PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 4, 1937 PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, JULY 4, 1937 RackhamFund Gave Michigan Most For Year Speech Of Dr. Glenn Frank, Former President Of Wisconsin, Given Here DAILY OFFICi P'ubiicatlon to the 3'liettn to con, WWJvority. Copy received at the *M vmitHl 3:-30: 11:00 a. nSaturday. i V (Continued from Page 2) For 1936, University Got $5,338,533.75 Of Total To 15 Institutions The third annual accounting of the Horace H. and Mary A .Rackham Fund, made Saturday by the trustees to Probate Judge Thomas C. Murphy, Detroit, showed that in a total dis- bursement df $6,874,000.37 during 1936, the University of Michigan was the largest beneficiary, receiving $5,- 338,533.75 from the Rackham Fund during that year. The schedule, which filled three large volumes, showed educational appropriations of $6,656,000, chari- table donations of $72,196.58, ben- evolent grants of $67,632, and scien- tific appropriations of $12,000. Ad- ministration costs totaled $29,039.96. A total of 15 educational institu- tions benfited with the trustees re- porting gifts of $4,000,000 to the University and $1,333,533.75 to the Board of Regents. Under the scien- tific appropriations a $5,000 gift to the University was listed. Of the original trust totaling more than $12,000,000, a balance of $3,- 636,409.94 remains, according to the trustees of the fund, set up in the estate of the late Mr. Rackham, whose fortune was based on Ford Motor 'Stock received for drawing up the original patent papers. Troopers Dissolve Chick Stealing Firm" (Continued from Page 1) still in the 20 buriap bags they were carrying. They were booked at the Washtenaw County Jail at 5 p.m. Saturday. According to Sheriff Jacob B. An- dres, State Police and authorities of Washtenaw, Wayne, Monroe and Oakland counties have been on the lookout for the' past three months for a gang answering the description of the trio under arrest, in an at- ;empt to answer a series of chicken coops despoiled almost nightly during that period of time. Andres said that' Whitfield, the youngest of the three, had confessed to the thefts, and said the older men had paid him $3 a night to help them. Andres added that farmers who have suffered re- cent losses will be taken to Smith's chicken store in Detroit in an at-. tempt to identify some of the 600; chickens in stock as stolen property. Aside from the alleged chicken- theft, the three gentlemen are ap- parently otherwise unemployed, for' the space allotted to "occupation" on the jail registration cards here bore only one word-"thief." 3 SENTENCED TO JAIL IRONWOOD, July 3.-(P)-Justice of the Peace A. J. Getta today sen- tenced to 30 days imprisonment three, men who pleaded guilty to obstruct- ing the highway and interfering with, train minds to think in a vacuum by$ using classical materials only and bothering little about contemporary affairs on the assumption that there is time enough for that after college. The graduate school of the model university will differ widely from the mine-run of existing graduate schools, whose programs anddprocesses are still distressingly undergraduate in content and technique. To it will be admitted only young men and, young women who show aptness for and determination to become produc- tive scholars. Once admitted, they will find themselves in a master-ap- prentice relationship. They will not, to any material extent, be enrolled in classes or expected to take courses es- sentially informational in character. They will instead serve as secretaries, assistants, gatherers of data in the field, and collaborating investigators to the mature scholars of the perma- nent staff.It will be assumed that prospective scholars, with the capacity requisite for admission to the model university's graduate school, will be able, with the informal and inci- dental counsel of their older col- leagues, to ferret out and formulate the background-materials for their respective fields. The common body of staff and stu- dents will at all times be jointly en- gaged in the prosecution of well- planned vital researches which have scope and significance to contempo- rary society. To illustrate, I mean re- searches comparable to the three- year economic study by the Brook-. ings Institution, resulting in the four volumes on America's Capacity to Produce, America's Capacity to Con- sume, the Formation of Capital, and Income and Economic Progress. There was, perhaps, no single mind engaged on this project with the range and precision of Adam Smith's mind, but the group-produced result may well rank, for this phase of economic evo- lution, with that super scholar's "Wealth of Nations" in 1776. In this way there will come .out of the graduate school of the model uni- versity publications which effect syn- theses affording guidance to society in its special functions and its gen- eral policies. Such publications will not take the place of but will sup- plement the detailed papers published by individual scholars, but the im- pact of the model university upon the national life will be more through these major syntheses 'than, as so often now, through the intermittent forays of exhibitionist professors into press and politics. Although they will be absolved from responsibility for educating stu- dents in the sense the liberal college seeks to educate, the mature scholars of the model university's graduate school will have a vital relation to the college. From time to time, they will sit in with staff and students of the liberal college, report their latest findings in research, suggest to the teachers the possible implications. they see in these findings, get from the teachers a sense of the new