TUMM0~Y, MAY. 0, 1930 THE ICIIAN DAILY PAGE Tr1fEP .n_ _ __ DRt JONES STATE[S~ [IFE IS TOO -FASTI TO AL WTH0UgHT, Quaker rPs9r gys rvs .to be 100-Horsepower, 100 Candlepower.I CITES HOOVER EXAMPLE: Says President Found Himselff FAMOUS CHURCH PROV WE{PICTURESQUE SETTING rirUTyton Quesioned POLICE ATTACK FOR WEDDING OF PR EIR MUSSOLINI'S DAUGH TbyER PULIE iji ID~Cmite MADRIDS'tUD T - n nrrn I~T~tr~IN TREET. IQs _____ ARID, May 5-Police .fred 1.~.a mob of student rioters here b 3 rrs of C.onsprator Brings ;- day and stray bullets were repo "01 1on Outbreak of Mulattos ::.~ ed to have killed one workman a to- )rt- nd .._ ZV7 as by a Revelation or Inspiration of God. One hundred horsepower and1 one hundred candlepower lives{ should be our aim in the opinion of Dr Rufus Jones, professor ofi philosophy at Haverford: 'college, who spoke before the Student Christian Association convocationt Sunday evening in Hill auditorium. Dr. Jones is a Quaker by faithl and while the service Sunday eve- ning was in no manner similar to' the Quaker service his address re- flected the Quaker idea of life to some extent. He accused our mod- I er. life of being paced at too rapid a rate and deplored the fact thatj the average modern individual, rarely if ever paused in the mad rush to meditate in quiet and' peacefulness. He compared modern life to the famous Southern Cali- fornia football player who ran the wrong way for a touchdown. In other words it is the belief of Dr. Jones that we are driving hard and fast in this modern existence, but that our lives lack purpose and di- rection. Then the speaker went on to dis- cuss spiritual energy and stated that it existed all around us in the same way that electricity exists in all material bodies. He expanded this thought by saying that St. Paul was a revelation of spiritual energy the same way that a street. car was a revelation of electrical energy. God, he said, was manifest to us in many everyday events that occurred often, but the trouble is we do not recognize God in these things. While the speaker did not di- rectly refer to President Hoover as a Quaker, he cited him as an ex- ample of a boy that fqund himself suddenly as by a revelation of God, as the result of time spent in quiet imeditation. Herbert Hoover, con- sidered, as rather queer in his youth, decided to be an engineer in a single inspiration, the momentus of which, he says, carried him for- ward ever since. I Count Galeazzo Cian, one of before the altar of the Church of of the Italian premier. Associated Press Photo the Italian minist-rs of communications, pictured above as he kneeled St. Joseph in Rome, with his bride, the former Edda Mussolini, daughter in Worcester. tr. an ,;.{ SOLDIERS GUARD TOWNS 1I/ Wv .4ssociated PIress 3 WORCESTER, Union of South Af- rica, May 5-Police reinforcementsx were rushed here today from Cape- town to maintain control in the znulatto section. In serious riot- ing there Sunday one police cap- tain was felled with an ax and his throat slasned as he lay on the} ground, five natives were killed and 19 natives and constables injured. Associated Press Photo At one time in the course of the William H. Stayton, street battle, the natives, infuriated, Chaixman of the board of the by efforts of detectives to arrest Association against the Prohibition potential trouble makers, drove the Amendment, who was questioned olice fromthe scenetof e cs by the lobby investigating com-4 The constabulary later regained; control, fully armed detachments mittee of the senate concerning r guarding the section during the letter in which he is alleged to night. d ghave pictured President Hoover as Immediate cause of the outbreak j "not a dry at heart." was the action of Maj. Thomas, chief of the criminal investigation Biological Society department, Capetown, who arrived ELfNe in Worcester over the week-end to i Elects New .weers investigate native trouble, and or- dered arrest of a native whom he Phi Sigma, national honorary noticed earlier in the day loading a biological society, at a recent meet- rifle at the African national con- ing elected the following officersE gress. for the coming year: Eldred R. Mar- tell, Grad., president; Kenneth L. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS-The Jones, instructor in Botany, vice- Brown Derby is to Illinois what the president; Evelyn Dx' essel, Grad., Oil Can is to Michigan. Every year corresponding secreta ry; Elsie H. Sigma Delta Chi holds a gridiron Bauchman, Grad., recording secre-, banquet and awards the Brown tary; Donald J. Amee , Grad. treas- Derby to the most "regular" pro- urer. fessor of the university. urr. .