L7,j mv r WARiMER itr tl DAY .A AND NIGHT SERVICE __ --- . No. 18 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY' 13, 1922 PRICE. ri ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY~ 13, 1922 PT~T(1'I~ WP ,r ,t DACE BID MEETS FLAT REFUS y iD KEADS TURN WRPROPOAL OF AC ECON FER ENCE E OPPORTUNITY TO MEET E'H F. It. JEWELL, UNION LEADER-. )RE HOOPER'S OFFER TRIKE ARBITRATION e Recall of Walkout Only Way lear to Resume Former Negotiations EXCHANGE CLUBS TO GATHER HERE Three hundred members of Michi- gan Exchange clubs will gather here on July 20, to celebrate the "Charter Night" of " the newly organized local branch of the club. Members of the Exchange clubs of Detroit, Jackson, Lansing, Monroe, Toledo and Adrian will attend the affair. The program will include golfing, an inspection iof the University, and a dinner in the evening, at which the formality of presenting the charter to the Ann Arbor club will take place. The Union will be headquarters for, the affair. SETTLEMEINT PLA-N I FOR A H IT MINE OWNERS GIVE FAVORABLE RESPONSE TO ARBITRATION. OFFER HARDING SAYS REPLY ASSURES ACCEPTANCE Union Continues Evasive Policy, Fail. ing to Indicate Stand .in- Matter IARVARD FALSE TO TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF TRADITION --SLONIMSKY (By W. Bernard Butler)' "Harvard is being false to 200 years of tradition," said Dr. H. Slonimsky last night in my interview with him on the question of "The Narrow- Minded and Prejudice of College Men.'" Dr. Slonimsky is an eminent, student of the Jewish belief and is' delivering a series of lectures on' the Prophetc Religion before members of the Summer session. "Harvard seeks to limit the Inum- ber of Jews entering tie university," continued Dr. Slonimsky, "by requir- ing them'to take certain psychological Says Country Is Beehive of Industry; All Classes of People Are Working CLAIMS BUSINESS MEN GIVE LITTLE HEED TO WAR DEBT hfcago, July 13.-A flat Trefusal to t with E. M. Jewell, head of the king shopmen, to discuss peace posals was the answer tonight of way executives to a proposal made B. W. Hooper, chairman of the Un- States railroad labor board. & a letter to Mr. Hooper, the execu- s declared the "issu'e raised is ot for consideration between the car- r' and the representatives of the anized crafts, on strike except ugh the further orderly processes >re the United State railroad labor State Objections sserting that the strike was a re- 1 to accept the. results of the ar- ation of the labor board, the let- declared that no conference con- ent upon the abdonment of the de- on of the board was "neither per- gable nor tolerable" because it .ld place the carriers participating 'eia in apparent co-operation with e on strike in , seeking to find .ns to subver; the decisio of the r board. ! hie letter conpluded, however, that irompt recall of the stiike orders id permit the. resumption of form- nethods of cbnference and permit cnsideration of an matters which esentatives o employees would to submit." Sheeler Rhead 'ease n Thid ?aculty Concert (By r. C. Trotter) . a well-balanced program which wed to great advantage their splen,- musical tlents, William Wheeler, [ of thevoic department, and Mrs. ge B. Rheadi, teacher of advanced o work, in the School of Music, the third ;faculty concert of the iner sessloh program last nighf !ill auditorum. s. Rhead opened her program with ante and variations, in F minor {aydn. Bginning with a simple ve, it dev loped into a'complexity ans, and tills, finally culminating forte cliax. . lk Songs from the Hebrides, sung Ur. Wheeiler, formed the second p of the iprogram. These songs e collected and arranged by Mar- ennedy ,Fraser,' who spent sev- ears inthe Hebrides learning 1 from the natives, They were or- lly sung 1i Gaelic, parts of which been retained in the refrains, and related to,'the Irish and Highland songs, in that respect. *caus of the great range of ex- sian afforde, by these songs, so irably rendered by Mr. Wheeler,< were easily the outstanding feat- of his program. - 'ilowing Mr Wheelers first groupi ngs were three sletions by Mrs. ad. Rachmaninoff's, Prelude, Ma >r, which she played .with a fine e for grauations in tomie, was fol- d by Etude, D fiat, b Liszt, a lant composition in vhich her ' nique reached its height. Com-t ly contrasted in tone, bui no less tically treated, was her list num- whose repeated melody aid vivid , WORK TAKES SHAPE ON NEW BUILDINGS tests or to have interviews with