1qw * THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER -23, 1920 LTRRJU1A51Hoover Names Stimson Chairman of Delegation to Naval 01P1TEN D Fooe Elected Head ENI Limitations Conference; Reed and Robinson Are Delegates ilitary S'Odciety TOCAST BALOTS'_ N~! INSTRUCTOS m D l NER TO TLK IlTAL SUBJECT Natural Science Auditorium Will be Scene of Junior Class Elections ,T0 NAME J.HOP GROUP{ (Continued from Page 1, Col. 7) The other elections scheduled for today are the senior Forestry, theI juior Business Administration, the senior and junior Pharmacy. The Pharmacy students are be- ing classified according to classes by the school, and they may ascer- tain their respective classes by call- ing at the office. Students on these lists will be eligible also to run for, office. The Freshman Dental class will vote late Thursday afternoonr and the exact time and place to be announced tomorrow. -Junior Laws Elected. The other officers for the junior Law class, were Harold J. Hand,} vide-president, Earl T. Glocheski, secretary, Paul S. Mendenhall, trea- surer, and Leo J. Conway, J-Hop committeemen. All, including Bow- ers, were elected unanimously. Gray won the sophomore Arch- itect presidency by polling 19 votes to Den Chassee's 11, and William )Balbach's three, Russell Bailey was I chosen vice-president over Stuart White, 23 to 10, S. J. Stepnoski won the class secretariat, with 14 votes, to 9 for G. Coombs, and 10 for John Martindale. The treasurership went to Stanley B. Fleischaker, who polled 19 votes against 14 for Bal- bach. Elections in the junior Forestry class were all unanimous. Besides Grout as president the officers are -ernonE. Hicks, secretary-treasur- er, John J. Meier, vice-president, and Max A. Melick, J-Hop commit- teemen. Elections for the junior Dental officers were evenly contested. Pate won the presidency from E. "Addis 41 to 30, Denzil Gray, defeated D. Collins, 41 to.29, for vice-president, James M. Keenan, won over C. Pat- terson. 45 to 25 for secretary,. Vaughn A. Shilling defeated R. Stoffer, 39. to 32 for treasurer, and Verne C. Piazza won the J-Hop committee position from L. Dick- ens, 42 to 26. ---------- Several Books to be Printed by Members of Department of Sociology NEW STUDIES ARE MADE E. K. Wennerlund Will Feature Problems of Industry in Address TO HOLD JOINT MEETING Three new instructors have been added to the staff of the Sociology department this fall. They are: Miss Anna M. Cameron, Mrs. Alice . W. Remer, and Mr. Richard C. Ful- ler. Last year, Miss Cameron was instructor in social work in the Ex- . tension Division of the University of Nebraska. Mrs. Remer, who will act as Supervisor of Field Work in the Curriculum of Social Work, h had first hand acquaintanec with Assa eves Pho social problems, not only in this aj. Gen Alfred Foote , ::.::;::.::.:: ".:{. . _ . .. ..... ...:. ...... Ycountry, esecially in Boston, but! e a on 1esci rFule~o bau Massachusetts army man, who Asocated Prs Photo also in China. Mr. Fuller spent last Msahstsam a h was elected president of the Na- Joseph R. Robinson I Henry L. Stimson David A. Reed year as assistant to Professor Rob- erd~rsceto h a Congressmen, who havebeebiLonr Henry L. Stimson aeert C. Angell, of the Sociology de- tional Guard association at a con- Congressmen, who have been London. Robinson, a democrat ference. Henry L. Stimson has partment, working in conjunction vention of that organization held named by Persident Hoover as del- from Arkansas, and Reed, a Penn- nrecently in Los Angeles. egates to the forthcoming naval sylvania republican, are the two Staff of Columba University.e limitations conference to be held in senate representatives to the con- delegation. Several books will be rsityh this year by members of the de- that of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Scot- Debate League Head Life Size Bust of Old Ottawa Indian Causes partment. Among them are: "A land, claims to have more pupils in Auch Speculation Among University Students Statistical Study of 226,000 Arrests public schools than her rival city. nnounces rogram ! in Detroit Over a Period of Seven In the laboratory of Carleton W. When the University Museum Years" by Prof. Arthur E. Wood, Poland is to have a new chain of E. K. Wennerlund, industrial en- gineer for the General Motors cor- poration, will