THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY Guardsmen Are1 Sent To Quell' DairyTrouble Wisconsin Farmers Rise To Close Creameries In Milwaukee Region Skeek Showdown Sheriffs Meet To Plan Protection For Trucks Carrying Milk MILWAUKEE, Wis., May 17.-(RP) -A crisis in the Wisconsin milk strike appeared imminent today as the state sent more than 1,000 Na- tion'al Guards acting as deputy sher- iffs into the field to combat pickets who said thousands of "farmers would arise" to close cheese factor- ies, condensaries and creameries. Adj.-Gen. Ralph M. Immell, who said he was desirous of a show-down today, concentrated his forces in two sectors-Shawano County in the north, and counties comprising the Milwaukee milk shed. Likewise, pick- ets were massing in those areas. Reports of violence brought prompt action Tuesday night. More than 800 additional Guardsmen were moved to trouble points. Two hundred more were held in reserve. A crowd of more than 500 attempt- ed to burn dairy farm buildings in nearby Racine County. One hundred and twenty Guardsmen were sped to the scene. More than 1,000 strikers threatened violence at Bondue, Shawano County scene of disorders Monday. To match their strength, Immell sent 250 Milwaukee militia- men to Acting Sheriff Oscar S. Dett- man, who already had 70 men at his disposal including 225 Milwaukee cavalrymen. Advised that extensive shipments of milk were planned in the Milwau- kee milk shed today, the sheriff of Ozaukee, Waukesha, Racine and Mil- waukee Counties met Tuesday night to co-ordinate plans for protecting trucks. Racine and Ozaukee Coun- ties were given 75 guardsmen. and Waukesha 125. Two hundred others were held in reserve for emergency duty. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) p. m. under the direction of Mary Anne Mathewson. The girls are re- quested to be familiar with the fol- lowing pieces which will be sung: "Falling Star," "What Have We Got to Lose?" and "Have You Ever Been Lonely?" The tap chorus will rehearse at 3:30 at the Women's Athletic build- ing. If it rains, this rehearsal will be in the Rehearsal room of the League as usual. Observatory Journal Club meets in the lecture room of the Observatory. Mr. Orren Mohler will speak on "Temperatures of Be Stars." Tea will b e served at 3:45. A.S.C.E.: Meeting at the Michigan Union 7:30 p. m. Junior members will be received. Professor Worley will be the speaker. Delta Epsilon P1 meets at the Michigan Union at 8:00 p. m. Reports of the dance committees and indi- vidual accountings of dance tickets must be given at this meeting. Polonia Literary Circle meets at 7:30 p. m., Michigan League. All members urged to be present. Last meeting. Varsity Band: Meet at Ferry Field at 5:00 p. m. sharp. Truck will leave Morris Hall at 4:55 p. .m. with heavy instruments. Faculty Tango Class will meet at 7 p.' m. tonight for those wishing to attend the May Festival concert. Those wishing to meet at 7:30 may do so as the class will continue until 8:30 p. m. Jewish Students are invited to a tea at the Hillel Foundation; from 4 to 6 p. m.. The Hon. Mrs. Joseph San- ders of Detroit will serve, assisted by the Hon. Miss Marian Sanders. International Goodwill Day: Under the auspices of the. S.C.A., the War Resisters League, and the Tolstoy League international Goodwill Day will be celebrated at a meeting, at 4:15 in Natural Science Auditorium. Rev. Frederick B. Fisher will be chairman and addresses will be given by Prof. R. W. Sellars, Prof..B. Wea- ver, Rev. F. Cowin, G. B. Halstead and a representative of the S.C.A. EXHiBITION Division of Fine Arts Announces an exhibition of international water col- ors in Alumni Memorial Hall. West Gallery open week days from 9:00 Fear Gas Fails To Prevent Milk Dumping By Strikers -Associated Press Photo In one of the outbreaks between farmers and deputy sheriffs in Wisconsin's milk strike trouble zone, tear gas was employed near Mukwonago, Wis., in an unsuccessful effort to disperse strike advocates who were halting milk truck drivers. This picture gives a view o the melee, in which six truckfuls of milk were dumped despite deputies' protests. Elementary Education Experts