ESTABLISHED 1890 i Aglow 4 Y f Ar 4tj r MOW" t XLIL No. 51 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1931 COVE CEO DED ary G PENALTIES ON HOUSES pL9ST YEAR roup Lifts Decree Big Ten Ofcial to Address Grid. RULING ON COOK 111111 runrn~rn of Social Probation on Fraternities. AFFECTS FIVE HOUSES immittee Feels That Puipose of Ban Is Fulfilled,' Says Council. he last vestige of punishment, icted upon the five fraternities led by police authorities last r, was removed yesterday when houses were informed that the al probation, under which they i been placed; was removed. he fraternities, Delta Kappa ilon, Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta ta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and ta Delta Chi were closed last rpary after liquor raids. They e allowed to open up again last ier, after the spring semester were placed upon social proba- d these of any o the Senate Com- ent Affairs, urging ty be lifted, was a meeting of the ittee of the Inter- it last week. It was nimous vote after y, dean of students, option. mmittee lifted the a virtually unani- on Drawn. to the committee Banquet Tuesday VILL LA[biLU Major John L. Griilth, commis- sioner of Big Ten Conference ath- si nro i e ofrneahletics, will be the principle speaker at the annual Union Football ban-, quet, to be held at 6:15 o'clock, Regent Murfin, Attorney for Law next Tuesday, in the Union. School's Side, Expresses The banquet is held every year Optimistic View. as a tribute to Michigan's Varsity OptmitiVew football team. Every man who re- ceives his letter in the sport this $6,000,000 INVOLVED year will be a guest of the Union. At this time the captain and Serrogate Judge Foley of New manager of the 1932 team will be announced. There will be speeches York Is Now Considering by Captain Roy Hudson, Manager All Evidence. John Sauchuck, and by the captain and manager elect. Interest in the litigation concern- Prof. 0. J. Campbell, of the Eng- ing the will of the late William W. list department, will be the toast Cook, donor of the law club has master at the banquet. Hugh R. Conklin, '32, president of the Un- been aroused by the prospect of a ion, will extend the welcome of the decision in the near future. Last campus and the Union to the team. Friday the New York serrogate Tickets have been reduced in judge who is trying the case. dis- price from the customary $1.25 to mse or n oktecs $1. Six or more persons, buying missed court and took the case tickets in a group, may reserve a under consideration. Approximate- private table. The tickets will be ly six million dollars are involved in on sale at the Union desk, at Slat- the will. er's Book Store,and also may be James 0. Murfin, regent of the men. University and attorney for the law / The Union banquet, w'hich has school's side of the litigation, ex- become a traditionon the campus, pressed himself yesterday as being is held at the close of each foot- very optimistic as to the outcome ball season. It is primarily an Op- of the case. "The judge will have to portunity for the student body to makhe some startling law if the de- express their appreciation to the cision is against the university, he teayn for their work done during remarked. the season.SutoImrane This year, because of the fact JudgeSuit of Importance. that there are only four outstand- the suit Foley apparently considers ing juniors on the squad, there has tane frone of considerable import been much speculation as to who fcrding to Regent Murfin. Before will receive the captaincy next year. dismissing the court, Judge Foley Thereare also four- men eligible stated that in his opinion the case for the managers job. wsatey thatnasinonell casen Since the V a r s i t y las gone se ry important as well as in- through and unusually difficult and When the question was discussed successful football season this year, as to how much money was actually and because of the fact that the at stake as a result of the decision, price of the tickets have been re- the possibility was brought up that duced, the Union expects to have even though the one time wife of one of the largest crowds in its his- William Cook won the suit she still tory at the banquet. ,might not get any of the money. It seems the law provides that educational. &id eharitable institu- i nsca nnlt l mm}e h n h Y. I KDAof a man's will if a widow or child files suit for a share. As the amount is always figured from the value of the estate at the time of the donor's demise,. the university's half of the estate in this case would be about Democratic Leader Tells Party six million dollars. And since the Not to Take Definite Stand estate is mostly in foreign loans on Prohibition Issue, and in stock of the National City ,y__bank, its present value i less than six million, it was brought out. WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.