TODAY'S FEATURES 8:15- C"radle Snatelers," at Sarah Caswell Angell Hall. ,1 h I #ummr.r Sir i4an 4ia1D MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VIII, No. 17. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1927 PRICE FIVE CENTS JONES RETAINS LEAD * NBRITISH OPEN BY TAKING BRILLIANT 72 DEFENDING CHAMPION IS SIX STROKES UNDER PAR FOR i FIRST 36 HOLES MEHLHORNELIMINATED Hodson, Of Tenby, Wales, Trails Bobby By Two Strokes; Joe Kirkwood Holds Third Place (By Associated Press) ST.BANDREWS, Scotland, July 14.- Bobby Jones played his second 'round of the British open golf championship -4n 72, one stroke under par, giving him a total for the two days of 140 and maintaining his lead in defense of the title he holds. He was a stroke over par for the first nine but clipped two strokes off coming home. Bobby found when he had completed his round he was leading the field by two strokes. B. Hodson of Tenby, Wales, returned a fine 70 today which coupled with his 72 yesterday gave him a 36-hole total of 142. Joe Kirkwood was in third place with 144, made up of two 72's. Six Strokes Under 1ar The champion faced the final 36 hole test tomorrow with an advan- tage of six strokes under par for the classic St. Andrews course. He was five under par with his record equal- ing 68 score of yesterday and added another today. Bobby's score of 140 for 36 holes compares with par 146 for two rounds. Bill Mehihorn was watching Bobby's score with intense interest for it was evident that Bobby's 36 hoje count would detemine the players to remain 'for the' final competition. When Bob-I by turned in a total of 140 for 36 holes, Bill was eliminated as he had taken 157 over the same route, more than 15 strokes behind. Putting Still Good Jones' game today was almost as spectacular as that of yesterday al- though he was more uncertain from the tee. He was pulling his drives today but he- had not misplaced his putting touch. The huge gallery about the famous 11th green, made the course ring with shouts whenhe dropped a long down hill putt of some 50 feet for a bridle "Long Jim" Barnes of New Rochelle N. Y., who scored 76 yesterday; and another 76 today for a total of 152, Larry Nabholtz of Sharon, Pa, taking 82 today for a total of 159 eliminated himself from further competition. Cyril Tolley played today in par 73, giving him a score fo the 36 holes of 150. STUDENTS VISIT ART INSTITUTE Twenty-five of the summer architec- tural students accompanied by mem- bers of the faculty went to Deroit recently, according to the report of Professor Lorch, head of the College of Architecture. Through the courtesy of the author- ities of the Art Museum of the New, Art Institute they were shown through tiat interesting and sump- tuous structure. The next objective was the McGraw house at Grosse Pointe, designed by Mr. Charles Platt. Here Mr. J. Philip McDonnel, Detroit architect on the building, explained the full-size and shop details as a preface to a thorough-going examina- tion of the premises. On the yray back most of the stu- dents visited- Belle Isle to see, among other things, the Scott Memorial Fountain. BASEBALL SCORES' (By Associated Press) American League Washington-Detroit. - No Game. Rain. Philadelphia-Chicago. -- No game. Rain. Cleveland, 4; New York, 1. St. Louis, 4; Boston, 2. National League Cincinnati, 8-8; New York, 6-3. Pittsburgh, 6; Brooklyn, 5. Philadelphia, 7; St. Louis, 3. Chicago. 6: Boston, 1. GALE WILL GIVE TALK ONT UESDA Y "Review and Origin of the Nation- alist Movement in China," with spe- cial reference to the interests and rights of treaty powers, will be the' topic upon which Essan M. Gale, prin- cipal officer of the Chinese Govern- ment Salt Administration, will lecture Tuesday at 5 o'clock in Natural Science auditorium. Mr. Gale is a member of the class of 1907 receiving his master of science degree in °1908. Since that time he has servedt12 years with the Chinese Government Salt Administration, which is an organ that touches the political affairs of that country very closely. He was a member of the American Legation in Peking from 1908-11; United States Consulate Gen- eral 1911-13; and a member of the Chinese Salt Review, 