THE MICHIGAN D4TtV:' _____ *nae council, n with the Saturday in .r A. Cooke, of the first is a member of sev- societies, and will re- fall to take her mas-, Botany. This is the ire give as their part ear program.~ An- th~e Detroit asso- -sity of M ° a r. grus workers He was past chairman of the D- r ~ ~~~ x i ; e ..idsw il attendth troit-Ann Arbor section of the $ Vie . aW ae ,fall, of !Ohio A.I E.E., and a member of the D-' f e~tuiversty, as chairman of troit Engineering system. tie ,central field council, 7ill pre- He was bon-at Mason, Mich., { Ve. July 19, 1874 He graduated from 4 A group of morning addresses Ann Arbor High school, and later Jh ,J' Y.will be presented on the general received his bachelor's degree from Associated Press Photo subject of "What Students Live the engineering college, class of John W. n99k, By." Thomas Graham, dean of the 1897, at the Univesity. " OQberlin school of theology and M. Kittredge entered, the employ- Former warden of the federal . Lichliter, of the First Congrega- m-ent of the Bell system in 1899 ,as penitentiary in Atlanta, Ga., who tional church, Columbus, will lec- a special inspector for the Central is being considered for a position ture during the series. Union telephone company, then op- in one of the country's largest pen- Student leaders will confer on crating in Ohio, Indiana, and Ili- al, institutions. Hfe has been sug- campus problems, Kearns said. Spe- nois. Four yars later, he became gested for the post of warden of vial discussioon groups are in inspector at _Indnapcl1il , din Clinton prison, Dannemora. N. Y. charge of E. B. Schultz., of the na- 197 was promnoted, to asistnt ___________________________ tional student division of the Y. M. chief engineer. In 1911, he eteretl1 LLI~ar FtIS # NCARC. A. Personal guidance and voca- the employment of the Michigan ROLLNG PISONCAR tional help problems will b epe- Bell Telephone company as plant ENDS MUTINY -PERIL cially emphasized and programs engineer, and in 1921 was promoted outlined. tW chief engineer. In 1925, he was ATLANTA, Ga., An.y 25.-(M)- madec assistant to the vice presi- L¢atest in railroad equipment is BARNARD COLLEGE-A recent dent. th~e prison coach, survey of the intended occupations Funeral services will be hld at The first such coach to reach of senior students was made and the family residenpce, 802 Fourth Atlanta brought 28 prisoners to only four listed marriage with no street, Royal Oaik, , t two o'clock~ the federal penitentiary here. paid occupation as their field of en- this afternoon. burial will be in Chiilled steel bars close win-" deavor. Teaching headed the list. Ann Arbor. dows 'of the prison coach as ef-"~- fectively as prison bars. Guards bottle up the ends of the car. In case; of general mutiny they have- only to retire to the plat- forms outside, closing the steel dloors behind thteli. Wheni the car reaches the pen- itepitiary it is' shunted inside a steel' cage. The engine. pulls away, the gates shutting behind it.. Director Contments on Values of o Annual Educational Insftite. S lI Annual, five-day a411 ni educa- tion courses are evoking apprecia- tio~n andl response from those who ve return~d to the campus to tape advantage of the programs, gccording to Wilfred B. Shawdi- rector. of alumni relations, writing Wd We*in the current School of Education bulletin. "Last June some - seventy-five alumni retulrned to the campus to attend tihe Alumni University', anI ed~gatiqnal, institute covering the~ five days iminedigtely succeeding co nl41eIcexrnent,"*A says Mr. Shaw. 