Will Teach At Summer Session Authorities in the field of element-' ary education will be prominent among visiting faculty members in the School of Education during the 1933 Summer Session, according to' a bulletin recently issued by the' school. Dr. Bess Goodykoontz, assistantC United States commissioner of edu- cation, who has prepared a consid- erable amount of material in the 1 field of elementary education, partic- ularly for children's reading, will be on the summer faculty and will teach a course in the organization and ad- ministration of elementary schools, the bulletin says.I Dr. Goodykoontz is a graduate of the University of Iowa and was suc- cessively elementary superivsor in the Green Bay, Wis., public schools and assistant professor of education in the University of Pittsburgh be- fore taking her present position. Another national educator who will come from Washington to teach here is Dr. William G. Carr, director of research of the National Education Association. Dr. Carr, who will teach courses in rural schooling and trends in education, is a graduate of Leland Stanford University, and has taught there and at Pacific University, For- est Grove, Ore. Dr. W. W. Theisen, assistant su- perintendent of schools in Milwau- kee, will conduct courses in the psy- Former Students To Accompany Murphy Two former Michigan students are accompanying Frank W. Murphy, '14L, former mayor of Detroit, and recent appointee to the position of governor-general of the Philippines, as members of his staff, it was learn- ed yesterday. Edward G. Kemp, '12-14L, left a petition as attorney in Detroit, to leave with the Murphy party, which departed on May 13. He was promin- ent on campus while a student here, and was president of the Union his senior year in the literary college. Miss Eleanor Bumgardner, '22-23, summer '24, formerly secretary to E. B. Harris, vice president and treas- urer of the National Guardian Trust Co. in Detroit, will .be secretary to the governor-general. SAVE TOWNS TREMONT, Me., May 17.--(P)-- After an all-night struggle 500 fire- fighters, aided by a timely east wind, today had turned a menacing forest fire back from the communties of Tremont, West Tremont, Bernard, Southwest Harbor and Bass's Har- bor. chology of elementary education and educational diagnosis. He was for- merly connected in an administrative capacity with the Cleveland public school system. Courses in the history of education will be taught by Prof. John S. Bru- bacher, of Yale, who has also taught this subject at Columbia University, of which he is a graduate. Two women, supervisors of ele- mentary schools in Michigan cities, complete the list of visiting faculty for the summer. They are Miss Edith Bader, of Ann Arbor, and Miss Helen K. Mackintosh, of Grand Rapids, also well known as a lecturer and writer on educational subjects. More courses covering the newer areas in education are given during the Summer Session than at any time, it was pointed out by Dean James B. Edmonson of the educa- tion school. Among these he listed extracurricular activities in high schools, trends in education, charac- ter education, introduction to educa- tion research, psychology and educa- tion of exceptional children, and the measurement of growth. The laboratory schools will be oper- ated during the session, with the holding of a nursery school during the six weeks from July 3 to Aug. 11, and a seven-week term in the Uni- versity High School from June 28 to Aug. 16. Students and visitors will be able to observe educational methods in the elementary school by means of the system of observa- tional balconies, it was said. Honored Alumnus Of University Here For May Festival One of the most famous of alumni guests in Ann Arbor for the May Festival concerts is Irving K. Pond, '79, who is staying at the Union for the annual music season, with Mrs. Pond. Mr. Pond is widely known as an architect, having the honor of being the only American, a member of three foreign honorary architectural' societies, the Association of German Architects, Berlin; the Central So- ciety of Austrian Architects, Vienna. He was made a corresponding mem- ber of the Royal