__TIEMI CIG ANDAILY Dean Edmonson Is Appointed To Education Board Commission Plans Study Of Effect Of Depression On Public Schools Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education has again been appointed a member of the Joint Commission on the Emergency in Education, according to an an- nouncement made yesterday by the commission. The commission met during the past week-end to outline plans for the coming year. Appointed in 1933 for the purpose of studying the effect of the four- year depression on the public schools of the country, the commission made its first report at the Minneapolis meeting in February of that year. A board of 800 consultants from every part of the country and rep- resenting every type of school and every office and position in educa- tion was chosen to co-operate with the commission. Through their ef- forts a recognition of the gravity of the present educational crisis was brought to the American public. Practical plans for developing and carrying out measures to protect the schools against the effects of the economic crash were the result of re- gional conferences held during the past year at representative cities throughout the nation. During the summer of 1933, a con- ference called by the commission drafted a charter of educational fi- nance which has been widely used, since that time as the basis of plans; to revise methods of school support. The commission has been active in securing relief for rural schools from the FERA and in bringing about the introduction of 33 bills into the pres- ent Congress, action on which is now pending. Inland Review Will Continue Campus Sales The Inland Review, new literary and critical quarterly magazine, ap- peared on the campus for the first time yesterday. The sale will continue today. The initial issue of the publication contains articles on varied subjects, the greater part of which have been written by students. In addition to articles purely literary there are two widely divergent from this type. Charles Andrew Orr, a teaching fel- low in the economics department, discusses the growth of campus rad- icalism in an article entitled "Build- ing a New World." Joseph Carl Sei- del, director of the Art Cinema League, attempts to point out why Sergei - M. Eisenstein, dean of the Russian film directors, has enjoyed such favorable criticism of his work. The title of this discussion is "Eisen- stein and The Soviet Cinema." Contributors of other articles are Robert Warshow, '37, winner of the first prize in the poetry division of this year's Freshman Hopwood Awards; T. C. Wilson, Grad., author of several articles in national literary magazines; Otto Bird, '35; Dorothy Vale, '37; and Theodore Kane Cohen, '35, Hopwood Award winner in both 1932 and 1933. Valerie Gates Stevens, Herbert Schwartz, and Ezra Pound have con- tributed poems. Athur J. Carr, '35, reviews Mildred Walker's Hopwood prize winning novel, "Fireweed," Subscriptions for the Inland Re- view of four quarterly issues are one dollar. They may be obtained by sending the required amount to the office of the English department, 3221 Angell Hall, or to 1024 Hill Street. Sees Success In'White Cross, Seal Campaign The sale of White Cross seals for the benefit of crippled children was reported progressing yesterday by Wilfred B. Shaw, Rotary Club pres- ident, in charge of the campaign. Favorable reports from clubs, churches, and schools have been made, and Mr. Shaw expects about 100,000 seals to be sold in the county. The receipts of the campaign, last- ing from Monday until Saturday, will be equally divided between the Wash- tenaw Counety Society for Crippled Children and state and national so- cieities. I I , e #~~uid A 4i k.,h.Uf I Giant Sikorsky Flying Boat Proves Airworthy In Test Historian Discounts 1 European War Fear NEW YORK, April 1.-(P) - The dangers of a European war, at least in the immediate future, have been greatly exaggerated, in the opinion of James Truslow Adams, historian and Pulitzer prize winner, who paused here on his way from London to Washington. "And it's not because several na- tions of Europe might not want to make war," Adams said, "but be- cause they cannot. "England can't make war because at present the people wouldn't stand for it. Unless it were perfectly ob- vious to every man in the street that the life of the British Empire was at stake, the first result of any declara- tion of war would be a general strike." SEE RIDER, for PENS 302 South State Street 1 PRICES THAT WILL PLEASE YOU! THE ATHENS PRESS Dowtown -- 206 North Main St. Dial 2-1013 Next to Downtown Postoffice Typewriting Paper at Reduced Prices ',; Ii 'I Even Finer Bt isses New Schedule Faster Service Effective April 3 L 7"I-I I w ' rN -Associated Press Photo The giant flying boat S-42, built by Sikorsky for Pan-American Airways, is shown as it proved itself airworthy on a test flight over Bridgeport, Conn. The plane, powered by four engines and capable of flying 2,500 miles non-stop with a mail load and crew, was planned as America's largest passenger plane. It is 76 feet long, has a wing spread of 114 feet, and has a gross weight of 38,000 pounds. It will be fitted with 32 passenger seats for the South American service. 1 Local Professors Return From Chemical Meeting Professors Hobart H. Willard, Jo- seph 0. Halford, and John R. Bates, of the chemistry department, re- turned yesterday from the semi-an- nual meeting of the American Chem- I ical Society, held at St. Petersburg, Fla. A paper on "Exchange Relations Involving Deuterium" (heavy water), written by Professor Bates, Professor Halford, and Prof. L. C. Anderson, of the chemistry department, and one on strontium, by Professor Willard were read. - A SU BWAY 727 1" fr Type of Coaches Now in Service between Toledo, Ann Arbor, Flint 4 ROUND TRIPS SUNDAYS AND WEEK DAYS 5 HOLIDAYS 450ROUND chleengoTRIP SPECIAL STUDENT RATE - THREE FAST DE LUXE COACHES DAILY CAMPUS.TRAVEL BUREAU -- CHUBB'S 12-8 P.M. DESSERT 'INCLUDED rCOFFEE SHOP North University . U TOLEDO' 1 Hour 55 Minutes $1.75 One Way $2.65 Round Trip FLINT 1 Hour 30 Minutes $2.00 One Way $3.00 Round Trip 40 F +I Campus Agent -- JOHN BOLLOCK - Michigan Union Downtown: Union Bus Depot - Phone 3589 k II f': READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS __ ___ VIII _________________________________________________________________ -S., O ctenieetwes... $zey care leAA/Iestlecwes uckies are All-Ways kind to your throat W HEREVER the finest tobaccos grow- in our own Southland, in Turkey, in Greece-all over the world, we gather the very Cream of the tobacco Crops for Lucky Strike. And that means only the center leaves Not the top leaves-because those are under-developed -not ripe. Not the bottom leaves - because those are inferior in quality-they grow close to the ground, are coarse, dirt-covered, sandy. The center leaves are the mildest leaves-they taste' better and farmers are paid higher prices for them. These center leaves are the only ones used in making Luckies. Then "It's toasted" -for throat protection. And every Lucky is fully packed with these choice tobaccos- made round and firm, free from loose ends- that's why Luckies do not dry out. Naturally, Luckies are all-wa kind to your throat. NOT the top leaves-they're under-develoied "It's toasted" ILuckies are all-ways kind to your throat