MSABLISHED 1890, 4 zau 4aU1* MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS wwamlowmmmk*M VOL. XXXVIII, NO. 131. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1928 . N0 ER 0 ER HEL s L I L OPPOSITI O- WORLD EN6INEERS END FOR EXHIBITION'' COURT LOSES BY BIG 1 PRESIDENT LITTLE, OTHER FACULTY NOT ABLES, VOTE IN DAILY ELECTION PLAN IAARGE PROGRAM FEATURE EXHIBITS AND DISPLAY$ SHOEMAKER IS CHAIR Every Department To Take 1's First Open House Progran Since 191" O I IMAM 'rt Ini to Final arrangements for the Open House of the College of Engieering which will take place from 1 o'clock in the afternoon to 9 o'clock in the evening cn Friday, and from 8 o'clock in the mrning to 5 o'clock in the aftern on on Saturday, have been practically completed. The complete program for this Open House, the first given by the College of Engineering since 1915, has been announced by Perry Shoemaker, '28 E, general chairman of the undertak- ing. Many remarkable exhibits have been arranged for dSplay to the public during the course of the Open House, some of them having been brought here with considerable difficulty. The departmnt of aeronautical en- gineering will demonstrate the use of the wind tunnel which'is located in the basement of the East Engineering building, and in addition will show ex- amples of' desgn work and a number of model planes. To' have Chemical Show The department of chemical engin- eering, in addition to putting on a chemical show demonstrating the melting and pouring of metals, will display various metallurgical exhibits, and will show among other things the' use or the Duco spray both, the ultra violet ray weathering machine, the ice n me, the process of nickle- plating, ble crystalizer and cetrafuge operation, and high temperature steel testing. The department of electrical engin- eering will -open the dynamo labor- atory and the illuminating laboratoryI and will demonstrate x-ray experi- ments, vacuum tube experiments, and a machine that can draw as many as 160,000 lines per inch on glass or highly polished metal, which is used for measuring wave lengths in the ether. Also, a reverberation room and a sound proof room will be opened to the public, as will the radio rooms.1 As a feature of the open house, the department of civil engineering is of-; fering a very large exhibit of models, many of which will actually be oper- ated. Incluided in the list are models of road machinery, grade crossings, bridges, a sewage disposal plant, a filtration plant, a typical countryside, 12 feet by 14 feet, and a locomtive and train models ranging from the earliest American built locomotive, to a scale model of the Twentieth Cen- tury Limited Models of modern auto- mobiles and a model of a Great Lakes freighter valued at $15,000 will also be exhibited. Model Submarine To Be Shown 'The department of marine engineer- ing will have working models in op- eration in their naval tank, and will show examples of 'ship, boiler, and en- gine design, A model of a modern 'submarine will be exhibited and the actual engine used in the launch of Admiral Severa, who was the Spanish Admiral at the time of the sinking of the Maine, will be displayed.j The department of mechanical en- gineering will exhibit and test various types of aircraft and automobile motors, and will open the foundry, forge, and machine shops. A high speed turbine and a Doble water wheel will be 'shown in operation, and some heating and ventilating experi- ments and mytery demonstrations will be offered. The University power plant will be open and the air brake instruction car of the Michigan Cen- tral lines will be on the University siding from 8:30 o'clock in the morn- ing to 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon on Friday. . The department of military science and tactics will exhibit pieces of light artillery throughout the Open House. PAIL TESTIMONY President Clarence Cook Little is sion of campus opinion, theI here shown casting his vote at 4 arrived at the poll just at o'clock yesterday afternoon, in the when the vote was heaviest, poll held by The Daily. Joining with the his vote in the true political rest of the faculty in hearty support , even shielding his ballot Pre-sid'ent the timeI and cast manner, with his of the movement toward an expres- Will C;ndiict Affair Along lines Nattioial PIolitical Convention According To Committee Of ATTENDANCE IS LIMITED Invitation, for the 'sixth annual Grtdiron banquet, sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi, professionsl journalistic fraternity, were place in tle mails late last nigh, according to the invi- tati-n committee. Between 300 and 400 invitations were included in the list, which included both students and faculty