The Generally warmer Sun showers or1 Weather rfair and slightly iday. Monday local thunderstorms. LL it igan Iait~ Editorials I Chapter's End . I. I VOL. XLIII No. 180 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 4, 1933 PRICE FIVE CENTS Emeritus Club To.Meet With Alumni Group Glee Club Alumni Reunion Will Feature Singing On Library Steps Plan Varied Sports And Entertainment Members Of Class Of '23 Select Slogan Of 'Join The Poverty Parade' Rejnlniscences of the days when the campus was surrounded with a post fence, old University Hall was the principal building, and East Hall was a grammar school will be ex- changed next week when about 25. members of the Emeritus Club meet at the time of the annual alumni re- union Thursday, Friday, and Satur- day, June 15, 16, and 17. The Emeritus Club is the offspring of an informal gathering of .several years ago, called the Tappan Re- union. This meeting consisted of alumni who were on the campus in the time of the Rev. Henry P. Tap- pan, first president of the University. Later it was extended to include' those on the campus under the ad-I ministration of the Rev. Erastus O. *Haven, and, at the suggestion of Luther Conant, '62-64, of Oak Park, Ill., the present Emeritus Club was organized with a membership includ- ing all those who had been off the campus more than 50 years. Membership Is Automatic ,Now, according to Frederick S. Randall, '23, council secretary of the Alumni Assocaiton and director of the 1933 reunion, members of all classes automatically become mem- bers of the club on the golden anni- versary of their graduation. The, class organization as such continues until the fiftieth year and then, without destroying the class organi- zation, it integrates with the Emer- itus Cub's -',rganiation. The pur- pos of the club, Mr. Randall ex- plainx; i to ~uaint older alumni{ with the present-day campus and prevent them from "feeling lost" when returning to a campus of strange faces. The Varsity Glee Club Alumni As- sociation's reunion will, be ¬her' interesting unit of the reunion plans. This association, composed of men who sang in the Varsity Glee Club in their undergraduate days, will gather in 'an atmosphere of days filled with tradition-Joe Parker's Cafe-for luncheon and an after- noon rehearsal Friday, preparatory to the Alumni Sing with alumni and the Varsity Band at 9 p. m. on the steps of the General Library. Clas Emblem Is Cup Members of the literary class of 1923, having taken as their reunion slogan "Ten Years Out of School and Back Where We Started," and as their class emblem a tin cup, will stage one of the most colorful pro-. grams of the reunion week-end. "Join the Poverty Parade," a supple- mentary slogan, will be the theme of a Saturday afternoon and night gathering at Washtenaw Country Club, halfway between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Reservations for this function have poured in at the oun- try club so rapidly that' club officials uestion their ability to accommo- date all the group. A unique feature of this celebration, which will include golf, bridge, inter-departmental soft- ball, and a barbecue dinner, is the invitation of members of the liter- ,ry class of '23 to engineers and others of the '23 classes to join them, aiding in breaking down the frequent segregation of departments. The most important features of Registration Day, Thursday, June 15, are the meeting and luncheon of the Alumni Advisory Council. This body comprises University alumni promin- ent in the business world, who gave their time and interest to activities of the Alumni Association. Trap In Detroit For Macdonald Proves Futile FLINT, June 3.-(P)--A police trap laid in Detroit having failed to pro- duce Balfe. Macdonald, sought for more than a week for questioning concerning the slaying of his mother, Mrs. Grace B. Macdonald, authorities Peace Follows Clashes At Morgan Quiz Investigation Is Begun Into M. S. C. Funds Questions Raised On The Disposition Of Musical Department Money Music School Head Explains Systems --Associated Press Photo k A Senate committee's investigation of the House of Morgan has produced many a word battle between Ferdinand Pecora (left), com- mittee counsel, and Sen. Carter Glass. In this picture they have temporarily settled their differences and the hearing continues smoothly. Various Talks Offered Today By Ministers1 Dr. Carl S. Patton Fromj Los Angeles To Talk At Congregational Church Dr. Carl S. Patton, former pastor of the First Congregational