- - AE ' U t Kt Y c ti >f; , .2 kN -D AG . ... ...... . Michigan CollI OPPORTUNIY OFFEREDSTUDENTS TD VIEW WOR~KING S OFANN'UAL ONVENftIO OFWORlLD PWERSi ges Gather Here For M del League I DELEGATES WILL DISCUSSAND CONDUCT WORK' AS IN GENEVA PROGRAM IS COMPLETE Banquet Btring At Union Tonight Will Model Assembly To Close By Robert L. Sloss Twenty-one of Michigan's univer- sities, colleges, and junior colleges represented by more than 150 stu- dents , have gathered in Ann Ar- bor this week end for the Model Assembly of the League of Nations, which is being sponsored by' the Student Christian association on the camp1s and by the Michigan League of Nations Non-Partisan association. Today's program consists of the second PAd third plenary sessions of the assembly, a luncheon at noon, and the concluding banquet at the Union tonight. Prof. Pit- nin B. Potter, of the political science department of the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, will speak at the 1"noheon on some phase of the ~rganiation of International Re- Itlons clubs. All members of these clubs from the participating in- stitutions will be present to hear Professor Potter discuss their aims ideals, and accomplishments. Brumm To Be Toastmaster At the banquet tonight, Prof. John L. Brumm, of the School of Journalism, will be the toastmaster, and the three principal speakers of the convention will talk. Dr. Stephan P. Duggan, of the Insti- tute of International Education and known widely for his intimate knowledge of international affairs, will speak and at the end of the program offer a critique of the assembly as a whole. Sir George Foster, member of the Canadian Senate and Canada's del- egate to the League of Nations at Geneva, is scheduled to speak as well as Professor Potter. Prof. Ed- win D. Dickinson, of the Lair school, who with Professor Potter visited Europe on a question of internat- ional law in 1926, will address the group. ate: The model assembly is patterned closely after the one held every year at Geneva in the Salle de la Refor- mation, and is designed to afford both participants and spectators well-defined ideas as to just how' the League of Nations functions. Many of the problems that are to- day vexing the world will likewise come up for discussion, and thus allow opportunities for obtaining the knowledge necessary for under- standing the problems facing na-' tions of the earth today. Represent Fifty-four Nations The delegates, who comprise del- egations representing the 54 na- tipns that are members of the Leagu e, will take up these subjects, ifer resolutions, and in general conduct their business just as it is conducted in Geneva. The chief matters which will oc- cupy the attention of the model assembly are disarmament, which is important in view of world peace and welfare; the admission of Rus- sia to the League, a hypothetical question in that it has never been brought before the League for dis- cussion; the need for mandates and their use by the nations of Eur- ope; the problem of the opium trade; and, world health as a mat- ter for legislation: A number of model assemblies similar to the Michigan one have been held by various colleges dur- ing the last few years. All have been greeted with interest by the public and by the participants, and it is hoped that the students, fac- ulty;;and townspeople will attend. :, 1 , t! i i _I State-wide Interest Evoked ByAssembly Much interest in the model as- sembly is being shown by students and faculty both at the University and in other colleges throughout the state. Several bus-loads of spectators, besides the participants, have journeyed to Ann Arbor to attend the sessions, and more are expected today. Hillsdale, Kalamazoo, Adrian and I Alma have all held convocation services at which the League was discussed, while practically all of the other colleges'.attendingahave{ had previous meetings for the pur- pose of acquainting themselves with the formal procedure. Kalamazoo college, Detroit Teach- ers college, Alma college, Hillsdale Canadian Delegate lE PlE K'DE l V Prof. Pitman B. Potter, Political Science 11RIIeks Tormsemoe Speaks To Assembly LLI L Expert, To Be Honored Guest At Luncheon IjULLU LL1A0B As a distinguished guest of hon- our of the Model Assembly of the a**iR G OS A PA EX UNUniversity of Michigan, Prof. Pit- N T N IEA E Wman B. Potter of the Political SciC ence Department of the University n A TADANTAE "of Wisconsin, will speak at alunch- ES SIDENT Tseon to b held g this noon in room SP iOFESSORtE y XnPU9NDS HIS Professor Potter is a veteran and CONVENTION GIVES CLEARER ,. ; VIEW TOWARD L E A G U E experienced teacher of political sci 0 'CONCEP)QTION OF WORLD Th.eag.