)ESTABLISHED 1890.. C~I, LuAr at MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Vol. XXXIX, No. 119. ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1929 EIGHT PAGES OF ACADEMYTOD WORRELIL TO DISCUSS MAGIC OF EARLY EGYPTIAN CHRISTIANS HOBBS IS SCHEDULED FOR GREENLAND TALK Sapir Will Speak On Aboriginal Languages Of America elling; Of Work In This Field Climaxed by the annual Aca- demy dinner and. President Wil- liam H. Worrell's address, "Early Christian Magic from Egypt,", which are scheduled to take place; at 6:30 and 7:30 o'clock tonight re- spectively, the thirty-fourth an- nual sessions of the Michigan Aca- demy of Science, Arts and!Letters. will enter this morning upon their second and most important day. Lecture Is Feature An illustrated lecture by Prof. William H. Hobbs upon the subject, "The Greenland Expeditions of the University of Michigan with Some Account of the Rescue of the American Fliers," will complete the aeries of events listed upon the Academy's general program. , The largesa amount of today s work upon the part of, the Aa- demy will be the olding of the majority of the section meetings listed in this year's program. Of the more than 206 papers which are to be read during the course of thenassembly, a majority will bc presented before -memers of the 13 sections in today's meeting. The balance will be held tomorrow morning and afternoon. Following them the Academy assembly will meet for the election of officers and consideratiol of -resolutions.' With the close of this meeting the Academy will adjourn for the ypar. Sapir On Program1 Yesterday%-' academiy progam1 was opened with an address by Prof. Edward Sapir of the depart- ment of anthropology and general linguistics of the University ofa Chicago. A seris of educational moving pictures presented through the courtesy of the School of For-k estry and Conservation followedc Professor Sapirs address. Taking as his subject, "The Ab-1 original Languages of America," the Chicago profess r who is one of the' country's foremost men in this field declared, "There is no part of the world that vies with1 America in the interest of its aboriginal languages{ Museum Is inspected In addition to the special ex- hibit arranged by the various sec- tions of the Academy all the otherk portions of the Museum were thrown open to public inspection. This .included all the laboratories, which under normal conditions aret closed to the pubic Besides this show an exhibit of asupplies for bi- ological laboratories and class- rooms. is being held all during the convention in roomn 2111, Natural Science building. The fine arts section had an ex- tensive exhibit of paintings in oils and water colors, besides etchings and various articles of sculpture. These were works of both local and state men. Schedules Announced Anthropology will meet at 9:00 o'clock this morning in room 2054, Natural Science building with Prof. W. B. Hinsdale as chairman. Botany will meet in four sessions, at 9 and at 2 o'clock on both Fri- day and Saturday in room 2003, Natural Science building, under the chairmanship of Prof. E. F. Wood-' cock of Michigan State college. A biologists' luncheon will be held atj 12:15 o'clock in room 1023, Natural, Science building. Economics and Sociology will bold a joint meeting at 9 o'clock in room 101 Economics building this morning. Individual meetings will be held at 2 o'clock with the eco- nomics section meeting in room 101I and the sociology section meeting in room 102 of the Economics build- ing. Prof. Z. C. Dickinson of the University economics department, will be the chairman. Fine arts will hold its first meet- ing in the form of a luncheon at 12:15 o'clock today at the Union. A mAitini nf pehihitnrs memhers. Bonstelle, Quirk, And Wallace To Give Final Decision On One Act Plays Tonight Final judging of the four one- inence through his relations some act play bill being presented night- time ago as head of a national! ly this week by Play Production dramatic organization. At present' tkp'prfohe is in charge of a group of play- will take place at tonight's perfor- ers in Ypsilanti. Professor Wallace mance. The three judges who will has had varied experience and is make the decision are Miss Jessie well known in his field. He will be. Bonstelle of the Detroit Cvic the- in Ann Arbor this summer as di- STORM IN SUIJ KILLS NINE IDEN BLAST; ater, Daniel L. Quirk, Jr. of Ypsi- lanti, and Prof. Chester M. Wal- lace, head of the drama school at, Carnegie Institute of Technology. The four plays which have sur- vived-the previous elimination and which will compete tonight for the decision to be awarded are "My Man" by Jerome McCarthy '29,' "Passion's Progress" by R. Leslie! Askren '29, "Outside This Room" by Dorothy Ackerman '29, and "The Joiners" by Arthur Hinkley '29. The three judges are all well known in the field of dramatic art, Miss