-(A)- Therefore with the university's Chairman John J. Raskob of the share bei g paid first as it probably Democratic n a t i o n .1 committee would b the former Mrs. Cook said today he opposed the partyg may not receive her half even taking either a wet or dry stand in though the deision of the court is 1932 but wanted it to declare for inher vProbably Appeal. a referendum on prohibition. Whoever comes out ahead in the At the March meeting of the present litigation, there will in all committee, R a s k o b proposed a probability be an appeal to a higher plank providing state liquor con- court, according to Regent Murfin. trol. His declaration today on the Pointing out the unusual nature eve of another national committee of the claims of the late William ineeting was une pected. He made Cook's former wife, Regent Murfin the statement through the com- said that there were-no equities in mittee in defending his position in the case at all, and that if it were reply to an editorial in the New not for the eminence of the oppos- York Times. He said: ing council and the large amount "I strongly feel the party should involved, no one would take the take neither the wet nor the dry case seriously. side of this highly controversial Nathan F. Miller, the attorney for question, b u t that its platform the opposition has considerable should definitely commit the Dem- standing, it is generally agreed. ocratic members of Congress to Their claim is based on a mere vote in favor of some resolution technicality, however, Regent Mur- which will give the neople them- fin declared. Is University President Criticises Forced Conformity as Result of Modern Ways. TALK IS a Epsilon, Theta i Delta Theta be status of social of Good Stand- The committee feels irpose of the penalty has aplished.... advantages of social pro- a serious detriment to e of these houses during g seasoni." lution was drawn up and to the Judiciary commit- ard Gould, '32, secretary- of the Interfraternity State Bulletin (By Associated Press) Tuesday, November 24, 1931 ESCANABA-H. H. Stroud, Way- land, Mich., is the second archet of the season to get his buck in the Blaney park archery reserve. He brought down a 10-point deer with his bow and arrow today. H. J.[ Cooper, of Kalamazoo, felled a deer by the same quaint method Satur- day. LANSING-Approximately $500,- 000 in road contracts were awarded today by the . highway committee of the state administrative board, which also approved $71,000 worth of new construction and better- ment projects.- BATTLE CREEK-The Anna J. Kellogg school f o r handicapped children, cited by President Hoo- aver as an example of future devel- opment in public education, was dedicated here today. W. K. Kel- logg, cereal manufacturer aided in financing the school. PONTIAC-Six witnesses testified today in the one-man grand jury inquiry Circuit Judge Parm C. Gil- bert of Traverse City is conducting into the recent flogging of three men suspected of communist sym- pathies. Clarence Sherman, one, f the whipping victims, was a wit- ness. DETROIT-Felix J. Mahler, Na- than M. Gross, and Norman Lyle, officers of t h e defunct Federal Bond and Mortgage Co., were held selves opportunity to vote on the question as to whether they wish t h e Eighteenth Amendment 1e- ! tamed, repealed, or modified." I Raskob also challenged, the pub- lished assertion that Gov. Roose- velt of New York, opposed his se- lection by Alfred E. Smith in 1928 as head of the committee. "Former Gov. Smith advises that Gov. Roosevelt never opposed my selection as national chairman and I am very sure that this is the fact," he said. A recent biography of Gov. Roose- velt carried the statement of his opposition to Raskob's selection. Coach Dorais Refuses U. of D. Charity Game DETROIT, Nov. 24.-(P)-Coach Gus Dorais, of the University of Detroit, has turned thumbs down on a suggestion by the state un- employment athletic commission that the Titans engage Michigan - State College on Dec. 5 for charity. Dorais said today he had wired a negative reply to A. W. Thomp- son, of the commission's football sub-committee, from whom t h e suggestion came. HOLIDAY EXODUS WILL BEGIN TODAY AS STUDENTS HEAR GOBBLER'S CALL Trains, busses, and the student "thumb" will be worked to the limit today as numerous undergraduates hark to the annual call of the "gobbler" and forsake textbooks for a "good, square meal." Despite attempts by the Univer- sity to bring a turkey-filled stu- destined to remain in the city will have to be content with the offer- ings of the landlady, the house chef, or the numerous eating shops with which Ann Arbor is more than abundantly supplied. The latter area appealing to the palate with special menus offering everything