-ralAStynITITd no aence, having taught comparative Th..tL[gRELATIONSdIPS .h a adi d eg * tsns nd o nPa- mb y a st tra LISt, db n f t S THpREE Ar t eSh- tional law and diplomacy at Has vdnd PtRESDNT "<° . . ard, Yale, Illinois, Chicago, Texas hpk and Wisconsin Universities.ss _n _my hh gTrial Assembly Said To Be Moref. resen Dr. Potter studied at Harvard Twnty-One Delegations Participate Than Mere Pa c ifSti nereein is there In Representing FiftyFur (Courtesy or The Detroit Fr ee Tres, Laboratory in 191.4, his A. M. in 1916, and his. . Members Of League Sir GeorgeToeser sdoctorate, in 1918. His extensive The League-as a reality and not travels have taken himto the- I toThat the League of Nations Model Who was a Canadian delegate to as a sort of a pacifistic experimenti mammoth libraries of London, Par- 1 ~ assembly has attracted much favor- the initial assembly of the League -is the presentation being Lmade by is Rome, and Geneva; and he has. . I able attention throughout the state of Nations, and who will be one of the cooperative effort of the Michi- -investigated American diplomatic I is evidenced by the hearty respose th rnia paesa h m-ga n colleges here today, was the and anua ot nmn at which it has received from students tation assembly, which began itsE comment made by Prof. Preston W.I of Europe, as Well as visiting num- as well as faculty and administra-. Slosson, of the history department, erous international bureaus and of t an tr tive leaders on the various Michigan yesterday. g the model assembly. conferences in Paris the Hague, Sir George who has beenn in the{ His statement regarding the meet- .eneva, and other cities, most impotant writings are to be capesdn . C.WrieoMch Canadian Parliament since 1882,; ing was: Luring the World War Dr. Potter Ifound in the followingg volumes:"An igan Central Normal college, at Mt. was a vice-president of the League " The greatest advantage of the was engaged in Washington, pre- Introduction to the Study of Inter- Pleasant, has expressed his thor- when it was first organized, and imitation assembly of the League of paring materials for use by Amer- national Organization". "The Free-I ough approval of the projectan has been one of the most ardent ! Nations being held in Ann Arbor ican delegates at the Peace Con-I dom of theSea in Histo~rr Law- P. rfn n+P, l A+ n yo+ne n t W i college, Michigan State college and supporters since its inception. He by the cooperation of colleges all fTerence. -- others have formed International was , delegate to the Geneva as- over the state is the presentation In the literary world he has pro- Relations clubs which have met C sembly again in 1926, so he is ac- of the League as an actual reality; duced many books and treatises and twice a week regularly' quainted with the League as it has not a theory, or project, or dream, for the past 15 years has furnished: developed as well as with the origi- or subject for propaganda, but a manuscript far newspapers. His nl organization. He was on the functioning political organism just [onmittee that drafted the origi- ,as real and concrete as the Britis nal covenant of the League. Empire or the United States of opening Culintes Dumerous'positions, high in the America. I stress this point be- life of Canada have been cause even yet some people have Four Month's Labor filled by hi1. Sir George was a not got out of the habit of regard- VA A1896, and from 1911 until 1921. pacifistic experiment, a thing that Results of nearly four months' '___Since last leaving the cabinet he Woodrow Wilson put down on pa- work were realized by the officers has been a member of the Domin- per. The League is now a decade of the Model Assembly yesterday' Miniature International. Conclave l o awe nernativeion Senate. Several other positions old and has never been interrupted afternoon when the opening ses-' Draws Representatives From of trust under the Canadian and in its steady, routine activities; It sion convened. Since the first of Nineteen Colleges British government have been en- is only experimental in the sense i trusted to him during his long po- that all government is experiment- }the year the executive committee,y DISCUSS WORLD PROBLEMS litical career. al, and it is mortal only in the under the direction of Prof. John sense that all political structures!M. Brumm, of the journalism de-! Traditions and flags of the coun- Second Session Will are motaal.d. e. a'partment, has been arranging for tries of Europe provided a color- A second advantage is that stu- hemeetings of yesterday and to- f NatinfontaconvateneauVas- enTProgram dents here may gain some ac- h e ssd ful settig for a miniature League .oay P g quaintance with the type of prob- day. - N nndlems that confront the League, for Assisting John M. Brumm, '31, 1 sar College over the week end of Meetings of the second plenary only real and current problems