THE WEATHER Generally Fair with Possible Showers . 'ummi x i "k t rl i i~IaitiP MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED, PRESS VOL. X, No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 7, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS DR, DIXON DISCUSSES CONTROL Of DISEASE AT HEALTHINSTITUTEI CLINICS ARE NOW ORGANIZED TO GAIN CONFIDENCE OF PATIENTS PSYCHOLOGY IS EMPLOYED Clinic Administration Is Moulded About Nursing Staff; Medical Services Independent To obtain and hold the confi- dence of the patient was the chief point stressed by Dr. R. E. Dixon of the Detrot department of public health in his lecture yesterday af- ternoon in addressing the third Public Health institute, now in its third season, on "Modern Methods of Veneral Disease Control." The modern clinic has been or- ganized with this purpose in mind since it has been found by past experience that the administration of public health service is most valuable to the community when based on this principle. Acting upoW this theory the doc- tor's work has been limited to t;e purely medical portion of the serv- ice. All the routine work is placed entirely in the hands of a nursing staff. By this means the clinic or- ganzation is built around the nursing staff entirely independent of the doctor examining the patients. It has been found vitally important to obtain a nurse at the reception desk whose personality is able to convey friendliness to the client, and to win his confidence. While the patients are waiting in the reception room it has been found useful to use various meth- ods to acquaint the patients with the essential facts about public health. Ths has to be conducted in a rather careful manner in order to avoid arousing antagonism in the individuals' minds. Once he has lost his hostility toward the clinic, and has become acuainted with the true facts involved in his case, the application of the proper treatment will be comparatively simple. Petty Thefts Baffle Local Constabulary Eleven dollars was stolen from the Main St. poolroom, North Main street, Friday by 2 men who walked away with the money in a cigar box while the proprietor was sweeping off the sidewalk in front of the place. Police have obtained no further clews to the robbery of the drug store of William Parker, 1100 Broadway, which was broken into the night of July 2. Parker oper- ates a postoffice station in connec- tion with his store and also col- lects bills for the Detroit Edison company. The thieves took $40 from the Edison envelope and $92 from the postoffice money. The money wa locked in the safe. TEA TO BE GIVEN IN LEAGUE GARDEN The second of the Summer Ses- sion .teas will be given Wednesday July 10, from 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. The tea will be given in the garden oi the Women's League building anc is in honor of the Library Science faculty, including Miss Margaret Mann, Miss Gertrude Maginn, MisQ Hilda Evans, Mrs. Drury, Mr. F Goodrich, and Prof. C. E. Joeckel OPENING NET PLAY TO END TUESDAY First round play will be com- pleted by Tuesday in the single, and doubles competition of the in- tramural summer tennis tourna- ments it was announced by Intra- mural authorities. All entrants wh4 have as yet not taken part in the 'the initial round play will do si Tuesday under penalty of default With fifty-nine entrants listed it the quest for singles laurels and 1 teams entered in the doubles tour- ney it will be necessary for the in. +toavai thnritie to riidlv en GOLF COURSE SUIT ' J. RAMSEY MacDON ALD, LABORITES GOES BEFORE JURY PREMIER, GOE S TO WORK BY AIR The Universitys condmain. **%. suit again Alvin Pommerening, in- stituted for the purpose of obtain- ing title to 10.553 acres of land out South Main St., between this thor- oughfare and State St., which is desired as a part of the site for a University golf course, went to the special jury hearing the matter shortly after noon yesterday. The jury will determine whether there is necessity for taking the land and, if so, what is a fair and just compensation for it. The Uni- versty is offering $1,000 an acre for the land it desires while the re- spondent is asking $2,500 plus dam- ages. BOY PRODIGIESTAKE UNIVERSITY COURSESI Cyrus C. Sturgis and Clinton Harris, Ninth Graders, Study Subjects Under Lichty, Hodges AGES ARE ONLY 13 AND 14 In this age of prodigies it is in- teresting to note that the Universi- ty is not without its quota. Upon investigation it has been found that two boys, namely Cyrus C. Stur- gis, Jr., 719 Church street, and Clinton How Harris, 324 Jefferson, aged 13 and 14 years