a ESTABLISHED 1890 I AIL tip MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS - , . -sommmw EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN VOL. XLI.. No. 143. PRICE FIVE CENTS EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1931 ,,..,_.v. . .._..,,,._.._ _ . _.._ a ENISON TO SPEAK PROGATOIH Brucker, Tuttle, Murfin, Bates Also to Address Banquet in Lawyer's Club. WILL PRESENT BILLETS Final Argument in Junior Case Club Series to be Held This Afternoon. Judge Arthur C. Denison, Grand Rapids, of the United States Cir- cuit Court of Appeals, sixth federal circuit, heads the list of speakers who will appear at the sixth annual Founder's Day banquet at 6:30 o'clock tonight in the Lawyers' club. This banquet is given each year in honor of the donor of the club, the late William Wilson Cook. Among the other prominent speakers on the program will be Governor Wibur M. Brucker and Judge Arthur J. Tuttle, of the United States District Court for the eastern district of Michigan. Regent James . Murfi n, -wel-known De- troit lawyer, will present the bilets to the seniors who have been in the Lawyers' club for at least two years and Dean Henry M. Bates, of the Law school, will be the toast- master. Name Judges for Case Finals. The final argument in the junior division of the Law school Case club series will be the feature of the program during the day and will be held at 2 o'clock this after- noon in the main lounge of the club. The judges for the case will be Gus- tavus Ohlinger, Toledo attorney, Judge Tuttle, and Judge Alan Campbell, of the Wayne County Circuit court. Judge George P. Hahn, of Toledo, formerly announc- ed as a judge in the arguments, will not be present. The winning counsels in the case will be awarded the Henry M. Campbell award of $100. The losers will be presented with $50. The com- petitors in the inter-club contests are Leroy Mote, Lee Van Blargen, Morris Zwerdling, and Paul Kaupr, all juniors in the Law school. 300 Guests Expected. More than 300 guests are expect- ed to attend the banquet tonight, it was announced by Prof. Grover C. Grismore, of the Lave school, facul- ty advisor of the club who has been in charge of the arrangements for the occasion. He has been assisted by David W. Kendal, '31L, student chairman of the committee on ar- rangements. This is the first Founder's Day banquet at which there has not been a personal message from Cook who died last year at his home in New York without ever seeing the building which his gifts had made possible. State BulletinsI (By Aor'ted rers Thursday, April 23, 1931 LANSING-Governor Brucker to- day signed a bill making Eastern standard time the official time for the state of Michigan. It will be- come effective 90 days after the ad- journment of the legislature which will be in August or September. BENTON HAROR--Coast guards today renewed their search for the body of a woman who disappeared from the south pier at St. Joseph, April 14, when they received word from Mrs. Charles Comstock who said she saw the body of a woman floating in the lake about eight miles from here. BATTLE CREEK--Lr.land H. Sa- bin 59, prominent Calhoun county attorney, died here today from prneumno nia. Mr. Sabini was alsol president of the Battle Creek Ro- tary club. JACKSON-The wives of 85 state legislators today conducted an in- ,pection tour of the Michigan State prison.. After being a guest of War- den and Mrs. Harry Jackson at luncheon, they listened to the pris-I on choir and concluded the inspec- tion with a tour of the prison. R OCK F OR D-Five cars of a! PALMER URGES CAMPUS APPROVAL OF COUNCIL REORGANIZATION PLAN Senior Literary Class President Declares Proposal Will Remedy Evils, Declaring that the proposed plan for student government reorganiza- tion will remedy existing evils in student government and provide for a more effective expression of stu- dent sentiment, H. Bruce Palmer, '31, president of the .s e n i o r literary : . o 1 a s s, business manager of the Gargoyle, a n d Student council- m an for two years yesterday urged the approval of the plan when Palmer submitted for a campus vote Thurs- day, April 30. By providing for centralization of stuctent government and for in-, creased student representation in the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, the plan will eliminate the much-heard criticism of too much paternalism on the part of the Uni- versity as well as the complaints' about the ijjeffectuai operation of the prese,-c Student council. This will insure greater harmony and cooperation between the University and thedundergraduate body, Palm- er stated. "More efficient management of student activities will result with the establishment of the planned student administrative c o u n c i l, which will be organized like the Union. Politics will be eliminated . 