AGE SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARCh 25, 1936 I . ............ .... .. . ... . ........................ . . . Whitford Kane To Be Summer Guest Director Distinguished Character Actor Named For Staff Of Repertory Players As guest director for the Summer Session activities the speech depart- ment has procured Whitford Kane, noted character actor, it was an- nounced in a bulletin released by the Summer Session speech department. Valentine B. Windt, director of Play Production throughout the year, will be the general director of the activi- ties during the summer. Mr. Kane has been associated with the most important theatre organiza- tions in both Great Britain and Amer- ica, a few of which are the New York Theatre Guild School, the Goodman Theatre of Chicago, the University of Washington and New York Uni- versity. Crandall To Assist Frederick O. Crandall, of New York City, assistant director last summer of the Michigan Repertory Players, the professional laboratory theatre for the summer courses which produces weekly prominent plays, will com- plete the staff of directors for the summer activities. In addition the department will again have as art director of the Players Alexander Wyckoff of New York City, and Miss Evelyn Cohen also of New York City who will be the costume director. The speech and general linguistics department for the summer will offer for the first time radio courses under the direction of Prof. Waldo M. Ab- bot who is director of the Broadcast- ing Service throughout the year. The courses will have available for their work the the three University broad- casting studios and the broadcasts will be carried by leased wire to Sta- tion WJR, Detroit. Crocker Also Named Another of the visiting faculty in the speech department will be Lionel G:. Crocker, lecturer in speech. Dr. Crocker is a member of the faculty of Denison University of Grandville, Ohio, and is also a graduate of the University of Michigan having re- ceived his doctors degree in speech here. He was formerly on the facul- ty of the University, before going to Dpnison University. Dr. Crocker will conduct the course in debating which will make a thor- ough study of the question to be de- bated in the Michigan High School Forensic Association for 1936-37. Possible Candidate -Associated Press Photo. Walter E. Edge (above), former ambm iador t France, has been mcnticned as a possible running made for the Republican presidential nominee. party's Ar Arbor boys To Use Vacation For Niagvara Falls Trip, With the coming of spring vacation this year 20 Ann Arbor boys, ranging in age from nine to 12 years, will set out for the great unknown with over $150 between them, a new Ford truck for transportation and Niagara Falls their ultimate and long wished for destination. With them will be Mil- ford Boerms, '37, counsellor at the University of Michigan Camp for Boys, supervisor and honorary mem- ber of the Bach Travellors' Club. The club was organized, with the help of the counsellor, by these boys, who attended the camp last summer, and who, continuing to spend their leisure time together in sports and in taking short trips, decided last Oc- tober to form an organization by which they could make enough money to take them all to Niagara Falls. Since that time, the boys have been working one or two days a week col- lecting papers and salvage to sell and giving rummage and bake sales, aided by their families, with $150 as results. ' They have planned the entire trip themselves, marking out the route, deciding where to stop on the way to see such places as the Welland Canal, Watkins Glen, the Corning glass works, Akron rubber factories and other spots of interest. The club is one of the numerous outgrowths of the Ann Arbor Guid- ance Project, started last fall with the aim of following the campers for a year and helping to organize their activities. The project is under the direction of Prof. L. J. Carr. DISCUSSES ETHIOPIAN WAR Col. Henry W. Miller of the engi- neering college will speak tonight at a banquet of the University of Michi- gan Club of Toledo on the present state of European politics, the Italo- Ethiopian affair in particular. Col. Miller will be accompanied by T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association and Robert 0. Morgan, council secretary of the Alumni Association. Rotary Group Fetes Foreign Students Today Luncheon To Be Held For Newly Elected Members At Union Six students from other lands will he presented today at the regular weekly luncheon of the Ann Arbor Ro- tary Club as "International Guests." They are: Tsai Hwa Chiang, a teacher of some years experience in China, and a candidate for the doc- tor's degree in education; George Jurdak, a senior engineer from Bey- rut, Syria; Dr. Bishnu Mukerji, a re- search fellow in pharmacology work- ing under a grant of the Rockefeller Foundation, a member of the faculty of the Bengal Medical College in Calcutta. Others To Be Feted Oothers are Hasan Rufai, a senior engineer from Iraq and a government scholarship student; Cesare Goicha- echea, a Basque student from Spain, studying in the School of Library Sci- ence under a government scholarship; and Werner Frederick Striedieck, a German student in the graduate school and a teaching fellow