ESTABLISHED 1890 (Ib Ap t MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XXXVI. No. 14D EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1926 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS ANNiUALI AT UNIOi RAY MILLER'S McKINNEY S WILL M ILITA RY D E HELD[ I TONIGHT ORCHESTRA AND YNCOPATOJIS PLAY -Is Library Training School Is Given Approval By Regents PEACE OUTLOOK IFrench Debt Parley To Be BETTER THAN YEAR;Resumed Today flfln noIufn iunnrni - GIVE OUT FAVORS Officers Of itrict ArmytDivision Plan To Attend Function; Tickets Available With Ray Miller's 11-piece Bruns- wick recording orchestra and the Mc- Kinney Syncopators alternating in furnishing the music, the sixthannual Military Ball will take place tonight in' the Union ballroom. Ray Miller's organization, which has been recently playing in New York city with theatrical productions such as the Follies Bergere and at the Club Maurice, and more recently in Detroit, will be the principal orches- tra. Miller has worked up a num-) ber of specialties for the occasion with unusual orchestrations. McKinney's Syncopators, an 11-piece colored band from Toledo and Cincinnati, will al- ternate with Miller in furnishing con- tinuous music. This band has been broadcast recently from Cincinnati and has played at some of the larger affairs in Toledo. It includes a quar- tet and novelty arrangements in its program. Officers in the district army division will be present, according to tele- grams received by George C. Weitzel, '26, general chairman. Brig. Gen. L. R. Gignilliat, superintendent of Culver Military Icademy; Maj. Gen. Guy M. Wilson, commanding officer of 32nd division; Col. J. S. Bursey, Adjutant General of Michigan; Quartermaster Gen. Leroy Pearson; and Lt. Col. 0.1 H. Tower, finance officer of the state, will be a few of the military men at the affair. Officers of tIre University R. O. T. C. will attend. Booths have been arranged in the ballroom for organizations and deco rations will conform to the nilitary character of the dance. Favors will be a coin purse with the dance pro- gram inside. Weitzel stated yesterday that a limited number of tickets would be put on sale today at the University R. o. T. C. office and at the door to- night. The tickets are $5.50 and those who have not secured favors may get them at the door.4 STU1DENT IS Aw.0010E PHYSICS SCHOLASH'P1 Bernard Holbrook, son of Prof. Evans Holbrook of the Law school has been awarded a scholarship in physics by the General Electric com- pany of Schenectady. Holbrook spent his freshman year at the University, then entering Leland Stanford, where lie was graduated in 1924. Following his graduation he spent a year as as- sistant in physics at the latter insti- tution, after which he was appointed to a fellowship at the University of Chicago. Holbrook will continue his studies under the General Electric scholarship at the University of Chi- cago. May Order Senior Invitations Monday Orders for announcements of and invitations to Commencement on June 14 and other graduating functions of the class of '26 can be placed on Mon- day and Tuesday of next week. This is the only time that orders will be taken, it was announced by James E. Newton, chairman of the committee, yesterday, and cash for the entire number desired must accompany the order. Invitations are 50 cents and an- nouncements $1. Approval of three resolutions for the organization of a library methods training school as a department of the literary college, adopted by the faculty of this college last Tuesday, was made by the Regents at their monthly meeting last night. The courses of instruction in the new de- partment will begin with the fall 1 semester of the 1926-27 school year. The Regents had already appropri- ated $17,000 as an initial sum for "the establishment of a library school un- der the direction of the University li- brarian." The resolutions which the literary college faculty recommended to the Regents for approval are:f 1. That the literary college fac- ulty recommends to te Regents that instruction in library methods be in eluded as a department inethatsschool. 2. That admission to the work be conditioned by three years of col- legiate work and that there be an ex- cess of honor points over the number of credits required. Students upon graduation will receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Library Science, and those students who successfully complete their graduate work will re Chicago Mayor Takes Part In Dry inquisition (By Associated Press)f WASHINGTON, April 22.-A mayor, a temperance leader, a former bar- tender, and two United States sena- tors were the principal characters in a swift-moving drama today -before the Senate prohibition comlnittee. The central figure was Senator Reed, Democrat, Missouri, who clashed with his colleagues time and again, vigor- ously cross-examined witnesses and characterized as fanatics and fools those who laughed at his declaration that he was not on either side of the wet and dry controversy. Another figure bulking large in the proceedings was Mayor Dever, of Chi- cago, who appeared at his own request to dispute what he regarded as as- persions cast on the Chicago police by District Attorney Olson of Chicago, in testimony before the committee. Will DistributeN MichiganensiansI Tuesday Morning Distribution of the 1926 Michigan-' ensian will begin at 9 o'clock Tues- day morning in the basement of the Library, it was announced yesterday by Frederick M. Phelps, '27, Bus.Ad., business manager, and will continue until all orders have been filled. After May 11, according to the con- tract terms, all receipts will