ESTABLISHED 1890 jqppp, t Ztxk I MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS I VOL. XLII. No. 150 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1932 WEATHER: Cloudy. CROSS IS ELECTED TO HEAD MICHIGAN EDUCATOSGROUP' Rehmus Becomes Vice-President; Jocelyn Retains Post of Treasurer. RUTHVEN GIVES TALKI University President Speaker at Annual Reception in League. Dr. Arthur L. Cross, the Richard Hudson professor of history in the University, became president of the Michigan Schoolmasters' club for 1932-33 at an election held yester- day at the annual business meeting in the Law building. The administration of Professor Cross folows that of C. S. Larzelere, of Central State Teachers' college. The meeting was part of the im- portant Friday session of meetings, which included the annual recep- tion and dinner at 6 o'clock in the League, at which President Ruth-* ven addressed a group of 150 schoolmasters and their friends. Principal Renamed to Post.. Principal Paul Rehmus, of Battle Creek High school, was elected vice- president of the organization at the business meeting. He was form- erly principal of the Tappan school in Ann Arbor. Louis P. Jocelyn of Ann Arbor High school retains the office of secretary-treasurer, which he has held for 35 years. Lucille Mackenzie of Mount Clem- ens High school was elected to the executive committee for a three- year term. Other members of the committee completing their present terms in office are Principal J. E. Wellwood of Central High school, Flint, and Assistant Principal C. S. Cooke of the Cass Technical High school, Detroit. Miss Mackenzie re- placed Prof. D. L. Rich, director of classification. Officers and members of the club consider yesterday's meeting one of the best in the history of the club which la organized at the Uni- versit in 1886, according to Mr. Jocelyn. The agenda of the meet- ing was first printed on a postal card; it now occupies 32 pages. Discusses Adult Education. Processes necessary to the edu- cation of the adult were discussed by President Ruthven last night in an address entitled "Where Do We Go From Here?" delivered at the annual reception and banquet at the League. He aserted that the course of civilization is being changed, and that persons believ- ing that present conditions are only temporary, and progress in what was its normal sense will be resumed, will shortly discover their error. "We have been on a tack, but now we are changing it and find that the change is making the going rough," he said. Progress, he stated, may come through survival of the fittest, but it will come less expensively through knowledge. He described the program of adult education as one wholly de- tached from entertainment and requiring a continuous, intensive study and objective thinking. The thinking powers are acquired only through the expensive method of experience and the efficient method of serious study, he asserted. The specialist must gain a broad knowl- edge, otherwise he will do more harm than good in his own group. Larzelere is Toastmaster. Ex-president C. S. Larzelere acted as toastraster at the function. Many activities 'of organizations whose meetings were correlated with those of the Schoolmasters' club also occurred yesterday. They included the conferences of the administrative teachers, art, biol- ogy, business schools, commercial, education, English, general science, geography, home economics, junior high school, mathematics, modern language, music, physical educa- tion, physics-chemistry-astronomy, research, school health, school lib- rary, social science, and the speech groups. Mitchel Is Re-elected Secretary of A.P.E.A. Prof. E. D. Mitchel and R. W. Web- ster of the intramural department returned recently from Philadel- phia where they were delegates to the National Convention of the American Physical Education Asso- ciation. Mitchel was re-elected sec- retary-treasurer of the organiza- tion, the office he has held for the New Attendance Mark May Be Set at 1932 University Summer School The 1932 Summer Session will sity which will, in general, open equal if not exceed attendance of June 29, is the thirty-ninth session other years, Dr. Edward H. Kraus, of the various schools and colleges. 