of 4 r tmm ex WEATHER Increasing cloudiness. ai tly swarmer today. bably showers tomorrow. 13Ut i a 4i ALUMNI REUNION EDITION III. No. 1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1927 PRICE FIVE CENTS L.U TO HOLD Io s II Cc SENIOR CLASS DA YPROGRAM IS PRESENTED' 3RADUATES TO C L O S E ACTIVITIES IN COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES MONDAY AT FERRY FIELD eremony On Campus Marks Begin- Speaker Of House Of Representatives ning Of Final Demonstration By Will Give Commenement Address Class Of 1927 At 83rd Annual Ceremony As the opening event of the annual -Marked by the address of Nicholas mmencement week-end program, Longworth, Speaker of the House of Representatives, the granting of hon- ree senior classes of the University orary degrees to several of the na-j Id their class day exercises this tion's outstanding citizens, and the I orning on the campus. The senior; procession of the faculty and more than ass of the College of Literature, 1800 members of the graduating class of 1927 in academic costumes, Michi- ience, and the Arts, the senior en- .gan's 83rd annual Commencement neers, and the seniors of the Law ceremonies will be held Monday morn- hool were the three classes which , ing on Ferry field.. served class day with the customary| A bugle call at 7:30 in the morning ograms. I will be the signal for the raising of I the flag on the campus, and soon The seniors of the Literary college,( after, at 7:45, the seniors will assem- lding their exercises at 10 o'clock in1 b le in their assigned places for the e open air near the Library, staged march down State street. They will e most pretentious program. Six leave the campus at 8 o'clock, and ferent speakers addressed the as- proceed in a long line down to his- mbly of black-robed graduates, cli- toric Ferry Field, where the crowd of axed by a speech by Dean John Ef- alumni and visitors will have gather- ger of the College of Literature, i ed to watch and listen at the closing ience, and the Arts. festivities of the year. The exercises Literary Class Celebrates are scheduled to begin at 9 o'clock. S. Tyler Watson, '27, served as chair- Tickets are being given out at the n of the occasion for the literary office of the Secretary, and no one will niors, and the first number on the be admitted to the Field without them. ogram was the president's address, In, case of rain, the weather sig- ven by Henry S. Maentz, '27. nals of the UnitegV States weather bu- Thomas V. Koykka, '27, was second reau will be hoisted below the Amer- the program with the class proph- ican flag on the campus and Ferry, y, and he was followed by Frederick! Field flagpoles, and the ceremonies Glover, Jr., '27, who presented the will be held in the Yost Filed house, ss 'history. The poem was given the procession being omitted. A stage Charles Lee, '27, and Robert F. has been prepared in the building as ice, '27, was the last student speak- usual, although so far it has never when he gave the class oration. been used. Dean Effinger then, gave a short The granting of the honorary de- Teh rahntin of th te hlniorr d Senior Women Hold LITTLE TO SPEAK Annual Breakfast SUNDAY MORNING!O gN?,0 XET9 Anti Present Play~imme-m i Tfl flFTIIflhI mn nPAI~IrnII ho the th dif se ma fin Sc I nia sai prc giV on ecy S. cla by Pri er I More than 190 senior women met in cap and gown to inaugurate to commencement activities at the an- nual senior breakfast and play held yesterday at the Union. Decorations of pink and white peonies, marigolds, palms and ferns gave an air of dig- nity to the tables which were lighted with tall white tapers. The important tradition surrounding the senior breakfast was that of blow- ing out the tapers signifying that the person doing this had been married during her college course, and the par- taking of the lemon, indicating an en- gagement during the four years in school. Those who blew out the can- dle were Margaret Sandburg How- bridge, Fern Townsend Crosby, Thel- ma Ellis Bell, Myra Finsterwald Drie- fus, and'Margaret Poor Fountain. Many Are Engaged Among those who ate the slices of lemon which were placed at conveni- ent intervals along the tables were: Alice Worden, Helen Bradley, Kather- ine Johnson, Ida May Kamp, Mabel Jones, Geraldin Aubrey, Genevieve Buell, Catherine Oakley, Martha Chamberlaine, Dorothy Spencer, Es- ther Bradley, Phyllis Gulick, Margaret Nichols, Elizabeth Hastings, Mary Ann MacRoberts, Virginia Whipple, Mary Grace Knoblock, Margaret Ward, Irma Wardman,. Neva Brannigan, Elaine Wassink, Buella Harger, Ruth Jane Kinder, Etruria Doster, Elizabeth Rus- sell, Catherine Scott, Lucille Fiegel, Mildred Birke, Phila