THE MVLICHJiGAN,DAILY t Discusses Presidential Ship And Route Of His Cruise. To Hawaii u Attainments Of Law Conference Third Year Of Meetings For International Law Professors Illustrates Methods Instructors In The Sessioi Give Lectures And Leas Seminar Discussion The purposes and accomplish ments of the Conference on Inter national Law now convening at th Law School were explained by Dr James Brown Scott, chairman, in a; interview yesterday.. Consisting of some 35 or 40 mer and women teachers of internationa law and international relations a various institutions in the Unite States, this year's meeting "is a con tinuation of a venture started thre years ago with a summer meetin here at the invitation of the Carne gie Endowment for Internationa Peace," Dr. Scott stated. The topics being considered at th sesion this summer are Internationa Law, a study of the Classics in th subject, Before and After Grotius, A Interpretation of Treaties; the Law o Territorial Waters, the W r i t t er Sources of International Law, and International Arbitration.. But in ad dition to these topics, one of th purposes of the conference is an ex position of the methods of teachin international law by five experience professors of the subject from a many institutions. Study Instruction Methods By this means the teachers hav the opportunity to study the method of instruction not only in one insti tution, as the University of Michi gan, but in several institutions. Th course as it is presented is intended not only to teach international law but to illustrate teaching by exam ple. Each of ,the five instructor gives at least one public lecture on some phase of the subject allowing the students to compare their meth ods of presentation.. In these lectures the speakers, Dr Scott explains, are striving to give an address of a popular kind in the hop of reaching and instructing without tiring. Part of the instruction of the conference lies in the example pro- vided by the instructors in the prepa- ration and delivery of these talks. The method of instruction on the part of each, man is perhaps uncon- scious, but the students, themselves teachers, are able to weigh the meth- ods as representative of five profes- sors chosen from five'accredited in- stitutions. t3 d z- e r. n n Lt d - e g - e 11 e n )f n d l- e g d Ls e Is 0 -Asgoclated Press Photo The cruiser Houston has been specially fitted and equipped for President Roosevelt's'combination good will and holiday, cruise to Hawaii. Besides making a survey of the nation's outlying possessions, he will call on President Enrique Olaya Herrera at Cartagena, Columbia, and plans to go ashore several times at Panama. After his Hawaiian visit, Mr. Roosevelt will return to the west coast for an overland trip by rail back' to the capital. He is expected to visit the Booneville project on the Columbia river Wlear Po tlanid, Ore. Yanis Regain Lead; Defeat' Detroit 4 To 2 Machine Guns Guard San Francisco Buildings Also Give Seminars In addition to the lectures, each of the instructors in the five-week tern offers two seminars to the entire group of visiting teachers. Each in- structor, in these seminars, states thE nature of the question in relation tC his observation of allied subjects. The seminars are open to discussion of all the members of the group.Here too is an example of five different types of seminar or round-table dis- cussion. Each instructor differs ir his way of teaching and the gdests, coming from different colleges anc universities, also vary, with the re- sult that it is a forum, not only of different views of the subject under discussion, but of various methods of conducting such a discussion. "Three years ago, the summer con- ference was an experiment," Dr. Scott said. "Last year' it was a going con- cern, and this year it is permanently established here. In the opinion of the men and women attending this summer the conference is of great value." "Most Beautiful Building" The classroom for the conference is in Hutchins Hall, described by Dr. Scott as the latest link in the Univer- sity and the most beautiful university building in the world. The visiting guests have full advantage of the University, access to the General Li- -brary with the privilege of drawing books and the same privilege in the Legal Research Library. Dr. Scott himself is very well known in the field of international law. Ac- cording to Dr. Lewis C. Cassidy, a stu- dent at the conference from the Uni- versity of Washington and possessor of the'J.D. degree from Harvard Law School, Dr. Scott has been awarded five honorary degrees; from the uni- versities of Michigan, Paris, Cam- bridge, Salamanca, and San Marco- the oldest university in the western hemisphere. He has been a represen- tative of the United States at all her conferences from the second Hague Conference