0 ESTABLISHED 1890 YC io, rt iijan 4 aii MEMBEF ASSOCIAT; PRESS VOL. XXXVIII, No. 25 ANN ARBOR MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1927 EIGHT Pi FELLOWES WILL GIVE; TWO, TALKS, ON MUSIC' ENGLISH CANON IS CHAPEL HEAD AT WINDSOR CASTLE, ENGLAND IS UNIVERSITY LECTURER Famous Authority on Old English Mu- sic Wii Talk on Thursday and Friday in Science Auditorium Coincident with his tour of this country and Canada, the Reverend Ed- mund Horace Fellowes, of St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, England, has been obtained to give a series of two University lectures on old English REQUESTS ROOMS BE LISTED TODAY More than 200 rooms for visitors will be needed over the week-end, with the Ohio State game and the University Press club of Michigan convention bringing many delegates to Ann Arbor, according to Milton Mc- Creery, '29, chairman of the Union rooming committee. Persons having rooms available at this time are requested to list them today with the telephone operator at the Union or to get in touch with the committee chairman or his assistant, William Nissen, '29, as soon as pos- sible. GOODRICH WILL SPEAK r~ ON FORIGeNQUESTION To Tell 'of Investigation Lade In A BEAZELLTOA ESS1MIMES TO START SHOW THURSDAY I Due to the type of the show and the other engagements for Mimes thea- ter during the next few weeks, the second production of the Mimes play- Sers,"On Approval," will begin its i ITT'x 7rD QCT'V lAThI A nn lNJPIT I TINIT nniirniiiirulT Pull i 3 I i run Thursday, continuing through the DELEGATES TO REGISTER O next week and including a perform- THURSDAY; SESSIONS TO y CLOSE SATURDAY ance Saturday, Oct. 29. There will be Ino performance on Monday. STATE EDITORS TO COME "On Approval" is a comedy in three Dactsand two scenes by Frederick Assistant To Managing Editor o The Lonsdale, who wrote "The Last of New York World To Be MainMrs. Chaney," presented here by the Rockford Players during the summer. After-Dinner Speaker It is the latest work of the author's, - -. 7L ,.. - ] 2_ - -- . .. - ., .+ a. . 21 t } TO COMPLETE EDUCATION RANGE I Plans for the new unit which is to 'ing, four floors high, and will be added be added to the University high school directly on the south side of the building are nearing completion, ac- present building. It will be large cording to an announcement made enough to accommodate the elemen- from the office of Dean Allan S. tary grades from one to six, and inmW I E Whitney of the School of Education addition will house a special section yesterday, and work on the structure for pre-school children, on the first TRIlS OF FALL AND SINCLAIl will begin next spring, taking slightly story. OPENS WITH SELECTION more than a year to complete. Dean Dean Whitney and Prof. Clifford OF VENIREXEN Whitney and his colleagues are at Woody recently returned _from a trip) present working on the final plans for to the Universities of Iowa, Chicago, TESTIMONY BEGINS SOO the use of the new unit. and Northwestern, making an especial - The new unit will be of the same study of the accomm'odations for pre- Eleven Jurors, Including Three W general structure as the present build- school children,' for which these men, Qualify, But May Be Chal. schools are famous. lenged By Either Side The best and most adaptable of i these findings will be put into practice (By Associated Press) in the new unit, and when complete, WASHINGTON, Oct. 17-Three Wo will give the University the most com- men, one a gray-haired mother, qual WIplete psychological laboratory for fied today along with eight men, a studying educational methods of any prospective judges of the guilt or in school in the country. With this new nocence of Albert B. Fall and Harr Second Year Men In Engineering, Den- pre-school group including children of F.' Sinclair on the government charg tal and Architecture Colleges To the ages of two to six years, it will of criminal conspiracy in the leasing Elect Officers Today make the range of students under ob- of the Teapot Dome naval oil reserv seilvation from the two-yearolds up f In all, 26 verniremen were examine I of music on Thursday and Friday of this Study of Australian and week. The lectures will be held at American Labor 4:15 d'clock in Natural Science audi- torium. HAS MADE SPECIAL STUDY Announcement of the engagement - was made last week by Dr. Frank Rob- Prof. Carter Goo'f v bins, assistant to the President. Earl sity economics department will speak V. Moore, director of the University at 4:15 o'clock Wednesday afternoon School of Music and