Section AIV -M I m A6a att Section Two Two VOL. XXXIV. No. 99 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1924 PRICE, FIVE CEN s ALUMNI. CATALUUE PUBLISHED LISTS MO'RE THAN 6091000 H. L. SENSEMANN DIRECTS NEW ISSUE OF DECI-ANNUAL PUBLICATION ONE THIRD GRADUATES SERVED IN WORLD WAR 36,600 Students Hae Been Grad eated Since 1837; 4,O00 Degrees Conferred More than 1,300 copies of the Alum- ni catalogue, issued by the University every ten years, have been mailed to those who have ordered them and Radio Broadcasting Stations Increase Among Universities Practically unheard of in colleges out daily musical concerts. Illinois a few years ago, radio broadcasting broadcasts lectures and other items statios are perate ypracticall of interest twice a week. Minnesota, a t o la r e o ver aitied o r pratc al .y Ohio State, and Purdue are other Big allthelarerunierstie o th con-Ten universities that give frequent1 try today, government records reveal, programs. The University' of Ro-; I I The stations vary from small experi- mental plants constructed by mein- bers of the engineering departments of the schools, to powerful ready- made, long range, broadcasting appa- ratus. Extension lectures, concerts, readings. market and weather reports, and many other types of program are being transmitted from these stations daily. Trhe most recent to come into the field of college broadcasting is Sta- tion WCBC here at the University. While comparatively small in size and built primarily as laboratoryi equipment, the plant has reached the most distant states in the Union in chester (N. Y.) transmits weather re- ports and concerts daily, and on Sun- day an afternoon church service. Among other institutions with regis- tered wireless telephone transmitting plants are the Universities of Pennsyl- vania, Cornell, Cincinnati, Oregon, Washington, Colorado, North and South Dakota, Arizona, Louisiana, Le- land Stanford, Jr., Ollahoma. Texas, and Vermont. Officials of many of these stations say that they have found in the radio the ideal way to get in touch with their alumni and with people inter- ested in their athletic contests and other big functions. By the volume and distribution of the answers they1 have received from listeners-in, they have been able to find out that s~uch programs as they broadcast are ac- tually needed and enjoyed not only by their immediate communities but sometimes even in far removed places. i 1, t 1' f ; s f!] 3 a I ( 1 i k ' r 'f I\\\fkPO Women's Dream of Smokeless "U "UJIU"ICity May Soon Be Realized ON NOR SES 110 ME Reports for individual business con- time most large cities have a smoke I cerns, manufacturers and owners of ordinance, and the smaller cities are Total Cost Wil Reach 6 0 In large buildings in Ann Arbor will soon eginning to adopt them. Ann Arbor's s was first passed more than a year Donation byi Senator T11te be sent out by the city engineer's of- ago. It aims first to reduce smoke ,1ouzens flee to aid in enforcing the city smoke of the large industrial factories and ETD ordinance and to prevent that nuis- business blocks, which phase the two EXCAVATIONS AND FORM.1S FOR ance as far as possible. university men have been working up- FIRST FLOOR NOW COMPLETE Workfonfarisp-b.on, and also of the larger residences. Work on this problem has Been car- A survey was first made during the Excavating and construction Work reed on for more than a year, and ac- fall of all principal stacks, and In- on the new Nurses' dormitory located tively since last fall, by Prof. Hanson spectors have now completed a thor- on a site iust west of the Observatory j S. Hawley and Prof. Hugh E. Keeler, i ough investigation of the individual has reached a stage in which the of the mechanical engineering depart- concerns. Reports in each case will framework and forms for the first nent, who were retained by the city to be sent out shortly, suggesting how for= ameor ciand yforms fo petdthe smoke can be reduced to a mint- bfloor have practicallybeen compalrd aid in reducing the smoke resulting mum with the present fuel and equip- ing to the Buildings and Grounds de- J from increased use of soft coal ment. partment. In a recent interview on the pro- If the concerns can not be brought The work has necessarily been slow gress of the work, Professor Keeler under the restrictions with their pres- because of frozen cnd the clay type praised especially the co-operation and ent facilities, a change in fuel and of the ground, which it has been nec- aid that has been forthcoming from