to the Pan-American Conference in Havana in 1929. Dr. Scott is secretary and a trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for In- ternational Peace, president of the American Society of International Law, and past president of the Insti- tute of Law - the only American ever to achieve this distinction. He is a commander of the French Legion of Honor, was Major in Judge-Advocate' in the World War, and served in the Spanish-American War first in the second division of the California Vol- uinteers and later in the i eventrA~,-fa~ Babe Ruth Clouts 700th e Home Run To Give New N York Winning Margin s (Continued from Page 1) n A baffling change of pace mixed g with a sizzling fast ball kept the - Tigers guessing all afternoon, and only Hank Greenberg was able to con- nect successfully. Greenberg hit the offerings of the e Yankee ace for two hits, both for t extra bases. His first, a double in the e second inning, failed to contribute tc the scoring, and he was left stranded _ on third after Cochrane had singlec but Owen and Bridges both failed tc advance them. In the eighth, however, after Billy Rogell had - been safe on a fielder's choice which forced Gehringer at second when the Fowlerville Flash came through with his lone hit of the day, Greenberg hit one of Ruff- ing's offerings off the centerfield wall f and reached third standing up, to score Rogell. The Tigers put over their first run in the fourth after Jo Jo White had walked and had gone to third on a double by Goslin to score on an out- field fly by Gehringer. Although Ruffing allowed but six hits, he was in frequent trouble, and found himself with a 3 and two count on the batter many times in the . early innings. He walked four men and fanned three. Bridges started out strong, but Ruth's homer in the third evidently unnerved him, for the Yankees began to get at his offerings frequently, and even his control failed to func- tion ,for he walked four, all in the late innings. He struck out eight. The Tigers' big trouble was failure to come through in the pinches, eight finding themselves stranded on the basepaths, and all were ready to score. With Greenberg on third following his triple in the ninth Manager Coch- rane became irked by a decision of Umpire Donnelly's which retired the Tiger leader on strikes and ended a potential rally. Intermittent showers following the fourth inning failed to mar the play. The two teams will meet tomorrow for the third in the crucial four- game series. Manager Cochrane has nominated Victor Sorrell to go against the Yankees, and Vernon Gomez will attempt to retain first place for Rup- pert's Riflemen. The box score: NEW YORK Prize-Fighter Leaves Wife To Enter Movies Astor Widow, Fiermonte Separate After A Brief Marriage Career NEW YORK, July 12. - John Ja- cob Astor's middle-aged widow and the young Italian welterweight prize- fighter she married last December are going traveling -in different di- rections. Society and humbler circles, which buzzed with ° gossip when it was learned she was going alone to Paris, where the French divorce mills grind apart many an American marriage, nodded knowingly today when her husband, Enoz Fiermonte, former Flint, Mich., boxer, announced he was going to quit the fight racket to become a film actor in Hollywood. "You'll have to ask her," Fier- monteureplied laconically when asked whether his wife approved his con- templated Hollywood venture. "I'm on my way." It has been two weeks since the Adonis-like figure of the boxer, who is 26 years old and was married and divorced before he met his latest bride, has been seen on the sands of West Hampton, where Mrs. Fier- monte, 40. is staying. She has been silent about the pur- pose of her Paris voyage. Her first husband, Astor, died a he- ro's death when the Titanic sunk af- ter striking an iceberg in the Atlantic in 1912. Before he drowned, he saw her placed safely in a lifeboat. Renouncing the fortune he left her on condition that she remain single, Mrs. Astor in 1916 married William K. Dick, a childhood friend and a mere millionaire (Astor's estate was valued at $87,000,000). She divorced him last July 21 in Minden, Nev., two months before Fiermonte divorced his first wife in Reno. By EDWARD J.'NEIL (Associated Press Staff Writer) The relief of young Enzo Fiermonte in getting out of society and back into the prize fight business doesn't argue very well for a career that runs from the social halls of Southampton and Newport in the summer to Palm Beach in the winter and back again. Fiermonte is just 26 years old, and last November his marriage to the widow of John Jacob Astor, who died a hero on the sinking Titanic, created a tremendous sensation in what was practically the stratosphere of socie- ty. Enzo, a fair pugilist and a very handsome physical specimen, first met the former