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March 31, 1929 - Image 1

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1929-03-31

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ESTABLISHED
1890

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MEMBERI
ASSOCIATED
PRESS

Vol. XXXIX, No. 136. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 1929

EIGHT, PACE8

TAKEN SCODIN
NORTHWESTERN TAKES FIRST
WITH 31 POINTS; MAIZE
AND BLUE GARNERS 21 I
SHATTER TWO WORLD
RECORDSAT ST. LOUIS
Wolverines Take Three Seconds

i
4
I
Y
,
,
f 1

James Schermerhorn Plans To Attend Grid
Banquet Razz Fest Here Wednesday Evening SIGMA
"fAn evening of unfettered expres- ) time ago stated his intention of PLAN
sion is. too rare these days to be being present at the banquet unless I
passed up lightly" declared James he be detained in Washington, but
Schermerhorn of Detroit, noted it is expected that it will be defl-
editor and speaker, in his letter to nitely known tomorrow whether or
the speakers committee of the Grid- not Senator Couzens will be here.
iron banquet, expressing his pleas- In his reply, the senator stated that
to attend. rank are to be forgotten in a spirit
Schermerhorn is known through- of good-fellowship, appeals to me CONSTRUCT
out the state not only through his immensely. I will do all I can to I ROOM IN
former capacity as editor of the be present although because of the TOMOR
Detroit Times but also as a brilliant uncertainty of what Congress may
speaker, a clever columnist, and a; do, I cannot say this time definite- .
journalist of striking character. His Ily. If I am in Michigan, you may
presence at the Grid-iron banquet rest assured I will be on hand." AL!
has been said by many who have The unique spirit which pervades
i.. .._.,h fL. a ran ..1yr- - ---_ _-- the4t the aVi f

DELTACHI
rIOY OF COURT
UNJON TO BEGIN
ROW MORNING
iUPPLY
MOST EXHAUSTED'
tie Named As "Judge";
Abbot "Prosecutor"
z-Fest Wednesday
virtually complete for
the loquacious lubrica-
dge Clarence Cook Lit-
e Cdurt of the Univer-
eld at the seventh an-
on banquet of Sigma
,t 6:30 o'clock Wednes-

Will Hold Wenley
Funeral On Monday
Funreal services for the later Prof.
Robert Mark Wenley will be held
at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon at
the St. Andrew's Episcopal church.
Rev. Henry Lewis, rector, and Rev.
Thomas Harris, associate rector of
the church will officiate. Burial
will be a private interment at Fo:-'-
est Hill cemetery.
Prof. Wenley, whose death oc-
cured unexpectedly early Friday
afternoon following -an attack of
the heart, was director of the phi-
losophy department of the Univer-}
sity since 1896, and was a scholar
and teacher of international em-
inence.
Pallbearers for the funreal will
be members of the the Katholeps
club, an intimate organization
made up of faculty members with
whom Prof. Wenley was closely as-4
sociated during his long teaching
career of more than 30 years on
the campus. Coming as a shock to
the faculty, students and Alumni
of the University the professor's
death brought a host of testi-
monials of profound respect..

YSI ARRANSI GRID CONTEST WITH
PRINCETON IN 1931; RETURN GAME
MAIZE AND BLUE TURNED BACK BY 13-4
SCORE IN PREVIOUS GAME
PLAYED IN 1881 4
Michigan will meet Princeton University on the gridiron
during the 1931 and 1932 seasons it was announced yesterday by
Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost. Final arrangements which
call for a home and home series have been completed after a long
period of negotiations which started three months ago and ended
during the past week, and the dates on which the Tigers and
Wolverines will tangle have been agreed upon by officials from the
two schools.
4 Michigan will invade Princeton, N. J., for the first game
on October 31, 1931, while the eastern squad will play in Ann
Arbor the following year on October 29. The scheduling of these
games is largely due to the co-operation of Indiana University who
made a change in their schedule so that the Wolverines could make
the trip against the Tigers. Indiana was scheduled to meet Michi-

