ESTABLISHED 1890 We 4W 41P MEMBER SASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XL. NO. 128 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1930 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS TENTATIVE OUTLINE FOR MAY FESTIVAL ARRANGEDBY SINK Percy Grainger and Claire Dux Are Soloists With Chicago Symphony Orchestra., NORTHWESTERN WAGESRAISED (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, March 27- Plans to increase by approximately 33 per cent the salaries of profes- sors and to limit the number of liberal arts students were ap- proved Wednesday by the board of trustees of Northwestern Un- iversity. MUSICAL OPENS ON 13TH The trustees also approved of plans to appoint to the liberal arts faculty additional outstand- Allocation of Fifteen Artists Ising educators and to creat new Made for Six Concerts scholarships and fellowships as of Spring Series. a means of developing the arts college. Plans for the distribution of the Under the salary scale approv- ed, professors will receive from 15 artists engaged for the May 1 $10,000 to $7,000; associate pro- Festival into the six concerts, with fessors $7,000 to $5,500, and as- detailed announcements of the sistant professor $5,000 to $4,000. compositions to be performed have -_ been tentatively prepared by Char-' les Sink, president of the Univer- - _--_ sity School of Music and impres- sario for the Festival. P G Claire Dux, sopraianist, will be the soloists with the Chicago Sym- phony orchestra at the first con-f 111tWeHONORvSYSTEM cert Wednesday evening. Mr. Grainger, instead of the one con- certos usually played by the pian- Method Does Not Stop Cheating Ist in the Festival, will offer two But Gives Decent Person numbers, the Carpenter Concertino a Fairer Chance. for piano and orchestra and the Cesar Franick Symphonic Varia- tions for piano and orchestra. Miss EXPLAINS ITS USE HERE Dux will be heard in two arias. Noted Soloist to Appear. Declaring that the most import- The Thursday evening concert, ant feature of the honor system was which is to mark the performance to concern itself with student- by the Choral Union of Honegger's teacher relationships in a scholas- King David and Bach's Magnificat' tic sense, Prof. A. D. Moore of the will have as the artist in the solo i parts Ethyl Hayden, soprano, Merle electrical engineering department Alcock, contralto, Dan Gridley, addressed the fourth of the spring tenor, and Paul Leyssac, narrator. series of all All-Campus Forums on The Friday afternoon concert, in the subject, "The Honor System- addition to the usual numbers by Here and Elsewhere," yesterday the children's chorus under Miss afternoon in Alumni Memorial Higbee and by the Chicago orches- I Hall. tra, will be notable as the rid- Professor Moore, who has charge western ,debut of Ruggiero Ricci, of the administration of the honor phenomenal boy violinist who will system in the engineering school appear in the Beethoven violin of the University, stated that its concerto.' fundamental objective was not, as -'The Friday evening concert is most people think the prevention another artist's concert with Duso- of cheating during examinations, lina Giannini, American soprano, but that it was to give decent peo- and Richard Bonelli, baritone, of- ple a chance to react decently with fering several arias with the Chi- the proper treatment. "People rec- cago symphony. This concert also ognize that colleges are dealing has more numbers by, the Chicago with a fairly highly selective group, symphony under the baton of Fred- the majority of which will respond erick Stock the Mendelssohn Over- to the things desired if properly ture, Fingal's Cave, a movement handled. Although there is some rom Beethoven's Pastorale Sym- dishonesty under the honor system, phony, Delamarter's Suite from quite naturally, there will be under "The Betrothal", a suite by Glazou- any system that can be devised," now, and the Bacchanale and Fi- he stated. nale from Overture to Tannhauser Although there is much misun- by Wagner. derstanding on the subject and Have PiAno Ensemble. even ob'jections to the title itself In the Saturday afternoon con- I by people who say that honor can cert Guy Maier and Lee Pattison, not be systematized, no better famous two piano ensembles that I names have as yet been advanced. have never before appeared in a f Results obtained by many of the Festival, will be soloists with the 1 more prominent universities in the Chicago Symphony. The first half country have more than justified of the program will be the Bee- its use. While there still remain thoven Overture to Egmont and a many evils, the system at Michigan symphony as yet unannounced by has worked in a most successful the orchestra. Then, after the inter- manner. Incoming freshmen are mission, Guy Maier and Lee Pat- explained the workings and ideals tison will offer the Mozart Concerto of the