SUNDIA , D)ECEM BIF"I1'4.2,f2 H IHGNDIYPG ~l THE MICHIGAN DAILY PALL '"t t.?'E To Great Britain ~flI DIED BTES, TO ATTEND~ LAW CONETO New French Envoy ADTOcdLII ECTURES TONiGHT ti ::":;i~sisii;::i~i i i i::~i: "Bokhl 'eik IPers~ecution ot ('h)ri'ianit3 iibje I fec kiil5" :: f'A ddr ess Moscow trial in which 14 Catholicj addition to reporting other momen=- priests were convicted of treason j uos events of this period. without definite evidence. Captain Among the books that he has writ- ,McCullagh's disclosures regarding the ten, based uponl his experiences in trial andl the atrocities perpetrated by Russia under the Soviet regime, are the Soviet government won him the included1 "With the Cossacks," "A commendation of eminent clergymen, Prisonecr of t.he Reds," and "The Bolt throughout the world. shevik Persecution of Christianity."C Captain McCullagh has had an un1- usually adventurous career, although GAUT still in his forties. He is a native of GIV COURSES Otlher F"aculi ty A eni,trs Will Anniiual ifeeting ii Chlicago At tend4 1to lhe given during the Christmas hol-r the courses will be delivered by P'rof. idays, have been opened to under- William 1. 1Hobbos of the geology dle- graduates in the civil engineering de- partment and the following non -resl- partment. These courses, which aredn etrr:Stt iha on called civil engineering 637, "Highxay Transport Economics and Survey," missioner F. F. Rogers, State Geulo- andl 72, "Gravel and1 Quarry Plants gist I. A. Smith, E. A. WilliamsZ, G. l and Gravel and Broken Stone Roads,"'; H. Pride, and F'. R. Loomis. The Imay be taken by undergraduates with regular lecturers are Prof. A. H1. credit toward the B. S. E. degree and Blanchard and Prof. Roy S. Swinton without additional fee if the permis- in ecurse 67, and Prof. Roger L. Mor- sion of Prof. Arthur H. Blanchard is rison in the other. obtained. Men taking co" ~'Classes will meet fromv Dec. 22 to preference by' the Jan. 2, with the exception of two days partmerit in appioint±. '. of Li ag- at Christmas, and the final exanrina- gregate inspectors, anu by _. State tion will be given January 3. Len-j Geologist for positions on the road tures on special phases of work in material survey. WiCKERSHAM TO TALK WAS RUSSIAN PRISONER Tyrone, Ireland, and during the World war held a commission in the Royal' Dean H. M. Bates, of the Law school, yfgether. with other members of the lay"w faculty, will tale part in the an- ° i almeeting of the Association of A-j .icon Law Schools at which delegates from 58 law schools throughout the *' {hited States will be in attendance1 29, 30, and 31 in Chicago. Dean hates has been chairman this year'fhescilom teeilrpiin ~ leading articles in the fiell of la, .and -has been a member of the committee un the jurist ic center. Prof. Ralph W. iA iger has served since the mneet in s last year as secretary-treasurer of the a lion. George Il.vWiccersham will de(-j 'l-fiver the principal address to the as-! ~.sociation at its second sssio. TheI1 annual address by he president, Wil- ~laiam D. Lewis, of the niversity o'1 y 'Pennsylvania law school, will be giv-1 Am I t the same session ; his subject vi~rll be "The I pi w 'eaching Branc o f the profession." Following teto f a.addresses, lean Bates and ProfJI. i'J, leale, of the Harvard law school, will ~condluct a discussion of various pro- lm. Dean Bates is to act s chairman of " f ieround table conference on public jg w. Frof. E. D. Dickinson is also a' mnembler of the conference, Eight c:on- I ci ences are to be held during the 4' r la et ing, treating commercial law, xremedies, property andl status, wrongs, . q ~risprudence and legal history,bui bs-nss associations, and equity. Prof, rwEvans olbrooks is a member of thej conference on commercial law. l iscussions of material presented in '~con fei nces and reports of special! ' and standing committees will consti- lute the remainder of the business of; the meeting. The meeting will close Swith the election of officers and exe- cutive committee for the coing year. S. UNOERLALND'S ETURIN eEX E T D IIfProf. Edson R . Sundeland of the, Law school, who since last July ha Sbeen making a detailedl study of court procedure in England, expects to re- turn to Ann Arbor in time for the yr opening of the second semester of the University. Professor Sunderland' with Mrs. Sunderland and theirch- eli-(n sailed for England early last. summer, and in addition to his study, they hate made a tour of a number of E~uropean countries. At London