THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1827 THE MICHIGAN- DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1927 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ' PAGE. THIMU rBIG SUPE RDRE ADN AUGH T JOU RN EYS INTRINATIONAL NIGHT'L BA STORNEW ORLEANS FOR FESTIVAL TO HAVE MANY NOVEL FEATURES THIS YEAR'.=:Y ,_. PRO~IWCTIO WILL BE LARGER ANiD MORE EXP~ANSVE THAN USUAL ORChIESIS TO PARTICIPATE Scenes Portraying Usual Occurrences. Of Typical lawaliin Day To Be Part Of Special Act Latest announcements indicate that International Night, sponsored an- nually by the Cosmopolitan club of the campus, will this year be a larger and more expansive creation than it has been in years past. Two perform- ances will be given, the one in Hill auditorium on March 6, and one in Ypsilanti on the following night. Plans for the production are in the hands of Mrs. Robert winters and a committee of foreign and American students Under the present plans a number of new features will be included this year, making up a colorful and varied pro gram which will combine ;both campus talent and professional cts from Detroit and the immediate vi- cinity. One of the most attractive featrres will be the work of the foreign children in Ann Arbor, il- lustrating the daily life of their homes and their traditions. A Ukrainian orchestra and dancer from Detroit will be one of the lead- ing attractions, while all presenta- tions will be in native costume with a characteristic background. The quartette of Negro spiritual singers previously announced has been in- creased to an octette. Blossom Bacon, a student, will represent the Irish element on the campus with her playing of the harp. Orchesis, a club composed of stu- dents interested in interpretive danc- ing, directed by lone Johnson, in- structor in physical education, will present creative work in one of its only publi appearances for the year. These them-es are chosen and dvel- oped by the participants themselves, and will (represent the inherent qual- ities of the different nationalities. All the scenes that go to make up the daily occurrences of a Ha- waiian day will be presented in one fct in a picturesque, brilliantly-cos- tumed pantomine. Scientist Will Talk On Subject Of Radio Dr. Phillips Thomas, radio author- ity of the research department of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufac- turing company, will lecture on "Radio and Power Transmission by Radio" in the We'st lecture room of the West Physics building at 8 o'clock .Friday night. The lecture will be given under the auspices of the De- troit Section of the Institute of Radio ,Engineers cooperating with Ann Arbor members who are responsible for bringing the lecture to Ann Arbor. Dr. Thomas is the inventor of the ultra-audible microphone and has been responsible for developments in it. He also developed the fundamentals of the Westinghouse line of electro- static condensers and holds the basic patents on them. He was graduated from Ohio State university in 1904. Evening skating for Dartmouth students has been made possible by the erection of several huge flood lights on Occom Pond. 'NGROQUESTION WILL Study Data On Cost F ~ ~~ f TOI EIJECredit 'Accounts; B t OF In cooperation withu thle National Retail creht assocation, the bureau Professor Johnson Will Speak Before of business research of the School ofoso egeO ujc f Bsns diitain smkn Southern Lynchings a study of the costs of operating Souteri Lych ngscredit and accounts receivable de- SPEECH THIRD OF SERIES partments inretail stores throughout being secured by questionnaires Oakley C. Johnson, of the rhetoric mailed to 4,500 stores in all parts of department, will speak at 4:15 o'clock the United States this afternoon in room 231 Angell hall The report of the various stores on the subject, "Lynching and Civiliza- will be analyzed by the bureau and tion." He is 'speaking under the aus- the findings will be presented in pices of the Tolstoy league. pamphlet form. In his addrtss, he will disucss the lynching of negroes in the the South Ohio State university will observe and will comment upon the entire Scholarship day for the fourth time negro problem. Johnson is particu- this spring. The student senate will larly interested in this topic and has handle the details of the affair. made an extensive study of it during the past few years. The question of injustice to the negro will also come in for comment. Johnson is the founder of the Negro- v Causasian club on the campus. The purpose behind this movement is to' make the negro students feel both wel-B O O come and at home in the University 'l and to assure them that they are not looked down upon by students of oth- We are at your s enationalities, which wehaveg l The lecture by Johnson marks the we third address the Tolstoy league has offered this year that directly bears on the teachings of Tolstoy, in re- gard to.~modern forms of punishment. rof. Arthur E. Wood, of the sociol- ogy department, 'spoke last fall in CAN GE condemnation of capital punishment; and Frank Hatley talked against war. Members of the band at the Uni- versity of California have been granted one and one half units of B. A. credits for their musical work. I Men's Silk Lined Caps, All New Spring Numbers. Values to $2.50-$A..59 Men's Athletic Underwear, 2Piece--45c each Men's Imported English Broadcloth Shirts, Ide, Collar Attached, Pre-shrink-$.9 Ann Arbor. Dry Goods Co.. 316 S. Main St. SubscribeP For the Weekly Uncle Sam's superdreadnaught Texas, largest battleship ever to visit New Orleans, arrived in time for the Mardi Gras celebrations. Above, the Texas in the Mississippi river; below, some of the 1,200 members of the crew lining the rail, and two seaplanes which are carried by the Texas and used as scouts in time of war. Necessity Of Individual Mental Activity Is Stressed In Statement By Educator "Vocationalists are now recognizing ing recognition of the values described the necessity and advisability of a as cultural. These facts include such definite and conscious policy of de- significant things as complaint on the veloping general, sound abilities and part of several institutions that there individual mental activity as the most is a trend away from science. The practical method to attain vocational professional schools tend to empha- objectives," declared Dr. Arthur J. size more the aspects of education Klein, chief of the division of higher which have been regarded as cultural. education of the National Bureau of "It is true, however, than any form Education in a statement recently of mental application, even when pur- made public. sued for the purpose of earning "There is indicated," says Dr. Klein, money, has cultural value. As one "a returning faith, if not in the dis- writer puts it, 'America will not ac-I ciplinary value of the so-called cul- cept the, European conception of utral subjects, at any rate in their scholasticism on the basis of organi- practical value and in the habits of zations of colleges and universities.' application developed by the exertion Segregation of culture and of liveli- required to master them. Enrollment hood, of intellectual and of money figures and the numbers of degrees values, does not take the place of obtained as a result of four years of life. They are intimately interwoven. devotion to the liberal arts show no America is becoming increasingly in- 'serious' decrease in liberal arts edu- sistent that they should become in- cation. Many facts point to increas- timately interwoven in education. Are you running low on stationery? I INFORMATION! service with a fund of Book Information gathered during 5 years of experience. 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