And One Third, Beating known his abilities to be a guaran- e yearly razz est , e spi i
Rutgers By 7 Points tee that the banquet guests will f freedom from the pompous dignity
hear remarks in keeping with the of the conventional banquet and
ST, LOUIS, March 30.-Record usual subtlety and cleverness that the substitution of a ready give and
breaking performances character- has been expressed at previous take of repartee, is expected to
ized the national intercollegiate "razz-fests." make its appeal to others in the
swim meet today, all the marks In addition to the sentence quot- selected group of noted men to
tumbling as Northwestern came ed above, Schermerhorn remarked which the committee has sent invi-
through'to capture the title with "I appreciate your hearty summons tations. Those who attend are as-
throinhtoMciafiihdsc sured an insight into the inner
31 points. Michigan finished sec- to the 1929 Gridiron razzle-dazzling workings of human atureas ini-
ond with 21 points while Rutg next Wednesday evening, and I will fested in the great and the near-
netWdedyeeig n ilwas third, seven points behind. be glad to be on hand." etdithgraantena-
. Two world's records went by the great as well as in the many speci-
boards during the evening when No further word has been receiv- mens of the ordinary or garden
Kojac of Rutgers broke the 150 ed by the committee as yet from variety of B. M. O. C. who will be
yardback stroke and the North- Senator James Couzens who some present.
western medley relay team -broke,
the mark in that event. Kojac's
time was 1:38 -2-5 and the Purpl^
relay quartet was clocked in
3:09 2-5; OPNO O A 0f
Ault Takes Two Seconds
The Wolverine tankmen took
three second places and a third to
take the runnerup position. Walk-
er of Michigan was disqualified in 1--
the 50-yard event for interference, Directors Believe Students Should Woman And Ecclesiastic 'Play PartI
but finished behind Schwartz in Start Any Further Proposed In Solution Of Papal
the 100 yard sprint. Ault took a, Constitutional Changes Troublesf
second in the 440 and another sec-
ond in the 220. Walaitis' third DISCUSS DAD'S BANQUET KELLY SUGESTS PLAN
place in the diving cvcnt concluded I
the Michigan scoring.
The Rutgers 200-yard relay team Sentiments expressed by the (By Asocia a Pres.)
set a new national collegiate rec- members of the Board of Directors ROME, March 30.-Ten years ago'
ord in the first event of the finals of the Union at their regular two Americans in Paris had a con-
of the sixth annual meet. Their I monthly meeting yesterday were
otme wsxt 1366. Tedn Mole of to the effect that the a e l versation over their teacups in the
Princeton broke his own national of interest on the part of the stu- Ritz Hotel destined to play a con-
collegiate record in the 200-yard dents as regards any amendment siderable part in the concord which
breast stroke in the second event, to the Union constitution does not now reigns between the Pope and
swimming the route in 2:35. In the war ant the Board taking any in- the Italian government.
preliminaries last night he tied his itiative in the matter of further In May, 1919, during the Paris
own intercollegiate mark and set amendments.
a new collegiate record with a time This opinion was voiced by the peace conference, Monsignor Fran-
of 2:57.4. Union directors after the propo cis C. Kelly, then president of the
Shields Wins Twice I tion had been submitted to the Catholic Church Extension Society,
Bryant of Dartmouth broke the group by William E. Nissen, '29, as and pastor of St. Francis, Wilmette,
third national collegiate record to the result of an editorial carried l., kdnow bishop of Oklahoma,
be clocked in the first three events by The Daily advocating the adop- was asked to tea at the Ritz Hotel
by winning the 50-yard free-style tion of the merit system of choos- by Signor and Signora Brambilla,
swim in :24, lowering by three- ing Union officials. formerly Miss Julia Meyer, daugh-
tnths of a second his own recorct The Board further stated that ter of George von Lengerke Meyer,
of last year and bettering the new any future action relative to ex-ambassador to Rome and St.
record of :24.2 made by Oker of amendments to the Union consti- Petersburg and a member of Presi-
Chicago in the preliminaries. tution should come first of all from dent Roosevelt's cabinet.
Shields of Brigham Young uni- ( the students themselves. In reach- In a course of the conversation,
versity was the only double win- ing this conclusion the failure of Mgr. Kelly said he had met Car-
ner of the evening. He surpassed the last two amendments approved dinal Mercier who had expressed
his own national collegiate record by the Board was recalled by the opinion that the conference,
and set up a new intercollegiate members of the group. iwhich was dealing with the ques-
mark in the 440 yard free style Discusses Father And Son Weekend i tions of vital interest to so many
with a time of 4:57.8. He also took The directors also discussed the countries, would have offered a
the 220 yard event. annual Fathe: and Son's weekend good opportunity to bring about al-
Schwartz Breaks Mark - to be sponsored by the Union, May so the solution of the Roman ques-
1.pn u p 15i snsational work 10 and 11. The annual banquet is tion. The Brambillas thought that
of K ns" Iveing, Kmjait lltgers' to be held on the night of the sec- such a suggestIon, coming from so;
flas maedig owrdr, ond clay. A prominent outside an enlightened a' man as the arch-
fsh.,smshd is(ow11worIld's roe-
ord by splashiing down the tank in speaker will be secured for the minshop of Malines, should not bel
the i50-yard backstroke event in banquet, it was announced. allowed to drop.
1:38.4, bettering his time of last Permission to hold the Military The Pope, with the quickness of
night when he set a new national ball on April 26 and the Senior ball vision so characteristic of him, im-
collegiate mark of 1:41. The sixth on May 3 in the Union ball room mediately expressed his willingness
successive mark to fall came iin was granted by the directors in to consider the possibility of an
the 100-yard free style when concluding the business of the agreement with the Italian gov-
Schwartz of Northwestern lowered month. ernment.
both the national collegiate and - --
the national intercollegiate record Bates Offers Critiquc Of Art Display
with his time of :53.2.
Summaries: Exhibited In Alumni Mem oria I Hall,