1 from this council as merit will be the basis of promotion for the stu- dents attracted to tryout for com- mittee positions. When found to be adequate, the council will take over many things relating to students that have heretofore been admin- istered by the office of the Dean of Students," Palmer said. The present idea of student judi- ciary power has become antiquated, Palmer added. "Under the proposed system, the revised Senate Commit- tee will reflect the mature opinion HOUSE P]ASS(S B||BRUCKER TO TALK US PASSE ILL AT DINNER HERE, LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE FINDS TO FIX GRAOUAT1fl LIUOR PROBLEM IN UNIVERSITY TAXES ONINCOMESLA ELR Thomas Act Approved by 54S3T3E H Vote Without Any Debate. WARDELL BILL CARRIED Fraternity Raids Due to 'Over-Zealousness' of Ann Arbor Police, Group Declares in Report. of the faculty as well as to allow Sales Tax Advocates Announce expression of student opinion in Campaign to Switch sympathy with the undergraduate Fia Vo body."Finalotes. Creative thought will be stimu- lated with the removal of the fear LANSING, April 23. -(p)-The of the veto power, which has been Thomas bill levying a graduated held over the heads of student or- tax on private incomes rode through ganizations in the past. Greater re- to final passage in the house today1 spect and prestige will result for all with comparative ease. The mem- parties concerned if the proposed bership voted 54 to 33 for the meas- plan of student reorganization is urerwith no debate marring its approved, Palmer declared. journey. .After disposing of the incomet measure, the membership passed b 1 a vote of 54 to 32 the Wardell billL providing a tax of 25 cents on every bottle of malt or wine tonic sold'in the state.I N91VI'AIT! Final Test Next Week. Friends oi tno temporarily do- feated rotail sales tax announced a Jeffries Involved in $700 Suit renewed campaign to switch votes as Former Director of toitsupport for a test next week. asFer DrCtora of.Tired from its two-day battle' Defunct Company. I over the sales tax bill, the member- - sh:p witnessed the fruitless attempt DETROIT, April 23.-(AP)-Recor- by Representative Charles H. Cul- der's Judge Edward J. Jefiries, who ver to send the income measure to presided in the Gerald E. Buckley the ways and means committee. murder trial, which ended Tuesday I Fred R. Ming overruled his point of night in the acquittal of the de- order and the house soon after- fendants, was named defendant, as 'ward passed the bill. RepresentativeC a former stockholder and director Culver declared, as he did with thet in a defunct alcohol manufactur- sales tax, that it should be sent to ing company, in a suit for $70Q filed the finance group on the contention in circuit court today. that it was an appropriation meas-u There are 25 other defendants, I ure.b said by the Detroit News to include Approved With Minor Changes.' "bootleggers, gamblers, and profes-, The bill was approved with onlyC sional bondsmen." minor amendments today. Repre- The bill of complaint names sentative Charles H. Reed, of Clio, Judge Jeffries, his son, Edward J. 1 was unsuccessful in a t t a c h i n Jearies, Jr., a lawyer, and others slight changes in the phraseology t as stockholders in the now defunct of the text. The house had previous-b Mueller Process company, of St. ly accepted an amendment to setn Johns, Mich., which once was en- aside the first $10,000,000 of the rev- s I. Wilbur M. Brucker, Governor of Michigan, who will be one of the principal speakers at the sixth annual Founder's Day banquet to be held tonight in the Lawyer's club following the finals of the Junior Case club competition. BTATE FOR HCH14"ICAGO" Assembly Requested to Petition Congress for Creation 1 of 49th State, SPRINGFIELD, Apr. 23. - (/P) - Creation of a forty-ninth state by the separation oW Cook county (Chicago) from the rest of Illinois! was, asked in the general assembly by a group of Chicago voters today. The assembly was asked to petition. Congress for the creation of a new 1 state. The reasons given for the separa-C tion were that downstate Illinois baippered Cook county develop-; rnent by refusing to reapportion the state and that Cook county citizens wer e taxed without fair represen-I ration. More than one-half of the state's population under the 1930 census figures reside in Cook county which! includes Chicago and a few sub- urban towns. Cook county 'also. furnishes more than one-half of the state income from taxation. Repeated demands for reappor- tionment, required by law, have fallen upon the deaf ears of down-; state representatives with the re- sult that Cook county is represented in the United States House of Rep-, resentatives by 10 members of a Democratic Committeeman He Did Not Slarider Republican. Says WASHINGTON, April 23.-(/P)_ A charge by Chairman Fess of the Republican n a t i o n a l committee that Jouett Shouse ,was guilty of a "deliberate lie" in a recent San E Francisco speech brought an as- sault on the Ohio senator today from the chairman of the Demo- cratic national executive commit- tee. In two statements issued from national headquarters, Shouse said Fess should have substantiated his E facts before attributing to him a statement that the Republican or- ganization p u r c h a s e d 10,000,000 copies of an Eastern magazine carrying an article by Robert Cruise McManus, a newspaperman, at- tacking the religion of Chairman Raskob of the Democratic national committee. gaged in. the manufacture of al- cohol from a secret process under a federal government permit. Some of the defendants said today the company was organized to manu- facture potash, fertilizer, and other: products, with alcohol as a by-pro- duct. The complainant is John A. Ing- raham, a former bookkeeper for the company. He was granted a judgment of $2,019.93 against the' concern in 1929 and charges in the l suit that he received only $1,500 of this amount. He is suing for the remainder. Judge Jeffries and his son couldj not be reached today for a state- ment. They were Fnaid to ben route to French Lick, Inct. enue from the measure to the school tax burden. equalizeI Hoover Undertakes Inspection of Administrative Machinery of Government. WASHING TON, April 23.