T 11E M ?7,TA N DtiTY t Oratorical Association Provides $20,000 Scholarship I,~~~~~ 9 - Fund Best Forum in Country HoosPo.True blood Outstanding Record Of Presenting Nation's Famed Speakers To Ann Arbor Dates Back To 1854 . (Editor's Note: The Daily is deeply indebted for source .material. to the 'Ensian, Michigan Alumnus, and the Michigan Alumnae Quarterly . evIew.)4 By'MORTON MINTZ and JAMES CONANT Three decades of cultural service by the University Oratorical Associa- tion to the students and townspeople of Ann Arbor have culminated in the creation of a $20,000 scholarship fund for students of speech, and in an- other outstanding entertainment season. Prof. Carl G. Brandt,,.secretary of the Association's faculty committee, announced Evelyn P. Kenesson, Grad., a candidate for a doctor',s degree, as the first recipient of the Thomas C. Trueblood Scholarship, named in honor of the Association's founder. Prof: .Brandt explained that the Association, a non-profit University organization, decided in its ehrly years to save any surpluses for a speech scholarship fund. The Board of Re- -- gents, he said, in 1916 accepted the' first installment but stipulate the scholarship would not be given until a $20,000 principal was accumulated, .1 which has just been accomplished. Though only one scholarship was" given this year, Prof. Brandt believes that two or three may be given annu- of $1l,400 had beeu aceinn plated by the Association irk the j)z'CviOUS three years, as a result of student apathy, ascribed, in part, to "the opening of the New Whitney The- atre." The Regents decided to make up the debt from University funds, in view of the fact that the SLA had,' at different times, contributed over $6,000 to various University enter- prises; not the sum that the Orator- ical Association is contrbuting to- day for scholarships, to be sure, but a sizeable sum for a student organi- zation. G Mt In Churches In the early days, the meeting places were local churches, the high ,chool, and in the fall of 1873. the U-Hall Auditorium. Not until 1913 was the 5,000-seat Hill Auditorium ready for use by the Oratorical Asso- ciation. The most vigorous period of the SLA was that before the Civil'War when lecturing was less of a business than a means of satisfying a widespread Desire for self-improvement.' The largest number of lectures were "lay sermons" on ethical and moral subjects. Other specific subjects of the time were Abolition, Reconstruc- tion, Women's Rights, Civil Service.; the Coast Survey, the Atlantic Cable, Arctic Exploration, Darwinism, and Shakespearian Actors. In its 58 years, the SLA paralleled the great growth of the University itself. It was almost inevitable that such men as Mark Twain, Thomas Nast, Oliver Wendell Holmes and Godkin (the foun- der of The Nation who would only accept expense money for his lectures here) would serve as a tre- mendous stimulus to the intellectu- al life of the University. As might be expected, the Univer- sity's central location, its reputation and the large number of students in attendance early in its history made it the favorite place for the most important deliverances of our greatest men, and earned it the ti- tle, "the best forum in the United States." Bryan Vs. McKinley Many statesmen, largely because of the SLA, chose Ann Arbor to de- clare themselves on questions of far- reaching importance. It was here that Congressmen William Jennings Bryan and William. McKinley deliv- ered opposing speeches, and it was here that Bryan and Grover Cleve- 'Stormy Petrel" ally in the future. Death Of SLA The Oratorical Association has brought distinguished men from all fields of learning to Ann Arbor since 1912. In that year, the Board of Re- gents gave the Association the au- thority to take over the duty of pre- senting lecture programs at the Uhi- versity. Before that time, the job had' bee\ handled by the Students' Lecture Association, which went out of existence in 1912. A glanee over the imposing list of speakers which the Oratorical Asso- ciation has, during its existence, brought to the University, will show what a powerful educational force, it has been, Personalities like Win- ston Churchill, present British Prime Minister, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jan Masaryk, former president of Czechoslovakia, Bertrand Russell, and Thomas Mann, to name only a few, have spoken here in recent years. A more extensive list, going fur- ther back in the Association's his- tory, would include William Jennings Bryan, William Howard Taft, Newton D. Baker, Wilson's Secretary of War, and Senator William E. Borah, in the field of politics and current affairs. Men