1914-22. With the background that Mr. Gale has, the lecture promises to be one of ex- ceedingly great interest, Dean Ed- ward H. Kraus, head of the Summer session stated. i i RIJCKFORD PLAYERS S TO PRESENT 'PIGS" "Cradle Snatchers" Will Be Shown For Last Time Tomorrow Afternoon; New Play Opens At Night , IS COMEDY OF FAMILY Marked changes in character will distinguish tomorrow's programs by the Rockford Players in their after- noon performance of "Cradle Snach- ers" and the evening program of "Pigs," John Golden's "barnyard com- edy." -- Robert Henderson and Amy Loomis especially will have to make extra or- dinary changes in character, as hob- ert Henderson plays the Spaniard in the afternoon performance of "Cradle Snatchers" and 18-year-old Junior At- kins in "Pigs" that evening; while Miss Loomis jumps even further from the elderly Ethel Drake in "Cradle Snatchers" to the ingenue lead of Mildred Hastings in "Pigs." Elsie Kearns To Play Grandmother Iatrons who have so admired the work of Elsie Herndon Kearns will r - , I 1 I , Ir I $8 COLLECTED FOR FRESH AIR CAMPERS TWELVE BOYS, FOUR LEADERS SELL TAGS ON CAMPUS TO RAISE BUDGET WILL REDUCE SIZE Total Amount Of Funds Iteceived For Year Shows $1,000 Contributed By The University Twelve bo4s and four leaders from the University Fresh Air Camp sold tags in the city yesterday in an ef- fort to raise the budget of the camp. $218.83 was taken in on the campus, this figure is $100 less than the total taken in last year. The total amount of funds received for the maintenance of the camp this year through donations was $1,000 from the University students and $3,500 from other sources, it was an- nounced. Various societies and clubs made large contributions in the fore Dart of the summer. DEAN CABOT REPORT1 ENTERING STUDENTrr ARE WELL ,[UCATEI 'URGES ADMISSION OF AS MANI FIRST YEAR MEN AS POSSIBLE FEARS LACK OF DOCTORS Shows Increase In Number Of Enter uing Medical Students Having De- grees Over That Of 1914 Medical students are rapidly set tling the question of entrance re quirements for themselves by obtain ing a broad edcation before seeking admission to the medical school of th University, says Dean Hugh Cabot, in an annual report of the medica school to the president of the univer sity. He also advocates, in the sam report, the admission of as many first year men as it is possible for tQe school to care for, because of the threat to too few physicians in years to come. In his discussion of entrance re- S 3 Yi NEWS AND LIBRARYCl lAN FLRS Reserviations for the fifth excur-l II sion of the Summer session should be made before 6 o'clock tonight so that transportation arrangements can be =" ::DESPITE BAD WEAT completed. This excursion will go 11PT A IT to the Detroit News building and the Detroit Public library and should in- FLYEiS LEAVE OAKLAND terest an especially large number of PORT AT TEN O'CLOCK HOP GHT 'HER AIR Wa LV1 LU ~ i edquirements, Dean Cabot went on to Wil Reduce Size show that in the freshman class of I was announced yesterday by 1914, 14 percent of the freshman calss Homer H. Grafton, manager of the held bachelor degrees, while in the camp, that dun to the lack of ade- 1926 class 44 per cent were college I quate funds this summer the camp graduates. 25 per cent of the 1926 would be forced to reduce the last class entered the college on combined section of boys to 75 instead of main- . courses. taing the usual section size of 100. 70 Per Cent Have Degrees At present there are 105 boys in the "It thus appears," says Dean Cabot, camp with 16 leaders. Ample time "that in the ,freshman class of 1926 and space is given to further the in- 70 per cent of the students either held struction of the boys along outdoor I bachelors' degrees or were working life and athletic lines. The camp is !,on the combined courses, this show- situated on a plot of 170 acres with ing an average of considerable over facilities for bathing, swimming and three years of college work prelimi- fishing, as the entire plot is nearly nary to entering the medical school. surrounded by the water of three Of the remaining 30 per cent, a con- lakes, however, the ground is high siderable proportion had spent