STABLISHED 1890 -.0 t atlg MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Vol. XXXIX, No. 150. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1929. EIGHT PAGES i i Weaver, O'Neill, And Trueblood To Serve As Judges AUDIENCE EXPECTED TO PACK HILL AUDITORIUM Jackson High School Boys' Chorus' And Varsity Band Will Furnish Musical Entertainment j Classes For DismissedcreLoc Bailey Lecture, Speaking of. the subject "The Im- portance of the Arts in Education," Henry Turner Bailey, director of the Cleveland School of Art, at Cleveland, Ohio, will address the annual convocation of the Michi- gan Schoolmasters' club at 11 o'clock this morning in Hill gudi- torium. All classes, with the ex- ception of clinics will be dismissedI at 11 o'clock in order to allow stu- dents and members of the Univer- sity faculty to attend. Mr.uBailey is particularlyjwell qualified to speak onthis subject,I having been a teacher of art for' many years. He also has been the editor of art publications and ad- visor in educational work in the Ross Gor Play Amid i: ons, and Military in the Un march w wood, Jr., the afiaiz Virginia -dance wi the gran 11:30 o'cl end at 2c On the will be R ginians,, taking cb nishing i various i tered. It chestra w and speci custom ( other schi A fewt remain, the R. O. of the ca Favors f out this noon at U al Military iforces Dance At Annual Gathering Tonight -A g s at the Ball will be Colonel Walter man And Virginians Will C. Cole of Detroit. Colonel Cole At R. 0. T. C. Ball who was recently named as head In Union of the Reserve Officers' association of the United States has had an' machine guns, other weap- active career, not only in Detroit, many flags, the annual but in national affairs. Ball will be held tonight Prior to the World War, he was secretary of the Board of Com- nion ballroom. The grand merce in Detroit. When the United ill be lead by B. P.' Sher- States entered the war, he became '29, general chairman of division transport officer in France. r, and his partner, Miss Since the war, he has organized' Woolfit of Bay City. The the National defense committee of ll commence at 9 o'clock, the Detroit Board of Commerce, d march will be held at which he now heads as chairman. lock, and the party will In recognition of his prominence o'clock tomorrow morning, in military affairs, Colonel Cole platform of the ballroom will be made an honorary member oss Gorman and his Vir- of Scabbard and Blade, national with the versatile German honorary military society, at a ban-' harge of affairs and fur- quet tonight. This banquet will be ndividual numbers on the held in honor of the recently in- nstruments he has mas- itiated members of the Michigan is expected that this or- chapter of this organization., ill feature Michigan tunes The patrons for tonight's'affairI al numbers, as this is the will be President Clarence Cook Gorman has followed at Little and Mrs. Little, Prof. Field - ools. ing H. Yost and Mrs. Yost, Dean H.. tickets for the affair, still C. Sadler, and Mrs. Sadler, Prof. I.. and will be sold today at C. Anderson and Mrs.. Anderson, T. C. office in the center Dean John Effinger and Mrs. Ef- tmpus. The price is $4.50 finger, Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Srnith, or the Ball will be given Prof. Walter E. Lay and Mrs. Lay, morning and this after- Prof. J. S. Worley and Mrs. Worley,f he R. O. T. C. office. The Prof. A. D. Moore and Mrs. Moore," e chain bracelets. and Major Reinold Melberg and HNOOVER RM8PASSED Cornelia SkinnerI S POTEmulates Father Having a family name to live up I . Ito is one handicap and being a whole show in yourself is another, but Cornelia Otis Skinner, who will appear next Tuesday night in Hill auditorium as the ninth and con- B HOUSEcluding number on this sea- Cleveland Museum of Art. He is' Grand Rapids high school's aflir- also an author of note, having pub- mative debate team will meet the lished several books on subjects Cheboygan high school negative trio related to his work and to art in in the final round of the state high general. school debate championship elimin- 1 Besides the address to be given ation series at 7:45 o'clock tonight at the convocation this morning, In Hill auditorium. Mr. Bailey is scheduled to give More than 4,000 persons are ex- another talk on the value of the pected to be present at the contest, talented at the special art confer- culminating as it does a forensic ence to be held at 2 o'clock this race begun last September and in- I afternoon in Room D of Alumni volving more than 250 participating Memorial hall.1 schools. Included in the audience President Clarence Cook Little son's Oratorical Association lecture Omit Debenture Pan, course, has achieved considerable' As Measure Goes recognition for her ability as an To Sente 1 ntertainer. To Senate Leaving the legitimate stage 1about two years ago, her name at ONLY TWO REPUBLICANS first drew the attention for it was FAIL TO VOTE FOR BILL known that she was the daughter of a brilliant father, Otis Skin- (y A isociatcd I'rcss) ner. Then her remarkable ability WASHINGTON, April 25.