iTr,._ 1,J2 7~~HE>7vi TC -HC2N D4L ESPE[RANTIST \fl Retiring Secretary F Takes New Position bYILL SPEAK Dean Is Chosen Head FOUNDING OF COLLEGES IN RURAL DISTRICTS HAS Of Medical Colleges It W r V Jaffe Will Lecture On "Esperanto" Fire raging from 7 until 10 i As International Tongue For oen Wrdneruseoclock yestrday mornng did w World..":nter..o:.r.e damage estimated at more than dl .IVES COURSES IN FINT $30,000 to the Moe Sport Shop on( «_North University avenue, which1 "Esperanto, The International ;"::z> was severely damaged, exactly two AxlayLnugOfTeWrd" 4months ago in the Arcade theater.9 wilbIh ujetwihSu fire, and wrecked havoc in the Cam1wl etesbetwihSu . Jaffe, '21, will discuss at 4:5 cocpus Beauty Shop and the Craft Tuesday, Feb. 19, in Natural Scienceo Type shop upstairs and the Draketn auditorium. Jaffe is one of the f 1 Sandwich shop in the adjoining s leaders of the Esperantist move- building. The offices of Selby A.n ment in the United States, and has a "Moran, located on the upper floor t had considerable success in con- iof the burning building, were also .ot ducting courses in this language at a total loss. T F'lint. An overheated flue in the base- o Esperanto is an artificial langu- ment of the sport shop started the s agr. L.L.venh y oli hocsor, hedaIeorIiee,!rvn. age, invented by a Polish doctor, fire which had gained considerable D..L.Zmnowhwabr headway before firemen, driven ,a in Warsaw, Poland. Dr. Zamen- back by dense clouds of smoke, p hoff, seeing the chaotic conditions were able to combat it effectually P which arose from the use of four -with streams of water. I distinct tongues, Russian, Polish, Despite the tons of water poured c German, and Hebrew, in the city in , into the building the flames ate s which helived, dvisedDth ideatofIthe__media__1_sch_____ which he lived, devised the idea of their way through the second floor Dean of the medical choo of the a reatig an international language to the roof, portions of which col- University of Indiana, who has t which would bring with itWilliam M. Jardine lapsed, providing a good vent for been chosen president of the Amer- o ed degree of order, as well as the Secretary of Agriculture, who hast the flames below. Shortly after- ga Association of Medical Col- creation of more friendly relations Ieliminated himself from the new # ward theomainifloor timbers crash- between various nations.'cabinet by announcing he would ed into the basement, and the blaze s 'A Jaffe, as a feature of his lecture become counsel for the Federated virtually burned itself out in the has sent to the University a com- Fruit and Vegetable Growers, Inc. hol hell of the build half TO HELP INc plete set of many kinds of Esperan- He was considered virtually certain an hour later. I ECONOMIC to literature, which is now on dis for reappointment. Firemen were partially success- lay in the lobby of the Library. Frmnwr arilysces The materialsbare the personal ful 'n fighting the flames from the The appointment of D. K. Lieu, t property of Jaffe, and were ar- rear of the building where the '15, as one of the collaborators with i ranged' for presentation by Dr. leavy prting machineryof the Prof. Charles F. Remer of the Francis Onderdonk, of the Archi- Type shop was located on economics department in an in- tectural school. thesecond floor. A checkup, itI Throughout Europe, the use of 11 Ij rIMIIN I was said, will reveal a heavy lossf vestigation of the internationali Esperanto is so extenledthat many a aILL I1III? EaLto the typeshop, although theforeign and economic relations of commercial compakiies employ that I presses did not crash into the by Professor Remer. language almost completely for ad- Permission has been granted for basement. Lie is in charge of the Statis- vertising. Regular Esperanto broad- the holding of exhibition billiard , George J. Moe, owner of the Moe tical Bureau of the Chinese gov- I casts are given by 44 radio stations matches between Willie Hoppe, na- Sport shop, stated that his store ernment and editor of the "China throughout the world, and the ex- tional 18.1 balk line champion, and was a total loss. Almost a com- Critic," an English magazine pub- tension division of the University of Ralph Greenleaf, national pocket plete spring stock of tennis, golf, lished in China.: Minnesota has supplemented its billiard champion, on the afternoon baseball, and track goods was correspondence course in Esperanto and night of Tuesday, Feb. 26, in destroyed as well as new store fix- KALAMAZOO - Western State with weekly instruction