The Weather Mostly unsettled today; probably rain. Y .1t igau ttij editorials Age Limit In The Beer Bill VOL. XLIII No. 141 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1933 PRICE FIVE CENT 0 Action Dalrymple Censured Issuance Of Per'mits To Eastern Gangsters Brings On Heated Controversy 'Keep Graft Out Of Beer'-Cummings Pacific Coast Agent Is Shifted Without Attor- ney General's Knowledge WASHINGTON, April 18.-WR)- Three weeks in office, A. V. Darym- ple, Prohibition director, today was the center of a controversy over the issuance of brewing permits to east- ern gangsters and the shifting of a Pacific Coast administrator without the fore knowledge of Attorney Gen- eral Homer S. Cummings. ° Meanwhile, the Attorney General initiated an independent investiga- tion into the issuance of permits all over the country and said that every resource of the Justice De- partment wouid be strained toward keeping known offenders and per- sons with criminal records out of the beer business. "I believe that the decent and law-abiding citizens of the country want decent and responsible people handling beer in a manner free from corruption and graft," Mr. Cum- mings said. Echo of Gang Killings The New Jersey beer situation which led to the killings last week of two men listed as racketeers and gangsters-one of whom had ob- tained a brewing permit - w a s brought to Dalrymple's door early in the day. Dr. James M. Doran, commissioner of indstrial alcohol, asserted that some permits were pushed along at the request of the Prohibition director. Later, Attorney General Cummings said that he did not know until he read published accounts that Dal- rymple had demanded the resigna- tion of William G. Walker as admin- istrator of Northern California and Pretzel Question Up For Debate In House LANSING, April 18.-(I)-The question of when is a free lunch bothered the House liquor com- mittee today. Members who favored pretzels with their beer contended' that they are appetizers and not food. The administration beer bill, as passed by the Senate, prohibits serving free lunches with beer. The committee agreed tentatively to amend the measure to permit munching free pretzels. Nevada and had appointed John L. Considine, a San Francisco news- paperman, as his successor. Dalrymple, in a turbulent session' with newspaper men, dictated a heated statement-his first since tak- ing office-in reply to what he term- ed "slight criticisms" of his office. Defends His Actions He said that haste was urged to get revenue flowing in from beer and that "the object was, of course, to see that no injustice was done to those who had complied with the regulations." He added that he did not intend to enter into any controversy with Dr. Doran. Then, flatly declining to answer any questions about his actions since he has been director, he pounded his desk and told those gathered about him that he would not be in- terrogated and that he was under instructions from the Attorney Gen- eral to give no interviews. The Prohibition director said that "we have and will instruct our men to expedite issuance of permits where, it is demonstrated that it is a proper case for a permit to be issued." , 'Capless' Cap Night { Next Council Topic What to do with Michigan's cap- less Cap Night is the topic which1 will come up for discussion tonight> when the Student Council will hear the report of a special committee composed of Councilmei William F.1 Vllna++ ,'qq aiIr ram . RiironsRCC L I i "- Center Of Storm -Associated Press Photo A. V. DALRYMPLE Administration To Stimulate Currency Use President Calls Conference Of Federal Reserve; To Facilitate Credit WASHINGTON, April 18.-OP)- The administration tonight called in the Federal Reserve Bank governors to stimulate exchange of currency and reach out for command of the growing campaign for inflation. Calling off temporarily the drive on Capital Hill for money expansion, the President determined to make existing credit facilities more effec- tive as he began discussion of other "reflation proposals." In announcing the conference here tomorrow of the governors of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks, Secretary Woodin made it clear that he was looking primarily for means of put- ting into operation the idle currency now available to the banks and the freeing of four or five billion dollars locked up in closed institutions. There is a conviction at the treas- ury that the demand for capital is increasing and commodity prices im- proving, but that something must' be done to pump the millions of available new currency through the' banks to industry. The door was not slammed at the White House to inflationary steps, but it was emphasized there that no specific administration measure has' been drafted. High administrative leaders also hinted quite strongly that there is no thought of forth- right currency inflation. As for the related silver problem, it is the intention of President Roose- velt to work this out through an in- ternational treaty or treaties in the forthcoming world economic discus- sions. He feels world action is neces- sary on the subject of bimetallism. With approximately $2,000,000,000 of new currency available under the' recently enacted banking law, the banks had called for only $31,652,381 up to April 15. Only five Federal Re- serve districts had used any of this new currency-New York, Phila- delphia, Boston, Cleveland and St. Louis. NAZIS REMOVE EBERT STATUE BERLIN, April 18.