T
a
3

President Lit
Waldo M.
For Raza
Plans are
the trial of t
tor before Ju
tie's Suprem
sity, to be h
nual Grids-r
Delta Chiat

day night in th court room of the
Union. Final artangements will be
completed by Mo day night so that
the last touches .may be added to
! the court room before the moment-
ous trial is ope'ed, according to
Morris Quinn, '29, general chairman
of the committee responsible for
having the action brought about.
With nearly the entire allotment
of court room passes already in the
mail, the work of the committees
whose action depended on the num-
ber of applicants for admission has
been able to go forward at a rapid
pace during the past few days, and
actual construction on the court
room will begin tomorrow under the
personal supervision of Charles S.
Monroe, '30, to whom the contract
has been let. His force of men will
completely remodel the court room
of the Union, which of late has
been used for dancing.
Few Passes Are Left
Accordingto Alexander K. Gage,
Jr., '29, one more day of grace will
be allowed to those who have been
unable to answer the summons be-
fore the first of the month. As
there are comparatively few of the
passes left, only those answers
which are received on the first mail
delivery Monday morning can be
considered. The last consignment
of court-room passes will be mailed
Monday night, in order that they
may have time to reach the owners
before the time set for the trial.
Charges against several suspected
lubricators have already been enter-
ed upon the records by clerk of
court, Waldo M. Abbot, who an-
nounces that the prosecution has
already mapped out its case and
have several exhibits registered for
use during the trial. Reports from
the oflices of those who will defend
the alleged lubricators 'intimate
that nearly all of the defense evi-
clence has been secured, but is being
kept a secret in the headquarters,
of the individual counsels.
Carson's Band To Play
Attorneys, jurymen, court officials
and the audience will be escorted
by police into the court room at
exactly 6:30 o'clock Wednesday
night where they will be seated at
banquet tables before the trial be-
gins. After the meal, during which
Robert Carson's prison band will
furnish music, has been completed,
the clerk will order the court to be
brought to order and Judge Little
will hear the pleas of the accused
men.
By court order, a special detach-
inent of bailiffs and deputy officers
was sent yesterday on a nation-
wide search fordsouvenirs appro-
priate to what is said by J. Stewart
Hooker, '29, president of Sigma Del-
ta Chi, to be the greatest trial of
the century. Hooker, it is rumored,
thas advised the judge to provide'
against a last minute rush for seats.
Hobbs Prepares For
I Next Northern Trip
Prof. William Herbert Hobbs of
the geology department, Director
of the University Greenland ex-
peditions, left yesterday for the
East where he will make several
lectures and complete arrange-
ments for next summer's Univer-
sity expedition to Greenland.

