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November 21, 1924 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 11-21-1924

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

News." He will 1be fol~oloedcyPrf
COMMITTEE SEEKSKs~hlyd teae(r1
d f l out illi) )1 nekupn"Nw
b.ib w Ci () the gne. of 1 110v j ii O RN~ yEA
[ andFrProiifin.,

RETURNS FROM
STEN_SCHOOL TOURi

Conferencee Reports '~ia~t Aims Iii-
c lude Discoutragement of Guml-
4k ing and Use of 3 iquor
ROMOTES SCHOLARSHIP

XNew York, Nov. 21.-One of tbc
nost interesting events of the inter-
fraternity conference to be held at
he Pennsylvania hotel Nov. 27 and'
A8, will be the report of the commit-
tee appointed to investigate the true
ims and ideas of a college fratern-
SThe committee has been at work on
he question for a year and the re-
port it is to present will be in sub-
tance as follows: Recognition ofa
roper respect for Deity, moral liv-
ng, discouragement of gambling, dis-'
~ouragement of the use of liquor, at
premium upon friendship, emphasis
pop the virtues of honesty and integ-
ity, and encouragement of the prac-
tice of charity.
S Upon "their individual members, ac-
ording to the report, fraternities at-
tempt to play their role as a vital
And helpful pat in tile achiney of
ducation by encouraging high schol-
" rship, requiring participation in
ampus activities, and urging college
loyalty.
The committee summarizes the in-
uence of fraternities in matters per-
ai~4ng to commn.unity interest as fol-
ws, Fraternities are intensely pa-
uorttic inromote concord among {
rAoups of different religiou racial,I
,'pd political, backgrounds, teach the
&uy and privilege of service to mn-,
k :ind, denounce snobbery, and foter
I articipation.,- in . social .srvice or
Sphilanthropic work.I
,,The final report was based on thb'
firesorts of 51 fraternities with a nem-
brslip of 398,000) and a average
0I. und ig date of 1887. As there are
q!oily 54 well established fraternirties,
it was considered safe to gneralize
tonl the ams and ideals of fraterni-
-k 541 from the replies received.'
ABBOTWILL SPEAK'
I~T METINO TDA
@ (COntiiucd from Page (.c
t Willis J. Abbot, '94L, editor of the!
O' Chlristian Science Monitor, and, Se-
r r~ary Shirley Smith will be the main
speakers at the meetings of the Press
;1wclub today hi, addition several Uni'_
AYersity professors and- Mrs. Charlottet
1'. Gilman, noted author and lecturer.
vrwll e tadeas .
). At"tiT' fftinal dinner of tere onven- ;
4'~ t in tonight, -M., Abbot will present
:tin address onl "1-edlinin H1-ap
P11105." Mr. Abbot is a grauate ofi'
the law school here and has been en-
a gaged in newspaper work for mnoe
t.u30 years, having been the manag-
ing editor of the Chicago Times in
192 During the war he was a.staff.
O~o ln of Colliers weekly and
prominent as a writer on political top-
4i from Washington for newspapers
r over the country. He assumed his
f present position in 1921.
ifIn addition to being prominent in
newspaper work all his life, Mr. Abbot
is also a writer of note in other lines
akas well and has been a frequent con-
tribtor to magazines and revues. See-
fqw retary Smith's subject tonight will
Sbe "The University Today."
Mrs. Gilman, who is to speak before!
Sthe afternoon session of the conven-
ation at 4 ocock today, has chosen ast
lhrsubject "Te Whole 'Truth in
Newspaper Work." She is a great
'A grandaughter of ,man Beecher andl
~first began public work in 1890, since
4*that time she has been actively en-
t gaged in the movement for the ad-
vance of women and in the solution of
the labor problem.
rIn addition to delivering numerous
~/lectures both in Europe and this
coutryon thics, economics and
sociology, she has written many ar-
aticles for different magazines and
A'publications. She was editor of "The
'~Forerunner" from 1909 to 1916.
Oening the morning session at
=j9:;30 o'clock will be a discussion on
-the relation of the newspapers and
,~the courts. It will be started by Stuart

,I. Perry, editor of the Adrian Tele-
S gawho is to speak upon "Contempt
tof Court as Applied to Newspapers."
Following general discussion of this
problem, Prof. Herbert F. Goode ri
t of the law school will deliver an ad-
Thes upon "Civil Liability in Libel."
Teconcluding speech of the morning-
p will be on the subject of "The Proper-
{fSelection o Features," an address byV\
F A. R. Treanor, editor of the Saginaw
SNews-Courier.I
At noon the different groups repre-;
~sented at the conference -will meet at
~luncheon to discuss subjects common
t~o their particular type of newspapers
A~Prof Jesse S. Reeves of the political
science department will open the af- I
'4ternoon session writh a talk upon
4"Domestic PIersp(1-tiv,-es in Foreign
ICUP FOR BEST DECORATED ) j
Ciarles Grahb, owner of

- "f:'Icnig i':~i~ Wil k Si!~d~j'faculty, who is on leave of absence
A Adre-;:A,(im '1. Nxt during the current semester, has re-
'I nsdayCently Silen t two week s 1inthe Easti.
Co3, nitt .e'I. "1CCt --- visiting schools of edIucation at Hiar-
'- XTVS ARMYCHAPL IN tiia rdl,Boston university, Columbia,
fl , and New York university. He
doe: ote r. Sotlftys Jr ly KT'Kor uvrs t-also ins ect (d four junior high schools
_____ ~ ile~onc ti~l~ii)0i'd .ilon eiornhighscoo. o ni-
(''L i".Is. MatC. 'A.
E - J 'alycchpw s'l ( or, ho aryatcateau-a
LOXxford6 ,7 , wil}ive Ma ric .pods 2 lcairana
N nedaO 1 pltclSic;asoe ommtthe,
r - C rly e i h ut fa " hi - ch r s 10 r n d r s e l su si ct o
th ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~o Wet"Aoghsohrwrsivtdt ltiDuisrigte i
"Lif of 31 'o') i tmer. V~a:ni t n Nvt {cie gu ttalin
I - moris ~tyT' {tl- eDaiy fo'lbwaverindited y hae
lot) aond] co, tton aprlathicar i eeral rany j tdy fao teeor pAllen.
a:t 74c; ,v000 c, fr,09illacres. ln of 11 P. in o e txs ts."' har (
_______________ ,,loa ,,n' ,taA .inl,..
I-- O;)---- mediw a ea l pon-,M clo f the Un.. b - l&4s.na.xty tServi(-r co- tr
Vi,,!yhtL' niflrini ofN T~i~yE vil zzvfat theNTanksgvingser
hal xa Tusa n W d c-ray ie -n~est.

vitation from, the Middlesex Teach- Read
c rs' association to speak at its meet-
i ng -1in Boton. Professor' Davis' sub-
sectwa "Some Difficulties in .Junior I
igh,) School Teaching."
"Chief among my impressions' is
that the East is taking great interest
in profe ssional education," Professor
jDavis repjorts. "Educational practice
in the schools and education as it is'
taught in h.igher institut ions are un-!I
der Bohr ditic orrA ltIon. Oppor-
tuntiC~ fr ~ ac "~ete: av
been ncgu itAnz(lanid ;school surveys.;
are miade t'- hai.s of direct observia-I
tion and la b -rato y practice by some!

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