Church of this city, will be guest speaker at the1 10:45 a. m. service at the Congrega- tional Church today. Dr. Patton, atf present pastor of the First Congre- gational Church of Los Angeles, Calif., is Moderator of the National. Councilsof Congregational Churches of America. This is the highest honora within the gift of the denomination. He is a popular speaker before uni- versity students all over the country and has many friends in Ann Arbor. Dr. Charles Clayton Morrison of1 Chicago, editor of the Christian Cen- tury, will preach at 10:45 a. m. in the First Methodist Church on "The Crisis in Christianity." Dr. Morrison is a writer and lecturer of note on religion and world peace.r "Religious Vitality" will be the subject of the sermon by the Rev. Alfred Lee Klaer at the morningI services at the First Presbyterian Church. The Student Forum at 6:30I p. m. will be addressed by Mr. Gor- don Halstead on "How Could We Start a Cosmopolitan Student Cul-t tural Center in* Ann Arbor?" Mr.1 Halstead has in mind the forming of j a place where students from differ- ent nations could live, a cultural cen- ter similar to International House in< Chicago but on a smaller scale. FOUR KILLED BY TRAIN r CHARLOTTE, June 3.-(RP)-Eli Reynolds, 42 years old, and three ofj his four children were killed tonight when a Michigan Central train en route to Jackson struck the auto in, which the family was driving to Charlotte, at Chester Station. Mrs. Reynolds and a daughter, Betty1 Jane, 18 months old, are in seriousi condition in Community Hospital, here. William Muldoon, Famed Sportsman, Dies At 88 PURCHASES, N. Y., June 3.-RP)- William Muldoon, mightiest man of the gas-lit 'Eighties, sport's "solid man" of honesty for half a century, died peacefully today at the health farm where he added years to the lives of thousands. He was 88 years old nine days ago. He died at 3:40 a. m. E.S.T.), meeting death with the same staunch fearlesness with which he fought through the Civil War, tamed the turbulent spirit of the great John L. Sullivan, ruled boxing in New York for 10 years, and bent to his will such men as President Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, Elihu Root, Chauncey Depew, and Edward H. Harriman, when they came to his acres seeking health. Famous Scientists Will Lecture Here The Summer Session Symposium on Theoretical Physics, one of the two of its kind in the world and the only one in the United States, will have as guest lecturers this summer several prominent physicists from Europe and the United States. Prof. Neils Bohr of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, will lec- ture here for two weeks. Professor Bohr is a Nobel prize winner and founder of the modern theory of atomic structure. Prof. Enrico Fermi of the Royal University of Rome will also be a guest lecturer, as will Prof. J. H. Van Vleck of the University of Wisconsin. Prof. Arnold Sommerfeld of the University of Munich will be a guest here for a short time. Pro- fessors S. A. Goudsmit, G. E. Uhlen- beck, and D. M. Denison of the Uni- versity of Michigan physics depart- ment will also lecture at the sym- posium. About 30 of those who will attend the meeting are professors at other universities. It is expected that an equal number of graduate students and other students will be present. Everyone In Lansing Said To Think The Board Of Agriculture Is Divine LANSING, June 3.-{P)-The Sen- ate investigating committee again hammered away at the conduct of the musical education department at Michigan State College, with fre- quent clashes between the -commit- tee and Louis Richards, director, af- filiated with the Michigan State In- stitute of Music and Allied Arts. Richards testified that two-thirds of the musical fees went to musical instructors and one-third to the in- stitute. On the one-third portion for the institute, he retained 25 per cent himself, he said, adding that the en- tire plan was approved by the State Board of Agriculture, the governing body of the college. Answering a question put by 'Sen. Ray Durham (Rep., Iron Mountain), "whether you think the taxpayers should pay for music lessons given by a private institute?" Richards an- swered that he regarded the matter as one for the agricultural board to determine. "That's the whole trouble with the institution out there," Durham re- plied, "everyone seems to think the Board of Agriculture is vested with divine rights." Richards testified that all the in- stitute's instructors were receiving less pay than they