THE MICHIGAN DALLY PRMA.Y, FEBRUTARY 22, 1929 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1929 SURVEY OF MICHIGAN MENIN SENATE; MADE BY fORMER POLITICAL SCENCE INSTRUCTOR HERE, REVEALS MANY NOTED PERSONALITI[S FiVE NATIVE SONS orship. It is significent that these. fivesenator made' the step from DISTINGUISHED either private life or local politics to the second highest political of- IN SENATE fice in the United States., The two senators representing Many interesting facts concern- Michigan first got their Washing- ing Michigan men in the Senate ton office by gubernatorial ap- are brought out in an article re- pointment; Couzens to succeed. ceived by the Daily which was Newberry in 1922, and Vandenburg written by John J. George, instruc- to fill the vacancy created by thei for in the political science depart- death of Woodbrige N. Ferris, (the; ment last year and who is now only Democratic senator froml professor of political science at Michigan in three quarters of a Converse College, Spartanburg, S. century). Each was subsequently C. George received his Ph.D. last elected to a full. term in his own June and following that time ac- name. Hale, Howell and Cope- cepted the professorship at the land went to the Senate by elec- southern college. tion. Hale has served since 1917, Wrote Several Articles Howell and Copeland since 1923,1 The article entitled "Wolverines Vandenburg a little less than a flee he went to the Senate, prob- ably explains that. Hale is the most regular conservative of the four Republicans. Howell and Couzens reserve the right to a large sphere of party independence. While these two do not go the lim- it of Norris and Blaine's liberalism, neither Howell nor Couzens belong to the group that "will stand with- out hitching." Two of her sons have gone east and became senators-an unusual thing. Only one has obeyed Gree- ley's injunction "Go west, young man." Hale, lawyer; Howell, engi- neer; Vandenburg, editor; Cope- land, physician and surgeon; Couz- ens, banker, business man, and capitalist. BISHOP RECEIVES CARNEGIE HONOR Librarian W. W. Bishop of the University, has been honored by appointment as chairman of a re- cently constituted advisory group of college librarians, it was an- nounced recently by Frederick P. Keppel, president of the Carnegie corporation of New York. R. M. Lester, assistant to the president of the Carnegie corporation, is secretary. This group was formed to advise the Carnegie corporation as to grants to college libraries. These grants will probably -take the form of books rather than money for buildings or operation. The group, has held two meetings. New Type Fish Is Get Committee Posts ej Ordinarily assignments to Sen- ate committees are made on al basis of party regularity and sen- ~iority in service. Vandenburg, a newcomer into the Senate, was at- tached to the committee on the District of Columbia, Terrirtories and Insular Possessions, and-fit- tingly-Printing. Copeland, be- longing to the minority party has no committee chairmanship; het must be content with membership Oil Company BoardI Chairmanship Asked In Stewart Letters CHICAGO, Feb. 21.--Stockhold- ers of the Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, who March 7 will decide whether Col. Robert W. Stewart is to continue as chairman of the board, have been mailed a new ap- peal for re-election by Col. Stew- art. The letter charges spokesmen of1 John D. Rockefeller, Jr., with a "campaign of misrepresentation" in their effort to remove Col. Stew- art fro mcontrol. It expresses the hope that the contest between the younger Rockefeller and himself be kept on a high plane. "It was my understanding that such, too, was the hope and intention of Mr. Rockefeller," the letter continued. "Then Mr. Rockefeller sailed for Egypt," Col. Stewart wrote in the letters which went into the mails Wednesday night. "Mr. Aldrich (Winthrop W. Aldrich, brother-in- la wand attorney for Mr. Rockefel- ler) and Mr. Ivy Lee apparently did not understand the matter as he did. "After saying he would embark on no "unseemingly scramble for proxies," it surely must be without his knowledge or consent that others in his name have embarked upon a campaign of misrepresen- tation; that they, in a very wild scramble for proxies, indeed, have brought the whole force of ilhe Rockefeller millions to bear to in- timidate and coerce wherever pos- sible individuals and financial in- stitutions and all of the companies which the Rockefeller ' interests dominate in order to defeat the present management of this com- pany." His opponents, Col. Stewart said, have initiated a "rule or ruin" policy bent on obtaining control of the company "regardless of th consequences." The chairman denied he was asking a personal vindication of the stockholders "that has already been given to me by two courts and two juries." What he wanted, he said, was that they vote "for the good of the company and your own good." FOREIGN-Danish women are a serious lot, according to a report from Copenhagen. One-third of the undergraduate students of the