THE MICHIGAN DAILY r :a u . +s'; l i Guidance T alk Tells Qualities Of Law Student Analytical Mind And Keen Imagination Stressed By Dean Bates An analytical mind and a keen imagination were listed by Dean Henry M. Bates of'the Law School yesterday as two of the chief require- ments of a successful lawyer. The talk was the first of a series of voca- tional guidance lectures for students of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Although the profession of law is overcrowded at present and compe- tition is very strong, DeanBates said; the man with real ability sup- plemented by courage and ambition can succeed. "It is the cool, rea- sonable, open-minded man who makes a success at the bar," he de- clared. Leading law firms, he stated, prefer to pick. their young assistants from among students with high scho- lastic .averages, for they have found by experience that the best law stu- dents make the best lawyers. In connection with the require- ment for an analytical, mind in the profession, Dean Bates offered the il- lustration of a client who wished to draw up a will. "Not one time in 20 will your client have a very clear idea of what he wants to do with his money and property," he said. Speaking of the ethics of the legal profession, Dean Bates expressed his belief that in spite of a large number of so-called "shysters" of which the bar is at present trying to purge itself, there is every opportunity for a man of high integrity and charac- ter, who can be trusted not only by his clients but by other lawyers as well. "'It is not necessary for a man entering law to sacrifice any of his principles," he said. While many of the old types of legal work are dying, the dean ad- nitted, he pointed out that a world of new opportunities for good law- yers was being created by the new advances of science, as new methods of transportation and communica- tion which create new problems in interhuman relationships. Moreover, Dean Bates said, the legal profession like the medical is turning more and tmore today to preventive work. The next lecture in the series will Ve given at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in .doom 1025 Angell Hall by Prof. Rus- sell W. Bunting of the School of Den- tistry, on dentistry as a profession. ; Mid-West Governors At Parley In New York f X b4 'h 4 ~ l 1 i Speaker States Pro English Modes - e .EnI Affected Goethe I Wagner's Work Is Similar Tempering the perennialc To Bismarck's In Its of the typical freshman ist difficult problem faced bye Effect, Hohlfeld Says counselors in the engineering Prof. Arthur D. Moore, head The great influence of English of the college, said yesterd manners and customs upon Goethe interview. as evidenced by the closing scenes of The counseling plan nowi bis "Faust" was emphasized yester- tion in the engineering colle day by Prof. Alexander R. Hohlfeld some 25 years ago by Dean- of the ,University of Wisconsin in a Mortimer E. Cooley, was des( regular University lecture in the Prof. Erich A. Walter, head Natural Science Auditorium. demic counseling in the litec It was Goethe's contention, Pro- lege, as the oldest and moE fessor Hohlfeld said, that the Ger-- developed facility for schola: mans could learn much from the ance in the University. peace-loving English whose well or- To Reach JIdividua dered, complete lives were quite an- "Our system," Professor Mc tithetical to the distraught Germany "is an attempt to reach the ii of Goethe's day. and thus mitigate one of tY Assist Each Other difficulties in a large univec Goethe maintained further in the tin educational institution o final scenes of "Faust," the speaker gan's proportions there are ne went on, that the time for national many problems of adjustm literature was over, that conditions fronting the entering freshm were ripe for an internationalism of if not solved are liable to effec culture, that the nations should as- hindrances throughout the rE sist each other so that the culture of his college career. "It and natural endowments of each our office then," Professor Mc peoples would be brought to their "to make the individual feE greatest development. part of the campus just as Giving some literary interpreta- possible." tions of Richard Wagner, before a He explained that the packed auditorium on Monday night, counseling system has two n v sI0ns the as;embily and the men- Iable to insure individual handling of -Associated Press Photo The chief executives of three Mid-Western states attended a confer- ence of governors of. six states at the New York City home of Gov. Herbert H. Lehman of New York, to discuss relief problems their states have in common. Seated, left to right: Governors Henry Horner, Illinois; Lehman, and Charles F. Hurley, Massachusetts. Standing, left to right: Governors Philip F. LaFollette, Wisconsin; Elmer A. Benson, Minnesota; and Robert E. Quinn, Rhode Island. JournalismDepartment Plans Picture Institute For Reporters tors. The assembly, he said, is a weekly one-hour meeting of the whole freshman class at which time differ- ent professors of the engineering col- lege lecture on topics related to ori- entation, such as how to study, the relation of extra-curricular activities to later attainment and some aspects of different engineering fields. Others Speak "In addition to talks by engineering professors we annually issue an invi- tation to other men connected with the university," Professor Moore said, "as for example President Ruthven, Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the political science department, and T. Hawley lapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association, who are asked to lecture on their respective fields. "It is curious to note that the amount of time needed to call the meeting to