equipment will be advised. essary to remove. Now that the exca- the business men of the city. The - vations are complete it is expected problem, he explained, has arisen be- Movies Of Life that the rest of the work will go fore the war because of the increasing e along at a normal rate. use of soft coal and the more general On Campus W ill ' It was also necessary at first that tendency over the country to attempt I construction buildings and offices be to get rid of the nuisance. .Be Sent Alu n iznz built on the grounds so the work This was stopped by the war, in view could be more efficiently carried on. of the fact that any thing that would This has been done, furnishing a shed. burn was acceptable. At the present two t eels films showing the s- T ent life of the campus, as well as for tools and an offlee for the man .n.f-;-+n- -----2- 11.. _ ALUMIl DIRECTORSH WILL PLAN FUT-URE MEETING SET FOR, FIRST PAR OF MARCH; TO ANALYZE LATE PROGRESS TAPPING WILL ORGANI2 LOWER PENINSULA CLUB District Directors of Many Section Make Plans for Annual meetings During May The Board of Directors of the Alum ni association will gather in Ann A bor the first or second week of ne month to discuss the progress in tb re-organization of the association date, and to plan for future activitie chiefly through Hawley Tapping, '16 field secretary, and Wilfred B. Sha '04,. executive secretary. At that time reports will be give upon the work by Mr. Shaw, Mr.'Ta ping, and the advisory board of th Alumnus, as well as probably a r port upon the Alumni Fund. Icreased activit in the re-organ the remainder of the 2,500 issue are I the test programs already conducted. being stored in the Alumni catalogue Constant improvements are being office until demand arises for them. made in the apparatus and great Distribution of the copies began last (changes are planned if funds become week and has been carried on through available. the catalogue office, mailing slips hav- One of the pioneers in the field, ing been prepared and put on the the Wisconsin university station, catalogues as they, arrived from the broadcasts a program which can be Cox bindery in Chicago. Printing of picked up throughout the countryE the books was done by Wycoop, Ha- every day, while Iowa State also sends genbeck and Crawford of Lansing. The new book, which contains the I names of more than 60,000 students ofth fautys fr thefndin [NI EUNION and graduates, officers and members 1 M R U IN of the faculty from the founding of the University in 1837 until 1922, has 1379 pages, 300. hundred more than the catalogue published in 1911, whichI contained more than 40,000 names. H. L. Sensemann, '11, is editor of the Friday and Saturday, June 13 and 1-i, new book.. Set is "Reunion" and Nearly one third of the living grad- "Alumnn Days uates and non-graduates of the Uni- ____ versity, Mr. Sensemann ,estimates, LATE CLASSES EXPiECTED TO participated actively in the late World SWELL TOTAL TO NEAR 2,000 war. More than 12,000 alumni were in it, out of total living at that time7 of less than 40,000. Plans are advancing rapidly, both The summary of names included in at the Alumni office, and through the the directory shows that through 1921, secretaries of the individual classes, 91),000 degrees have been conferred for alumni reunions in Ann Arbor, since the founding of the University during Commencement week of nearly fnd 36,600 persons have graduated. 2,000 graduates. Reunion day thisj Fifteen thousand of these degrees year falls on Friday, June 13, withj have been granted by the College of Alumni day on Saturday. Literature, Science, and the Arts The program as now outlined will 4,500 by the Engineering college; 10,- include separate class gatherings on 000 by the Law School and 4,800 by Friday, entertainment in the evening, the Medical college. I the annual alumni meeting in Hill In his preface Mr. Sensemann states Auditorium Saturday morning, a the plan of the book as wellas the luncheon from the University to all difficulties encountered in securing visiting graduates, and a mass meet- the data. He states that In view of ing in the afternoon. the fact that an editor of the Alumni Under the Dix plan df class reun- catalogue of a nearby State univer- ions, which brings the classes back sity estimates the number of errors at three or four year intervals, but in a book containing only half the meeting in four-year divisions, sched- number of names as this publication ules the following for reunions this at over ten million, no reliable esti- year: '63, '64, '65, '66; '82, '83, '84, '85; mate can be placed on the number of '01, '02, '03. '04; and '20, '21, '22, '23. mistakes in the catalogue of this unl- It is thought that several classes will versity. meet under the five-year plan, among The book is divided into three parts, them being '14, which will gather for Part I containing the lists of Regents, a ten-year celebration; '99 for a twen- secretaries, treasurers, librarians, su- ty-five year, '74 for a fifty yTear, and perintendents of public instruction, '79 and '94. and Presidents, and members of the Those classes which have already factulties in alphabetical order, with started plans are as follows: '74, '79, an official record to date for each. '85L, '94L, '99, '01M, '04. '14L, '20, and In the second division of the cata- '22E. Letters have been sent out logue there are listed names of grad- from the alumni office to members of uates, arranged according to three the classes in the sixties which are schemes: collegs and schools are list- scheduled to meet as the number sur- ed in their order of establishment, viving is small. It is expected that classes are arranged in chronological the number of alumni returning this order within the schools and colleges, year will be slightly larger than usual names appear in alphabetical order 1 in that the late graduating classes are within the classes, among those which are expected to' (Continued on Page Eleven) assemble here. Many Inventions Made By Aged Scientist Doing Research Here Youthful Guests in charge of the work. . Send Letters O"" Of It is estimated tha~t the total cost of the building will approximate $600,- 000. It will be unique in construe- Thanks To S. ( A. tion and will compare to other build- sktcesings of its type. There will be lava- Fetters, portraits, car~ds, sketches,;tories, classrooms, and amphitheatres, but by far the most of the lot, letters as well as the living quarters, The- -letters written on paper of all col- funds for this building were donated Bradfield Will Pste Caull for Men I ors, kinds, and dimensions, such are by. Senator James Couzens of Detroit. Interested In Propositlon the contents of the many envelopes which made it possible that the total Shortly received lately by Louis Reimann, '16, 1 of $600,000 be switched into a general - camp director of the Student Christian appropriation fund from the Nurses' DRIVE IN HOME CITIES AT association's fresh air camp last year. dormitory to some other University SPRING VACATION PLANNED Thesewletters are written by the building. youths who spent last summer tt the The work was started in the form A call will be issued shortly by camp; sonc are crude, but all show of excavating practically a month ago, John Bradfield, '18, business manager sincerity. One lad writes, "Dear Sirand considering the difficulties that of the Alumnus, for men to continue S ll had to be overcome it has progressed the subscription drive of that maga- I still remember all the songs we rapidly. The firm of contractors who zine, started last Christmas vacation, learned at camp I hope you are feeling have charge of the construction work, during the spring recess. At Christ- fine to well I still wash my teeth is Christman and company, the same mas time more than 40 students can. ,k " a firm that built the new Engineering vassed alumni in 45 towns and secured1 walk. shops and the Model high school. 500 new subscribers.r And the writing, some slants one The style of architecture will tend Among the towns were all the im- way, some the other, some papers are in the main toward the Georgian. portant Michigan cities, as well as neat, and free from blurs, some doneNw Yok WahntSycue in pencil, others are done in ink. But New York, Washington, Syracuse, in all these letters from youths 'wilt- B "C" Sirkus manyPttsb"r Clevela" Chag , and ing in the muggy heat of a brick many others. The going was found , alley" during the summer, hoping i p r ble T btohe benarlrhancapeofte their,"dream ship to come true," lies Com pares le TO btth enatuladicap e ; si it * Christmas season is thought to have sincerity. aOld Union Fair been the root of the trouble. In addition, the lists of alumni fur- nnnn rai iinrrrnr' '''Un-nished by the Alumni Catalogue of- rnuoI S.IN ntarnun Comparable to what Michigan's Un- ice had to be revised, as many were ion fair, to be held on March 7 and 8, found to be faulty. The plan used was SIrn s expected to be like, is the annual as follows: each man was given a list Big "C' Sirkus, which usually takes as