Mrs. Astor, who was then also' the former Mrs. William Dick, while teaching John Jacob As- tor, Jr., how to take care of himself with his fists if he ever found the need in rough company. One thing led to another, romance developed, and finally, while the for- mer Mrs. Astor was recovering in a New York hospital from a broken arm and shoulder, they were mar- ried. Fiermonte previously had di- vorced his wife in Italy. Life became a gay round of cock- tail parties, teas and social enter- tainments. Now Enzo is back in the fight business, and he looks tre- mendously relieved. His every ac- tion, and some of his words, indicate that if he never gets back in that squirrel cage again it will be soon enough. Prize fighting, by compari- son, is a pleasure. The New York State Athletic com- mission has decided that Enzo isn't fit to fight Maxie Rosenbloom for the 1 i g h t - heavyweight championship, which should make Enzo a prohibitive favorite to win the title. The com- mission, represented by Bill Brown, said the same thing about Max Baer and look what happened. Brown, for all the jibes that came his way afterward, was just about DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Vage 2) The following persons please 're- port to the Office of the Summer Ses- sion, 1213 Angell Hall, immediately: Leonore Hohl Rachel Uhvits Martin, Swen M. Z. Windham H. G. Barker J. D. Ferdman Lester Morey E. J. Walters S. Edward Marder Louise A. Haekler H. M. Pollard S. A. Wahid E. S. Breaver, Jr. L. H. Rosenberg- .J..B.San ord x.n ., t c l t I t i l 1' InA ENZO FIERMONTE 90 per cent right in his evaluation of Baer's condition, regardless of the outcome of the Carnera match. A well trained fighter with Baer's wal- lop would have stowed Carnera away in a round. But setting that matter aside, there is no reason why the commission shouldn't permit Fiermonte to fight Rosenbloom. -Associated Press Photo One of the several machine gun nests set up along San Francisco's strike-torn waterfront is shown here, ready for any emergency. Machine guns also were rushed to various downtown San Francisco buildings to prepare for the possibility of a general strike. Prof. Carver's Course In Flying Is Popular For Hot Summer Days By DONALD R. BIRD To the man who spends Sunday afternoon wishing he had a car and a swim, here is a welcome diversion. Out at the city airport on State Street every week Prof. A. C. Carver of the mathematics department is teaching students how to pilot airplanes. Prob- ably there are very few students who haven't at some time wanted to be able to run one of these new-fangled machines. Here's a chance. Both men and women who have signed up with Professor Carver find some time during the week to sneak out to the field via special taxi and fly for two or three hours. All but a few of the students are allowed to handle the controls, and some of them have already done a bit of solo fly- ing. Al Lee, son of Professor Lee, is the youngest pilot in Ann Arbor and has over two hours soloing to his credit now. Don Baldwin and Fred Hunt, local students, are spending a lot of1 time out there trying to master three< point landings and the rest of the art of keeping the neck whole. Where- T-o Got Morning 8:00 - Excursion No. 5 - The Gen-x eral Motors Proving Ground and La-E boratories at Milford. Visit to thet Weather Station. Meet on Angell HallI steps. Afternoon 2:00 - Michigan Theatre, "Privatef Scandal' 'with Phillip Holmes. 2:00-Majestic Theatre, "Spring- time for Henry" with Otto Kruger and Nancy Carrol.I 2:00 - Wuerth Theatre, two fea-r tures, "The Search for Beauty" withl Buster Crabbe and "Dark Hazard"c with Edward G. Robinson.a 4:00 - Same features at the three theatres. EveningV 7:00 -Same features at the three theatres._ 8:30 -"Both Your Houses" by the Michigan Repertory Players, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.j 9:00 -Social evening, Michigan Tpri Rii~n Bob Auburn, a summer session man, is in Pontiac now, practicing spot landings for the amateur division of the air meet to be held there tomor- row. He may be the first of a long line of future University representa- tives in the big air meets. This will be the acid test of Professor Carver's instruction, too. Let it be here recorded that the men do not hold forth exclusively at this game. Several faculty and city women go up every day, and some, so the pilots say, are better pupils than the men. Mrs. Laura Mae Brunton piloted her husband's ship the other day for the record of being the first Ann Arbor woman to fly solo here. Two other woman students are fight- ing for second honors - a thing their ancestors would gasp at, were they living now. It seems that the port is becoming something of a replacement of the old swimming hole on hot days. A trip through the clouds any day beats a swim all hollow, and a