* THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. MAY 2S. + : raa. .rr .awux* . U, air * New Michigan Forester Out Next Thursday Publication Is Dedicated To Charles W. Garfield, Prominent Forester Minneapolis Strikers And Sympathizers Club Police The Michigan Forester, annual publication of the School of Forestry and Conservation, may be obtained after May 31, Carl J.- Holcomb, '35. F&C, editor-in-chief of the book, an- nounced today. The annual has been dedicated to Charles W. Garfield, a man promi- nent among the present proponents of forestry, and who was probably the outstanding member of the movement which resulted in Michigan having a school properly staffed and prepared for the teaching of forestry and con- servation. This year's issue will present sev- eral new features, containing for the first time, the pictures of the gradu- ating class, as well as a record of their activities. In addition to this innovation, an "Alumni News," cov- ering 80 graduates of the school, will be included. The alumni directory will also be printed here. A large . number of the faculty members of the School of Forestry and Conservation have contributed articles on various phases of forestry of interest to the modern forester.! Included among these is Dean Sam- uel T. Dana's "Forestry and the Lum-' ber Code," a subject particularly per- tinent at the present time. The win- ner of the Charles Lathrop Pack prize, Blair Hutchinson, is also represented. Holcomb heads the staff of the Forester. Albert C. Worrell, '35F&C, holds the position of Associate Edi- tor; Francis S. VanSickle, '35F&C, Alumni Editor; Charles C. Mony, Business Manager; Charles H. Stod- dard, Contributing Editor; Professor Ernst V. Jotter, Faculty Adviser; the rest of the staff is made up of War-. ren E. Roberts, '35F&C, Lawrence M. Wines, '35F&C, Sherwood C. Nichols,' '35F&C, and Earle S. Brown, F&C. Stanwood Cobb Sees Increasing Intelligence , Unusual Peace Is Reigning in Macedonia Area SOFIA, Bulgaria, May 25. - OP) - A mysterious quiet hangs over most districts of Bulgarian Macedonia - regions which have been the subject of startling rumors since the Nreek- end coup d'etat. One of the first acts of the new' military dictatorship of Premier Ki- mon Gueorguieff was to partition this stronghold of the dread inner Mace- donian revolutionary organization, the Imro, between two provinces, So- fia and Plovdiv, just as though the Imro and "King" Ivan Mihailoff did not exist. Mihailoff, a fighting man, is the leader of the independence move- ment in Macedonia, which has been divided among Bulgaria, Greece and Jugo-Slavia. Tour eveals Gairn Naturally rumors of armed con- flict between Mihailoff's men and Bulgarian government troops soon filled the air after the partition of Bulgaria's Macedonian territory. But, in a motor tour through the heart of "King" Ivan's country, this correspondent failed to find any evi- dence of actual fighting. On the contrary, in such towns as Razlog, Bansko and Gornadjumaia there was an outward appearance of perfect peace. Talking with the inhabitants, who for years have been paying taxes to two governments - the official Bul- garian and the unofficial Imro - one. gets the impression they hope Gueor-' guieff and his colleagues will succeed in the governmental reforms they promised when they seized power May 19. Paying taxes to one governmen, these people will tell you, is bad enough for them. Watching Government According to some old-timers the people of Macedonia are waiting to see what the new government actuallyl does before committing themselves. They fear a new reign of Imro ter- rors - with a repetition of past al- leged assassinations and tortures -in case Premier Gueorguieff attempts to break the Imro's rule in the moun- tains of Macedonia. This feared terroristic campaign, the natives say, is not expected to take the form of open conflict with the mil-s itary, but various forms of sudden death for civil officials who, carry outl the orders of the Sofia administra- tion. Frank Merriwell Comes Into Full Glory Of Manhood NEW YORK, May 25.-- (P)-Frank Merriwell,. who eschewed tobaoco, foreswore swearing and swallowing nothing stronger than his pride, has come in the full glory of his man- hood into a federal court.- His creator, W. Gilbert Patten (Burt L. Standish), has asked that. Superior Talking Pictures, Inc., be enjoined from using the name Frank Merriwell in a series of short films it has produced. M'Ierriwell, as a . hundred million nickel-novel readers will attest, was the embodiment of all that is clean good, and brave; a scourge to das- tards and venom to villians. He was given his first name, Pat- ten said Thursday, because he was indeed "frank." The last name was synthetic, "merri" meaning 'merry and "well" meaning he was free from dandruff, hoof and mouth disease and the bubonic plague. Frank Merriwell, boy and man, pre- served the honor of dear old Fardale and (later) dear old Yale for 986 consecutive weeks. During that en- tire period his lips never touched liquor, spoke an epithet or held