16 THE WEATHER Fair and warmer. li' ummrr 13*IfrbtIgan LzitP MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. X, No. 31 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 30,-1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS WOLVERINE BALL TEAM ENTRAINS FOR ORIEN ETERNAL CITY'S RUINS DESCRIBED BY WINTER IN ILLUSTRATED TALK LOCATION OF EARLIEST SITE OF SETTLEMENT FOUND ON PALATINE HILL NEW BUILDINGS HIDE OLD Development of Different Sections of Forum by Successive Rulers Is Traced Massive ruins, the only remnants of the grandeur of ancient Rome, give mute testimony to the solid construction and the wonderful sticking power of Roman cement, according to Prof John G. Winter of the Latin department of the University in his lecture yesterday afternoon on "Ancient Monuments in Modern Rome." Roman building construction first came into being as a military neces- sity. About the fourth century B. C, a wall as a protection against tribes to the North was completed entirely surrounding the city. Pro- fessor Winter showed slides of frag- ments of this wall which are still standing in various parts of Rome. The Aurelian wall, completed about 500 year later, was also described. The Palatine hill was probably the location of the earliest settlement and later became the site of the palaces of the rulers of the Roman empire. Views of the palaces re- stored to all their former glory gave a slight-idea of the enormous sums which must have been lavished on their construction. Before the final edifice of this group had been com- pleted a period of several hundred years must have elapsed as each emperor felt the urge to add to and elaborate the original structure. Of the stately buildings and beautiful gardens the slides showed remnants of a few crumbling walls and bases of columns scattered here and there. "So much has been heard of the Roman Forum that it is apt to prove rather disappointing on first sight," stated Professor Winter. "Little comprehension can be had of its ancient grandeur from the conglomerate mass of broken col- umns and ruined arches which greet the eye today. However, pic- tures of the Forum in a restored condition present a spectacle which is striking both in beauty and in contrasts of different periods of architecture." After showing views of the Forum from different angles, Pro- fessor Winter went'on to trace the development of various sections of the Forum by successive rulers. Dr. Sappington Believes Dormitories Furnish Greater Material Comforts EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the fifth of a series of interviews with prominent women on the campus concerning their views on the forth- coming new dormitories for wonen. The inter- views will appear from time to time during the remainder of the Summer Session. Presenting reasons both for and against the advisability of dormito- ries for women, Dr. Edith P. Sap- pington, assistant physician for women, stated as a preface to her remarks: "Dormitories have ad- vantages and disadvantages, con- sidered from the hygienic stand- point. "Domitories are decidedly good for social development by bringing people into contact with one an- other, but at the same time, living en masse puts one under a certain amount of nervous strain," Dr. Sap- pington observed. "I believe that all dormitories should have single rooms, in order that residents may be alone part of the time. "Sleeping in large groups is not apt to be as restful as in a single room. Even in a double room the sleeper is apt to be seriously dis= turbed," she added. "Another disadvantage is that girls are apt to waste time in too much socializing, such as gossip- ing, and it is then necessary to stay up much later at night in order to get work done." Concerning diet, Dr. Sappington said, "It is better for a girl to be on a fairly well balanced diet, such as supervised dormitories provide, than to be eating around in various cafes. On the other hand, feeding 'in the mass doesn't meet with every girl's requirements. Some need high calory diets, others low calory diets, while still othersneed diets with a high iron content; and al- though dormitories do their best, they cannot be expected to meet these needs entirely. Such girls would be better off eating where they could selectstheir, own menus. "Dormitories usually provide for material comfort better than do small boarding houses, where the boarders are restricted in bathing and laundry facilities," continued Dr. Sappington. "Dormitories foster a spirit which produces greater participation in intramural athletics than is obtain- able in scattered groups," she pointed out. "This] increase in the amount of exercise is a desirable factor." Turning to the social considea- tion, Dr. Sappington next observ- ed, "I've noticed that at Michigan, so far, living in a dormitory has been considered a privilege, shared alike by members of sororities and non-organization women." I GRAF ZE.PPELIN READY Test Proves New Motors Satisfac- tory; Eckener Sets Start for Next Thursday Morning TO BRING GRAND PIANO (By Associated Press) FRIEDRICHSHAFEN, July 30.