order keeps increasing each week," Professor Moore observed, "as the freshmen become better acquainted. Perhaps this in itself is sufficient testimony to the efficiency of the assembly." Students' Reports "The mentor division," he ex- plained, "provides the actual contact between advisor and advisee. Under each mentor there is a group of 15 or 20 freshmen. It is the office of the mentor to do the actual advising - academic as well as general, and he is entirely responsible for those in- dividuals of his group. "We now have the system so integrated," Pro- fessor Moore went on, "that each mentor receives every six weeks a complete report from all the instruc- tors on the progress of his students. These reports contain not only the grades, but also a list of the special deficiencies of the student in the subject-ie. preparatory school train- ing, class absences, insufficient home- work etc.-so that the mentor has concrete evidence to present in his conference with the student. "By use of this plan we are also Arthur D. Moore Explains eerma( College Mentor System delinquent cases," he added. "The first Monday after examination week the home list is brought to me and I then interview each individual and make recommendations accordingly to the committee on delinquent stu- dents. Following this careful proced- ktre we usually find it necessary to dismiss less than a half-dozen stu- Glents per semester." When queried on the most com- mon difficulties found among the {freshmen, Professor Moore said that lack of ability, inadequate prepara- tion before entering college and poor work habits were responsible for most of the academic problems. "Then too," he said, "there is, of course, the problem of mental hy- giene. At any one time there are at least 10 per cent of the students on campus in need of some kind of psy- chiatric help." In conclusion Professor Moore ob- served that the neophytes on campus seem to withstand admirably the rav- ages of Cupid's shafts. It is the up- perclassmen, he said, who are most subject to amorous annoyances. 150 Take Tuberculin Tests During Week Approximately 150 students took the tuberculin test given last week at the Health Service, Dr. Margaret Bell of the Health Service said yes- terday. Dr. Bell said that 14 per cent of the women who tested negative three and four years ago tested positive last week. The number taking the test was better than average, she de- clared, although 234 letters were sent to sophomore, junior and senior women, urging them to take the test. "I am pleased with the result," she said, "but I am disappointed that more of the women did not respond." By EARL GILMAN An institute for practicing jour- nalists interested in news pictures, and a series of demonstrations on the selection of camera subjects and camera technique will be sponsored by the journalism department this spring, Prof. John L. Brumm, chair- man of the department, announced yesterday. Professor Brumm said the institute will be -given because the picture is becoming daily a more important1 factor in news presentation. He said that since the picture tabloid first made the public picture-conscious a few years ago the larger papers have demanded reporters who could get candid camera action shots equal to the printed word. "The test of a news picture is its relative superiority to the text it dis-1 places, judged by news values," Pro- fessor -Brumm declared. "A picture of an automobile wreck, for instance, may or may not have pictorial news value. If it is that of just another wreck, it merely clutters up the page. But if it exhibits something vividly unusual, such as a motor car lodged in the branches of a tree, or some other freakish accomplishment, then the picture may doubtlessprove to be more exciting than a description cov- ering the same space," he continued. "There is likely to be real im- provement in news pictures now that reporters are being taught to take action shots," Professor Brumm said, "and :many papers are establishing staff photography departments." The picture agencies, he said, have been so haphazard in the service they provide that editors have come to ex- pect little of them. Professor Hohlfeld termed the work of the great German composer as strikingly similar to that of Bis- marck, the statesman. Whereas Bis- marck accomplished the political unity of the Germanies, he said, Wagner tied together the cultural heritages, especially of South Ger- many. German Folk Lore In order to effect a cultural unity in Germany, the speaker continued, Wagner seized upon the German folk-lore and legends as the main themes of his drama and thus through his work he hoped to link together the traditions of the coun- try. Wagner brought a great innova-, tion to the opera, Professor Hohlfeld pointed out by himself writing the words for his music. By doing this he attempted to combine word, tone and motion. Much effort was spent on making the character of the mu- sic consonant with the words of the drama that accompanied it. The ethics of Wagner were pro- foundly affected by Schopenhauer, the speaker went on. Like the latter Wagner pictures life as con- stant suffering mitigated only by love, love as characterized in pity and compassion. This theme is especially exemplified in "The Flying Dutch- man" and in "Tannhauser," Profes- sor Hohlfeld said. In concluding Professor Hohlfeld illustrated the versatility of Wagner by terming his "Mastersingers" one of the greatest German comedies ever produced. moeo1h oe i o epn. Jewelry and Watch Repairing HALLER'S Jewelry State at Liberty 'II TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPHING Promptly and neatly done by experi- enced operators at moderate prices. O. D. 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