ESTABLISHED 1890 PF (t r fri an1 ti s MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS i VOL. XXXVII. No. 146 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARWOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1927 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS CAVANAUGH OUTLINES M COUNCIL REGULATIONS ON SPRIN ELECTIONS REGISTRATION OF STIDENTS TO BE HELP WEEK BEFORE VOTING DAY NO CHANGES PLANNED Daily To Issue Special Section Before Elections Wflti Pictures And Histories Of Candidates Detailed instructions regarding nominations, publicity, petitions and registration in connection with the annual spring elections, Wednesday' May 11, were outlined yesterday .by Thomas Cavanaugh, 127L, president of the Student council. With the excep- tion of the publicity which will be given candidates this year in a special section of The Daily, the day preced- ing the elections, there will be no changes from palt years in connec- tion with the preliminary arrange- ments. In the niatter of nominations the names of all candidates for offices In the following organizations must be submitted to the Student council of- fices in the Union by Wednesday, May 4, in order to be placed on the official ballot: Union, Student council, Stu- dent Christian association, Oratorical association, Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications and Board in Con- trol of Athletics. The names, photographs, and lists of activities of the nominees for the presidency of the Union, Student council, Student Christian associa- tion, and Oratorical association will be published in the special section of The Daily, together with the names and activities of the nominees for 3 ecording secretary, and vice-presi- dents of the Union; the senior and junior representatives of the Student i council; and remaining offices of the Student Christian association and Ora- torical association. It is imperative that presidential candidates submit "glossy print" photographs and activ- ity lists, and other candidates hand in acttvityJLisbeyWed Y May 4, at the council offices in the Union. Those not submitted by that date will not be published. Petitions for nomination to offices, of the Union must be submitted to the Union nominating committee on or before 9 o'clock Saturday smorning' May 7. Every petition must contain at least 200 signatures of members of the Union in accordance with that organization's constitution. Petitions for nomination to offices of senior and junior representatives of the Student council must be submitted to the council's nominating committee, at the , Union, on or before 2 o'clock Satur- day, May 7, in accordance with the council's constitution. Registration will be held Wednes- day and Thursday, May 4 and 5. Booths for registration of all students in the University will be open on the campus from 9 until 4 o'clock on the days designated. All students must fill out registration cards at their re- spective school or college booth in order to vote at the Spring elections the following Wednesday. The complete list of registered names will be checked with the offi- cial class records by the election committee of the council. Women stu-' dents will be permitted to vote for all. offices except those of the Union, Stu- dept council and Student Christian association, if registered. MOORE TO SPEAK ON CHANGES NOW FACING COLLEGES Henry T. Moore, president of Skid-' more college, Saratoga Springs, New York, will lecture on "Changing Ten- dencies In College Education" at 4:15 o'clock today in the auditorium of University thigh school, appearing in Ann Arbor as the guest of the School of Education. President Moore is well known at the University, having ac- cepted a professorship in psychology here just prior to his appointment ' to the presidency of Skidmore college President Moore has had a varied career in educational work, graduat- ing from the University of Missouri, where he received his M. A. degree in 1904. He received the same degree at Yale three years later, and his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1914. One of the first faculty positions held by President Moore, was at Harvard, where he as- sisted in the psychology departmcnt. He was assistant professor of psy- chology at Dartmouth during the years 1915 to 1917 and held the same Friedman Refutes Newspaper Claims MEXICAN AMBASSADOR Cooey Will Speak ASSURES AMEICANSesr es OF PROPERTY SAFETY ' ! , LITTLE WILL TEST NEED OF AUTO BAN It B Y RIGID ACTION Benny Friedman Star Michigan athlete, who last night flatly denied reports printed in a New York newspaper claiming tuat he had signed with a Detroit profes- sional football club. A,,cording, to the reports which were printed last night, Friedman had 'signed for a large salary at a meeting in Cleve- land last Saturday. WILLIS SPEAKS TOD'AY ON. LECTURE PROGRAM Senator From Ohio Will Conclude Annual Series Sponsored By Oratorical Association Sen. Frank B. Willis, Republican, Ohio, will speak tonight in Hill au- ditorium as the last number on the