ques- tions arising out of the attempts of the liberal educators to further in their students' minds the creation, comprehension, and control of a satis- fying social order, and give to the stu- dents of the college first-hand con- 'model university will, in general, dif- fer from existing professional schools in their greater emphasis upon broad and deep grounding in the philosophy, purpose, and problems of the profes- sion and their more limited concern with techniques which may be more soundly mastered in the profession it- self and which become quickly out- moded anyway. There is no royal recipe for financ- ing the model university.gAside from the importance of its being adequate- ly financed, two considerations are paramount-it must not be financed at the expense of its freedom and it must be so financed that its facilities are open to' the youth with capacity to meet the challenge of its high dis- cipline, regardless of his economic status. In one place, this may mean private endowment, in another, public upport; in one place, it may mean very low fees for everybody, in an- other, measurably high fees with ex- tensive provision of scholarships and subventions. This issue must be de- cided in terms of the location of the model university and the economic College Stars Break Records At Milwaukeel Allan Tolmich, Of Wayne, Defeats Towns; Four Top Vault Record MILWAUKEE, July 3.-(IP)-Black- thatched, wiry Allan Tolmich, versa- tile youngster from Detroit's Wayne University, whipped a world cham- pion, and came right back to set a meet record today to outshine a field of brilliant stars in the Golden Ju- bilee renewal of the Amateur Ath- letic Union's senior track and field championship meet. The grand old man of the middle distances, Glenn Cunningham, re- tained his 1,500 meters title with the help of a heartbreaking accident to little Archie San Romani; four far westerners surpassed the accepted world pole vault record, and six great Negro high jumpers dominated their field-but it was Tolmich who out- sparkled them all 'today in Mar- quette University's stadium. Tolmich it was who whipped Geor- gia's famous Forrest (Spec) Towns, world record-holder, Olympic cham- pion, defending titleholder and re- garded as unbeatable in the high hurdles, over the 110-meter route. And it was Tolmich who came back an hour later to skim over 200 meters of low hurdles in the meet record time of 23.3 seconds. All this was on top of a triumph in the junior 100-meters championship last night. The Detroit youth's triumph over Towns, who conquered him in the National Collegiate A.A. champion- ship meet at Berkeley, Cal., two weeks ago, was wholly earned. And Towns' defeat was so thorough that he was forced to accept third place behind the flying Tolmich and Ray Staley of Southern California. (Continued from Page 2) level or levels from which its stu- a year; Soil Conservation Service, and dents, in each instance, come. Bureau of Agricultural Engineering. The model university will house Chief of Library Service Division, its entire student body on or near $5,000 a year. its campus, and will so plan and ad- Specialists in Public and School minister its housing system that the Libraries, $3,800 a year; Office of units become genuine communities of intellectual interest and social pu'- pose. Its athletics will be endowed and, out of a, participation of the entire student body in wholesome sports for their own sake, more brilliantly com- petitive teams than we have yet known will emerge. And, finally, the model university, however secular its origin or affilia- tion, will foster among its students the ideals of a religion of maturity, which it will define as a religion that takes all of life for its field, a re- ligion that makes for the unification of man's purposes, so that an identity of valuation runs through his polit- ical, social, and economic as well as more literally labeled religious prac- tices, a religion that conserves the vitaltenergies of men's lives by bring- ing them to focus under the sov- ereignty of a supreme objective. I covet for the University of Mich-" igan a nearness of approach to the model university which I have all- too-inadequately suggested. Bank Deposits Moved To Remodeled Building The State Savings Bank of Ann Arbor has been moving its deposits sincerFriday under heavy guard to its newly remodeled quarters on the northeast corner of Main and Wash- ington streets. The bank since last December has been located in the First National Building while its own quarters were being remodeled. The complete mod- ernization of the building will be seen Tuesday when the bank opens for its first day of business at the new loca- tion . I I Education. For further information, pleaseR call at the Office 201, Mason Hall. UniversityeBureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational In- formation. All graduate students in the School of Music and those enrolled in the Graduate School with a major in music, are invited to attend a meeting in Hill Auditorium at 8:15 p.m., Wed- nesday evening, July 7. Members of the faculty of the School of Music are also invited to be present. En- trance through rear doors only. Earl V. Moore, Musical Director. Religious Education: The Counselor in Religious Education is available daily, except Saturdays and Sundays, at 11 to 12 a.m. and 2 to 3 p.m., or other hours by appointment, at the counseling room, Room 9, University Hall. Personal problems, community issues in religion, or questions of re- ligious education are welcomed. Excursion No. 3, Wednesday, July 7. The Ford Plant. Inspection of the various Ford industries at River Rouge. Round trip by special bus. Reservations in office of Summer Ses- sion, Room 