speak on "Industrial Engineering Problems in the Auto- mobile Industry" at a joint meeting of the student branches of Indus- trial Engineers and American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers at 8 o'clock Thursday evening, in the Union. Mr. Wennerlund after graduat- ing from the University of Minne- sota accepted a position with a railroad where he received valuable training in the scientific manage- ment of shops *from Harrington Emmerson, noted engineer, who was then just starting his career. Mr. Wennerlund has been a con- sulting engineer for many years, and is one the speakers that will appear before engineering students this term. A business meeting of the two student societies will be held be- fore Mr. Wennerlund makes his ad- dress. 1 I{ According to Prof. C. E. Dens- more, about 260 schools will be re- presented by 1600 debaters in this year's Michigan debating league, of which he is the head. These fig- ures include practically every high school of any size or importance, from Calumet in tle upper penin- sula to Morenci;on the southern border line. The 1600 debaters, which total1 exceeds last year's by 100, will takeI part in 700 debates, the finals of which will be held in Hill auditor-E ium April 25. The subject of thej debate this year will be: Resolved, That a judge or board of judges be substituted for the jury in allj state and municipal trials in Mich-j igan. Noonday luncheon clubs through- out the state are backing the league this year, and are creating local interest in their activities. They will give local awards and ban- Angell, artist, in the University Mu- was finished the bust was put on seum building reposes a plaster exhibition in Mr. Angell's labora- bust to which is attached a curious tory. During the year and a half history-a history that constantly declared that it was the bust of becomes larger. Coach Yost, Will Rogers, Stephen The bust is a life size replica of Leacock, innumerable professors, the head of Henri, an old Ottawa and even a former president of the' Indian, sculptured by Mr. Angell University. Old grads, seeing the two years ago when he was visiting 1 piece of sculpture, mistake it for, the Ottawa Indian reservation in the figure of old class mates or of Missaukee County, Michigan. The former instructors. red man, 61 years old and averse Each new identity that is made E to be "done" in plaster, was finally increases-paradoxically as it seems persuaded to sit for the modeling. -the history of the bust. Thus, it His wife and tribesmen remonstrat- is reasonable to expect that in fu- ed emphatically, saying that the ture years old Henri will have ac- guardian spirits would be offended. quired many more personalities, The bust was completed in nine and perhaps, by this accretion, In- hours. Two days later old Henri, dian superstitition, which, accord- the Indian, was dead. He had con- ing to some self-styled authorities, tracted pneumonia during an au- i believes that likenesses of the dead tomobile ride, following the sitting, become invested with the souls of and this, augmented by an infec- the departed, will be eventuallyf tion in his arm, proved fatal. justified. which was sponsored and will be published by the Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research. Professor Angell has written "A Study in Undergraduate Adjustment" which will be published by the University! of Chicago Press. In the interests of the National Tuberculosis As- sociation, Prof. Lowell J. Carr has written a book on "The Measure- ment of Effectiveness of Propagan- da in Saginaw and Kalamazoo Counties," and W. A. Goldberg, a graduate student, has prepared "A Study of Waiver of Jury Trial Un- der the New Michigan Law"awhich will appear in the Michigan Law Review and in the Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology. grain elevators which will cost $I5,- 000,000. NOW PLAYING (4A ® #® inu-iAu On the Living Screen Triumphant Return FLAGG and QUIRT Mighty he-men heroes of "What P r i c e Glory" on a hard boiled 1 o v e and fighting world tour. For the first time in Ann Arbor theateres --history picture re- turns for an extend- ed run. I | Detroit Theatres I ;1 I f f I - Labor Leader Becomes Einstein Gives Short Ad New' Austrian Premier RadioStation Th (By Associated Press).. (By Associated Press) CANBERRA, Australia, Oct. 22- BERLIN, Oct. 22.