-- injured three others. Some stu- dents and police were reported as slightly injured. The students had hoisted a red flag over San Carlos Medical Col- lege this morning, deserted their classrooms and flocked on the cam- pus, still protesting their treatment Thursday night when police broke up a demonstration of students who had greeted Prof. Miguel De Una- muno at the Norte Railway Sta- tion. Then they returned to the build- ing, barricaded themselves and stord the. police from the roof. EUROPEAN TOUR for STUDENTS of ENGINEERING and others INTERESTED IN ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS July 5-$695-Sept. 1. Visiting Engineering and Industrial Plants in ENGLAND, FRANCE, GERMANY and SWITZERLAND with Conferences on MANAGEMENT PROBLEMS Also other E UNIVERSITY &STUPNT TOURS $395 and up Offering Courses with College Credit, in FRENCH, SPANISH, GERMAN, ITALIAN, ART, HISTORY, etc. SCHOOL of FOREIGN TRAVEL, Incr 110 E. 42nd ST. NEW YORK CITY New Air Ambulance Introduced by Navy po'Carolina Banks' Wy.,Isocated Press) NORFOLK, Va.,-Probably the! most unusual ambulance service inj the world is being operated by thel United States navy in the semi- barren land between Norfolk and storm-swept Cape Hatteras. The ambulance is a huge am- D[EGATESATTENDYoung Pilot Seeks OPELASEMBLY Fli ht Record __3n East-West Hop (By Asocawt c i .Press) Edwards, Watanbe, Ittyerah, LOS L5' , jAy 5-Already Hartwig and Brumm Visit possessor of a new east-west trans- League of Nations. continental record for junior fliers, j Frank Goldsborough, 0-year-old DvDl'hCT%.T'T' T ADriANT TT1nTA +---------------------------- II i Five delegates from the Univer- sity attended the third annual phibian airplane, with ample space model assembly of the League ofI for the accommodation of patient I Nations, held last Friday and Sat- and attendants, and its usage de- urday at Kalamazoo, under theI veloped from the'almost complete auspices of Kalamazoo College and veloed romthethe Western State Teachers' Col-} isolation of the "Carolina Banks." lege. On the "Carolina Banks" was theJ The representatives sent from birthplace of the airplane, the here comprosed two full delega- Wright brothers making the first ions, and included Douglas L. Ed- Wrg t b o h r a i gt he frt w r s '31, John M . Brum m , '31, flight from Kill Devil Hill Decem- - George Ittyerah, '31E, Lawrence E. ber 17, 1903. Hartwig, '31, and Akira Watanabe. Today, 26 years later, the modern Edwards, Brumm, and Watanabe counterpart of the flimsy motorized represented Japan, and Ittyerah flying craft is playing an important and Hartwig sat in the Indian sec- role, thanks to the navy, is saving tion. All of the representatives lives and easing suffering among spoke before the committees in the citizens of the "banks." which they were placed. Announcement was made at the More than a day's travel remov- concluding session of the confer- ed from hospitals on the mainland, ence that the fourth annual model the residents of the section, who assembly will be held in the early take their living from the sea and part of May at Hillsdale College, the sound, have come to depend on Hillsdale, Michigan. The assem- the navy's flying ambulance in in- blies include all of the colleges and stances where speed is necessary universities in the state of Michi- in taking a patient to a hospital. I gan. Jackson Heights, IN. Y., ayiator, to- day announced plans for a return trip this week, seeking to establish a faster west-eAsa marjk. Goldsborough planned to pilot his plane to San Francisco today. He said he would return here later to take-off again for the east. After batting weather and flying conditions that would have tested the skill of a more experienced flier, Goldsborough landed here at 1 p. m., Sunday, to clip 13 hours and 57 minutes from the former junior record held by Dick James. He com- puted his flying time as 34 hours, 3 minutes. i ;, 4 i ,{ { I I i . ,; . : j OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Lenses and Frames Made to Order Optical Prescriptions Filled SALLE R'S STATE STREET JEWELERS .XjQft5UDDEN SERVICE ---go lip .1 SO Im" y AX 'F'q ENy t MANT $ T--Y~ou 'THAT r I&M t Light is the first of painters. - EAERSOY BUILDINGS in Which You Take Prides ON THE CAMPUS, where clasp buildings and memorial structures are so often distingiishcd by their nole form, flood- lighting equipment serves to prolong the enjoyment of their beauty and to enhance pride in the institution. Such an appliation is made for the new 165-foot campanile at South Dakota State -mag- nificent gift of an alumnus. Electrically operated chimes sound the hours and are heard in concerts. At night, shafts of ,MA WA q 1A1,TO. A AS AY k HF'Wy .. .N RI :W 5ioT, KVS WAINI ' X, .F 1,000 w Wna c K "iS r+ v ws y w9 LWAWV garsT iw s + iiNV ThI~ ~b\~Soon qyys too. A Kw uKt4&' .ASt SUMMAE WA'/s WAO wI r tD~~ .- K~ PtoCA S Fiaw. e - I OA Mp? eZ APR _. . Drawing of theC 6oughlin Camnpanile at South Dakota Stte Coll ege, Brookings, S.ID. 1Perkins and Mdciytu'.architects light from General Electric floodlighting VtA3 ,~ ~'Y L \~'~~ P'( 0 SOJpn Y. . KI WD f r..1O.DA'S o TRFA8 , AN + HAlI, A'v+c R °OI projectors effect a picture of superb beauty done in the school colors and white. From the air, the tower is identified by the beam from a G-E airway beacon surmounting the floodlighted dome. Thus, GE equipment plays its part in promoting progress and fine appreciation. Back of i