0-- TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1930 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WAGE THREP TOEDA M'~ 2, 190 HE MIHIAN DALYPAE HR UTTIES SPEAKMissouri Professor Faces Board Action M AERICAN BOY Fieding H. YostDean Clark Present Optimistic Views at Detroit Meeting. DISCUSS SOCIAL LIFE Delegates From United States, Canada and Hawaii Are fJ N;<, Assembled. (.Specia! to The Iily) DETROIT, May 20.-Two noted' authorities on American youth,~ Dean Thomas Arkle Clarke of the, University of Illinois, and Fielding. H. Yost, director of Athletes of the University, presented optimistic views of the contemporary boy 4:I when speaking before the 24th an- 4j nual convention of the Boy's Club , Federation of America at the HotelM Statler last night, at which more Dr. Max Meyer. than 350 delegates from the Psychology professor of the Uni- United States, Canada and Hawaii versity of Missouri who is on trial are, assembled for a four-day ses- before the board of curators on sion. charges of insubordination. The Dean Clarke held that "if the action grew out of a sex question- American boy of today is different naire controversy started more than his dad was when he was a i than a year ago. youngster, it is because the condi- tions under which the two spent their youth are different. Boys inD l general have more money, com- forts, lu iries and better homes to live in th n fifty years ago. Life is IT made easier than it once was." Speaks of Opportunity. Upsetting a popular notion, DeanCi Clake oninul:"Threwas a Col Henry W. Miller to Lecture Clarke continuel: 'There was fa less social life in those days than on Paris Gun' Tonight today. My mother used to say that in Auditorium. she had never . belonged to a club or led a meeting of any sort En route from Camp Holabird, all her life. Now young people, mi d Baltimore, Maryland, the Motor die-aged people and the old have something to take their attention 'Transport School Convoy of the away from home every night in the United States army including 19 of- week. The boy of today has a ficers, 91 enlisted men, and 32 greater opportunity for education vehicles, will arrive here today. and training than any boy in the The purpose of the trip is to world ever had. He has more to give practical experience in motor make life enjoyable and broad and transport field work, suchasthe inifluential." A d d i n g a note of operation of convoys, highway warning, he stated: "In many transport, and the maintenance of cases I think modern day youth is vehicles on the road. less serious-minded, less well-man- The convoy will inspect the Uni- nered, less willing to work than versity Tuesday afternoon visiting the boy of yesterday was. If he is to the stadium, Mt. Clements library, do the things we expect him to do, the field house, and other places of1 he must get trained, he must de-I interest. velop moral stamina, he must bee As a special compliment to the willing to work hard. It is only visiting officers and those of the through these things that the boy University. Col. Henry W. Miller of of today will accomplish the best the engineering college will lecture that is in him." on "The Paris Gun" at 8 o'clock Yost Makes Talk. Tuesday evening in the Natural Pielding Yost declared that "the Science auditorium. His talk will greatest business in the world is be open to the public. not conftrubting automobiles or The convoy will go to the Gen- sb-sraprs, but the building o eral Motors proving ground tomor- mn, Whieh means the proper row and Thursday will be enter- goth and the development of tained with a luncheon at the thi< physital, mental and moral Union by Dean H. C. Sadler, after' side.'hat is all there is to any which it will leave for Toledo. pP'ram of athletics and nothing During the past week the convoy ca p p- without some kind of has been in Detroit where the men a pf-fti. Wthouit the dveop- .visited the Cadillac, Packard, and mYTt of the will, the quick think- Chrysler manufacturing plants as itg, the volition to make use of well as the General Motors labora- peonal capaeities, the mere tory, where the latest commerial fund mentals and technique of the methods of shop operation and fac- me are worth little." 'tory mnnagment were observed. Michin's famed coach empha- si d: "Sme of our best emotional game. With this free a boy can uitw#iVes are built out of competi- drain htself dry of it if neces- tive sports. The greatest' force in sary in teaching out for his ob- life is love-love of honesty, love je',i- . beeaus he has courage and of respect, love of college, love of fa h." BRTIH TUENSSTMPTF[ECAKE RS' CTY PL ANS TO HOLD SECOND PUBLIC CEREMONY' CET SCROLARSHIPSl .. v Commonwealth Fund Fellowship 4 ....... Winners Plan to Attend Graduate Students Obtain Fellowships for Research Work R. F. Bacher and John Strong, graduate students in the physics department, have been awarded National Research fellowships for 1930. After completing their work AL8ERT E.r.HrSQAK NAMED PRESIDENT Army-Navy Club Names Officers for Coming Year; Hobbs .retires. University. (BY Associated Press) NEW YORK, May 19- Thirty-1 three students from British and Co- 1 lonial universities and the British Colonial Service have been awarded the Commonwealth Fund Fellow- ships, it was announced today. The Fellowships are awarded annually for study in the United States This, year's appointees will enter Amer- ican universities in the fall of 1930, travel through the United States in the summer of 1931, and complete a second year of study before re- turning home. Two of these students will attend Michigan. They are Robert Arthur Humpherys, a graduate of Peter- inft house. Cambridge, who will study dur history; and Reginald William Re- I e vans, University College, London, and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, The who will study physics. spec ;rrI I 3 for the Doctors of Philosophy in Prof. Albert E. R. Boak of the his- Physics degrees in June, both in- tory department, was elected pres- tend to spend their time at the ident of the Ann Arbor Army and 4: 1 California Institute of Technology Navy club at the recent annual at Pasadena where they will study meeting. He succeeds Prof. William some phase of spectroscopym Strong, who has acted as instruc- Herbert Hobbs .of the Geology do- for in elementary physics, is an in- partment, who retired with the ex- vestigator in engineering research piration of his term of office. for the physics department; Bacher Professor Boak and Prof. Joseph R. . is the holder of a Coffin memorial Hayden of the political science de- fetlowship which is given by the General Electric company for grad- partment, were the or anizers of uate students specializing in fields the naval reserve units that went The Stump Speakers' Society of the engineering college held its first of electricity, to the World war from the campus. iation several weeks ago. Members of the society are shown above The awards, which are given an- Lawrence Leever, commander of Ong the public ceremony in which the neophytes gave a series of nually by the National Research the Ann Arbor post of the American council, and which are financed by Aches from the society's stump located near the engineering arch. the Rockefeller Foundation, offer, Legion, was elected vice president. group bases its membership upon scholarship and the ability to to able students, research along Major Basil D. Edwards was re- ik. A second initiation will be held May 28. special lines' elected secretary-treasurer. vavv va.iK NV4t 4VW1J' VILWIJ IAl Vl" 1mm . .. This should mean an Anniversary buying time for you. When we put in tides everything in our store. All our well known and standard brands of on a sale it is merchandise really a sale and greatly reduced. Original prices on all articles. Buy NOW and SAVE! Sale Starts Tuesday, May 20th. 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