~T"17 1f r.h"IrT'-ANT-MATTV. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1920 Eg '4c &J 1'.I _ i A iJ2.r1V1L&UIi d u L/ti :: _ UNIVERSITY SENATE (Continued From Page One) "Every economy consistent with safety and convenience" was advo- cated in connection with the buildin of the new stadiun. No attempt, should be made to give it the form of a monu'mnent . or memorial. While at- tractiveness of appearance should not be entirely neglected, the total inyest ment in the structure should be kept as low as possible, the delign repro- senting the utmost simplicity. The increased revenue resulting from the enlarged capacity of the sta- dium would increase the fund from which the financial support for other athletic activities may be drawn. Cer- tain intercollegiate sports which can never be made to pay their own way have always drawn heavily on foot- ball, and, intramural sports have also been aided in considerbale measure by the department of intercollegiate athletics. Intramural sports, the re - port declares, are just as deserving o. support as intercollegiate, and have just as legitimate claim on the 'reve* nue from intercollegiate contests. Tho increase in revenue should make pos- sible the desired expansion of the "athletics-for-all" program. However, reorganization of th means of control of athletics Was thought by the committee to be more important than the development of any particular element of physical education or intramural sports, and that the control of athletics should ie made subordinate to the control of education. To accomplish this pur-, pose, all parts of the athletic program should be brought under unified con- trol and the President and faculty should be given a prevailing voice. To accomplish this, the report recom- mends a change in the composition of the Board in Control of Athletics through the inclusion of five addition- al members-one to be an ex-officio member (to be the director of the University division of hygiene and' public health) and the other four to be representative of the University Senate, appointed by the President. This will bring the total membership on the Board to 16. It is believed that this reorganization will place th& development of athletic policy defi- nitely and squarely in the hands of those charged with the development of the University's more general educa- tional policy. In the opinion of the committee, the present system is not so seriously de- fective at any one point as it is es- sentially out of balance. As matters Anow stand, intercollegiate athletics may be said to exist "in excess." The committee which drew up and presented the report last night was appointed in response to a resolution adopted by the Senate council on May 11, 1925. Acting under this resolu- tion, Acting President Alfred Lloyo appointed Dean Edmund E. Day of the School of Business Administration; chairman; Prof. Ralph W. Aigler of the Law school; Prof. Arthur E. Boak of the history department; Joseph A. Bursley, Dean of Students; and Prof. Alfred H. Lovell of the engineering college. FIIA I REPORTS SHOWS I STRES OPTIMISTIC Trade and industry, according to Bradstreet's, show considerable de- creases compared to the feverish ac- tivity of the holiday weeks, but the ,trade of the first week in 1926 exceeds that of the corresponding period in 1925 on nearly every point- Whiolesale housesf are completing their inyentories, getting their sales- men out on the road, and in other ways are preparing for the spring and sumsmer trade. Optimism prevails in all distributive lines: retailers' stocks are low, and most jobbers expect to do a good business. The Shoe Style show at St. bouis is attracting buyers from all parts of the country; and the Na- tional Automobile show at New York, with announced price cuts from some manufacturers and rumors of others to come, is also making claims on public interest. FLORENCE. - The Region around Monte Amiata, in the Tuscan Sub-Ap- penines, which was the center of a sharp earthquake early this month, was visited by seismic disturbance Sunday night and this morning. Little investment-big returns, The Daily Classifieds.-Adv. I PAY BEST PRICES For Men's Used Clothing. Phone 4410 1 W. Washington 11. BENJA1IN , Planes For Polar Flight Near Completion FA MOUS AUTHORITY ON ICEBERGS WILL ACCOMPANY HOBBS ON POLAR EXPEDITION Dr. Barnes Has Won Recognition For the last Shaketon expedition to the V. Stefasson attended. The latter xper iiments On Large ice tlhm s Antarctic. also gave a dinner at the New York In St. Lr Urene River The only way in which the iceberg alumni club to the leaders of three ___St _menenace is now being confronted, Pro- exploring expeditions: Professor OTHERS SIGN FOR TRIP fessor Hobbs said yesterday, is by 11 bbs. Cant. George H. Wilkins, who means of two or three vessels of thelwill lead the Detroit Aviation society i-n f t otr ur servic expedition to the Arctic, and Carl ; .With the engagement of Dr. Howard wich explore the north Atlantic wa- Akeley, who spoke in Ann Arbor last T.Barnes, who is probably the world's ters and advise other ships by ,wire- year and who is leaving shortly for greatest authority on the iceberg as less of the location of the bergs when Central Africa for the purpose of o- I menace to trade vessels, to accon-s taining anmal groups for exhibition pany Prof. William H. Hobbs on his seen. . in AfricanImal of the American Mu- '° 1university of Michigan expedition to The problem should be attackedi n ACm of Natural History. Greenland next summer, one of the Greenland," Professor hobbs Another development in the niver '-,<., t, " t x I outstanding features of the arctic "where they originate, which is also -ity expedition plans, as announced by ->project will be the attempt to solve~ the iew expressed by Lang Koch, Professor Hobbs yesterday, is the anu c- - the iceberg problem. professor Hobbs, famous Danish explorer. "Icebergs quisition of Capt. Robert Bartlett as who returned Sunday from a week's are all derived from the icecap of skipper. Captain Bartlett was with trip in the East in connection with Greenland, explained the geologist, ; th last Perry party in 1909 which the expedition he will direct, spent where they are formed largely m ' teasdthi er party In 1h0 which s , 4a reached within 120 miles of the North' hhsom time with Dr. Barnes in Men- small district some 200 miles north -treal where he is senior pofesso of the location where the main ase Toey Physics 1t ciluniversity, of the Universityex i wl e s trot as promised a unique snow fKIn addition to having made an ex- Atit ilb md yPoesrnotor to be taken on the epdto tensive study of icebergs, Dr. Barnes Hobbs and his party to break up the which will be used for carrying sup- has conducted many experiments on great bergs by the use of thermit, and plies. The machine has been on the the large dams of ice that form in also another method, so that they will imarket for only a short" time but has the St. Lawrence river and flood the never reach the trade routes of the proved extremely successful, accord- rounding country in the winter. Atlantic. The smaller ice masses sel- ng to Professor Hobbs, the principal Last year Dr. Barnes broke an ice dom, if ever, reach the Atlantic, he being that it floats over the surface - dam near Montreal which was 15 said, becoming trapped in the many of the snow. 'Imiles in length and weighed more fjords of the Labrador coast. - A - than 1,000,000 tons. He did this, Pro-Ho rset t e a1sorfssi ESM NE -Resoeimnt fessor Hobbs explained, by using a Hobbs presented the plans of the Uni- DES MOINES.-Rules to eliminate Two Fokker airplanes, equipped with the litest iniventions for combatting Arctic conditions, are nearing ery small crt, appoximately 95 ersity exedition to the board of gnv - ojectiabeen formeofte b hares complgtion at Hasbrook Heights, N. J., for the North Pole flight next summer. This expedition is to be at- m ounds, of nhe xide mitue alumni association at which meeting instructors. tempt d under the auspices of the American Geographical society, and the Detroit Aviation society. It will beeu andin o. commanded by Capt. George H. Wilkins, aviator nd explorer. Photo shows general scene at Hasbrook steel welding. Heights plant as ien put finishing touches to the wings of one plane. Inset is of Wilkins. Dr. Barnes performed several ex- periments with ice in the St. Lawr- ence for Professor Hobbs' observation. Ladies Footwear Choice Shear Unearths "ncovered, al.wthl mosaic floors ofI ALB3ION, Neb.-Mrs Rose Garvey,!Acopayrgp ,MRi Vroeso beautiful and intricate patterns. 113, Nebraska's undisputed oldest in- on the University expedition will be Roo an 1'a In I "The villa stands in a pleasant lo-habitant, is dead at her farm home his assistant, G. Vibert Douglas, Ha'5- cation, with the rich plain sloping inna rard instructor, who was a member o GdCondition front othears'the Corinthan gulf,- while in the distance behind rises the citadel of Acro-Corinth. It was sup- - kplied with excellent water from an ! C EAMERA SUPPLIES cover the Great Theater, dating in abundant spring." Blonde and Grey Kids- the sixth century B. C. at Corinth, by Five rooms have so far been un- the American expedition under the di- covered, all of them with the mosaic; Nyat A rection of Dr. T. Leslie Shear of ifloors intact, the colorings bright, Princeton university, a magnificent fresh and undam ged by the centuries Roman villa, in perfect condition was during which they have been hidden L ea h eFootw earC uncoverei, which must have been one from sight. These mosaics are ui-I of the city's leading residences at the doubtedly the finest that have yet been Sp ciat dawn of the Christian era. Dr. Shear, discovered in Greece. who is enthusiastic about his new find, describes itas follows: AUGUSTA, Me-Cold weather is no 00 "While the main excavation was inshould buy progress, it became necessary to di reason that a mnoto ist hudby 4 2 pathreveraltworme netsay taoui half a pint of denatured alcohol for Educator Shoes Have Stood patch several workmnen to a spot about' his radiator, in the view, of Chief a mile west of the Theater, beside iseld of the state highway police. the Test of Time the Sicyon road, to clear an protec Enforcing the prohibition law, he has bit of mosaic pavement that was in given 'warning against such sales. e danger of being washed away by aeing___________________that______ led to the discovery of a RedihlW ntAss sA IfY~ 1905 rivulet from o inen ryTm s wreRe d h W nt A s , '0 71 Ro of isch ofiv sumptuosR upon their agencies for good shoes. Romanvilla,offvrooms 719 N UNIVERSITY AVE. PEONEXMAH4 HARGIS B0OTERY EXAPH WUEERTHATHEATRE FILMS ILM DEVELO}PI C- You don't want to be bothered with IIS ______________________________________________ ::: 1 1. °A it '4 laundry when you should be studying for your exams. Send your things here and we will do the rest. The MOE L AUNDRY a M IL INewVI ct orReodg For That * JHOP HUSEPARYj THEY MAKE THOSE "IN BETWEEN HOURS" MORE ENJOYABLE ItE St o "°"F".c d. 1s ~!././1 ".".'"./'. ,/,rI"1,i1,r",°.rr, ee ',j'.././.0".I1./°..di'«/.'i.O./1./"".rf°,Pd3i'.,I.I.I". °..e.Jeo"s"da//.s*.d'.ra'. "1".ei . ,"l.I "%1. i'@!/I'I"./.dr. ."'.d'.0;%d.I"Y u bscribe No for the Michigan Daily THE Daily will be delivered to you from the date of your subscription throughout the school year for only $ 50 HE Daily is delivered before 7 o'clock in the morning and thus affords the students and townspeople an opportunity to read all Uni- versity announcements and notices in addition to glancing over current news-local, national and foreign-before school convenes. L'Ideal Parisien Modes Formals, Street Dresses, etc. Subscribe Nolv!