'sWith two exceptions, the term will dean of the session, stated yester- 'close Aug. 19. The Law School and day. This announcement was the biological station will close at prompted by the number of queries a later date. so far received by Dean Kraus in 4 Per det i his office in University Hall, which 4Today tC gradute school s theh indicate, he said, a record enroll-I largest unit of the Summer Session. mIn 1931 4,655 students wr Several years ago it was predomin- but191,4,6th e s were en- ately undergraduate, but courses rolled, but this year, Dean Kraus for teachers and other advanced. said, the figure should reach close students have attracted a large to 5,000, advancing several reasons number of candidates for high de- for his optimism. se grees until, in 1931, 61 per cent of Gives Reasons for Increase. the total number of students en- "A great many factors are a basis rolled held college degrees. Of this for increased attendance at summer number, 41 per cent were enrolled, schools. Among them, the summer in the graduate school. sessions afford unusual opportuni- Since the enrollment in summer ty during the present period of is approximately half that of the, economic stress to shorten the regular academic year, the demand' period of study in calendar years. for all courses in the curriculum Furthermore, in the field of teach- has grown unti the majority of ing, master's and doctor's degrees subjects taught in the first and are being required of those seek- second semesters is offered during' ing new appointments and promo- the short term. Pointing to this: tions. In other words, the .stand- increased demand, Dean Kraus' ards, not only in teaching but in said it could be traced to the in- other professions, are increasing fluence exerted by the University in year by year. In addition, the su- planning instruction on a univer- perior facilities of a teaching staff sity basis. which the Summer Session pro- Growth Rapid Since 1918. vides, indicates that the attendance I Of the 38 years the Summer Ses- here this year will be as large-if sion has functioned, the rapid in- not larger-than last year." crease in growth has come within The summer term of the Unive - (Continued on Page 6) IWESTERN STATE BEATS__MICIHIGN Southpaw Jinx Hits Wolverines and They Drop Contest to Visitors, 5-1. By Sheldon C. Fullerton' That old southpaw jinx that has bothered the Wolverines so much in recent years rose up again yes- terday in the person of "Lefty" Neigenfind, and Michigan's baseball team garnered only five bingles off the Hilltopper hurler as Western State sunk the Maize and Blue, 5-1, on Ferry Field. Michigan will gor down to Kalamazoo this afternoon Oldfather Seeks Enlightened Intolerance' to Bolster Cultural Levels. Pleading for an "enlightened in- tolerance" on the part of the pro- fessional educators of America in order to lift the country from the "sheer sappiness" which he says it has fallen into in recent years, Prof. W. A. Oldfather, head of the classi- cal department of the University of Illinois, spoke on "Levels of Cul- ture" in a University lecture deliv- ered before the Schoqlmasters' club yesterday afternoon. BULLETIN HONOLULU, April 29.--)- The four defendants in the Jo- seph Kahahawai lynching case were convicted tonight of man- slaughter by a radically mixed jury which asked leniency. A loud sob broke from Mrs. Thalie Massie, central character in the unusual chain of circum- stances surrounding the case, when the first verdict was an- nounced convicting Lieut. Massie, her husband. The maximum penalty for manslaughter is 10 years im- prisonment. They were charged with second degree murder which calls for a penalty of 20 years to life imprisonment. Judge Davis ruled that the jury could find not only a second degree murder verdict but also manslaughter or acquittal or for Massie, not guilty by reason of insanity.- GRADES NOT CHIEF GOAL OF COLLEGE4! CHAE POINTS OUT [Ilinois President Gives Address at Annual Convocations; Receives Degree. 525 STUDENTS HONORED Speaker Warns Against Seeking Marks for Themselves and Neglecting Scholarship. More than 3,000 students, members of the faculty, Michigan School- masters' Club and the Parent- Teacher Association packed Hill auditorium yesterday morning to! hear President Harry Woodburn Chase of the University of Illinois deliver the ninth annual Honors Convocation address to be held on the Michigan campus. Included in the reserved section at the convocation were approxi - mately 525 University students who1 have distinguished t h e n s ~ a through scholastic achievements during the past year, including the upper 10 per cent of the senior class, freshmen and sophomores with an average of half A, half B, or better, and other students who have received scholastic awards, scholarships, and fellowships. Winter Presents Dr. Chase. Closing the events on the morn- ing's program, which began at 11:00 o'clock, Prof. J. G. Winter, head of the Latin department and director of the division of Fine Arts, pre- sented President Chase for the de- gree of Doctor of Laws, after which President Ruthven conferred the degree. In his convocation address, the principal part of the morning's pro- gram, President Chase lauded the seniors and other honor