members. This year's ban- quet will be held on Wednesday night, April 4. Instructions for returning the invi- tations were included in the letter, and, ,according to the committee, they should be returned to convention head- quarters, as designated by the invita- tions, by the end of this -week. In- asmuch as it is planned to limit at- tendance to the u'sual 300, the first ap- plications will be assured of securing tickets. Outside invitations have all been' placed in the mails, according to the committeo ,and replies are being re-f ceived d aily. Indications are that many outside guests will be present on the night of the annual "razzfest." The price of ticket for this year's ban-{ quet has been set at $2.75. As previously announced, the affair will be conducted along the line of a national political convention. Tickets for the banquet have also been se- lected to harmonize with this scheme,' the ticket committee reported yester- day, and they will be mailed out next week, in order to accommodate recip- ients as early as possible. The different factions present on the night of the banquet will be grouped separately in order to give their candi- dates moral and verbal support, ac- cording to the seating committee. Por- traits of the fathers of the different parties are being painted and will, be arrayed about the convention hall, which, for other occasions is known as the Union ball room. The identity of the recipient of the famous "Oil Can" still remains a mys- tery, the choice not to be known until the night of the banquet. It ha's been intimated that the speeches given at that time by the different candidates will probably materially further the cause of the recipient, as far as the final choice is concerned. Bridge Prizes To Be A mnrr-,1 Tn Winn era hand as he marked the small squares. 1 His vote remains a secret. The faculty vote wa's especiallyE large in yesterday's balloting, exceed-I ing by a °large majority the number of votes cast by the faculty at any of9 the previous elections that have been held for the campus at large. Much of this was no doubt du'e to the talkt -xcited by this year's campaign, andi by the Coolidge ultimatum.r RESHME[N AGREE[ TO~ KEEP POT TRADITION c Further progress in the enforcement of the tradition of the freshman pot1 was announced by Courtland C. Smith, '28, at the regular weekly meeting of the Student council held lat night at1 the Union. Smith reported to the council that he has interviewed tie t presidents cf the freshmen classes of1 the engineering college and of thet College of Literature, Science, and the Arts with the result that they will en- deavor to take steps which will per-t petuate the tradition. The efforts are the result of thel neglect by large portions of the fresh-t man class to wear their pats thist year. Among the other business trans- acted at the council imeeting lacl night was the report of a committeet which has conferred with the major officers of the various classes of the Medical school, with the result that a more sincere effort will be made } in the future to cooperate with the medical classes in the handling of their class elections and various class functions, according to the report. In, the past, due to the inconvenient hour of laboratory periods and the exceptional nature of the Medicalt school organization these classets have been forced to handle their own' class elections and similar duties. An effort will be made to assist them in the future, the council decided. Plans for Cap Night are proceed- ing to completion, according to the report of the Cap Night committee. Cap Night this year will be held on May 11. The site has not as yet been decided upon. DISSIPATE RUMOR OF FOUND PLANE (hy Associated i'res3. GREENVILLE, Maine, March 21.- The possibility that the monoplane Endeavour in which Capt. Walter Hinchliffe and the Hon. Elsie Mackay set out from England last Tuesday on a transatlantic flight. might have VOTERS REJECT ALL-PROPOSALS WOMEN AND FACULTY FAVOR WORLD COURT BY ONLY SLIGHT 3MARGIN MALE ,STUDENTS OPPOSE Suggestion To Draft Coolidge Loses By Ten To One Vote, But Issue On Prohibition Is Close Snowed under by a count of more than three votes to two,theeissue of the World Court, as presented on the ballots of the presidential poll conducted yesterday, fell in defeat by a majority of more than 800 votes. In the deluge of "no" ballots which descended on the three questions, both of the other issues, involving prohibition and the. drafting of Cool- idge, were also defeated, though the prohibition ballot was close. The proposal to draft Coolidge was over- whelmed by more than ten votes to one. Both the women students and the faculty members gave the World Court a slight