at the time stated Robinon ofJohn on the acceptance, upon. the payment ity will deies l~iI of the $5.60 admission charge. A ra "ClassicalSsil maximum of 650) tickets will be dis- ior" Thursday and tliibuted. clock Newberry hall. k limited number hkats been re"".v sor. Robinson will ed for es-service mnen on the faculty tHieyapolis, Sardis to whom applications w-ill be mailed nd Friday. on~ Coo-I April 1 by the Military Ball commit- Ephesus, Priene and tee. Faculty military men will, be griven first preference "ip the applica- ll deal with the subl- tion for tickets and all are assured adt- nial manner, CiviTg . mission. upon application., punt of mnany of the________ lres will be illustrat-; ^ fides. Cored Club Play * (Special to The-Daily) Berk~eley, Cal., March 26.- Coach Fielding H. Yost will arrive here Thurs~day from Los Angeles having completed heis tour of southern Call- forila. Planis are being carried .for- ward at the University of California to entertain the Michigan football mentor during his stay. Alumni from the surrounding country as well as imany of Yost's old Stanford players are preparlag to greet the."Old Man" on his first trip to the far west since At~ Los Angeles and Pasadena the l Coach was royally entertained with luncheons, banquets and receptions. 1Aporters were continually after him for pictures and interviews. Two thousand highs school athletes viewed the six reels of Michigan football C'igames in the afternoon. Michigan songs, cheers and, colors predom- mnated.. 3The CoachI is In the best of health j and feeling fine after his long trip,. His last dlate is in Spokane on April 7. lie will return to Ann Arbor I'April 11. Discussion of the proposed change. in the constitution of the Stdent council will be completed at the meet- ing of the Student council tomorrow night at the Union. The :report will then be turned over to the Senate comx- Mittee for the investigation of stu- dent government who will i turn sub- mit it to the Senate council for fnl action. All studens are Iinlied to attend the" meeting. The provisions :to be discussed ;to- morrow evening are as follo s: .'Membershiip of the 'Cucil:. The Student council shall ,cosst of nine nembers to bje elected from the cam- ius at large, anxd three ex-offico mem- bers. In the event that the president I shall be elected other than from the( iersonnel of the councl; the c4ouncil l shall then ceonsist of thirtee pwmbers. I Ex-officLoemnberg lamed "The sx-ofico meabers shall be the President of the &Ichg'~u Union the TEdto, .f The Michigan aly, and the capta 4n of ta .Yl o ! z tea ' to 1 1servly dtiring the year that they. shall actively l brad thes mffce. No ex-ollo membrer shall hold any bi-t' I ice of the council. "of the nine elected memberssi4 Imen aire to be chosen eac y~ar threei of whom shall serve a one year term and three a two yar term. .Any mank on the campus shall, be" eligible to election.11 "Elections to~vacancles shAWbe by vote of th Sttd;ti council. Nomia. Lions to vacance sherd, lbe nae y the noiinatixig'crmittee in te ma tier herein~fter ,- rovi ed fr r omia- tions. MemberS s rto eleced shall srveh for' the balance of .teter3,so vact- ed. Notice 'of an, elation.' to fill ya cancles shall be given atite preced- ing meeting' coxoetl to Nomninute " "Manner of nominatlii ad of Wee- Lion of Candidates:,'The body fo: nomination of elective hiefibers sb4 be °composed of .the- three ex-offci Mnembers. and the v president, vice-. president, and the secretary of th council.',, "At least twice as many shall b nominated as are to be ;elected. Any mnember of the 'conci shall have te right to place names "on tih list °to be considered. The nomiating cou- mittee shall ,theu determine how many men are to be nominated, and eac i member of the committee shall then vote for that 'number of men. Thos receiving the hight number of VOW-t shall he considered nominated. po- viding in all casa tat they shall hav received a majority of the vtes of the Inominating body. ii ase of a tie or lack df , majority, a reve hall ;be taken. These naominatlonts shall be made at least two Weeks previous t0 the election and published in The "Any man may be nominated by pe- tition, said petition to cotain the names of at. least tOfteen percent of the men in each school or college f the University. Nominatons upon pe-I tition to be filed with the secretary of the Student council at least one week before election. Te members of the Student council -are to be voted for by meni only. i "Election of President: The presi- dent shall he nominated and elected1 (Continued oni Page Two) JIICIJIGAN 7 MlThN as well as Fiichigan wp'men ar being offered opportunities ev- ery day that canot bereached by students 'of other niversi- ties and ollegtes. Wen Oppor- Col. Josiah tiedgewood Col. Josiah Wedgewood, B'ritish