Prof. James H. in Natural Science auditorium on the Hanford of the English department subject "Some Questions from Queens- were responsible for the procuring of land. Canon Fellowes. Prof. Goodrich, who teaches labor The first lecture to be given on courses and the history of labor move- Thursday will have for its topic the mets was sent to Australia in Feb- English madrigal form, and will deal I ruary of this year by the Social 1 with the supremacy of English music Science Research council, an organza- in the 16th century, polyphonic music, tion scoposd ot repres ts the origin and growth of the madrigal, s spe in social, economic and anthropological its harmony, the substance of its s s tonmk a studyothepdiffer- lyrics set to music, and the principalestde st dhe madrigal composers -Byrd, Morley. nces oetween k the uyo Australian and the! igbyeand.comoes-Byherdayley-American labor movements.r Wilby, and Weelkes. The Friday lec- Though differing in size, the Aus- ture will take up the rise of the ar trainmvmn en h ags song, accompaniment, the lute, and tralian movement being the large John Dowland, Campian, and the lu- in the world in proportion to thed£ tenist school. Canon Fellowes will l- tpopulation while that of the United lustrate and accompany the lectures States is one of the smallest, thereI1 valtraendwiththepaidyoftheltres' are but two other noticeable difer- x vocally and with the aid of the lute ences between conditions in the twol and the piano. Phonograph records ntos codn otersace. of 'the English singers will also be I nations, according to the researches. 1 usd. theEn rof.sHangrdw l asoMr.The first of these is politically, ast used. Both Pr of. Hanford and Mr. Australian labor unions have gone in- Moore feel that the lectures will be to politics and control five of the of special appeal to students of mu- six provincial legislatures while Amer- respondingshisrof the period, and cr- ican unions have again reiterated their Conghistory. is considered an intention to remain free from party Canonnces; and theisccndsisdehedthn - authority on the old English music of alliances; and the second is the thes-t the Elizabethan and the Jacobean per- retical basis upon which the systems - iods. He was born in London and are based. The Australians are so- educated at Winchester and Oriol col- cialistic in their principles while the loge, Ofor. I 197= he onoarylabor in the United States asked mere- degredfDtoroInM1si7thshon-ary ly for an amelioration of present un- degree of Doctor of Music was con- I fortunate labor conditions. ferred on him by Trinity college of Two Countries Similar Dublin. He has devoted many years Almost every other way Australia to the collection of Inglish madrigalsand the United States greatly resem- many ases thesewresoriginaly ub- ble one another, according to research- many cases these were originally pub es conducted. Both are new countries lished in separate parts and have con- ith vast territory and unlimited nat- sequently become scattered. In orderwirasr torysand stimtedrnat , to bingtogethr the complete 'texts. ra resources and still their labor to bringes movements are radically different. In it has been necessary to make a care- his speech Wednesday which is under ful search among many cathedrals and the auspices of the Michigan branch libraries. The songs of this nature of the League of Industrial Democracy that have been edited by Canon Fel- prof. Goodrich will discuss but one lowes, number more than a thousand. Prfodihwl ics u n They havebeen mileda tus. thphase of the results of his research. It They have. been. compiled under thewi bsmeothnwrprbms head of the English Madrigal School will be some of the newer problems a wor in 6 voumes raised in the province of Queensland a wank in6 volumes. I where the labor unions inaugurated Canon Fellowes is also the co-editor a general strike against a labor gov- of a ten volume collection of Tudor ernment. church music, five volumes of which Prof. Goodrich is author of two have already 'been published, and has books, both dealing with coal miningI written several shorter works on mu a ik-n ticulr a ituati n sic. Since 1910 he has been in charge ahe miinng districts. The first, a of the music at St. George's Chapel in study of English' conditions was writ- *London. ten in 1920. It is entitled "The Fron- Will Sing Also tier of Control," and was the result of He is said to be a speaker of unus- a year's study of the situation in Great ual ability, and the singing of old mu- Britain. "Miner's Freedom" was