PAGE MOTH'f THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OC' 013 4, 1990 .HE.....I.AN ...TL. .A...A...OCTOBER.4..1.. rw.r.a+.. . a v v f. a.MVV DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a. in. Saturday. VOL. XLII. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1930 NO. 10 NOTICES University High School Bulletin 1930-1931. The Editorial Office an- nounces the issue of this bulletin as No. 16 of Volume XXXII of the Official Publication. Graduate School: Regularly enrolled graduate students, who hold the rank of Assistant Professor, or above, at another institution, are asked to leave their names at the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell fall, at their earliest convenience. This applies only to married students. Rhodes Scholarships: Candidates for this year's award are requested to confer with Professor A. L. Cross, Room 1011, Angell Hall, Tuesday or Thursday at 10 A.M. or Frilay at 9 A.M. before October 10. COMING EVENTS Final Examination (Make-up) Speech 31 and 32 will be given Mon- day, October 13. at 2 P.M. in Room 4203, Angell Hall. English 211b will meet Monday at three o'clock in Room 2216, Angell Hall. J. R. Reinhard. Hall. Zoology I Seating List: The seating list for Zoology I lecture will be posted in the glass case in the corridor near P!iom 2091, Natural Science Bldg~, Monday morning. Students should -,nsult this list before coming to lecture on Tuesday. Seniors, Medical School. Election of officers at 1:30 p.m., Monday, October 6, in the Hospital Amphitheater. R.O.T.C. Uniforms. The tailors will be at the R.O.T.C. office Monday and Tuesday, October 6, 7, from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. All regular mem- bers of the R.O.T.C. will report during the periods indicated to be meas- ured for uniforms and to receive issue of shoes. Choral Union Concert Tickets.. The "over the counter sale" of season Choral Union concert tickets, will take place at the School of Music office on Maynard Street, beginning Monday morning, October 6, at 8:30 o'clock, at which time, all remaining tickets will be offered to the gen- eral public. Previous to that time, up to noon Saturday, October 4, all mail orders received will be filled in advance in sequence. Prices: $6.00, $8.00, $10.00, and $12.00 each. Varsity Glee Club. A list of new members has been posted on the bulletin board of the Michigan Union. The first rehearsal will be held in Room. 303 Michigan Union on Monday evening at 7:15 p.m. Varsity Band Tryouts: Tryouts for trombones, tubas, E flat and bass saxophones will be held Sunday morning, at 10:30 in Morris Hall. EVENTS TODAY Cosmopolitan Club: The opening social meeting will he held in Lane Hall auditorium at 8:00 P.M., Dean W. R. Humphreys will give a brief welcoming address. Old meibers, foreign students new to the campus, and their friends are urged to attend. The "Upper Room" Bible Class will meet this evening in the "Upper Room," Lane Hall at 7 P.M. All, men students are cordially invited. TIAJOMISSIONAIES SL FOR BYCHINESE British Women, Held Captives, Since July, Shot by Bandits. ASKED HUGE RANSOM Executians Reported to Consul After 'Finger' Warning Is Disregarded. (7;,v Ass (iH(P ssry " PEIPING, China, Oct. 3.-Mess- ages reaching the British consul at Foochow today said that Miss Edith Nettleton and Miss Eleanor June IHarrison, British missionaries who were captured last July by Com- munists at Chingan, northern Fun- kien province, had been shot. Their execution followed failure of protracted negotiations for their release, in the course of which the bandits cut off one of Miss Nettle-. ton's fingers and sent it to British consular authorities as a dire re- minder of their death threats if ransom money of $100,000 was not paid. The two women, who were asso- ciated with the Church Missionary society, were traveling from Chun- gan to Kienningfu when captured. It was understood that the British authorities here would await all the details before taking any fur- ther action. Although the consular authori- ties are attempting to verify the dual killing there appears no rea- son to doubt the truth of the re- port. Only last week a letter was received insisting that the women would be killedrunless the ransom moncy were forthcoming. (V v ;ssoiaicd Press) LONDON, Oct. 3.-The public generally and missionary circles particularly today w e re deeply moved by advices that Chinese Communist bandits had killed the two British missionaries. Miss Edith Nettleton and Miss Eleanor June Harrison, in lieu of ransom for their release. Miss Nettleton worked in a car- pet mill in her home town of Hali- fax, Yorkshire, and was a Sunday school teacher in St. Augustine's church parish. She went out to China for the church missionary society in 103 and spent most of her time at Chungan working a- mong women and girls. She was homo on furlough last year. Miss Harrison was from Cook-. ley, near Kidderminster. She was 63 years old and first went to China for the Church Missionary society in 1896. Three years ago she returned home to live with her mother, but last year upon her mother s death she volunteeredto return to China and work with Miss Nettleton. Rev. W. W. Cash, the society's secretary, said that up until today hopes were entertained for release of the two and that today's mes- sages of their death had come as a great shock. DISTINGUISHED FRENCH GENERAL ARRIVES FOR L GION CONVENTION ---- General Henri Gouraud, battle-scarred veteran of tne World War and France's delegate'to the American Legion convention in Boston, is shown being greeted by Major William Deegan. Most Faithful Fan of Gridiron History Will Return 'Today Michigan's most faithful foot- ball fan, Sid Millard, will return to the stadium today to watch the Spartans try once more for a victory over the Wolverines. Last Saturday, for the first time in history, Sid missed see- ing a Varsity football game played on the home field. The earliest record indicates t h a t Michigan played itsfirst foot- ball gane in the fall of 1?373 with Racine college, winning 7-2. Millard was in attendance at that game and had witnessed every other home game for 52 years until last Saturday. A re- cent illness prevented his at- tending the double-header a- gainst Denison and Ypsilanti. Having recovered, he watched{ one of the practices this wee and announced that he wouldC see the kick-off this afternoon. Besides having had perfect at- tendance at all home games for 52 years, Sid has missed very' few out-of-town stadia. He has also officiated at Michigan track meets ever since the first one was held in 1893. Michi-a, noted for the ardor of her alum- ni, has none more faithful than Sidney. VARSITY TO MEET SPARTANS TODAY State Will Seek Revenge After 14 Years of Losses. (Continued From Page 1) lines did not stand out as towe~rs THREE1,PEOPLE DIE 'IN E!STERIN STORM Four Others Seriously Injured; Rancher Believed Lost. 1WO COUNTIES RAVAGED (YPr ea l I ss) FOWLER, Colo., Oct. 3.-A tor- ntdo twisted its way across parts of two southern Colorado counties Thuirsday killing three persons, in- juring four others and causing un- estimated property damage. The dead:. George W. Lackey, 1 prominent Fowler cattleman whose feedin ) operations centered 14 miles north of here in the middle of the stiicken area; M-s. John P. Downing, ranchwoman living 24 miles north of Fowler; Colie Noble, Manzanola, Colo., ranches Lackey was killed instantly and the other two injured fatally when the tornado struck the building on the Beaty ranch in which they had taken reluge froin the storm. Henry Bushaw, a ranch hand and Mrs. Downing's daughter-in-law, Mrs. John B. Downing and her two- month-old- daughter also were in the structure when it collapsed but escaped serious injury. Mrs. C. R. Wolf received body in- ju.ies and severe cuts from flying debris ati the twister struck and demolished her ranch house three riles south of the Beaty ranch. Mrs. Wolf's infant daughter was not hurt. Fear was expressed for the safe- ty of J. W. Lawler, a rancher, from whom there had been no word r yr It 1 { JJ tJ t t { y4 P Y t r. T f i t c CITY NEWS IN BRIEF CHOIR TO MAKE APPEARANCE will be held Monday, Tuesday, Wed- Formal appearance of the news nesday, and Thursday, classes will boys' choir at St. Thomas Catholic start for the first time Monday church, composed of 75 boys of night, October 13. Courses will be school age, will be made next Wed- given in all subjects, including nesday at the opening of the Priests' English and citizenship instruction. Eucharistic League of the Detroit diocese. In addition to the musical PROPELLOR MAY BE CLUE training received, the boys also have Discovery Thursday of an airplane been taught the pronunciation of propellor in Lake Michigan off Bu- Latin. The choir will sing the Gre- fington, Ind., may be the solution- gorian mass, an offeretory, the pro- to the mystery shrouding the disap- cessional, and hymns of benediction. pearance last Apri of Ralph Fisher Skelton, artist-flyer of Chicago, un- COURT CONVENES MONDAY reported after leaving the Ann Ar- The October term of circuit court bor Municipal Airport on a lake will open Monday morning, it was flight. The propellor, painted yellow, announced yesterday at the office of is of the type used on planes suh Judge George W. Sample, presiding as flown by Fisher. officer. No sessions will be held this- afternoon. During the past week, CLERKS PROTEST LOW PAY Judge Sample has been holding Backed by clerks from other court in Detroit. The jury for the Michigan counties involved in the October term will not meet until rec.at gubernatorial recount, Cla- after elections in November. amon L. Pray, Washtenaw county MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN OPENS clerk, has sent a letter of