morel and covered with heavy timber. When than the required twO years. This the boys reach the camp they are given suggests that no important hardship a thorough physical examination and wouldresult from the requirement of any physical defects can be taken care three years of college work for ad- of. They are placed under an abso-' m ion. V the contents of such a lutely controlled c nvironm'ent twenty- three yas' period were wisely] four hours a day. planned and adjusted to the particu- Two Cottages Donated lar capacity of the student, an edu- When questioned in regard to the; ctional quipmnent quite comparable I. TOMORROW Because of the unprecedented{ demand for seats for "Cradle Snatchers," there will be a mati- nee performance of that play to- morrow as well as Saturday at 3:30 o'clock. Seats for the mati- nee are 75 cents for the main floor and 50 cents for the bal- cony. have an unusual opportunity of see-! ing her in'the single character role she is assigned during the season when she appears as the grandmother in "Pigs." Paul Faust will take the part of Spencer, Junior's elder brother, which was played this spring by Rey- nolds Evans; Frances Horine will again appear as the mother, which1 is regarded as one of her finest char acterizations; and Charles Edgecombel will play Uncle Hector. Others in the cast will include Rob- ert Wetzel as the father; Helen Hughes as Lenore Hastings, the town flapper; and Samuel Bonnell in the double character of the veternary and Smith Hastings. Is Comedy Of Family Troubles "Pigs," by Anne Morrison and Pat- terson McNutt, is a life-like and rio- tously funny comedy of family trou- bles on the stage. The same events in our own house- hold would be tragic, but on the stage they are most plausible. But, every- one knows that stage happenings have a way of somehow coming out just right. After troubles and trials that are so real they are heart-rending, Junior Atkins manages to bring a . litter of sick pigs through an epidemic of chol- era and, raise enough money to pay off the family mortgage. His veteri- nary operations are all carried on in secret, with the aid of his equally youthful sweetheart, Mildred Cush- ing, and it is not until the final mo- ment, when all hope of saving the home has beep. given up that Junior! steps forward, cash in one hand and Mildred in the other, outlook for the camp, Mr. Grafton1 stated that it was a matter of time to' determine what sort of camp it wouldt be, but, with the facilities they have, now and the remarkable camp-site, hel predicted a steady growth for the pro- I ject. This year two cottages were do- c nated to the camp, Mr. Grafton an-l nounced., The camp is a welfare project ofi the Student Christian Association of the University and its policy is "to provide safe, wholesome, vigorous living for boys who are not financially1 able to attend a full pay camp." This2 is the seventh season the camp has been operated and each year shows an increase in 'tlie equipment and interest3 in the project. SIMPLICIT Y MARKS BURfAL OF DREW (L3y Associated Press)t PHILADELPHIA, July 14.-Interred with undramatic simplicity in ther presence of only three relatives, the ashes of John Drew, who died last week in San Francisco, rested tonight in the grave of his wife in Mt. Vernon cemetery here.1 Searing sunlight beat down ont grassy plots of the burial ground as a black limousine came to a halt with-{ in the gates of Mrs. Louis Devereaux,{ daughter of the great American actor, her husband, and Ethel Barrymore, niece of John Drew, emerged. Together they walked to a freshly dug opening that marked the grave of Mrs. Drew and while the two women stood with heads bowed Mr. Deve- reaux handed a small urn to an at- tendant in the excavation. F urweatherMan to that no'V represented by the degree of Bachelor of Science could be in- sisted upon. Tend Toward Older Graduates "It is quite clear that the tendency in medical education is in the direction of lengthening and broadening the pre medical requirement, though this ten- dency is bang considerably decried in some quarters as increasing the age at which men may enter practice. This criticism does not, however, seem to me to be