I ~DAY / ~fr i4an :3ati 31 and WESTERN CONFE EDITORIAL ASSO' 155 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1924 EIGHT PAGES PRICE, F [0 TOWNS N900 BELT S PLACE TOTAL AT MORE K 111 LINA WORSE EAN OTHERS erty Damage Esthnated To ReachI rell Over Ten Million: Troops On Guard lanta, Ga., May 1.-(By AP)- i and rural communities, strick- y an epidemic of tornadoes that d ruthlessly through seven sou- i states yesterday were recovering ly to-night. Relief workers frona nized services and volunteers had task well under way in scores ilages leveled. ports gathered placed the totall i list at 111. There still was no1 ite estimate of the personsin- 1but belief persisted that the er would reach 500. roperty Damage In Millions operty damage will be muchj er than at first anticipated, it was ated today. The only estimate opted-that of $10,000,000-prob- CLOCK TURNS BACK WhEN . BOYS FILL CAMPUS WALKS{ I The campus clock stopped, inE fact to all appearances it had been turned back several years,{ shortly after 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The cause of thisE illusion was the presence ofE swarms of small, dressed-up{ { little boys who invaded the pre- cincts or their elders at about { that hour on their way to Hill E auditorium where the boys' Loy- alty parade passed.{ One passerby was heard to remark: "They're a great little Ibunch, and riot much different { from the ones that are generally I I { one the campus except for size." TWELVE INITIATED INTO TAU BETA P1 F. N. Calhoun, Instruclor Of Mechanic. al Engineering Department, Also Given Honor BURSLEY GIVES PRINCIPAL ADDRESS OF THE EVENING Twelve juniors and one instructor were initiated by Tau Beta Pi, nation- al honorary engineering fraternity yesterday afternoon, following which ceremony a banquet was held a the Union. Dean Joseph A. Bursley, was 11 be Caro lsped. a was the worst strick- a states visited by the ,ross workers and oth- iderson's and at Hor- neat and state troops Property damage at ie was $750,000. The as disclosed the tol-. ths; South Carolina 81, Alabama 11, North Carol- sana 1, Arkansas 1. port More Deaths, nal deaths were reported ibia wher'e 2 injured per- n hospital aid at Robert- C. where belated reports -ister striking tbere, Ines were'said to have been ad an appeal for aid was Mayor Cox. One uniden- the principal speaker of the evening, giving an address on "Tau Beta Pi." J. W. Hostrup, '24E, acted as toast-1 master during the evening, while Rip- ley Shemm, '24E, gave the address of welcome' to the new men. Stewart fulse, '25E, responded for the'Initi- ates. More than 60 members were present, including several representat- ives from the Alpha chapter of the society at MV. A. 0.. The instructor who was received as an associate member was Floyd N. Calhoun of the mechanical engineer- ing department. He was a graduate of Louisana State college in 1916, re- ceiving his degree in mechancial en- gineering. He first came to the University in the summer of 1921, when he took' graduate work in that .line of study. September 1922 he was appointed asI a teaching assistant for a year and this year has served as an instructor.- He has recently been appointed by the Regents to retain that post for 1924- 25 The students, all junior engineers, who were initiated yesterday, are: G. E. Bosserdet, W. H. Cooper, F. M. Freeman, W. S. Hearding, S. H. lse, C. L. Hulswit . W. Reed, D. 3.Reese, K. B. Robertson, R. S. Scribner, H. A. Sheridan, W. W. Spanagal. NOMINATIONS ANNOUNCED FO0R OORRICAL0BOA RD0 School Heads To Gather For Meeting Today Meeting for the first time, the su- perintendents and general school ad- ministrators for the various Michigan schools will hold a conference here today. They plan to discuss educa- tional problems in. their fields. Maintenance costs and prevailng rates for school buildings in the mat- ters of lighting, water and gas; ed- ucation of the public to look upon tax-, es as a savings instead of as an as- sessment; and methods of budget making for school systems will be some of the subjects discussed. The superintendents will also raise questionsnas to the methods to be adopted in obtaining better trained I teachers, the raising of standards of life certificates, the value of the mus ic memory contests, plans for making the School of Education more service- able, and the practicability of adopt- ing a simple. and effective teaching rating that might be uniform through- out the state. Prof. George Strayer of the New York Teachers' college will be pres- ent and will conduct a number of the, meetings. Members from the faculty of