protest to Governor Fred W. Green regarding Plans for the Y. M. C. A. member- the low rate of compensation ship campaign were formulated awarded clerks who worked on the Thursday at a luncheon meeting of recount. members of the campaign group. Thirty-two members of the cam- 12 APPLY FOR CITIZENSHIP paign committee were present, Twelve applicants for United headed by W. W. Springer, general States citizenship will be arraigned chairman. Prizes of tickets to the a fituralization hearigne- Illinois game, given by Director in a final naturalization hearing be- Fielding H. Yost, and of tickets to fore Judge George W. Sample At the Kreisler concert, given by Dr. two o'clock this afternoon in cir- Charles A. Sink, will be awarded to cuit chambers. The applicants oare those obtaining the largest number natives of Greece, India, Roumania, of memberships. England, and Germany. MONTH OF BRIDES POLLOCK UPHOLDS June as a month for brides may BRUENIG CABINET soon lose its prestige. During the past month 41 marriage licenses .tes Dangers in Changes Ma were issued by County Clerk Ca- sC maron L. Pray. The average mark by Recent Elections. for months other than June are about 20, he said. The majority of (COti iiied From Page x) those who secured licenses were res- 923, is possible at the present, for ident of nn Abor.i must not be forgotten that the A1ussian government is in control NON-STOP FLIGHT ENDS of Dr. Otto Braun, who is one of the socialist leaders. Furthermore, Bearing a number on one leg and the small but highly efficient Ger- a message on the other, a carrier man army, despite little bit of pigeon yesterday made the office of disloyalty here and there, is de- Murdoch and Porter, of Detroit votedly loyal to the president of street, its stop for the night. The the republic, who is put in a very pigeon was given food and placed in strategic position in case any, dis- a box, and will be released today order should arise.' following the Michigan-M.S.C. game. "I am not as encouraged asi was two years ago," concluded-D. NIGHT CLASSES TO START Pollock. "There is a solution to Registration for persons intend- the situation. There is not the re- ing to pursue night school courses motest possibility of violence or in- this year will be held next week at ternational difficulty. The elec- Perry school on Packard street, Miss tion should be a pretty serious Carrie L. Dicken, announced yester- Warning to responsible leaders in day. Following registration, which Germany not to play with fire." L- T ARTICLE ISUSE WMEN SSALAIES College Trained Workers Found to Stand High Kn All Professions. Education Courses to be Given Teachers Registration for Saturday work in the School of Education takes place today. The School of Education seeks to relate its work as fully as possible to the public school system' of the State and to meet the educa- tional desires of teachers and ad- MANY STATISTICS USED ministrators in service, As one Full-time women workers have an average earning capacity of $1548, according to the issue of the Mich- igan Business Studies which is com- means to this end, it has regularly scheduled certain courses for four o'clock in the afternoon. DEAN AT PRINCETON CITES CAUSES ing off the press Monday. OF FAILURE OFI This issue, -edited by the Business --- bureau with the co-operation of the Principal Causes For Failures National Federation of Business and Professional Women's clubs based its information compiled from a questionaire sent to 30,000 of the federation's members, 14,000 of whom responded. The average hours of labor per week for the individual stood at 45.6; average number of years each had worked was 13.7; and the aver- age age the group was 37.7. The value of a college education was evidenced in every profession and type, of work.. Uniformly the statistics showed the, women with college educations earning appreci- ably higher saleries. Of 13,000 women who answered that they were salaried and working for someone else, only 6 per cent were' earning more than $3,000 a, year, while of the 1,000 who replied that they were independently work- ing in ,business or professional life for themselves, 31 per cent are earn- ing mare than $3,000. Four -aculty Members at Marquette Meeting Professor Howard McClusky, J. R. Sharman, Wray Congdon, and Lu- ther Purdom.. are attending an edu- cation meeting of the teachers of the northern peninsula at Mar- quette this week-end. Profs. Mc- Clusky and Sharman are on the program. Shown in Article by Gauss, ' Dean of the College. Lack of native intelligence and motivation is set forth as one of the principal causes for student failures in an article, "Why Students Fail," by Christian Gauss, dean of the col- lege, Princeton university, which appears in a recent issue of the Saturday Evening Post. In the opin- ion of DeanJames B. Edmonson,of the School of Education, this article presents one