Armstrong, Ger- trude Gulick, Dorothy Lauver, Mar- garet Parker, Phoebe Morse, . Ruth Wilke, Ethel Stevenson, and Leona Sherman. Play Presented Following the solemn ceremony of the breakfast which was under the di- rection of Virginia Kersey, the annual senior play was given. This year's. entertainment was a one-act play by Herman Suderman entitled "The Far Away Princess," directed by Minna Miller and embodying in a fanciful manner a delicate and rather pathetic theme. The fenior women in inter- preting this play showed unusual sym- pathy with the author in grasping the salient points in the interpretation of) a young man's idealism. The work of Ruth McCann as the Princess was es- pecially commendable.. The committee in charge of the play was headed by Ruth Hirschman and included: Alice Callender, costumes; Mary Allshouse, properties; and Eliza- beth Knapp, staging. The guests of honor at the breakfast and play were: Mrs. Allan S. Whitney, Mrs. Henry M. Bates, Mrs. Emil Lorch, Miss Beatrice Johnson, Miss Alice Lloyd, Miss Grace Richards, Mrs. Nor- ma Bicknell Mansfield and Mrs. H. F. Worley of Washington, D. C. ORGANRECITAL Palmer Christian, University organ- ist, will present an organ recital, one of a series which he has been giving throughout the year, at 4:15 o'clock Sunday afternoon in Hill auditorium. The general public, with te exception of small children, is invited to attend. PRES ENT LITTLE TO ADDRESS ALU NI TOMORROW OUTLINING UNIVERSITY'S PROGRESS OLD GRADUATES RETURN Members Of Classes Of '59 And Attend Exercises; Women Plan Open Houses kin '61 speeen Lo ie gra ua§ s, Le111111e n ' thing of the( history of the University. The senior class of the Law School also held its class daffy exercises at . 10:00 o'clock this morning, at the Law- yers' club. Fred L. Harlocker, '27L, presided, at 'the occasion and the first number on the program was an ad- diess by Arthur J. Adams. James E. -Duffy, Jr. '27,.then presented the class memorial and it was accepted by Prof. Paul E.. Leidy of the Law School.' The last address of the occasion was given by Dean Henry M. Bates of the Law School. .: Engineers Give Program The exercises of the seniors of the College of Engineering and Architec- ture were held on the senior benches in theiengineering quadrangle at 10:00 o'clock also. Herbert :Kuenzel, '27E, presided at the ceremonies, and two other students took part in the pro- gram when Hubert W. Gouldthorpe, '27E, presented: the class history and Ralph B. Ehlers, '27E, presented the class memorial. An address by Dean Mortimer E. Cooley and a speech by Prof. E. M. Bragg of the Engineering school, who has been mentor of the class through its career of four years in the. University, comprised the fac- ulty portion of the program. WOLVERINES MEET CINCINNATI TODAY In an event of the opening of the, Commencement week program, the University of Michigan baseball team, winner of third lace honors in the Big Ten Conference, will play the Uni- versity of Cincinnati nine at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon' on the Ferry field diamond. Coach Ray Fisher has also arrang- ed a baseball game for the crowd of returning alumni and Commencement week guests with the same team to-1 morrow afternoon. The second game of the series will begin at, 3:15 o'clock. Don Miller, who pitched in the ma- jor part of the season's play, will take up the task for the Wolverines against the Ohioans this afternoon. grees will he of particular interest, since up to tlfe time they are awarded, no announcement will be made as to their recipients. Last year such out- standing men as Sir Frederic Whyte, Henry Ford, and the Rev. Kirsopp Lake were .honored. The Rev. A. W. Stalker of the First, Methodist church will give the invoca- tion and benediction at the Com- mencement ceremonies. After the exercises, the actual di- plomas will be given out to the sen- iors at the offices of the various col- leges as announced in the printed program of Commencement week. BACCALAUREATE SERMON WILL BE. GIVEN ON SUNDAY President Clarence Cook Little,, sixth executive of the University, will give his second successive Baccalau- reate sermon before the graduating classes of all schools and colleges at 11 o'clock Sunday morning in , Hill auditorium. So far no text or sub- ject has been announced for the Pres- ident's address. Seniors have been requested to as- semble at the stations on the campus assigned for all exercises, at 10:30, and will march in columns of two in time to arrive on the terrace in front of the auditorium by 10:45. The fac- ulty, in academic dress, as will be the graduating students, will assemble at 10:30 in the