Bonstelle, the first of the judges, is well known for her con- nection with the Detroit theater which formerly bore her name. Quirk has attained national prom- TOA N NOF 'ENSIAN SALES" Subscriptions Will Be Taken Last Time This Year At 4ooths On Campus For ISSUE TO APPEAR SOON Today is the final day during' which subscriptions will be sold for the 1929 Michiganensian accord- ing to an announcement made yesterday by J. Franklin Miller, '29, business manager of the year- book. Following today's sale the order of books for the 1929 annual will be placed, according to Miller, and no further subscriptions will be received. A waiting list, however, will be .placed in the business of- fice of the publication in the Press building. In the event that there are any copies left over at the end of the year, students will be called in the orders that their names appear on the list. Representatives of the 'Ensian staff will be located at tables at both ends and the center of the diagonal today as well as in the lobbies of' University and Angell halls, Unredeemed pledge cards will be accepted as partial pay- ment for subscriptions at the table in Angell hall only, Miller stated. The price of the yearbook is $5.50. Pledge cards are equivalent to $1 paid toward the price pf the an- nual. With editorial work on the Mich- iganensian complete and galley proofs being returned daily to the printers, it is probable that the book will be ready for distribution on the campus during the second week of May. As soon as the work of indexing the; present work is complete and has been sent to the printers, the present editorial staff will turn its attention to the laying of plans for the 1930 annual. The sporting staff will prepare actual copy and pictures for the 1930 yearbook' while the remainder of the staff and the present editors will con- rector of the repertory theater. Persons wanting to attend to- night's presentation may obtain seats by calling at the office of Play Production in University Hall. A very small number of seats re- main.. Capacity crowds have witnessed the previous showings of the bill on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights. 'FORWARD MARCH'! READY FOR DEBUT Helen Bush And Dora Vandenberg Head Large Cast In Junior Girls' Production PLAY TO RUN NEXT WEEK Twenty-four junior women arel members of the cast of "Forwardl March," the 25th annual Junior Girls' Play, which is to run all next week at the Whitney theater. The unusually large cast for the junior play has allowed a wide range of characterization., The leads are played by Helen Bush and Dora Vandenberg. Miss Bush, as Julie, is the ingenue type of leading woman, and Miss Van-, denberg plays opposite her in the role of Larry Lane, an Amnerican geologist. The comedy leads, Gwen and Wally, are played by Lillian Setchell and Kathleen Suggs. Mi- riam Fuchs, as Minnie the Menace, is cast in the role of villainess. The role of the president of the republic 1" played by Margaret Ohlson, with Claire Simmons as Oswald, her husband. The other characters, in the order of, their. appearance, are: Paragraph, play- ed by Lauretta Townsend; Secre- tary of State, Esther Anderson; Secretary of the Interior, Dorothy Cox; Secretary of War, Elaine Frost; Secretary of Foreign Af- fairs, Jean Wallace; Secretary of Commerce, Agnes McDonald; Sec- retary of Labor, Kathryn Butler; Secretary of the Treasury, Kath-1 ryn Purcell; Secretary of the Navy, Janet Cochran; Author, Dorothy Goodridge; Cook, Helen Harter; Cleopatra, Katherine Fitzpatrick; Du Barry, Mary Harrigan; Queen Elizabeth, Rachel Robbins; Lulu Belle, Elizabeth Campbell; Lucre- zia Borzia, Dorothy Whiting, and Ethel Barrymore, Josephine Ran- kin. In addition to these. women, about 60 juniors are taking part in the choruses, which, are to be larger this year than ever before. The largest chorus includes 24 women. All of the dances have been drilled by Camilla Hubel, chairman of dances. SPANISH STUDENT RIOT EXTENDS TO PROVINCES MANY IMPERILLED' TORNADO RAGES THROUGH SMALL COMMUNITY INJURING TEN FLOOD WATERS RISE IN WESTERN STATES Mississippi Tributaries Threaten] Property In Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, and Nebraska (By Associated Press) GREENVILLE, S. C., March 14.- Nine persons are dead, two are thought to be dying and five or ten others are injured, the victims of a tornado which bored swiftly Wednesday night into Six Mile community, a small settlement 271 miles from here. Few Realize Danger Although the community has a population of only 200, the tornado was confined to such a narrow zone and came and went so sud- denly that nearby residents took the roar for thunder and were not aware of its true nature until they heard the cries of the injured and dying. Four homes, a cotton gin, a church and a building of Six Mile academy, a Baptist preparatory school, were in the zone of des-' truction. Medical aid was rushed to the community from Pickens and Liberty, nearby, to care for the injured. Two Homes Collapse All nine of the deathsreported here were caused by the collapse of two of the four homes which were struck. They 'Included G. Nelse Garrett, a deputy sheriff, his wife and three children, and Mrs. Tillman Garrett and three daugh- ters. An infant of the Tillman Gar- rett family was blown 300 yards by the wind but was not sriusly injured. CHICAGO, March 14.