a valid one, though there need be no hesitation in ad- mitting the fact. "It is quite certain that, among the changes which have taken place in the last generation in the medical pro- fession and the public, an outstand- ing one has been the increased will- ingness of the public to accept at its full value the services of younger' men. She day has almost passed when the public hesitates to accept a phy- sician as having satisfactory equip- ment until he has reached middle age. This means that it.is widely believed that the younger men are better equipped than their older colleagues because of the improvement of late in medical education. If this esti- miate of the tendency is sound;, it fol- lows that the public is expecting more of the recent graduate, and that he must, therefore, be in a position to deserve their confidence. Sound Judgment Necessary "Among the qualities necessary in a satisfactory practitioner is sound- ness of judgment, a quality which is rarely, if ever, inherent and it is com- monly the result of experience. It, therefore, follows that graduates in medicine can hardly be expected to have the maturity of judgment which the public expects if they are to be graduated at an age of less than twenty-six." PARIS.-Delegates to the American Legion convention in Paris in Septem- ber will have special stamps provided for them by the French authorities. NEW YORK.-A marked similarity exists between the brain of early man and the ape, in the opinion of Dr Frederick Tilney, professor of Neu- rology at Columbia University. students, says Cariton wells, head oYETRA ~LUOIL,~ ~ii~nvv~ I f YESTERDAY - the Rhetoric department, director of excursions. -WIRLESS OUT OF ODE The party will go to Detroit by in- W'RELES OUT F RDER terurban, leaving. at 8 a. in. from the Smiit' Forced To Ascend 3,500 Feet interurban station at Packard and In Attempt To Ride Over I State streets. The total expense of Heavy Fog I the trip will be about $2.50. Lunch - wil be served at the General Motors (By Associated Press) - building. Those who wish to may SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., July 14.- meet the party at th Detroit News Soaring southward over endless hours - follow the interurbans. At the De- g troit News building the party will see of fog, a civilian monoplane piloted e besides the newspaper offices, the radio by Kenneth L. Smith has hopped off n broadcasting station WWJ. The libra- from the Oakland municipal airport ry contains many works of art. at 10:40 o'clock this morning, was J reported proceeding nicely on its - flight toward Hawaii late today. The message received from Bronte late in t the afternoon said that the wireless e receiving set abdard the plane was out ..UCC\ WillRof commission, but that did not wor- U jry him. Back in Oakland, where the plane Floating University Considered Worthy took off for its flight, anxious ears Experiment In Modern were prompt for the slightest word Teaching Methods of the flyer's progress. EE U AWinds Add Speed S LECTURE ILLUSTRATED The flyers got the benefit of trade I winds, aiding them along at abot 20 "The students on the World Cruise miles an hour when they reached 500 1 actually learned something, contrary miles from Sant Francisco. Smith and to the general opinion," stated Lio- Bronte were face to face with disas- nel G. Crocker of the Public Speaking ter in their first attempt to take off department, who delivered an illus- this morning. As they roared down trated talk, "With the Floating Univer- the runway at 10:30 o'clock the wheels sity on Its World Cruise," yesterday of the plane struck a slight depres- afternoon in the Natural Science au- sion i the ground that caused the ditorium.monoplane to swerve violently to the Emphasizes Importance right, onto the rough ground adjacent Crocker emphasized the impor- to the runway. When the plane final- Mr. rcerIpaizdteimo- tance of this type of education and'ly came to a halt, it faced at right an- f pronounced the experiment a success. gles across the 'runway. By means of a miscellaneous group of I Try Second Take-Off slides he showed the cruise at the Taj- I The second take-off was accomp- Mahal, Bombay, Ceylon, Honolulu, lished