be void and their holders will be unable to obtain books after that date. No copies will be issued except on presentation of receipts. Purchasers who have lost receipts, or have any other irregularity in payment, must settle them at the office in the Press building on or before Saturday, o wait until the distribution at the Li- brary is completed. NOTICE I The Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications will hold its meeting for the appointment of I Managing Editor and Business} I Manager of the Michiganensian I on May 1, 1926, and on May 8 will hold its meeting for the ap- pointment of Managing Editors} and Business Managers of all other student publications. EachI applicant for a position is re- quested to file seven copies of his letter of application at the Board office in the Press building five (lays prior to the meeting for the userof the seven members of the jboard. Carbon copies, if legible, will be satisfactory. Each letter should state the facts as to the applicant's scholastic record in the University, his experience, his experience upon the publica- ceive the degree of Master of Arts in Library Science. 3. That the details as to organiza- tion of this school be arranged jointly by a committee composed of the Dean's advisory committe and the University librarian. The new school will be divided into two divisions: a one-year undergrad- uate course requiring three years of collegiate work of above average grade, and a reading knowledge of French and German (or Spanish); and a two-year graduate course requiring an A. B. degree, a reading knowledge of French and German, and one year of training in library methods at this school or at an accredited library school. L.WER T ME R F FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE # SURVEYS WORLD EVENTS AT LEGAL- MEETIN G LAUDS WORLD COURT Deies That American Adberence 'il I Connect Our Government With League Of Nations (By Asociated Press) WASHINGTON, April 22.-Survey-; ing recent world events in an address here tonight before the American So- ciety of International Law, its presi- dent, Charles Evans Hughes, declared that the prospect for international peace was better than a year algo. The former Secretary of State praised the World court, denying that American adherence would connect the Washington government with the League of Nations, defended the Sen- ate 'reservations, and expressed the hope that next year further progress "in testing the sincere desire for RbV, HlRYH HU I Wisconsin Supreme Court iJudge Give Principal Address At Banquet Tonight Will EXPECT MANY VISITORS{ peace by the voluntary restriction of Students, faculty, alumni, and guests unnecessary multiplication of instru- of the Law school will meet at a mentalities of war" may be recorded, banquet in the Lawyers' club tonight particularly in limiting auxiliary na- to observe for the first time in the val craft. history of the Law school, a Founders' As to the World court, Mr. Hughes day program. said "many do not realize that a per- Justice Marvin B. Rosenberry, '93, manent court of international justice, of the Supreme court of Wisconsin with learned judges of approved char- will give the principal address of the aster and independence, set apart to evening. Justice Rosenberry spoke give their lives to judicial service, willj at a Coif dinner in Ann Arbor two ; afford a far more satisfactory recourse years ago and is considered one of the for us than the ordinary arbitral foremost justices in the country. Dean methods." It is not realized, lie added, Henry M. Bates will be toastmaster. that "the establishment of a perman- Invitations have been sent out to the ent court is in our own interest." honorary members of the Lawyers' The World court, he continued, was club, of which group a considerable set up under a separate agreement number will be present according to from the League of Nations and "our telegrams and letters received by the adherence will not give us a singlej student committee which is taking right or impose upon us a single duty care of all arrangements for the din- under the covenant of the League." ner. A number of Michigan attorneys from Detroit who are graduates of the Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the politi- University Law school are also com- I cal science department, is acting as ing. chairman of the discussion group! Regents Benjamin S. Hanchett of dealing with the codification of inter- ,rand Rapids and Junius E. Beal of' national law at the Washington meet- Ann Arbor, Judge C. B. Collingwood ing of the American Association of of Lansing, Judge Guy A. Miller, '98, International Law. In addition to the of Detroit, Judge Samuel G. Houghton address by former Secretary of State of Bay City, and John M. Zane, '84, an Hughes there will be talks by teach- attorney of Chicago, will attend the ers and statesmen from all sections of affair. It is hoped by the students the nation during the sessions, which and the faculty of the college that the will continue through tomorrow., Founders' day will be made an annual I event of some prominence on the Law school calendar. Tickets, which cost $1.00, may still APPATIONS TO fC [ be had at the office in the lobby of the Lawyers' club. The dinner will , begin promptly at 6:30. 09UIOR No Union Dance Final issue of applications for tic- kbets io the Senior ball, which will be held on May 21 in the Union ball- Because of the fact that the Military room, will take place from 2 to 5 0'- Ball will be held in the ballroom of clock this afternoon at the desk in the Union tonight, the regular Union the lobby of the Union. Only the ap-, dances will not be resumed until to- plications are filled out now, the $5 morrow night, it was announced yes- I for the ticket being paid after the ac- terday. ceptance notices are issued. Full-fledged members of the classI RIO DE JANEIRO.