it

Al

DATE FORDNC M EXICAN-
noval Of Administrative Bans Revolutionary Forces
Allows May Party Again Forces As Goveran
This Year P~rc 4~h"V

RHESS
Try To Rally
ment Troops

Rem

TICKET SALE TO START

aresswithin Fourii nes
ARMY FEES SOUTHi

After months of hesitancy be- y.s 11(,i i tb1Fi-c'S)I
cause of certain administrative re- MEXICO CITY, March 30.-Less
strictions, the announcement has than four miles separated the fed-
at last been made from the Archi- eral and the rebel forces at Corral-
tectural college that the traditional ites, south of Jimencz, tonight. The
Architects' May party will be held rebel forces ha've steadily fallen
again this year on Friday, May 10, ak.o svrlhnrd.mls
in Barbour gymnasium. The dif- through thevera hd mles
ferences were said to have arisen states of Zacatecas,
over the' place at which the archi- Coahuila, and Durango without of-
tects and their friends were to fering serious fight.
revel. Their main body appeared to be
The announcement was made at still south of Jimenez despite the
the same time as one by the Sen- fact that the government announc-
ior Ball committee to the effect ed here several days ago the rebels
that a Victor recording orchestra ed hereaeer ygherebels
has been definitely signed for the had retreated through Jimenez to
affair, and that the tickets for the the north. It has been expected
dance will go on sale next Tues- -here for several days that if the
day at the Union, with other box rebels made a stand before reach-
offices opening elsewhere later in gauani oreat
the week. What orchestra has ing Chihuahua City it would be at
been signed cannot be named until Bachimba Pass, the most strategic
early this week as the contracts point to defend in that territory.
have not been returned. However, with the pursuing fed-
The May Party is sponsored an- erals only six kilometers in the rear
nually by the Architectural society, of the rebels, it was thought pos-
which includes all architecturalg
students. This society elects the sible that there might be a forced
committee to make the arrange- fight somewhere south of Jimenez.
ments. Competition for the de- The government bulletin today
sign to be used in the decorations said that rebel cavalry, presumably
will commence tomorrow and con- the rear guard, evacuated the town
tinue throughout the week among of Cellano this morning and retired
all students in the college, it was to Corralitos. Cellano was saio to
announced. Of all those submitted, [be the last strategic point this side
six are to be chosen, and these six of Bachimba, as the country be-I
will be worked into better form for tween is flat and open, giving the
a second competition in which the advantage to the superior federal
design to be used at the 1929 Party forces, .
Breckenridge Masterpiece Included
In Alumni Memorial Hall Exhibition

Wgan n-nn tror in i)32, and
in Bloomington in 1931, but as
the Michigan squad could not
make both trips the same year, the
Hoosier Athletic department con-
sented to change the dates and
meet Coach Wieman's men in
Bloomington during the the 1932
season and to play here in 1931.
Only on one other occasion has a
Michigan football team played
against Princeton, and that was
back in 1881, the Wolverines jour-
neyed east and getting the short
end of a 13-4 score. However the
Tigers are not an unknown quan-
tity in the west, since they held the
strong Ohio State teaml to a 14-14
gtie last year, and having played
against the Chicago University
gridders several times, both in Chi-
cago and in the east.
Also Play Harvard '
The completion of arrangements-
fpr t4ese contests gives Michigan
games with' schools ° which were
members of the "Big Three" four
years in a row, Harvard havirig
been on the Wolverine schedules of
1929 and 1930 for some time. Con-
trary to Princeton, however, Har-
vard has never invaded the west to
meet the football team of another
school. Their game here next sea-
son will break a precident of long
standing at Cambridge, in that all
intersectional games which Har-
vard has played have been in the
east.
Michigan has met Harvard three
times, in 1881, 1883, and 1914, losing
to the Crimson each time. Only
one of these games has been play-
ed while Coach Yost has been con-
nected with the University, that of
1914 when the Wolverines were de-
feated by a score of 7-0; the other
scores were 4-0 and 3-0.
Navy Game Dropped
Harvard will take the place of
the Navy in the Wolverine sched-
ule next season, and thus will keep
one important intersectional strug-
gle before the Michigan fans.
Princeton will keep up this cus-
tom of meeting a strong eastern
team each year which started
when the Navy was scheduled in
1925, giving the Michigan team a
game of national Interest for seven
consecutive years.
Plans For Military
Ball Are Announced
With the assurance that 1ROK
Gorman will play for the ninth an-
nual Military Ball to be held at the
Union the 27th of April the com-
mittee in charge have practically
completed arrangements for the
event. B. P. Sherwood, Jr., is chair-
man of the affair and he states
that tickets will be put on general
f sale starting tomorrow morning
and are obtainable at the R. O. T.
C. office throughout the week.
Decorations for the ball will be
obtained from Detroit and will con-
sist of flags of various nations,
bunting and other forms consistant
with the martial atmosphere of the
event.
Among the list of patrons and
patronesses will be heads of the
more important military posts:with
in the state. The Commandant
and staff from the R. O. T. C. unit
at Michigan State College, officials
of the Organized Reserve in.Lans-
ing, reserve officers and their wives