like John Galsworthy, John Drinkwater, Emil Ludwig, Alfred Noyes and Mann have contributed their literary knowledge to the Asso- ciation's program. Explorers And Commentators Every type of work, from journal- ism to - science to exploration, has found a place in the Association's lec- ture calendar. Explorers like Nan- sen, Amundsen, and Byrd, scientists like Beebe and Chapman, and news experts such as H. V. Kaltenborn, Lowell Thomas, Dorothy Thompson and John B. Kennedy have spoken from the Association's rostrum. Winston Spencer Churchill, thie greatest world figure ever to have spoken under the auspices of the Oratorical Association, spoke to an audience of, over 3,000 on March 1, 1932., As quoted in The Daily for March 2, Churchill ridiculed rash schemes of disarmament and lashed out against communist Russia in his sec- ond talk before an Ann Arbor' audi- ence. He had appeared here before the Student Lecture Association on an American tour thirty years pre- viously. Although the Oatorical Association has been bringing statesmen like Churchill, literary figures such as Edna St. Vincent Millay, and ,dra- matic artists like Maurice Evans to Ann Arbor audiences. for only thirty years, it was preceded on campus by a flourishing organization which per- formed the same function until its death in 1912. 1 The Students' Lecture Association, known better in its time as the SLA, was founded in 1854, part of a move- "It would be a pity if the English speaking peoples were the only ones to disarm and then something went wrong with peace . . "-Win- ston Churchili, Ann Arbor, March 1, 1932. Imperial Court Orchestra of Vi- enna. Some of the speakers showed more ardor than logic. The editor of the Argus commented on March 6, 1868, after a talk by Anna E. Dickinson on "Idiots and Women": "Anna, with her bundle of 'no- tions,' would be a first-rate mis- sionary to root polygamy out of Utah. Even the Mormon Elders wouldn't want more than one wife with her ,ideas." Men like Carl Schurz and Edward Everett Hale came to Ann Arbor to discuss civil service reform. Thomas Nast, the cartoonist, came to Ann Arbor fresh from his important part in the exposure and prosecution of the Tweed Ring in New York City. Nast came here at the peak of his j;C1i:~LJ~Lif.N' (I uilit a :Uing It :;rw .itll of( letLiring in which he is bii(I to; have cleared $40,000. A seven-fold classification covered most of the lectures of the early, period: ethics, literature, travel, his- tory, politics and foreign affairs, hu- mor, and science. But the last two topics were sadly neglected; humorists, although re- ceived with great popularity on other lecture circuits, were, not brought to Ann Arbor by the SLA. with the not- able exception of Mark Twain, who was not too well received. And science had not yet fully established itself as a lecture topicy ; deep opposition to the theory of evolution and other new scientific ideas is believed to have charged the atmosphere with explosive po- tentialities. During the first 10 years of the SLA discussion of ethical or moral matters was emphasized; the type of "lay sermon" made famous by Emer- son was in vogue. The second dec- ade of the series found the accent more on literary subjects, and brought to Ann Arbor Mark Twain, and Bret Harte, as well as other lit- erary and theatrical figures of the time who are less well-known today, such as James E. Murdoch and Mrs. Mary F. Scott-Siddons. He Was "Palmed Off" An Ann Arborite of today would hardly speak of a noted lecturer on science-William Beebe, for exam- ple-as being "palmed off" on an unsuspecting community. But it was in such language that in irate Ann Arbor resident de- scribed the English astronomer Rich- ard A. Proctor, sixty years ago. Mr. Proctor had given one of .the few talks on science the Students' Lec- ture Association sponsored in its first decades, back in 1873-74, on "The Sun," and talked on "The Moon1 and Its Satellites" six years later. It Noted Dipl ill "t RUTH BRYAN OWEN# was this latter lecture which got the response. Inveighing. against this "arrant astronomical humbug," a letter to the Ann Arbor Daily Argus of Janu- ary 30, 1880, reads: "He was introduced to the audi- ence as a Professor! Professor of what? He is certainly not a pro- fessor of the Christian religion . . Thus Richard A. Proctor at one fell stroke wipes out of existence the book of Genesis-the inspired history of the patriarchs-cart loads of pious Christian literature." Students provided trouble of an- ather kind. Witness the- Argus as it reported on one of the Association's first lec- tures, that by Bayard Taylor, on March 9, 1854. Taylor was a traveler, and