the School of Education will alsoI attend and will assist in solving some of the problems. CCNE DTE OF HONOS C6OVOCTION TO MAY 131 Because of a conflict in the ar- rangements for another campus fun- ction, the date for the Honors convo- cation, originally set for the after- noon, of May 8, has been changed to 4:15 o'clock Tuesday May 13, in Hill auditorium, according to announce- ment made yesterday by Dr Arthur G. Hall, who is in charge of the ar- rangements during the absence of Dean Hugh Cabot of the medical school. President Marion L. Burton will de- liver the main address at the convo- cation, at which the highest ten per- cent of each of the senior be present. Holders of graduate school fellowships, and winners of prizes and medals in journalism, ora- tory, and various other departments will be invited to attend the function. YOST TO-GIVE ADRES BEFORE CCAPGOLUMNI1 Chicago, May 1.-(By AP)-Field- ing H,. Yost will be one of the speakers at the dinner of the University of Michigan club at Chicago Friday evening, May 9-. lie will discuss the building of men, which he claims, "is the purpose of all education." "Schools and colleges can best dis- charge their responsibility by stim- ulating simultaneously the four-sid-. ed man. The head, heart and body must be nurtured to the end that tie boy may have a clean jntellect, a sound character and an active, healthy virile body. NAMECOMMITTEE OINr Members of the nominating com-I mittee of the Student Christian associ- ation have been chosen. They are: J. K. Dunn, '24, chairman, Harold Steele, W2E, John Detar, '24, Rensi 'Likert, '26 and Milo Oliphant, '24E. . Petitons to apply for places on the ballot as candidates in the campus el- ections, May 13 will be received today l or next weeek. BELGIANS ACT AS GO-BET WEENS ON DAWES PROPOSAL1 THEUNIS AND HVINANS ARRIVE IN LONDON TO GET PREMIER MACDONALDIS VIEWS WOULD SMOOTH OVER ALLIED DIFFERENCES British Urge Removal Of Debt Control; From Hands Of Reparations Commilssion London, May 1.-(By AP)-Premier Theunis and Foreign Minister Hy-_ Imans of Belgium arived in London to-1 night on the second of the visits they are paying to France, England and Italy to ascertain the views of the el- lied governments on methods for mak- Ing the Dawes plan effective. .Fresh from Paris, the Belgian em- missaries who are assuming their old role as go-betweens in the allied negotiations, will be able to ;seek~ Premier Poincare's mind as well as their own when they meet Prime Min- ister MacDonald at Cheqluers Courts tomorrow. In return, they will hear the British thesis, which, whilehnot new indicates an outcropping of the! old Anglo-French differences, forgot- ten since the British resigned themsel- ves to the occupation of the Ruhr. Mr. MacDonald, it is understood, will inform the Belgians that the British government would like to see the business-like beginning which the ex- pert made, continued in carrying out their recommendations, and therefore will propose to the allies when the pro- per time comes, that application of the expert's proposal be taken out of the hands of the reparations commission as far as is possible and put into ef- feet by a new allied agreement with the Germans which could be obtained by direct negotiations. I MILLKA TOIVEI.BOYS' MARCH I N SPECHTOMORROW' L OYALTY PARADE In regard to the present issue, the so-called Poetry number, one hesitates to say too much. There is a great plethora of sentiment about the hills, and the lost roads to the hills, and the stern mountains, the blue sea and sky, on and on it runs until everyone real- ly is a trifle weary. The majority of the versification is from bad to worse, extremely conven- tional, extremely tiresome; but there are several contributions-and it is ridiculous to hope for more than a few significant pieces in any magazine -which seem to create the required lyric atmosphere that instinctively satisfied one. ea economy oI means. 7ore lan MS, there seems to be a fairly obvious idea to it and fortunately no hopeless search for subtlety. As for the rest.... T may be very wrong in my opinion.- One contribu- tion, however, one "Oblivion" seems uniquely bad. To be fair, I can quote the majority of the line-and writing them as the prose that they are- which run like this: "Smoke, blue and brown, in a thin wavering thread, as- cends from the burning tip of my cig- arettee...'