cool shower afterwards completes the perfect afternoon. Some days it's worth while to just sit around and listen to the stories the pilots tell. And at six-thirty every day the mail from the east is dropped off. Ann Arbor is one of the few smaller ports where the big airway planes land twice a day-from the east and west - without extra charge to the postal service. These pilots really have thrilling experiences to tell, and it's a good time to be around. Last week a trio of navy planes from Detroit dropped in on a cross- country trip to brush up on dirt land- ings. At the controls of the leader was John Nolan, graduated from Michigan this June. The others were navy men who are enrolled part-time in the University this summer. Some day Michigan may train the army air corps. Deaths from all causes in Georgia were reduced from 1,211.9 per 100,000 population in 1860 to 1,031.1 in 1933. DLAL7Z/I>n AkI i i for your BAS EMENT Luther Purdom Explains Work Of Job Bureau Vocational, Ed ational Guidance Large Part Of Function, Director Says To many, the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation exists only to get jobs for students. But this is only a part of the bureau's work, it's director T. Luther Purdom told, an audience at the four o'clock lecture series of the School of Education. The work of the guidance was de- scribed by Dr. Purdom as covering "a wide range of work, but may be divided into main phases: first, the so-called educational guidance, hav- ing to do with all types of informa- tion, both general and specific; sec- ond, the vocational guidance and per- sonal adjustment, dealing to a greater extent with the scientific side of -guidance and the relation of one's fitness to the various professions." Information which the office is called upon to furnish is upon every imag- inable situation, he said. The work in vocational guidance and personal adjustment is also com- plicated, Dr. Purdom stated. Tech- niques used are a certain amount of testing, frequent interviews, and coun- selling. He traced the growth in this department from the small beginning it had several years ago to the present time when several hundred individuals are carefully studied each year. Dr. 'Purdom described a case now pending as an example of the varied problems which the bureau must cope with. "A freshman entered the University with the idea of preparing for a certain profession. He was obliged to earn his way, and became ill. The Health Service found that it was impossible for him to carry so heavy a load, and advised him to carry a light educational load without any outside work. He was referred to the Bureau, and it is now con- sidering his case. That is only a typ- ical case, although perhaps a 'trifle more difficult to solve than most, Dr. Purdom said. J~ B. Safr uom said. - - - PRACTICAL LIGHTING In lighting your basement, utility is the first consideration. An adequate supply of light is essential for the laundry room, the fruit room, the furnace room, and the stairway. For ordinary conditions, the laundry room should have a ceiling fixture in the center of the room equipped with a 60 watt lamp, and two. other ceiling fixtures. The fixture over the ironing board or ironer, or under which other work is done, should have a 60 watt lamp. The fixture over the wash tubs and washing machine requires a 1 0 0 watt lamp for proper illumination. AB R Combs, cf ......5 1 Saltzgaver, 3b,lb 4 0 Ruth,if ........3 2 Byrd, if .......0 0 Gehrig, lb .....1 0 Rolfe,'ss .......2 0 Chapman, rf ...3 1 Dickey,. c......4 0 Crosetti, ss,3b . .3 0 Heffner, 2b .... 4 0 Ruffing, p ... .4 0 H' 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 2 0 TB PO 1 4 0 7 4 1 0 0 1 1 11 1 0 3 5 1 2 1 6 0 0 A 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Summer Sweet's A Nq i POUndI Package by 29c Another Summer Favorite Chocolate, 2 c- Fruit and Nuts.. II should be located in the fruit room, the boiler room, and at the foot of the stairway. In the basement, especially, recommen- , dations vary with conditions. For this reason we suggest that you call upon The Detroit Edison Company's Home Lighting Adviser who will test your lighting with the Sight Meter and will make recommen- dations for lighting your home properly. This is part of our service. Merely call the Detroit Edison office near you41 The- Ceiling fixtures with 60 watt lamps Totals ....33 4 9 13 27 6 0 DETROIT Fox, rf ... White, of. Goslin, if .. AB 5 ! .....2 4 1 Gehringer, 2b ..4 Rogell, ss......4 Greenberg, lb ..4 Cochrane, c ... .3 R 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 H 0 0 1 1 1 2 1 TB 0 0 2 1 1 5 1 PO 4 2 1 1 2 8 8 A 1 0 0 1 4 0 2 E 01 0 0 0l 0 0 0' Popular '2-lb Boxes IOc Cream Kisses Burnt Peanuts Butterscotch Pop Corn Lemon & Lime Drops Peanut Mallows JXF/"W31.,3LC V B FAII 1TY ' IN NN P I I 111 11 I I