students for their scholastic achievements. He warned them also against be- coming' narrow-minded in their academic aims. With regard to the point of view toward the end of education Presi- dent Chase told the audience that "we have set up so much machinery that educational externals loom very large, and the effective opera- tion of the machinery comes too (Continued on Page 6) Announce Elections to Phi Beta Kappa; 48 Students Named Election of 48 students-42seniors ind six juniors-to Phi Beta Kappa national honorary scholastic fra- ';ernity, was announced yesterday it the ninth annual honors con- vocation. Seniors elected were as follows: Helen B. Aulph, Leonard Berman, Julius C. Berstein, Violet G. Can- berg, Carolyn M. Cook, Carroll C. ",urtis. Nanette M. Dembitz, Mar-i win R. Dodson, Mark S. Donovan, Emmett E. Eagan, Irving A. Fields, Zreta Flinterman, Nathan Fred, Ruth E. Dallmeyer. John E. Glavin, jr., Dorothy Gold- berg, William G. Gordon, Pauline E. Grivling, Aileen E. Henricson, Florence M. Hiscock, Charlotte H. Hughson, Katherine D. Koch, Rich- ,rd W. Loveland, George W. Meyer, Robert R. Miller, Wilber A. Meuhlig, Jack G. Oatman, Charles A. Orr, Elizabeth F. Osgood. Pauline M. Picchiottino, Alton F. Reeves, Ted Rickard, Winifred V. Root, Francis F. Rosenbaum, Mar- Sen. Smith W. Brookhart, Republican progressive of Iowa (left), and Rep. Hamilton fish, Jr., Republican, New York, will debate here July 11 in Hill auditorium on the recognition of Soviet Russia. Sen, Brookhart favors recognition, while Rep. Fish, noted for his investiga- tion of communistic activities in the Unted States, will, uphold tht negative side. prepared to grab the return game Professor Oldfather, recognized as and even the series at one victory one of the leading classical scholars apiece. in the United States, brought out Coach Ray Fisher crossed the in striking fashion his conception dope by sending "Whitey" Wistert of the low cultural state of the to the mound against the Teach- common man today in comparison ers, but the husky sophomore twirl- with ihe high level of even the er found difficulty i locating the slaves of ancient Greece and Rome, plate and was shelled out i the He q u o t e d numerous extracts fifth frame. After four runs had from common laborers' letters, bus- crossed, the plate on four hits, a mess, and legal records, and epi- taphs of antiquity, selected to give Box Score on Page 3 ta broad cross-section of the mass of written matter that has survived walk, an error, and a hit batsman from that period, to support 'his Harley McNeal took up the mound contention that even the lowly man duties and held the visitors in of early days had a clarity of ex- check throughout the remainder of pression and fineness of intellectual the day. feeling far above his counterpart Outside of the fifth inning, the of today. game lacked much interest. Neigen- Attempting to bring out through and was always ahead of the Mich- this comparison of the lesser level igan batters, and managed to of society the differences between scatter their five hits so they could ancient civilization and our own, do little damage. Stan Waterbor Professor Oldfather reached the played another nice game at short conclusions that "the common man for the Wolverines, handling eight (Continued on Page 2) chances without a slip, while Jack Tompkins in center field pulled ffigh School Seniors down five flies. Koch and Woods were the outstanding defensive Present Molnar Play stars for the Hilltoppers. In this afternoon's game at Kala- "The Swan," by Ferenc Molnar mazoo it is expected that "Lefty" will be presented by the senior class McKay will take the mound for of Ann Arbor high school at 8:15 the Wolverines against another o'clock, tonight in the Lydia Men- southpaw, Fred Black. With a left delssohn theatre. hander working for Western State The play is a romantic comedy, Braendle and Petoskey will again translated from the Hungarian into play in the outfield in the places English by Melville Baker, and of Ferguson and Artz, who play produced profesionally for the first only against right handed pitching. time in America in Detroit. BROOKHAR T, FISH TO DEBATE HERE ON RUSSIA DURING SUMMER TERM Michigan Quintet IQualifies in 880 at Drake Relays, DES MOINES, April 29. - (A')- Athletes of the Western Confer- ence contributed three new marks today in the opening of the 23rd annual Drake relays. Indiana's medley relay team shattered the intercollegiate record while Saling, University of Iowa hurdler, and John Brooks, Chicago university Negro broad jumper, set new marks in their specialties. .I Michigan won the fastest pre- liminary heat in the 880 yard relay. The team of Ellerby, Glading, De- Baker, and Russell making 