ESTABLISHED 1890 AIMMOMF man L iL df 1111 MEBE EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1931 PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. XLI. No. 127 EIGHT PAGES CON TRACT L ET FOR X1,500,000 LAW CLASS ,'. ei mot} .ti, J tr }i R, t, i t: *iUBn ARCHITECTS' SKETCH SHOWS HOW HUTCHINS HALL WILL APPEAR WHEN COMPLETED IN FALL OF 1932 SENIOR" HONOR MENe. IN FIRS T MEETING 1 T.H. Tapping Explains Relations of Alumni Association, Undergraduates. RANDALL, PALMER SPEAK Class President States Group Will Serve as Nuck us in Activities. Dean G. Carl Huber of the grad- uate school, and president of the Alumni association, addressed the literary sectionof the senior Honor Group last night at their first meeting. Appointment of the exe- cutive committee marked the first step in the organization of the Group. Dean Huber, who has been a! director of the association since 1897, used the Michigan alumni body, numbering 70,000 strong, as the topic for discussion. T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the association, explained the relations of the association to the under- graduates, in a short speech to the seniors, while Fred Randall, also an officer of the association, discussed class organizations in college and in alumni life. Class President Speaks. Bruce Palmer, class president, pointed out that the Honor Group will serve as the nucleus of the class in all the traditional senior activities preceeding Commence- aent, as well as assist in the organ- iration of details for the gradua- tion exercises. The first concerted effort of the Group will come over the three day period, March 31, April 1 and' 2, when a drive for the collection of class dues and a sale of subscriptions to the "Alumnus" will be made.. Tapping praised the Group for their enthusiastic spirit and stated that this was the first attempt of seniors in recent years to organize at such an early date. Education Group Announced. Appointments to the senior Honor Group as representatives of the School of Education, were announc- ed yesterday. by LaVerne Taylor, president of the senior class. Sixteen men were selected for the Group. These are: I-oward Auer, William Benz, Clarence Biedenweg, Ralph Coombs, Leo Draveling, Nyol Hayes, Thomas Justice, Robert Morgan, Ralph Mueller, Thomas Prouse, Albert Steinke, Leonard Walle, James Smith, Edward Tolan, Philip Wargelin, and Ralph Wills. -StateBulleins (By Associated Press) Friday, March 27, 1931 MT. CLEMENS-Circuit Judges Neil E. Reid and James E. Spier, upon the petition of Prosecutor Earle M. French, today ordered a grand jury investigation into the county drain commissioner's office. Bert Engelbrecht is drain commis- missioner. DETROITStockholder sof the American State bank will meet to- morrow to vote on the agreement of the Peoples Wayne County bank to take over assets and guarantee the deposits and liabilities of the American State Bank as recommen- ded by its directors.- BENTON HARBOR-A f t e r de- fense attorneys had asked for a dismissal of the charges of crimin- al syndicalism against 54 alleged communists arrested nine years ago, Circuit Judge Charles E. White today ordered that a trial be held but did not set a date for the trial. LANSING-Sir Henry Thornton, head of the Grand Trunk system, will confer in Detroit Friday with Governor Brucker. It is expected NUHMPHREYS LEADs FORUM ON MARKIN, Student Discussion to be Given to Faculty Committee on Grading System. Using a group of more than 100 students as a laboratory to express contemporary opinion, Dean Wilbur C. Humphreys, of the literary col- lege, led a forum on "The Marking System," yesterday in room D, of Alumni Memorial hall. Report of the discussion con- ducted by the students will be given to the faculty committee studying the marking system, Humphreys said, who have been working on the problem since last fall. Students should be given oppor-: tunity to express opinions about Stheir professors, he replied, to a question asked by a student, and thus be alowed to eliminate some scholastic difficulties that lead to poor grades. FISHER SPEAKS TO CITY GROUP Approximately 185 Ann Arbor residents were present last night at the annual dinner of the chamber of commerce in the building of the organization. Rev. Frederick Fisher, the speaker of the evening, was introduced by Shirley W. Smith, vice-president and secretary of the University, acting as toast-master. R e v. Cisher spoke on the improve- rment of the spirit of commerce F through past centuries to the' present, touching on slavery and the opium wars. Cone W. Lighthall, president ofz the chamber, and manager of phe Hoover steel ball company ,poke in praise of W. Hachley Butler, who is serving as secre- tary of the organization with Dut pay. Singing was furnished by the Salvation army under thef direction of Captain Wilfred Trevithick. William F. Ross, '31E, entertained the guests with an °exhibition of parlor magic.1 ABOVE: Hutchins hall, new law class building, as it will ap- pear in relation to other build- ings on the law quadrangle. The new structure is to be erected at a cost of $1,500,000 and will be completed by the fall of 1932. 