the dean. It is a sin!" The speaker went on to say that Harvard was acting - contrary to the moral principles on .which this country, its constitution, was built. War Bred Prejudige I asked him what was the reason of the underlying cause for this pre- judice which had grown .up in Har- yard and at other great institutions of learning throughout the UnitedC States, not only as evidenced,by ac- tion such as Harvard has taken but also by the high degree of Ku-Klux- Klan organization . that had taken place in their faculties. He relied that this narrow mindedness was the immediate reaction of the general hatred which the war has bred. This feeling, he said, is the reaction of the war. "It is said that the youth of these' universities should lose their ideal- ism, for if youth loses its idealism, -from where is our idealism to come?" the speaker added. He stresesd the idea that the uifrest, the prejudice and bigotry which is so dominant in the world today is the after- effect of war. "If war is to continue the lib- eral feelings and movements and in- stitutions will perish," he declared. '122 GRIDs REMAINS ELI89KILI Excavation Begun on Engineering Laboratories and Practice High School . START WORK ON INTERIOR FINISHING OF LIBRARY During the last few days the most marked progress in the Unversity's building program has been that ef- facted in the new engineering shops and laboratories building excavation. From the small hole for the basement of the building, the excavation has grown to a larger comparatively shal- low space. To accommodate the air ducts for the building the steam shovel is now digging out a deeper hole from the main excavation. In addition to the work of excavat- ing, concrete footings for the building are being poured., Although the work of excavating for the practice high school has not been started, that will commence as soon as the slight changes in the strue- tural '-plans of the building are com- pleted. At the present time, the exterior of, the Clements' Library bulding as 'as- sumed its final form. The progess which is being made in this structure+ is not so evident, for most of the work yet to be done is on the interior. The milled work is being finished in Grand Rapids plants and will. be .shipped here as soon as needed. The roof layers will arrive probably today to put on the gravel roof which will be fiished by the end -of this week. Pouring of the concrete floors is to be- gin within short time. / By the recent action of the city of Ann Arbor that section of East Uni- versity avenue over which the pao- posed Medical school building will eventually extend, Will be closed. ONE KILL INJURED9 A S FLYERH-NITS FRIGHT Kansas City, Mo., July 12.-One per- sorn is known to have been killed and 15 others injured in a wreck on the7 outskirts of Kansas City tonight, when1 the Pueblo flyer, No. 11, on the Mis-t souri Pacific railroad, struck a freightt train in a head-on collision.l BRITON AND AUSTRALIAN WIN EUROPEAN TENNIS TOURNAMENTr Wimbledon, July 12.-J. 0. Ander-1 son, of Australia, and Randolph Ly- cett, of Great Britain, today won the1 men's doubles tennis championship in the international grass court tourna-t ment here by defeating Gerald Patter- son and Pat O'Hara Wood, both ofI Australia, 3-6, 7-9, 6-14, 6-3, 11-9.x Dr. Burrett Elected Homoeop Head Dr. Claud A. Burrett, for inine years professor of surgery in the Homoeo- pathic school, has been elected presi- dent of the national Institute of Hom- oeopathy having its convention in Chi- cao this week. (By Associated Press) Washington, July 12.-Anthracite mine owners. today submitted a re- sponse to the government's offer of arbitration in the coal situation that President Harding was said to regard as a complete acceptance. Manwhile the miners' uniOn and, to a degree, the bituminous coal op- eratdrs continued 'to pursue a policy which high officials declared was in- tended to evade or delay an immedl- ate response, and which officials said was a means of disposition to reject the government settlement plan if public opinion would approve such a source.