I I V _. b ,4771 a t I Vol. XXXVIII, No. 8. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1927. DELEGATES TO EIGHTH ASSEMBLY OF LE AGUE ARE RETURNING HOME LEAGuE MEETING WAS MOST IMPORTANT iN HISTORY, DELEGATES BELEVE ECONOMICS IS IMPROVED Americans Will Be Invited To Sit Upon Advisory Commission For Economic, Cooperation (By Associated Press) GENEVA, Sept. 27.-The delegates to the eighth assembly of the League of Nations are returning to their re- spective countries tonight virtually unanimous 'in the conviction that the meeting is one of the most. important in the history of the League. - The Assembly has been marked, in their view, by two notable interna- tional developments. The first is the great moral impetus given to the consolidation of peace, and the second is the decision to tighten the grasp on peace, by grad- nally constructing a machinery which the nations feel they can accept as adaptable to changing conditions of international life. It is generally believed that the Geneva peace protocol, fashioned by the 1924 Assembly of the League, was too idealistic for the present age in that as President Guani put it in his valadictory oration today, it is better to approach the complex problem of peace by distinguishing more clearly the boundary between the practical and the ideal. The Assembly decided to approach the question of obtaining reduction of armament, not by one but by a series of international conferences and by simultaneously creating a system of arbitration and security pacts .be- tween nations which will make it pos- sible for nations really to lower their armaments by the time the first dis- armament conference is held. Disarnmament Not Likely The Assembly ended today.with the growing conviction that for Europe at least any considerable lowering of' armament is not likely unless the feeling of national security is greater than that afforded by the Locarno conference agreement. Many dele- gates expressed the hope that the United States, in addition to cooperat- ing at the disarmament preliminaries, will collaborate in security negotia- tions even if it should find itself un- able to engage its national respons bility as a party to the actual security treaty. A remarkable feature of the as- sembly has been the ,repeated refer- ence by the speakers to a movement among the American people totobtain definite outlawry of war by the ex- tension of arbitration. Several of the delegates exppressed the opinion to' the Associated Press correspondent that the United States could play a helpful role in the forthcoming long and complicated pfort for outlawing war by lending its support and advice. if only unoficially and that any world movement to brand an aggressor na- tion as an outlaw can never succeed unless the United States, tacitly ac- cepting any League decision concern- ing the identity of the outlaw, would agree to waive certain neutrality fights, and without engaging in any actual League war, would consent niot to trade with or help the nation de- clared to be the-aggressor. Mtch Done 'In Economics In the domain of economics, deemed by many the potential cause of war, much ihas been done, International eRonomi cooperation, hailed as e- sential by the recent economic confer- ence, will be pronoted by the creation of an advisory commission on which; Americans will be invited to sit, in a"i endeavor to find means of establishing genuine liberty of commerce and the rempval of vexacious tariff restric- tions. The Latin-American states hav taken a leading part in the delibera- tions of the Assembly, and although the League took no action and was not asked to do so, in the Panama canal problem raised by Dr. Morales, the Panama delegate, the impression1 prevailed here that Latin-American political problems will be at least aired in the future at Geneva and the grat forum of intrnational qustions. FORESTR Y DEAN'SI ASSISTANT NAMED Miss Eloise Judson of Escanaba, Olicb., has been appointed recorder and assistant to the dean of the School of Forestry and Conservation. She is to assume her duties today, Scholarship Winner' Departs To Attend CollegeIn England Theodore Hornberger, '27, awarded the scholarship presented to the Uni- versity by Mr. and Mrs. J. Ingliss of! Ann Arbor, left this week on the Lan- castria, Cunard Line steamer, for Eng- land. According to the stipulations of the scholarship he will engage this next year in study preparatory to a teacher's career. Hornberger was undecided up to the time he left as to what college he would attend, whether Oxford, Cam- bridge, or the University of London. Dr. Robbins, secretary to the presi- dent of the University of Michigan, is of the opinion that Mr. Hornberger favors the University of London. The scholarship was awarded upon recommendation of President Clarence Cook Little and its subsequent passage by the