Institute of British Architects, London, in February and is the only American to be admitted this year. Mr. Pond designed several University buildings, the Union, the League and the Student Publications Building. In addition to being a well-known architect, Mr. Pond is an acrobat of rare skill. It is said that Mr. Pond did back flips on the stage of Hill Auditorium on the occasion of the fiftieth reunion of his class, and re- peated the performance, at his home in Chicago, on his seventieth birth- day. He received a telegram wishing him happy birthday from the Clarks, a noted circus acrobatic team, now on' circuit. Japanese Soldiers Make Advances Below Wall TOKIO, May 17.-(A)-While Pres- ident Roosevelt was pleading for pledges that troops would not cross the boundaries of another country, the Japanese army, already holding 3,000 square miles of territory below the Great Wall in China, ploughed deeper into that country. The difficulties of travel apparent- ly were the only impediment today to four brigades advancing west of the Lwan River. Air scouts reported that Japanese and Manchukuan flags were floating from triumphal arches raised in Tangshan and other towns before the arrival of the invaders. Visitors' Day At Library To Feature Talks Annual Informal Reunion Of Library Alumni Will Take Place Tomorrow "Visitors' Day" at the General Li- brary and the annual informal re- union of the alumni of the Depart- ment of Library Science will both be held tomorrow, William W. Bishop, University librarian, has announced. An address to both groups will be given at 11 a. m. in Room 110, Gen- eral Library, by Dean Louis R. Wil- son, former librarian at the Univer- sity of North Carolina and now Dean of the Graduate Library School at; the University of Chicago. Dean Wil- son will speak on "Regional Library Planning in the Southeast." For "Visitors' Day" invitationsj have been sent to the librarians of Michigan and neighboring states to inspect the University Library and the library science department. All visitors will have the opportunity of investigating the particular work of their interests, and the faculty of the library science department will be prepared to co-operate with visi.. tors in informal conferences. Tea is to be served in the staff lunch room from 3:45 to 4:30 p. m. The alumni will hold an informal luncheon at the Huron Hills Golf Club at noon. All persons coming from out of town to these meetings have been invited to be the guests of the University Musical Society at one of the May Festival Concerts tomor- row. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. New York............16 9 .640 Washington.........18 11 .621, Cleveland...........17 12 .586 Chicago .............15 11 .577 Philadelphia.........11 14 .440 Detroit..............11 15 .423 St. Louis.............11 18 .379 Boston..............8 17 .320 New York, 4-7-1, Gomez and Dickey; Detroit, 1-6-1, Fischer, Wyatt and Hayworth. Boston, 7-13-2, Pipgras and Far- rell; St. Louis, 3-8-0, Blaeholder, Gray and Shea. Washington, 3 -10 - 0, Crowder and Sewell; Cleveland, 2-8-1, Fer- rell, and Myatt. Chicago, 5-7-0, Durham, Faber, and Berry; Philadelphia, 2-6-1, Walberg, Peterson, Dietrich, and Cochrane. "Stage fright" cannot compare with the fear that newcomers to ra- dio broadcasting experience when they attempt to speak through a microphone, according to Prof. G. E. Densmore of the speech department, who has had several years of actual experience in radio broadcasting. He added that the "technique of radio broadcasting is much more difficult than platform speaking." Professor Densmore blamesnunin- teresting radio speaking on the speaker's failure to visualize his au- dience adequately. "The average ra- dio commentator assumes that he may be talking to 10 or 15 thousand people. He makes the mistake, how- ever, of thinking that he is talking to this group as an assembled au- dience." What he should visualize, he stated is two or three people comfortably seated in their homes whose interest must be aroused to keep the radio speaker on the air. "With this pic- ture in mind," Professor Densmore said, "the speaker should asume that he is entering the home