respectively, are enrolled in the University Sum- mer Session. Both are studying chemistry under Prof. David M. Lichty, while in addition Sturgis is taking a course from Prof. James H. Hodges. Both boys are former members of the University high school. Harris will be in the ninth grade and Stur- gis, who is the son of the director of the Simpson Memorial institute, also designates himself as an un- dergraduate of the same school. The boys have private labora- tories where they may pursue their experimental work without inter- ruption, in addition to carrying the regular classroom work. A special clause on the rules of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts which allows those not regularly matriculated to be admitted with the consent of the Dean enables the boys to study in the summer school. Poincare Is Backed By French Cabinet (By Associated Press) PARIS, July 7-The French cabi- net, meeting again today in spec- ial session, stood firmly upon Pre- mier Poincare's decision that rati- fication of the American and Brit- ish debt accords must be unquali- fied. Any reservations must be ex- pressed separately. The ministry I was unanimous in its attitude. i POLLOCK TO TALK I ON NEW GERMANY "The New Germany" will be the topic discussed by Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science de- partment at 5:00 o'clock Monday afternoon in Natural Science audi- torium. Professor Pollock, an authority on comparative party politics, was in Europe during the academic year of 1927-28, spending more than four months in Germany. While there at that time the last Reich- stag election was held, and also the Reichstag was dissolved. In speaking of the new political, social, and economic aspects of the new republic, Professor Pollock will attempt to clear up the popular misconception that Germany is still virtually under the guidance of the old monarchial cliques. To A PlII T LONG ILLNESS To Be Buried Tuesday at Arlington With Full Military Honors After Cathedral Service FILLED HIGH COMMANDS f Pictured above is J. Ramsey Mac- Donald, who was recently elected to the British premiership. Mac- Donald is known throughout the the British Empire as the Working{ Man's Idol, having been chosen for1 the office while he was running on the Labor party ticket. His chief: aim for his term of office is that ofj YOST TELLS HISTORY OF ATHLETICPRGA At a recent meeting of the Men'sf Educational club, Coach Fielding- H. Yost discussed the athletic pro-1 gram of the University and out- lined the growth of the athletic plant since 1921. He explained that in 1921 he setj out to build an athletic plant and a physical exercise program which! would equal or surpass that of any other university in America. "II began this job with the motto, 'Make Athletics for All a Reality.'" In order to do this it was neces- sary to establish a program of exercise to meet the needs of all students; to provide } adequate grounds, buildings, and other ath-' letic facilities; and to engage a competent and adequate staff of t - - alleviating the unemployment pro- blem. Premier MacDonald is seen above in his flying togs discussing the weather with a British Army offi- cer. He is intensely interested in the future of avation and employs it as a means of getting to number 10 Downing street, from his coun-! try home. RECORD AT 1I74 HOURS CLEVELAND FLYERS' BETTER FORT WORTH MARK BY NINETY MINUTES 75,000 WITNESS LANDING Electrical Storm Only Twelve Hours Before End of Flight Fails To Halt Airmen (By Associated Press) CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 7-Hold- ers of a new world's record for en- durance -flights of 174 hours and 59 seconds, Pilots Roy L. Mitchell and Byron K. Newcomb today rest- ed their wearied bodies after re- maining in the air from a week ago Friday afternoon until 12:39:50 this morning, when they brought their plane to earth at Cleveland Air- port. They exceeded-by 1 hour, 28 min- utes, and 58 seconds the old mark set recently in Fort Worth, Texas, by Reginald Robbins and James Kelley, who remained aloft 172 hours, 32 minutes and 1 second. Weariness brought the airmen to a landing and the riotous ac- claim of 75,000 persons, one of whom was killed, after a flight which became more hazardous as the days aloft cut down their phy- sical endurance. Survive Severe Storm The climax of the attempt came bait a few hours before it ended, and the two men said it nearly killed them. They survived a severe electrical storm which damaged their refueling plane in a forced landing and stopped all other air traffic to fight on for the record, attained 