-Just five words James Henry " Scullin, . 52-year-old of Dr. Albert Einstein's message leader of the Labor party, became from across the seas to America premier of Australia Monday. Pre- over an international radio broad- mier Stanley Bruce resigned as a casting arrangement last night result of the National party's defeat were in English, and therefore un- in the recent general elections, and derstandable to the vast majority Mr. Scullin was called upon by Lord of his listeners. Stonehaven, governor - general, to Those words were at the con- form a new ministry. elusion of his short address, when The first act of the new prime he said, addressing himself to Mr. minister was to cancel the dismis- Edison, in whose honor he was on; sals of 1,700 telegraph linesmen, the air: which had been ordered by the "Good night my American ,ruce government following upon friend.", the award in a labor dispute. Scul- The famous scientist's speech, lin and his party are pledged to very poorly heard in America, due u p h oI1 d the federal arbitration to faulty reception, follows: court, wheras the Bruce govern- "Good evening, Mr. Edison, It is ment was defeated on its proposal a unique pleasure to me to be able to turn jurisdiction in labor dis- putes to the state courts.--- dress in Honor of Edison from European rough International Broadcasting Arrangement to send you from a faraway country things necessary to life hardly any these cordial congratulations. The muscular labor and no longer needs mental workers and especially the to be a motor or a slave. technicians and physicists of the "The great creators of future whole world .are today thinking of generations probably will be or- you and your work with admiration ganizers whose task will be to see and sympathy. that such technical powers no "You have been equally success- longer serve the purposes of war, fully as a pioneer, executive and but of economic security and the! organizer. Your construction of the liberation of mankind." electric incandescent lamp has to a _- - ---- _-- great extent made the development of a great electrical industry pos- sible. "The great technical creators of which you are one of the most sue- cessful have produced in the course oyn of a century an entirely new situa- - .~ tion to which mankind has not yet adapted himself. For man today:n requires for the production of I LAFAYETTE "LITTLE ACCIDENT" with Thomas Mitchell A Laugh Riot! Matinees: Sat. 50c-$2.00 Nights: 50c, $2.50 CASS GEO. SIDNEY "KIBITZER" Matinees: Wed. and Sat. 75c, $1.50 Nights: $1.00, $2.50 SOON Three Live Ghosts" Another of the Super Glory ow Professor of Physics to Speak at Cornell Prof. W. W. Sleator of the physics department of the University will read a paper on "The Propagation of Energy by Waves", before a meeting of the Optical Society of America to be held at Cornell Uni- versity, Ithaca, New York, Thurs- day. Friday, and Saturday of this week. Pilot Escapes Safely From Fatal Tailspin (By Associated Press).., MT.. I..TCLT IETDTT N Y ft 22 1 ' NOW SHOWING WUERTH NOW SHOWING IEME..1)11E. EtELlUJ THAE MARIAN NIXON FRANKIE DARRO j.. r SAM HARDY SLLOYD INGRAHAM a garamount AU-TALKINO CqWure 10 , S I I 1 i t 1 t l I --While his plane fell to earth in a tailspin Monday, Lieut. John Se- ligman, army pilot attached to Mit- chell field, dropped more than 2,000 fget with a parachute and escaped with only a wrenched ankle. The machine -was wrecked. 1* mICHGA N FOUR DAYS, BEGINNING TODAY- The Picture Sensation of All Times! GRETA F Just Naturally Good f Good treatm tobaccos . . . made tent. " That's the good by Nature, secret of OLD not by GOLD'S SAWYE- S RQain wear FROG B11R4D SLICKERIS SHE TOOK LOVE WHERE SHE FOUND IT ~.ff 71x;- ft V 4 :: :4 :. " ". ''artificial goodness i .1 RECK- LESS 01, SOCIE'S BRAND OF SHAME A chef may be able to make a doubtful steak taste good by artificial flavoring and sauces ... But it's still dangerous to your stomach. So it is with cigarette tobaccos. "Heat-treat- ing" is useful to "set" and "sterilize" the to- l --n . ..r _n OLD GOI D tobaccos are naturally good. Care- fully selected from Nature's best for smooth- ness, flavor and freedom from throat-scratch. You have only to try a package to get the thrill of this smoother and better cigarette. That will STAGE a r