in Ger- man. The local Rotary Club recently amended its by-laws to provide for election of a limited number of repre- sentative foreign students to member- ship as "international guests." These students will have the privileges of the club for the period of one year. They will attend the weekly luncheons and receive the weekly1 publication of the club and the Rotarian. Begun At Cornell This plan of introducing foreign students as members of Rotary was begun at Cornell University. The Cornell group now numbers 25 mem- bers, but at present the local group will be limited to six. By association with representative town and faculty men the students selected will become familiar with the workings of Rotary and the purposes of American service clubs. The international guests are chos- en by the usual procedure of the club and are proposed for this honr by the International Committee of which Dean Joseph A. Bursley is chairman. Other members of the committee are: Dean S. T. Dana, Dean Herbert C. Sadler, Dr. Carl E. Badg- ley, Dr. Warren Lombard, Prof. J. Ra- leigh Nelson, and George Burke. Foreign Relations Clubs To Convene Sixty-seven International Rela- tions Clubs in the Mid-West Region, including that of the University of Michigan, will hold a conference Ap- ril 3 and 4 at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, under the aus- pices of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Dr. Howard Calderwood of the political science department announced yesterday. Dr. Earnest Minor Patterson, pro- fessor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania, and Dr. Paul L. Dengler, member of the Austrian Commission of the Institute of In- tellectual Cooperation, will be the principal guest speakers, he said. Olson Says Expt Of School Discq European Tour Revealed Many More Nationalistic Youth Organizations By F. CLAYTON HEPLER After spending about five months touring 12 countries on the continent, Prof. Willard C. Olson, director of research in child development, has returned to his duties in the School of Education impressed with the dis- appearance of the experimental types of schools in those nations which are controlled by dictators. "The schools," he said, "are becom- ing more conservative and more, and more dominated by state pur- poses." Citing Italy and Germany as typical examples, he discussed out-of- school organizations, especially in Italy, which are attempting to instill the principles of nationalim in its citizens at an early age, and other supplementary groups which are de- signed for providing programs for leisure periods. The Opera Balilla Nazionale, an organization for Fascisti youth be- tween the ages of 8 and 14, is per- haps the best machine for govern- ment propaganda that Italy posesses, he stated. It has just been organized on a corporate basis and will fit in with the new system of government corporations. The purposes of the Balilla are to develop the spirit of discipline and to provide premilitary, physical, cultural, professional, voca- tional and religious training for the Italian youth. The next step in the training per- iod, Professor Olson explained, is the Avanguardisti for boys between the ages of 14 and 18. The graduation DAILY OFFICIAL BUTLLETIN (Continued from Page 4) March 24 adopted the following reso- lution :1 Lambda Chapter of Beta Theta Pi fraternity at the University of Michigan shall be suspended and their chapter house closed from April first, 1936 to September first, 1936. The said organization shall be allowed to reopen and remain open after Sep- tember first, 1936 only upon submis- sion to the Executive Committee of the Interfraternity Council of the University of Michigan on or before October 15, 1936 of evidence of in- ternal conditions satisfactory to the said Executive Committee and to the national organization of Beta Theta Pi Fraternity. Executive Committee Interfraternity Council University of Michigan. "r II WPA STRIKERS FIRED rtfen lta l ype NTLES. Mich.. March 24 - . F(f WPA strikers ',hIi( refused to re- l ~ ~ ~ ;i 'O work were suspended perman- pearirg broa Monday by Administrator E. 1). Morse. Approximately 150 men re- day, when a boy passes from the med work on projects which were primary group to the more advanced shut down last week by the strike. group, is a gala day and is celebrated throughout the country. Another group whose activities are carried on in conjunction with thoseT of the Ballilla is the Dopolavaro, T ursdIa which is designed as a training course for future leaders of the Balilla, Pro- fessor Olson added. They do their practice teaching in the ready organ- Friday ized groups, and after they complete their training, go out to form new squadrons for the Balilla. Reminiscent of the days of the Saturday Caesars is the organization of the troops, he continued. The smallest unit is the squadron, which is com- posed of 11 boys and their leaders. All the other units are formed on the basis of three, three squadrons mak- ing a manipulum, three manipula making a centurium and three cen- turia making a cohort. The largest unit is the legion, which is composed of three cohorts. Membership in the Balilla is limited to those who have the consent of their parents. A tui- tion fee is also required. Although education