PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~rn DAILY ®___, ___ .._ . _vv * ~S"URVIVING PRISONERS CLEAR17bPU INS OF DISASTEROUSPITENTARY IRE MENTAL PLEAUE n 2 IN HONORSSPEEC-1_ T , AR IITECTS FINIS Twenty-six Entrants Draw Plans for Administration Building of Mythical University. END TWO WEEKS' WORK Prize Design Will Receive $1200 Award to be Used for GOVERNMENT PROPOSES BUILDINGS FOR ENVOYS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS Former President of Minnesota Stresses Enjoyment l of Culture. POORMAN GETS AWARD' Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi Elections Are Announced; Underclassmen Honored.I (Continued From Page x),, those which he would enjoy." He emphasled some of the in- tellectual pleasures, such as the origin of words, academic research, scientific examination, and the use of the imagination. "The ability to use words is a worthy accomplishment, but one should have a clear perception of the meaning, and should be able to associate each word he uses with some definite setting." Dr. Vincent told of the manner in which Henry Drummond acquired a broad com- mand of adjectives. Drummond would select one adjective a week to I augment his vocabulary, but, fur- ther, he learned how to' use the word, the former Minnesota uni- versity head stated. "....This he would accomplish by a set of circumstances or conditions. Con- sequently, he would have a work- ing knowledge of the word." Many pedagogues are held toe their profession merely because of the "love for research, the interest- ingness of its methods, the excite- ment of discovery. The spirit of1 enterprise is exhilerating to them." Name Senior Elections. Seniors whose election to Phi Beta Kappa was announced for the first time at the convocation are: John Brumm, Ona Felker, Emo- gene Harrington, Marian Mackey,3 Edna Nicholson, Leo Norville, Flor- ence Tennant, Josephine Wede- meyer, Joseph Zwerdling, Phineas Wright, William Althana, Frances Anna Cope, Doris Kuhn, Mildred Limond, Mary Long, Max Newman, Frances Sackett, Philip Stern, Harry Swartz, Dorothy Marshick,t John Allan Seager, Royal Walters, Leon Pennington, Ruth Portfleet, Paul Steketee, Margaret Fead, Jean Criggs, Paul Adams, Carl Urist,x Richard Debo, Lorinda McAndrews,x Bertus Boone, Mary Parnall, Pauline Unger.s Charles Kaufman, Joseph Haas,r Otto Graf, Sarah Orr, William Ker- by, Margaret Ohlson, Marie Cimini, Isaac S. Friedman, Herbert Rix,s Alice Damon, Leo Weiselberg, Harry Mehlman, Evan Reed, Karl Smith,1 Frederic Wolf, Walter Fulghum, Jr., Clara Mitchell, Merle Elsworth,Y Jean Adele Gilman, and Robert Petrit.C Graduates Chosen. Graduate students who wereC elected are: Dwight Long, Richardc Hitchens, Roland Robinson, Lydia Case, Lorne Matheson, George Vanl Lear, and Marjorie Kunze. Nine juniors were chosen mem- bers to the society. They are: Alice and Elizabeth Sunderland, Arthur Adels, Abraham Becker, Eleanor A. Cooke, Meyer Teitelbaum, Emoryt Nunneley, Jr., Franklin Smith, andl Elsie Bliman.r Seniors elected to Phi Kappa Phi, not previously announced are:C literary college, Durwin Brownell,N John Brumm, Frances Cope, Rich-: ard Deno; Merle Elsworth, Victoria English, Margaret Fead, Marjorie Follmer, Isaac S. Friedman, Waltera Fulghum, Jr., Jean Gilman, Dor- othy Griggs, Joseph Haas, Charles; Kaufman, Mary Long, Lorinda Mc-t Trip Abroad. Concluding two weeks of almost steady work, 26 students in the Col- lege of Architecture will complete and hand in tonight designs for the administration building of a uni-.. . ... versity, in the sixth annual com- petition for the George B. Booth Mocls of proposed U. S. forei n service building at Shanghai (top) traveling fellowship in Architec- and diplomatic residence in Nicaragua (below) are typical of new ture. housing projects for U. S. envoys abroad, These sets of drawings will be _ _ _-_-__- judged at some time during the (3y ,socia d PTess)o ad Paris. The former will month of May by a jury composed WASHINGTON, Ap _l 25-Uncoe be completed in 1931. It will cost of several members of the archi- Sam is turning a more imp^sing somewhat more than $1,000,000 and tectural faculty and a group of De- face to the world in foreign capM- is built of earth-quake proof con- troit architects. tals. crete and steel. The embassy build- Started April 12. In marble, steel and stucco new ings in Tokyo will include offices., To the contestant whose design emba sies, legations and consulates. residences for the ambassador and is adjudged the best will go the are rising to replace the former ob- two apartment houses to provide award of $1200, to be used to fi- solete and undignified quarters of residential quarters for the com- nance a trip abroad for architec- Amricandiplomats. mercial, military and naval attach- tural study. Judgment