0-- 0 LEFT : Architects' sketch of the Hutchins hall, seen from the corner of State and Monroe streets. Faculty offices and prac- tice courts, as well as classrooms, will be housed here. HOMECOMING PLAN Committee Will Meet Saturday to Finish Arrangements for Spring Program. Members of the committee in charge of preparations for the Spring Homecoming program, that will culminate May 9 with the annual father and son banquet at the Union, will meet at noon Sat- urday in the Union to complete plans for the event. Three days be- ginning May 8 will be set aside for mothers and fathers of University students during which the annual Cap Night and other traditional events will occur. The program on Friday, May 8, will consist of the annual freshman event in Sleepy Hollow at which time first year men throw their pots into the fire and awards to deserving athletes are distributed. Speakers, prominent on the campus and in the city and state, will con- clude the Friday night program. All parents and friends of Uni- versity students will be admitted free to the Minnesota-Michigan track meet on Saturday, the only outdoor event of its kind scheduled on the home track thishseason. Swimming, golf, and other sport exhibitions will also feature the day, while the new law research library will be open for inspection to all guests and students. The father and son banquet at the Union Saturday night will fea- ture the three-day program. This will be followed by an address at Hill auditorium by Laurence Gould, professor of geology and member of the Byrd antarctic expedition. Sunday, Mother's Day, will be featured by a 3 o'clock concert at Hill auditorium at which time the Varsity band, both glee clubs, and other musical organizations will present a program. Senior men will wear their canes for the first time on Sunday. The committee in charge is made SENIOR CLASSDAY' OFFEICERS ELECTED ICLOSECONTESTS Bruce Palmer Elected to Most Respected Man and Two Other Positions. HARTWIG MADE ORATOR Simrall Piles up Largest Vote in Winning Class Athlete and Popular Man. Close contests featured the an- nual senior literary elections for Class Day offices and Mock elec- t i o n posts yesterday afternoon. Lawrence Hartwig will have the leading part in the Class Day ex- ercises the Saturday preceeding Commencement as the result of his victory in the race for class orator. George Dusenbury was unoppos- ed as historian in the elections. Jessie Winchell was chosen prophe- tess while Paul Showers was named prophet. Roberta Reed was select- ed poetess. Palmer Wins Three Positions. Bruce Palmer, c 1 a s s president, captured first places in the three positions for which he was nomin- ated in the mock elections. He was chosen /the most respected senior, the Senior who has done the most for Michigan, and the Biggest man on the campus. Three others re- ceived two positions apiece; J. Har- rison Simrall being named the Class athlete and the Most popular man; Gurney Williams, the Senior. most likely to succeed and the Most Literary senior; and Hermine Sou- kup the Most popular girl and thef Most ingenuous blonde. The other winning candidatesl and their positions follow: William Gentry, Best appearing man; Al- !Bert Donahue, Senior who has done Michigan for the most; Kasper Halverson, Smoothest politician;- Monty Shick, Smoothest man; Cad- well Swanson, Most astute grade' beggar; and Theodore Metz, Coed's choice. Simrall Polls Most Votes. Only five votes separated the three candidates for the post, Most ingenuous blonde, while the office, Senior most likely to succeed, was in doubt until the last ballot was counted. Simrall polled the largest number of votes of the election as class athlete in addition to a large majority in winning the position, Most popular man. Slide Rule, Law Dances Scheduled for Tonight While the senior lawyers dance tonight to the music of Griff Mor- ris and his Clevelanders at the an- nual Crease dance, the engineers