for a genial conversation." Simplicity and clarity, short and uninvolved sentences, simple and un- ambiguous words, and a direct and intimate style of conversation are four of the requisites for good radio speaking, according to Professor Densmore. Most radio speaking is in reality radio reading, that is, the speeches are written out beforehand and the manuscript read into the microphone. With this in mind, it is necessary, according to Professor Densmore, that the speaker is thoroughly fa- Densmore Outlines Intricacies Of Radio Microphone Technique .niliar with his manuscript before- hand so that he can read it un- falteringly. "The greatest abuses in radio speaking at present," Professor Dens- more stated, "is a too rapid rate of talking and a monotone of expres- sion." He also said that all extremes of volume must be avoided. Medical Alumnus Is Given Appointnient Announcement has been received here of the recent appointment of Dr. Christopher G. Parnall, '02-'04M, to the position of commissioner of public welfare for the city of Roches- ter, N. Y. Dr. Parnall, a member cf the faculty of the Medical Scho3l after his graduation, was formerly medical superintendent and director of the University Hospital. Before his appointment to his new position, he was medical director of the Rochester General Hospital. His naming was the first of a "house- cleaning" program inaugurated by the municipal administration of Ro- chester. Before his directorship at the Rochester hospital, he served in the same capacity in the Iowa Uni- versity Hospital. PYTHON GUARDS HOME LADYSMITH, Natal, May 17.-UP) -A strange watch-dog guards the house of M. C. Coffee. It is a 15- foot python and lives in the yard, secured by a leather thong. Have you tried serving the Novel and Delicious New Refreshment, CARAMEL CRISP for Your TEA and BRIDGE PARTY? THE CARAMEL CRISP SHOP Michigan Theatre Building + r T M ._. . mew mr:r e l the hut feaured today the den NATIONAL LEAGUE Dedicate Issue Of Forester To Leigh JI Young The 1933 Michigan Forester, pub- lished annually by the Forestry Club of the University of Michigan, ap- peared yesterday, dedicated to Prof. Leigh J. Young, who has been asso- ciated with forestry at Michigan since 1907. The purpose of the publication, as stated in the foreward, was to give a clear cross-section of the activities of students in the School of Fores- try and Conservation and of alum- ni in the field during the past year. Following out this plan, articles included one by Normal L. Munster, '26, on "Michigan and Its Forest School Program," which discussed in part the forest properties of the school, and an article by Prof. Dow V. Baxter on a research trip in Alas- ka. Other contributors included John Kirby, '33, who wrote on "Forestry and Unemployment"; George Banz- hof, '22, who discussed "A Forest Business." There were also articles about activities, such as the Forestry Club, carried on during the year. Pittsburgh ..... New York...... Brooklyn ....... Cincinnati...... St. Louis ....... Boston ......... Chicago ........ Philadelphia ... . . . . WL . 18 8 ... 16 8 .. ..12 11 .....13 13 .....14 14 .....14 16 Pet .692 .667 .522 .500 .50( .467 .407 .286 r. Z 2 AQ U .11 16 .8 20 Boston, 8-13-0, Brandt and Ho- gan; Cincinnati, 0-3-1, Smith, Frey, Rixey, and Lombardi, Manion. Pittsburgh, 6 -13 - 0, French, Smith, and Padden; Philadelphia, 4 -11-1, Berly, Collins, and Davis. Brooklyn, 5 -11 - 1, Heimach, Thurston, and Lopez; St. Louis, 2- 8-1, Walker, Johnson, and Wilson. 111 li LATE SPRING + +. All Models Now 20% Off At that time petitions and a resolu- tion will be presented to the Board of Regents. All those interested in "no tuition increase" are urged to attend. iip F WHITE; DRESS Priced from $10 801 and Up Spring Suits with a Newness and Smartness You'll Like --" chicken a Ia king with mushrooms, ice tea, coffee,-milk..........25c diced small turkey salad, homemade nut bread, ice tea, coffee, milk. C stuffed pork chops au gratin complete dinner .............40c -j ust a few suggestions -aways a large selection of good things to eat at fingerle operated 41 Society Brand and Other Fine Makes 11 -.amm k i, -F I1 If II f