poet, and by conviction anti- temperance a;nd an t-uffk .ge.lHe drew well-an excited crowAd (trnedi out. But, as the editor of the "Argus" put it two weeks later-"We like to see the boys enjoy themselves, but they should temper their demon- strations to the occasion and place. Stamping, whistling, and playing on jews' harps are not ap- propriate preludes to a lecture, and especially in a church." Students' conduct was not neglec- ted by the lecturers, however; tem- perance was a frequent subject for discussion The greatest temperance advocate of his time, John B. Gough. spoke on his crusade against the evils of drink. Beer flowed freely in Ann Arbor then as now-too freely, maintained many of the visiting lecturers. Among these crusaders was Mrs. Susannah Evans, who spokeabefore the SLA on temperance in 1864. But Elihu B. Pond, the editor of the Ar- gus, was not impressed. "It was," he wrote on December 23," a fair school girl declamation, and that's all truth will permit us' to say. If Miss Susannah wishes to benefit young men, as her intro- duction leads us to suppose is her object, she had better return to the social circle and give private in- struction. Her lecture is too tame and commonplace to excite enthu- siasm or awake the conscience." Certainly the SLA will forever loom big in University history, for an organization which in its day brought such men here as Presi- dents McKinley, Cleveland and Wil- son, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mark Twain, Horace Mann and Horace Greely does not expire without leav- ing a deep mark.For not only did it attain a prominent position in stu- dent interests, it also played a large part in the gradual organization of the department of oratory and pub- lic speaking. THOMAS TRUEBLOOD. ment for adult education which was growing throughout the nation. This date is made all the more im- .ortant, for it marked a turning point in the popularity and meaning of lec- turing. Literature, politics, "readings," his- .ory, biography, foreign affairs, hu- mor and science-all of.:these at- tained new force throughthe medium of public speaking at the University. In common with other "lyceums," as these centers of education by the lecture method were known, the SLA regarded itself as an instru- ment for education, not as a profit- making corporation. It contacted prospective speakers directly, without the medium of a booking agency. Its resources were not great-Ann Arbor was a small town, and Michigan was a small Uni- versity-but it managed to schedule prominent speakers . from the very start. Not every lecturer, of course, was a nationwide authority-Univer- sity professors were often scheduled between visiting, speakers, without honorariums, Sixty Lecturers During the first 10 seasons of tb vigorous young SLA, more than 60 different lecturers delivered more than 100 lectures under its auspices. But then, as now, there were diffi- culties to be overcome, financial' troubles to be surmounted. Profes- sors, without pay, supplied much of the speaker material during the open- ing years of the series. Off to an auspicious start in the 'irst- two decades of its existence, the students' Lecture Association con- tinued to flourish. At its peak, over x,000 tickets for the series were sold. But then came its demise in 1912. Its career won it the reputation of being ,he best and highest-priced (in amound paid to speakers) lecture ser- .es in the nation. A headline in the "Michigan Alumnus" for June, 1912: "S.L.A. Writes 'Finis'." A story follows de- scribing the 1 death of the "oldest organization on the campus," which "has come to an honorable end after 58 years of service." A deficit li-paig of, I 4t American Humorist C3 .." :(:- .<. 9 .9. if "~ C I I MARK TWAIN land sounded the keynotes of their Presidential campaigns. During the 1900-01 season, ex- President Harrison declared his be- lief, '1 an address that attracted world-wide comment, that the "Con- stitution follows the flag," In this season, also, Britain's present Prime Minister, Winston Churchill M. P., spoke here. In the 1901 'Ensian, he was described as the "colorful soldier and war cor- respondent." Notable also that year was the appearance of the 4 r U' UNIV ERSITY OF MICHIGAN ORATORICAL Presents ASSOCIATION THURSDAY, NOV. 13 8:15 P.M. A ANNE. O'HARE McCORMICK A Ill The Merchants of Ann Arbor and The Michigan Daily present. II as I I First Women Foreign Correspondpnf to Receire Pulitzer Prize Distinguished Member of N.Y. Times Editorial Board , "MT R~l Vd lN NR PE" A fashion show fo eYes anyou )r you . . to be held at the MichiganTheatre, Thurs., Nov. 1 Admission Free I I l 1l1 l i I I