-The to entertain took its rightful posi- new farm relief bill having the support of the Hoover administra- Lion and success crowded upon her. tion, was passed by the House to-; Miss Skinner is not a reciter--is day just ten days after the con- not a monologist. in the American vening of the special session of meaning of the word. Her pro- Congress, which was called pri~ gram, which consists of Character miarily to provide means for al- sketches, every one of which is the leviating agricultural ills. The vote was 367 to 34, only two fruit of her own pen, cover ail the Republicans being among those in emotions. Using no stage proper- opposition-Tinkham of Massachu- ties or scenery, Miss Skinner takes setts and Stafford of Wisconsin, her audience to view bits of life the latter a new member. from everywhere, which are re- The measure was sent to the puted to be both unique and enter- Senate where a bill with its dis- taining. Young, attractive, gra- puted export debenture plan is cinous, she is said to posses a per.. pending. The House had refused sonal charm that is reflected in to accept that method of farm re- her work. lief, which was m serted in the ---------- --- S i and in Ann Arbor's many conven- w tion visitors today will probably be{t representatives of as many as 150 high schools. The question to be debated is the I same as that which has occupied the attendance of the state league throughout the year. It reads as! follows: Resolved, that a federal subsidy for 'the development of an] American merchant marine would be a wise national policy. ill preside over the convocation favors ar his morning. A5.ng 'tc notables to be presenta oR"HSONNE HEADS Father And Son Week Plans Are Announced More than 4,000 invitations will be inliledout by the Union this [0 !week to fathers of Michigan men CONVENE TODAY telling them of the plans which are weing made for the observation of Representing Grand Rapids in the tusinless Administration School W M1ie and ivi i t them to viSit ane competition for the championship Be Host To Prominent Me Ah gm will be Robert Jepson, Walter 'A. BeIotT rmnn e Arbor for the programn, it was tryk oert Clr n E.WPae WAn-' This Morning stated yesterday by William A. Stryker, and Clarence E. Page. Wen-Mu '3 dell Horning, George Keldsen and . Murphy, '31, chairman of the af-I Calton Jacobson are the members MANY TALKS SCHEDULED The Union's annual Father and of the Cheboygan negative group. ---eSon observance is to take place Kraus Is Chairman Designed to bring together per- Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, May1 Dr. Edward H. Kraus, dean of the sonnel officers and, executives of 110, 11, and 12. Among the fea- College of Pharmacy, and dean of 1 Michigan for discussion of common tures of the week end will be they the Summer Session, is to be the problems, the third annual invita- annual spring games on Friday chairman of . -the evening. The tional conference on personnel re- afternoon and Saturday morning, judges will be Dr. Thomas C. True-!. s a baseball game between the Var- blood, professor emeritus of public lations, to be held under the sity and Illinois on Saturday after- speaking, Prof. James M. O'Neill, auspices of the School of Business noon, and a banquet at the Union chairman of the department of Administration, will open here at on Saturday night. speech, and Prof. Andrew T. 10 o'clock this mornng, it was an- Speakers for the banquet pro- Weaver, chairman of the depart- nounced yesterday by Prof. gram have already been secured ment of speech of the University ofdC. 8- according to Murphy, Wisconsin. Yoakum, of that school. . Judge William L. Day of Cleveland, Silver loving cups are to be pres- A. K. Hurlburt, of the Detroit and Coach Fielding H. Yost. Carl cnted to both schools by the Uni- Edison company, will preside at the Brandt of the speech department versity extension division. A trophy' first session, at which reports will has been secured as toastmaster. cup engraved "First Honors" will be be given by T. A. Veenstra, W. F.- presented to the winner, and a sec- Rasche, personnel director of Gen-, ond cup engraved "Second Honors" eral Motors corporation, and N. F. is to be given to the loosers, runners Dougherty, director of industrialDSH up as they will be in the champion- relations, General Motors corpora- ship eliminations. Each of the six Lion. debaters will receive a gold watch After a buffet luncheon, the dele-! presented by the Detroit Free Press. gates will meet again at 2 o'clock,, The two teams which will meet when, under the presiding gavel of _ - i here tonight won their way to the H. S. Kelley of the American Seat- --. finals following the elimination of ing company, addresses will be de- "No matter how old we are in 62 other teams. These 64 teams livered by Arthur H. Carver, direc- Inewspaper