-Two days of s'pring had created flood havoc in Illinois, Missouri, Iowa and Ne- braska today. Many hundred acres of farm land were flooded, streets and buildings in some places were fill- ed with water, rail and highway traffic was disrupted and bridges were torn away. Rivers Are Swollen Rain and rising temperatures, melting the winter's last snows and breaking up the ice, had turned the Mississippi's tributaries into ice- glutted torrents. The Mississippi itself was rising but gave no im- mediate cause for alarm. Hundreds of men worked on dikes while others watched ice movements, prepared to use dyna- mite wherever bridges were threat- ened. MEXICAN FIGHTING IS INTENSE AT TORREON (By Associated Press) Fighting before whatis expect- ed to be' the crucial battle of the Mexican revolution at Torreon, is growing more intense as three big federal columns really get under way in their converging attack against the massed forces of the revolution. DEMPSEY WILL INSPECT ATHLETIC PLANT HERE Jack Dempsey, former heavy- weight boxing champion' of the world, and Floyd Fitzsimmons, well known promoter, will be in Ann Arbor for several hours to- day as the guests of James G. Frey, a member of the Michigan legislature. They have been hi Lansing in the interests of cer- taln state boxing bills. The two notables will be at the Michigan Union at 4 o'clock this' afternoon where anyone wishing to see them may come. They will be taken on a tour of Michigan's athletic plant and will inspect the various facilities for athletics here. - -- -o , SENIOR LITERARY DUES | I- 1 Seniors in the College of Lit- | erature, Science, and the Arts I I will be given an opportunity to I | pay their class dues of five dol- Tankmen Contest Northwestern To Hold Big Ten Championship For Third Year NINE SCHOOLS ENTERED By Edward L. Warner .i. In defense of their Big Ten title, UUR U LU I IL 14 Michigan swimmers will enter - the championship meet at Chicago Mrs. Zoe Blair Bolles Is Appointed; tonight with the task of outscoring As Business Manager Of New Northwestern's team of brilliant Women's Club Building performers. With the *Wildcats figured to annex a majority of the 'I WIDELY EXPERIENCED first places; the Wolverines will T depend upon a well-balanced squad The board of governors of the in an attempt to' bring the title Michigan League building an-. back to Ann Arbor for the third nounces the appointment of Mrs. successive year. Zoe Blair Bolles to the position of Coach Matt Mann has taken a business manager. Mrs. Bolles' squad of 14 men to enter the chain- telegram of acceptance was re- pionship events. Two of the .Wol- ; ceived yesterday morning by Miss verines, Ault and Hubbell, will be Grace Richards, president of the l relay teams will attempt to retain board. defending their titles, while both "The board set itself to the quest their championship laurels, of finding the one best person,, Tle 160.yard relay team will be says Miss Richards. "To .this end composed of Walker, Seager, Wala- every suggestion was canvassed,4 itis, and either Ault or Reif. In every recommendation followed up.. the 40 yard sprint Coach Mann is The Lewis Institute, Simmons Col- entering Walker, Seager, and Reif. lege, Pratt Institute, and the Uni- Walker finished first last year but versity of Chicago vocational bu- was disqualified. The Wolverine reau were invited to recommend entries in the century free style properly qualified persons. will also be Walker, Seager,. and Reif. The. recommendation of Mrs. Reif.Bolles was made by the Florencer George Hubbell will be defending Spencer agency for clerical and his 150 yard back stroke crown, executive employees, and by Mrs. while Captain Spindle will also George Hamilton Dean, '14. Mrs. compete. In the breast stroke Bolles, was, according to Miss Michigan will rely upon Bob Gold- Richards, the unanimous choice of smith and Thompson. Walaitis, the board from among more than Grimshaw, and Bailey have been 40 candidates. selected for the fancy diving. The new business manager will A great part of Michigan's hopes arrive in Ann Arbor on April 1 to rest with Garnet Ault. The Ca- make preparations for the opening nadian star will be defending his of the League building on May 4. title in the 440 yard event, as well Her temporary office will be in as being counted upon to score Alumni Memorial hall, where she heavily in the 220 yard swim. Wat- can