over the the Union, it was announced by tures just installed to replace those Teachers' college downed Michigan: radio. William E. Nissen, '29, president of damaged by the previous fire. State Normal college, 39 to 26. The special committee appointed the Union, following a meeting of; by the League of Nations has en-! the Union board of directors yes- dorsed Esperanto and altogether terday noon. 340 schools have instruction in this Further details concerning the tongue in their curriculum, either exhibition matches are not yet .: .. optional or 'obligatory. Albania, available, Nissen stated, but will be Brazil, and Czecho-Slovakia are made public as soon as complete04 some of the countries whose gov- arrangements are made.: ernments have introduced this A special George Washington auxiliary language through the birthday dance will be held from 9 SPECIAL! STATIONERY public schools. to 12 o'clock Thursday night in the ball room of the Union in accord- High Grade-69C a Box-containing1= Thomas Has Known ancewdi ecao resolution passed by 60 Sheets and 50 Envelopes Chiefs And BeggarsI Decision to reserve the Union 1111 South University i, Block from Campus I- A-I[swimming pool for women students under the direction of Dr. Bell on (Continued from Page One) Tuesday nights as well as on Thomas was the only American Thursday nights marked the bal- Subscribe to 'The Michigan Daily observer who witnessed the re- a.nce of the work of the Union di- claiming of the Holy Land from rectors. Heretofore, women su- t he Turks, and was with Allenby j dents have only been allowed the alII1Mu u111111111111 1111 11111 1 i f 1II IIII 1 111t111 111 n when the famous general drove use of the Union pool on one eve- them from Palestine. ning during the week. "get 1Ch a lo He was chosen official historian! -_ sag of man's first airplane flightC hrhilGlabbekeof good food on their around the world. He accompanied r E - the Prince of Wales on his easternI Will Gie Lectures 75c Sunday dinner. I journey and last tiger hunt in In- never saw the equal. dia; and in 1926 he flew 25,000na miles over 21 countries to study Eu-I Alfred V. Churchill, director of' r. I. rope's commercial aviation in or- the fine arts department of Smith der to discover what its possibilities ! college, will speak at 4:15 tomorrow f are here in the United States. afternoon in Natural Science audi- = Save Money His journey into forbidden Af- torium, his subject to be "Modern - h Mea .,ghanistan and Central Asia was Romantic Painting." o Tickts perhaps the most hazardous and Tuesday afternoon, Dr. Adolphe exciting of all his jaunts into far Van Glabbeke of Brussels, Belgian ER' KIT H countries. Nevertheless, he re-{ historian, jurist and artist, will' " jFI I'~ KIH { %I{II1 turned safely and brought with him speak at 4:15 in Alumni Memorial -- the first film record ever made of hall on "Leonardo de Vinci: His Life FAMOUS FOR FOOD one of the strangest and most mys-. and Works." Over Slater's °terious lands on earth. Mr. Thomas has chosen "With' IMiss Loraine Pierson, a member ;tI i111tiN11111111Ni111 1imi ililllltlillF1 Lawrence in Arabia and Allenby in of the department of Romance Palestine" as the topic of his illus- languages of the Alabama college, trated lecture which he will give recently received the degree of doc- in Hill auditorium Tuesday night. tor of philosophy from the Univer-' The material he garnered while a sity of Illinois, her thesis being a member of the staffs of these two study of the influence of the his-f great British leaders during their tory of Joan of A n French \ conquests into the Holy Land. drama since 1890. AIDED THA "One of the most important fac- ors in narrowing the gap between' ural and urban facilities for de- elopment has been the founding f higher institutions of learning n rural districts," writes Prof. Roy Fin man Holmes of the sociology lepartnent, in an article in the urrent number of the American Tournal of Sociology entitled "A Study in the Origins of Distin- ;ulshed Living Americans." "Most of the men mentioned in W'ho's Who are college men," con- inues Professor Holmes. "In round umbers, 77 out of every 100 per- ons giving educational data, whose ame appear in the 1922-1923 edi- ion, attended college, and 64 out f every 100 were college graduates. The great eastern cities and many f the smaller cities in the eastern tates have all through the period' under consideration been able to ifford their young people the op- ortunity to attend college without heir being obliged to leave home. n the nature of the