12 hours later. Exhausted, the airmen im- mediately were taken under guard to a hotel, to sleep throughout the day if they desire. They were spent. "We broke the record. That's enough. All we want now is sleep," Newcomb said. Resting with them was Ernest Basham, pilot of the refueling plane, who completed 24 contacts during the flight to replenish the supply of gasoline, oil and food. NE* SIZE CURRENCY, " (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, July 7-Rear Ad-I miral Walter Eberle, U. S. N., re- tired, one of the outstanding fig- rures in the development of the UAO Hfl present day navy, died today at the Washington Naval hospital, after Ea long illness. MONROE, Mich., July 7.-(AP.) He will be buried Tuesday at Ar- lington with full military honors, --Sail boat races, speedboat cn olwn evcsa h ahn- tests and the annual Detroit rivei I following services at the Washing- yachting association race to Put-! ton Episcopal cathedral. In-Bayn makeupthen pogramtof- He is survived by his widow, one he Monroe Yacht club today. A son, Lieut. Edward R. Eberle, and colorful ball at the club house also two grandchildren. The Admiral is being arranged for guests of the was 65 years old. club. At the time of his retirement last August Admiral Eberle was rank- Inasmuch as the regatta is in the ing officer of the service in sen- nature of a home-coming for all iority, and he had held the tem- yachtsmen who ever sailed into the porary rank of full admiral for old Monroe harbor, it is expected seven years, filling three of the na- the entry will be large. Sloops, vy's highest commands: command- schooners, yawls, Marconi rigged er in chief of a battle fleet, chief' catboats, gaff rigged catboats, club- of naval operations, and chairman owned and privately owned cats, of the executive committee of the class V boats, speedboats, fast navy's general board. launches, and large pleasure craft The ailment which caused his will throng the course. death, an acute ear infection, had coaches, instructors, and leaders. When the Monroe Yacht Club Since embarking on this program was located on the famous govern- of expansion eight years ago, the ment piers, built out over Lake ~rie1- erwasr.ue scene i'u many gay its source in an injury received ear- ly in his career, and resulting com- plications. department staff has been enlarged from eight full time teachers and one administrative officer, of which number but one was a faculty ranking instructor, to 34 full time instructors and 10 administrative officers, 27 of which asre now facul- ty ranking instructors. In place of the five intercollegiate sports in 1921, there are now 11, and the number of buildings then available, three, has been increased to seven In addition to all this, the new stadium, with a seating capacity increased 63,000 over the old one has been erected. S!Erie, it was the scene of many gayI and colorful regattas. The clubGre Pan Cut g was surrounded by an impenetrableGeenT marsh land and could only be Of Prison Sentences reached by a trolley line, and Mon-- (By Associated Press) roe Harbor lost its commercial sig- LANSING, July 6.-Gov. Fred W. NEW YORK, July 7--The new nificance. When the club house Green today asked Parole Commis- style of small currency which will was moved to its new location two sioner Arthur D. Wood to furnish be put into circulation next Wed- years ago, interest immediately him a list of all persons sentenced nesday was described tonight by picked up and those acquainted to life imprisonment in Michigan Ogden L. Mills, Under-secretary of with the early history of the insti- under the criminal code with a the Treasury in a talk over the tution began to live again old view of equalizing sentences involv- Columbian Broadcasting company scenes. ing violations of the liquor law to chain. Sail boat races were hell Satur- conform with the revision of the "With your cooperation and good day afternoon, while the regatta code as passed by the last legisla- will," he told his radio audience, ball was held in the club house. ture. "it is probably that a year from now old size currency bills will be ie ROWE DESCRIBES COURTESIES WHICH FOREIGN POWERS TENDERED FLO0ATING UIVERSITY UCeylon, according to Rowe. Re- of the force with which the gov- authorities of Germany, and classe J. P. Rowe of the geology depart" taining ones equanimity while ernment of Mussolini is exerting were conducted in the Universit ment, recently returned from the crossing this strait in a none too itself-the swiftness of justice, and of Berlin-just across the moa round-the-world cruise of the