six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1935 i _ __ .____ .-.. ___._ Complete Plans For10 Summer Session Trips First Excursion Will Be Campus Tour; Detroit Trip Is Second To Visit Ford Plant Most Extensive Excursion Will Be 2-Day Trip To Niagara Falls Plans for the ten annual excursions to be conducted during the coming summer session have been completed, according to Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the summer session. Prof. Louis Rouse of the 'engineering col- lege mathematics department will be in charge of the tours, which are open to all students enrolled in the Strachey's Hearing In Chicago Postponed session. The first excursion, which will be held June 27, will be a tour of the campus. This will include an inspec- tion of the General Library, the Cle- ments Library, the Law Library, and other buildings of the Law Quad- rangle, the Union, the aeronautical laboratcry, the naval tank, and other points of interest of the campus. Ex- planatory talks will be given by those in charge. A trip to Detroit by special bus has been planned for the second excur- sion, to be held June 29. Points of interest which will be inspected are the Detroit News Building, Belle Isle, the Fisher Building, and radio sta- tion WJR, the Detroit Institute of Arts, and the Public Library. To Vis:t Cranbrook The Cranbrook foundation schools will be inspected on the third excur- sion on July 6. The five schools in- cluded in this group are the Kings- wood school, the Brookside school, the Cranbrook school, the Cranbrook Academy of Art, and the CranbrookI Institute of Science. They will also! visit Christ church and the carillon there. A special bus will be chartered for this tour. A tour through the Ford plant at River Rouge has been scheduled for the fourth excursion to be held July 10.-This trip will be repeated on July 17. The most extensive excursion will be a two-day trip to Niagara Falls under the direction of Prof. Armand J. Eardley of the geology department. The group will leave Ann Arbor at 3:30 p.m. July 12 in a special coach and will return Sunday night, July 14. To See Proving Grounds The seventh trip, to behheld July 20, will include a tour of the General Motors proving grounds and labora- tories at Milford and a visit to the weather station. Greenfield Village at Dearborn will be inspected on the eighth excursion on July 24. A visit to Ford's Village, the museun' of early American life, Edison's Menlo Park Laboratory, and the Dearborn Inn will be includedin this trip. This tour will also be re- peated on July 31 as the tenth excur- sion. A trip to Put-In-Bay Island in Lake Erie has been scheduled for the ninth excursion on July 26. The group will have a special bus to the boat dock in Detroit, where they will take an excursion boat to the island. Profes- sor Eardley will be in charge of this tour, and will explain points of geolog- ical and scenic interest, including' the island caves and Perry's monu- ment. Reservations for all the excursions may be made in the office of the Summer Session in Angell Hall. ITHE STAGE AT THE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN "UNFINISHED PICTURE" JohnS Chicago on (hatless) s Chicago im possible de: Straci CoG (Conti -Associated Press Photo. St. Loe Stra-hey, young British writer who was arrested in charges that he "actively advocated communism," is shown, urrounded by a crowd of curious persons as he entered the nmigration offices, where the hearing concerning Strachey's portation was set for March 21. hey Says Overthrow Of rovernment Not His Purpose Attendance At S.C.A. Camp In 1934 Is High Fresh Air Camp Served 340 Boys To Break All Previous Records The attendance at the University Fresh Air Camp in 1934 broke all previous records when it served the needs of more than 340 different campers, the annual report submitted by George G. Alder, director of the camp, shows. The boys for the camp each year are selectedthrough the cooperation of more than fifteen different social wel- fare agencies located In Ann Arbor, Detroit, Hamtramck, and Wyandotte. No restrictions are placed on the boys because of race, nationality, or creed, and an effort is made to take as many forme" campers as is possible each year. The entire program of the Fresh Air Camp is "conceived in order to promote wholesome, vigorous, and in- telligent living among underprivileged boys who are unable to have the bene- fit of a full paid camp." One of the secondary aims of the camp is to de- velop leadership in University men. Students Run Camp The camp personnel with the ex- ception of the caretaker, bakers, and handicraft director are all university students and graduates, most of whom are from the University. The positions. are filled through the cooperation of the Student Christian Association. In the last few years the program of the Fresh Air camp has been carefully coordinated with a special health pro- gram. On the day of arrival in camp each boy is given a physical examina- tion and a careful record of the health of eery camper is kept. Under the supervision of Prof. F. N. Menefee of the department of engi- neering mechanics the long planned "main building" of the camp was started. It is hoped by officials at the camp that this new structure will be completed for use by the 1935 season. * New Building Under Way The new building when finished will provide adequate kitchen and dining room facilities and a limited number of sleeping quarters. The camp build- ing will also be available for the use of certain organized campus groups for retreats and other week-end meet- ings during the winter months of the University year. The funds necessary for the support of the camp are raised principally through popular subscription and by the Student Christian Association, which sponsors forums, lectures, and the annual All-Campus Jamboree. Se For Damages In Kerns Disaster LANSING, March 15.