--(P)-Nazis re-1 moved a bust of Friedrich Ebert, first president of Germany, from the1 Berlin city hall today.1 Council Votes New Method OfInventory Board Of Directors Of Chamber Of Commnerce May Choose Committees Will Name Experts For Investigations Appointment Of Boards To Appraise Businesses For Assessment Is Asked A plan to improve the method of levying taxes by having committees appointed to take inventories of the businesses to be assessed, rather than allowing the business men to make their own inventories, received the approval of members of the Common Council and city members of the Board of Supervisors in a meeting last night at City Hall. The meeting agreed to ask the Board of' Directors of the Chamber of Commerce to appoint the commit- tees, and a resolution to that effect will be presented to the board when it meets tomorrow evening. Would Concentrate Talent In the plan's operation, a number of committees would be appointed, each committee composed of men in a single line of work. Thus there would be a committee of doctors, a committee of lawyers, a committee of grocers, and similar committees for all lines of work to be assessed. Each committee would take the in- ventories of those businesses with which it is most familiar, the doc- tor's committee taking the inventory of doctors' offices, the grocer's com- mittee taking the inventory of gro- cery stores, and so on down the line. It is expected that the plan, which was suggested by a member of the audience, will do away with attempts to cheat on assessments. Lawyers, the meeting decided, would be able to make better inventories of the city's law offices than any one indi- vidual not connected with law work could do, and the same is true with other businesses. Chain Stores Discussed The meeting also decided that if the technical work in making out as- sessments was too great for the city assessor himself, a number of men should be appointed by the budget committee of the Council to assist him. Much discussion at the meeting concerned chain stores, which, it was argued, do not really pay as high an assessment as they should. This, a number of speakers contended, is be- cause of their quick one-day turn- over of goods brought here from De- troit, which makes it impossible to take a fair inventory. Many persons present said that a large number of businesses in the city are not paying a fair tax, and this necessitated those who did pay their taxes to pay a higher rate than they would otherwise have to do. Senate Waits Action On Banking Reform WASHINGTON, April 18.-(A)- Agreed upon a widely ramifying banking reform bill, embodying a $2,- 000,000,000 proviso for insuring Fed- eral Reserve member bank deposits, the Senate banking subcommittee made known tonight it would with- hold final action until the adminis- tration speaks. Financial Difficulties Not Settled By Cut In State Salaries, is Clairi To Urge Budget Cut Protest State Board Asks Further Revenues Teachers Suffer Througl Failure Of State To'Ad- vance Aid, Pearce Says LANSING, April 18.-UP)--Imme- diate legislation to start new reve- nues flowing into the State treasury was demanded by members of the State Administrative Board today as all State employees were placed on half-pay. Even this reduction in ex- penditures will not allow the State to meet essential obligations unless funds car be obtained from new sources, it was claimed. Webster H. Pearce, superintendent of public instruction, told the board hundreds of teachers are suffering because of the failure of the State to advance aid. He said the teach- ers, many of whom have not been paid for months, have continued working on the promise that the $2,- 000,000 Turner School Aid Fund would be distributed May 1. State Treasurer Theodore I. Fry said there will not be sufficient money for the disbursement. Upon Pearce's motion it was ordered that as much of the school money as is available be re- leased. G. C. Dillman, State highway com- missioner, said some trunk line high- ways maintenance payrolls have not been met since last December. High- way funds have been "borrowed" for general fund purposes. The 50 per cent reduction ordered by the board will affect approximate- ly 10,000 State employees and will cut into a $1,100,000 monthly payroll. The resolution adopted by the board, upon the recommendation of the fi- nance committee, said: "In view of the falling off of rev- enues from tax collections the State is unable to meet its obligations and continue to supply the money needed for the operation of State govern- ment. As one means of meeting the cash shortage the committee recom- mends that 50 per cent of all State payrolls, including those of the Uni- versity of Michigan, Michigan State College and other institutions be de- ferred effective April 1 and that the percentages be adjusted from month to month as necessity dictates. This means that employees who drewthalf monthly pay April 15 will not be paid again until May 15, and em- ployees paid but once a month will draw half a month's pay for April on May 1. The committee is hopeful conditions causing the lack of tax collections will be remedied in the near future." Faculty Judges Announced For SpeechFinals Six Students To Participate In Oratorical Contest For Chicago Alumni Medal Five members of the faculty will judge the orations of the six finalists in the annual University Oratorical