- With all of the new motors func- tioning satisfactorily during a test flight of nearly 12 hours the giant airship Graf Zeppelin is ready for its next flight to America. Dr. Hugd Eckener, commander, has fixed Thursday morning for the start, it having been thought im- possible for paying passengers to arrive here before Wednesday night. Wednesday has been tent- atively set for the start. Already much of the freight for the Trans-Atlantic crossing is stowed away in the big airship. It includes a Rubens painting, a grand piano, several gorillas in- stead of the solitary one on the recent unsuccessful voyage, as well as a bust of the late Baron Von Huenefeld, owner and passenger of the Bremen, which flew to America last year. IPIANIST, O GA IS TO GIVE PROGRAM Mrs. MacGregor, Stanley Fletcher. Are To Be Featured Artists: Shumann Group Included CONCERT TO BE VARIED The sixth concert in the series of summer recitals presented by mem- bers of the faculty of the school of music will be given this evening at 8:15 o'clock in Hill auditorium. An interesting program of wide range and variety has been provided for the occasion. Mrs. Margaret MacGregor of the organ faculty, will render two groups of selections on the Skin- ner organ. Mrs. MacGregor, who has been a member of the faculty of the school of music for the past two years, has been heard on numerous other occasions. She is an accomplished artist and the numbers which she will play will provide her listeners witn a splen- did opportunity of hearing the re- sources of this exceptionally fine instrument. An especially interesting feature of the program will be the appear- ance of Stanley Fletcher, a young English boy, who came to this country a few years ago and settled in Springfield, Mass. Because of his exceptional pianistic ability, he was called to the attention of Guy Maier of the piano faculty, who was very much impressed with his musical resources. He has since1 become a student of Maier through the assistance of the Juilliard Mu- sical foundation. The program is as follows: First movement from Fifth Sym- phony ................... Widor Lento and Air from Orpheus .... ....... ................... G luck Prelude and Fugue in E minor ....Bach Mrs. MacGregor Scenes from Childhood.. Schumann The Little White Donkey.....Ibert At the Donnybrook Fair......Scott Mr. Fletcher In Springtime...........Kinder Reverie ........--Debussy-Christian MOHAMMEOANS RAID CHINESE VILLAGE; ILL 20 ~00INHABITANTS MISSIONARY REPORTS ATTACK IN FAMINE STRICKEN AREA OF NORTH SPARE WOMEN, CHILDREN Victims Trapped Like Rats in Town Full of Starving Refugees from Other Districts (By Associated Press) PEKING, July 29-Massacre by Mohammedans of 20,000 men and boys in Dangar City, Province of Ching Hai, was reported today by Findley Andrews, American mis- sionary, with details which read like pages torn from the worst chapters of Medieval persecution and regime. Andrews, who has just returned from a 3 months investigation of the famine areas in northern China for the China Inland Mission, as- sembled information for magistrat- es and other Chinese officials re- ports to the international famine relief commission that Mohamme- dans in the lapse of 2 hours anni- hilated the male inhabitants of the unhappy city, and then looted the homes. Men Weakened by Famine From what the missionary learn- ed the raiders attacked the moun- tain town mounted and afoot with shouts of "Kill the men. Kill every male from 17 to 70," they rushed the city gates in religious frenzy. Oniy a few women were killed, mostly those who attempted to shield the men. The Chinese men, weakened by famine conditions and privations could offer little resist- ance so far as Andrews could ascer- tain, every able bodied man was killed, while the aged, the very young, and the few who managed to hide in cellars escaped. A raid on Dangar occured dur- ing the winter and