- (A) - A rep- ercussion of the tragic Hotel Kerns fire here Dec. 11 gave the state de- partment of labor and industry a new legal knot to untangle today. Mrs. Ida F. Wiesse, of Saginaw, en- tered a claim before the-department in which she seeks compensation for the alleged death of her husband, James, in the blaze. She demanded $5,400 frot the battery company for which he traveled as a salesman. His body never was identified among the victims. Mrs. Nellie Thied, widow of Fred C. Thied, salesman for a Chicago pharmaceutical company, asked the same amount from his employers for the death of her husband in the blaze. Debating Team Faces Difficult Meet Schedule Oppose Beloit College Of Wisconsin Monday; End Season April 5 The University Varsity debating team will begin an intensive two-week schedule of duel and Conference de- bates next Monday with a meet with Beloit College of Wisconsin in Ann Arbor. The debate season will close April 5 when a team of from four to eight Michigan men will participate in the Western Conference round-robin de- bates on the Northwestern University campus. Abe Zwerdling, '35, and Jack Moe- kle, '35, will represent the Michigan negative in the contest with Beloit on the question: "Resolved, That All Collective Bargaining Should Be Con- ducted By Non-company Unions Safeguarded By Law." Both debaters have shown their ability in argumen- tation and rebuttal in the past, Zwerdling having a record of three years of experience on the Varsity, and Moekle one year. Syracuse University and Xavier College will send their forensic teams here March 19, the former preparing to meet the local debaters in the eve- ning and the latter early in the after- noon. The question over which the verbal battle will be contested will be the same as the one used with Beloit, William Centner, '38, and Ed Litch- field, '36, will debate the subject, tak- ing the negative side, in the Syracuse -contest. In the afternoon debates only Litchfield has been chosen by Dr. James McBurney, coach, thus far. He declared yesterday that the other Michigan contestant will be selected the beginning of next week from a group on the squad including Ralph Danhoff, '36, Carl Nelson, '37, Collins Brooks, '37, Arthur Marlowe, '36, and Centner. Complete Plans For Meeting Of Sociologfists Professor Carr Describes All-County Conference Set For May 3 Plans were announced yesterday by Prof. Lowell J. Carr of the sociology department for a county conference on juvenile delinquency at which all local social agencies will be represent- The tentative date for the confer- ence has been set for May 3, and it will be held in Ann Arbor, according to Professor Carr, who is chairman of the local treatment planning commis- sion. No definite program has been scheduled as yet, but it is"expected that discussion sections will beled by leaders of the various agencies. The conference is not, it was .tressed, due directly to the interest in the problem which has been created by the recent murder of Richard Streicher of Ypsilanti, but is an out- growth of a gradually approaching crisis. Decision to hold the conference, Professor Carr stated, was reached at a meeting of the planning commis- sion several weeks ago. The sugges- tion was made by Professor Carr, and was enthusiastically adopted by other commission members. Rules NRA Invalid -Associated Press Photo Federal Judge Guy L. Fake at New- ark, N.J., ruled that the national re- covery act, as applied to interstate business, is "unconstitutional because it attempts an unlawful delegation of legislative authority." READ THE WANT ADS U I THE SCREEN AT THE MICHIGAN "SOCIETY DOCTOR" A Metro-Gol Iwyn-Mayer picture star- ring Chester lorris and featuring Rob- ert Taylor, Virginia Bruce, and Billie Burke. Also three shorts - "Once Over Lightly," a rubbishy comedy starring Roscoe Ates, who can stutter; "Movie Memories," a saccharine but interest- ing series of glimpses of many old stars; and Phil Spitalny and his orchestra (?) dressed up as a flock of girls, quite pansyish on the whole. Egg-headed, patent-leathery Ches- ter Morris is senior interne at Dr. Wa- verly's polished hospital. Virginia Bruce, who resembles no one quite so much as she does an Alice White gone intellectual, is a cigarette-puffing nurse whose indecision as to whether she will fall in love with Morris or Dr. Ellis (Robert Taylor) is a thread of the thread-bare theme. And Taylor is the "other man" -an extremely lik- able, one too, it may be said. "Society Doctor" is another motion picture which is easily categorized. It's of the "Men in White" school. It of- fers nothing that this picture did not, has no improvements. It has, then, no raison d'etre. The Michigan's presentation will bring few huzzahs from audiences which have seen Copperfield, "For- saking All Others" - shows that have been jam-packed with enjoyment from flag fall to finish, as it were. New 10-year low in musical shorts --Spitalny's females! 