1213 Angell Hall by Tues- day, July 6, 5 p.m. Private cars mak- ing trip report directly to Rotunda Building on Schaefer Road. There will be no excursion on Sat- urday. July 10. The visit to the Cran- brook School will be made later. Reception for Foreign Students and Members of Institute of Far Eastern eral subscriptions cannot bc de- I A W W Y W WULWT livered until those etitle to them j L BIL ~ A I call at The Daily offices. If you are not 'structive notice to all members of Ub. receiving your Michigan Daily, please !M. at the Aauixtant to the Preside present your University Treasurer's S receipt for the Summer Session at Studies: All foreign students in the Daily offices on Maynard St., to- Summer Session and both students gether with your full name and ad- and faculty of the Institute of Far dress. Eastern Studies are invited to attend The area in which The Michigan the Symposium on "Some Aspects of Modern China" to be presented by the Daily is delivered by carrier service Chinese students of the University. comprises all streets between Main under the direction of Prof. Y. Z. St., east to the city limits. In case Chang in the Ballroom of the League, you are living outside of this zone, Wednesday,Jimmediatey followrin t either west of Main St., or outside 10 ''co ti me iaely folow ng th of Ann Arbor, please call at the Daily Symposium, there will be an inform- nAropescaltthDiy al reception in the Concourseand the o-ffices and give an address within the adjoining rooms of the League. above zone at which your copy can J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor be delivered. In case this absolutely to Foreign Students, cannot be arranged, a mailing charge t Fo i nS d nsmust be paid at the Daily offices be- Students ,College of Literature, Sci- fore your Daily will be delivered. ence and the Arts: No course may be The Michigan Daily, Circula- elected for credit after the end of the tion Dept., J. C. HalL second week. Saturday, July 10, is therefore the last date on which new elections may be approved. The will- e w erry onors ingness of an indvidual instructor to Facultd admit a student later would not af- FyUdents feet the operation of this rule. IHelen Newberry Dormitory official- University Bureau of Appoint- ly opened its Summer Session social ments and Occupational Information: program with a tea given Friday Registration of all Summer Session afternoon in the dormitory. students will be held at 4:10 p.m. on The tea table was centered by a Wednesday, July 7, in Room 205 Ma- large boquet of delphinium flowers, son Hall, across the hall from the of- adwslgtdb alcnls h fice of the Bureau. It is requeste and as lighted by tall candles. The that all students wishing to register tea was attended by approximately 50 this hummer attend this meeting with women. Presiding at the table were Dr. Purdom. This is for new regis- Miss Druggin and Dorothy Briscoe. trants only. Piano music was furnished during Students who have been previously the entire afternoon's program. registered with the Bureau and who Among the guests who attended the are enrolled in the Summer Session tea were Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Mrs. are requested to call at tse office as Marvin L. Neihuss, and Mrs. Arthur soon as possible to leave schedules W. Bromage. and addresses. This applies to stu- dents who were in residence during SOCIAL 1936-37 as well as those who have *DANCING been here during previous years. Toe, tap, acrobatics Circulation Notice: Due to the fact Garden Studio. wuerth seveal t t mae t heirTheatre Bldg. Ph. 9695 that several students made out their2nd oor. Open eves. registration cards improperly, sev- Put Your Money On The Thoroughbred truck drivers in last stoning of five logging Marenisco. Wednesday's tact with men pioneering on the fron- trucks near tiers of knowledge. The professional schools of the' ki * WHITE Suits *WHITE Dresses * WHITE Coats * WHITE Trousers " WHITE Hats " WHITE Sweaters " WHITE Gloves ... Send All Your A THOROUGHBRED will carry more weight fur- ther and faster than an ordinary horse. All blooded race horses trace their descent from three Arabian Studs, Byerly Turk, Darly Arabian, and Godolphin Barb. Crossed with English mares these stallions produced horses vastly superior to FROM THESE THREE STALLIONS originated the superb racing strains of Eclipse, Herod and Matchem, known wherever men discuss fine horses. Strange to say, the Thoroughbreds thus developed proved far fleeter than the, horses by whom they were sired, and today it is common knowledge that a medium Thoroughbred will any before known. The strain proved so fine WHITE CLOTH ES to GOLDMAN that it was kept carefully intact and resulted in the fleet Thoroughbred. of Godolphin Barb is the most romantic. Dis- covered in 1728 hitched to a hackney cab on the streets of Paris, he was purchased by an English- man, Mr. Coke, and given by him as a present to a friend, Mr. Williams, who in turn presented the stallion to the Earl of Godolphin. In the Earl's stables the horse was to make famous the OF THESE THREE HORSES, perhaps, the history name of Godolphin. three noble stallions they received an unmatched heritage for courage, endurance, intelligence, and speed that would respond to breeding. OvER A PERIOD OF YEARS The Michigan Daily has proved its right to the title of Thoroughbred. Its Editorial policy is intelligent and courageous, its Display and Classified Advertising Service efficiently administered. Backed by readers ex- ceeding five thousand in number, it stands alone as an Advertising medium for those who would outrun the best of the Arabians. But from the oz~4al A 1 ' \tr! Guaranteed I. reach collegiate Ann Arbor. i I I