.Smoke, blue and brown, rushes swiftly to the sky, and spreads out into a transparent negation." You like it? R.B.II. Winner of Nobel Prize To Speak Phi Beta appa Initiation Banquet At1 IS NOTED AUTHORITY ON MODERN PHYSICS PROBLEMS Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan, the second American to win the Nobel prize in physics and the contributor of some of the greatest discoveries in the field in recent years, will speak at theI annual initiation banquet of Phi Beta Kappa, honorary international schol- astic society, at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow Whimsies Criticized As Poor Attempt At "Highbrow" Poetry There is something quite wrong with "Mountains" by V. Carleton Havens Whimsies. There is an air of heavy is one of these. "Anticipation" by solmnity about it and everything iP Mary Cooley, '26, another. I am never so deadly in earnest. It stands as quite sure of Miss Cooley's verse. Michigan's literary Magazine, the sole Generally I miss the point-although surviving beacon light of local "Kul-l that is more due to my lack of appre- tur", desperately staving off the fate ciation, I suppose, thankhers-and of the Sunday Magazine. The fact is, while it may not be good poetry, at it is trying to be highbrow-an un- Ileast it certainly is not bad poetry. pardonable sin at a university, where I "Paradox" by Dorothy Tyler is very the slightest interest in things art-|excellent. There is something fresh isticTer and beautiful results in every. 'ind ofnostracism. sand unstilted about it, and an unaffect- n fnnnm M of mon Xfnn thn thiC Rand, Scouts, Military Org'anizatlons Reviewed By Burton, Yost, From Stand TODAY'S PLANS INCLUDE SPECIAL RAiDIO PROGRAM Hundreds of school children from Ann Arbor and the outlying districts marched in the Loyalty parade held yesterday to mark the climax of Ann Arbor's observance of Loyalty day for Boy's Week. Other units of the par- ade were the University band and the "M" club, the Boy Scouts, militaryl NORTHERN OH9 WILL TILT TON SIX CONFERENCE SCOI CLASH AT EIGHT O'Cl . FOR VERBAL HONOR WINNER WILL RECE TESTIMONIAL O 111ill Auditorium To Be S Annual Battle Of Words Foi Time Since 1918 Orators representing mor 60,000 mid-western students w at 8 o'clock tonight in Hill au in the thirty-fourth annual of the Northern Oratorical The contest has not been held Arbor since 1918, and will not here again until 1930. There are six Conference in the league, Northwestern sity and the Universities of W Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota ,an gan. Of these Northwestern 1 gan's greatest rival, having firsts to 10hof the University William Schier, '24, will ri the University in thus cont will be the first speaker, his being "Is Progress a Delusioi second speaker will be North% well known woman orator, Ali son. Her subject is "Saviors The Wisconsin speaker, Ha Cranefield, will follow with his "Justice for France." Levingston To Speak Max Levingston, who will r the University of Iowa, wi speak on "Social Control c ution." He will be followed Illinois speaker, Morris Sosti will speak on "Wanted-A R Idealism." The last speaker Llewellyn Pfan-Kuchen, UnivE Minnesota. He will speak c Control of Progress. Each speaker will speak on ject, which of his own choice, than 15 minutes. Stanley B. University of Minnesota, nation ident of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary forensic fraternity o be broadcasted from New York, at 8:30 o'- w night, by station of his talk on music night of March 27, Mr. an experiment in nging" by radio. Thej was to prove his belief eople everywhere could i the same song at the in tune and time with FRENCH CLUB WILL GIVE LEMEDCINMAIGRE LUIB The eighteenth annutaj Frech~~ "Le Medecin Malgre Lui" by M61Th A together with a curtain raiser, "L -I Anglais Tel Qu'on Le Parle" by Ber- nard Trfistan, both comedies, will beI presented this evening in Sarah Cas- well Angell hall at eight o'clock. ; The plays are under the auspices of the Cercle Francais and are in charge1 of Mr. John H. Muyskens, assisted by Dr. Jean B. Cloppet, Mr. Robert V. Finney, Mr. Anthony J. Jobin, and. Prof. Herbert A. Kenyon of the Ro- mance Languages department. The cast of "L'Anglais Tel Qu'on Le Parle" will include Samuel Ben- iil& as Eugene, T. J. Montgomery as I-ogson, Robert Henderson as Julien, Miriam Mansfield as Betty, Mark Ire-I land as Le Garcon, Edward Parnall as L'Inspecteur, Everett Tobin as thej Policeman, and Germaine JBaer as La Caissiere. All members or associate members1 of the Cercle Francais will be ad- mitted on presentation of their'mem- bership cards, and single tickets at fifty cents may be purchased at the door. r a r' ' , I., k". { . ', I 1, 't . night in the main dining room of the organizations, and local civic organiz- Union. Professor Milikan's