system and hence are fa- for two pianos and orchestra. miliar with its operation. The big The last concert Saturday eve- problem to be solved," he said, "is ning is solely taken up with a per- the teaching of the many ideals of formance of the Verdi Requiem, the system to those students who which has been substituted for the transfer to the university in their opera done formally which has pre- I junior or senior year." viously made up the last concert in the Festival. Earle V. Moore, di- Police Reports Reveal rector of the music school, will con- duct the performance of the Re-!Four Overcoats Stolen quiem which includes the Choral Union, the Symphony orchestra, Of four thefts of overcoats oc- and four soloists. The soloists en- curing Tuesday and Wednesday, gaged for the Requiem, all of them two of them reduced the "coat chosen for experience in perform- value" of 1015 E. Huron the sum of ance of this work, are Nanette Guil- $600, it was revealed yesterday by ford, soprano, Kathryn Meisle, con- police reports. A brown beaver tralto, Paul Althouse, tenor, and coat, valued at $500 by the owner, Chase Baromea, bass. Paul Alt- James Gillard, '32M., and a light house and Chase Baromeo have brown camel hair coat, valued by its both appeared here before in Fes- owner, E. R. Murbach, '32M., at tivals, Baromeo being a graduate $100, were taken from the Pharmo- of the University Music school. I cology building Wednesday after- FINANCE PROGRAM FRA 'rvENrrITRS CAUSES MUELLER'FDDDNSE CABINET BREAK-UPj Government Resigns After SplitT on Employment Insurance. (By Associated Press)i BERLIN, Germany, March 27.-- Dirigible Skipper.Presented With The coalition government of Chan- Wets Invite Canadian Premier to National Qeographic Society cellor Hermann Mueller after sur- Answer Drury's Charges of Achievement Medal. viving the stormy seas of post war Absolute Failure. YGerman politics for 21 months and .F ?CAPITOL PAYS TRIBUTE recently bringing the Young repa- ENLIST DU PONT'S AIDS rations plan safely through the Zeppelin Captain Shares Glory Reichstag, c'ashed today on one Development in Liquor Fight With Officers, Crew, and oits nhe mana ks threatenmg.iti Due to Judiciary Committee's U.. S. Navy Dept. The cabinet resigned when its Favoring Padlock Plan. component parties failed to agree By Oscar Leiding, upon an unemployment insurance (By Associated Press) (A. P. Aviation Editor) question. President Von Hinden-i WASHINGTON, March 27- Gov-, WASHINGTON, March 27.-Dr. burg accepted the resignations, re- ernment control of liquor in Can- Hugo Eckener's name was inscrib- questing the ministers to remain in ada will be defended by Premier ed on a roll of modern immortals in office until a new cabinet could be George Howard Ferguson of Ontar- geography and exploration toniglt Iformed. i0, if he accepts an invitation from when the National Geographic so- Dr. Heinrich Bruening, a Centrist the wet forces to testify before the ciety presented a special gold medal member of the Reichstag and onetHe judicircomittee han for his globe-encircling trip in the of the outstanding leaders of his House judiciary committee in an- Graf Zeppelin. Iparty, was reported to have been E C. Drury, of Ontario, that the Flanked by the flags of America suggested by Chancellor Mueller for system "is an absolute failure." and Germany and the historic ban- the task of forming a new govern- Plans to invite Ferguson were ners of the Society which Perry ment. announced late today by Represen- carried to the North Pole, the anucdlt oa yRpee- criedo te joined the ranks ,ttatives Linthicum, Democrat, Mary- dirigible skipper pioneers. Only three lland,m Incharge of wet witnesses. He of te othrpioesA. Onee, also said that Pierre S. Du Pont, of of them, Charles A. Lindbergh, ; I IIIU f Wilmington, Delaware, industrial Floyd Bennett, and Rear Admiral magnate, also would be a rebuttal Richard E. ByrdPeNered0thr;ughiditess, to answer the charges of aeronautical achievements. 1 dry advocates who assailed him in Praises Officers and Crew. h I the hearing. In accepting the "exceptional th NewrDevelopment in Fight honor," he said the glory was shar- Tickets for Romeo and Juliet' This development in the prolong- ed with his officers and crew and Now Procurable; to be 'ed prohibition controversy on Cap- the United States Navy Department itol Hill came after the House ju- "without whose support we could Played Four Times. diciary committee favorably report- not have been successful." ed the first of the law enforcement "We honor Dr. Eckener," said Dr. ALL SEATS ARE 75 CENTS commission's recommendations to Gilbert Grosvenor, president of the strengthen the dry laws by author- Society, "for the years of experi- Box office sale of seats for Play izing the institution of padlock ment, inventive genius, and patient Production's presentation of "Rom- proceedings against speakeasies, research which