will hold their annual Slide Rule dance in the Union ballroom, with Ace Brigode and his Virginians providing the music. The occurrence on the same night of the two dances by the former rival schools is an innovation in the history of the University and could not have been considered a few years ago. For it is only a few years ago that each of the dances was inevitably followed by a raid by the members of the rival school. ORDER OF COIF NAMESFIFTEEN Fifteen members of the senior law class have been named to the Order of the Coif this year, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Paul A. Leidy, secretary of the Law school. The selections, which include the high ten per cent of the graduating class each year, are made on the basis of scholarship. One woman is listed this year.. Plans for the annual initiation and banquet, which will be held in the Lawyers' club, have not yet been completed, Professor Leidy said, but it will probably take place late in April or early in May. The new members are William Warner Bishop, Jr., William Mar- shall Emery, Robert E d m u n d F i n c h, Florence Koenigsberg Frankel, Hugh Alfred Fulton, Samuel Eugene Gawne, M a r k Henry Harrington, Virgil Davis Parish, Benjamin L. Pierce, Wil- liam Charles Pusch, Maxwell Leon R u b i n, James Harland Spencer, John Selden Tennant, Jacques Loeb Weiner, and Lewis Desmont Wilson. ' HUTCHINS HALL' TO BE FINISHED BY FALLOF 1832 Cook Estate Executors Accept Washington Firm'sBid. WORK ISSTARTED Structure to Resemble Those Now in Law Quadrangle. HOPWOOD CONTESTI Dickinson, Osborn, Quirk Are Named to Pick Winners in Play Competition. Judges for the Hopwood contest awards, to be conducted under the direction of the English: depart-I ment, were announced yesterday by Prof. Oscar J. Campbell, of that de- [partient. The exact time of the awards has not been announced yet. In the drama contests, the judges will be Thomas H. Dickinson, Paul Osborn, and D. R. Quirk. Dickinson is the author of "The Case for American Drama," and editor of "Chief Con- temporary Dramatists," in addi- tion to a number of other works. Osborn is a Michigan graduate, and wrote the play "The Vinegar Tree," which was produced this year in New York City. The judges for the essay award will include Agnes Repplier, es- sayist who is known for a large number of works which include "Essays in Miniature," "A Happy Half Century," and "Under Dis- pute." Robert M. Lovett and Henry S. Canby are the other judges nam- ed in this section. Lovett has been a professor ofdrhetoric at Harvard University and is best known for "A History of English Literature," written in collaboration with W. V. Moody. Canby is editor of the Sat- urday Review of Literature and has also done much writing in connec- tion with the short story and com- position. For the fiction award, the judges will be William McFee, James Boyd, and Ellen Glasgow. McFee is known for his novels which include "Har- bors of Memory," and "Sunlight in New Grenada.' Robert Frost, Witter Bynner, and Louis Untermeyer will be the judg- es in the poetry contest- Hutchins hall, supplanting the present law classroom building, will be ready for occupancy by autumn, 1932, it was announced yesterday noon in the office of President Alexander Grant Ruth- ven. Contracts were signed yes- terday morning, and work of ex- :avating has already begun. Executors of the estate of the late W. W. Cook, donor of the Law Club building, the Martha Cook dormitory for women, the John P. Cook dormitory, and the new legal research library, com- pleted the plans for the $1,500,000 structure yesterday and contracts were signed with the John Baird company, of Washington, build- ers of the present structures. Hutchins hall will be built on the northeast corner of State and Monroe streets and will complete the "Law Quadrangle" except for proposed additions to the present John P. Cook dormitory on the southeast corner at Monroe street and Tappan avenue. The building will require approximately eighteen months for conpletion and will provide employment for hundreds of Ann Arbor workers. Shirley W. Smith, vice president and secretary of the University, yesterday said that he would consult with the Baird company executives in an effort to hire as much local labor as possible. Building Named after Hutchins. In acordance with the wish of W. W. Cook, the new classroom build- ing will be named Hutchins hall after the late Harry B. Hutchins, former dean of the Law school and later President of the University. Ihe structure will contain