4 --G.M.W.,Jr. the last word in modern gas, ranges , i nued from Page 1) fense for me to express communistic views - which obviously I do." "Do you consider the University's action in denying you Hill Auditorium an abridgement of free speech?" he was queried. "Well," he came back, "they were certainly not allowing me to speak freely." Asked whether he believes it is pos- sible for communism to be adopted in this country without revolution, he stated, "Yes. I think it is possible, although I should say unlikely." "Do you believe it possible in Eng- land, Mr. Strachey?" "No." He termed Huey Long a "serious menace to your country," and believes that "the Kingfish is far less a clown now than Hitler was in Germany ir 1926." Only when he came to the question Koelz Writes Of Rare Birds In Far East Five papers written by Dr. Walter N. Koelz, University explorer, con- taining notes on the some 600 species of rare birds he collected on his ex-' pedition last year to Tibet and India, are being prepared for publication, University Museums officials an- nounced recently. This material, Dr. Koelz pointed out, was up until a short time ago, the only thing of its type in the United States. Recently, however, the great Rothschild bird collection has come to the American Museum in New York City. When this col- lection is unpacked, Dr. Koelz hopes to find other material for comparison. The aid that he will get from the Rothschild collection will be small, however, according to word from Dr. Claude Ticehurst, noted British orni- I thologist, and editor of the bird maga- zine, Ibis. In a letter received by Dr. Koelz here yesterday, Dr. Tice- hurst said, "Even in the Rothschild collection, with its some 3,000 speci- ments, there is little material on Tibetian and Indian birds." The names of the papers are: "Notes on the Winter Birds of Khin- jar Lake, Sind (Tibet)"; "Winter Birds of South Punjab (India)"; "Birds of Spiti"; "Birds of the Himal- aya Foothills"; and "Birds of Zanks- kar." Aga-OgI u May Lead Princeton Seminr Dr. Mehmet Aga-Oglu of the orien- tal art department has been invited to give a course at the summer sem- inar in Arabic and Islamic studies to be held at Princeton University, from June 20 to July 31, according to an- nouncement made yesterday by Prof. Philip Hitti of Princeton, director of the seminar. The seminar is the first of its kind ever attempted, and has been de- signed ,according to Professor Hitti, "to meet the needs of advanced schol- ars in fields linked with the Arab world and who desire to acquire com- petence in the Arabic and Islamic phases of their respective subjects." Award To Be Presented Rv .nrne On Miri 171 on William Randolph Hearst, did the economist-lecturer refuse a direct an- swer. "He does not picture events truthfully -all know that - but no mere foreigner could describe Hearst so well as your Professor Beard," he said. The remarks of Charles A. Beard, American historian, are noted for their scathing criticism of the news- paper magnate. The dark eyes of the 230 pound son of a British peer flashed as he em- phasized his points and twinkled as he made humorous remarks. A mem- ber of the crew when he was at Ox- ford, the powerful radical walked with an easy swing. Standing six feet, two inches in height, Strachey towered above any- body in Granger's Ballroom where he spoke. His jet black hair was combed back in pompadour fashion from his wide forehead, which narrowed into' a sharp chin. He spoke rapidly and earnestly, in broad British accents. His treatment of newspaper photog- raphers before he spoke, threw the, audience into laughter. "Take 'em now," he told the photographers in a sharp though chuckling tone. "I can stand to be shot verbally while I am speaking, but not that way." ADMITS KIDNAP HOAX WILMINGTON, Del., March 15. - (P -- Public Safety Superintendent George Black announced today that Chester Hyde, found bound and gagged here after being reported kid- naped, has admitted the abduction story he told was a "fake." "The boy has admitted it was a fake," Black stated, "he said he had been writing letters to his stepfather asking for money."} Hyde, 19, was reported kidnapedl after being missing from his home and after his stepfather, William Lella, horticulturist, had received a note de- manding $10,000 ransom and threat- ening the youth with harm. 24X "r M1 '* - _R 4 ~1 _. rY 1J v With eyes wide open-homemakers are praisig this sensational new range. Stands on a frame of chrome finished tubes. Floor beneath range con- venient to broom. Has every device essential to work-saving modern cookery. Many new features shown for first time. We've never seen its equal: Let us demonstrate. Series 1400, onlyi- (25s A00 (Less Old Stove Allowance) MUMMORWA __ 7 .1 U I A Review The Hillel Players' production of "Unfinished Picture" is the most out-l standing local theatrical undertaking of the year to date. Its execution gives the play itself the full signifi- cance which it possesses, and as a whole, the remarkable organization and foresighted ingenuity manifest- ed in the production make it an effort that is not only noble but should bet fruitful.1 Theodore Cohen, the author, dis- plays bright potentialities as a play-1 Wright, but as should naturally be expected of such an early work, "Un-t finished Picture" is youthfully garish,l a bit self-conscious, and does not pos-t sess the full dexterity which would characterize it as a mature work ofE art. Comprehensively, the most per- tinent contemporary problems are dealt with humanly, somewhat frag- mentarily, and within an impellingt dramatic design. The characters arel generally well conceived but possess, in part, obviously psychological in- congruities which present difficulties to the actors. However, "Unfinished 4-, ( - 17< I The Tailk of The Callnns ., THE UNION Membership Dances are becoming more popular than ever be- fore. You'll enjoy gliding over the smooth floor to the rhythms of the in- I __ 0 comparable Union Band. Why not Another new Magic Chef-unusually commodious and roomy-at a price far below what over-size ranges usually cost. Is 40 inches wide, 301/2 inches deep. Large size oven-20 inches deep. Complete with modern devices and features for which Magic Chef gas ranges are famous. Ideal for large families. Series 2100 - 850 I plan to dance at the Union tonight? The charge is only $1.00 per couple and dancing is from 9 until 12. I I