subject ations.1 will be, "The Significance of Modern From the reviewing stand near Hill Scien" auditorium, Coach Fielding H. Yost, Science. general chairman for tile week's pro- The famous physicist took his bach-r Prsintu elor degree at Oberlin college in 1891 angra; P resid ew, wi ton. and was there after awarded degrees and Mayor George E. Lewis, with 0th- b Columbia, Berlin, Northwestern er local represntatives, paid their res- Amherst and Dublin universities. He pects to the boys. Coach Yost, who AsmhersthandDublin unibersitie s. e!sponsored the Loyalty essay contest is the author of a number of books, held recently among the Ann Arbor among the most recent being "The El- Ischools, awarded prizes to the winnersj ectron" in 1917. Last year Professor 'at the start of the parade. Millikan was awarded the Nobel prize Floats in- the parade were presented in physics for his distinguished work by local organizations. The Ann Ar-? in that field, notably for his proof bor chamber of commerce depicted the that electricity has an atomic struct- city as it was 100 years ago; another ure and for his measurement of the float represented the spirit of '76.f unit charge of the electron. He shares Although yesterday's program marks the honor of being tone of IAlhogheeseda'sprgammak tAmerin o wbingthisonorwithe only the high spot of the week, special cer- Americans to win this honor with A. emonies will continue today and to- A. Michelson who was similiarly ,m row. Today has been set aside as awarded in 1907. "Boy's Day at Home", and in the Dr. Milikan is now associated with' evening a radio program will be broad- the Norman Bridge laboratory of1 cast in accord with the spirit of the physics at the California Institute of day. Coach Yost will speak on "Play- Technology, Pasadena, and is chair- ing the Game," the University quar- man of the administrative council of tette will sing, and winners in the that organization. ILoyalty essay contest will read their Dean Henry M. Bates of the law composition. The program will be school, president of the Michigan broadcasted at 7 o'clock from station chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, will act as D 99 W0BC, wave length 280 meters. toastmaster for the occasion. Tick- We8 jets are $1.50 and will be sold at the bers who have dent speaker. F. N. Rarig of of Wisconsin, IH Wilbert of of Northweste of the -public Each judge wi own on a pol The winner of ti ceive a $100 testi endowment given I Frank O. Lowden the speaker taking a $50 prize from th Nwill also be an hon The Northern Or founded in 1890 tl of Professor Trueb the "daddy" of tb time there were o ,Michigan, Northwe and Oberlin. Iowa j 1894. In 1896 the cago Joined, but visible chor- songs, begin- A few sec-f ent was com- deluged with the success of the first haw, who was formerly' tropolitan Opera com- York, and who present- "Cosi Fan Tutte" and in Ann Arbor recent- iced the second sing for Lt. nce, Mr. Hinsliaw an- ntrance of the Univer- use into the radio field, me as his song leading. invited to drop into the w night, it was announc- Mr. Hinshaw singing 1 as it is picked up, by Nominations for the Oratorical Board for 1924-25 were announced last night by the nominating committee of the present board. They are, for president, F. H. Backstrom, '26L, and 1 E. H. Salzman, '25; for vice-president, W. C. Dixon, '26, and B. B. Sibley, '25; for secretary, Elizabeth VanValken- burg, '26, and Beata C. Wagner, '25; and for treasurer , J. J. Dunn, '26, and A. E. Sawyer, '26. In adition to these four officers, who will be elected at the campus elections on May 13, the new board will elect four delegates-at large, and each of the literary societies will elect one member making in all, 11 studentt and three faculty members. BANDUTO I UUCUONCEIT INKALAMAZOOTONIGHTI QUAKE SHOCKS REPORTED4 BY ST, LOUIS OBSERVER',1 St. Louis, May 1, (By A. P.)- Violent earthquake shocks were re- ported on the seismograph of St.