the sic to his own lute accompaniment will other being published in 1925 as the add a unioue touch of historical color. result of a study of American mining The canon has been largely responsi- conditions made on an Amherst me- ble for the advent of the English sing- morial fellowship. He has spent con- era who appeared in Ann Arbor last siderable time working in the coal year on the concert program series fields, particularly in Illinois where under the auspices of the University the recent protracted strike has just Choral union. The two lectures that been concluded. he will give here are from a series of EnTonSponsor Other Talks three that he is delivering on his Sponsoring the address and probably tour. All three will be given at the as many as 15 more upon kindred sub- Library of Congress. jects during the remainder of the year In the spring of this year Canon eisshe League for Industrial Democra- Fellowes will" make a tour of Canada,1cy. Previously it has been known in with the men of the St. George's cha-'Ann Arbor as the Round Table club, pel choir and the boys of Westmins- but afterrfour years of existence it tc: abbey. This trip is being made has become affiliated as one of the a 'the request of the CanadiW Coun- 1 70 branches of thernational organiza- ell of Education. He will give short I tions which is represented in many talks in connection with the choir mu- leading American universities and col- sic. lee. An attempt will be made to get Its organization is chiefly of stu- Canon Fellowes to speak before class- dents and townspeople who have band- es in music and English literature, a - ed together for the purpose of in- though this has not been definitely I forming themselves on current eco- onnounced nomic social and politicalquestions. William Preston Beazell, assistant ; and has had but one presentation aside I from that given by the original com- managing edit eoalthspe Ner at pany last year. The Bonstelle com- annual University Press club of Mich- 1pany, with a special cast headed by igan banquet Friday night. Prof. John Robert Warwick, presented the drama L Brumm head of the journalism de- in Detroit during the early fall. "On Approval" will be given with a , partment who is in charge of the pro- mixed cast, including Charles D. Liv- gram,zannouncedsyesterday. s ingstone, '28L; Lorinda McAndrew, Beazell, who is one of the best '30; Jane Emery, '28, and Kenneth S. known newspapermen in the east, White, '29. Livingstone will again di- joined the staff of The World in 1910 rect the staging of the piece, and the ' and' .has held his present position ientire production will be under the since 1921. In 1919 he was in the spot- supervision of E. Mortimer Shuter. light when he covered the entire series of successful and attempted trans-Atlantic flights. Since 1923, he has served as associate professor in MKJ the Columbia university school of . journalism. Beazell is also the an- Pf thor of the book, "The Great Boz Ball." ADY HOBBS The Press convention, held annually. -- in Ann Arbor and attended by editorsj Geologist Invited To Make Speeches throughout the state, will open Thurs- On Results Of Explorations day, with sessions also on Friday and Before Danish Scientists Saturday. Delegates will register at' the Union on Thursday morning, and! TO RETURN IN NOVEMBER the first session and address of wel- come will be heard Thursday after-, noon, with the President's dinner that Latest advices from Prof. William evening, H. Hobbs, contained in a cablegram Four prominent newspapermen will from Copenhagen, indicate that he speak at Friday morning's session, wvili sail Nov. 14 from Southampton and the meeting in va talks on the for this country, aboard the Leviathan. centralized subject of "Conservation." Professor Hobbs has completed the Friday night, the annual banquet will first stage of his long homewardI be held at which Mr. Beazell will be journey from Greenland aboard a5 the principal speaker. Danish government steamship plying The convention will come to a close I between Holstenborg, Greenland, andI Saturday morning with the general the Danish capital. business meeting and election of dele- ProfessorcHobbs has been invitedI gates. In the afternoon the visiting to make several speeches and to meetf newspapermen will be the guests of scientific societies in Denmark, which the Athletic association at the dedica- will occupy his time for the next two tion game with Ohio State university. weeks. He feels himself indebted to -__ the people of Denmark who haVA