FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1931 KEARNiS CONCLUDES RANS FOR HUMAN RELATIONS PARLEY TIHE MICHIGAN DAIIYYPA E CAAINNO filft ...nnn CANADIAN EN VOY |0{|T TAKES UP WORK LL'IVL [ rnuni Committee Assured University Athletics Are Conducted in Approved Way. _ ._. ., ...._..... _ .. i Purpose of Meeting Is to Destroy Present Bars of Racial Prejudices. J. E. BEAL TO PRESIDE Lcaders of Different Religions Will Visit Ann Arbor for Discussion. Plans for the human relations parley of religious good-will, to be held March 28 and 29, have been completed by William Kearns, ', chairman of the religious advisc y committee of the Student Christian association which is sponsoring the meet. The purpose of the conference, which will be attended by religious leaders from throughout the coun- try, is to effect a better mutual un- derstanding between members of the different faiths represented in the University, and to destroy pres- ent bars of racial prejudice. Beal to Be Chairman. Regent Junius E. Beal will act as honorary chairman of the confer- ence, with President Alexander G. Ruthven serving as ex-officio head. Leaders'of different religions who will come to Ann Arbor from their native cities to conduct the two- day discussions are ,Dr. Everett R. Clinchey, executive of the national conference of Jews and Christians, representative of the federal coun- cil of associated churches, and now; visiting professor of social science at Rollins college in Florida; Dr. Leo Franklin, rabbi of the Temple Bethel of Detroit, and Prof Ells- worth Faris, of the University o1' Chicago. At the beginning of the parley, more than 20 faculty members and Ann Arbor townspeople interested in religious problems will start a discussion on the platform, that will continue for an hour. At the expiration of their informal session,, the meeting will be open to the public, with questions being asked. and answered from both floor and platform. To Give Guest Cards. A special feature of the confer- ence will be a section reserved for those that have received guest cards from the student directors of' their respective congregations. Two hundred fifty cards will be distri-- buted by the Student Christian as- sociation in proportion to the num- ber of students each religion claims in the University. Although mem- bers of all faiths will be invited to promote discussion, those in the re- served section will be recognized first by the chairman, and their discussion will take precedence over any other. Placards depicting the faculty members, and visiting scholars who will lead the discussion from the platform will be distributed throughout the campus and in fra- ternity houses and dormitories, Kearns announced last night Ice Company Employe Discovered Dead in Bin Discovered dead in the coal bin of the Artificial Ice and Coal com- pany Wednesday night by Herman Donner, 310 Spring street, Henry Reary, an employ, was said by Cor- oner Edwin C. Ganzhorn, who was _ summoned by police, to have died of heart failure. Detective Cliffor West, who was called to the ice plant by Donner, could throw no light on the fact that Reary had apparently met death in the coal bin. According to police he had been living in a shackj on Jackson avenue in the vicinity of the fair grounds. OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY -Plans for an inter-fraternity song contest based on the presentation of' an original alma mater s o n g were announced here by the music _ department. INVITATIONS AND PERSONAL CARDS Long years of experience Dependable Service A Red Arrow Place 0. D. MORRILL CHICAGO, March 12.-(AP)-En- riched by approximately 30,000 w o r d s of testimony and assured that University of Iowa athletics are being conducted in a manner approved by the Western confer- ence, the Iowa legislative investi- gating committee had returned to Des Moines today. The committee which is probing the administrative affairs of the state university, spent two days in Associated Press Photo Chicago quizzing Major John L. A-cw -B - Griffith and Amos Alonza Stagg, William Duncan Herridge, sr., athletic director of the Univer- New Canadian minister to the sity of Chicago, on the reasons why United States, who has taken up Iowa was suspended from athletic his duties at Washington. He is relationship with other Big Ten from Ottowa, Canada. schools in May 1929. The committee learned, at some University Symphony length, that Iowa was adjudged BCD Y @ Y® l!7iguilty of having recruited and sub- to Present Program sidized athletes, had countenanced a loan fund for athletes and had The University Symphony orches- permitted alumniainterference in tra, under the direction of Prof. the management of its athletic af- David E. Mattern, of the music fairs. school, will be featured tomorrow It also learned that the so-called night from the broadcasting studio. "Belting fund," was not known to A special national broadcasting have existed when Iowa ousted, and program this week has made it that the former director of ath- necessary to change the hour of letics, Dr. Paul Belting was not broadcast from 7:30 to 8 o'clock. responsible , for Iowa's athletic The faculty addresses will be given troubles. Major Griffith assured the from 9 to 9:30 o'clock. members of the committee that the The faculty speakers on the pro- Big Ten has confidence in the abil- gram will be Prof. S. Lawrence Bige- ity of President Walter Jessup and low, of the chemistry department, Athletic Director E. H. Lauer, to who will take as his subject "The properly handle the school's ath- Air We Breathe, the .Hare Gasses letics. in it," and Prof. Orlan Boston, of A number of athletes who bene- the engineering college, who will fited by a Belting fund were de- discuss "Metal Cutting." clared ineligible in February, 1930. 11 .0 ANNOUNCING the opening of Mack's Photo Studio Featuring . . 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