annual Oratorical association lecture series. Senator Willis replaces Sen. Pat Harrison, Democrat, Mississippi,l who was unable to fulfill his engage- ment on the lecture series due to the pressure of senatorial committee work in Washington. The lecture will be the eighth on the series this year, and will start at 8:15, according to officers of the' Association. As yet no definite subject has been announced for the speaker. Senator Willis was born at Lewis Center, Ohio, in 1871 and attended- Ohio Northern University from which he graduated in 1893. He received his Master of Arts degree from the same school in 1904 and then attended Ohio Wesleyan, Miami, and Ohio Univer- sity in the next two years, receiving an L. L. B. degree from the latter school in 1906. From 1894 to 1906 he held the po-I sition of professor of history and eco-1 WASHINGTON EXPECTS MEXICO 1. WILL VIOLATE OTHER AMERICAN IIGHTS OFFICIALS SAY NOTHING President Expresses Feeling That Both Countries Will Reach Ami- cable Adjustment In Future (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, April 25.;- The Mexican ambassador has assured the American government that Mexico does not intend to confiscate Ameri- can property, but it remains for the future to disclose in what measure the assurance will ease the diplomatic, controversy over the Mexican oil and land regulations. There is still apprehension in Washington that Mexican authorities are threAtening steps which, from the American viewpoint, will amount to a violation of American rights, even though those steps may not be regard- ed by Mexico herself as constituting confiscation. President Coolidge, disclosing in his New York speech tonight, the assur- ing message delivered to him by the Mexican ambassador, added that he was convinced an amicable adjust- ment would be possible. This decla- ration, however, followed a state- ment by the President that the American government feels that Mexico is "threatening" to disregard the cardinal principle that privatel property must not be taken withoutI fair compensation. Officials here declined to add any-: thing to the words of the President, or to say what significance they at- tached to the ambassador's assurance. It was recalled, however, that the Mexican foreign office had contended all along that the policies adopted by President Calles toward American property owners in Mexico did not involve "confiscation," and that it was upon this very question of the true) meaning of the term that Washing-1 ton and Mexico City came to an im- passe. It was, after that impasse had been reached that Ambassador Pellez made a hurried trip to Mexico City and talked over the whole situation at length with those in charge of the for- eign policies of his country. REVEREND JUMP RESIGNS POSITION I Mortiuer E. Cooley Dean of the College of Engineering and Architecture, who will deliver a lecture on "Forestry From The En- gineer's Viewpoint" at 4:15 this af- ternoon in Natural Science auditorium as part of the observation of National Forest Week. The lecture is under the auspices of the Forestry Club pnd will be followed by a movie deal- ing with the use and methods of rais- ing timber. The public is invited. -LIMIT.PUBLIC TICKET SALE FOR MAY PATY Wiuslad's Orchestra Froutm L lois lie! To Play At 16th Annual Architects' Ball. COSTUMESNECESSARY Due to the large demand of archi- tectural students for tickets for the 16th annual Architects' May Party which will be given Friday, May 6, in1 Barbour gymnasium, only 100 ticketsj will be put on sale for the generali public, according to members of thes committee in charge of ticket distribu- tion. The general sale will be held from 1 to 5 o'clock today, at the ticket booth in the Union. The price of tickets is $5.50. , Announcement that Winstead's colored orchestra from Louisville, will play for the affair has also just been made by the committee. This is the same band which furnished music forI the lawyers' Crease dance this year. The May Party, which is given au- nually and sponsored by the students' of the architectural college, is the only costume party held (luring the year under the auspices of the Uni- versity. All the design work for the event is (lone by the students of thej architectural college.I All persons attending the party must wear a costume, for no one wearingj formal or street clothes will be ad- mitted. In contrast to past May Par- ties, prizes will be awarded to the man and woman having the best cos- I tume. Inean effort to find the best pos- sible scheme of decoration, a con- petition was held among the students which was won by R. T. Bittingef, 27A. The plans of the winning design call for the setting to be laid in a very elaborate garden which will be executed on such a large scale as to make the dancers seem small. LACK OF COOPERATION MAKES ABOLITION ('CETAI1, SAYS LITTLE DEFENDS RESTRICTIONS "Student Resiomsibility" Is J ibject Oj Address Of Little At e ConvocationC Student cars and the possibility of their abolition here were taken up by President