tak- SEXPER'TS DISCUSS ; en a deep interest in his expedition, EE TARIFFCUSS E and have extended him pany courte- NEW TARIFF NOTE sies and favors. _ FRESHMAN LAWS TO ELECT Sophomores of the college of en- gineering, the college of architecture, the dental school, and freshmen of the Law School will hold their class elec- tions today according to the arrange- ments made by the Student council elections committee. The first ballot- ing of the day will take place at 11 o'clock this morning when the sopho- mores of the college of engineering will hold their elections. The sophomore engineers will meet this morning in room -348 of the West Engineering building, where they will choose their leaders for the year, while the remaining classes will not ballot until this afternoon. At 4 o'clock, the sophomores of the college of ar- chitecture will meet in the same place, room 48-o f the West Engineering through the college and graduate stu- I dents. TICKE[T ERRORS MADE, Wrong Section Assigned Applicants For Block; Corrections To. Be Made At Union Today MUST EXCHANGE TICKETS Due to an error in filling out their by counsel at the opening' day of th second big felony trial growing ou of the Senate oil investigation. Nin were excused for cause since the had formed definite opinions in th case, and six others -were excuse three by the government and ,thre by the defense on peremptory cha lenges. Each side had seven such cha lenges left when court adjourned an it is possible that all of the 11 wh were accepted today will be take 1 from the box tomorrow and replace ,by new jurors chosen from an add tiona panel which was summoned ov night. Ages Not Asked Counsel omitted to ask any of th blanks and having them stamped by I women their ages,. but those of the committee in charge of the cheer- I men were carefully solicited. Z ing section some students who pur- youths, only slightly past 20, were chasedu nifnms and intended io sit. remptorily challenged later. 71 UllaZIUU Uli LiVL111:1 Qr1i'Lt LA1LLVAILAIU 4V -. 1 building, for their elections. ntecheering sections tave been sent seats' which are not in sections' 21, 22, 23, the blocks occupied by the' SOPHOMORE ELECTIONS 1 cheering section. -- , 1 All students who got these tickets College of Engineering and who have signed for the cheering Room 348 West Engineering section are requested by the Student building .............."....11:00 council to return their tickets to the1 I committee in the main lobby of the College of Architecture Union between 3 and 5 o'clock this I Room 348 West . Engineering I afternoon or tomorrow afternoon to I building ..................4:00 1 exchange them for seats in the section. 1 It will be necessary for them to have School of Dentistry ; these seats to use their uniforms and. Room 231 Dental building .5:00 I it will be necessary for the appear-; - - I ance of the section that they sit in it.! FRESHMEN ELECTIONS I The committee wishes to emphasize l Law School I the fact that the tickets which are Room B Law building .....4:00 I in the cheering section are in sectionsI 21, 22, 23 of the stadium, situated be- tween the 33 yard lines. Students At 4 o'clock also the freshmen of who signed to sit In the cheering sec- the Law School will meet in room tion and who have their uniforms are of the Law building for their elections adiosad wo ha their advised to make certain that their and an hour later, at 5 o'clock, thes. sophomores of the dental college will seats are in these sections., If they meet in room 231 of the Dental build- has these tickets and they will be ex- ing, where they will ballot for their changed for the seats which these officers. students hold. Different colored ballots will be ! The students will not lose their ex-f used for each election, in order to t avoid any possibility of fraud, and sepny exchange .sTeytikl steps will be taken to assure the eligi- simply exchange the student ticket I ~which they hold ;for the ticket in the bility of each candidate before he is section. Students who apply to the allowed to run. - committee for change are asked to In their lengthy examina ion of t esmen, none of 'the counsel made rE erence to the decision of the Unit States Supreme Court last Monday r storing Teapot Dome to the gover ment and in which Fall was chart terized as a "faithless" public serva and the naval oil lease was declared be the result of "collusion and ci spiracy" between Fall and Sinclai Defense counsel was persiste however, in asking prospective jur if they understood that this wast first time