case, most ountry young people can never be o fortunately situated. Every col- ege, however, that is established in irural area makes its -contribu- ion toward increasing the ratio f the distinguished rural-born." In his abstract Professor Holmes ays, "a study of Who's Who in gmerica reveals the fact that the ities have been more than twice s productive individuals of emin- ence as "the rural districts. "In 1840, it took a rural popula- ion of about 36,000 to produce each ndividual, yet living, who found his way into Who's Who, while it took, but about 9,000 urban population to produce such an individual. In other words, in 1940, the urban part of our population was about! four times as productive of dis-' tinguished men and women as the] rural. By 1870, urban productivity of such individuals was but two and a quarter times as great as rural.: In 1880, the cities' relative produc- tivity had apparently increased slightly; and in 1890, the cities' ap- parent showing was still better, al- though not as good as it had been in 1860. T SECTION IN COMPE TITION WITH CIT ous social factors operative ii urban and rural districts co uted to the improved sh made by the latter. Other f operative in the country which aid- ed in increasing the proportionate numbers of rural-born individuals of distinction, were bettered mnean~s of .transportation, including the growth in numbers of small towns, and of higher institutions of learn- ing located in rural communities." PURDUE UNIVERSITY.--Seven- ty-two per cent of the student body 1 n- ;, -.^ afi 'ia Mr th n oni 1 fac 4It is argued," Professor Holmes uIeu~voted in he airmave or une goes on,"a e Presosor he proposed plans of inaugurating a goe o, that the reasons for the differences must be sought mainly spring vacation at Purdue Univer- in the field of environment. Vari- sity. ~ ATTENTION! STUDENTS Being accustomed to home-cooking YOU should come to CLARK'S REAL HOME-COOKED DINNER For 50c NOON and EVENINGS II Delicious Salads and Sandwiches 1114 S. University Serving Sunday 5 to 10 p.in. r r "r a r +w r r "r it wr ar rr r ar. a r w w rr r T yr ur. r r i W rr a + r . u. r air r +PM i ar w s "r f LOUIS UNTERMEYER AUTHOR POET LECTURER WILL SPEAK ON THE " Critic's Half Holiday TONIGHT - SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17-8 P. M. At the Natural Science Auditorium .. a. .a .,. = r. I. .. .. .o .. a : a' .. .. .S Admission 50c at Door Auspices Hillel Foundation y !.+t . I,. J..+ :'..if'' . ,IC ",./. "../ ./".r/. I"J1. "lI".I1,J1, " "lJ.1.. +",J,~lf~«/. "1J. 1l.I.l.Il~,J..+'~.1. +". i°.r+" ., ..1".J ". 'J. ". +. !r YELLY D'ARANYI Hungari n Violinist Choral Union Series ' I ti ti! I ! .III ve your college lms for Electricity opens - a new era of ocean travel ' Let us h A Wednesday, February 20, at 8:15 p. m. Hill Auditorium A Limited Number of Tickets Still Available at $3.00, $2.00, $1.50,*at UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC Maynard Street Careful Finishing Careful from beginning to end is our photo finishing service. Here you are Miraculously quiet and vibration- less, luxurious and swift, the new electrically operated S. S. Califor- nia, largest American-built pas- senger ship, has opened a new era in ocean travel. Electricity drives the California so efficiently that the fuel bill for the comforts found in the finest hotels. Complete electrification makes the California an engineering marvel and a commercial success; it is booked far in advance, a sister ship has just been launched, and another is under construction. On sea or land, in every walk of life, electricity is in the van Y.YOUR HOME ! A new A. A. Home-Designed for you-Built for you with all your pet ideas included, just as_ you would have them. AND FOR LESS THAN YOU, WOULDEX P E C T TOPAY On orders for the next ten knimeq e m are incl ing real ° I sure of obtaining the finest prints from your valuable college films. Service Is Prompt And our service is prompt. Orders are alvays ready when promised. Take advantage of our careful finish- ing. Let us have your exposed films. initial coast-to-coast trip was even less than the Canal tolls. Electricity mans the winches, bakes the bread, makes the ice, polishes the silver. And electricity cools the This 'a' 'F of progress. Undreamed of yesterday, the electric ship is a symbol of the electrical in- dustry's part in modern civil- cabins and provides and o applia monogram is found on great 'that drive the California, n a multitude of electric nces which contribute to the ization and a prophecy of even greater ac- i