contest which will be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Laboratory Theatre. As announced by Carl G. Brandt, of the speech department, they are Prof. H. R. Coffey of the Law School, Pro- fessors Louis Eich and A. D. T. Hol- lister of the speech department, Prof. James K. Pollock of the political s c i e n c e department, and Prof. Thomas C. Trueblood, dean emeritus of the speech department. The six persons who survived the preliminary round held on April 6 are Alice Boter, '33, Dorothy M. Davis, '33, Edmund K. Heitman, '35, Wilbert L. Hindman, Jr., '33, Robert M. Sawyer, '33, and Robert S. Ward, '35. The winner nf the natnewiP n. More than 5,000 leaflets will be distributed on the campus today by members of the National Student League, urging all students and faculty members to telegraph the State Legislature protesting against reduction of the University appropriation to a sum less than the $3,750,000 which President Alexander G. Ruthven has recommended. The Legislature is scheduled to take up the matter of the Univer- sity appropriation some time today, and the leaflets will urge flooding the Legislature with telegrams early enough to make the sentiment of the students and faculty known before the matter comes to a final vote. The leaflets will point out to the students and faculty members that a further reduction will raise tuition fees, force young instructors and assistants into the ranks of the unemployed, and generally ruin the University's standing as one of the leading educational institutions of the world. When the cut was first proposed, the- National Student League was active, along with Michigamua and Sphinx, honorary societies, and The Daily, in circulating a petition objecting to the reduction, which at that time threatened to be almost 75 per cent of the Univer- sity appropriation. More than 3,000 students signed the petition, which was then taken to Lansing by a committee of campus leaders and presented to Gov. William A. Comstock. $2,645,000 Compromise Struck In Committee Recommendation After Plea By Ruthven Is Hearc 2 Britons Are Committed To Russian Prison One Acquitted, Three Are Expelled; Monkhouse Defends Profession MOSCOW, April 18.--P)-Two British electrical engineers were given prison sentences today on con- viction of charges of sabotage and espionage, while one, A. W. Gregory, was acquitted, and three were or- dered expelled. L. C. Thornton, chief erecting en- gineer for the Metropolitan Vickers Co., received a three-year sentence. .W. H. MacDonald, an engineer, was sentenced to two years. He was the only Briton who pleaded guilty. Allan Monkhouse, the director for the firm in Moscow; Charles Nord- wall and John Cushing were ordered expelled. Ten of the Russian defendants were convicted and the eleventh was acquitted. The sentences for the Russians in- cluded: Vassili Gusev, 10 years; Zorin, eight years; Krasheninnikov, five years; Kotlyarevsky, eight years; Anna Kutuzova, one and a half years; Lebedev, two years; Lobanov, 10 years; Oleynik, three years. Y. I. Ziebert was acquitted. Prior to the verdict the last proce- dure in the court room was a series of final statements from each of the defendants. Perhaps the most dram- atic of these came from Monkhouse, who told the court that a man of his profession could no more wreck his engineering accomplishments than he could kill his own children. "When engineers build works of this kind they look on them as their own children, and I never yet knew a parent who would put a dagger in the heart of his child," he said. STAMP CLUB MEETS TONIGHT The Ann Arbor Stamp Club will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p. m. tonight in the Union. All students interested in philately are urged to attend. Students Plan Conference On World Affairs Commissions Organized To Lead Discussions Of Politics And Economics Student analysis and discussion of world problems of national and in- ternational scope will be made pos- sible at the International Student Conference on World Affairs to be held May 4, 5, 6, and 7 in the Union. Three separate commissions are be- ing organized to collect material and information on world politics, eco- nomics, and society. They will be in charge of discussion of these par- ticular phases of the conference. The group sessions under super- vision of these commissions will meet afternoons and evenings for discus- sion periods. Reports of each meet- ing will be kept. These reports will be read at the evening sessions which will be limited to speeches and re- ports from leaders of the conference. Student discussion will necessarily be eliminated at these evening ses- sions by the shortage of time, since the progress of the various groups will be collected and checked daily at these assemblies. Michigan offers an excellent op- portunity for this conference, Gor- don Galaty, '33, chairman of the ex- ecutive committee, explained, because of the ability of the faculty and the diversity of its student population, both of which have signified their intention of co-operating in this con- gress. Technic Will Contain Prize-Winning Article "Apprenticeship, Vocational Train- ing and Industry" a prize winning article by Marshall Anderson, Grad., is the main feature of the April issue of the Michigan Technic which goes on sale Thursday in the lobbies of the East and West Engineering Buildings. Ways And Means Group Will Try To Place New Figure In University Bill Tax Appropriation To Be Guaranteed Legislators Agreed That $2,000,000 Is Too Low; M.S.C. Gets $1,000000 ' LANSING, April 18.