Clarence Cook Little Sun- day morning in his convocation ad- dress in Hill auditorium. "It will be necessary to do away entirely with student automobiles until they can be permitted upon a different basis," the president asserted, though he addenm that "I do not believe in a permanent rule against cars." The address was given by President Little due to the absence of Prof. Alex- ander Meiklejohn of the University of Wisconsin who was unable to come, and had as its subject "Student Re- sponsibility." The speaker declared that students in attendance at Amer- ican colleges and universities should not be as free from restriction as those not offered the opportunity of securing an education. "I do not believe in a permanent rule against cars," President Little declared, "And the restrictions will not be final. But we must find those students who can assume responsibil- ity. We must reach rock bottom and begin to build from there. "You can not realize the terrible consequences of an accident like that last week because you did not go to the hosnital with me to see the stu- dents who were victips of it. A boy's life was snuffed out; a girl was dis- figured for life, if her life is not lost also. Another boy received a nervous shock from which he will not reeper for a long time. But try to imagine the feelings of their parents," Pres- ident Little continued. The only purpose which the speaker recognized in the University's policies is to save the students from failure of some sort or another. "We will al- ways forgive failure but we can not forget it," the president declared. "Have opportunities been given here for student responsibility?" the speaker asked. "Yes," he said, "In the liquor situation and in the automobile ruling they were given responsibmty and authority. A great many stu- dens have responded, and I still be. lieve that student authority is pos- sible, but a large residue of inert stu- dents remains." The President then continued to say that he knew of no method of in- creasing cooperation under present rules without student help, and that the student help is not forthcoming. Too many students say "It is the bunk," President Little said, and too many students haveperfect records ot bolts from the class on obligations. Changes are probable, because not enough students have been willing to assume responsibility, he asserted. Of the three great problems con- fronting American universities today President Little placed student re- sponsibility as 6ne of the first. The other two problems are the establish- ment of a closer contact between the faculty and students, and the struggle of the University before the state and the public eye for recognition as a constructive body. The speaker" reiterated that in a publicly supported institutiop the student is obligated to accept those 1 opportunities by assuming certain responsibilities, and has not the right to spend the public funds and waste f his own time and the time of others as has the student attending the private- ly endowed institution. He has a definite obligation that must be real- ized. In answer to the question "Should restrictions be arbitrarily enforced, or should they be adhered to by a sense of cooperative participation?" Presi- dent Little said that the students' should be allowed to exercise their own wills on the continuity of efforts obtained by cooperation for the com-' mon goal of both the faculty and the students-that of student welfare. The solution of similar problems leads to the accomplishing of progressively more difficult problems." CLASS ASSEMBLY IPOSTPONED WEEK I Due to a change in plans, the meet- TO THE STUDENTS:. The President of the Univer- sity, after a conference with the editors of The Daily, has con- sented to give students of Mich- igan another chance to prove their ability to handle the auto- mobile situation without the necessity of a ban on all studentj owned cars. The final decision in the case, after three days of debate, now rests squarely with the student body. If the present regulations are rigidly enforced until the close ofj j school in June, there will be no general abolition. If the stu- dents, with all the facts clearly before them, prefer to continue to disregard the reasonable laws now in effect, there can be no excuse whatever for any opposi- tion to the more drastic rules. Complete abolition will then be, obviously, the only possible re- maining procedure. The punishment meted out toj students who continue to drive, without permits will be severe. An effective effort to bring such students before the committee will be made. The Daily believes that men and women who prefer not to cooperate, but rather to force a general ban of all cars on their fellow students in order to enjoy themselves in defiance of the present rules, forfeit any I right they might have to lenien- cy. The drastic punishment of offenders is to be preferred to I laxity that can lead only to the I prohibition of cars to the hun- j dreds of students who use them I sensibly and appreciate