THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 3Q, 1935 Child Welfare Conference To Be Held Friday Problems Of Delinquency And Delinquents Will Be Discussed Judge Pray Is Leader Many University Faculty Members Are Included On Committees The first Washtenaw County Juv- enile Delinquency conference, to be held Friday in the County building, is expected to bring over 300 county and city officials, schoolteachers, ministers, health experts and others interested in child welfare to Ann Arbor, according to Probate Judge Jay G. Pray. Judge Pray has been active in initi- ating this conference, issuing invita- tions to all interested persons earlier in the month. The problems of de- linquency and delinquents are to be fully covered by the meeting. Seven speakers prominent in social service work are scheduled to speak at the convention and to lead discussions. Pray To Lead Session The meeting will be held from 1:30 to 5 p.m. Friday, and will begin with a general session headed by Judge Pray. Speakers for the first session will be former State Senator H. P. Orr of Caro, member of the state crime commission, Warden John Ryan of the Federal prison at Milan, and Prof. Lowell Juillard Carr, of the so- ciology department. From 2:30 p.m. until 4:30 p.m. dis- cussions will be held in the court room and the supervisors' room of the county building. Discussion pro- grams will cover the entire field of child delinquency. The first, on "The Role of the School in Delinquency Prevention," will be presided over by! E. H. Chappell, superintendent of , schools in Ypsilanti. Principal George R. Koopman, of the Tappan school in+ Ann Arbor will be discussion leader.' "Conditions in Washtenaw County Villages" will be discussed under the leadership of Harry H. Mayering, re- search assistant in the sociology de- partment, with the Rev. Harry Jer- ome presiding. A session on "The Home and Juvenile Delinquency" will be presided over by Mrs. Herbert S. Mallory, director of social service at the University'Psychopathic Hospital. Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the education school will lead the dis- cussion. Elliott To Preside The final discussion session, on "Local and County Cooperation" will be led by Miss Lois Heitman, county welfare agent, and presided over by. Prof. Charles Elliott of the Ypsilanti Normal College. Many University faculty members are included on the committees of the convention who have organized the present schedule of the conference. Among these are the Rev. E. W. Blakeman, counsellor in religious education,.Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, of the Health Service, Prof. Ferdinand N. Menefee, of the engi- neering college, Dr. Theophile Raph- ael, of the HealthlService and the so- ciology department, Prof. Arthur E. Wood, of the sociology department, and Prof. Wesley H. Maurer of the journalism department. The closing meeting of the confer- ence which is to receive the reports of the various discussion sessions will be presided over by Professor Carr. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN tContinued from Page 2) make a Satisfactory excuse to Mar- garet Dunn, secretary, before the mYC'eeting . D3ance Recital: The Spring Dance Recital will be presented on Saturday afternoon and evening, May 4, in Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theater. Box office opens Wednesday noon, May 1. Jewish Students interested in ora- tory will be welcomed at the elimina- tion contest to be held at the Hillel Foundation Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Prof. James McBurney, of the Speech Department will choose one man and one woman winner, who will be sent to Chicago, all expenses paid, for a Middlewestern championship to be held May 15. The oration is to be no longer than 10 minutes and must be based on some Jewish subject. Luncheon for Graduate Students on Wednesday, May 1, at 12 o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the Mich- igan League Building. Prof. Everett S. Brown, of the Political Science de- partment, will speak informally on "Recent Impressions of Washington." Michigan Dames: The Art Group will meet at the home of Mrs. Whit- oker, 1207 Willard St., 8 p.m., Thurs- day, May 2. Mrs. Bachur will talk on Art in Germany. ATTENDS MEETING T. hawley Tapping, general secre- ,ny of the Alumni Association, will Red Cross Workers Demonstrate Dust Masks -Associated Press Photo. Red Cross headquarters at Topeka, Kans., resembled war days as women volu1. !ie s irsronded to an appeal to make 10,000 dust masks for uwe by reidents in the western ection of the state where dust storms have resulted in heavy property damage and endangered health. A nursa and a helper are shown demonstrating how the masks are worn. Rod And Reel Devotees Repair Waders For May Day Opening By ROBERT B. BROWN Last minute preparations and fren- zied activity in general are charac- terestics of the large body of local sportsmen who await the opening of the trout fishing season ,tomorrow. . May 1 may be a day of dangerous disturbances in Europe and of