are, the secretary-general of the as- February 22, when nineteen col- session of the model assembly will being discussed at the meeting. A;sembly have been an active com- leges and universities of the states feature today's program. Opening third advantage is the chance to mbty, ham ed an active of New York, New Jersey, and Penn- at 9 o'clock this morning events, observe the method of procedure 'mittee composed of representatives sylvania sent student delegates to including the reports of several at Geneva; it is like a free visit from the various schools and col- sit at a model assembly there. The committees, a luncheon, and the to the gallery of the House of Com- leges of the state, which have sent convention hall of the Student's finale dinner tonight will fill the mons or the House of Representa- delegates to the imitation assembly. Building was not unlike that of the order of the day for the visiting; tives. No student of modern his- Administration of local arrange- official chamber in Geneva, having delegates. tory or politics can afford to neg- ments have also been directed by its raised platform for authorities, Reports of the committees one, lect this opportunity." Brumm. In his capacity he has! _____________I been aided by a committee of stu- speakers, and a. three sided gal- five and six, will be held at the 9 ! - by lery for spectators, while the league ,o'clock session this morning. At FLAGS LEND MUCH COLOR dents of the University. The mem- members themselves were arrayed noon a luncheon for members of-1ters of this group with the branch under the placards of their respec- the International Relations club, Brilliantly depicting the ceremo- of work which they have directed tielns i . h atoswihwith Prof. Pittman Potter deliver-I nioiis aspect of the assembly, a 1ae atnJ ol 3,tnne tive lands, i. e., the nations which iCSthe principal talk. Reports of complete set of flags representing Charles Spicer, '29, and . Bennett sent. r committee three, and the resolu- l every country imitated, is being Kearns, '29, arrangements; Louis sT.ttions by the delegates from Den- displayed at the meetings here yes- !Stein, '31, program, Leo Norville,) Throughout the triple session the mark and from Uruguay. At the terday and today of the Model j'30, speakers; William Palmer, '30,! chief topics debated upon dealt in banquet in the evening, Sir George League of Nations. The set of flags' hospitality; Howard Simon, '30,1 the main with League's relation Foster, and Stephan P. Duggan will is being used through the courtesy 1 publicity, Bettina Bush. '29, and to the Monroe Doctrine, the man~ head an illustrious group of speak- of the Northwestern high school, Isabelle Rayen, '31, entertainment, dates problems, and the composi- ers. of Detroit. ,'and J. Martin Frissel, '29, exhibits. tion of the League Secretariat. _-_ _ _ _ _ The most striking feature of the entire convention was the very no- REPRESENTATIVES FROM 21 MICHIGAN COLLEGES ticeable manner in which the schools representing certain coun- GATHER AT ANNARBORFOR LEGUE ASSEMBLY tries belligerently maintained the natural political and diplomatic views of their temporarily adopted nations. The German delegation from Colgate University moved a °f resolution disapproving of forcedj labor in mandated territory; butI was virorously opposed by the Aus-- tralians coming from New York Un- iversity. An Italian feminine leader from Bryn Mawr argued against the the- ory that the Secretariat should be international in character, follow- - ing out the principles of the Ducej government, advocating that Italy # wished to be represented by its, faithful servants, and challenged t he sincerity of ' the other great' '"o'vers if they opposed this view. They did, the protestations issuing from vehement student mouths.1 In addition to the spirited stu-t dent debates were the speeches ofc two outside personages, Mr. James .G. MacDonald, of;the Foreign Pol-t icy Association, and Dr. Royal Mee- 1 ker, former commissioner of La- .o.ic bor Statistics. awaav acua ulavy, l L,jpCX3ti w a en Le Danuet and. and Politics," "International Civics," sessions today. "The Myth of American Isolation", President Harlan L. Feeman, of "The Nature of American ForeignAdrian college, writes in regard to Policy" and "American Territorial the assembly, 'I think it is an excel- Expansion."