--(/P)~~ President Hoover is making a thor- ough study of administrative ma- chinery of the federal government. With congress out of session sev- ti p it u f t. t S f i 17 Members of the house committee recently appointed to investi- gate the University liquor situation reported yesterday at Lansing that Michigan is better than most educational instiuions in regard to the observance of the eighteenth amendment and that the recent raids were due to "over-zealousness" on the part of the Ann Arbor police. The conditions which were alleged to exist at the University, uncovered in the raid which closed five fraternities until September, were not thought to constitute a "major problem at Michigan." "It is the opinion of the committee," the official report stated, "that the police officers who actually raided the fraternity houses --were indiscreet and over-zealous, or were quite willing to embarrass Positions on Daily the students needlessly. Their an- Open to Freshmen nounced purpose of endeavoring to obtain evidence with which to con- Freshmen may still report for vict the two alleged bootleggers work on the editorial and busi-1 could have been accomplished by nnsTeDaily, it was less objectionable methods. While There is still a chance for the prosecuting attorney acted those who report to win repor- within his rights, a little better ters' jobs during their sopho- judgment and a little more prud- more years with the possibility ence on his part might have pre- of appointment to a night-edi- vented considerable unfavorable and torship and the . upper staff of unjust publicity." the publicatiop at the end of their second year.Liquor Not a MajorProblem, All second-semester freshmen "The use of intoxicating liquors and sophomores who have at by the students is not a major prow- least one grade of B or better lem at the University of Michigan," and no grades below C are eligi the report continues. "All the per ble for this wor. Csons interviewed by the members of the committee were of the opin- ion that the use of liquor by stuff dents is gradually decreasing. Drinking is not a common practice among the students. Conditions are materially better than they were five years ago and there. is less drinking on the campus by the stu- dents' than there wa,b - the adoption of =prohibitio. The co=!- imittee also finds that condtion' Gould Appointed .to Position; not only are improving in An Call for Tryouts :Arbor from year to year, but that Cdconditons not only are improving Issued. in An Arbor from year to year, but ~~~~ . .ththat conditions at the University At a regular meeting of the judi- are better than at most colleges ciary committee of the Interfra- and universities." ternity Council, held last night in "The committee further finds University hall, Howard Gould, '32, that the unit method of discipline was appointed Secretary-Treasurer is in accord with established prac- ' was ap n t r ttice at the University," the report of the organization for the coming concludes. "While it is the opinion year. This was the first meeting of of the committee that the punish- the group held under the new con- ment inflicted upon the students stitution. and on the alumni members of the A call for second semester freh fraternities is rather severe, still the committee is satisfied that the. issued. This will giv ratrnio t n University authorities have acted an opporunity to do some executive calmly, reasonably and in entire and opornitygtorkohomexecti good faith, and with a complete and organizing work, John Dobbin understanding of the entire situa- '311, stated, and the job will also to. pay a salary of $100 per year. Try- Tinv outs are to meet at 3 o'clock to- The investigting committee was morrow on the third floor of thecomposed of Repreentativesarin, UorroonthetairdHull, Boyle, Frey, Lane, and Hink- Union, he said. ley of which Hull of Detroit, was It was announced that the office chairman. hours of the council would be from O'Brien Refutes Charge. 3 to 5 o'clock on Tuesdays and Chief of Police Thomas O'Brien Thursdays. stated today that the "officers were The next committee meeting will NOT over-zealous in making the be held on Wednesday, May 6, at raids and arrests" and that they which time two men will be nom- followed their "usual method of inated for the presidency. The last obtaining evidence" meeting of the council will be on "I do not know how we could Wednesday, May 13, at which time convict anybody," O'Brien stated, elections will be held. "without producing the evidence. -- The evidence in this case, had been Specialist Will Speak placed in the fraternity houses by Alph Om ga Aphathe bootleggers who were unknown topha to us up to the time of the raid We acted within our rights. It is Pir. George W. Crile, head of the not, and never has been, the inten- Cleveland clinic, will deliver a lec- tion of the police to prosecute a ture at 8 o'clock tonight in Natural student any more than any other _.person. delegation of 27. In the general assembly at Springfield, Cook county is repre- sented by 19 of the 51 state sena- tors and 57 of 153 sta1c represent- Fess based his statement on a San Francisco newspaper account of Shouse's speech in that cityl April 15. Shouse said he never madeI such a statement. "In that speech at San Francis- co," he said, "I called attention to an article published in Scribner'sa magazine of last September, ex- cerpts from which were reproduced in a pamphlet issued by the Repub- lican national committee under the heading 'Smear Hoover--Raskob's order to his subsidized propagan- da.' " E JUS TICE I PLAN FOR_ INQUIRY Federal Authorities Prepare to Investigate $100,000,000 Mortgage Company. WASHINGTON, April 23.