work, we must continu- were the ranking schools following tor of industrial relations, Swift ally go back and remember that a period of preliminary debates. and company, I. L. Gilbert, an accuracy is the essential basis of Each school entering the elimina- employment supervisor of the Bell journalism," Lee A White, '11, edi- tion series was presented with the Telephone company, and Albert torial executive of the DetroitI University wall plaque through the Sobey, city director of Flint. News, declared in a talk given at a courtesy of the Free Press. Ordway Tead, of Harper and meeting of the editorial staff of; Over 630 Debates Held Brothers, New York City, will speak The Daily yesterday afternoon. Cheboygan won its way into the on "The Nature of Executive Lead- "Eagerness for accuracy, determi- final round by eliminating Mason ership," at a dinner to be held at nation to have all the facts, an high school while Grand Rapids' 6 o'clock in the evening. H. J. Bur- elimination of the smart aleck spir- South defeated Royal Oak, last ton, of the Consumers Power com- it, and an effort to be constructive year's champions, in the semi-fin- pany, will preside. and not destructive should char- als. It is estimated that more than -- acterize the college paper's editor- 1,500 high school debaters took part, Black Will Address lais," he continued. in the debate contests during IAseries of comments upon crit- the year and that more than 630 Last Of Convocations ical writing and a group of remi- debates were held. E niscences of his own days as an The Jackson high school boys' !!editor of The Daily were included chorus of more than 100 voices un- hiugh Black, popular Eastern in Mr. White's speech. In a see- der the direction of F. S. Rockwell preacher, a Scotchiman by birth, and speech before the annual din- and the Varsity band are to attend and professor of practical theology ncr meeting of The Board i Con- the contests and will furnish a mu- at Union Theological seminary, New the of Student Publications with sical program. The Jackson group York, as o ti the upper editorial staff of The sica prgram Th Jacsongrou Yol~,will address the last of this I Daily held last night, Mr. White re- will sing the following songs: "The Nun of Nidaros" by Buck and "Every years student convocations- at 11 lated something of the work of Rustling Tree" by Kuhlau. o .clock Sunday. His topic will e other graduates of The Daily Entertainment plans for high "What is Man,?" school visitors will include campus, Born in Rothesay, Scotland, in WIDE-SPREAD FAILU tours leaving the front steps of An- 1868, Professor Black took his M. A- gell hall at 10 and 2 o'clock and a at Glasgow in 1887, was ordained in'CT IN EPEND high school pupil-teachers confer- 1891, and held pastorates in Paisley' once at 4 o'clock. Dr. W. D. Hen- and Edinburgh before coming to "llidfepeiident thinking and in- derson of the University extension 'this country in 1906, since when he dependent acting are at a very low divisien will preside and Ira M. has held his professorship at Union. ebb in the world of today," said Smith, registrar of the University, Degrees of doctor of divinity have Prof. William, A. Frayer of the his- will speak on the subject, "Choos- been conferred upon him by Yale in tory department in a talk at the. ing a University." 1908, Princeton and Glasgow uni- all-campus forum yesterday after- city in 1911. In 1917 the University n at Lane hall. "We all read of Pittsburgh awarded him a Litt,v the same ho ee.sand Varsity Golfers Defeat I D. degree in recognition of his at- clothes, live in th e same houses and Freshman Squad, 18-41tainments in that field. Professor arrange our aman dture in the same Black is the author of several books way.d i, himadares to be an in- Michigan's Varsity golf team de- the best known of which are Lest ydividualist, he is taken to the psychopathic ward. The attitude feated the freshmen quartet 18 to iWe Forget, The New World, and The" of the world today is 'Let George 4 yesterday afternoon. Captain ! Open Door, in addition to several I do the thinkinq : only in America~ Mrs. Melberg. SEVEN ARE BY STORMS3 .EntireWest is tI ld il Spriig Blizzards An W i i I e Dalnag MISSISSIPPI R1 i Q(ny Aso i:tcd KANSAS CITY, Ap known dead, approxi] sons injured, and pro running into hundred of dollars was reveal the toll of the violent that played havoc yesterday. Wyoming was still the worst April bliz while communities Nebraska were slow from the effects of dI Senate measure by its agricultural committee after vigorous disap- proval by President Hoover. I The House bill would launch the" government upon a program which its advocates contended would en-' able the farmr to help himself to prosperity. It would create a fed- cral farm board with a revolving Grip )f _ r f und of $500,000,000 to be used in d Tornadots loans to co-operative associations. P Mounts The support given it by both Re- publicans and Democrats brought. jhe bill through the House; un- I VER RISES changed in any major respect from Ithe form in which it came 'from the agricultural committee. The three ril 25.