PAGE SIX T HE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 I Mich. H ighway Conference To Be Held Here Highway Engineers, Safety Directors, And Police Officials To Speak Southern Flood Waters On Rampage; Many Die Attitudes Of Faculty, Students Widow Of The Are Judged In Campus Surveyt Late John K. A variet y of orinions, some whimsical and some in dead earnest, were Stack Is Dea tsiven by students and faculty of the University concerning each other in a"sw to a recent survey. Members of the faculty were asked: "What in your Passes Away Week Aftt cxr1eu is wrong with the attitude of students?" Students were asked: "What in your cpinion, is wrong with the attitude of the faculty?" Death Of Her Husbam 'i Announcement of the preliminary program of the 1935 Michigan Higb way Conference, which will be held Feb. 12-14, was announced yester- day by Prof. Roger L. Morrison o: the highway engineering and trans- port division of the University, anc chairman of the program committee for the Conference. Presiding over the six general meet- ings of the Conference will be Murra3 D. Van Wagoner, state highway com- missioner of Michigan. Professor Mor- ison, Varnum B. Steinbaugh. denut commissioner and road engineer o the Michigan Highway Department. Inspector W. L. Potts, president of the Michigan Safety and Traffic Directors Association. Leroy C. Smith. engineer- manager of the County Road Com- mission of Wayne County; and Allar M. Williams, president of the Mich- igan Association of Road Commis- sioners and Engineers. Twenty-First Meeting The conference is the twenty-first annual meeting of its kind, the first of which was called in 1915 when, as Professor Morrison describes, the State of Michigan had only wagon roads. They were inspired by the phe- nomenal increase in automobiles that was taking place at that time. Be- tween the first and second confer- ences there was an increase of 50 per cent in the number of motor vehicles in this state, Professor Morrison said. The Conferences are sponsored by the College of Engineering of the Uni- versity, the Michigan State Highway Department, the Michigan Association of County Commissioners and En- gineers. and the Michigan Safety and Traffic Directors Association. Faculty Men To Speak Members of the faculty who will speak at the conference are: Dean Herbert C. Sadler of the engineering college, William S. Housel, professor of civil engineering and research con- sultant of the Michigan State High- way Department's testing laboratory; and Prof. John S. Worley, head of the department of transportation and en- gineering. Other highway engineers from the various counties throughout the state, safety directors, and police omficials will address the conference, Professor Morrison said. Among the latter will be Capt. L. A. Lyon of the Michigan State Police, and Colonel H. A. Pick- ert, police commissioner of Detroit. Eurton W. Marsh, director of the safety and traffic engineering depart- ment, American Automobile Associa- tion; and Sidney J. Williams, director of the public safety division, National Safety Council, will be included among those speaking at the conference on the safety and traffic problems aris- ing from modern highway conditions. Rabbits Can Romp Without Any Fear STUDENTS' ANSWERS FACULTY ANSWERS Taking inspiration from the cur- The apathetic attitude adopted by rent Gargoyle cover, or from expe- most students in regard to a majority rience, the majority of students on of the courses offered by the Univer- I camps iferrd tat te geatet' ity is the main criticism of which l campus inferred that the greatest embers of the faculty have to com- fault of most professors was their plain. susceptibility to "apple-polishing." It is natural, one professor ex- The next greatest professorial sin olained. that students should not have was their "narrow-mindedness," ac- the high degree of interest in each cording to the poll. This fault was course that the man in charge of it iffnt w would naturally have, but the extent expressed in d erent ways stome to which they carry their lack of in- said, "They do not give a studenttretidsrprina. credit for his own ideas . . . they think T terest is disproportionate. knowledge of the subject begins and The attempt which some students ndgteirownheson;"tensanother mcke "to-er-ah, well 'apple polish,' ends in their own person;" ante specially at this time of the year" student answered, "They all think '?e- lya hs ieo h er srh another major criticism, according their course is the only one in the ns worl." A a hole" sad aothe, jto another pedagogical observer. It is world." "As a whole," said another'ral ahrptfuh xliet "theyare he mst uaccontaby ! coaly rather pitiful, he explained, tol ,they are the most unaccountably ee them try this last-minute meth- egotistical and narrow-minded people -d of improving their grades. It almost in the country." nvnriably' identifies