dressing rooms of the auditorium, and will occupy seats on the stage. The Rev. T. L. Harris, assistant rector of St. Andrews Episcopal church, will give the invocation at the ceremony. Theodore Harrison, direc- tor of the University Glee club, will sing. RECEPTION TO BE GIVEN BY SENATE Tendering its annual reception of the Commencement week-end, the Lniversity Senate will entertain the members of the graduating class, their relatives and friends, and the alumni at 9 o'clock tomorrow night in Water-I mtan and Barbour gymnasiums. Danc-I ngg has been arranged to take place Photo by Spedding President Clarence Cook Little Baccalaureate speaker, who will give the address at the ceremonies at 11 o'clock Sunday morning in Hill audi- torium. The President will leave soon after commencement . for a trip to Europe. PLA YERS PRESENT EIGHT NEW PLAYS Eight plays, all of them new to Ann Arbor with one exception, have been announced by the Rockford players for the six weeks of their second season of summer plays under the auspices of the Summer Session and the Alumnae council of the Uni- versity. The plays will be given in Sarah Caswell Angell hall, above Barbour gymnasium, as they were last sum- mer and this spring. Thirty-six per- formances will be presented as against eighteen last summer, the company playing every evening during the week except Wednesday and Sunday, and on Saturday afternoon. Robert Henderson, '26, remains as director of the company, and -Amy Loomis is returning as leading lady. It is hoped that Reynolds Evans will also be here, but the illness of his father and mother make his return uncertain. As featured artist Elsie Herndon Kearns, for five years Wal- ter Hampden's leading lady, has been engaged.1 . The season will open the first day of the Summer Session on Monday, June 27, with a gala performance of George S. Kaufman's "The Butter and Egg Man," in which Gregory Kelly was recently starred and which has just been released for stock. Miss Kearns will appear as Fanny Lehman in this comedy-satire of the theatrical game, while Robert Henderson will have Mr. Kelly's part and Amy Loomis the Sylvia Field role of Jane Win- ton. Reservations for course tickets are now being made at the Alumnae coun- cil office in Alumni Memorial hall, and the sale 'will soon be transferred to the- State street bookstores. IV hUfH run bRiflif HELD BYFR1TY-SIX CLASSES More than. 2,000 alumni are ex- pected this year at the thirtieth an- nual Alumni convention, and reunions of 46 classes will be held. Registra- tion of the alumni began yesterday morning in the lobby of Angell hall and will continue through tomorrow. All former members of the Varsity band are asked to register at Morris hall. Among the first to register was Rev. Eben L. Little, '61, of Alpena, who is one of the oldest living grad- uates. Today the various classes will hold their respective reunions at their headquarters in the university build- ings. The literary alumni in Angell hall, the medical alumni in the Med- ical building, laws in the Law build- ing and the engineers in Angell hall. This afternoon the baseball game between the Varsity and the Univer- sity of Cincinnati will be played. Be- tween 4 and 6 o'clock today there will be open houses at Martha Cook building. Helen Newberry residence, Betsy Barbour House, Alumnae House, and Adelia Cheever House. All alumni and friends are invited to visit and inspect the buildings. Alumni Day Tomorrow On Alumni Day, tomorrow, the Annual Alumni Meeting will be held at 10:30 o'clock in Hill aduitorium. President Clarence Cook Little will give, the principal address on the "Progress of the University." This will be a short business meeting with the reports of the officers and the election of two members of the Board of Directors. At 12:15 o'clock Saturday an Alumni luncheon will be served in Barbour gymnasium complimentary by the University . to the visiting alumni. Tickets for the luncheon are given out at the time of registration. After the luncheon the exercises for turning the first spade of earth for the League building will be held on the site op- posite Hill auditorium. The cere- monies will consist of a short talk by I. K. Pond, architect, an announce- ment by Mrs. W. D. Henderson, and an addressby President Little. At 2 o'clock, the alumni will march by classes to Ferry field to the class stunt program. Ins case of rain the program will be held in Hill auditori- um. Social Affairs Planned An extensive program has been ar- ranged this year to entertain the visiting alumni. Besides the regular meetings there are various teas at the dormitories Saturday afternoon. In the evening the alumni will