formerly got on the concert stage, and expressed the belief that the institute gave "an advantage to students" over the so- called "Ypsilanti plan" in operation at Michigan State Normal. The di- rector said that Louis Graveure, fr- mer head of the voice department was getting $1,800 for a vocal con- cert before he joined the institute staff. Richards said it "was a matter of an opportunity for service," which brought the artists to the college. Richards, a harpsichord artist, said he had charged $750 for a campus concert at one time because he was under contract with his New York manager not to give free concerts. The contract since has been changed, he said. Sen. Edward B. McKenna (Detroit) chairman of the investigating com- mittee, charged that "not one dime of college music fees ever trickled back to the college." Richards denied a charge that he had sought to use government frank- ing privileges on bulletins mailed by the private music institute. Attempt To Get East Side Beer Is Postponed D e a n Sadler Soliciting Private Opinions About Issuing Licenses Attempts to get beer for sale east of Division Street were postponed yesterday when City Attorney Wil- liam Laird asked that a hearing on a writ of mandamus brought by Wil- fred and Ralph Monk, operators of the New Granada Cafe, 313 S. State St., be held at a later date. J. Edgar Dwyer, attorney for the cafe, agreed, and the hearing was set for Friday, June 9. The mandamus was to compel the Common Council to grant the cafe a license. The cafe claimed that the council has no reasonable excuse for not granting it. Meanwhile, a new development was occurring in the beer dispute yester- day when Ald. Walter Sadler, chair- man of the council's bond and license committee, and one of the men who has consistently voted against beer's sale in the University neighborhood, started sending letters to residents in his district, asking their opinion on the east of Division Street charter provision. The cards were a private poll, Alderman Sadler asking for only a yes or no vote. Sadler was one of Expect Appeal To All States By Roosevelt To Requst That Party's Pledge In Campaign Be Carried Out Soon 2 States Will Vote During This Week President Urged By Party Associates To Deliver Message Before Votes WASHINGTON, June 3.-(A)-A lirect appeal to the states to carry ,ut the Democratic campaign pledge and ratify repeal of the Prohibition amendment is expected of President _,oosevelt by Democratic leaders. With seven states already in line :or repeal and two others to vote on the question next week, members from dry and doubtful states have appealed to Mr. Roosevelt to join his postmaster-general and n a t i o n a 1 :ommittee chairman-James Farley -in making a personal appeal for action. They have gained the im- pression that he will do so. Already the President has obtained a provision in the tax section of the industrial Recovery Bill which will allow the solution of the special ,axes it carries when and if revenues aegin to flow into the treasury through a reinstatement of the liq- uor taxes that obtained before Prohi- oition. Mid-western Democrats have urged that the President speak his mind oefore Indiana votes next week. Gov- rnors have asked that he make the appeal before Alabama steps out July 18 as the first Southerin state to vote. Illinois will vote next week with ,ndiana. Twenty-three other states have set their voting dates definitely for this year and there is a'possibility of ac- tion by the 36 necessary to ratify before the end of the year. Meanwhile Prohibition leaders are drawing their lines for a fight in the states classed by them as doubtful, of which F. Scott McBride, superin- tendent of the Anti-Saloon League, said Indiana is one. Bishop James Cannon, Jr., of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, only yesterday appealed to the pas- tors of his church to oppose repeal, pointing out that rejection of the repeal resolution by the southern states would defeat the national movement. SENIOR ENGINEERS WARNED Senior engineers will have their last opportunity to secure Com- mencement invitations from 1 to 2 p. m. tomorrow in Room 301, West Engineering Building, it was an- nounced last night. After that time all invitations will be re-sold. PUBLICATION NOTICE With this issue The Daily ceases publication for the current semes- ter. Publication of the Daily Ofi- tial Bulletin will resume with the frst issue of The Summer Daily, June 26. violet Kemble Cooper, who plays the role of