them as poor Ulterior motives.were also ascribed students. by many: "they are just in it for the The whole attitude of college stu- money," was one answer, and another dents was attacked in another criti- At lcs. 10 pers ns died in flood waters as the Cold water River went sub-zcro tcmnpcratures and record snows caused widespread damage and of Coldwi'atzr River flood waters shows how the turbulent stream sweptc railroad tracks and basements of homes. Rear Admiral Peoples Slated Fo r PWA Post' Selected For New Agency To Handle $4,000,000 Work Relief Drive WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 -(P)-The star of a 59-year-old admiral was rising in the public works ;irma- ment today while the present PWA chief, Harold L. Ickes, was hitting back at opponents who are intent on seeing that his star shall set. Rear Admiral Christian J. Peoples was said in an authoritative source to have been selected for an impor- tant post in the new agency to handle the $4,000,000,000 work relief drive. He was said to be slated to directj the "projects division" - which would suggest undertakings to Presi- dent Roosevelt. There would be two other divisions but neither Ickes nor Relief Administrator Hopkins is men- tioned at present in connection with! the new setup. President Roosevelt would be in direct control of all three divisions. Peoples, native of Iowa, is on leave from the navy to head the procure- ment division of the treasury. He al- ready has surveyed $50,000,000,000 of possible projects for President Roosevelt. "What a bunch of enemies a man can acquire in a short time if he works hard at it," Secretary Ickes said Thursday when reporters asked about t MU LOTTE LEHMANN A REVIEW Lotte Lehmann, at the close of her first Ann Arbor concert in Hill Audi- torium last evening, left an audience, not speechless as does the Boston Orchestra, nor excited as does Horo- witz, but quiet, satfisfied, and very grateful, as only a truly great lieder singer can. Her manner was informal, but def- erential, at the outset almost hesitant. She did nothing to impress. The re- sult was a bond of human intimacy between listener and singer which made the audience of some 5,000 seem like a small and friendly gath- ering. Lieder, more than any other form of art, reveals the personality of art- ist, and woe to the singer whose soul is I threadbare. Lotte Lehmann's is not, but possessed of amazing breadth and richness. She sang cradle songs with a tenderness which just missed being sentimental, which is their true na- ture. Yet she did the Gretchaninoff "My Native Land" no less well. Her love songs revealed a deep and very feminine understanding. The famil- iar "Widmung" and "Vergebliches. Standchen" which she sang as en- cores, appeared in an entirely new Si m E M E accused them of constantly exploit- cismn. Students put too much emphasis -issciasea rress Photo. ing the students via the old text- on those courses which will be of on a rampage in Mississippi, while book racket, money-making value to them, conse- suffering in other areas. This airview Grandiose was the diction of a Phi quently giving little regard to those over the town of Sledge, inundating Beta who said, "They are not suffi- of more intellectual value, it was said. ciently cognizant of their own re- One genial professor complained sponsibility in the matter of student that students jump too quickly to the ___interest in academic affairs." conclusion that all professors are cold- - Resignation quavered in the voice hearted. We're really human after all, of a freshman, who answered, "they he said. S ICtake too much for granted, they think An instructor complained, "It really we know as much as they do, and isn't fair,iyou know, for the students to doze i front of us in class while seem unwilling to try and teach us we have to keep awake to try and anything." teach them. - ---~-- .At least two student opinions were diametrically opposed to the feeling and convincing light. And the way of the majority of their fellows, for HANGE GOVERNMENTS she sang the words "sausen" in "Der they thought most professors were LONDON, Jan. 25 -(A---The gov- Schmied" was a revelation. too suspicious of apple-polishing ernment bill providing a new consti- The Schumann giroup showed her t 1"They constantly think the students tution for both India and Burma was be possessed of a great and sensitive are trying to put something over on issued today. poetic imagination, a gift as rare as them," one of these rugged individ- The bill runs to an enormous length. her musical power. While able to draw i ualists said. out and turn the end of a phrasc oen rbbyrfrigt h AND AFTER as the most lithe-bowed violinist Someone, probably referring to the EAS as hemot ite-owd ioIni egotistical strain that is generally EXAMS, would have done it, she brings the attistedaost rofesgraidy DELBERT- poetry of the song into~life as no other atibuted to mos professors, said, WHABET poet hofe"Theardh he only jokes they ever laugh at WHAT we have ever heard. are their own ... they all think they TH EN? here until 1933, when the family moved to Lansing, following Mr. Stack's election as auditor general in the fall of 1933. They continued to maintain their palatial home here, however. A COMFORTA13LE LOW-COST TR IP HOME GINA LD, BY No accoun Oft the concert would bP complete without an expression of thankfulness that such a voice as hersj exists in the world, To have heard it F once is to live in perpetual anticipa- tion of hearing it again. It is "such stuff as dreams are made of." HOLDING OMPANY LICENSES?