them as one of the greatest of modern r conveniences. The Daily has opposed the general ban because of the con- viction of its editors that stu- I dents, when they appreciate the j situation, will aid wholeheartedly | in the enforcement of the pres- ent laws. The President has j generously offered the student body another chance despite the I total failure of the regulations [ up to this time. Coopera- I tion will mean the contin- . uance of the restrictions; non- | cooperation will mean the com- I plete ban on all cars at the close I of this semester . The decision rests with the campus.,j j THE EDITORS OF THE DAILY j i, CONSENTS TO TRIAL OF FTRICT ENFORCEMENT OF PRESENT REGULATIONS COOPERATION SOUGHT rrs etIrJt eqet!'n ill i nomics and was later professor of law at Ohio Northern University. In 1906 he was admitted to the Ohio bar, and had served two terms pre- viously in the House of Representa- tives of the state of Ohio, from 1900 to 1904. In 1911 he was elected to the United States House of Representa- tives and served two terms there from I 1911 to 1915 as representative from I the eighth Ohio district. In 1915 he was elected governor of Ohio, and he held this position for two years. In 1921 he was chosen senator from Ohio and has served for the past six years 1 in the United States Senate. Senator Willis is recognized as one of the best speakers in therSenate, according to officers of the Oratorical association, and has served on a large1 number of important committees of that body. His visit here will be the first time that he has ever spoken to a local audience under the aus- pices of the Oratorical association. BARTLETT WINS EVENTS CONTEST SLloyd W. Bartlett, '29L, was award- Jed first place in the local New York Times Current Events contest accord- ing to an announcement made by Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science department, chairman of the local committee, yesterday. Bartlett will be awarded the prize }of $250 and a bronze medal and will compete in the national contest with winners of local contests which were given in 201 universities. The winner of this contest' which will be held May 14, will be awarded $500. Bartlett was the second place win- ner in last year's contest. He was re- cently elected to Phi Beta Kappa. El- liot F. Moyer, '28, was winner of sec- ond honors and was the third place winner in last years' contest. Leroy Hurlburt, '27, won third place. i I' I Citing the convocations sponsored by th! Student council as unfair tot the work of local ministers, Rev. Her-I bert A. Jump, pastor of the First Con-, gregational church, presented his resignation to the congreation Sun-I day morning. The resig ation is tos! take effect at" the conclusion of his summer vacation this year. Reverend Jump's objections to the convocations were summarized in a statement given to the press follow- ing his resignation. He stressed the fact that when the convocations were' inaugurated the ministers of the town were assured that the townspeople would be denied admittance. But, he said, this has not been clone and the people of the town are flocking to the Imeetings. It is foolish, he continued I to expect the preachers to compete with famous visiting speakers who re- ceive $200 for a single lecture. (eIna statement issued yesterday, H. Thomas Cavanaugh, '27L, president of the Student council, said the Rev-I erend Jump, with several local min- isters, had been against the plan of convocations since thei' inception. President Grants Request Of The Daily In New Plan; Failure Means Ban Of All Student Autos Rigid enforcement of the present automobile regulations, backed finan- cially by the University and resulting in drastic punishment for offenders convicted, will be tried in Ann Arbor the remainder of this semester. This action, decided upon by President Clarence Cook Little after a confer- ence with the editors of The Daily yes- terday afternoon, is intended to give the present regulations a real test, and if it becomes evident that they can be enforced, a general ban on stu- dent cars will not be consider3d necessary. The President, although believing the best procedure to be the abolition of all student cars with the idea of eventually reinstating them gradually if such action is ever deemed feasibi., is willing to cooperate with The Daily in giving students a last chance to prove themselves worthy of keeping their cars. He agrees that the present regulations constitute the ideal set- tlement of the situation provided they can be enforced without the expendi- ture of an unreasonable amount of money for policing. The Daily has maintained that the regulations, be- cause of their lax enforcement thus far, have never been given a chance, and with the aid and cooperation of the student body, will attempt to prove to the administration that the present rules, having gained the res- pect of the students, can be enforced If the experiment succeeds, the present rules will be continued; if it fails, it will have been definitely pro- ved that