--Seven; minor changes that were made, mately 30 per- were ioposed by committee mem- )perty damage bers to clarify the language of thel s of thousands il. The vote found most of the for- led tonight as mer advocates of the debenture! spring storms plan and the equalization fee in the West ranged alongside their; former op- ponents in support of a bill that is minus both of those features. The in the grip of majority of those who voted againstj zard in years, the bill, were advocates of one orl in Texas and both of those proposals who stilll ly recoverin hope the bill as it finally emerges ! er from the Senate may be changed (estructive tor- in severals c~,-'ts .. . . . _ . LAW GROUP HOLDS Story And Kent Groups Will Argue In Case Club Competition Before Banquet VISITING JUDGES SPEAK Activities in conimemoration of the fourth anniversary of the founding of the Lawyers club by, William W. Cook, '82L, vjill com- mence at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon with the final arguments in the Case club competition to be held in the lounge of the Lawyers club. A banquet this evening, at which sev- eral noted members of the legal profession will speak, will conclude the celebration. , The Story and Kent club have this year reached the final rounds and will meet to decide the win- ner. Robert J. Clendenin, '30L, and Thomas V. Koykka, '30L, are to represent the Story club, while Norman C. Bowersox, '30L, and Wil- liam H. Stockwell, '30L, will argue for the Kent club. A prize of $100 will be given the winning team and a conciliation prize of $50 will go to the runners-up. The affair is to be held in the lounge of the Law- yers club and the general public is invited. A formal banquet is to be held at 6:30 o'clock this evening in the refectory of the club. The Hon.I Louis H. Fead of the Michigan Su- preme Court will deliver the prin- cipal address of the evening. His subject has not yet been an-, nounced. The Hon. Robert F. Thompson, of the New York Su- preme Court, Appellate Division, the Hon. Arthur Webster, of the Circuit court of Detroit, and. the Hon. James O. Murfin,, Regent of the University from Detroit are to speak also. Dean Henry M. Bates is to be the toastmaster. Says Attention Given To What Is Thought And Not Why ADVISES HIGH SCHOOL SCIENCES BE IMPROVED Dean Edmunson And Guest' Speak- ers Given Informal Reception Before Banquet Vigorously decrying the growth of a professionally-minded de- partmental aristocracy in the lib- eral colleges, President Clarence Cook Little, in his address at the annual banquet of the Michigan Schoolmasters' club last night, de- marcated the disadvantages accru- ing to the student under a system of instruction in which greater at- tention is paid to what is taught, rather than to why and how a subject is taught. Prefacing his discussion with a tribute to the school teachers of the state as a group possessing "a general standing and ideals high- er than that of any body of pub- lie servants in Michigan," President Little then pointed out that the problem was to care for the heavy influx of badly oriented students-- those who are misfits, not socially, but mentally and emotionally. Fur- ther outlining the problem, he con- tinued: "Exceptional high school students, even though trained along vocational lines, which hap- pen not to conform to the chaste commandments of our unit system of admission, should be given a chance, 'with the recommendation of the secondary school, in the University. Liberal Arts College Scored "The liberal arts colleges of the country are becoming more profes- sionally minded than the law or medical schools. Departnental aristocracies have allowed the good teacher who doesn't write books to go without promotion for that rea- son. Further, professors do not want to teach underclassmen, but prefer to instruct the graduate stu- dent whom they know to be a prospective professor. As a result, the normal student is forced to dive deeply into the subject with the professor, even though his lungs ache, his earn hum, and bib eyes are pained,w hen he would rather spend his time swimming around near the surface to enjoy other beauties, and only occasion- ally diving to a deeper level." As a corrective, Dr. Little pro- poses that high school teachers better prepare themselves in the biological sciences - psychology, physiology, and human biology- in order that they may deal with the student, not as a variable, but as an objective for the aim of edu- cation. Preceeding the banquet an infor- mal reception was given for Dean J. B. Edmunson, of the School of Edu- cation, out-of-state speakers and other guests of the group of teach- ers assembled in Ann Arbor for a' three day program. Special Conferences Planned Special conferences on subjects included in the curricula