be' enter- tained by a concert on the campus by' ,the Varsity band. Later on the same evening the Senate reception in Bar- bour gymnasium, is open to the, alumni. Arrangements have been made for the visiting alumni to play golf for those who desire it. Hugh Cabot, dean of the Medical school, will hold a special clinic for the medical alumni. The reunion this year is expected, to be much larger than any of the previous, judging from the first day of registration. Dr. J. P. Stoddard, '59, the oldest living graduate is to be present and also G. W. Neihardt, '61, who is the only other living mem- ber of his class, besides Rev. Mr. Little. ILLINOIS-The University of Illi- nois granted 1515 diplomas at the an-1 nual commencement exercises. YALE-Plans for a Walter Camp Memorial Gateway to the Yale bowlI were announced in connection with Commencement exercises at Yale university.a BOARD OF REGENTS WILL . J HOLD MEETING TONIGHT I The annual meeting of the t Board of Regents of the Univer- sity will be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the Law building. At- this time the granting of de- grees, the budget, faculty pro- motions, and other matters of f importance will be brough up. SUMMER SESSION HAS PROSPEROUS OULOOK Enrollment Promises To Exceed That Of Last Year And Previous Years PLAN HEALTH INSTITUTES With registration plans complete for the Summer Session, Dean Ed- ward H. Kraus hopes to have an en- rollment exceeding that of last year, which totalled 3,022. "The prospects look very good," said Dean Kraus yes- terday, "and the correspondence has been encouraging." More than 40 faculty members will come from other institutions, several having been add- ed since the printed announcement was published. Prof. George M. Ehlers, of, the geology department, is already in Kentucky preparing for the summer study camp in geology and geography which opens Tuesday, and Prof. George R. LaRue is at the Douglas Lake biological station. Work there will begin on June 27. A recent ap- priation has made possible increased housing facilities at the latter camp. Sundwall' Heads Institute A new feature of this year's sum- mer work will be the six Public Health Institues, under the direction of Dr. John Sundwall. These will consist of groups of lectures and dis- cussions given each Friday and Sat- urday from July 1 to August 6. Topics covering a wide field of Public Health work will be taken up. The Institutes are being conducted for the benefit of actively employed social workers who would be unable to attend the regular s~ummer session work. Summer work in the Law school will begin Tuesday morning, and registration is being carried on to- day, tomorrow, and Monday from 9 to 12 o'clock in the morning and from 2 to 4 o'clock in the afternoon in the Law building. Registration Hours Announced Registration in the other schools and colleges has been arranged as follows: For the College of Literature, Science, and'the Arts, in the record- er's office, University hall, June 23 and 24, 9 to 12 a. n. and 2 to 4 p.m.;' June 25 and 27, 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 5 p. M. Thereafter 10 to 12 a. m. daily. For the Colleges of Engineering and Architecture, in West Engineering building, June 23, 24, 25 and 27, 8 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 5 p. m.. For the Medical school, in the Med- ical building, June 23, 24, 25 and 27, 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 4 p. m. For the College of Pharmacy, in the Chemistry and Pharmacy building, June 23, 24, 25 and 27, 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 5 p. m. For the School of Education, in- cluding hygiene and public health, physical education, public health nursing, and athletic coaching and administration, in Tappan hall, June 23, 24, 25 and 27, 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 4p.m. For the School of Business Admin- istration, in Tappan hall, June 23, 24, 25 and 27, 9 to 12 a. m. and to 4 p. M. For the Graduate school, in Angell hall, June 23, 24, 25 and 27, 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 4 p. m. EXTERIOR OF WOMEN'S LEAGUE BUILDING TO RESEMBLE UNION ,.' -i-c " i-t "'-, i ~ r . .,; 11" t~u . - w R}{ ep N ~ ___ I/ The New Women's League Building According to the plans furnished by Pond and Pond, architects, of Chicago, the general appearance of the exterior of the new Women's League building will be similar to that of the Michigan Union. It will be built of dull red brick, with an imposing entrance at the foot of a low tower. The main room will be dedicated to Ethel Fountain Hussey, the first president of the League. 'It will face the Mall. 'I