will be made Since the passage of the foreign es and their families. on the basis of the general quality service buildings act in 1926 the Construction of the new United ool inwr addiiono the atuhl d- United States has been acquiring ,States embassy office building in schooln addition to the actual de more and more of its own buildings Paris, which will also cost more signs submitted n the competition. abroad. -than $1000,000, will start next Jan- . After making a preliminary d6o Before that time members of the rary. It will be located in the psign, the entrants were started on foreign service often were housed in beautiful Place de la Concorde. The April2make-shift, unsuitable dwellings. government owns the ambassador's ing itself. The 26 contestants were Now they have specially con- residence in Paris, having acquired prohibited by the rules of the comI- Ittucted residences and offices it furnished from the late.ambas- petition from receiving criticism of built in keeping with the country sador, Myron T. Herrick. any kind. they represent and furnished to Another pretentious project is Details Outlned, provide all the comforts of the the proposed new building in Details of the problem, as out- United States. IShanghai to house all activities of lined in the program of the com- Two of the newest and most pre- the U. S. government. It will be petition, were: "This building, tentious embassies are those at built on a slope above the river. Assocnrtrd Prcss Photo Convicts are shown above away debris after the catastraphic fire at Ohio State prison, in which more than 300 prisoners were killed, 110 of whom are as yet unidentified. Injured convicts are being cared for in the prison hospital. WOLVERINES W I N PITCHER'S BATTLE (Continued From Page z) sixth for Syracuse. Beagle struck _______out, but Horowitz singled to right. Board of Governors Gives Billets Hayman tried to reach third on the to Snior; LtterFro hit but was caugTht between bases, to Seniors; Letter From t naghupr 1e W. W. Cook Read.j Butler to Daniels to Superko. Mean- _._.___ while Horowitz reached second. CAMPBELL PRIZE GIVEN Stevens singled to short but Hor- owitz was out attempting to score, (Continued From Page i) Daniels to Hudson to Truskowski. the lawlessness cannot be, on the Holtzman's single was wasted in whole, attributed to foreign born. Michigan's half of the sixth, as In reciting the defects of the was Hayman s scratch hit off present legal system, Loesch ex- Toltzin'soglve n the eighth. plained that if a witness were to' Topol single with two down in the leave for Michigan or Indiana, no, ninth, but '{oneberg forced him at subpoenae in Illinois could touch k kseconk. him and the case was therefore Sulkowski opened the tenth with lost to the prosecution, in such a long triple to left. Wallo Biey instances as the recent political Tompkins. feor walking Baiey, scandal. Loesch told of the famous I Holtzman bore down, forcing Hay- "conspiracy trial" which convicted man to foul out to Superko and 15 of 17 Chicago political leaders on striking outBeagle for the fourth 23 charges ranging from murder to I consecutive tiMe. Tepol opped to perjury, and of the action taken by Daniels, but Stoneberg singled to th'e commission in ridding the city t seing een of such factors. Sulkou~skiolled toSupero for the Preceding the principal speaker third out. of the evening were John W. Zane, Langen's single to center with of Chicago, who acted as toast- two gone in the eleventh was only master for the banquet, Justice H, Michigan's third hit of the game; M. Butzel, of the Michigan State Walkov reached first on Daniels' Supreme court, and Judge Paul low throw to first in the twelfth. Jones, of Ohio. Regent James Balsley grounded out, Straub to Murphin completed the prelim- Hudson, Walkov advancing. Hay- inary program by presenting the man s single to left scored Walkov, "billets" to two-year members of but the Orange runner was out the law club. A message from trying to convert it into a double, Founder William Cook was also IBuero dntStraub. Beagle f 1,n- r n n- nr f t b f.'ilf.ZT nI f I y i 'I ry :11 i f .