> WASHINGTON, Jan. 25. - (P) - Federal licensing of public utility holdings was suggested by the Federal trade commission today. It said the "stage is now set so that a combina- tion of the present holding company systems would produce one nation- wide monopoly." In 1929, the commission reported, 16 holding company groups had an ownership interest in about 02 per! cent of the nation's electrical output. are very waggish." One woman answered, "I don't know, I never pay any attention to them." Another replied, "T'hey are not chummy enough." The last student questioned struck a serious tone in answering, "Many - though not all - present an interest- ing topic in an unorganized fashion, requiring the student to devote un- necessary amounts of time to glean- ing the required information." NEW CARS FOR TAXI SERVICE P P HH N N E 445E CAMPUS CABS 24-HOUR SERVICE IN I- Ili recent displays of opposition to him. After Next Week These included a drive by Democratic insurgents in the house, who obtained LANSING, Jan. 25.--Michigan assurances that President Roosevelt small-game hunters have but one himself would allot the money for week left in which to enjoy their rab- the new works drive. bit hunting. About the complaints of congress- The last of the open hunting see,-men that he failed to show them Thns of the current winter will come proper politeness, he said: ronsof he urrnt intr wll omei "If that's all the criticism of the to a close Thursday, Jan. 31, with the Ir end of legal rabbit shooting in the jpublic works during my administra- upper and lower peninsulas. tion, I can stand that." "I've had to say 'no' on a good many The close of the small-game hunt- caiostaplainsfrobad ing for the winter, however, will not occasions to applications for jobs and projects I couldn't comply with," he prevent the shooting of certain non- said. game animals on which there is no As for other foes, he called them closed season, according to officials "a choice collection - contractors, in the Department of Conservation. . oil interests, public utility interests." Hunters who hold small-game li~ Ickes apologized Thursday to At- censes and gun permits may shoot the torney General Cummings, Postmas- following animals at any time: minks, ter General Farley and Senator Har- coyotes, wolves, lynx, bobcats. fox, rison (D.-Miss.) for the interior de- skunks, porcupines, woodchucks' partment's action in preparing re- house cats, ground squirrels, red prints of a magazine article criticiz- squirrels, weasels, owls, crows, star- ing them. The article, in "The Na- lings and blackbirds. tion," had attacked Judge T. Web- ber Wilson of the Virgin Islands and Start Retiring Of held the three officials responsible for his appointment. Ickes said the Sub-Marginal Land circulation of the article was a "slip- up" that happened in his absence. YOU're telling lay they.sat.isf- LANSING, Jan. 25.-- (P) - The first step in the retirement of sub-mar- ginal lands surrounding the village of Waterloo in northwestern Wash- tenaw and northeastern Jackson counties was announced today by the Departnent of Conservation. The Waterloo project is part of a program under which the Federal government is looking toward the shrinking out-of competitive produc- tion of some 50,000,000 acres of sub- marginal farm lands, as a permanent remedy for over-production of farm crops. Under this program those first affected are farmers on lands too poor or so.poorly located as to permit decent living conditions, and where farms were obviously failing and be- coming economic and social liabilities. It is expected that actual develop- ment work will begin April 1 when it MOTION PICTUPE 'CZAR' HELD CHICAGO, Jan. 25.-',A) - Thomas E. Maloy, "czar" of the Chicago Mo- tion Picture Operator's Union, was indicted by a Federal grand jury to- day as anyincome tax dodger. The jury charged Maloy had an income, in the four years of 1929 to 1933, of $350,- 000 over and above his salary as union chief and failed to report it. ATTENTION THE MICHIGAN CUT RATE 601 East Liberty Next to Mich. Theatre Ph. 9192 For Your Convenience. We Mean Business to Your Pocketbook. Here is something you can't go wrong on: FILMS - Printed and 9C , >