-Rear Admiral of '26, both men and women, may ap- Arnaldo Pinto Luz has been appointed ply for tickets, it was announced yes- minister of marine, succeeding Admir- terday. Coon-Sanders Original Night al Alencar who died recently. Hawks will furnish the music. Musical Season Will Come To Close Here With May Festival i i (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, April 22. - The American debt commission will re- sume negotiations tomorrow with France for the refunding of its debt, with a motion pending in the Senate to reconsider its ratification yesterday of the Italian agreement. Ambassador Berenger who has been given full power by France to nego- tiate a settlement, will meet with the commission. He has been in confer- ence with Secretary Mellon for sever- al weeks on the question and treasury officials were confident tonight that an early agreement could be reached. Action on a motion by Senator Reed, Iemocrat, Missouri, to reconsider ratification of the Italian settlement was deferred. ,.While Senator Smoot, Republican, Utah, sought in vain for an agreement for a vote tomorrow on reconsideration, early action on the motion was expected by leaders. It is thIe plan of leaders to press for ratification of five other debt fund- ing agreements pending in the Senate which have been approved by the House. These include settlements with elgium, Rumania, sthonia, Latvia and Czecho-Slovakia. PLNS COMPLETED 'OR MOTHERS' DAY Spring Games, Track Meet And Sunday Morning Convoatio Will Form Nucleus Of rrograim COOPERATION ASKED Plans for Mothers' Week-end, May 7-9, which promise to make it one of the most successful of its kind, are lbeing completed by a committee under the sponsorship of the Student Chris- tian association, according to Robert J. Brown, '26, chairman of the co- mittee. Responses to a letter sent to all fraternities and sororities by the committee indicate that more than 35 houses will co-operate by having house-parties over that week-end. The campus events which take place on that week-end, such as the tug-of-war on Friday afternoon, the Spring games and Michigan-Ohio State track meet on Saturday, and the convocation on Sunday morning, form the nucleus of a program which should be of interest to all mothers. I The special features which the com- mittee has planned are: reserving a section at the Mimes productions on Friday and Saturday nights for visit- ing mothers and their sons and daughters, a tour of the campus which will include all the points of interest, and a faculty-student tea on Saturday afternoon in the main ballroom of the Union. At this affair, opportunity will be presented for the mothers to meet many members of the faculty. Some of these features are tenta- tive as yet since a definite expression of co-operation has not been secured from some of the houses. The com- mittee requests that all students, whether in fraternities, sororities, league houses or private residences, make some effort to have their mothers come to Ann Arbor for that week-end. Thieme Is First American On Paris Text Book Board Prof. Hugo P. Thieme of the French department, has been elected by unanimous vote to the Consell d'Ad- ministration de la Societe des Textes Francaise Moderne, according to re- cent information. The body has its headquarters in Paris, France, and Professor Thieme is the first Ameri- can to receive the distinction of an appointment to the board.{ Prof. Gustav Lansen of Paris, noted authority on the French language, and an author whose text is used by advanced students in the University, is president of the council, and Am- bassador Jules Jusserand is one of the vice-presidents. The body has the LEAVING DETAILS TQ' BOARD 70,000 Seats Will Meet A proval; New A thletic BodyWill Handle Problem Construction of a new University football stadium, with no definite limit on the seating capacity and all the details left to the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics, was authorized by the Board of Regent5 last night. The report adopted declared that, in the opitlion of the Regents, a stadium of 70,000 seats "would not be objectionable.' With the single provision that "stadium construction should be so handled as 'not to overdo it' ", the entire problem was left to the present Board in Control of Athletics, headed by Coach Fielding H. Yost, and to its successor, a new board in control created. last night, which will go into office on May i. The new board is to consist of two students, three alumni and nine faculty representatives. Seek Faculty Interest The new board was created by the Regents in order to provide more fac- ulty representation and interest in the control of University athletics, because of the development of physi- cal education as a part, of university work and because of the "growing recognition that athletics, as a whole, is becoming more and more an inte- gral part of college life." Of the nine faculty representatives, the President of the University and the director of intercollegiate athletics are to be per- manent members;. the other seven are to be appointed by the President. Two members will represent the. undergraduates, one to be chosen each year from the junior class and to' serve for two years. This student member will be selected at the regu- lar all-campus elections in May. The three alumni members of the Board, appointed last night were: 'Tom Hammond, who