THE MICHIGAN DAILY trauss, joness Man To Choose Book Of Month heir Selection Will Be Placed In Pendleton Li- brary Of The Union, the book of the month, as de- mined by Professors Louis A. 'auss and Howard M. Jones of the glish department, will hereafter be rchased by the Union and placed the Pendleton Library for student' , it was announced yesterday. Professors Strauss and Jones will leavor to select every four weeks it book which they consider to be best for the period and of the atest value to student readers. First to be named is "The Man of Renaissance," by Ralph Roeder. e book concerns Savonarola, Ma- avelli, Castiglione, and Aretino, >laining that the four men illus- te four phases of the moral life their age and, taken together, ripose the man of the Renaissance. No thinking man who lived dur- those four brief momentous dec- s of the culmination of the Ital- Renaissance, between 1494 and 0, was the same when the period s over," the foreword states, "and the lives of the four protagonists the period it is possible to trace s development; they focus and eshorten it, and they complement another with a logical continu- Pu-Yi's Altar; Killer Of Rasputin; Young Smoot Quizzed -Associated Press Photos i I i I Calls Teaching Worst Paid Of Aill Professions I Edmonson Says Teachers Must Enter Field For 'Joy Of The Work' I The story of a tragedy which startled the world was told in a Lon- don courtroom when Prince Felix Youssoupoff (left), related how he killed the monk Rasputin. His testimony was given during a hearing of the suit of his wife, Princess Irina Youssoupoff (right), for $2,000,000 damages against a motion picture company. She alleged the film "Ras- putin and the Empress" libeled her by linking her identity "objection- ably" with Rasputin. Teaching, termed the "worst paid and the best rewarded" of the pro- fessions, is a field into which one must enter for the joy of the work, Dean J. B. Edmonson of the School of Education stated in a discussion of "Teaching as a Career" over the vocational guidance program broad- cast on the University radio hour yesterday. "It must be admitted that teach- ers' salaries, in general, are limited," he said. "No teacher will ever be- come rich on his salary in the way that some lawyers, dentists, doctors, or men in business and commercial lines have become wealthy. There are, however, many non-financial values in teaching, and teaching has a strong appeal to those who know that a successful life and the building of a personal fortune are not synony- mous." In discussing the possibilities in the teaching field, Dean Edmonson pointed out that while there is an oversupply of teachers, the same con- dition exists in every field. A teach- er's salary tends to lag behind the business cycle, being relatively high in the early years of depression and low in periods of prosperity, he pointed out. "It is definitely false that schools are returning to the stage of private control," Dean Edmonson said. "America recognizes the need for ed- ucation." Dean Edmonson expressed his be- lief that the use of the radio in edu- cation will fill a definite need, espe- cially in the field of adult education. DANCING EVERY NIGHT Except Monday at PREKETE' S GARDENS above The Sugar Bowl No Cover Charge 109 and 111 S. Main St. "Together they loom like so many awgivers, raised by the age to. an- swer its perplexities. Their lives em- bodied the adventures of the basic deas that men live by, and they de- veloped them with such transparent implicity and extreme consistency hat they live on for posterity as ,ypes," the author has written. In a book which is ostensibly a )iography of four men, Mr. Roeder ias given the whole teeming story f Italy during the Renaissance pe- 'iod. ,The four men supply the pivot zround which the story revolves: Sa- onarola, the priestly fanatic, forcing 'eligion on a licentious Florence; Vlachiavelli, the hero - worshipper, reaching the merciless doctrine of lespotism; Castiglione, the courtier, tpholding the virtues of the aristo- ratic ideal in the face of a world hat had outgrown it; and Aretino, he "Scourge of Princes," seeking the Atimate truth in man himself, and iving out his life on the bright Ve- ietian lagoon. U.S. Swin Toward Inflation Predicted By Penn Economist (By Intercollegiate Press) PHILADELPHIA, March 1. - Real anger of inflation is seen in the resent trend of events by Dr. S. toward Patterson, professor of eco- omics at the University of Pennsyl- ania. "Maybe I'm wrong. I hope and pray hat I am," he said. "But as re- avery goes along, bank deposits will icrease, bank credit will have to ex- and, and when that happens on top f the monetary inflation I see ser- )us difficulties. "I lived through the inflation in ermany. In 1923 a dollar would buy 0,000 marks. Three weeks later it ought 4,000,000 marks. You say we ill never do that? Yes, I know. But xermany didn't intend to, either, how me one country that ever