fll a ch n s giv ahi' t - ____ lceiEawirwndo f an e of all alumni in his city, which can- placent a whirlwnds of fuC ander- stituted his quota. Fifty cents a sub- 1 I ~riment at the University of California,; Various problems presented to the and which will be given February 29 scription was paid by the Alumnus department of engineering research this year It is similar in forn to for the first 10 per cent of his quota tis er.I ssmlri omt secured, 75 for the next. 10. and one are now under process of solution. the old Union fairs and like the plans dollr for the ner. ,n the In presenting these problems the var- for this one dollar for the remainder. In the fu- ions concerns have also made avail- The custom at this time is for every ture a dollar for each new subscrip- able certain funds which help in the activity, college honor society, club, ion will be paid by the Alumnus how- solution of their particular problems. fraternity, sorority and organized;Ever, Mr. Bra~dfield announced.; Detroit concerns are well represented group of students on the campus to Mr. Bradfield was especially encour- in the list of those that have made J furnish and take part in a side show aged by the showing made by one this co-operation possiblej which is guaranteed to "split the sides man, in that nearly half the complete1 The Detroit Steel Products com- I of all who behold it." total was secured by him, working ! glimpses of it taken in 1914 will be aI11p~ u. i.uuenin15L4wil e Icrasdactias a, aIvit nth '-nr6"ti assembled at the Metropolitan Mo- zation work is being noiced by Mr tion Pictures corporation tomorrow Tapping, who is also increasing his for the Alumni association, unider the efforts to bring about a completely direction of Mason P. Rumney, '07E, organized association. Plans are pro- president, and Hawley Tapping, 18L, gressing in almost every district foi field secretary. the annual meeting of that body; mosi The late films were taken during of them are to be held in May. the fall and some last week. Among The only district which has already those who will appear in them are held its annual meeting is the third Homer Heath, manager of the Union, made up of the state of Ohio. It was E. Mortimer Shuter, director of Union held Jan. 30, at which time IH. I operas, President Marion L. Burton, Shepherd, '98L, of Cleveland, was Dean Hugh Cabot, of the Medical elected director. The day's program school, and the well-known Joe Par was closed by a banquet, Presideni ker of restaurant fame, while the old Marion L. Burton being the principal views will show Dean Henry Bates of speaker. the Law school, and Dean Mortimer Other . districts which will hold E. Cooley, of the Colleges of Engineer- meetings, most of them, in May, are: ing and Architecture. May 9, fourth, made up of Indiana Among the, campus and university Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and scenes will be some taken at football Mississippi, director, V. R. Jose, '10; games, the dedication of Yost field first, made up of the eastern states house, Lawyers' dormitory construe- director, S. D. McGraw, ex-'92; tenth tion, and Clements library, while made up of the upper part of Michi- among the old films have been secured gan, directors, C. C. Kusterer, '06, and a picture of rooters sending the foot- Thomas Clancy, '08; second, made u: ball team off for a game with liar- of states in the southeast, director yard, and a view of the destruction of H. O. Evans, '94, and the eighth, made the old library tower. up of states on the western coast, di- These films will be available for rector J. B. Miller, ex-'92. showing at any or all local or district Arrangements for all gatherings are alumni gatherings over the cn [made through the directors of the nd will bte sut from theAlu n different groups, but enthusiasm is and fwill bsenturomhbeing generated through the General oce for such purpose. association office here. Steps have been made in the seventh district to- wards its organization, with the re- cent formation of an alumni club in Kansas City. Mr. Tapping is also making plane for renewed activity* in re-organizing as well as organizing new local clubs Washington, D. C., Feb. 16-Thel He will start with the lower penin- Harding Memorial Association, form- sula in this state this month and ed by the late President's friends and next, dividing it into five sections, visits associates to honor his memory, has of nearly a week's duration being advised the Association's 2400 county made into each. In April, Indiana