hie attended the nec~mg Sof the Bar association and also vs Sit ed the Chief Just ice of England's court and the Court of Criminal A)- h eals. In a letter to Dean H enry M. t Bates of the Law school, he said, "Their freedom from tech ~a itt es al- Amost passes belief. I heard H I :ppi- cations for criminal appeals disvw ed of inl 50 minutes, not a lay e p- Spea r1g H-e was favorably impressed witi the simplicity, directness and hpeed of the English system aswhere , ~r eater part of the American lawyers' tuidying the procedure of Eglshb d fcourts. Regarding the value of the SLondon meeting lie said, " cannot see how this London meetng (cn fail to( have an appreciable effet in sti- -ulatin ginterest in the United Staes in t he practical reform of procedure.'' "fi Proessor Sunderland with his famu- ily spent a number of weeiks seeing SEngland, France, Switzerland and taly. In Englandl they enjoyed a twro r wkeeks' trip by automobile through the southern counties and Wale;. Pr- r essor Sulnderland( is (ontfing his' swork. in the English cours at the p hresent time while Mrs. Sunderlad and the children are studying rnch in Pris. SOCIOLOGISTS CONENE A. CHICGO DEC, 29 S Sociologists from all over the entire Scountry will meet Dec. 20, 30, and 31 in Chicago for their national convention, .,. and those attending the convention from the University will be Prof. C. H1. Cooley, Prof. A. E. Wood, Prof. R. I-1. s I4Eolmes, R. C. Angell, and Gerald A3arnes, all of the sociology depart- ient. Professor Wood is also presiding of- J cer of the Community Center also- clnation which meets in Chicago it the ; :smo time. "The Bolshevik Persecution of Christianity" will be the subject of an address by Captain Francis McCul- lagh, author and formerly newspaper correspondent in Russia, who is to speak at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the i Methodist church under the auspices of the Wesleyan Guild lecture series.j Captain McCullagh not only speaks from actual experiences while a pris- oner among the Bolshevists, but sup- plements his statements, regarding the various persecutions of the Chris- tians in Russia, with certified trans- lations from decrees of the Soviet government which are included in aj book on Russian and Bolshevik per- secutions. As a corresondent Captain McCul-j lagh accompanied Kolchak's army1 which invaded Russia, where hda was made a prisoner by the Bolshevists.r Nfter his release he went to England, later returning as a correspondent of the New York Hlerald. In March, 1924, he was an eye witness at the famous ' EpreFss with -distinction in tie Japanese- Russian war and the Balkan war, in _ _ - .. i; _ ._ xi I A NEW CHURCH FOR STUDENTS There is still time to submit a letter on WOULD LIKE To FIND."' "THEr CHURCH I Ainie .1ceab de Fleuriau, above, 1)1. ( nsft mni~ater fromt Prance Ito China, will shortly asmunie his new duties as 1 Fr-eh aniba ssador to GIreat Britain, Sic('eed ing ('onnat ie St. Aulairo. Write not over 800 wordy anid pc,-hat) 3 ha le that $50.09. Send to Box 34, Michigan Daily, before ~January 12th. I WRITE NOW. Don't (delay- today. -Pay your Subscription III Js teul o nyreuet hcmnae AaenL haIe'ddt odseea acsdra Ie Crippen s Drug 213 Noith Ma'n 723. North University IN CRSMSVCTO Tw;o graduate courses in highway engilli erin g and highway transport, Store Electric percolators are delioghtful gi'fts that are really use- ful, 15.95 to $22.5O The Detroit Edison Company' Main at William Telephone 12316' Christmas Atomizers L-'tatiollcry Gilbert's Chocolates Vanity Sets S e tion 4orth aini Cigarette Cases Dunhill Pipes Cigars Tourist Sets N( 217 I ,.. rr.rw OWN M. ....e.. ....o..,.... .. i .o a :wI I I tile Christmas 'vacation. They feel that there are quite a fewa students staying in Ann Arbor over the holidays, and it is mainly for them that the following pro~rarn has been decided upon. 1"rchev, Dec. 19, 9w1 A Romantic Comedy Drama of the ide walks o e LAID IN "HELL'S KI'TCHEN"9 A Section of Manhfltan, Gangland's Par'adiSe York- t rl , , ". Saturday-, Dec. 20, 9-12 I S aturday, iDec. 'Iturda x Ja n. 27, 9-12 3, 9-12 . f '4 'itM t ALSO A mguar New WEDNESDAY, DEC. 31St WITH Favors, Noise Makers and all the extra things that make a New Year's Eve party Distinctive Music for All Dances by Bill Watkins and His Work On Grounds Stopped By Cold Cold weather has halted landscan-y in g operations on the campus. Next spring, however, the program started this fall after the dIesign worked out Granger Eight -- * I