without incident. The plane Java, Siam, the Philippines, Gibralter, cleared the runway at about 3,500 Japan, China, and Panama, as well as feet and labored slowly upward. Smith numerous views on shipboard. , was forced to circle about over Oak- Ryndain Was Boat Used land, San Francisco and the bay some The Holland - American steamer, little time before attaining sufficient "Ryndam," which was the boat used altitude to take him above the fog by the cruise, left New York Septem- that loomed in the west. . ber 18 and returned May 2. During Lieut, Leslie J. Maitland and Albert this time 40,000 miles had been cov- Hegenberger, army flyers who beat ered of which 7,000 were on land. Smith to an Oakland-Hawaii hop, ap- 500 students were on board, of which peared on the field a few. minutes be- 50 were women. Dr. Crocker was head fore Smith was scheduled to leave. of the Public Speaking department on the cruise. CITY CELEBRATES MANDELL-M 'GRAW FRENCH HOLIDA Y FIGHT To DECIDE Ann Arbor celebrated the French FIGHTLDTCHAMPION National holiday with a Bargain Day. WORLD CH AMPION IWith flags waving in the breeze, col- ors floating 'n the air, an impromptu By Frank M. Smith I band striving valiantly to keep in step DETROIT', Mich., July 14.-The bat- and in tune, lost' children crying for tle of speed against ruggedness will "mama," hot adults cursing the ever be staged tonight at the University of rising mercury, $1 garments selling at Detroit Stadium when Sammy Mandell, the unheard of price of 98 cents, ex- lightweight champion of the world, travagant women asking whether or and Phil McGraw, Greek contender, not Woolworth and Kresg were sel- meet under the keen promotional wing .ing at a reduction-with these and of Floyd Fitzsimmons in a ten round other interesting trifles did Ann Ar- decision bout at 135 pounds. bor celebrate. And a good time was Without question, Mandell is the had by all-who stayed at home. fastest boy of his weight in this or any__ other country today. Not only is heCOUNT IES' VIEWS speedy, he is confidence personified, when he enters the ring. There isn't TOLD AT GENEVA an angle of the pugilistic racket with which he is unfamiliar under the tu- (By Associated Press) telage of Jack Blackburn, a whirl- GENEVA, July 14.-The men who wind in the ring in his day. represent the United States, Great Added to what he absorbed from Britain and Japan explained before a Blackburn, Mandell has had a world plenary session of the Tri-partite na- of experience in the ring and it too val onference today the viewpoints of goes without saying that steady, well their countries on the cruiser prob- programmed ring work is the best lem, and when, all was said, with 'conditioner for champions or those firmness and good temper, the con- who aspire to the heights. ference adjourned to meet at the call With speed as a permanent asset, of the secretary. No private meeting Mandell, in preparation for the Mc- I of the Plenipotentiaries have changed Graw setto, has been developing most and the general opinion in Geneva of his time to developing a punch that tonight is that if the delegates do not 'wil stop his aggressive opponent. I succeed in breaking the back of the Whether or nt he has developed this cruiser problem within the next week angle of the fighting game with abili- the conference inevitably will have to ty to use it in his melee with the Greek be terminated with failure written on remains to be seen. In his training its register. camp he has daily upset his sparring Admiral Jellico and W. C. Bridge- partners with heavy jolts to the head, man, first lord of the British admiral- and body and on one occasion a mate ty, spoke for Great Britain. Hugh was forced to call it quite after al S. Gibson set forth the attitude of they short exchange. I United States, which Viscount Ishii made a specific proposal that the num- NEW YORK.-A complete dining ber of 10,000-ton cruisers for the service, including a six-course chicken United States and Great Britain limit- - dinner, is provided on airplanes flying ed to ten and that the limits for Japan between New York and Boston. be fixed at seven or less. / -Fears there will be showers.