abolition of all cars is h only way out of the situation at Mich- igan, and neither students nor The Daily will have any justifiction in further opposition to the ban. A meeting of the present automo- bile committee will be called at once, the work reorganized, and a concen- trated effort made in the few weeks remaining to sweep Ann Arbor of un- registered student cars. Probation will be meted out for a first offense; sus- pension from the University for a definite period for a second offense. The Daily, in recommending this pro- cedure, has been governed by the theory that drastic punishment for the minority who refuse to cooperate is to be preferred to general punish- ment for all, which is virtually what a general ban would amount to. If, in the opinion of the President, the students continue to attempt to disregard the present University rul- ings, despite the fact that the situa- tion has been clearly placed before them both by President Little in his address at Hill auditorium on Sunday and by The Daily, a general ban on all student cars will be enacted by-the Regents and placed in operation. WORLD TRIBUNAL SEEN AS PEACE NEED BY HIGGINS Avowing that world peace will never be guaranteed until all nations submit international disputes to an impartial International tribunal, Prof. Alexander Pierce Higgins, professor of International Law at Cambridge university, speaking under the auspi- ces of Coif, honorary legal society, yesterday delivered the first of a two- lecture series on the subject, "In- ternational Relations and Internation- al Law." Professor higgins will deliver the second public talk at 4:15 o'clock to- day in Room C, of the Law building on, "The Locarno Settlement". He was principal speaker at the annual Coif banquet which was held last night at the Lawyer's club. The main trouble, he said in his afternoon talk, lies in the disregard by the people of their duty to follow' the doings of other nations besides their own. The average citizen fails to appreciate the close interrelation between home affairs and foreign events. An unusual knowledge is necessary to understand international relations, he said, especially at pres- ent when the world is in the throes of the greatest period of unrest in its CLIPPY STADIUM IS TRANSPLANTED AS ENGINEERS FROLIC ON DIAGONAL PROFESSORS WILL ADDRESS ANNUAL ACADEMY SESSION' President Kenyon L. Butterfield of' Michigan State college, Prof. Roy W. Sellars of the philosophy department, ! Prof. Charles E. Merriam of the Uni- versity of Chicago, and Prof. L. A. Chase of Northern State Normal school will be among the speakers at the 32nd annual meeting of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters 'which opens here tomor- row, it was announced yesterday by the committee in charge. President Butterfield, who attended the conference last year, is a grad- uate of Michigan State college in the class of 1891, and did graduate work for three yearsaat thedUniversity here. I In the school year 1902-03 he taught rural sociology at the University. Professor Sellars is a graduate of the University and has been employed' as teacher here since his graduation. He was appointed professor of philo- sophy in 1923, and has written several books, the best known of which is "Essentials of Logic." In the evening session on Thursday Prof. Charles E. Merriam, head of the political science department of the University of Chicago, will speak on "The Role of Tradition in Civic Train- ing." Prof. L. A. Chase, of Northern Statel Normal college, will speak at 8:00 o'clock tomorrow night in Natural Science auditorium at the second ses-1 sion of the Academy. ADVERTISING MEN TWILL GIVE TALKS' Talks by prominent Detroit adver- By Timothy Hay Clippy Stadium rests in the realm of the engineers! And its and lawsl are celebrating the removal of the eye-sore from their end of the diagonal. More than two hundred students] were in the crowd that carried the feat of the century. Where they got the idea that Harry had anything to; with the Stadium is more than weE could figure out, but an engineer, WOULD drag in something like that. To the tune of roller skates, scoot- ers and co-eds' shrieks, the grand march down the diagonal was made' without a single protest from anyone, white redwood benches last night although a University policeman was from the State street end of the cam- seen sneaking away from the scene of pus down to the engineering arch, action. where formerly rested the senior The campus was busier last night benches, removed recently by Univer- than State street the evening of thej sity authorities. last tear gas party of the police de- Lifting the benches in four sections, partment. The sentiment of the B. and carrying the big blocks which and G. boys evidently was: "If they're formed the foundation, the engineers foolish enough to want 'em, let them marched down the walk yelling and have them." singing, as engineers are wont to in We think the lits and laws ought to their carefree moments. take up a collection to provide a purse