-t John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, and other officials of that organization called on Secretary Davis today and were understood to be endeavoring to induce the President to make the ar- bitration proposal apply to- all the partially unionized territories as well as the mining area shut down by the bituminous strike. So far as the willingness of anthracite operators to settle was concerned Mr. Lewis said, ''Arbitration in the anthracite fields would be considered by the mine workers along with the bituminous arbitration porposal and the general policy comittee meeting Saturday." Responses from the bituminous in- dustries, it was evident, would not be in the President's hands before Mon- day. , REHEARSLSSTARTED FORk UNION SPOTLIGHT ADDITIONAL STAFF MEMBERS NAMED; STUDENT 'WRITES NEW PLAY Clever vaudevilIV acts, medley songs, dancing and a skit are features of the summer Spotlight to be given Thurs- day night, July 27, in Hil auditoriui. Howard Donahue, ,24, has been ap- pointed to take charge of pulicity. Lawrence Favrot, '24, and Harold Hunt, '23, will plan the 1kogram. Ross Campbell, '23, is assistant to the general chairman.' While several of te acts have al- ready been secured, and are being re- harsed, there Is still opportunity for tryouts. It is desired that as much talent as possible here this summer be used. Anyone having ideas' or acts are asked to communicate with' Jack Briscoe, '24E, general chair- man, telephone 131. One "skit" which will be used is being written by a student and will be completed within a few days, so that rehearsals can be started on it. Several dancers and singers are prac- ticing and those in charge will soon be able to decide definitely on two or three acts. The acts already secured are of a high calibre and those added will have to be of a high standard even if it is necessary to put on a shorter program. Show Educational Film Today Scenes from Yellowstone National Park, together with films entitled "Across the Great Lakes" and "Home Making in Canada" will be shown in the series of educational motion pic- PETRO ONLY MEMBER ( YEAR'S TEAM TO I INELIGIBLE YOST OPTIMISTIC C NEXTYEAR'S PRO Vacant Line Positions Will est for Coaching Sta to Fill Coach Fielding lIT Yost st terday that there will be., member of the Varsity footb unable to play next fall be ineligibility. Charles Pet played the guard position in was also a member of the 1920 has been declared inel the school authorities Pk the most promising candiat t e places formerly occu Duke Dunne and Hugh Wils graduated in June. Baseing his claim on his personal observations obtained during his year's tour of the world, Prof. William H. Hobbs, head of the geology department of the University, in reply to the ques- tion, "Who won the war" replied "Ger- many." It was at the meeting of the Rotary club here yesterday noon that Profes- sor Hobbs gave= the reasons for this statement. German Trade Prospers "Outside of the United States," he 'declared "industry and the carrying trade have been gravitating into the hands of Germany, which is note sup- plied with a great merchant fleet con- structed since the armistice. Germany today is a beehive of industry with her plants working night and day and with contracts made on the most fav- orable terms piling up faster than they can be filled. Largely exempt from the labor troubles which have vexed hex, rivals, and with, the depreciated mark favoring etxernal as opposed to internal contracts the work goes on in Germany at a' phenomenal pace. Only recently this rush has been sonewhat halted because deliveries were bdkom- ing so long delayed as to divert con- tracts to the other countries, partic- ularly the United States, where indus-, tries are once more getting on their feet. Everybody Works "In German.y the capitalist, the shop- worker, and the farmer are all pros- pering. It is chiefly the ien of the middle class, particularly 'the salar- ied officials who are feeling the pinch due to the depreciation of currency. "There is undoubtedly profit to be deprived from trading with Germany,' but this profit is unfavorably affected by the depreciation of the mark, kept down in part, by the reparation penal- ties. It seems to matter little to t01 business man that France ad Bel- gium are entitled to the reparations, which can in any case only in part. indemnify them for their terrible sac- rifices made in defending themselves from the invader, or even that without them they may never recover. "The prime consideration seems to be that th'e reparations hurt business, and so France is now taunted as the militaristic nation of Europe which is stirrin up the hatred of Germany and wil bring about a future war of ,revenge-just as though that war of revenge were not already as certain a the rising.of the sun on the morrow." Dean Cooley in East Dean