culminated in his I eo and Juliet" will open this morn- night clubs, and other places where astounding achievement." f ing at 11 o'clock at the box office liquor is illegally dispensed. The "His circumnavigation of the | of the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. measure would authorize absentee earth was a marvelous feat in en-! The box office will be open from 11 service of summons through pub- gineering and navigation. It sym-- to 5 o'clock each day through Sat- lication and posting. bolizes the advance of science urday, April 5. ( The judiciary committee also which tends to bind peoples more The production of this Shake- considered the Stobbs bill to modify closely in friendship and in under- spearean drama will be given Wed- I the Jones law by defining misde- standing." . .nesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sat- meanr and fixing ahe xim . Washington assembled all its jurday nights of next week. a) the for first and slight offenses at not color for its tribute to the genial 'Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. All more than 6 months in jails and skipper. He nodded recognition to seats for all performances are pric- a fine of $500. The committee will the many friends he had made ed at 75 cents. ' consider several other measures re- since his first mission to America. Rehearsals of the entire produc- commended by the enforcenent in 1924 when he flew the Los Ange- tion are being held each night on commission to relieve congested les to Lakehurst for delivery ac- the stage of the Lydia Mendelssohn Federal courts next Thursday. cording to the terms of the Treaty I theatre. The scenery for the five Drury Answers Ferguson. of Versailles. Diplomats of 26 na- acts is being constructed in the Appearing before the dry forces of the Cabinet and scenery room of the theatre under yesterday, Drury said bootlegging, of Congress ranking officers in the the supervision of Charles Holden, drinking in the home, liquor con- Army and Navy, and others high grad., and with the assistance of sumption and crime had increased -Armyanderavyand othiersfhhthe members of the stagecraft class in the Dominion under government in the federal and social life of the of the Play Production course. liquor control. In answer to this, City and nation, paid their re- The majority of the costumes for Premier Ferguson said in Toronto, spects. . the cast have been completed. They that "The best evidence of satis- Byrd Sends Congratulations. were all designed and executed in faction of the public of Ontario as Rear Admiral Byrd, speeding the Play Production laboratory in to the law is shown in results of homeward from conquests of the i University Hall, by Mrs. Marion the last election." Antarctic, cabled his congratula- 'Gallaway, grad., and Miss Irene By- "The Province repudiated Mr. tions for "your noteworthy achie- chnisky, '30, assisted by women in Drury's policy and returned 92 sup- vements in advancing aeronautics the Play Production department. porters of the government out of a and especially your pioneer flight Reservations for seats for any one total of 112 members in its legis- around the world." of the four performances may be lature," he said. Sound pictures, turning back the made by calling the box office of the The Premier added that if the pages of history to the days when Lydia Mendelssohn theatre.,' officials at Washington desired ac- the Graf flew across three conti- f curate information on government nents in its pioneer voyage, carried Student Body to Hear control of liquor, his government the audience into the everyday would be glad to offer every oppor- life of the dirigible, over vast areas Crane Lecture Sunday tunity and assistance in every way of Siberia never before photo- to secure data upon which they graphed, and from California to Dr. Henry H. Crane, of Scranton, might reach a conclusion. New York. Pennsylvania, through a cancella- tion in his lecture schedule, has GAS FUMES KILL c____ -been obtained by Prof. F. N. Men- COHN OF Sefeeof the Engineering college, as F 0 U R CHILDREN C speaker for the Student Council convocation to be held Sunday morning in Hill Auditorium. I (By Associated Press) (By Associated Press Dr. Crane's reputation is nation- FREDERICK, Maryland, Mar. 27 DETROIT, March 27.-Martin J. wide, and his spiritual subjects are -The lives of four children, rang- -,_,+-f ing age from 16 months to 8 years GOWN WET POLL GROWSSLIGHTLY Slight change in the faculty consensus on prohibition was ef- fected by the additional 15 votes received yesterday in The Daily's post-card poll. Strict en- forcement was favored by seven and modification or repeal by eight. The "wets" now hold a 51 vote lead, with 57 per cent of the faculty voting. Three- fourths of the five thousand stu- dents who voted in the poll fa- vored either repeal or some modification. The Ontario liqu- or control plan was outstand- ing favorite. The faculty tabu- lation stood last night as fol- lows: Present situation ........9 Strict enforcement ......227 Ontario plan ...........131 Other modifications .... 