1:27.7. Kansas was second. Nebraska and Marquette won the other heats. Brooks of Michigan qualified in i the discus throw and the shot put. Rhea of Nebraska made the best distance, 50 feet % inch, in the shot put, while Purma of Illinois led! the discus qualifiers with a throw of 144 feet, 4 inches. The Hoosiers, anchored by the :riving Henry Brocksmith, raced the ten laps of the medley relay in the time of 10:19.1, which bettered by nine-tenths of a second the intercolegiate mark made by a Yale quartet in 1915. The old mark of) 10:21.6 was made by Iowa state last year. The start of the race scarcely ndicated an easy Hoosier victory as Martirh, running the first quarter, was kept back in the field. Neese, running the half mile lap, started near the tail enders but finished third and I,.'emp gave Brocksmith a lead of 10 feet over Howery of Notre Dame as they started the final mile. Brocksmith was clocked in 4:17 and finished 120 yards ahead of the Notre Dame star. ,rooks' performance in the broad jump was the most surprising of the day. He leaped 24 feet 3 and 3-8 inches to better the record set by DeHart Hubbard of Michigan in 1924. f-illel to Give Play Second Time Tonight Hillel players, presenting "Death Takes a Holiday," will repeat their performance of last evening at 8:30 tonight at Laboratory theatre. The play last night was attended by a large audience and the results of the performance were consider- ed successful. APPOINT REGISTRAR, TO ATHLETIC BOARD,1 Smith to Fill Vacancy Caused by Resignation of Ruthven; Gifts Acknowledged. Ira M. Smith, registrar of the Uni- versity, yesterday was named to the Board inrControl of Athletics to replace President Ruth ven, whose resignation yesterday was ac- cepted by the Board of Regents at its April meeting. Registrar Smith will ofl*!.ially be- come a member of the board May 31 and will serve for a term of two years. At the same time, Prof. H. C. Anderson and Prof. E. D. Mit- chell, present members of the board. were renamed by the Regents for four year terrms. Professor Ander- son is a member of the faculty of the engineering college, while Pro- fessor Mitchell is director of intra- mural sports. The Regents approved the plan of the architectural college which will. permit four weeks of instruc- tion during the summer term,, and named Prof. Walter V. Marshal and Prof. George B. Brigham, 01 the college, to give instruction. A gift of $1500 from the Carnegif Institution of Washington to fur- ther the biological studies of Fred- erick M. Gaige director of Univer- sity Museum of zoology and his as- sociates at Yucatan was also an- nounced by the Regents. A gift t the School of Education consisting of 600 books, the private library of H. M. Slosson, former superintend- ent of the Ann Arbor schools, wa acknowledged by the Regents. The requirements for a master'. degree in the School of Music, be- ginning with the Summer Session were raised from 24 to 30 hours while appointments to the ooard o. governors of the League, Lawyers Club and Betsy Barbour and Alum- nae Houses were approved as fol- lows:0 League-Mrs. William Brown, re- named for term of three years Lawyer's Club-Prof. E. C. Goddard of the Law school, and Harry C Buckley, Detroit, two year terms' Betsy Barbour-Miss Betsy Hayes (Continued on Page 2) FIGHT RESULTS CHICAGO, April 29.- (P)--Micke3 Walker won a ten. round decisior1 over King Levinsky tonight at thin Chicago Stadium. CONGRESSMEN TO DEBATE HERE PRICE FIVE CENTS DEBATING TITLE. IN SAEFINALS Upholds State System of Unemployment Insurance. DECISION 2 TO 1 Debate Closes Season; Former Manager Presides. Backed by a cheering throng of more than a thousand classmates and friends, three Muskegon High School debaters were handed the state championship debating tro- phy last night in Hill auditorium after decisively downing the Oxford debaters with a heavy barrage of facts and figures to prove that a system of unemployment insurance should be adopted by the state of Michigan. Culminating a preliminary sea- son of ten rounds of debates the Oxford High School team consis- ing of William Lockwood, Dorothea Failing, and Gordon Thomas op- posed the Muskegon team composed of Kenneth Dryer, Harry Brats- burg, and William Shorrock, Jr. Prof. G. E. Densmore, of the speech department and former manager of the Michigan Debating League, pre- sided, and a short speech of pre- sentation was made' at the close of the debate by Malcom W. Bingay of the Detroit Free Press. Security Point of Issue. The controversial point of the de- bate contered around the question as to whether the working man suf- fered from insecurity at the pres- ent and whether unemployment in- surance would bring about secur- ity providing that such a condition existed. Dryer