a. cigaret, not even a cubeb. He per- formed his weekly heroics from April 1, 1896, to January, 1915. This is a long time for anyone to attend Far- dale or even Yale, but Frank was a glutton for book learning. Patten, who feels that if Superior Talking Pictures, Inc., went ahead with its Frank Merriwell series he would be damaged $250,000 worth. said the Merriwell stories had circu-; lated 123,600,000 copies t6 date. He estimates he has used up 40,000,000 words in telling the world what a grand person Frank is. Newspaper Woman Dies In New York Mrs. Julia Blanshard, '14, newspa- per woman and writer, died May 18 at her home in New York City. Mrs. Blanshard was the wife of Paul Blanshard, '14, Commissioner ofc Accounts of the City of New York.t Mr. and Mrs. Blanshard became ac- quainted while they were both stu- dents in the University. Mrs. Blanshard was formerly so-e ciety editor of the Rochester Demo-c crat and Chronicle and later a re- reporter for the San Diego Sun andI Newark Ledger. She was a member of Kappa Gamma and Phi Beta Kap-i pa. Kingfish Long, Wages Tariff War In Senate A One-Man Filibuster Is Conducted By Senator To Stop Bill WASHINGTON, May 25.-() - Almost every senator except Huey Long agreed today that the Kingfish was conducting a one-man filibuster against the tariff bill. Both Republicans and Democrats Said the Louisianan, vigorously op- posed to permitting the President to reach tariff reduction agreements with foreign powers without senate approval, was trying to delay a vote. Long, with something like a wink, disavowed any such intentions. "I haven't even got to the merits of this thing yet," he told reporters after making half a dozen speeches, mostly in other senators' time. He offered as a substitute for the pending bill a reproduction of the old Harrison bill passed with the aid of Republican independents April 1, 1932, but vetoed by President Hoover. It would make all Presidential tariff ;hanges and reciprocal actions with other nations subject to congressional approval. Meanwhile, a personal disciple of William Jennings Bryan, silver- tongued spokesman for free coinage, has decided to vote "aye" when the Roosevelt silver-aid bill comes to a test in the house. Rep. Edgar Howard of Nebraska, one-time secretary to the "great com- moner," whose flowing hair, frock coat, and black campaign hat he emulates, told newsmen today he hoped this was a step toward Bryan's goal of 16 to 1 free coinage. Sophomore Is Admitted To West Point As Cadet Ted Ross Evans, '36E, has just re- ceived notice from the War Depart- ment confirming his appointment as a cadet in the United States Military Academy at West Point. Evans, who was about to receive his commission as a Reserve Officer, re- ceived his appointment from the late Joseph L. Hooper, congressman from Battle Creek. At the University he had an outstanding record for proficiency in his office as commander of Com- pany C in the R.O.T.C. -Associated Press Photo The cameraman caught this remarkable bit of action in the Minneapolis rits at the height of turbulence shortly before a truce was called in one of the most bitter labor disputes in the city's history. The man in left foreground was one of numerous special officers to be clubbed by strikers and sympathizers in the riots. His assailant is shown completing a swing with a baseball bat. Other strikers, ready for action, are shown in background. Professor Shartel Predicts Life Terms For Judiciary Chicago Man Publishes Book On Excavations "Parthian Pottery From Selencia (Continued from Page 1) method of choosing the administra- tors of justice, we have more good men in the courts than we have any right to expect, Professor Shartel said. Professor Shartel outlined a meth- od. of appointment of state judges which would be adaptable under the present system of state governments.' He would give the governor of the state the right to appoint the judges subject to the approval of a judiciary commission made up of various judges, lawyers, and laymen to in- sure freedom from politics. Profes- sor Shartel suggested having the chief justice of the supreme court and two or three others from that body, together with three judges from the state circuit courts appointed by the judges of those courts and the president and two others from the state bar association to act on the Head-On Crash Kills TwoIn Bus Accident judiciary commission to approve the governor's choice. In this way poli- tics could not enter into the selec- fin o h en riq t (By Intercollegiate Press) WASHINGTON, May 25. - The average man and woman of the fu- ture will equal the ordinary scientists of today in ability to think clearly, in the opinion of Stanwood Cobb, foun- der of the Progressive Education As- sociation and director of the Chevy' Chase Country Day School here. Before society realizes that high intellectual standard, however, Cobb says, education must be changed from "the standardized mass production of today to the development of the in- dividual child to the maximum of his talents and abilities. "At present," Cobb says, "we are giving the youth in our high schools and colleges neither enthusiasms nor convictions. We are not training them in habits of intellectual initia- tive or judgment. We are not, ex- cept in some few departments of sci- ence, heightening their creative pow- ers." Grand Rapids Puts Ban On All Slot Machines GRAND RAPIDS, May 25.