University of Denmark are spe- cializing in philosophy. Six girls are specializing in theology, even though Danish women tnay not hold church positions. The report says 163 are going to be doctors, 59 lawyers, 22 political scientists, and 97 are studying English. Detroit Theaters CASS THEATRE LAST WEEK Evenings-1.00 to $3.00; Sat. Matinee-$1.00 to $2.50 Schwab & Mandel present "GOOD NEWS" SHUBERT LAFAYETTE Stratford-Upon-Avon Festival Company Friday Evening, Feb. 22 "Kcing Richard 11111 STUDY DISCLOSES SCHOOL CHANGES Consolidated rural schools have been taking the place ofone-teach- er schools at the rate of 1000 a year during the last decade, it has been disclosed through a recent comprehensive survey made by the Bureau of Education. Arguments in favor of the spe- cialized school point out that the one room schools are usually taught by the least trained and youngest teachers, that the percentage of attendance in one teacher schools is far below that of grade schools and that the social advantages of- fered by larger schools give them a superiority in training pupils that can not be reached. Try Our Meals You will like our prices Chicken Dinner Every Sunday Mrs. Anna Kaimbach ..,,, Changing. Horses. '.i. ~ , A 1 . ,_~ "'".' LANE HALL TAVERN The choicest of wholesome foods a . ,t . ' , . * . on Appropriations, Commerce, DiscoveredHere Education and Labor, and Immi- - gration. Hale is chairman of Naval Dn Affairs, and ranking member of Due to the observing eyes of lit- Rules. Howell, chairman of Claims, tieFrancis Hubbs, daughter of Dr. is a member of four other impor- Carl G. Hubbs, curator of fishes tant committees, ranking member the University Museums, there of Interstate Comnerce, and chair-yI has been found a new type of man of Education and Labor, hybrid fish, a cross between a CouzensĀ° at the opening of the ( pumpkin-seed and asunfish. While Seentiethongesswn ina ohin the live fish experiment room Setentieth Congress won in a con- 1the other day, the little girl chanc- test for membership on the power- ed to observe a school of very small ful Finance Committee. By virtue fishes swimming about one of the of these committee posts, and his tanks;very excited, she hastened serving on Pensions, and Civil to call her father who was delight- Service, Couzens as a committee- ed to find that the cross that he man easily outdistances the other had attempted between the two f r lerinsDointespecies of fish was a success. Mih genulic ns Dominate i The pumpkin-seed and the sun Michigan senators are tradition- fish had been placed in the tanks ally Republican. Two of the three several months ago. They reached migrating Wolverines to become maturity exceedingly early, due to senators have "kept the faith." the fact that they were cared for Copeland alone refuses the Repub- in the laboratory better than in lican label. The fact that he be- their natural streams. And it hap- came Commissioner of Health of pened hat both species reached New York in 1918 from which of- maturity at the same time. A - if , F1 T the portals of our large cities-Nei York, Baltimore, Detroit, and soo Cleveland-a semaphore halts a luxuriou flyer drawn by a puffing steam engine.1 simple switching maneuver, and electricit takes charge. A giant electric locomotive quickly under way, glides silently into th home stretch with its long string of Pullman Like a thoroughbred it makes the run-tire lessly. Passengers alight in a clean terming -clean because there is no smoke or sou Another milestone in transportation-al other event in the life of the iron horse! Civilization is progressing, with electricit in the van. How fai this advance will tak us, is a problem for our future leaders. I is for them to develop and utilize nei in -v,, Y --- --- Th~- oolmi w I . ,.- .,. -- ". r -, a .--- ,,. A 4 .n!%, ,y. N f .rw l p 4 _ _ t J..rr " :il L. ALL THIS WEEK AT THE it w U HERT =THEATER = applications of electricity--the force that is pointing the way over uncharted courses, not only in railroading, but in every phase of progress. found on large electric locomotives and on MAZDA lamps, electric vacuum cleaners, and a multitude of otherappli- ances which serve us all. It is 'the mark of an organization that is dedicated to the cause of electrical progress. >57 GENERAL ELECT GENERAL ELECTRIC CLOMP AN Y SCH ENECTAD Y, N EW YOR AND A TEAR BESIDES! ...........-... . d " ' LAST TIMES TODAY Holiday Program Today with Orchestra at Matinee Performances NOW Boyle Wolfolk's G SHOWING Great Vaudeville Unit Show MID-WINTER FROLIC RADIO-KEITH ORPHEUM ACTS With 66OIA & VERDI LOOS BROTHERS "IN MUSIC" Glorified Classified "All in Harmony" Mortified D R,.THY STAN SUMMERS KAVANAUGH "The Versatility Girl" "The Juggling Humorist" 1 Sor by PJOA JOHNSON YOUNG '-: Scenriej byGUM thLDIOPA JOHN FO R oducioa APPOINTMENTS - All in Technicolor "Cleopatra" Our Gang- "GROWING PAINS" News - Topics - Review GRIFFIN TWINS Pantone and Dancing JIMMY LUCAS & CO. "Vampire and Fool of 1929" 11 Cosmopolitan Opening Saturday EIGHT KURNICKER GIRLS .. I TL W'UEWMLW- II n- T T r Lr . T a. i I