be reached by calling Univer- son and McDonald are entered in sity 242. Applications which have the quarter mile, while Watson will already been made for work in the! also compete in the 220 yard race League building will be forwarded! along with O. Goldsmith. to Mrs. Bolles immediately. Schwartz is not likely to defend Mrs. Bolles has had very wide his 220 yard title, but is expected experience in many parts of the to seek first place in the 40 and country. During the war years, she 100 yard events. Colbath will de- was with the Wallis Cafe, Wash- fend his diving championship. The ington, where between four and other three champions of last year, five thousand people are served Hill of Minnesota in the 40 yard daily. She went to Baltimore to sprint, Darnall of Michigan in the become the manager of the Indus-j century free style and Wagner of trial Cafeeria and director of social Michigan in the breast stroke have welfare work at the Consolidated all graduated. Michigan won last! Gas and Electric company. This year's meet at Minneapolis with was followed by two years' experi- the overwhelming total of 53 ence with the Boomer and Statler points, Northwestern taking sec- hotels of New York City, and four ond with 29. years with the New York exchange. GILMARTIN ASSERTS STUDENT RULE NERE STANDS BETWEEN OPPOSITE EXTREMES OF OTHER SCHOOLS1 Junior Play Posters Were Not Immodest; Withdrawn For Policy, Says Louise Cody Announcement in yesterday "The members of the junior morning's Daily that the posters class regret that distorted facts for the Junior Girls' Play had concerning the poster publicity of been withdrawn at the order of the Junior Girls' Play appeared in Alice C. Lloyd, adviser of women, the Michigan Daily yesterday. We because of the alleged immodest believe that this was due to a lack character of the figures on the of authoritative information, and poster was labeled as misrepresen- therefore wish to make the facts tation late yesterday by several of the matter clear. Because of members of the play committee., an imperfection in the printing The story appearing yesterday of the poster, designed by Ruth morning was the result of misun- Cooper, '30, and intended for use derstanding in several depart- in advertising, 'the posters were ments, and a full explanation of withdrawn at the request of the the action was given the Daily I playcommittee, who. felt them in a statement issued by Louise detrimental to the plan of adver- Cody, '30, general chairman of the tising. We wish it to be clearl;' committee. The . statement fol- understood that there was no ac- lows: ion taken by the office of the Ad- visers of Women, which has at all times cooperated with the Junior Girls' Play committee to the ful- lest extent, and we deeply regret INU any misrepresentation of fact." Phyllis Loughton, Grad., direc- tor of the play for this year, and kit other members of the committee, also testified that the withdrawal was at their request, and for the facts stated above. FAM OUS ,SOCIALIST THINKS AMERICAN STUDENT IS 0DU LL SCOTT NEARING FULL OF PRAISE FOR SOVIET SCHOOL SYSTEM SAYS AMERICAN PUPIL INFERIOR TO RUSSIAN Brands America As "Most Ignorant Reactionary Center In World;" Criticizes Hoover BOARD -GOVERNORS niinnnr rvrlsiuir, "American school students, when they graduate, are absolutely dull and dispirited because of our en- tirely wrong system of education in which the faculty runs the school and the student to earn his hours of credit must merely sit still and submit," said Prof. Scott Nearing, versatile social leader, economist and college professor, in his talk last night in Natural Sci- ence Auditorium. "The students are not represented in the admin- istration of the schools to any ex- tent." People Here Are Wrong "To presuppose, as we do, that our faculties are of a high grade of intelligence and competency and are better fitted to select in- structors for certain courses by themselves than with student aid is. I believe, altogether fallacious. Often men get on the faculties ^of universities who are incapable of the task assigned them and stu- dents have no right to complain. In Russia, the representatives of the student executive committee would report the teacher and an- other would be put in his place. "The question to answer is, why are students in Russia full of vital- ity and self confidence and what has been done and is being done there to produce these results and why is not the same result pos- sible in the United States? The United States is handicapped be- ;ause 'its eednic 'steflV bad on the competitive profiteer sys- tem can not possibly benefit the schools and cooperate with 'them like the Russian - cooperative sys- tem in which they actually put into practice all the educational ideals about which we theorize. . Nature, Labor Important "In this country we teach read- Ing, writing and