71 Total repeal .... 85 n1 J~ BANKING_'POSITIONS Declares 95 Per Cent of Jobs in Commercial Banking Houses Are Futile. LAUDS BUSINESS SCHOOL "Ninety-five per cent of the jobs in commercial banking houses are blind-alley jobs, jobs which do not lead to anything," said Prof. Rob- ert G. Rodkey, professor of bank- ing and investments, in a talk yes- terday on "Banking" at the second forum sponsored by the business administration club. "But the other five per cent really lead to some- thing, and the training the school of busness administration gives aims to equip graduates with the technical knowledge to succeed in thig, field. The work of the five per cent of commercial banking lies in the fields of the credit, bond, loan and discount, and new business depart- ment. This field offers excellent op- portunities, but the graduate has to sacrifice something the first years in the way of time, early hours, smaller average wages than other business lines offer, and more work. The work consists at first of gathering facts from balance sheets of various firms, later of giving out these facts judiciously, and finally in forming judgments on the basis of these facts. The man who con- sistently delivers the goods in that line, at the end of about the first ten years, usually comes to be a second or assistan4 vice-president, with a salary of anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000. "In the other distinct field of banking, investment banking, there are two fields, selling and analy- tical work. Anyone who has a nat- ural selling ability should capitalize on it. In the commercialcbanking field opportunity is offered in the new business department. With the increase of interest in securities during the past years, banking houses have found it necessary to organize a stitistical or analytical department to analyze different in- dustries and bond issues to deter- mine where possible profit might lie," concluded Professor Rodkey. Prof. Charles L. Jamison, profes- sor of Business policy, will be the speaker at the next forum on Thursday night. He will talk on "SelfdAdvertising as a Means to Success." Eta Sigma Phi Takes in Eight New Members Eta Sigma Phi, honorary Latin and Greek society, held its annual initiation banquet yesterday even- ing at the Women's League build- ing. Eight members were induced into the society. Following the banquet, Prof. Benjamin Dean Meritt, of the Latin and Greek de- partments, gave a breif lecture up- on early Greek wars and revolu- tions, and their significance in modern Greek history. He also de- scribed actual incidents from the wars to show the relation which the independence of Greece has to the study of ancient and modern history. Humphreys Will Speak at Hillel Open Forum BURSLEY CHANGES ADVISORY SYSTEM FOR COMING YEAR Formation of Councilor Groups for All Entering Students Latest Innovation, MOVE IS IMPERATIVE Change Due to Growing Number of Transfers Matriculating From Other Schools. Inauguration of advisory groups for students entering the Univer- sity in the fall as sophomores or up- perclassmen is the only major inno- vation in plans for the coming Freshman Week, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Phillip Bursley, of the romance languages depart- ment, who will again direct the Freshman Week activities. This move was necessitated, Pro- fessor Bursley explained, by the number of students of the three upper classes who have been un- able to orientate themselves to the new environment. During the past five years there has been an ave- rage of 520 students entering the University in the fall as transfers from other colleges. These stu- dents have found it extremely dif- ficult to accustom themselves. to the new surroundings and fit in with the established order at the University. Faculty to Assist. With this difficulty in mind, Pro- fessor Bursley has created a group of approximately 30 faculty mem- bers to supplement the 91 who' will act as advisors to the freshman groups. When the incoming soph- omores and upperclassmen present themselves at the Dean's office, they will be assigned to advisors in accordance with their line of in- terest. This system will apply only in the literary clege and the School of Education. These studnts, however, wll .not be required to follow through com- pletely the Freshman Week pro- gram. Their attendance will be obligatory only at the evening functions; the President's address of welcome; the mass sing; and one other address, which cannot yet be definitely announced. Out- side of the general mixers, the li- brary trip, and the lawn party at the home of Dean Joseph A. Burs- ley, they will not be required to follow through the