dem- onstration and marching in the United States, but to 5,000,000 anglers' it is the banner day of the year for an altogether different reason. The long winter of poring over catalogues, varnishing rods, tying flies and buy- ing all kinds of expensive and more; or less unnecessary equipment is, over, and once again they can go outt before dawn to follow in the footsteps] of Izaak Walton. Around Ann Arbor there are few streams and less trout, but hope inthe heart of a fisherman is eternally; elastic, and regardless of all the fish-] less days of last spring, he will be] THE SCREEN f AT THE MICHIGAN "RECKLESS"1 A Metro-Goidwyn-Mayer picture, starring Jean Harlow and William Pow- I eli, featuing Franchot Tone and May Robeson - "Reckless" is not only the title of this, La Harlow's latest vehicle, but is the best one word description of the manner in which it races throught a series of hectic events and comes1 to a bombastic climax at the end. It is a perfect vehicle for the platinum- haired voluptuary and, if you read the newspapers, you know just about what that constitutes. Having as its origin the experiences of the Broadway torch singer, Libby Holman, with. her playboy husband, it tells the story of a musical comedyt favorite who marries (while on a bender) a very rich and very melan- cholic young hell raiser who, the day after, realizes that he has jilted his debutante fiancee and has incurred the wrath of his socialite father. Af- ter a sequence of scenes with his high hat friends and his family, his de- despondency leads him to suicide, and his bride is accussed of murdering him. Although she is freed, public opinion goes very much against her, and when she tries a comeback on the stage, life is very black for her for a while. Oh, yes, she has a baby, too; and there is a big brother in the on the stream as soon as he can see the water, or perhaps before, and elbow his way along the crowded bank to his favorite hole. Crowded, because on opening day every man, woman and chil in the country who has ever held a fish pole and who can think of. any earthly excuse to get out in the country will be there. Na- turally the fish are practically ter- rorized before the day is over, but to the real fisherman even this is acceptable. "You see," he will explain to you," all of the tin-horn sports who don't catch anything the first day will get disguested, and then there'll be hard- ly anyone on the stream during the rest of the season!" If you ask any trout fisherman what he usese for bait, he will prob- ably reply "flies" in a hurt and in- jured tone, as if asking you what he has ever done that you should accuse him of using anything else, for the; aristocrat among fishermen reput- edly would rather be dead than be seen using worms. But around the afternoon of opening day when the angler is getting tired and the creel is still empty it is altogether liable that you will see him discard hisI "principles" and revert to the "garden hackle," the earth work which Izaak Walton himself used with success. So, when you get an unexpected bolt Wednesday, or when the profes- sor stares disparagingly at numerous empty seats, it may all be attributed to the red letter date marked on every fisherman's calenger, the First of May, Opening Day! THE STAGE By ROBERT HENDERSON And what will be the best play of the Season? Who will be the most popular artist? Part of the excite- ment of the Dramatic Seasons lies in the very fact that no one really knows. Obviously, each represents. to a marked degree, our own especial prejudices and enthusiasms in the theater. Yet such is the naradox of the theater that frequently the very play or artist least featured and least pub- licized may turn the tables and run away with the popularity of the en- tire season. Olive Olsen is a case in point. When I engaged her last spring, I thought I was engaging someone else; it happened that the night I thought I saw her in "Good News" actually she was ill and I saw her understudy in her place. Patrons stop me and ask me, in confidence, which of the plays to choose. Naturally, I like them all, and all are -- we hope - adroitly con- trasted, so that the Season actually accomplishes its ideal which is to present a veritable "parade" of the stimulating plays and players of the New York stage. 'Two Enthusiasms' This spring I have two definite enthusiasms, Nazimova and the new play, "The Ugly Runts." Of Nazi- Smova it is unnecessary to speak. She is the finest artist we have ever brought to the Seasons; and the list of the past seasons comprise a Blue Book of the American theater. If a patron could afford to see only two plays in the entire season, I would immediately urge him to see Nazi- mova in "Ghosts," and then "The Ugly Runts." Besides the central committee, Earl V. Moore and Kenneth Rowe, no one in AnnrArbor has read the script of "The Ugly Runts." In New York. the theatrical-wise are agog over it. This is absolutely the truth. George Jean Nathan has read it and calls Robert Raynoids "the American Sean O'Casey"; a double compliment if you consider