-(/P) - The Justice Department today laid plans for a general investigation of the American Bond and Mortgage Co., characterized as a $100,000,000 company with activities in half a dozen of the largest cities. Word came from Federal officials recently that incidental inquiry had been made into the concern's ac- tivities. It was said authoritatively, today, however, that due to a new "flood of complaints" from stock- holders there "undoubtedly will be oral months for the first time in his atives. Literary School Dean two years in office, the chief execu- Leaves for Conference 'My e has turned his attention to ad- Royal Air Marshall inistrative affairs. DhThe inspection is being conducted Dies in Plane Crash Dean W. P. Humphreys of the lit-mostly for his own information, Crary college left Ann Arbor to a but there is a possibility that he SEA_URST PARK, SUSS X, E ta c I City I a' may discover the need of legisla- land, Apr. 23.--(/P' Air Vice Mar- niversi tum hreyswill rpr owa. tion to bring several bureaus up-to- shall Felton Vesey IHolt, commander Dean J hr eys wil r sen date. of the air defenses of Great Bri- Dean John R. Etfinger. who is in The president is not conducting tain, was killed today in an air- the south inspecting colleges of his inquiry primarily through cabi- plane collision. Ills pilot, Flight! that part of the country, at the con- net members but is calling in bur- Lieutenant Henry Moody, also was' Terence. cau and commission heads from ( killed, but the occupant of the other - all over town. Cabinet members plane escaped injury. Noted Detroit Pianist I are consulted at times but most of Vice Marshall Holt was 0o of Will Perform Tonight e work is being done through the the pioneers of the Royal Ai Force "little cabinet." and had received the Distinguished One of the reasons Mr. Hoover Service Order for valor. He was Frank Bishop, Detroit pianist, will decided he could not make a trip prompted to his present post Jan, present a recital at 8:15 o'clock to-. through the national parks and to 1 and appointed "air officer com1- night in the Lydia Mendelssohn his home at Palo Alto,, Calif., was inanding the fghting area of air theatre. that he needed the time for this nl defense of Great Britain" as rk-- .survey. as April 7. His program tonight will include --- --_ -- - - - - -- - - T e i a, Fischer; Prelude aROBBINS DISCUSSES LEAGUE HOUSE and Fugue in C sharp Major, B oh; REGULATIONS IN 'ALUMNUS' ARTICLE. I Moonlight Sonata, Bee t h o v en; ----.----- i l , , i a C r 7 Valse, Chopin; Fantasie in F Minor,E Chopin; La Cathedrale Engloutie, Debussy; Seguidillas, Albeniz; andI Sixth Rhapsody, by Liszt. Aunt of King Alfonso Dies of Heart Attack E Assistant to President S Advantages of Rooming System for Girls. tates PARIS, April 23. -(Il})- Infanta Marie Isabella Francoise, aunt of King Alfonso of Spain, died here to- day of a heart attack, three days after she entered France as an exile. She was 79 years old.I Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistantj to the President, surveys the regu- lation' of social activities among League house women on Michigan's campus in the April 25 issue of the Alumnus, out today. The article indicates the methods used to en- courage women not residing in sor- orities and dormitories to take part in social and extra-curricular activ- ities on the University campus, as thereby losing many of the social1 contacts that make college life interesting in itself and valuable as a training for the relationships of life outside the college walls. For these students the office of the dean of women has devised special methods to bring them more fully into the main current of events." Dr. Robbins continues to explain that at the present time there are more than 350 girls living in 38 rooming houses, which have been organized as league houses, each with a president and a social chair- man. Ethel A. McCormick, social Science auditorium. Dr. Crile is here under the auspices of the Al- pha Omega Alpha, honorary medi- "al society. "Research into the Formation of Autosynthetic Cells With Special Reference to Cancer Cells" will be the topic of his talk. Dr. Crile has achieved international recognition as a goiter specialist and for his surgical work along this line. The lecture is open to the pub- lic. Byrd is More Popular to Youth Than Santa MEMPHIS, Tenn., Apr. 23.-(P)- ARCHI TECTS SELL TICKETS FOR BALL Chairmen of Committee Plan to Install Booths on Campus. Tickets for the annual Architect's May Party to be held May 15 in Waterman gymnasium are on sale now, William Balback, '32A, and. Stanley Fleischaker, '32A, co-chair- men of the ticket committee for the affair announced yesterday. This week they are being sold in the architectural building only. Next week, booths will be installed in University hall and the Union'