that this particular case h been called for trial, and if they b been influenced by ahy matter o side of possible newspaper artic about the oil question. Although the presentation of teE mony may not begin before Wedn day; Owen Roberts of special gove ment oil counsel, had the records t show that H. M. Blackmer, fort chairman of the Board of the Midw Refining company, had failed to spond to a summons served upon I in Paris by an American consul un the Walsh act last year. . Miller Appears Former Gov. Nathan Miller, of N' York, appeared for Blackimer and w George Gordon Battle, ,also of N York, will represent him whenl g ernment counsel asks that he be judged in contempt of court and fi (By Asocited Pess)Professor Hobbs has spent the sum- I (By Associated Press) mer making scientific researches into' WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.-While first meteorological conditions and the glances at the new French tariff note movement and thickness of the great in official quarters found it highly Greenland icecap. The party whicht unsatisfactory in some respects, the he led, including Ralph L. Belknap of ' document was submitted to expert j the University faculty, second in com- examnination today with representa-imand, has created a weather station tives of the State and Commerce de- equipped with a wireless plant with partments and tariff commission co- which it is hoped that storms can be operating to establish the exact sig- predicted and broadcasted 48 hoursj nificance to be attached to the con- .before they reach the traveled lanes, ditions under which France offers of the North Atlantic. The expedition concessions as to customs rates on has also driven and plotted stakes American goods. with which to measure the movement I Neither the State department nor of the glaciers that form the ice-cap. the French embassy was prepared to This part ~of the work will be com- give out any summary of the com- pleted by- Belknap during the 1928 munication, one of a series hoped to season. end tariff disputes between the coun- tries and enter upon new commercial HONORARY GROUPs At the State department, comment TO MEET TONIGHT was restricted to the declaration that I the conditional clauses appeared un- Holding the first of its two formalj satisfactory, but without any definite meetings, Phi Eta Sigma, national3 indication as to their nature. ( honorary fraternity for first year men, will have its initiation banquet at 6:15 JACK MAY ENTER o'clock tonight in the Union. FOR SINGLE YEAR Nine men who secured the required scholastic average for the second se-, me---'o lat ya rforthe etir Permission for Prof. P. M. Jack of mester of las year or or e entire Aberdeen university to enter the Unit- year if not thefirst semester will be initiated into the fraternity. Active ed States as a visitor for a year was received from Secretary of State members will attend as sophomores, ,Frank Kellogg yesterday by Dr. Frank! stated Leonard Scheele, '30, president, Robbins, assistant to the President. yesterday. ': The telegram, however, sustained the ,The initiation will begin at 5:30 refusal of the State department to o clock in room 304 of the Union. allow Professor Jack to enter permna- President Clarence Cook Little, Dean nently since his resignation from the George W. Patterson of the engineer- post of professor at Aberdeen when- ing college, and J. A. Bursley, dean of. he took up graduate work at Cam- students, will address the initiates bridge two years ago renders him and members informally. ineligiblefor admission.p d An average equal to half hours of #Professor Jack was appointed last A grade and half of B grade is re-, summer to the position of head of the' quired of first year men for admission rhetoric department at the University, to the group. and has since that time been endeav- oring to enter the country. Dr. Rob- STATE PRINCIPALS bins will not make the hurried trip TO HOLD MEETING to Washington, D. C., as planned in view of the telegram received yes-mhss terday. Hope was expressed that I Membein of the southeastern Asso- some arrangements can be made for ciation of High School Principals his permanent stay after he is once will hold a meeting on Saturday, Oct. admitted. 22, in room 2001 of the University a high school, according to an announce- J TT hNT I M DE ment made yesterday by Prof. J. B. ALUM"NUS ADE Edmondson of the School of Educa- T TT1-110 n T " ' DN 'TL lT I+ r .