majority, the women voting 202 to 168 in, favor of the pro- position while the faculty gave it a narrow six vote margin with 130 bal- lots to 124. The male students, how- ever, registered in decisive terms their disapproval of American entry in the international body, by a mar- gin of well over 850 votes. Prohibition Race Is Close In the poll on prohibition, thoug the question was not directly stated, much the same thing happened, ex- cept that the margin of disapproval was not nearly as large as in the case of the World Court. The fina vote on this question, which found 2,012 of the voters against the pro- position and 1,811 in favor of it, wa the closest of the three issues pre sented, and both the women student and the faculty members gave the pro hibition question a decisive margin The faculty voted 250 in favor of th, policy and 123 against it, and th women students voted in a similai vein with 171 votes in .favor of pro hibition and 102tagainst it. In thi case again, however, the margi against the proposition registered b the male students was insurmountabl when they gave the question a hau icap of nearly 400 votes, and the fina result was the 200 vote defeat. Coolidge Measure Downed The proposition of drafting Presi dent Coolidge as a candidate for th' presidency went down to the most decisive defeat of any of the three ques- tions presented. All three factions of faculty, male students, and women students voted decisively against this proposal, and the final outcome wa a complete repudiation of the idea of drafting the present President as candidate. The faculty members vot ed 262 to 15 against the proposition, the women students defeated it by; count of 330 to 46, and the mal students, remaining consistent to their policy of rolling up a decisive mar- gin against each of the proposals snowed it under by a vote of 2,90 votes to 279. The question on drafting Preside- Coolidge was, like the question o the World Court, directly stated. HOOVER HEADED VOTING IN 1920 Herbert Hoover, secretary of com- merce, is not a new favorite of the University faculty and student body as a presidential candidate, it is revealed by examination ot the returns of a. straw ballot conducted in 1920 by The Daily. Secretary Hoover, in that year, led nit only on the Republican ticket but in the Democratic balloting a's well, though his margin of victory in both parties was very narrow. Never before in the history of re- corded campus ballotting has interest reached the peak of yesterday, when more than 4,450 votes were cast, though the totals in 1920, when in- "For the Love of Pete," the Junior Girls' Play with its locale on a float- ing university, and replete with dances and tuneful melodies, contin- ues its run at the Whitney Theater for the remainder of the week, with a matinee on Saturday. The joint product of more than 125 girls of the Junior class, the Junior Girls' Play is the largest sin- gle venture given by any class in the University. .Rivaling in size and mag- nificence the Union Opera, all of the work is done by members of the Jun- ior class with the exception of paint- ing and shifting of scenery. The ef- fort to maintain the standards of the productionaas strictly amateur have, however, had nothing to do with the excellent .brand of entertainment which has been offered from year to year. The general chairman of the play is Elizabeth Wellman, '29, the busi- ness is in the hands of Marie Hart- wig, '29, and Minna Miller, '27, is the general director of the production. I |I APPRECIATION To the student body which lent Its enthusiastic support, to the faculty members who cooperated so heartily in casting their bal- I lots, and to the various individ- I uals and organizations who aided, in the mechanical arrangement and management of yesterday's all-campus presidential poll, The Daily expresses its sincere ap- preciation. I TABULATION 0 CAMPU IA RGINALOS FOR PESI DN Fl Junior Presentation REPUBLICAN ENTRANT AS SI Has Successful Run At Whitney Theater IS.DEFEATED BY DECISIVE Is SECRETARY OF COMMERCE RECEIV MAJORITY OVER REMAINING CANDIDATES IN RACE Sweeping through the all-campus presidential poll held yes (lay to pile up a decisive majority of all votes cast in bth part Herbert Hoover, secretary of commerce, stood last night as outstanding unofficial choice of the University student body faculty for President of the United States. Secretary Hoover o' whelmed his nearest competitor, Gov. Al Smith of New Yorks b ratio of more than seven votes to two, and gained 2,540 of the t of 4,451 votes cast. Governor Smith, who led the Democratic candidates and v was in second place in regard, to total votes, received 728 of ballots cast, while Charles Evans Hughes, veteran New