morning and afternoon programs of Freshman Week. Length of Week the Same. The length of the week has not been changed, Professor Bursley announced; it will last from Tues- day morning, Sept. 23, to Saturday noon, Sept. 27. In acordance with the new ruling of the Senate Com- imittee on Student Affairs, frater- nity and sorority rushing will not begin until Saturday noon. "This will eliminate a lot of unnecessary strain on the incoming students," Professor Bursley declared. The pre-professional conference for incoming freshmen will be placed this year earlier' in the week than the classification, in order that the students may be aided by the advice received in these con- ferences. This year faculty advisors will be expected to accompany their groups through the process of clas- sification; they will assist the stu- dent in deciding not only what subjects to take, but in what sec- tions to classify. It is hoped that this will do much toward simplify- ing the entire classification system. The number of student assist- tants to advisors has been cut down this year to 140, and the number of men's groups has been reduced by increasing the number of men in each group to 20. 'Maureen O'rcutt Wins , Mid-South Tournament (By Associated Press) SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., March 27-Miss Maureen Orcutt of Ha- worth, N. J., metropolitan cham- pion, won the Mid-South cham- pionship for women here today over y field of golfers which included the national champion, Miss Glenna Collett and several members of the American team which will sail for Europe soon. S MissOrcutt made the title safe by her sterling play on the first 3 ii -1 High Scores Feature North and South Open (By Associated Press) PINEHURST, N. C., Mar. 27 - The stubborn, subtle number two Pinehurst Golf course joined forces with the elements today to hold its par barrier of 71 unbroken through the first two rounds of the 28th Annual $5,650 North and South Open tournament. More than 100 links experts lead by young Henry Picard of Charles- ton, S. C., matched prowess with noon. Both Gillard and Murbach room at 1015 E. Huron. I The other thefts were reportedI to police by W. J. Kinney, 2107 { Washtenaw avenue, whose black1 mountain fleece coat was stolen Tuesday from the Law school, and by L. D. Adams, of the Cook Spring company, Ann Arbor, whose polo coat was taken Wednesday noon from the Arcade restaurant. Scott to be Delegate at Shantz' Inaugural Professor-emeritus Fred Newton Cohn, proprietor of the Study club 01fa type that are unparalleled --r where 22 lost their lives stirring the intellect and feelings were snuffed out bygas this after- whr 2persons ls hi ie fcleeudrrdae.Bfr noon during a 20 minute absence of, of college undergraduates. Before - last September, was acquitted of a a series of three convocations which ( their mother from the house where charge of manslaughter by a Re- he addressed at the University of they were staying here. L corder's Court jury today. Illinois he lectured to capacity The children, Mary Lucille, 8; ,crowds. Myrtle, 5; Elsi Yvonne, 3; and Hel- The verdict was returned at 11 _rowds._._en, 16 months, all were found on a. m., after more than 12 hours: . .the floor of the kitchen of the home deliberation and ended a trial! Explosion Fires House; of Mrs. Joseph Bussard, sister of which had run intermittently since Woman Receives Burns Itheir mother, Mrs. Lester Shields last September. Judge Frank of Boyd. Murphy charged the jury at 11:06 Fire, resulting from an explosion Physicians and firemen using in- a. m. yesterday. of naptha, yesterday afternoon halators worked over the children The State, through Duncan C. caused painful burns on the hands for several hours in vain efforts to McCrea, assistant prosecuting at- and face of Mrs. P. A. Lee, who was resuscitate them, even though they torney, placed this charge against I using the fluid for cleaning pur- already had been pronounced dead the cabaret proprietor on the con- poses, and destroyed the kitchen by physicians who were called im- tention that he had been crimin- of her home at 344 South Main! mediately after the bodies were ally negligent in the matter of street. Firemen prevented the blaze found. safety facilities at the Club, from sl jading to other parts of Mrs. Shields had come to the The defense, represented by Sam- ; the house. home of her sister following a quar- uel J. Rhodes, held that inasmuch rel with her husband this morning. as city inspectors had gone over The sister was away from home and the Club, approved it and issued I $h r 'later Mrs. Shields went to the ad- Cohn an operators license, no guilt - joining house, remaining away could be attached to Cohn. , about 20 minutes, she said. When 77, she returned she found the bodies 'I and every jet in the kitchen stove Bruins Defeat Maroons open. 1 ko% AIR ft I Am -m er, v A3k PI ft vr^a I I 1 - I