in Europe is limited to the ability to pay and a general philosophy of "education for place" prevails, Professor Olson pointed to Sweden as one of the na- tions in which experimental educa- tion is making great strides forward. "Social, political and economic Ju conditions modify the educational philosophy of every country," he said, "and the cooperative nurseries and day schools in Sweden are evidences of steps taken to meet the changing conditions." A shortage in housing conditions, principally in Stockholm, has re- sulted in government subsidized, co- operative apartment dwellings. With- in these dwellings are rooms set aside for providing facilities for the care of both infants and other children not yet of school age. Engraved $ 10 Cards & Platesd THE ATHENS PRESS Tickets Now On S 'Printers City's Lowest Prices on Prnting 308 North Main Street - Dial 2-i013 F.D.R. LAUDS 'OLD IDEALS' [ WINTER PARK, Fla., March 23.- (P) - President Roosevelt-the New Deal's sponsor-stressed the stead- fastness of "the old ideals" in ac- cepting an honorary degree from Rollins College today and said "all we change is our approach method. s0 ize A te 1936 1ior Girls Play ale: 50c, 75c, $1.00 University Soloists To Be Featured At Michigan University talent is getting a chance to try its wings in the un- usual program being presented by Paul Tompkins at the Michigan, Theatre this week. The program of organ-music and solos features songs made famous over the air or thru re- cordings by nationally-known orches- tras. The students who take part in the presentation are: Sam Stoller and Ellis Moerman, singers, and Clare Wigell, trombone and Ernest Jones, trumpet. The interest of the pro- gram is heightened by the use of bizarre lighting and color effects. FOR THE NEW CANDID CAMERA BOKBARGAINS DELUXE EDuITIONS (FIRST PUBLISHED AT $3.75 to $25.00) SVEN HEDIN - MY LIFE AS AN EXPLORER ............................. $1.5u RUCKSTULL - GREAT WORKS OF ART .................................1.89 EBERLEIN & McCLURE - THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF AMERICAN ANTIGUES ...........................................................1.98 POTHEROE - ILLUSTRATED NATURAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD.......1.98 DeBLES - GUINE ANTIQUE FURNITURE................................ 1.98 MOORE - THE COLLECTOR'S MANUAL ......... ....................... . 1.69 McCOFFIN & DAVIS - THE ROMANCE OF ARCHAEOLOGY .............. 1.59 GOEPP - GREAT WORKS OF MUSIC .................................... 1.59 MARGARET KINNEY - THE DANCE - THE HISTORY OF A LIVING ART 1.69 BALZAC - DROLL STORIES...........................................1.69 STEFAN ZWEIG - MARIE ANTOINETTE ................................ 1.49 BOCCACCIO - THE DECAMERON ........................................1.77 TAYLOR - A GUIDE TO THE WILD FLOWERS........................... 1.49 TAYLOR - THE COMPLETE GARDEN BOOK ..............................1.79 BENNETT - PRACTICAL EVERYDAY CHEMISTRY ....................... 1.98 DURANT - THE STORY OF PHILOSOPHY ................ . ..............1.69 MACY - THE STORY OF THE WORLD LITERATURE. . ......... .........1.98 MRACO POLO - THE TRAVELS OF ..................................... 1.59 WRIGHT - PRACTICAL BOOK OF OUTDOOR FLOWERS................. 1.98 CULVER & GRANT - THE BOOK OF SHIPS.............................. 1.98 CESCINSKY & HUNTER --ENGLISH & AMERICAN FURNITURE.......... 1.98 CHAUCER - CANTERBURY TALES - in Modern English by Nicolson.......1.89 Rockwell Kent Illustrations EMMA GOLDMAN-LIVNIG MY LIFE. .. . ...........................1.49 NUTTING - THE CLOCK BOOK .................-..................... 1.79 WELLS - THE OUTLINE. 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Just use stand. ard natural color film. Argus-at this sensational low price -makes all the costly, slow, clumsy methods obsolete. If you would be modern -use Argus ! Argus can fit in the palm of your hand -5incheslong,weighs only 14 ounces. Come in. Let us demonstrate this amazing new Argus camera. W E are well prepared to dem- onstrate this amazing new camera and to develop and en- large its films. Developing and enlarging is done in our own dark rooms, careful attention being given to each. This is a BUSINESS with us. STUDYING OR READING under poor light will injure your eyes. Let us help you preserve your eyesight by sending you a Sight Meter. By means of the "electric eye," this instrument measures the amount of light in a room as accurately as a thermometer measures heat. Recent surveys show that not one home in ten is lighted according to the minimum standards necessary to preserve eye- sight. Poor lighting is responsible to a large degree for the astounding prevalence of defective eyesight! Four out of ten col- lege students suffer the handicap of impaired vision. There are no substitutes for the services of an eyesight specialist, but good lighting helps to protect eyes, good and bad, young and old. It will help you to do better work, more easily and quickly. You can measure your lighting with a Sight Meter. That is the only way to know definitely whether or not your lighting is adequate. There is no charge of any kind for Sight Meter service. Call the Detroit Edison office. THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY 41' I