of Muskegon led the pro- gram by quoting Stewart Chase and Roger W. Babson as being ad- vocates of the insurance plan. also made the statement that ,n insurance company both in New York and in Michigan had definite- y expressed the desire to write un- ;mployment insurance providing in opportunity to do so presents itself. Miss Failing of Oxford, the only voman to take part in the debate, ;ame forward next and attempted ;o show in a series of clear cut tatements that the insurance plan vas both impractical and unfaIr. Fifty per cent of the concerns in he country today are losing money, vhich eliminates one of the sources f revenue, she brought out. Bratsburg Impresses Listeners. Bratsburg of Muskegon, who gave he best impression of the group s a polished speaker, refuted the rgument that business could not tand the burden of the insurance >lan by pointing to the fact that usiness in the United States paid ut more than sixteen billion dol- ars a year in dividends. The plan, iratsburg indicated, would also reatly increase the buying power jf the consumer. As the second negative speaker, Villiam Lockwood, Oxford, brought ut the uncontested point that the 'lan which was being proposed iould only affect half of the pres- nt army of unemployed. Half of he men out of work today, he said, rould receive absolutely no benefit rom such a system either because hey lost their jobs through care- ssness or inefficiency or because hey were affiliated with an indus- ry which did not come under the ystem. William Shorrock, third affirma- ive speaker with a ,high-pitched, apid-fire delivery brought the vic- ory to his table conclusively with half dozen telling points. With a ayment of only two per cent of he wages of the worker and a pay- lent of an equal sum. on the part >f the employer, he stated, the orkers out of employment could enefit to the extent of a forty per ent return. . Oxford Debator Final Speaker. The final speaker of the debate, Jordon Thomas of Oxford, admit- ed that there was a problem to .olve, but expressed himself as be- ieving that the insurance plan vould only increase the dissatisfac- ion of the worker as it had in Ingland, according to his claim. He ;uggested another plan of meeting th< oblem. BL.es the participants of to- nights debate, Mt. Clemens High and Pontiac High were awarded ENDORSEMENT OF UNIVERSITY CAMP RECEIVED FROM FACULTY., ALUMNI A debate between two members of Congress and a lecture by a fam- ous polar exlporer have been added to an already diversified program arranged for the summer session of the University of Michigan. On the night of July 11, Senator Smith W. Brookhart, progressive Republican of Iowa, and Hamilton' Fish, Jr., member of the House of Representatives from New York, will debate on the question of recognition by the United States of Soviet Russia. Two weeks later, on July 25, Capt. Donald B. MacMillan, Arctic explorer, will tell of his ex- periences in 24 years of -Arctic exnlorations and will show the vestigate Communistic activities in the United States, wil oppose recog- nition of Soviet Russia. Representative Fish, a member of the foreign affairs committee of the House, was graduated from Harvard in three years with a cum laude degree. At Harvard, he was captain of the football team. He served three terms in the New York assembly, and in the World War was decorated with the croix de guerre.. He was also chairman of the subcommittee of the first Amer- ican Legion convention in 1919 that wrote the preamble to the Legion constitution. Captain MacMillan first entered Full support of faculty men and many prominent alumni will be thrown behind the University Fresh Air Camp drive, sponsors of the camp announced yesterday, as the plans for the annual "tag day" got under way. Endorsements of the camp, which is sponsored by the Student Chris- tian association, were received from President Ruthven, Prof. F. N. Menefee, of the engineering school; L. C. Reimann, co-founder of the camp; A. D. Jamieson, C.C.E., '10, vice-president of the Union Guardian Trust Co., of Detroit; G. W. Gillis, B.L. '96, president of the Edson, Moore and company, De- "that this camp has been success fully carried on for a period o: ten years." Professor Menefee, chairman, ir speaking about the camp, said, "Ii is organized to do two things: First it renders a much-needed socia' service to underprivileged boys by bringing them into personal contact with college men interested in their welfare; and second, it gives under- graduate, college men an oppor- tunity to understand boys from the crowded centers of the cities and to give them training in meeting their needs." "It has given hundreds of under- priveleged boys from the' crowded city areas," said Reimann, "the