York sta man, was second in the Republican ranks and third in point of vo received with 303. Vice-president Charles Dawes received votes; Newton D. Baker, 102; Frank Lowden, 95; Senator Will Borah, 90; and Senator James Reed, 75; amonfg the other lead candidates. Among the 276 faculty members who cast votes in the st ballot the various candidates showed only a slightly variant deg of strength. Secretary Hoover was the outstanding choice of group as of the others, with slightly 'more than half of all bal cast, while Governor Smith was a .poor second with 56 vo Newton D. Baker showed popularity all out of proportion to measure in the all-campus tabulations, however, when he polled or almost one tenth of the entire number cast. Another shift strength fromn the.all-campus returns was noted in the.Republi party when Senator Borah and Hughes tied for second place w ten votes apiece, while Lowden was an extremely poor fifth w only three votes. A distinct departure from the average was noted in the wome vote, however, when Secretary Hoover polled '423 of the tota 614 votes cast. Another decided shift of strength was apparen the total of Governor Smith among the women voters when 1 candidate, who had gained about one of every six votes thro the .whole ballot received scarcely more than one tenth, or 43, of women's votes. Hughes was far the outstanding second cho F RETURNS OF among the women students, w S POLL 'he received 41 votes, only' less than Governor Smith, while V B~iCAIVpresident Dawes, who failed to lc BLICAN rasdanappreciable candidate in e Women balloting as a whole, gained '24 v its Students Faculty Total from the women. S43 14,540 The vote as a whole, numbe 4 I 3503 more than 4,500 students and fac 47 I 303 members, was the largest all-can 24 7 1'2 ballot ever reported on any issue, 6 3 9: ing more than 350 votes more I S 10 90 were cast in the 1920 straw ballo 19 2 67 was conducted by The Daily at 2 o 27 polling booths on the campus,,w: 2 , 15 w'ere kept open all day with 2 114 exception of one hour over noon, o O 10 several organizations of a polil nature aided in getting the stud to to the polls in large numbers. The straw ballot will be linked v 527 175 3,323 a natiot-wide poll of a similar ture which is being conducted un RATIC the auspices of a national maga: the results of which will be announ e Women about April 1. its Students Faculty Total ' REPUE Candidates S Herbert Hoover........ Charles E. Hughes . ... . Charles Dawes......... Frank Lowden.......... William Borah. ...... Nicholas Longworth ... Frank Willis.. ... ... Nicholas M. Butler..... George W. Norris...... Charles Curtis. ..... . . All others.............. Mal tudeni 1,976 252 121 86 72 46 25 1.2 1 1 10 Total.... . ..........2,611 DEMOC Candidates <' S Alfred Smith........... Newton D. Baker....... James Reed....... .. Willam McAdoo........ Albert Ritchie.......... Thomas Walsh......... Vic Donahey ............ All others ........... Mal tuden P29 6O 67 55 57 41 17 43. 16 6 12 4 5 I 26 6 3 7 1 726 102 75 73 64 53 19 14 1,128 4,4.51 Total .... .........926 Grand Total......... 87 101 NATIONAL ISSUES POLL I. Do you believe that commitment to a policy of forcement for the 8th amendment is a desirable Lihon for a President? rigid en- q"al f ica- Jpposition To CI Memorial Is Voi Much opposition to the rec adopted plan to provide a clasi morial by mean's of a group en ment irsurance policy, was voit ,a meeting of the senior class ( engineering college held Tui night. The meeting was held Imany members of the class cl that too many were swept oft feet by the enthusiasim shown a meeting last Friday morning, an -because? of this the vote was not resentative of the views of the The" plan which had been a and raised much objection, cal each member of the class upon uation, taking out a $250 insu policy payable at the end of 25 a single payment amounting t proximately $8.75 per year. A end of the 25th reunion of the in 1953, a sum of about $110,000i will have accumulated will be where they believe the money car be usedl for the interests of the versity. Because of the opposition t plan now adopted, it was deeme visable to have this revote in that the class might act in accon with the opinign of the amajori1 was decided that a committee 1 Yes Male studnts... .. ......1,390 Women students..... .7.. .. 71 faculty ... ..................250 'Total.............I,81I No 1,787 102 123 2,o0I2 2. Do you believe that commitment to entry by the United States into the World Court is a desirable qualification for a President? Yes Male Students ............... I,029 Women Students-.......-.- .202 Faculty....................130 Total ............... ....1,361 No I,893 168 124 2,185 - -- --'.-. -". ..- -. I