of Michi- gan high schools will fill most of the day's program, while several luncheons will be held this noon Sby the various groups. The annual business meeting of the Schoolmas- ters' club will be held at 1:45 o'clock this afternoon in Room D of the I Law building, with J. A. Craig, of Muskegon, presiding. Campus tours have been arrang- ed this morning and this afternoon for delegates to the convention of the' Michigan High School Debat- ing League, while a conference for high school students will be held at 4 o'clock this afternoon in Hill Au- ditorium with Prof. W. D. Hender- I son, director of the extension divi- sion of the University, presiding. l An address on "Choosing a Col- lege" will be given by Ira M. Smith, registrar of the University. The State Federation of Teachers' clubs will hold a conference 'at 4 o'clock this afternoon in the audi- torium of the Methodist church. A board of directors meeting is scheduled for 3 o'clock, with a bus- iness session of the entire group to follow at 4 o'clock. Canadian Arbitration Is Sppn In Rum asp nadoes. Fears were felt for motorists caught unprotected on the snow_ blocked roads in the vicinity of E E A IONS Cheyenne, Wyo., which had been Itu cut off from communication with ithe outside world for more than 24 ,P hours. Meager reports obtainablej -- contain no news of loss of life in y the~~~~B blzadbti yAssociaed Press>) 1 the blizzard, but it was believed PARIS, April 25.-An eleventh' that when communication is re- hour agreement on reparations was stored some deaths from exposure still hoped for tonight in certain migh e revealed. uarters in Paris, but a majority; of the delegates are concerned1 QUINCY, Ill., April 25.--All of tlh jchiefly with a means of ending Slevees protecting nearby drainage their mission without closing their districts were endangered today as door to future negotiations. Sadditional heavy rains gorged the l The principal experts met this 1 Mississippi's tributaries and started I morning in the Hotel George V a rise in the parent stream, which to look over the work of their see- was expected to exceed all records. retaries with reference to prepara- Hundreds of farmers fled to high- tion of a report which is to be, or ground after the weather obser- made to the governments concern- vatory at Hannibal, Mo., announced; ed. "the Mississippi at Quincy will reach No one was willing to give any from 22.4 feet by Friday." r indication as to what the report was likely to contain though there If the maximum predicted stage were certain indications that the is reached it will be .9 of a foot final consideration will point out the higher than the crest of last Mon-I possibilities of future negotiations; rin whi.i h rnb r k l n-rl" r. ~ i I Americans Reticent In Disarmament Matters 1 t 5 1 y, wY c1 o1,)k\7 all recordts for 7" 1 Owen D. Young, American ex (By Asociated Press) years, and will be just .1 foot less pert and chairman of the commit- GENEVA,April 25.-The American than that of the great floods of i tee, still is straining every effort delegation to the preparatory com- 1851. Residents of the neighboring to prevent a final break, but to- mission for a disarmament confer- lowlands expressed the fear that night there was nothing to justify ence has decided against immediate none of the levees will hold. u hope of a change in the situation. delivery to Great Britain, France, Italy and Japan of the memoran-' IRE OF INDIVIDUALS TO THINK AND dum now being prepared to explain the technical purport of the Amrer- N TL Y IS P RESENT DA Y FA UL T-FRA YER ican formula of equivalent tonnage. - oe------ ______ ---_-- It was deemed wiser to circulate become more conservatve. Even mcnt, but a government that would the memorandum only on the eveI Russia is much more conservative do our political thinking for us. of the discussion of the naval ques- than in 1919. As the election in Our worship of the expert is prob- tion by the preparatory commis-_ the United States showed, we want ably our truest religion." p tion ythe preratr comris- not only a conservative govern- Science amid philosophy, r sion. rhe American expermts have mayilcer afndhispybpe' been working on the memorandum1 sorFrayer affirmed, is becoming since Ambassador Hugh Gibson dis- o sn fhecrn closed the general terms of the p of n-modern society. Abr -Einstein," he said, "is the most American policy. important man in the world today. Another development on naval Sq* The man in the street is going to matters was distinct drift of both be forced, within the next three or British and American delegations four years, to admit that mathe- to the belief that the proposed matics has a great deal to do with naval conference had better be every day life. merged with the second Washing- L° liri,,1 an is fa 4 RorolIn nr1 l tnfstr nf the fresh- I volumes of published sermons, "" V sill VAA11111111b , 1J A11 Y 1.1i VXAILCi11 44f it. icc T.Pf-. T-Tnrhnri. tin t.hn t.hinlrina