of the best treatments of the subject ever made. Dean Gauss points out that out of every four who enter, the university, only one ever receives his sheep- skin. The fault in a good many cases seems to lie in the admission re- quirements of the university, since a student who has done well in high school is admitted on certificate, he writes. He may, however, be fully incompetent to go on. with college work; he finds the grade too steep, and at midyears, is dropped from the university. Dean Gauss cites the somewhat analogous case of the student who had a drag in high school, and has perhaps never been submitted to an impersonal test. Midyears will find this student's name on the list of those dropped, he says. Two of the more outstanding causes for failure, he continues, are the lack of intelligence and the will to work on the part of the student. COLLEGE STUDENTS D e a n Gauss sets forth two main conditions which ordinarily make for success in college. "These are," he says, *'native intelligence, with- out a certain minimum of which no student can possibly succeed, and willingness to work, without which no student should be allowed to." Another factor, fully as import- ant, is outside interests. Dean C. W. Mendell, of Yale, says, "I should think that probably the chief fac- tor, as I see it, is the placing of out- side interests above the main col- lege interests." Dean J. A. Bursley, of Michigan says, "It seems to me that the two principal reasons for student failure are inadequate prep- aration and either inability to grasp what they are here for or a lack of a feeling of responsibility." Poor teaching, and as mentioned before, admission requirements of the university, are in a good many cases at fault, but, Dean Gauss says in closing, "The size of our distress- army of failures is, however, suffi- cient testimony that something here is fundamentally wrong and that we are confronted with a social problem which not the college alone but only a more enlightened public opinion can solve." of strength defensively with the op- Imne le started from Fowler earl- posing backs ripping off substantial i in the ayrmiileg l ae erdof here gains repeatedly. However, with The tornado, came from the Auer, a veteran tackle back'in the north, striking the northeastern line-up, Coach Kipke may find more parkt of Pueblo county and the power in his first line of defense. nor'lhwestern part of Otero county, In the backfield, Coach Kipke has cutting a path about a quarter of three men who are almost sure to a mile wide andi more than 25 miles start the game inCaptain Simrall, long. Tessiner, and .Hudson, with either- Heston or DeBaker ready to fill out goat'eathers Storm the combination. DeBaker showeda better in the Ypsilanti game than Af ter Summoning Aid did Heston, but play in practice makes it probable that Heston will WASHINTON, Oct..-Sress. get the call when the teams line up . MoASINTOdayOh.co.--he U. S. this afternoon. S. Montcalm today had conquered The loss of Captain Harold Smead, the difficulties which led it to send Thelos o Cptan arod inedan S 0 S to the Navy Department one of the best centers to perform Thursday to rush help to it 500 on the Stadium field last season, miles southeast of Charleston South was a serious blow to the hopes of Carolina. The boat ran into rough Coach Crowley this season, the vet- seuas. eran pivot man suffering sever in- juries in a motor accident last sum- With two ships heading that way, mer. With Smead in the line-up the the craft cancelled the request by Spartans would have presented a racio to Washington. The Montcalm powerful forward wall which would is the station ship of Guantanamo, have wrecked many plays. Howev- Cuba. The light cruiser Concord and er Meiers who is slated to start at !the S. S. Orbita, a mail ship bound center this afternoon played well for Europe, were en route to the against Alma. Montcalm when the heavy seas Against Ypsilanti the Michigan moderated and enabled the picking team kept its plays well under cover up of speed. through the game, but it is probable The Montcalm left Guantanamo that the Wolverines will start using Sept. 30 for Charleston for a regular some of their famous trick plays E overhauling. At 0 a. m. today she this afternoon if the Spartans show was ap.proximately 250 miles east of signs of threatening the Maize and Miami and about 450 miles south- Blue goal. east of Charleston. LA Dashing young Spanish d a n er who has created a sensation, in Eu- rope and America. She is here shown in her allurin r'g dance, the Fandan- guillo. Miss Goya has; brought to America! a large repertory' of authentic Span- ish G i t a n o and' Flamenco dance. with which she took Europe by storm. Each of her thirty daueal has its own ravish- ing costume. 11' .... , .... ........ r...,... W ... .. _.,, _.. .,. _. _.... . 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