Mrs. Hone in Romney Brent's comedy, "The Mad Hopes," opening Thursday evening, June 15. Christian Gauss Is To Make Address At Commencement Dr. Christian Gauss. '98, dean of the college at Princeton Univer:ity, who will deliver the principal address at the 89th Commencement Jurp 19, is one of Michigan's most illustrious sons in tL.a field of education. Dr. Gauss, who was born in Ann Arbor in 1878. received his master of arts degree from the University a year after h- graduation. From 1899, to 1901 he was instructor in French here and then went to Lehigh Uni- versity where from 1901 to 1905 he was instructor and assistant profes- sor of Romance Languages. In 1905 he went to Princeton University; since 1907 he has been professor of Romance Languages, since 1913 chairman of the department, and since 1925 dean of the college. Known for his astute and "hu- man" writings on problems and ac- tivities of a college dean, Dr. Gauss has become one of the foremost American educators. His contact with his alma mater has always been very close and it was for this fact as well as his fame as a modern collegiate educator that he was asked to de- liver the Commencement address this year. Indiana Voters Decide Repeal Question Soon INDIANAPOLIS ,June 3.-(AP)-In- diana voters today seemed stead- fastly indifferent toward the special election to be held Tuesday which will decide the state's stand on the question of repealing the Eighteenth Amendment. The apparent apathy of the voters was disconcerting to both wet and dry organization workers, but they hoped in the days remaining before the election to arouse a laggard in- terest. At the election Tuesday 329 dele- gates will be elected to the conven- tion to be held June, 26, at which a formal vote will be cast either for or against the ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment, which would repeal the Eighteenth Amend- ment.- The dry forces have concentrated on Indiana, Bishop James Cannon, Jr., one of the most eloquent leaders, having described this state as the 'real battleground." Dramatic Season Star Cut In Price For Football Announced Fifty Thousand Seats Will Be Available For Home Games At $1.10 Each Decision Is Made By Cant Botrd Reductions Also Made In Top Prices For Seats In Reserved Sections .Fifty thousand tickets for every football game the Michigan team plays at home next fall will be made available at $1.10 each, including tax, by virtue of a decision reached by the Board in Control of Athletics at its meeting yesterday. The $1.10 seats will include both the end sections, leaving approxi- mately 26,000 seats to.be reserved for students and sold at the reserved seat prices. Top prices for reserved seats for major games were also reduced from the prevailing high of $3.30 last year, to $2.75, including Federal tax. This price applies for the games with Ohio State, Cornell, and Minnesota. Tickets for the opener with Michi- gan State here will sell for $2, in- cluding tax, while reserved seats for the Iowa game were set at $2.20. Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost pointed out that the plan of selling general admission tickets at $1 was tried during the Chicago game last year and proved popular. The board also voted appropria- tions to send Michigan's Conference championship golf team to the Na- tional Intercollegiate Meet to be held in Buffalo late in June. Money was also set aside for Coach "Charley" Hoyt to take a track team -to the National Intercollegiate Meet at. Chicago June 16 and 17. The greater part of the six-hour session was taken up with discus- sions of retrenchments for next ye . It was pointed out by several me- hers that po definite decision could be reached until the exact amount appropriated for the Universtiy by the Legislature and general financial conditions next fall were -known. In- stead of making definite decisions a committee was appointed with full powers to adjust salaries if need of such a step arises. Prof. Arthur E. R. Boak, chairman of the history department, was named by President Alexander G. Ruthven to take the place on the board of Prof. A. 0. Lee, whose term has expired. Senior Week Band Limited To 48_Players. Forty-eight men will 'report June 13 to Prof. Nicholas D. Falcone for work in the Senior Week band, it was announced yesterday. The personnel of the band, which is made up en- tirely from the ranks of the Varsity Band, has been but from last year's quota of 60 for reasons of economy. "We hope, in spite of the difficulty of working