Mortimer E Cooley of the collpge of Engineering and Architec- ture has left the city for a several weeks' stay in the East. Monday he attended a committee meeting of the Society for the Promotion of Engi- neering Education in New York. To- morrow he will attend a conference of the procedure committee of the Fed- P-ntia tc A merion V inPino io 4, , a,'.oi - During the war, he continued, the sodiers were taught to hate the peo- ple against whom they were fighting. In drill, particularly in bayonet drill, the men were commanded to show hatred in the fierce contortions of facial expression. It is but a natural conclusion"based on a simple psycho- logical principle that when the war was over this' hatred should contin- ue. Hatred in the one concept of hating the enemy spread to other phases of the emotion and its ex- pression. - Bigotry Preeminent. Dr. Slonimsky took me further back from the present war intd social evo- lution and, our biological history. "Man is a gregarious animal," he said. "Such animals despise those who do not conform to tf2eir group. If he has a different religion, a aiffer- ent ethic, he is ostracised. "So it was with the Jew. He wasP washed ashore in the wave of immi- gration," continued Dr. Slonimsky., He was not accented, he was not as- similated.- He had Different views from.the group. We then talked of how the world was honeycombcd with strikes, wars,; discords prejud; 4a narrow-minded- ness and bigotry; irtdeed the wholel conditiqn seemed an exceedingly dis- mal outlook for the world. I asked Dr. Slonimsky to v:hat or to whom1 he looked for hope. "To the Ameri- can people - 'that old stock - the men such as you'see in the Michigan farmer and the Nebraska farmer, sturdy honest types," he r-eplied. "But even these are fast disapr earing," he added. The keynote of our conversation, the dominant tone of Dr. Slonimsky's convictions in last night's interview was that liberal institutions will per- ish if war is to continue, and that the unity of mankind is the essential fun- damental principle of the prophetic religion. PROF. CASE LEAVES ON RESEARCH TOUR Prof. E. C. Case, of the historical geology and paleontology department, will leave New "York, July 19, for Europe, it was learned yesterday. Professor Case has ,a year's leave of ab'sence and will spend that period in visiting Englaid, Europe, South Africa and Australia in an effort to find out the relation between the .rocks, of the permian age of geological time on the different continents. He desires to reconstruct the geo-. Line Is Problem These two guards and a 1 sition will be the hardest and his assistants, Little, to fill, for 'there remains' lit rial to choose from. Petro den and Swan were. regard most likely candidates for g with the ineligibility of coaches will hate to conti search, for more than tv guards %re necessary to a present day football. Trac and Garfield are' others whc velop and Coach Mather proi he has several men, from la freshman squad who - will fight for berths. Of these Voort, the big guard foin Lansing high school, looks Blahnick and Slaughter vouched for by the freshma Muirhead will again be a reg kle. Although light for this he more than makes up for and strength, and during mer he hopes to' take on wel of the above men will bes' take the other position and eapable substitites must 1 oped as well. SBackfield Miterial Plen 'here will be two sets of backfields in the Copferen to go in next fall. The m not only plentiful but the q high, as there are six vete: have l1l boen tried out a proven their ability in *ol with the best in the Confe quarterback there are three be hard to best. Ted Banks, a bad knee last fall, has hi good shape again and ther Uteritz and 'Knode. Knode at half last fall and Yost cide to let him play there a fall. Cappon and Kipke are th for the halfback positions., pare favorably with anything Ferry field since Maulbech. hindered during last season shoulder and 'went into t games with several rolls 01 wrapped around hini. Capp has played end, tackle, and always wanted to play in field and when he got a ( proved so good that Yost shift him back even though short of tackles. Dunleavy and Conley will fight it out substitute positions. At fullback Roby and Gu: probably alternate. Roby, not a favorite of Yost's, w when the others were hur proved one of the sensatio year . His ability to shift 'out holes in the line were graphical environment animals lived at that der the 11 in L {?