chairmen throughout the country that inois, and Kentucky will be thor. each of them is to select two days ougly covered. before Feb. 20 for an intensive period. Since his appointment last Septem to close the public campaign in his her Mr. Tapping has organized clubs district. All moneys collected and in 20 cities and reorganized that man3 subscribed are to be sent in by Marchj more. Five major trips have beer 1, since the date of termination for made, two east, one into Iowa, one the Association's world-wide apeal. through Minnesota, and one which has already been extended to alow resulted in the complete organization states to complete their organization. of pper nsua o this state l I i 3 1 Ain a nearby city. The husinesman-. pany has made funds possible for a ,!All of the participants always gath- iaea poity.d ou siness man- study of natural ventilation. Work er in a monster parade previous to the ager also pointed out that sales can on the art of cutting metals has been Sirkus itself, which proceeds through' he made in cities at a greater distance aided by funds from many Detroit the streets of Berkeley, then back to from Ann Arbor more easily since concerns including the Ford Motor; the campus, culminating either at the newsparers in nearby cities carry nmore University news, and hence the company, the General Motors corpora- I Greek Theatre or the stadium. Alumni are not so much interested in tion and other automobile manufac- Here a reviewing stand is to betAlumnuss turing concerns. erected this year. Prominent official the Alumnus. The Detroit Edison company appro- university and A. S. U. C. executives At the Easter vacation It is hoped priated funds for an investigation of wvill view the concourse as it passes that more than 2,040 additional sub- s by. A special committee of g scribers can be secured. The plan the characteristics of the single phase b.Aseilcm teeo judges is which will be followed is to make out motor. The investigaion is under the to select the prize winners of the pa- h up-to-date lists of the alumni in the direction of Prof. B. F. Bailey of the rade. 'f-t tes stsonhasumman th- electrical engineering department. The grand finale of the Labor Day ifrent te s son as a mi y p- pliestforsmhesositionnilathpaatciy.Thenh The Detroit Steel Products Conn- ceremonies will then take place in ''npie l Mo*nnpoito 1 , . E As announced a week ago, the Board of Trustees of the Association, head-' ed by Calvin Coolidge, informally plans to allocate one-fourth of the} total of the $2,000,000 sought for the three-fold memorial to an endowment fund. From this fund will come the money for the maintenance of the] shrine and the mausoleum and the; Wanted---Politest Man At Columbi New York.-Polite men are in sup demand that a two-year scholarsl has been offered to Columbia's polite Although the scholarship is not c . pany has made available funds for a the Big "C" sirkus tent. Here the a ir menLonthes il lIn e s ent sa Warren Gamaliel Harding Chair of feredc pnhsmdevi abef uperformance will be staged and the pe copies of the m zine as well asDiplomacy and Functions of Govern- ope study of the laws of naturalillumi-DiplomacyaandFunctionstofrs o Who has not heard of Marconi, of system of automatic firing of guns ation. Prof. H. H. Higie of the elec- side shows offered by all of the or- perhaps a letter or two ment, and no further appeal for con- dance1 Bell, of Maxim, of Edison?. Yet how when two vessels came within a cer-- . ' iganizations stationed. The Sirkus is This will pave the way for the stu- tributions will be made after the close award, many egiewasgdeprtentis i alwaysof thisecampaign. in the many know who was the inventor of tain distance of each other. This is ork. d Te Timen aways one of the biggest all-student (lent srgesman during the holidays. I m g the first incandescent lamp, the first now the system used as a basis forr e of Cnton, n gatherings of the year. The lists are now eina sent to alum- alternating current transformer, the all coast guard defense of this nation. Ornom ot, ni clubs in 100 cities for revisement 0.,thiscsponsorrforrithe problem cfrthe first automatic gun-firing device, the He invented the first high voltage "d.Ai on andrthe mrasem ntedh'.s the club secretaries, so that correct first high voltage lamp, and the first lamp, and attempted manufacture tm ny Ar ists wille iaian thus eiifE ngt-g Ss practical storage battery? This ex- many times but was always ruined ges * ing much of the waste of time on the ceptional inventor is in the service of financially by someone more clever in iNew Lit Building pat of the students. the physics department of the Um- businss than he..