arithmatic. We subdivide subjects and teach ab- stractions while in Russia they use for their instruction a unified, concrete piece of life. Their curri- culum has two principal divisions, nature and labor. Children from the start develop what we call a scientific method by which they learn through first hand inquiry and research, as far as possible. Hoover Is Quoted "We train them, as President Hoover expressed it, for a rugged individualism, while in Russia they train them for their value to the community as a unit. The purpose of the elementary school is to familiarize the students with the main tenets of nature and la- bor, that of thesecondary school to teach the technique of these matters and the colleges to further develop and explain the technique by practical experiments and re- search. - MARSHAL FOOH LOSING IN STRUGGLE FOR LIFE (By Associated Press) PARIS, March 14.-Exactly two monthsdago today Marshalaoch collapsed under a heart attack which soon was complicated with uremic trouble and congestion of a lung. Tonight three doctors who have been calling on him daily were greatly perturbed over' what tihey term "sub-normal temper- ature." HOOVER GIVES THOUGHT TO LAW ENFORCEMENT (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 14.-Al- though President Hoover has not yet approached any individual with a view to having him serve upon the commission he will ap- point to makean exhaustive study of federal law enforcement and court procedure, the chief exec- utive is according this subject a constantly increasing attention. SThn flrcf.f n+ ha ja is n nl +t (By Associated Press) LONDON, March 14.-Spanish - 44..- 4 n l 'f l Y! i sider plans and designs to be em- students continued agitatin in ployed in the preparation of next Madrid throughout the day and year's University annual. j evening without serious results except for the bruising of several THE WEATHER students in police charges to scat- f-- ter the groups. Numerous arrests 'The weather: Lower Michigan were made, including several partly cloudy Friday and Satur- newspapermen, and all were sent day; colder Friday. to the Model prison. GOLFING, GROWING 10,000 TULIPS, AND COLLECTING RARE FRENCH BOOKS MAKE UP H. Po THIEME'S HOBBIES For the last thirty years, Prof. World war he sold a lot of his Hugo P. Thieme, of the Romance prize flowers for benefit of the languages department, has regu- Red Cross and of the French Re- larly played hookey from his office l lief. and the cares of the academic But his greatest hobby is books. world, and gone out to the golf Professor. Thieme asserts. He isj links, he revealed in a recent in- the possessor of one of the most terview. Formerly he went out. complete private collections in the every afternoon during the spring world of books dealing with the and summer, now he gets out two technique of French verse. He has or three times a week. collected since he was a student Incidentally, Professor Thieme at Johns Hopkins university ij was formerly golf champion of the 1894, he says, and during his stu- University and of the Ann Arbor dent days often sacrificed an eve- golf club. And it was he who, ning meal in order to be able to' aided by old CommanderFaust, acquire some prized volume for was principally instrumental in his collection. the creation of the Barton Hills Professor Thieme's collection in- course. cludes all the best and most im- Professor Thieme also likes flow- portant editions of Montaigne ers. he admitted with a smile, and from 1600 to the nresent date. in- I 1 In the matter of student auton- omy this University stands about halfway between the most and the least progressive opined Council- man John R. Gilmartin, '29E, re- porting Wednesday on the fourth annual conference of the National Student Federation of America which he attended recently as' delegate of the Student council. On the Pacific coast student councils virtually run the campus, Gilmartin said. They even hire athletic coaches and disburse ath- letic receipts, while council repres- entatives from smaller colleges in different parts of the country com plained that their only functions were to elect themselves and hold a banquet. The conference Gilmartin at-j or where it was supported, as at Virginia, by a tradition of long' standing. It was feared that poli- tics would enter into honor system discipline, and that the system of grades would have to be abolished before the honor system coUld be! reasonably established. Delegates from Georgia Tech registered a complaint that stand- ards of scholarship has been raised so high as to keep many athletes out of college. The point was brought up that the Georgia Tech athletic ajsociation had to pay tutors to keep the good men in college. A discussion of scholar- ships for athletes reached an im- passe on the question "What is a scholarship?" Famous cases were recalled of athletes who received