Mr. Nathan's propaganda in favor of O'Casey (and Lillian Gish!) Two Months' Rehearsal Nazimova's performance in "Ghosts"-not forgptting Romney Brent as Oswald - should make a bit of history. The production will come to Ann Arbor with nearly two months' rehearsal. The company has been working in New York since the middle of April. As Romney Brent. told me recently, Nazimova will be so electric as Mrs. Alving the rest of the cast might as well not be on, the stage; and the cast supporting Nazimova is all-star in its own right. What I say of "Ghosts" and "The Ugly Runts" is no derogation of the other productions. If I did not think Edmund Gwenn's performance in "Laburnum Grove" among the most ':deightful characterizations I have Father's Secretary? U -Associated Press Photo. Rumors sprang up in Washington and elsewhere and were denied promptly at the White House that James Roosevelt (above),- eldest son of President Roosevelt, would assume the position of secretary to his father. Forest W or k Is Discussed At Conference Forestry and conservation activ- ities in Michigan and their relation to a correlated program for the Great Lakes states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota provided the subject of a two-day conference at Madison, Wisconsin from which Dean S. T. Dana and Prof. W. F. Ramnsdell of the department of forestry and conserva- tion have just returned. In commenting upon the meeting, Prof. Ramsdell pointed out the scope of the present conservation activities as emphasized by the presence at the conference of representatives not only from the U.S. Forest Service, but also from the National Park Service, Bio- logical Survey, Soil Erosion Service, AAA, FERA, State Departments of Conservation, state universities, col- leges and experiment stations. Great Concern was expressed over the multiplicity of Washington bu-! reaus and emergency organizations. dealing in land use adjustment with conservation objectives, and the con- sequent lack of correlated policy and program. A plea was sent to Wash- ington for setting a regional Federal long use adjustment office in the in-, terest of more unified program and -reater efficiency. -iservations and Tickets Here. No Extra Charge KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU 3uoaiis - Licensed- Bonded. 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The Negro spiritual is a uniue ari ;enre, created by the only instrument which can ever interpret it .adequate ly, the Negro voice and personality Phe high weird vibrato of the so prano, the metallic twang of the tenor, the belly-bass each has its characteristic quality which is as es- sential to the flavour of the music as the succession of tones. Madam Lil- lian Evanti, coloratura soprano. sang "Cara Silve" by Handel. -M.L. AT last a facial that deep-cleans, stimulates, absorbs excess oiliness. Leaves skin soft, clear and velvet-smooth. If you don't believe Lavena is a miracle facial, then make this simple test. First cleanse your face with soap or with cold cream. Now! Moisten the palms of your hands, blend Lavena to a creamy L A V E N A The 2-Minute Oatmeal Facia lotion. Put it on. Wash it off. If your skin doesn't feel softer,. more glowing, if it doesn't look cleaner, clearer, than soap or cold - cream left it, we'll gladly give your money back. At all cosmetic counters. We guarantee to refund the price of Lavena if it does not I perform exactly as we say. offing without whom the story could n New Y not enden i an esn i e ok not end.we would not be bringing the com- There are some good moments in plete production to the Festival. The "Reckless," mostly depending on Jean minute the curtain rises on the open- Harlow's talents, however. She sings ing night of "Laburnum Grove" I am some good songs, takes part in several certain there won't b.e a seat avail- well-executed dances, and swings her able for its run at any money. Mel- hips to the kings taste. And Franchot ville Cooper's handling of bananas rone does a very good job as the hus- in "Laburnum Grove" - he eats six band. Both William Powell and May at every performance - will become Robson are themselves, which means an Ann Arbor legend! that their performances are just what the movie fan expects of them. It LIVE in FRENCH is one of those pictures in which everyoneisatype cast and the results Residential Summer School aenot bad at all. -(Ico-educational). June 27-Aug. are1. Only French spoken. Fee If you're in a reckless mood, don't $150, Board and Tuition. Ele- miss it. But if a Jean M-arlow picture vined.w ritefrediatr lar is your idea of what the movies should :secretary, Residential French be obliterated for, you'd better stay summer School. B away. There is a superb Mickey - McGILL UNIVERSITY Mouse, incidentally. Montreal, Canada I, CALKINS=FLETCHER Cor. South State & Packard - 324 S. State - Cor. E. Wash. & 4th Ave. i I 0 .i il i III Use Your U lon Cloomed byl'iu.ny r' 1O§ * 0 _.__.... w_ _ - - - ___._ ,_..... W N SWIMMING BASEBALL RESULTS -, When Sammy Sniveller Mums a gala evening by 1m: I. _.y.. -- -- - iI1