lab- or member in parliament, has stirred that body by his charges -against the French in the tulir district. He crit- icized Great Britain for holding aloof. SORORITY HOUSE Theta Pi Alpha Is See of Disas- 1rous Fire Yester- 'rio" FRATERNITIES ALSO 3 a ' ti ' ''r ^( ..., x, ,y k 1 j 7 } } 1F{t i 4 t 4 E ' < 1 a C i 4 y J j i t F 1 1, t 4- ate school, Prf.Hoac ..........of MTN A) IN, FIRE EPII)EMfIC of uraemic poisoning which the Law school, Prof. L. A. H1opkins Friday, but the actress astonisl secretary of the engineering college Twenty-six girls, members of the physicians by her repeated ri. Prof. Leroy Waterman, of the Spinet- Theta Phi Alpha sorority at 821 East her will to live just as sheC lcs department, Prof. I. Leo Sharf- y September when hope had t~an, of the economics department. U~niversity were forced out of their times been abandoned. James Inglis, '01, H. B. Earhart, and hous'e by a fire which probably de- Was Poet, Novelist and Sct Staley G. Stevens of Ann Arbor veloped from a defective chimney, at Bernhardt's last stage role w .fudge. :Angell, Julian 1-. Harris, '98. 1 o'lc eteday fteno. ThisI er filled. She insisted she wo L.. Wb. Goodenough, '98L, Mir. Pope. 'lc eea no. pear but th~e doctors and her ITarry C. Bulkley, '95L, and Paul R fire was one of five fires that occurred interfered and prevented her Gray, '9, Detroit, Prof. R. H. Ryder yesterday. last appearance was in the of the Michigan Agriculturalcollege Some members from a house across picture- which remains unfii J'. Arthur Whitworth, '94, and William i She found timetobpet1 'A. Greeson, '79, of Grand Rlapids, and the street from the sorority house and sculptor. Ernest B1. Perry, '89B, of Bay City, i were the first to detect the flames, The loss of her right leg at EXecutiVe Committee the Satute which started in the upper part of ginning of the war caused her The executive committee of thle the building. They immediately not- it her movements on the stage Board of Trustees whose function is edtoewo erinheosea not binder leer appearances. S to determine the site and plans for the the time and bean removing valu.,ble hemifruebalypa buildingwill remain the same as orig- 'household articles, the soldiers and used to the rnally. It is composed of Judge An- Damange Covered by Insurance her wonderful voice which .4el, a chirma, M. Rlkle, M, jnevrer to tire. ~~~~~~~~~~ ,~caraM. ukcM. A large crowd gathered around the__________ Good>3ughr, lr. Grey, Mr. Hjarris,; scene of the fire, witnessing the ef-, kl.Inigi, 111. Pope, Mr. John1 . 4 forts made by the members to save SEIL 2Mfl OP1TICS II nrusel of D~etroit, and Mt'. Stevens. their personal articles. Act'on by the UJ Wlt No pthubic campaign for funds i9 fire department was delayed through E cotn g tti.c liae ep at the p llos en tim e $1 the fact that the nearest fire m ain w as FIR S T - T R IA L e ga e h t alEf0, n c s t ;t r b i ci n ; iad founde tor ltoe frozn andthfieoe hadF to be lengthened to reach the next -, end'owmeftt. will be raised throutgl un- nearest fire nmain. It tool: 15 minutes More than 2500 copies of "TJ solicited pledges. Many pledges have before thep firemen could get the fire iga'n Optic", campus rotogravvi alr-eady be~e'n made, one alumnus of I ne oto.Te pe w tre azine were, sold dluring the pay the University promising a contribu- of 'the building were completely de- Ienid according to a statement1 dion of X100.00. ;troyed by the flarmes. vey Reed, '24E, business manag -Prof,. Charle, F. Kent, of Yale uni- i IIrneo h hueaonst terday. The sale was as su~cce oneuanc'on h$17useamonts o the editors of the paper had versify,on of .the founder's and the 4$70 of which $12,000 was placed and will insure the financial director of .thee national school of re- ,on the house and $5,000 on the furnf- of the new paper if it cant: ligion tovement, was in town for the "ture. A complete estimate of the dam- ° succeeding issues. meeting. He talked at the oven for-s ages has not been made, but it is be- The issue that was published um mesting of the Congregrationalj lieved that they will be adequately time was the first of three tria chZtirch on Sunday noon and outlined covered by the insurance. 'recently authorized by the B carefully, the origin and history ofI Other Fires Reported Control of Student Publicatio the national movement, and gave th Arrangements were made whereby e r the provsosfthauo reasons for choosing Michigan as the the members were to be lodged tern-! of the new paper, three issuer site'-for the first school. Hle will be; porarily in neighboring houses and so-1 be published dluring the in Detroit this week, attending con- rarities, until another p)lace of resi- school year, and must be sut flerences of the executive committee B ence is decided upon. by the inem- fin ancial , and in all other wh~o are formulating the future plns br.fniuewsmvdyvans have the magazine continue of Qovganftation. 