was described by Andrews as the most gruesome in the long history of Moslem out- breaks in China. It was not the most terrible in loss of life, how- ever, for a Kansu Moslem rebellion in 1877 is said to have cost 14,000,- 000 lives. By "Will of Allah" Andrews,.in reporting to the In- ternational Famine Relief said "Dangar presents a new type of problem. Therehare thousands of women there without husbands or brothers and who are in absolute' despair.' By his account the Mos- lems made such a butchery of the male inhabitants because "It was the will of Allah that if a Moslem killed 10 Chinese he will surely go to paradise." Ching Hai province was created last year out of the northwest part of'Kansu and is one of the famine areas Andrews did not visit per sonally. From reports of Chinese officials he supposed it happened some months ago. At the time of the Mohammedan swoop down on Dangar, the city was filled to overflowing with starving refugees, from other fam- ine districts. The victims were trapped like rats, when the attack broke early in the morning. WV"'l Michigan Team Michigan's great Conference championship baseball team en- trained from Ann Arbor last night enroute to Japan where the Wolverines will spend four weeks in baseball competition with college teams of the Orient, returning to the University on October 14. As a guest of the Meiji university of Tokio, which team was in action against the Fisher coached combination on Ferry Field in a series of two games during the past season, the baseball team will take advantage of one of the biggest athletic adventures which members of this University every engaged in. Captain Truskowski of the football team, who did most of the catching for the Varsity during the season, is the only regular who will not make the trip as his football duties necessitate his pres- pence in Ann Arbor before the re- Meiji University Kx_ t 721 U_~a SUMMER SPORTS NEAR CLO'SE OF__ACTIVITIES Finals In Tennis Still To Be Played; Boyd, Davis, Kortner Capture Swimming Events - FULGHUM TAKES HONORS Final round play in nearly all forms of intramural competition is either a thing of the past or is now under way. The team of.Jones and Sunderland has already been crowned summer school handball doubles champions. In the tennis singles the diminu- tive Rene Suazedde has reached the finals in the lower bracket and is awaiting the winner of the Chris- tiansen-Hicks match. in the doubles Christiansen and Hasseltine will meet Rosenthal and Shafron in the final round of play. The intramural swimming meet which was held in the mammoth intramural pool under the personal supervision of Director Paul R. Washke attracted much interest from campus natators and the competition was strong. Individual gold medals were awarded the win- ners of each of the five events. Individual high- point honors went to Fulghum who gained two first places, one in the 25-yard back stroke and one in the 75 yard medley event, and captured a third in the 25 yard breast stroke event. In the 50 yard free style Boyd captured top honors, negotiating the distance in :27.2. Davis in winning the breast stroke turned in the fast time of :16.1. Folghumi swam the back stroke number in :15.6 and turned the medley in 56.8. The winner of the diving, Kortner, scored 25 out of a possible 40. BASEBALL SCORES (By Associated Press) American League Chicago 8, Philadelphia 6. National League Boston 10, Pittsburgh 9. Brooklyn 10, Cincinnati 2. Chicago 12, Philadelphia 10. New York 11, St. Louis 2. turn of the baseball team in Oct- ober. Enroute to the Pacific coast the Wolverines will play 10 games, sail- ing from San Francisco on Aug. 14. The first stop will be at Aberdeen, S. Dak., where an American Legion team will be met Wesdnesday. Fri- day and Saturday of this week Fisher's men will play at Spokane, Wash. August 5 the Tacoma Tigers will be met while on Tuesday, August 6 there will be a doubleheader at Se- attle with the Commercial Colleg- ians and the champions of the Pacific fleet. On Wednesday and Thursday, August 7 and 8 there will be games at Everett and Bellingham and on August 9 and 10 at Vancouver. The final game before sailing is sched- uled on August 12. The Michigan party will arrive in San Francisco on Wednesday morning, August 14 and will sail at noon. Providing the boat is on time, a game will be played with the University of Hawaii on August 20. The arrival in Japan is set for August 29. Thirteen games will be played with the leading college teams