seaworthy ferry was a feat for the of apprehension of malfaiteurs. from the former Kaiser's palac Floating university, having told of ablest seafarer of the group. Recalling an incident occurring on The education administrators gav their near encounter with Chinese Again on the boat, they sailed a street car between Naples and'them a trip to Potsdam, and San river pirates, and reception by the across the Arabian sea, through Pompeii. One of the young men Souci. royal house of Siam spoke of the the Red sea and Suez canal. Com- of the party had unthinkingly put The almost legendary Heidelber opportunity extended to him by menting on the canal passage, his foot upon the seat opposite. with its students and drinkin one. of the American educated Rowe stated that the Suez canal Immediately the conductor called bouts was visited, followed b guides in Bangkok, of playing a is nothing more than a large scale his attention to the sign, written Mainz, and a trip down the Rhin round of golf on the king's private desert irrigation project as com- in Italian, forbidding such action. the most beautiful river in - th course. pared with the remarkable engin- Although the student at first re- world, to Cologne. From ther From Siam the group went to eering feat accomplished in the fused to pay, nothing would ap- they went to Paris, being show Calcutta, visiting the famous pago- construction of the Panama canal. pease the +justice-dealing official through the University of Par das and catching glimpses of the More than ten days was spent in but a fine of ten lire. Nine were buildings, including the Sorbonn funeral pyres of the Indians. Pass- Cairo and its environs. A trip up fined on the same charge, and and were permitted to hold class( ing across India, they went through the Nile took them to Luxor, the when one boy attempted to leave E at the University. Here too, edu Benares, and on to Delhi where Sphinx, pyramids, and King Tutan- the car without payment of his cation officials gave the studen the famous Gondi stopped the kahmens' tomb. fine, he was unceremoniously de- trips to Fontainebleau, Napolec i train for 15 minutes while he ad- Shortly after Easter the college tained by a policeman waiting at and Josephine's home, and Ve dressed the students and faculty. group arrived in Palestine, visiting the point where the car stopped. sailles. At Agra, they inspected one of Jerusalem, Nazareth, and the Dead He paid his fine. Through an artist in the part the most renowned architectural sea-where a number of the party After seeing Italy, the university 20 of the students were ente achievements in the world-the went in swimming. King Solo- ! students proceeded to VienneaI tained at tea at the home of Ro. Taj Mahal. The next leg of their mon's cave, the home of Free where they were received by Am- Bonheur, the famous painterk journey took them across the lava- Masonry, was also visited. bassador Washburn and Mrs. Wash- horses., formed plateau of the west coast of More than ten days was then burn, and the Minister of Educa- After visiting Geneva, the Un India to Bombay, and then to passed in cruising the Medi- tion of Austria. While in the city, versity sailed from Marseille Madras. terranean sea, calling at the va- all classes were held in the build- arriving in New York, June 8. " It seems that the English chan- rious ports of Turkey, Crete, Cyprus ings of the University of Vienna. a finishing school, the Floatir nel has a potential rival in the and Italy. In Berlin too, the party was university is unequalled," Rove a rarity, and in a short time there after will arouse as much curios- ity as our new bills will on Wed- s i nesday. y The under-secretary said the re- it duced size of the new money will e save the government about $1,500,- e 000 a year and that the bills will is last longer because they will not be folded as much as the present g currency. The bills will be one- g third smaller that the present ones. )y e, ZEPPELIN TO TAKE re FLIGHTOF GLOBE vnr is (By Associated Press) ie, LOS ANGELES, July 7.-Lieut. es Karl Lange, western representative U- of the Luft Hiffbau Zeppelin cor- ts poration of Germany announced n the recejpt of a cablegram today r- from Dr Hugo Eckener, com- mander of the Graf, Zeppelin, in- y, forming him that the dirigible r- would leave Germany on July 28 on sa a round-theworld cruise. of, All arrangements for the flight nlg of the famous trans-oceanic flying vessel have been completed, Lieu- tenant Lange said he was inform- ed. The proposed cruise is expected to require 28 days. A stop will be made here. No other details of the