-lent idea, and a practical one, not with a view toward cultivating pub- ie pnion to lead the United States into the League, but in directing the thoughts of people to what it l-as already accomplished and prom- ises to acomplish in leading to bet- ter understanding and more satis- factory world relationships." Dean Is Enthusiastc Dean Estella C. L. Sherill, also of Stephen Duggan, Founder Of Insti-Adrian college, has expressed her Sintense enthusiasm for the project. tute Of World Education To She attended a similar meeting Be Principal Speaker which was held last year at Cor- nell, at which there were delegates HEADS FOREIGN COUNCIL from more than 20 Middle Atlantic ! colleges and universities, and found ofit entirely worthwhile. Stephen P. Duggan, founder of Other men and women prominent the Institute of International Edu- 'on the faculties of various schools cation, will be one of the princi- have accompanied their delega- pal speakers on the program of the tions to Ann Arbor including: Dean m Florence Steward, of Alma college assembly today as well as at the Miss Jennie Belle Boyer, dean of banquet tonight. After his gradu- women at the Detroit Teachers' ation from the College of the City college, Dr. Edwin Graeffe, of the of New York he attended Colum- 1school of finance and'commerce at um-i the University of Detroit, as well bia University, gaining his M.A. as all of the members of the his- and Ph.D. degrees from the latter tory and political science depart- school. Upon his return to the City I ments of the Grand Rapids Junior College as a professor, he hit upon college. the idea of having classes at night All of the delegations to the as- as well as in the day time, and sembly have been appointed to with this in mind, he began a sys- i represent the 54 nations which are tem which has grown so popular members of the League, and Mich- that over 2,500 students are now igan has taken Albania, the British enrolled in the after-dark class Empire, China, Guatemala, Hon- books. duras, India, Japan, Latavia, i- Among his other notable achieve- beria, Luxembourg, Nicaragua, ments are his directorship of the Peru, and Salvador. American Council of Education, Many Nations Represented membership and election to the po- The other colleges and the coun- sition of secretary in the American tries they represent are: Adrian- University Union in Europe, trus- Argentina, Austria, Abyssinia Al- tee of Vassar, and of Constantino- bion-Geimany, Spain, Uruguay; ple colleges for women, and the Alma-Canada. Lithunia, Panana; authorship of several books on dip- Battle Creek-Union of South Af- lomatic and international prob- rica; Bay City Junior-Norwy; lems. Central State Teachers-New Zea- In the direction of international land; College of the City of De- effort and goodwill, Dr. Duggan has troit-Poland; Detroit Teachers- been occupied for many -years with Roumania. the Council of Foreign Relations, Reis Jnsitute-Esthonia; rand of which he is now- the director, Netherlands; Highland Park Jun- and the Foreign Policy Ass'n. In ior-Columbia, Hungary, Portgal; recognition of his services toward Hillsdale-France, Irish Free State, world peace, the American scholar Paraguay; Hope-Kingdom of Serbs has been made a member of the --Croats - Slovenes; Kalamazoo - French Legion of Honor, the Ital- I Italy, Sweden; Michigan State col- ian Orc'er of the Crown, and the ( lege-Bolivia, Switzerland; Michi- Czechoslovak and Hungarian Or- I gan State Normal-Chili, Denmark, ders of Merit. Greece, Haiti, Siam; Olivet-Vene- zuela; Port Huron Junior-Austra- S. C. A. ARRANGES LODGINGS }lia, Persia; Western State Teach- ers-Cuba, Czechoslovakia; Univer- All official delegates and faculty sity of Detroit-Bulgaria. advisers have been assigned to Rowland Egger, Grad., has been lodging places through the assist- !chosen president of the assembly ance of the Student Christian asso- because of his intimate knowledge ciation. They will remain in the lof international affairs. He has city tonight and leave tomrow for been connected with the political their homes. Iscience department for some time. Professor Bradley, Of Amherst, Reviews Success Of Trial League Held In 1928 The Amherst assembly, a picture successful. Phillips Bradley, of the of which is reproduced here, was political science department at Amherst, believes that the assem- held at Amherst college in May, blies offer one of the most unique 1928, and was, according to com- possibilities of collegiate and inter- ment written on it recently, most collegiate activity. "The organiza- tion," he contin- ues is simple, the material vivid, the possibilities of useful coop- U eration with ac- tual department- al work in his- tory, economics, League Of Nations Is Now Established As Important Factor In World Affairs 01 foremost importance in every' reproduced is the Ninth Assembly' international problem is the League of the League, which met in La of Nations, which has now become Salle de la Reformation at Geneva an historical fact. The picture here in September, 1928. --___ @' The actual or- or - ganization w ork ' c provided an un- usual opportunityF for students who take part in the model assembly to ,. Y~yrr~sir CsF.itc A\~ i t ,i