APRIL 28, 10"t THE MICHIGAN DAILY: -irr LAB DR FE DRT[QNM L i GROUP RRDPHESIES Committee Finds Modification of Volstead Act in Next Session Probable. FEW BONE DRYS' LEFT Report Urges Voters to Appeal to Representatives in Congress. TO OFFER STUDY OF DRY STATUTE METIN OF STATE EDUCATIONA EN L TO ORE TKUPS'IY f R T HIi e Schoolmasters' Club Will Hold Discussion of Secondary School Curricula. RUTHVEN GREETS BODY Will Lead Honors Convocation Friday; James R. Angell W-11 be Speaker. ANN ARBOR FISHERMEN COMPELLED TO T RAV EL F AR FOR T ROUT FRIDAY Donal Haines Claims Speckled Beauties Are Scarce Near City. The trout season opens in Michi- gan next Friday, but, according to Donal Hamilton Haines, one of whose interests is fishing and hunt- ing, with journalism as his profes- sion, Ann Arbor enthusiasts will have to travel far to catch any of these fish. Not within 25 miles of the city are there any streams where any great catch of brook trout may be made, s ys Haines. He explains that this is due to the cutting of brush and PHILADELPHIA, April 27.-(iP)- Modification of .he prohibition lawI to permit the manufacture and saleI of light wines and beer is seen as a possibility at the next session of congress by Labor's national com- mittee for modification of the Vol- stead' act. A report of the committtee, based on a congressional survey, asserts that there are only 17 "die-hard" prohibitionists in the senate and 43I in the house of representatives andI that "victory is in sight if those who have voluntarily enlisted in this cause will make their wishes known to the senators and congressmen from their states." The report, was prepared by Matthew Woll, vice president of the American Federation of Labor, and I. M. Ornburn, president of the Cigarmakers' International union for submission today to the nation- al conference of organized labor's anti-prohibition group. "Of the 96 members of the Unit- ed States senate," the report states,' "34 are willing to vote'for the mod- ification of the Volstead act per- mitting the lawful manufacture and sale of beer and light wines; fif- teen beliieve that beer is non-in- toxicating, but claim they are not justified in voting to change the present legislation; twelve admit, that a majority of the people of I their states are producers or con- suminers of illicit liquors, but claim that the organized church vote is of so much importance that theyi do not feel it good personal policy1 to oppose it; ten feel that both the1 Volstead act and the 18th amend-c ment should be repealed and the; entire matter left to each state for1 the people of the state to decidet what they want to do, and eight refused to state their views. other cove Educators from the entire state the loweri will come to Ann Arbor Thursday the summe for the annual meetings of the temperatui Michigan Schoolmasters' club, the and brook, Michigan Association of College ter thatd Registrars, the Parent Education cool. institute, and the High School De- German bating league. The Schoolmasters' club, which is holding meetings on Thursday, UI Friday, and Saturday, will hold a discussion to center about the ques- tion, "What should be stricken! from the secondary school curri- culum of today; what modification should be made in what remains; what should be added?" Responses r, which, together with ing of the water level in r months, has caused the re of the streams to rise trout cannot live in wa- does not remain evenly brown trout have been planted through the effort of the (Eastern Sta bureau of fisheries and the depart- ment of conservation, he says, buto as yet they are not numerous enough 'Bro dway stars of comedy and to afford a large catch to spoits- song, with George Jessel as master men. of ceremonies, will be heard over * an NBC-WJZ network at 11 o'clock Only a few small brooks remain tN!ghtvwhethor at in ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i thVatrnpr f h'tte ngtwen1 (huy perform at a in the easternrpart ofthestatdinner in the Ho- where brook trout can be found., tel Astor honoring and there only in small numbers, Haines asserts. of the American One hundred sixty lakes in Mich- stage, David Bel igan have been designated 'pike: n r lakes this year, says a department Giore. Among of conservation report. In these all . GiemoroAmong t h e performers species of fish except bass, bluegills, will be Frances and sunfish may be caught. 'Williams, comedi- Only "feeder type" streams will enne from "The be closed to trout fish rs this year, Now Yorkers;" the report continues, for the open. James Ba r t on season of Mlay 1 to September 1. In. from "Sweet and addition, several lakes in the upper, Low;" Jeanne Au- peninsula have been designated. bert and .the For- trout lakes. j JEANNE AUBERT man sisters from Bills introduced in the legislature "America's Sweetheart;" Clayton, on several, matters of interest to Jackson, and Durante from "The conservationists are listed in the New Yorkers;" Helen Broderick and conservation bulletin. Representa-' Lester Crawfor~d; aind Shaw and tive Hartman, of Houghton county, Lee. The program will last one has submitted a measure providing hourp for the creation of an Isle Royale o national park commission. Other bills are planned to extend Efrem Zimbalist, violinist, will be. the trout season through Labor day, I heard at 8 o'clock over WJR and an and to fix the .amount paid persons NBC hook-up. He will play Adagio, called to fight forest fires at 35 Scherzo-Hubay; Caprice Viennois cents per hour. and Tambourin Chinois-Kreisler. PH YSICIS TS PLAN Ravel's "Bolero" will be featured WASHINGTON TRIP n ,. Pim, a Dr. Ben A. Arneson, Head of the political science de- partment at Wesleyan university, Ohio, who will offer the first aca- demic course on prohibition as a governmental problem next fall. TAG DAY WILL AID, HOSPITAL'S .SCHOOL91 Educational Board Finishes Plan for City-Wide Benefit Drive Saturday. Plans for the tag day, Saturday, May 2, for the benefit of the Uni- versity hospital school, have been' nearly completed by the King's Daughters .educational board of the hospital. The board is made up of representatives of the v a r i o u s King's Daughters circles through-. out the city, with Mrs. Ray Baker as chairman. Members of various organizations have been assigned locations as fol- lows: Congregational King's Daugh- ters in front of the Union, Metho- dist circle at Williams and State streets, Presbyterian circle at the Nickel's arcade, Baptist circle at the northwest corner of Liberty and Main streets, Good Will circle at Huron and Main streets. In a message of greeting sent to the representatives of this organi- z a t i o n, President Alexander G. Ruthven said: "In selecting this general topic, the club has, as usual,wisely chosen something fundamental. Every per- son engaged in or associated with education should have this question constantly before him." The program Thursday will in- clude a preliminary business meet-1 ing, and a conference of high school and college relations. The annual honors convention, at which President Ruthven will pre-. side and President James R. Angell, of Yale university will speak, will be held Friday morning. The annual business meeting, the final address on the "Keynote of the 1931 Meeting," the Schoolmas- ters' club annual dinner, a band concert, and the state high school championship debate, are sched- uled for Friday afternoon and night. The meetings Saturday will con- sist of various e4hibitions, a busi-1 ness scho'ol conference, a discussion for the Michigan Association of Col- lege Registrars, and a luncheon at the League. on Cam f Ht Response: sororities, them appea University been very meister, '31 the MichY chairmanc CAMP DRIVEi SEEK $81OOO From Society Groups npus Are Favorable,j ofmeister Says. s from fraternities and in reply to letters sent cling for support of the Fresh Air camp, have favorable, George Hof- 1, business manager of ganensian and general of the drive, announced Sixteen Faculty Men to Attend Scientific Convention. Newell W. Banks, of Detroit, na- last night. More than $8,000 is needed to support the camp and provide out- door recreation in the summer months for 400 underprivileged children, at the camp on Patterson lake. University students have been given the quota of $3,000 to raise, more than half of which is expect- ed to be contributed by fraternities, sororities and other campus organ- izations. Students prominent in extra-cur- ricula activities, and members of the "M" club will serve as the com- mittee to canvas students, on the University tag day, May 6. Mem- bers of groups contributing as a single organization will be given tags the day before the drive, so that they will not be approached on campus. tional checker champion, will give Sixteen members of thenphysics an exhibition of simultaneous chess department will leave Ann Arbor !and checker playing Friday night this evening to attend and deliver in rooms 316 to 320 of the Union, papers before the meetings of the under the auspices of the Univer- American Physical society, in Wash- city chess and checker club. ington. The meetings, which start Admission fees will be charged, Thursday morning, will be held at Aditsanaiiona l fechorglayin the bureau of standards and in the with an additional fee for playing auditorium of the National Acad- With the expert. He is expected to emy of Sciences. play 25 checker games, 15 chess Among the members of the Uni- games, and three blindfold checker versity staff who will present their games :at the same time. papers at Washington are Everett W. Thatcher and Neil H. Williams. Engineering Graduate Their paper is entitled "Influence G t . of Space charge on Current Fluctu-- Gets HighwayPostit ations." "The Brownian motion of Strings and Elastic Rods," is the C. M. Ziegler, '13E. has been made subject selected by George A. Van ,deputy state highway commissioner Lear and George E. Unlenbeck. to assume the duties of V. R. Bur- A treatment of "Many Electron ton, '14E, who died recently, it was Transitions" will be presented by announced yesterday by Prof. Roger Samuel A. Goudsmit and L. A. L. Morrison, of the engineering col- Gropper. . 1lege. 3 1 1 WASHINGTON SHOP 107 East Liberty Expert Shoe Repairing by leruc process We Call for and Deliver Phone 7373 I ''a t i . ,I t S r4 , Fm (Second in Command on Byrd Expedition) -N-% -W-" xh-T"w-"vRNS o ANN ARBO R mom da FA ll 7 IU Ar .# Byrd -."A to tile god B ot, 0 ml, oll the- IM I'd llustrated by Motion Pictures and Stereopticon Slides THE STORY OF HIS STAY IN THE MOST SILENT SPOT ON EARTH WHERE THE WIND ATTAINS A VELOCITY OF 200 MILES PER HOUR, AND THE TEMPERATURE REMAINS AT 70 DEGREES BELOW ZERO FOR DAYS AT A TIME. f Tickets Now o Stele a - hr's, SUnion, Leagi hie WIMUNMRMOR, GENERAL ADMISSION AT $1.00. A FEW RESERVED SEATS $1.50 Material Never Before Presented i Ann Arbor II