with small numbers, to be able to turn out as high quality music as in past years," Professor Falcone, the director, said. "If we find that in future years the Senior Week band will have to be a 48-piece organiza- tion we shall put in force a rule per- mitting members of the Varsity Band to play in the Senior Week band only twice in their college careers:" The personnel of the band will be as follows: Drum-major: Frank O. Riley, '33E; Manager: Kenneth O. Campbell, '34E; Librarian: Wellington B. Hunt- ley, '34; Flute: Ed Stein, '36SM; Oboes: Russel Raney, '34E, Paul The- baud, '33A; Clarinets: Cecil Ellis, Grad., Frederick Ernst, '33SM, Ber- nard Hirsch, Grad., Donald Strouse, '35 Alvin Benner, '35SM, W. Stod- dard White, '35, Keith Brown, '34, Jo Gardner, '33, Emerson Kempf, '34, R. W. Pierce, Grad. Saxophones : Henry F. Loetz, '33E, E. S. Rice, '35, Lester Colwell, '35E; French Horns: Ronald Hinterman, Grad., James Creagan, '33E, Roy Pa- quette, '36SM, Fred Bessler, John Budd, '36SM; Trumpets and Cornets: Robert T. Allen, '34E, Kenneth Sage, Dan Cook, '35, Everett Kisinger, '35SM, Hugh Henshaw, Grad., Ralph Fulghum, '33SM, Donald Bachelor, '35, James Pfohl, '33SM; Trombones: Prof. Angell Finds Depression Beneficial To Student Attitudes Rollo Peters Spends Leisure Time In Managing 'Real Farm' Few people would think of Rollo Peters, who is to have the part of Armand in the Dramatic Season pro- duction of "The Lady of the Camel- ias," as a farmer, and yet Mr. Peters spends a great part of his time on his 225 acre farm near New York, he said in an interview yesterday. On his place Mr. Peters is grad- ually reclaiming the land and he hopes before long to have a farm that really produces. The farm is in Rockland County, N. Y., not far from country houses of Noel Coward, Ina Claire, Jimmy Durinte, Hope Wil- liams, Katherine Cornell, and Helen Hayes. "But," Mr. Peters emphasized, "theirs are not farms, they are coun- try homes. I am the only real far- mer of the lot." 1,4_ f,' ' -A k, nnrctf,'rnra,.to Ann tumes which sometimes fitted and sometimes didn't. "This Season is really great fun for me," he said, "as it is the first time that I have played with Miss Cowl for eight years, if you exclude the balcony scene from 'Romeo and Juliet' which we did about three months ago over the radio on Rudy Vallee's radio program. When we were doing 'Romeo and Juliet' in 1925 we had Clark Gable and Den- nis King as extras in the cast." "How did I start acting? Well, it was rather through the back door. I studied to be a painter and be- came technical director for the old Washington Square Theatre in 1918. Being already in the theatre it was easier for me than for most would- be actors and after I had begged By RALPH G. COULTER You may have thought the de- pression was terrible, but now that it's apparently all over, you might as well know that sociologically it did you a lot of good. Proof of a substantial change in student attitudes during depression years to a greater interest in more academic subjects and to a more ser- ious concern over future careers has been established in a study by mem- bers of Prof. Robert C. Angell's class in the sociology of student life. Professors, administrators, Union and League officials, ministers, ath- letic and health authorities, heads of extra-curricular activities, and 75 seniors and house heads who have been on campus at least four years were interviewed or asked to fill out elaborate blanks in order that a com- parison might be made between stu- dent interests in 1929 and at present. Members of the class who carried dents might not influence the study, activities that -cost money were largely excluded, and an attempt was made to learn attitudes directly or to infer them from costless activities. Among the miscellaneous results which the committee brought out are the facts that self-supporting stu- dents and independents have become more socially acceptable, that more students follow a budget and that fewer believe it is their parents' duty to send them to college, that stu- dents are seeking more enduring and fundamental qualities in t h e i r friends, that there is less dating, and that even drinking is "more purpo- sive." All observers agreed that more in- terest was being shown in academic work and that students are studying more and doing more voluntary sup- plementary work. There was a gen- eral feeling that students are worry- ing more about their careers and that work is being selected with such matters in mind._