1 Bbersomnue was me oerbyns The Optic is a 1.6 page roto ~nd sme tke~nintomagazine made up of pictures flherfirs wre epotedat he hipus events taken by a staff of Othe fies erereprte atthePhigraphers. John Russell, '24, D3elta Theta fraternity 'house at 1.437 aging editor for the trial issue oflthe roof was consumed by flames; President Burton Speaks atI " O MMRF t the Alpha Delta Phi,. fraternity President Mlarion L. Durtot I~fl~tJII1 UIIIIILI lo use, 556 South State street, at 1302 last night before the Rotary Earl' C. Michener, congressman for Volland* street, and at 1032 Vaughn NJiles, on the University's1 the second congressional district, will street. . program. He was the guestc preside, at the luncheon meeting of the ident Frederich Grigg's of tl Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce, !urunna r rn ual Missionary college, at which is to be held at 12:10 o'clock 'i~lVi~lII~ U~I Springs. LUU*i i fk rl n h.," ^fJ1VI I1Ji~ w(tmmr r . . * *SS - OF *OOD Paris, March 26.-(By ah Bernhardt died peacef arias of her son, Mauris, tonight. In life she had li ing tour of emotion and realism and pathos in lie death scenes. At the and she quietly drifted away ii tired after her long fig death which she did not w: er feared. W'indows Closed Flm'sI Hope for the life of th( ress had long since been and half an hour before away those in attendance sinking beyond recover knowing her recuperative was thought she might 1 the night, ine. Bernhardt dlied ina on the second floor of her windows wide open on thi Pereire, the noise of true] roads keeping up a low ro she was long accustomed. sudden closing of these w gave the signal to those watching without that Bei (ldead. Death was due to a ren ENGINEERlING PROGRAMS TO 0E ORDERED TODAYi ins. with i onzgniuwtVVZLL~e Oen To Puh~v Orders for commencement exercise programs for senior engineer-s will be taken from 9 to 12 and 1 to 4 today gplo :a author andt 1' Kreymhorg kpril 5 in cor borg's lectui r the auspice legiate Aluii Jugh E. Kee hien's commn v ,F .. -' vv '7w nd ooro t U~Wa b(-othii ruiu. or r the Engineering society's room in the -Featured by the presentation of two l Engineering building. The price of t," plays Comedy club will throw its ; the leather invitation which contains 's doors open to the public for the first the names of all graduates and the n_ timne this year when it offers Strind-jcmeeenprga wilslfo re burg's "The Stronger" and Dunsany's > 5 cents while the printed announce- es "Fame and the Poet" at 8 o'clock this u- venng n, ara Cswel Agel hal.ments will cost 10.: The invitations el-' The former of these plays will be mutbpadfrweorrdan it- a departure from the ordinary dra- class dues paid before. delivery, about matic presentation -and will be some- Junie 1. y,' what of an experiment. In it Beth- Canes, cabs and gowns. for engi- he any Lovell, '25, as 'Mrs. X does, all 1 neers must be ordered at Moe's sport as the talking, wShile the part of Mrs. Y,: shop, One hundred and twenty-five Es taken by Virginia Brodel, S of IM is a have been. ordered to date. 'he pantomime role in which there 'are be! no lines. + Dr Sink Starts Private Practice inn.; He will also make a brief ad-, I dressy IThe ;meeting is to take the form of a congratulation and a greeting to Re- ' gent'Junius E. Beatl, '82, and George T. IBurke, '07. ' Regent Beal is a candi-, date for re-election to ,the. office he now holds anrid Mr. Burke is a candi- date 'for justice of the Sup reme court. Both are membhers of. the Chamber of Commerce.' Kenneth Westerman will lead in5 singing and Theodore Trost is to play' the .accompaniments. Comedy .Club Announces Correctionj Duie:to an error it was errontously stated in The Daily last Sunday that tickets for the Comedy club play, "MAlr. SEEN INNEAR FUTURE~ "It is probable that there will be proposed in the near future, somec plan whereby it will be °possible to' supervise all student eating houses in Ann Arbor," Dr. Warren E. Forsythe.' director of the Health service, said yesterday. "From the standpoint or, student health, this is a problem whichj the Health service has long been in- terested in.'. Several years ago an effort wasj made to provide for this supervision, l but the plan did not meet with approv- al at the time. 1As outlined by Dr. Forsythe, thel Botanical Journal Clab toI Menmbers of the Botanical club will meet at 8 o'clock th ning in room 176 of the Natui once building.- 1 Daily Staff IThe entire Itryouts of the + 5 o'clock tad Ij meeting at 4 C Mtleets editoria Daily v ay. UT o'clockt. m", a short doll pla by a group of tI ,ho wvill present it Robert Frost and 1) r of the play. T tage settings willt aC, gu( Vansity G~olf Try-o A meeting of all candidates has bees I i