--1hote;n.f1 .. ,... Tomorrow at 4 oclock the largest e election of the week will be held when. the sophomores of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts meet in Natural Science auditorium formthe choice of their officers, and Thursday the sophomores of the College of Pharmacy will meet to choose their class officials in the Chemistry build- ing. These are the last of the series of class elections which will be held early this fall, since the freshmenj elections in all schools and colleges of the campus will not be held untilr I after Thanksgiving, at a date to be I set by the Student council. The School s of Education elections wei'e held int disregard of the council regulations I and the School of Medicine will hold its elections at its own discretion, since the laboratory periods make it very difficult to secure a meeting of1 the whole class at once. The junior elections of the School of Medicine] have already been held. The freshmen law class will ballot today with the sophomore classesI since the Law School has no regular-' ly enrolled sophomore class, and while known as freshmen the group in{ reality has but two more years as students in the University. CAST FOR CAMPUS I MOVIE IS CHOSEN Announcement of the cast for the University moving picture was made yesterday from the office of Dr. Frank Robbins, assistant to the president, with the reception of an acceptance 'from Nathan Potter, '98, of Ann Ar- bor, who will play the role of the returning alumnus. The two student characters of his son and daughter bring their tickets with them, as no exchange will be made otherwise. The committee will be in the Union main lobby from 3 to 5yo'clock today and to-t morrow afternoon also. CLASS WILL HEAR MOCK LIBEL CASE Mip to Miller $100,000 as, provided by told newspapermen that A special mock court trial, designed upon a test case in newspaper libel,' will be held as the first of a series of feature innovations in the course in1 newspaper law, at 8 o'clock tomorrow in the editorial room of 4the West Med- ical Building. Robert W. Desmond of the Journalism department will preside as judge. The case, designed by Joseph E., Burnswick, '28, and Milton Kirshbaum '28, will characterize the work under- taken in the course by Mr. Desmond,i and will go through legal procedure. Kenneth Patrick, '29, and James L. Rigelhaupt, 28' will act as attorneysI for the plaintiff and defendant respec- tively in the case termed "Vedder, versus The Michigan Daily." Specia] witnesses will be summoned and cross examined, and the class will end witY a decision by the court, in which will be inc'orporated the Supreme court ruling on the case, with its citations. BUDGET QUESTION STILL UNSETTLED (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 17--Although called suddenly from the west coast by President Coolidge to discuss bud- get matters, Maj.-General Charles T. Summerall, chief of the army staff, did not have an appointment with the President upon his arrival in Wash- mer saw no reason why he should pear "involuntarily" in a case which he was not at all interested in addition believed the Walsh a< be unconstitutional. Flanked by an array of counsel, clair and *Fall had places near rail which in this little courtr shuts off the correspondents and public, giving plenty of space for former, but extremely little for spe tors. Sinclai.r frequently consulted his attorneys during the examina of each venireman. He gave ad when it came time to exercise per tory challenges, studying the lis prospective jurors very carefully Fall sat half the time hunched d in his chair with a black over thrown over one shoulder. Occasic I'ly he dozed, but was keenly alert v it came to removing jurors from box after they had qualified. LEVINE RECEIVE COOL RECEPTI( (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 17-Charles Levine came home today and wa ficially warned that he might e: to hear much criticiSm of hN inspired by jealousy of his ex, in being the first trans-Atlantic passenger. The Weather i CHAIRMAN NAMED FOR OPERA GROUP Carl Fauster, '29, has been appoint- ed chairman of the music committee for the 1927 Union opera, "The Same To You," according to an announce- ment made vesterday by John E. Star- Among the national directors are Nor- man Thomas who spoke here last year. Arthur Garfield Hayes, Robert Morse Lovett and other prominent figures. 1 I SENIORS Please get your order blanks J UDGE Ut 1 B GRT IKE.Nr.1 1tion. The meeting will begin at ]u o'clock and will conclude around LANSING, Oct. 17-Governor Green noontime. Fair rising (By Associated Press) and continued cool; fair temperature tomorrow. t1 I