class- rooms, practice courts, seminary oms, faculty offices, and offices of the Law school administration. According to Dr. Frank E. Rob- oins, asistant to the President, the ;otal value of the buildings and .and given to the University by W. W. Cook exceeds $5,750,000. The -ompletion of the Hutchins hall 2lassroom building will practically -entralize the entire Law school in the "Quadrangle." Dormitory space or more than 236 law students, ibrary facilities, dining hall, class- ooms, and faculty and administra- ion offices wil be available in the 'Quadrangle" by the opening of the 1932-33 school year. Materials to be Similar. .The new law building will be built of the same stone material as ;he structures now erected, and will :onsist of three and a half floors. Phe decorations on the exterior vill be in white stone, while the nterior will have the same general lesign as the present Law library, .ow being completed. Although no plans were divulged 7esterday as to the use to which the present law classroom building will be put, it was thought that the )resent overflow in other schools A the University would be accom- nodated by this means. The prac- vice court rooms will probably be used fortlarge lecture sections in ether departments upon the com- pletion of Hutchins hall. Excavation Work Started. Removal of the Theta Delta Chi fraternity house to the southwest corner of Monroe and South State streets was accomplished last sum- mer to make room for the new structure. Steam shovels and trucks were being used yesterday on the site of the new building where work on excavation for the foundation is NEW STUDENTS' COUNSELOR OFFERS PERSONAL ADVICE FOR INDIVIDUALS P. E. Bursley Aids Entrants Adjusting Themselves to University. in By Beach Conger, Jr., '32. "The greatest problem of the of- fice of Counselor for New Students is not to solve the troubles of the student, but to put him in contact with the right person," stated Prof. Philip E. Bursley, of the Romance languages department, in an inter- view yesterday for The Daily. "It is a bureau of direction for the new student which he may consult if he feels, or if the University feels, that he is not adapting himself to his college work." Few students on the campus knowj anything about this new office, es- tablished last year after orientation week with Professor Bursley as its head. Located in the former trans- tempting to build up routine duties, 1 but rather to become conversant with all phases of problems of ne,* students in their adjustment to the University." "A number of the cases are the result of carrying too. much out- side activity. A greater number are because of too much 'mother' or 'father'-students who have been babied. If parents would only leave their children alone for a while, let them stand on their own feet, they would be much better off. Follow- ing the old saying, 'As the twig is inclined, so grows the tree,' par- ents bend the twig for 16 or 17, years, and then expect usto change! its inclination in one year."' Most of the new students of the literary college who are on proba- tion come to talk with Professor Bursley, who attempts to find out where the difficulty lies. Some do1 not know how to study, some are, r l i J t F1 l I G 1 1 a SOCIOLOGISTS FAVOR CONTRACEPTION AS MEANS OF POPULATION CONTROL M'Kenzie Says Use Is Increasing Regardless of Attitudes of Church Groups. Contraception as a means of birth control,drecently given approval by the Federal Council of Churches, finds general favor with two mem- bers of the sociology department, Prof. R. D. McKenzie, new direc- tor of the department, and Prof. Robert C. Angell. "It doesn't matter what various religious groups think about the matter," Professor McKenzie de- clared," for use of contraception is naturally increasing, bringing with it changing relations between mem- I bers of different sexes, even in the but also due perhaps to higher mor- al standards, higher tension, and different foods, the latter two of which factors may have caused sterility." Professor McKenzie be- lieved that contraception was also more used among criminal classes than was generally supposed, for they are no "boobs," he said. "Most studens of human prob- lems believe," Professor Angell de- clared, "that contraception 'is es- pecially useful to large, rather poor families, who can't afford more children, and don't want them. However, there is always the prob- lem that those who most need to practice contraception will not do so, while those who can afford larg- er families will refrain from having