- Louis university from 2 until 3:01 o'clock this afternoon. Brother Reuptel, in charge of the instrument estimated the' disturbance was at a distance of 2100 miles, in a south-I easterly direction. This, he said, would be in the neighborhood of Porto Rico. NO TRACE OF MARTIN EPORT OF US., CRUISER qi Cu nion immediately before the ban- iet. AZAMAN PEAK ONFORENSIC CONVENTION Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary, E U U U forensic fraternity, opened it's annual convention last night with a banquet "Th. inner Develanment of Eglish in the Union. Tonf P .B. Blanshard her place b t that time to WERSON TO SUCCEED BARRETT AS MINISTER Dr. Merle H. Anderson will succeed L. A. Barrett, D. D., as minister the Presbyterian church of this y, delivering his first sermon Sun-' y forenoon. Doctor Anderson comes from Mor- town, New Jersey, where he has en engaged as secretary of the eas- n district of the New Era Movement the Presbyterian church. He grad- ted from Washington-Jefferson col- ge in 1893 and McCormick Theolog- AI seminary in 1896. The retiring minister, Doctor Bar t, is moving to Wooster, Ohio, where will persue Philosophical research' Sixty members of the University band will leave for the concert trip to Kalamazoo at 11:45 today. They will be met at the depot by the Ki- wanis club whose guests they will be while in the city. Dinner with the! Kiwanis club in the Park-American hotel will be followed by a short par- ade around the city. The main concert will be at 8:00 o'clock in the armory. The long clas- sical program which has featured in the past will give place to a lighter program of strictly popular appeal. If this experiment proves successful the spring band bounce will probably be of the same type. Games Chairmen Will Meet Today Bowling Season Closes At Union Bowling activities of Michigan stu- dents for the present have been dis- continued with the closing yester- day of the alleys in the Union. It is customary for the Union manage-. ment to shut down the bowling alleys every year between May 1 and Octo- ber -. due to the lack of interest in the sport during tihe warm weather months. New York, May 1.-The Zayas ad-. ministration in Cuba has imprisonedj all suspected revolutionists in Havana as result of the revolt of soldiers in Santa Clara province according to in- forniation Gustavo Gutierres of the Literature" was the subject of Prof.I Louis Cazmian's lecture yesterday af- ternoon. Ile traced briefly the history of tendencies in English literature since Chaucer, giving the main char-' acteristics of each age. "Intellect and imagination form the whole field of possibilities for artists," said Profes- sor Cazmian. "An age of realism always follows an age of romanticism. "Fatigue is the mainspring of liter-' ary change," according to Professor Cazmian. "Literary tendencies do not operate as a pendulum, but as a spir- fal. Romanticism of one age is en a different plane from romtnaicism of another. A law of human nature is involved in this fickleness, which is the power of consciousness to accumu- late past experience. "The greatest writers of tpday are characterized by a keeness of analysis, concreteness, and directness of per- ception. This is a regression toward the systematic ideal of classicism," said Prof.' Cazamian. Professor Moore Confined To Hone? JU G1 ~ 1l. LU. ,- . U )aio a of the philosophy department gave the principal address. His subject wasI "The Oratorical Mind." . Stanley B. Houck, national presi- dent of the organization, spoke on the work of the convention. Prof. T. C. Trueblood of the public speaking de- partnient delivered "Some Remarks." F. H. Backstrom, '26L, gave the ad- dress of welcome for the Michigan chapter. G. E. Bigge of the economics department acted as toastmaster. The convention will hold business 1 meetings this morning and this after- noon in the reading room of the Un- ion. The delegates will attend the Northern Oratorical contest in Hill auditorium tonight. EDMUNDS TALS BEFORE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE The contest is held school every year, maki every six years. Last yi at the University of. Mi old BerOlzheimer of Nor was reputed to be the in the Conference last place in this contest by vote of the judges. Gerrit Demmink, '23, t1 presentative, took thir( contest last year wit "The Mind in Thrall." The contest is open Persons attending -are in their seats before 8 contest will start prop will be admitted to I during an oration. Tau Sigm I Names 7 Bremerton, Wash., May 1.-(By A.P.) -A wireless message from the Coast Guard. cutter Algonquin at Dutch Har- bor, Alaska, received about noon to- day said no trace had been found of Major Martin, missing around-the- world aviator, and that it was hoped he had turned back towards Chignik{ whence he flew yesterday. Tau Sigma Delta, 1 nity in architecture, pledging of the followi men from the archit Jean C. Harrington, Buell, '24, Laura L. E neth C. Black, '25, L '25, Drothy Eggert,' Simpson, '25. It has tom of this organiza twice a year, and to h STwo Conference Teams Defeated Prof. C. C. Edmunds, of the econo- mics department, addressed the mem- bers of the University chamber of com- merce last night and opened a series 1 i