played fullback on the Michigan football team in 1903, '04, and '05, and was placed by Yost on his all-time Michigan football team; Charles DuCharme, '06; and1 James E. Duffy, '92L.j Refer To Day Report The other questions discussed in the Day report, adopted by the University Senate in January, and concerned with the development of intramural ath- letics, physicala'education and like matters, were all expressly delegated to this new board, with instructions; to "formulate and submit plans as expeditiously as possible to give full force and effect to the recommenda- tions in the so-called Day report." The Regents expressed their appre- ciation of the work done by the old athletic board, which will go out of office next week, in the following statement: "The Board in Control of Intercol- legiate Athletics as it is now consti- tuted has functioned well and splen- didly for years. We have heard no criticism of this group or of this sys- tem, nor is any pointed out in the re- port in question. (The Day report) Their work has been peculiarly con- structive and their affairs have been handled with the keenest appreciation of the best ideals of intercollegiate sport. Our wonderful athletic facili- ties and athletic plant . . . stand as a perpetual monument to the con- structive, unselfish work of the mem- bers of the Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics as this board has been constituted for recent years." Thank Investigation' Group The Regents also expressed their appreciation of "the painstaking char- acter and splendid presentation of the subject" as embodied in the report of the athletic situation submitted to the University Senate by a committee headed by Dean Edmund E. Day of the School of Business Administra- tion. The report adopted by the Re- I gents followed, with a few exceptions, the recommendations proposed by this committee. "Because of the growing apprecia- tion of the proper needs of physical education," the Regents declared that steps should be taken at once to pro- vide compulsory physical education and exercises for at least the first two years of all students, men and women, YOST TO MAKE STATEMENT I I CONCEI1NING PLANS TODAY Coach Fielding H. Yost, who is on the Board in Control of Intercollegate Athletics, wh'ich j will formulate the plans for a new football stadiumi,'as author- ized by the Board of Regents, declared when questioned last night that he could make no statement regarding stadium construction until he had read Ithe report. His statement will be released today. It is thought thait a meetihg of ,. the Board in Control of Athletics will becalled at once to consider plans for the new athletic plant. Yost Purchases Land Deeds for the last available bit of land between Ferry field and the cam- pus were obtained today 'by Coach Fielding H-. Yost, director of intercol- legiate athletics for the' expansion of the athletic department. The deeds were for a parcel of land almost as large as a football field adjoining the site of the Coliseum, purchased last year as a winter sport pavilion. The purchase of the land gives the athletic department almost five acres, two blocks from the corner of the campus, available for tennis courts, new buildings or any other use that the expanding program of the Univer- sity may decide upon. The land is separated from Ferry field proper only by the athletic field of the local high school and is being made very desirable by the installa- tion of a new drainage system for that part of town. Coach Yost has notyet decided upon the use to which th; land will be put, but indicated that because of its near- ness to the campus, either the pro- posed minor sports building or tennis courts were under consideration. Freshmen Will Be Examined Again Dr. George A. May, director of Waterman gymnasium, announced that beginning today a second exami- nation and measurement of all fresh- men will be started. All freshmen are requested to arrange for it by calling at the Waterman gymnasiuni office between 2 and 5 o'clock any afternoon. Freshmen are requested to bring the chart of measurements inde in the entrance examination last fall. Sell Tickets For Comedy Club Play Seats for Comedy club's annual play "You Never Can Tell" are on sale and may be reserved by tele- phone at the State street book stores. No seats may be reserved at the box office until Monday, April 26. As the conclusion of the musical season in Ann Arbor, on May 19-22, in Hill auditorium, more than twenty1 artists in almost every branch of mu- sical activity will give concerts in the 33rd annual May Festival. All of the3 artists appearing have national repu- tations and have won high recognition! in their respective professions.t Some of the better known are Flor- ence Austral, Louise Homer, Augusta I Lenska, Giovanni Martinelli, and' Mischa Levitzki. At the first concert I on May 19, Louise Homer, contralto, will sing with the Chicago Symphony orchestra. Mine. Homer has a voice of dramatic quality and is oftent spoken of as "a great personality and1 color. The cast includes Marie Sun- delius, soprano; Jeanne Laval, con-, tralto; Charles Stratton, tenor; and Theodore Harrison, baritone. The third concert on Friday ter- noon will be by Albert Spaulding, violinist, and the Chicago symphony as well as the children's Festival Chorus. The fourth concert is Giovanni Martinelli, the University Choral! Union and the Chicago Symphony or- Ichestra with Howard Hanson as guest conductor in the premiere of his "La- ment for Beowulf." At the Saturday afternoon matinee Micha Levitzki, pianist and the Chicago Symphony orchestra will furnish a O~urWet~erMl l I