-f)--The House Ways and Means Committee agreed late today to recommend a guaranteed mill-tax appropriation of $2,645,000 a year for the University of Michigan. The decision followed a hearing in which President Alexander G. Ruth- ven said it was his honest opinion that to cut the appropriation that low would be to "drag the institution" below the deadline to a 'point where destruction would begin." The com- mittee Wednesday will offer amend- ments on the floor to place the iew figure in the University bill. As or- iginally reported the measure pro- posed to reduce the appropriation from six-tenths to three-tenths of a mill with a maximum of $2,000,000 a year. No Maximum Limitation Convinced this figure was too low, the members agreed to fix the appropriation at four-tenths of a mill, without a maximum limitation, and with a guarantee that $2,645,000 will be paid the University regardless of tax delinquencies. Last year the institution was entitled to $4,126,000 from the mill-tax appropriation, but to date has received a little more than $2,000,000because of tax de- linquencies. The committee also agreed to guarantee Michigan State College $1,000,000 a year from a mill tax of sixteen one-hundredths instead of the $900,000 maximum and fifteen one-hundredths mill tax originally recommended. A straight reduction of 33 1-3 per cent in appropriations for personal service in all normal colleges was approved. Would Eliminate Overlapping The committee's. action followed a hearing in which Dr. Ruthven, Shir- ley Smith, treasurer of the Univer- sity, and Edmund C. Shields, Regent, pleaded for the appropriation which would permit the institution to op- erate without loss of usefulness and educational prestige. They advocated an appropriation of $3,750,000. A resolution was introduced in the House this afternoon by Rep. George J. Creen (Dem., Saginaw) proposing a legislative study to eliminate dupli- cation in educational institutions. It provided that the Board of Regents of the University, the State Board of Agriculture and the State Board of Education name representatives to meet with a legislative committee to discuss the proposal. It is Creen's contention that economies could be effected by eliminating overlapping courses and activities in the Univer- sity, Michigan State College, and normal colleges. Wari Leads Technocracy Discussion At Alpha Nu An impromptu discussion of Tech- nocracy led by Robert S. Ward, '35, was held last night at the regular meeting of the. Alpha Nu chapter of Kappa Phi Sigma, honorary speech society. Dean J. B. Edmonson, of the School of Education, who was orig- inally on the program, was called out of town. m p n n offered by friends and enemies of Technocracy. The chief objection to the system was that it could not function because its basic theory of demand equalling supply can never be realized. Seniors Are Urged To Order Canes At Once Seniors are urged to place or- ders for canes with Wagner's English, American Co-Eds Not Used To Freedom Of Continent By ELEANOR BLUMN College women in America and England are not used to the free- dom granted women students in Ger- many, France and Switzerland, ac- cording to Miss Helen Naegeli, of Zurich, Switzerland, who is here to observe American student life. Miss Naegeli has come here from Switzerland after extensive visits to Oxford, Paris, and universities in the south of Germany. "I have come," Miss Naegeli said, "to watch people teach and work, not to get a degree." She will attend lectures and classes as a regular student. One of the first observations that Miss Naegeli made was on the ease with which she wa ahl tn onenrll England's. In Switzerland and Ger- many, however, the student rooms are located anywhere in the vicinity of the school and have no connection with the university. They have no particular hours, she said, and when asked how that worked, Miss Naegeli said that the students were "surpris- ingly sensible." When asked if she believed that complete freedom such as that would work in America, Miss Naegeli remarked that, although she had not been here long enough to observe, she thought that American students were probably not prepared for that freedom since they had been away to school most of their lives and therefore under constant super- vision_ Tn ;rmmnn wimartnn -ar If Students Want Class Games, They Can Have Them, It Seems By GEORGE VAN VLECK Michigan will have class games, if the Union and the Student Council can get enough interest aroused among the members of the classes who are expected to take part. At a meeting of the officers of the freshman and sophomore classes last night, Union officials said that the lack of interest on the part of the members of the sophomore classes mightaseriously impair the success of the class games. Theyvsaid. howevvr.thatf fh.uhe- printing of any posters which the classes may want to prepare, it was announced by representatives of the organizations. The question of the spring games is to come before the Student Council tonight, but it was brought out at the meeting that the games would proceed regardless of the Council's action, if there was in- dication that support would be forth- coming from members of the fresh- man and sophomore classes. Plans were made for persuading one of the members of the freshman