} 1 i i 1 } i i t { i . I J t 1 j t r I l X ,I E I . t "i t i 1 . ' 3 erected in a commanding place on the campus of an educationalin- stitution, is to house . the presi- dent's offices, the secretary's offices, the faculty assembly room, and a memorial hall." The competition was open to un- married men under 31 years of age, who are graduates of the Col- lege of Architecture, or who have completed four years of residencet 'here. Each contestant was requir- ed to affix a nom de plume to his design, that there might be no pre- judice in the judgment. Large Number of Entrants. The number of entrants in this year's competition greatly exceeded that of last year, there being only twelve competitors for the fellow- ship in the 1929 event. Frederick J. B. Sevald, Jr., '29A., reecived theI $1200 stipend last year for his de- sign of a municipal boathouse. George B. Booth, founder of the E fellowship that bears his name, is a former president of the DetroitJ News. He founded the Cranbrookt School for Boys, att Cranbrook, Mich., and is well-known for his activities as an art patron. UNIVERSITY OF CHATTANOO-. GA-According to Prof. P. L. Palm- er, men have the edge on women as to mental capacity. Although wo- men generally surpass men in col- loge grades, their superiority is due to harder study. I Federal Commission Changes Attitude Toward Michigan'sApplication for Radio Broadcasting (By AssockIad Press) Brucker said the commission LANSING, April 25.-The federal proposed several small stations radio commission is more friendly scattered throughout the state toward Michigan's application for rather than one central station. He afindicated such a system would be ave channel for a state polce impracticable because of the ex- radio station than at any time pense and the delay in transmis- thus far, in the opinion of Wilber sion of messages. He will file a M. Brucker, attorney general, who. brief with the commission in sup- returned today from Washington port of Michigan's position. where a hearing was held by the*- - -------_ commission. "The reaction to the state's tes- AR B$0 timony seemed to be quite favor- Present able," he said. "The members of the commission expressed them- selves privately after the hearing that they had been impressed by the importance of the problem and that whatever can be worked out will be done. It was suggested that the commission engineer make a personal inspection of the Detroit radio system and the location of ,.. the Michigan station. "Michigan stressed the import- tance of the radio as the best weapon for law enforcement and w insisted the problem is one of en- forcement rather than radio me-(A V chanics If either must yield it must be the mechanical agency in favor of law enforcement.' h I {{, e Ii 1 1 \ read to the assembly.; "then singie to Ue u vas u eT e a s em y. junistealing, "Truck" to Straub. Mich- ' The finals c the junior divis igan's three hits cmbined with of the Case clubs arguments wasI Stevens' error won the game for the won by Jesse R. Orth and James H. Ste e n the . Ta e sh I Spencer, of the Holmes club, coun- home team in the twelfth. Thle see- sel for the appelant in the case ond game of the scries will be play se o h ppeln .tecs ed this afternoon, beginning at argued in the club lounge yesterdayr 2:30 o'clock.n g afternoon. The court for the final2 ' case were the Hon. Charles B. Col- - lingwood, circuit judge of the thir- Prof. Revcs Returns tieth judicial circuit of Michigan; From, Haue Law Meet the Hon. Paul Jones, federal dis- trict court, northern district of Prof. Jesse S. ReCVes of the politi- Ohio; ;and the Hon. Arthur H.: cal science department arrived inf Ryall, Escanaba. New York aboard the President R o o s e v e 1 t yesterday. Professor erine Hagedron, Agbess MacDon- Reeves will return to Ann Arbor ald, and Dorothy Marshick. School Sunday, having spent two months! of Business Administration: Milton at the Hague as technical advisor Drake, and Lemuel Laing. School of to the Hague committee for the Music, Ruth Whittier Johnson. codification of international law. Andrews, Marian Mehlman. Mackey, Harry 1 YES SIR HERE'S GREAT NEWS! EMMSTAR TING TODAY 1"IIIIIIIIIIIIIII' ENGAGEMENT LIMiTED THRU TUESDAY ONLY. OWING TO STARS GREAT POPULARITY YOU MUST COME EARLY FOR CHOICE SEATS. Gifted star has daring role in the season s sensational 1930 comedy drama edition Angela Nosenzo, Margaret Ohl- i son, Sarah Orr, Mary Parnall, Leon Pennington, Ruth Portfileet, Evan Reed, Herbert Rix, John Russell, Paul Steketee, Jr., Philip Stern, Florence Tennant, George C. Tilley,I Pauline Unger, Carl Urist, Josephine Wedemeyer, Frederick Wolf, and Phineas Wright. 11 in Engneering College. Engineering college: Wilfred By-, chlinsky, Masilo D'Alleva, Edward Fischer, Arthur Fries, Edward Hahn, Russell Harrington, James McMaster, Fred Rode, Robert Smith, Dale I. Watkins, and Byron Wells, and the architecural college, Jack Mills. Medical school: Horace Baydon, Harry Leavitt, Elwood Mason, Frank Maxwell, Ralph Patterson, Charles Socall. School of Dentis- try, Arthur Coxford, Norman Dahn, Ward Freeland, and Isadore, Steinberg. School of education, Helen Bush, Leone Dockery, Cath- Detroit Theaters CASS THEATER "The New Moon" E i ' I { {; i I f .. ... - - - I i , I 1 t i J Tih Go. I LAST TI ES TODAY: I Her only leg-acy was a pair of perfect calves-but the havoc they created! Sound Carteon Pathe Review "Master Sweeper" Metro News I i U 11 U ~ImL~ . m I 9-nn {.1