THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1930 wr wi . nrr rn i HARRY CHANDLER SENAME DPRESIDENT UPHOLDS RELIoIONl .. IN SUNDAY SPEECH' ( x it f THREE POWER NAVAL CONFERENCE LIMITS NUMBER M U AULT OFBATTLESHIPS TO SUPPLEMENT AMERICAN NAVY TINUREDULs Eover Soon ExpectedC to Per- PA UE L EQATIN .t Actual bying Down of DAIN CAR CRH E. ISTMargarek Nt M. Sager Fatally Huirt TOAEASTERNOMETSEightHeen0cru- Early Sna onn -~, r - A sers. each a sheer 1,0000 tons of' Seven Will Travel as MedicaliI ?.'.-W---AwVLA4iE erfihtaei strength. are to supple- Representatives to Series ,ment Uncle Sam's "ships of the INQUEST TO BE HELD of Auntal Gatherings. chance that our great grand child- WNW ren w ill see the com plete collapse ie od p it tr e er of the Christian church, stated Dr. ! Harry Chandler. Conrad. H. Moehiman of Rochester, ! Of; the Los Angeles Tines who N. Y., in a convocation lecture spon- was elected president of the Anmer- sored by the Student Christian as- ican Newspaper Publishers' Asso- clation recently. For m-any years sociation, Sunday night in Hill aud- Chandler has been one of the coun- itorium. tries leading publishers. "Ls Christianity Doomed?" was the subject of the talk in wiich r Dr. Moehlman discussed the case for and against. Christianity. In the discussion against the Chris- ian church the speaker stated that been fought in the name of Jesus T of Courts. Christ. He went on to indict the hose of Courts church by saying tha t after becom- ing complicated, the creeds of the DRAWS UP SCHEDULE! Christian religion had become static and had failed to keep in step with The history and growth of public modern progress. With only about utilities commissions, their present 15 per cent of the population of the status in the governmental struc- United States being interested. in ture, and their powers with' respect religion, and only three out of a to public utilities such as railroads. hundred being influenced by the electric power companies, and gas teachings of the church, the picture companies, were discussed by Arth- looked pretty black for the future ur H. Ryall, '02L, Escanaba, non-! of Christianity, said Dr. Moehlman. resident lecturer on the Law school On the other hand, it was point- faculty, in the first of two lectures ed out that there was an ever in-) delivered yesterday afternoon in creasing need for religion and that the Law building on practice before Christian traditions were so firmly public utilities commissions. rooted in our life that they could Mr. Ryall pointed out that al- not easily be displaced. The speak- though the utilities commissions are er cited as modern institutions that not. courts, they' exercise powers had their beginnings in religion, quite like those of courts in .that su.ch symbols as our calendar, the they find facts in specific cases, and alphabet, the days of the week, be- make orders to govern the action. sides such cultural efforts as paint- of utilities, much as courts wouldj ing, music, and medicine. do. Afer describing the vastness of Among the most important ques- our celestial universe by means of tions raised by. commission pro-' several comparisons, Dr. Moehlman 3eedings, according to Mr. Ryall, are said that if mankind failed to find how far they may go in ignoring. a meaning in it all, the human race judiciary rules of evidence, how far' would die out as a result of pessi- they may go in interfering with the misn. To further stress man's in- management of public utilities, and nate need of spiritual life, he said to what extent they may proceed, that religion dealt with the mys- without being subject to judicial re- terious border land between the view. known and the unknown, and that Mr. Ryall stated that probably: as long as there remained anything the most important but least un- in human experience that could not derstood question in utility prac-1 be explained by science, there would , ice today is just where to draw the! be a need for some kind of philos- line between proper regulation bas- Qphy or religion. Ied upon the police power on the one Professor Moehlman, a former hand, and improper and illegal in- member of the University faculty terferences with management by and now professor of the history the owners on the other hand. of Christianity at the Colgate- In the second lecture, he dis- Rochester Divinity school, will con- cussed the building up of a rate tinue his Ann Arbor visit with three schedule of a public utility. Such lectures under the auspices of the factors as valuation of physical Michigan School of Religion on the properties, depreciation, going value subject of Puritanism, and working capital were defined. MANY PAPERS 'PREPARED Warthin and Welter to Appear. on Program of Historical Research Society. Michigan's medical school faculty will be well represented at a series of conventions of societies prom. inent in national medicine, opening on May 5, 6, and'7. with a meeting of the American College of Physi- I cians at Philadelphia. To this gath- IeCring Dr. Aldred Scott Warthin, di- rector of the pathological )abora- tories of the Medical School, will go as a member of the board of regents. Following this, the University Medical School will send sevei representativAs to the annual con- vention of the Association of. American Physicians meeting on May 6 in Atlantic City, all of whom will appear on the speaking pro- gram. Papers to be read at-the associa- tion meet include "Liver Change in Grave's Constitution," by Dr! Carl V. Weller, Assistant Director of t h e pathological laboratories; "Syphilis as a Factor in Coronary Artery Disease," by Dr. Warthin; "Additional Observations on the Use of Dessicated Hog Stomach in Patients with Pernicious Anemia, prepared jointly by Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis and Dr. Raphael Isaacs' both of the Simpson Memorial In- stitute; and "The Character of "the Excitation Wave in the Cardiac Muscle, and the Theory of Opposed Potential Difference," a result of co-operative research by Dr. Frank -N. Wilson, Dr. John A. MacLeod, and Dr. Paul S. Barker. On May 7, two of the Association delegates, Dr. Warthin and Dr. Wel- i ler, will appear on the program of the American Society of Medical History, meeting concurrently and in the same city with the Associa tion. Dr. Warthin, who is vice- president of the Society, will dis-, cuss "The Physician of the Dance of Death," while Dr. Weller will lecture on "Lead Poisoning and the English Books of Trade." HARVARD UNIVERSITY - A study of college'entrance examina- tions and the effect of such -ex- aminations upon the curriculum and methods of the secondary schools and on the student's preparation for work in college is now being carried on 'by the Crim- son, the college newspaper. '.X11# IJ 11 il tIl 1[t I JJllliltilitlltlJllll RENT A RADIO CROSLEY-AMRAD SHOP 615 E. William Dial 22812 'tl#IlIIJ##lllf###I[I#!#Jtl#JulHt#HM I Augusta about March, 1931. mi -The 10 to follow will come out! of the 15 authorized in the cruiser bill} of 1929. Plans for two of the, 10 already have gone forward in private yards, one at Camden, N. J., and _the other at Quincy, Mass. *.. The 18 will be the only modern cruisers in the United States navy. 'Long and low, the new cruisers are veritable thunderbolts of steel. Their speed is about 33 knots an y hour. The Salt Lake City and the Pensacola mount 10 8-inch guns but -r: