PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4' EDNVSSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1934 State Press Club To Open Three-Day Convention Here Marlin Pew To Lecture AtBanquet Will Discuss 'Professional Versus Trade U n io n News Departments' Federal Official To SpeakOn Crime Comedy Club To Present Original Play At Friday Night Session The sixteenth annual meeting of the University Press Club of Mich- igan, to be held at the Union on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of this week, will afford the public an opportunity of hearing a number of distinguished guest-speakers, accord- ing to Prof. John L. Brumm, secretary of the organization. Marlin Pew, widely known in news- paper circles as the editor of "Editor and Publisher," the leading profes- sional magazine for journalists will speak at the Thursday evening ban- quet and dWring the general session on Friday afternoon. His subject for Friday will be "Professional vs. Trade Union News Departpents." President Alexander G. Ruthven will deliver the address of welcome. Another visiting speaker at the Fri- day afternoon session will be William E. Sweet, former governor of Colo- rado and now with the NRA. Jacob L. Crane, counsel of the Michigan Planning Commission, will speak Thursday afternoon on "State Plan- ning." The Friday evening banquet, to be held at the Michigan League, will be addressed by Mr. Henry Suydam, of the Department of Justice, Washing- ton. He will speak on "The National Crime Problem." A limited number of tickets for this banquet are available to the pub- lic at $1.25 each. Reservations may be made by calling the department of journalism. Following the banquet and recep- tion, to be, attendedhby members of the faculty and their wives as guests of the convention, the annual theatre party will be held. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This year's original play, "Editors Are Also People," written and directed by Prof. John L. Brumm, will be produced by members of Comedy Club. A second performance of the play on Saturday evening will be open to the general public. The convention will close Saturday morning after the annual business meeting. All open sessions of the con- ference this year will be held in the Michigan Union ballroom, and will be open to students, townspeople, and faculty members. Faculty members who have received invitations for the play may get their tickets this afternoon. Many Ask For 1935 Rhodes Scholarships Twenty students have made appli- cation for Rhodes scholarships, an increase of eight more than the figure for last year, Prof. Arthur Cross, chairman of the University commit- tee announced yesteraay. From this number all but five men will be eliminated within the next few weeks, said Professor Cross, and those remaining will appear before the State committee for a second elimination. Out of those selected by the University committee and, in ad- dition, students who have applied for scholarships in Michigan who do not attend the University, the State com- mittee will-choose two to come before the regional committee in January when final eliminations will be held. Five other staues besides Michigan' -Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky -will have represen- tatives applying for the scholarships, making a total of :12 finalists. The regional committee will appoint four men from this number as Rhodes scholars. I I I k E i i t 1 Kings ford-Smith Lands In Oakland After Epochal Flight Continuity Will Shape Student, Blakeman Says Doctor Warns That Any Neglect Of'eligious Life May Decay Education (Continued from Page 1) Secessionist Huey Tomorrow V ity Debate Squad To Meet Detroit Tea m Intercollegiate Season Will Tomorrow Forensic Be Opened of attitudes. But the essential mini- MMis regular worship. Following worship, these Guilds, Chapels, and Foundations, specifically designed to meet the needs of stu- dents, wvll offer religious student fel- lowship, religious music by our asso ciates, and religious projects which' k..;" ... = ;: :<:: students accept as valid. On occasion a discussion of theory or considera- tion of personal or social behavior will engage each of these groups. Classes upon religious literaturecare offered and there are arranged con- ferences with favorite professors, with the more mature students from var- HUEY P. LONG ious parts of the world, or with the ministers who lead in worship. On oc- casion nationally known clergymen, ession'!eried called in to reinforce us on certain phases of religious thought and ex- De r sFE a perience, are introduced. ated Press Photo Furthermore, the very fact that all h and his navi- of these normal methods of religious NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 6 - (') - nen are shown education under guidance of trained Huey Long today declared that he hours ahead of leaders, are set before our students as wants the State of Louisiana to secede r may be seen integral pary is doubly good. Such is the I "The only . way for us to get out aim - an interest motivated educa- ; of this here depression," said the tion in values. The methods will often "Kingfish," "is to secede from the 1dfall below the ideal held by the critic United States. and the results generally will depend "We ain't goin' to get any place upon the type of student who de- until we get rid of all those damn votes himself to the Guild in question. bureaucrats, hobocrats, autocrats 3nVene Where scores now participate, there and all those other 'crats up there . should be hundreds. The University (in Washington)." Frid a yitself has no ally so close to it in objectives or method. I hope each stu- dent new to the campus will unite )f Soci etywith his own church, think through To Visit Campus{ )f 50 CI Ct yevery personal problem in the pres-Vi t Announced ence of the Diety and in this normal' manner shape his own future. Several engineers from Soviet Rus- -Associ Flying from Honolulu to Oakland, Calif., in less than 15 hours, Sir Charles Kingsford-Smit gator, Capt. P. G. Taylor, completed their epochal flight from Brisbane, Australia. The airr as they were greeted by a small crowd at Oakland, where they apelegizel for arriving two h schedule. Sir Charles is standing on the wing of the plane, Lady Southern Cross, and Taylor climbing from the cockpit. The Varsity Debating team wilt. meet the University of Detroit for the first inter-collegiate debate of the year Thursday at 2 p.m. in the Ham- tramck High School auditorium in Detroit. Robert Malloy, '37L, and Jack Weissman, '37L, will speak for the Michigan team, which will take the affirmative side of the question: "Re- solved, That the Federal Government Should Adopt the Policy of Equaliz- ing Educational Opportunity Through the Nation by Means of Annual Grants to the several states for Public Elementary and Secondary Educa- tion." Judges To Be Selected Judges for the debate will be select- ed from the high school debate coaches in attendance, one of the rea- sons for this being that the debate will be held in the nature of an ex- hibition contest for the benefit of high school debaters and their coaches in the Detroit area, who are studying the same question in preparation for the competition of the Michigan High School Forensic Association. Prof. A. T. Keene, director of dos bating in the University of Detroit, stated to Mr. James H. McBurney, in charge of debating at the University, that 500 of these high school students have already indicated their inten- tion of being present for the debate. The contest will be followed by an open forum discussion in which ques- tions from the floor will be in order, both on the subject matter on the debate and on matters relating to public speaking and technique. McBurney To Speak As a part of the program, Mr. Mc- Burney will give a 15 minute talk on the subject, "What Makes a Good Debater." In the evening this same affirma- tive team, Malloy and Weisman will I meet a negative team from the Uni- versity composed of Jack Moekle, '35, and Abe Zwerdling, '35, in a contest to be held before Mr. McBurney's ex- tension class at Cass Technical High School. This debate will be judged and criticized by members of the class. These debates will be followed by a return debate with the University of Detroit on the Michigan campus, two debates with Wayne University, and two with Albion College. Final Tryouts Arithmetic Turns Y.M.C.A. Commercial With W For Operetta . Wil o NickelAs Reward Will BeToday Here Some hard-working mathematician has a chance to win five cents. Production's Cast Will Be All he has to do is to show Prof. Conference 0 W. W. Sleator, of the physics depart- Picked By Director This ment, how to do a problem in arith- Presidents Afternoomi ~ ~ metic which appeared in the Nov. 3 ByA dro Afternoontissue of the Literary Digest and col- B Anderso lect his reward from that baffled Final tryouts for the forthcominglphysicist. Final preparation music-drama course production of Professor Sleator posted the fol- conference of ther Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta, "Io- owing notice yesterday on the bul- Y.M.C.A. association lanthe," will be held at 3 p.m. today letin board of the physics buildingschools that starts Valentine B. Windt, director, an- ei a o the i' have been made, R nournced last night. ( ' "George W. Lyon, in the LiteraryhaebnmdF The tentative cast will be selected Digest tries to prove that educated son, '36, president athis tnime y sr. Windt, assisted bpeople canot do arithmetic. He cites Christian Associatior at this time by Mr. Windt, assisted by a problem, formerly given in the terday. Prof. Arthur Hackett and Prof. Earl acprole formerly en in Dr. Robert C. A V. Moore, both of the School of schools but wvhich educated people cooydprmn M. Moore, both of the Scho ofcannot 'do,' because they do not know ciology department Music. the meaning of the subjunctive mode the first session, N There are still a number of va-nrthruefthe students in their disc cancies in the chorus of the produc- nor the rule of three. t thr tion, according to Mr. Windt, and "I cannot understand the solution !student minister of n s for the annual presidents of the is in the Big Ten Friday, Nov. 9, Russell F. Ander- of the Student n, announced yes- mgell of the so- will be present at ov. 10, to aid the cussion. Anderson '. Alfred L. Klaer, the Presbyterian, i C DR. FUNKE LEAVES Dr. G. L. Funke, professor of botany at the University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium, left the University last night for Chicago after spending two days visiting the faculty of the botany de- partment. Dr. Funke will spend the next three months traveling throughout the country, visiting the larger univer- sities. He was awarded a traveling fel- lowship which will enable him to be- come acquainted with the American sia are expected to visit the campus of the