200-yard relay-Won by Rutgers,
(Johnson, Tilley, Jelenke, Kojac; By John Everts Bates
Michigan, second; Northwestern, From the muddy water and foli-
third; Illinois, fourth. Time 1:36.6. age, dirty browns, yellows and
(New national collegiate record). greens of the pastel "The Wis-
200-yard breastroke - Won by sahickon," Hugh H. Breckenridge
Moles, Princeton; Peterson, North- has traveled a long distance. His
western, second; Squiers, Drake, canvases show the vicissitudes and
third; Holbrook, Illinois, fourth. the consequent adaptations of an
Time 2:35. , American painter in his struggle
(New national collegiate record). for artistic survival. MoreoverI
50-yard free style-Won by Bry- this emergence from the Hudson
at, Dartmouth; Schwartz, North- Kiver School of painting (which
western, second; Oker, Chicago, the Wissahickon picture suggests),
third; Crocker, Minnesota, fourth. through his period of preoccupa-
Walker of Michigan disqualified for tion with brush stroke, up to the
interference. Time :24. (New na- group of three paintings on the
tional collegiate record). ( west wall which includes "Nude
440-yard free style - Won by with Still Life," and "Italian Pitch-
Shields, Brigham Young; Aulti er and Fruit" is the story of a prog-
Micegan, second; Loeb, Princeton: ress of which no painter should be
tird; Kiding, Illinois, fourth. Time ashamed. Mr. Breckenridge has not
4.57.8I 'T been afraid to awake use of the dis-
(w t a olie d coveries in color and new methods
(New na ,iti-l collegiate and m of const..ucting form, nor does be
tercollegiate record). stubbornly resist new values and
150-yard backstroke-Won by Ko- conceptions of life. He is by no
jac, Rutgers; Minch, Northwestern, means an innovator; he is, on the
second; Marsh, Minnesota, third; contrary, an ecclectic academician,
Hubbell,NMichigan, fourth. Time a term which should carry no de-
1 38.4. (New world record). I rogatorv connotation.

main the pi'i.mi tive of t1e way I
have discovered."
Most artists use the means that
have already been developed in
order to express their personal re-
action to life. It is given to few
men to discover anything really
new. But as long as a man grows
he will change; and it is a healthy
I sign when the outward aspect of
his expression changes in response
to the inner growth.
In the group of three paintings
already mYentionied, Mr. Brecken-
ridge seems to have "realized" to
the best of his ability. Notice the
modeling in the fruit, especially in
the. right hand still life. The ap-
ples are fresh, firm and built -with i
saturated color. How dull the
earlier work loofks in comparison.
The nude in this group is more
powerfully conceived than the one
entitled "Ivory, Gold and Blue,"
though the form is not quite per-
fectly handled. The back does not,
quite "go round," due, no doubt, to
faulty handling of the edges where
the flesh comes against the back-
grounnd Itnalmost looks a nniiah

.

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