of the Orient within a four-week per- iod. Considerable time will be spent in sightseeing. The return trip will start Sept. 27, the arrival in San Francisco being scheduled for Oct. 11. The following men will make the trip: Donald Corriden, Logansport, Ind.; Harvey Straub (captain-elect) Toledo, 0.; Ray Nebelung, Detroit; Harvey Straub (captain-elect), To ILedo, 0.; Ray Nebelung, Detroit; Louis Weintraub, Chicago; Harold Myron, Detroit; Harry Eastman Detroit; Anthony Centanni, New- ark, N. J.; Louis Kubicek, Chicago; Earnest McCoy, Detroit; Gerson Reichman, New York City; William McAfee, Chicago; Fred Asbeck, Cleveland, O.; Augustus Kiegler, Honesdale, Pa., and Richard Mon- tague, South Bend, Ind.The list in- clUdes four pitchers and one catch- rer in addition to infielders and out- fielders. Missourian Flyers Near 400 Hour Mark (By Associated Press ST. LOUIS, July 29.-With all rivals out of the running Dale (Red) Jackson and Forest O'Brine, pilots of the monoplane "St. Louis Robin" were nearing the 400 hour mark tonight in their record break- ing endurance flight. At 5:17 o'clock tonight the flyers had completed 394 hours aloft and had exceeded the record of the Angeleno by 148 hours, or more than six whole days. The joint earnings of the pair, accumulating at the rate of $116 an hour since they broke the record, amounted to $17,462. "Everything going fine," was the message sent down by - Jackson T Elieri huh { F I i 1 Novelty, Doll-Like Strangeness Make Marionette Performances Effective A Review by Howard F. Shout An imaginative and sympathetic audience combined with a rare efficiency backstage succeeded in making the performance of The Tatterman Marionettes last night in the Mendelssohn theater one of the most interesing enertainments that have been offered on the campus this summer There was, cf course, the difficul- ty of becoming accustomed to the wooden jerkiness of the actors, but with the passing of the first scene or two all awkwardness seemed to disappear and the novelty and strangeness of the performance was forgotten. "The King of the Golden River,' the first and longest part of the program, was undoubtedly the most engaging and delicately amusing of the evening. Especially was the dog with the "educated jappend- ages" a success. The spirit of the original tale was very well pre- served, and there was always pres- ent that subdued atmosphere of doll-like strangeness to add to the The choice of "The King of the Golden River" must have seemed to some on the campus as strange for an intelligent, adult audience. But it was rather the highest type of a compliment for it assumed from the beginning that those sit- ting "out front" were sufficiently, cultured to appreciate the whimsi- cal, unreal characer of the immor- tal fairy tale, and to accept it as a reminiscence of childhood dreems. As important as the efficient handling of the doll actors, was the matter of the dialogue and its synchronization with the moving scene. This, in general, was per- fect; although there was at times something of antagonism between the mature and cultured diction of the voice and the diminutive, child- like character of the actor. This is, very possibly, an unfortunate necessity. The Pickaninny Dance was the most amusing and effective of the shorter sketches although The Melon Thief had a great deal of subtle wit in the dialogue. The Clown can be mentioned only for Scientist Describes New 'Televox' Man; Robots Are Not Dangerous, He Claims Only a short time ago the Czech playwright, Karel Capek, produced a play which created what was lit-j tle short of a sensation. The title o fthe play was, "R. U. R." and it attempted to present a picture of the world after the ultimate triumphl of machinery. Man in this imag- inary world remained in the back- ground and played a rather unim- portant part, most of the work, being transacted by machine menI known as "Robots." Morgan W. Gibney who writes in the "Wheel" compares this auto- Westinghouse engineer, to the legendary great brass head that was reputed to answer any question1 that was put to it. He goes on to explain that the Great Brass Brain' in Washington, an appartus which mkes accurate forecasts of the movements of the tides, and even the automobile may be said to be modern "Robots" in the same sense as the "Televox" man. The name-, less dread with which the average man hears the name "Robot" pro- nounced may therefore be laid to the psychological effect of the Capek play rather than to any I