University today, according to Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to the President. The group is coming here from the Ford Motor Company lab-I oratories in Detroit, where they have spent considerable time. While here the men will be con- ducted around the campus by Vasily Prianishnikoff, graduate student from Russia. The group is particularly in- terested in the metallurgical and me- chanical engineering laboratories. Prof. A. H. White and Prof. Henry C. Anderson will guide the Russians through these departments. system of education. these must be filled soon, he said. Any men or women students who are interested in trying out for the chorus, whether they are enrolled in the course or not, are invited to attend, and do not agree with the answer.) For the first convincing solution, I will. give the sum of five cents. If two answers are submitted, I will decide which is the more convincing." church, will be leader in one discus- sion group. Mr. Klaer has interviewed many freshmen and will give the delegates information on how to or- ganize programs for the orientation E I rehearsal either at 7:30 p.m tomorrow The problem, contained ite - period. in the Glee Club room at the Union, ticle, "How Gray is Gray Matter On Sunday morning at the League, or at 8 p.m. Friday in the Labora- Today," is as follows: If one third of Dr. E. W. Blakeman, Counselor in tory Theatre. six were three, what would one fourth Religion Education, will guide the For those who are unable to be of 20 be. The answer given was seven last meeting of the conference. present at either of these times, it is and one-half. Anderson added that the delegates also possible to attend the meeting of Professor Sleator has so far re- will attend the Michigan-Wisconsin the course at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the ceived three answers, none of which game. The Board in Control of Ath- } Laboratory Theatre or to see Mr. is convincing enough to earn his lu- letics has granted those attending the Windt. The director's office hours are crative reward. conference a special rate. from 1:30 to 3 p.m. today and from One of these, contained in an an- 11 a.m. to noon as well as any time onymous note big heartedly donated Moore To Lecture On after 3 p.m. tomorrow. the nickle to the fund which buys tea for the physics faculty to drink Slide Rule Operation N.S.L. Wi1I Present each week. But this was not right either.Thprbescnetdwhte Soyiet Movie Nov.8 "The problem still remains an un- use of the slide rule willebe the sub- solved mystery, but as Professor Slea- ject. of a discussion to be given by tor is convinced it is unworkable, Prof. A. D. Moore of the electrical The National Student League will gray matter is still gray, and the engineering department at the week- present Thursday in Natural Science proof that educated people cannot ly meeting of Sigma Rho Tau to be Auditorium the first Russian movie to do arithmetic has not been estab- held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. be shown on campus this year. The lished. Professor Moore explained that picture, "1905," is also the first Rus- _there are more than ten different sian movie to be shown in the United PC Rot - types of slide rules that an engineer- States with English dialogue. Planes Carry Rooer ing studIent must consider when pur- It is based on Maxim Korky's novel To Out-Of-Town Games chasing one, and it proves a difficult "Mother," is on the approved reading matter to choose between a "log-log list for freshmen, and concerns it- Facilities for the chartering of duplex, poly-phase duplex, log-log self with the gripping story of a Rus- planes for round-trip flights to Co- vector, circular" and others. sian working woman turned into a lumbus for football games have been Professor Moore's talk will include revolutionary strike leader through made available to students by the the questions as to whether a begin- oppression. - Maycock Fliers, operating from the ning engineer ought to buy an ex- Nikolai Batalov, whose excellent Detroit City Airport. pensive rule to start with, what type characterization stirred those who The flights will start from Ann Ar- of rule he ought to use, and to what saw the "Road to Life" here last bor the morning of the game, return- extent the average engineer will use year, is the central character in ing that night, or with an optional 'the slide rule after graduation. "1905." Sufficient recommendation for stopover until Sunday in Columbus. Also featured on the program will the picture is the fact that it is di- Planes may be chartered for as few as be a committee report on the conclu- rected by the famous V. I. Pudovkin, three or as many as 30 through Clin- sions members of the organization the Russian director, whose work has ton B. Conger, Ann Arbor representa- have reached after extensive personal met with such acclaim in America. tive of the Maycock Fliers. study of the slide rule question. l J 1 ..... . U 1= Auto Heater Hot Water Type What a Value! 33 Water Tubes! Greater Heat! Delco Motor! Save at Ward7 low price - Complete GLYCERINE 9gal. in bulk Save at Wards low price. Get same protection as high-priced anti-freezes. Treated to resist seepage and rusting. One filling lasts all winter. Re-use it HOTChange ONGW r : OLD 100% Pure t Pennsylvania MotorOil TWIN 1 I SAVE f YOUR MOTOR l 0 In Your Container 'i Aso Sold in 2 & 5-Gal. 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