arted on the inflationary path that id not find it, very difficult to get This is an artist's conception of the most picturesque ceremonies incidental to the enthronement of Henry Pu-Yi, former child ruler of China, as emperor of Manchukuo, the world's newest empire. It depicts the emperor's sacrifice to heaven at dawn on an "Altar of Heaven" copied from the marble structure at Peiping where Pu-Yi's ancestors sacrified for centuries. Standing atop a triple-terraced shrine, the new ruler placed on tables sacrificial offerings of Manchurian fruit, grain and vegetables. Highest Manchukuo officials occupied the first terrace of the alter. On the ground at either side of the steps were musicians with instruments like those used in worship of Confucius. Behind the musicians were Manchukuo officials of the first and second grade. This sketch was based on a diagram made by an Associated Press corre- spondent from official plans of the "Altar of Heaven" as worked out by Pu-Yi, and also on photographs of the Peiping model. 'Small College' Plan Considered By Economies Students, Faculty An effort was made recently by faculty and students of the econom- ics department to combine the ad- vantages of equipment and expert instruction offered by a large colle- giate institution with the personal contacts between student and in- structor enjoyed in smaller institu- tions. The purpose of the meeting, which was held at the Union and was at- tended by the entire economics fac- ulty, undergraduates concentrating in the subject, and graduate stu- dents, was to consider organization of a discussion group and "other matters of mutual interest." Both students and faculty were enthusias- tic concerning an organization of this sort, which for the first time would bring undergraduates in closer contact with members of the faculty and other students in a department. This is the first year that the con- centration requirement for gradua- tion has become effective, and this embryonic economics group is the first organization of its kind to re- sult from the system. Prof. I. L. Sharfman, chairman of the economics department, said edu- cational mass production could be modified or destroyed utterly, even in large universities such as Michi gan, if plans which would permit th( closer intellectual contacts between students of common interests among themselves and also with the faculty of their department could be effected Dr. Ruthven To Talk At Midland Alumni Dinner President Alexander G. Ruthven has accepted the invitation of the University of Michigan Club of Mid- land to address the members of the organization at their annual ban- quet Thursday evening, March 8. T. Hawley Tapping, general sec- retary of the Alumni Association, and Frederick S. Randall. also of the Alumni Association, will accompany Dr. Ruthven as guests of the club. The organization has selected a committee of six members divided between undergraduates and gradu- ates to plan the organization of the group. Whether the two "factions" will combine or not will be discussed by the committee at a meeting Mon- day night. Piunkennes Bad TIaste HAVERFORD, Pa., March 2 - 6P) If students at Haverford College do not drink esthetically, it is not the fault of the News, their weekly newspaper. It has printed instruc- tions. "Drunkenness is the height of bad taste," it says, adding: "The man who can tell 1921 champagne or Na- poleon brandy should be more ad- mirable than a total abstainer." Also, "liquor should never be car- ried on the him" Ernest W. Smoot ,left), son of former Senator Reed Smoot (right) of Utah, appeared before Senate air mail investigators to testify that "outside interests" paid him about $19,750 while he was receiving more than $3,000 in 1929 as clerk for his father's Senate finance committee. - - , . ..0 1 & fr'C ~1h t4 "I admit that prices have not risen ry much. I hope I am wrong, but think there iseserious danger of flation getting out of hand." ALLAN HOOVER A FARMER { FRESNO, Calif., March 2- (41) - aving a "white collar" job, Allan >over, second son of former Presi- nt Herbert Hoover, turned today to e business of "dirt" farming. He .d associates have purchased a 500- re farm which Hoover will manage.' You hear a lot today about balanced diet- .. and there's something too in the way tobaccos are bal- anced that makes a cigarette milder and better. makes it taste I keep coming back to dl that statement on the back Opening of the Chesterfield package- DanCe Toni ht 9 CH ESTERFIELD- ---CGARETTES ARE A BALANCED BLEND OF THE FINEST AROMATIC TURKISH TOBACCO AND THE CHOICEST OF SEVERAL AMERICAN VARIETIES BLENDED IN THE CORRECT PROPORTION TO BRING OUT THE FINER QUALITIES OF EACH TOBACCO. REC. U.S. PAT. OFF. -good music... fountain service . . . toasted sandwiches ... fresh strawberry shortcake - fifteen cents . . -excellent waiter service . . . and the prices are in keepina with the tavern I UA We believe you'll enjoy n-ia I I