'I0t4ing this period ten members of the -faculty' each gave a course of five lectures over the successive- days with a most enthustastic re- sponse from ,' ose who ttended. AD The program will bc° repea'tdti year with, it is hoped, a larger en- rollment of alumni 'students'." In an effort to extend the-courses to nearby centers, five such u. i rses were organized in and around D.e- troit, writes Mr. Shaw. That there Is a -real and substantial basis for efforts' in this field'Is indicateed by the fact that both those who took the courses in Detroit and at the University paid for their participa- tion, he reports. Graduates of the University in the teaching profcs-° sion were among those enrolled. Despite the fact that it is a comn- paratively new development in adult education, some hundred odd American colleges and universities are interesting themselves in the M problem of continuing education, states Mr. Shaw. X-Ray 'Doses' Made Possible in future} Scientist Discovers New. Method of Measuring Rays.K WASHINGTON, May 25. --(A')- Cancer patients may receive more benefit from X-ray, treatments in the future because a government scientist has found a way to stand- ardize X-ray "doses" as accurately as doses of medicine. Lauriston H. Taylor, physicist and X-ray expert. of the United States Today's Radl Those Who wish to dance will Lhave amnple opportunity with the variety and. the quality of orches.- tras which are on the air toni-ht. Paul Whiteman and his men broad- cast twice tonight, once from VWJR, 'WLWU, and KDKA at 7 o'clock a 2nd the second time over Stations KYW, WGAR, andi WREN a? 11 o'clock., Fle;tcher Henderson, Coon Sanders, B3.'A. Rolfe, OzzieNeon and Cab 'Calloway also are on the air to- night. t i I "' 1 1 , S 1 : In the new Camel quarter,-hourj programn. which takes thae place of the former program is featuring Morton Downey, tenor, and An- thony Wons, of "Tony's, Scrapbook" fame. On the program which comes over the Columpia chain at 6:45 o'clock beginning next Tuesday, the orchestr'al portion is played by Jacques Renard's orchestra. Zita Johann, co-star of "Toor- row -and Tomorrow," on the stage now in New York now in that show, will be interviewed by "Gentleman Jim" Corbett at 5 o'clock tonight over the N.B.C.-WEAF channels., Frank Parker, tenor, and Don Voor- hees' orchestra will also be, heard ton the progra. George Bernard Shaw, contempo- rary author of "The Apple Cart" and "Saint Joan" will speak on Memorial day froma London, the day also being the five hundredth an- niversary of the martyrdom of Joan of Arc, and it is expected that Shaw Iwill tell something about the Maid I of Orleans, "Saint Joan," the hero- Wet Organization Reor inc of his play Coon Sanders and his dance or- Over 1914. chestra will make their final ap- pearance in the Florsheim Frolic1 WASHINGTON, May 25:~ program tonight. The broadcast, I An "analysis of America's ~which will be heard over Stations bill' by the Association Aga1 WWJ, WTAM1, ,and WGY at 7:30 Prohibition Amendmnt est o'clock, is one comprising all pop- peopl~e in the United Sa ular hit tunes, spending upward of $1,000,00 4:30-Bert Down and his orchestra-'WXYZ, year more for ligqosIthan is WFBL, W oL"~mrow'ad'Toor The association's rser ro^w"-WNEAF, WGY partment concluded 5:15--Pelter Van Steeden and his or ch~stra-WVEN'R, WJR, WGAR' r the 'illicit liquor business. b 5'30-Savannah Liner orchestra-WJZ, WBZA come one of Ameica's ma 6:35-Final baseball scores-WJR ~dt~po 6:45--Rambles. Rondoliers, dance orchestra- dustries.' It si h ep WENR, WREN,WZY are spndng$2,848,000,000 a 7:00-Paul Whiteman and his orchetra,-the itxctn e~a' Jesters-WJR?, WLW, KDKA ly for itxctn eeae Julia Sanderson and Frank Crumit- WWJ, W-FAM, WGY -pared with the $2,793,166,812 7:15-Round Towners, with Irene Beasly- sale figure for passeneral WXYZ, WFBL, WEAN blsn"' 7:30-Coon sanders dance orchestra-WWJ, blsi 99 W TAM NI,V-Y The ex