-- Where it is impossible for the men Proves Benefit versity here. He is Captain Achillies The University, planning a. new Gargoyles-not funny magafnes to reach in the spring vacation drive, de Khotinsky, formerly of Russia, physics department, brought him to J'cbut the real kind of mystic dog-like a campr.ign will be waged through the Captain de Khotinsky was born in Ann Arbor last fall to design and TH EA TER S creatures,-may now be seen peering secretaries of local clubs. Mr. Brad- One Michigan department which is done i, St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1850. His manufacture some special equipment. over the cornice of the new literary field announces, as part of the gener- of great importance in an instructive and as father was an attache of the embassy iHe was given the task of preparing a I building down on the mass of surging al plan to boost the circulation of the way, as well as serving the campus God at Vienna and a distinguished astron- .grating to be used in a new spectro- Arcade student humanity below. paper to double that of any other as a whole, has not received mucI signed omer and his mother, an Austrian scope which lie is designing for use in iA. alumni magazine.,e J. . S lady, was a musician of note. At the the investigation of the energy givel "Don't Call it Love," featured a the 'hat ac they doing there in the At the present time, with a circu- attention from any but those Closely partme age f thirteen e entered the Naval off by the infra-red part of the spec-Arcade Theatre today through Ties- lft. ecs of Michigans latest pro- tio of more than ten thousand te connected with it. This is the Engi- plans. academy, and while there he became trum. This grating was to have from day, is a story of love and artistic duct of classical architecture? They Alumnus tops all other competitors. neering Shops Foundry. Ina ?eymc neete nwa a 250 to fifteen thousand lines cut into temperament. It takes one into the. are the creatures of a vivid imagina-'adi s oe h siue ilb The object of the foundry, as sated io then a new thing, iron-clad battle- I its surface. For this cutting he had intimate and private life of a hot- tion and have for centuries been used iboosted to 16.000 by next summer. by Prof. b. W. Boston, acting director, High S ' e grto decorate architectural monumientsbotdt 6,0 ynx;sme.b ships. He built such a boat and the to use a diamond with the faces cut blooded, hot-tempered opera singer TiMr. Bradfield also believes that the is to teach the principles of cast me- foundr wife of the Secretary of the Navy rtat an angle of 85 degrees to each who has as many loves as she has The Devil Overlooking airison circulation will double that of any tals to engineers, and in order to tons o made a silk flag for .him. His boat (:other. gowns. Nita Naldi plays the prima the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris, m had the distinction of being the od To obtain this diamond, the captaI onna and the chap who falls into is perhaps the most famous of thea d other alumni paper within a year. demonstrate _these principles castings pipe r privately owned boat ever sailed sent to the best lapidaries in this coun- her silken lovenet is Jack Holt, as Gargoyle family. Others of his tribe Ejthan make the exercise castings and 10 tons under the flag of the Russian navy try but the diamonds received did not Richard Parrish. Agnes Ayres, Par- may he seen peeking from the obscure Flashlights Rout then break them up. practical work is of lin Ho Q'tn qnnnted from Na- hiq 1'nni'fm nt n hha tn corners of the cream of- o threak the pril. is f H grdaefrmthe Naval acad-,ithsruleenssoieado rish's fiancee amd Theodore Kosloff niches ndofl[erof_-_'c_ ,iturned out for the University. year fc officially by the university, to all students. L. J. Fagan hall proprietor, is offering th declaring he is a firm believe "old fashioned etiquette." Foundry To Campus n the shops and the woodwor sembly by the Buildings an Is department. They were de by Professor Boston and Pro Shepard of the psychology de nt, supervisor of the buildin ddition nearly 1900 sets of cas bade supports for the Mode chool are being turned out b y, and between five and si f castings were made up fc alers for the new heating tur iring the past year. More tha s of grate bars and three ton: ker crushers are made eac or the TUniversity nower house I