-r-(P)- The city commission adopted an ordi- nance banning all slot machines in the city, Thursday night, and giving gambling syndicates fair warning that violation would bring a $100 fine and 90 days in jail. The commission put the bill to pas- sage after Mallery H. Kincaid, police superintendent, declared that the presence of slot machines was an in- vitation to gangs to engage in some of, their old prohibition day battles for supremacy. -i/ 1 , Lion of the candidate. - q_ As for the tenure of office, Profes- on the Tigris," the first of a seriesj sor Shartel said that this is the only of volumes on excavations of which country in the world where life ten- Prof. Leroy Waterman, of the depart- ure is not the universal rule. How- ment of oriental languages is the di- ever, there is a strong need for a rector, was published recently by Nei-r method of supervision for the re- moval of old and incapacitated judges kon C. Debevoise of the Oriental In~ who should retire. The supreme court stitute of the University of Chicago.1 should also have the power the re- University excavations have been< move judges for misconduct, in the carried on for the last five years, and. opinion of Professor Shartel. He add- opmin o Prfesor harel.He dd-were participated in by Debevoise in ed that there is no place in the world where law enforcement has broken 1930 and 1931, while during 1933, he . down as it has in our state courts and was excavating in the Near East fort it is a significant fact that these the University of Chicago. Debe-i are the only courts in the world to voise, who is probably the foremostc which judges are elected for terms of scholar in America on Parthian cul-t years. ture, treats various types of potteryt The idea of appointment of state which had their origin from the years judges is not entirely new, according 140 B.C. to 200 A.D. in his book. to Professor Shartel. Over half the Art work contained in the volume judges in the state supreme court at was done by Robert Braidwood, of the present time have gotten there Detroit, who received his Master's through gubernatorial appointment. Degree in Archeology from Michi- Any vacancy caused by the death or gan in 1933, previously having trans- retirement of a state judge is now ferred from the architectural college filled by gubernatorial appointment to the literary college. At present, without any supervision by a non- Braidwood is engaged in excavation political body. work in the Near East for the Uni- versity of Chicago. MEETS WITH ALUMNI This volume was published under T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- the auspices of the Institute of Arche- tary of the Alumni Association, clogical Research and is a part of' Thursday will meet with the Univer- i the Humanistic series of the Universi- sity of Michigan Club of Birmingham. ty of Michigan Studies. (')~i'nn'r; 1S-T -'7 - .~- LI.L .~* I M SAVING RICHMOND, Va., May 25. - (/) - A head-on collision between a bus and a truck, followed by fire, left two persons dead and at least 50 in- jured today. The crash occurred in a blinding rainstorm near here at midnight. The bus was filled with Negroes on a plea- sure trip. Fire broke out while rescuers worked frantically. A woman was burned to death. Approximately 45 of the injured were brought to Richmond hospitals. { Others were sent to Petersburg hos- pital. The crash drove the front wheels and the motor of the truck through the front of the passenger bus. Paul C. Rand, 26, driver of the bus, and W. J. Whitlock, 20, of Rich- mond, driver of the truck, suffered- head injuries. Since the front of the bus was de-' molished, the dead and injured had to be removed through the windows. Eight cars were commandeered by State Officer J. C. Aaron, the first policeman on the scene, to carry the injured to hospitals. C. F. Loftin, of Ashboro, N. C., who was driving toward Petersburg, said the bus sideswiped his machine and forced him into a ditch. I 'r c e$ 4 1800' VORLD /S'FAIR 1IEM SAVING N VIF r VWJI ry[Zr y v-L t.- 1Z 4.l make. BEAUTIFUL ENLARGE-W MENTS O over your snapshot col- G lection. 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Greyhound coaches are finest on-the highway, schedules frequent, and on-the-dot. ]don't be surprised if you meet friends on the bus-college students all over America are saving dollars this modern way. Greyhound's service to the Chicago World's Fair is espe- cially attractive. Inquire at the local depot, or ask your Greyhound student representative about convenient ex- CAMPUS AGENTS MICHIGAN. UNION John Bollock Phone 4151 E. MICHIGAN BUS DEPOT 116 W. Huron St. Phone 3589 PARROT RESTAURANT 338 So. State Phone 4636 CHICAGO One Way $3.75, Rd. Trip $6.75 NEW YORK One Way $14.60 Rd. Trip $26.10 i