The Weather Rain in south, rain or snow in north, warmer today; tomorrow snow flurries and colder. 1 L it iga I1 VOL. XLIV No. 59 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1933 I , , Valuable Gift Is Presented To University Regents Accept Donation Of Herbarium, B o ok s From Parke-Davis & Co. Hold Final Meeting Of Year In Bay City Bartlett Says Presents Are Of Value To Scientific Experimentation BAY CITY, Dec 1.-- (Special) - One of the most important gifts re- ceived by the University in some time, the herbarium and collection of botanical books of Parke-Davis and Company, was officially accepted by the Board of Regents at its last meeting of the year held at the home of Regent William L. Clements here today. Fifty thousand specimens are in- cluded in the herbarium, and sev- eral thousand volumes in the library. Oscar W, Smith, president of the. company, announced the gifts. It has taken over a century to collect all the items in the collection and a value of several hundred thousand dollars is placed on them. Prof. Harley H. Bartlett, chairman of the botany'department, described the specimens and books as being of great scientific value, the former representing the flora of all impor- tant regions. Numerous expeditions have added to the nucleus of the col-." lection, begun by Dean Emeritus H.' H. Rusby, of the New York State Col-? lege of Pharmacy. Other Gifts Accepted A number of other gifts were also' accepted by the Regents. The Car- negie Corporation gave $2,500 for the study of methods of instruction in museums through exhibits. Ad-1 ministration of the sum will be un- der President Alexander G. Ruthven. A fellowship in metallurgy will be established through a gift of $1,000 received from the Detroit Edison Company. Frederick Stearns andI Company of Detroit gave $500 fort the renewal of Its annual fellowship in pharmacy and the joint researcht committee on boiler feedwater-studiest renewed its annual fellowship with# a $600 gift. An anonymous donor gave $500 to be added to the student loan funds. Mrs. Mary Earhart Smith gave $250c to be added to the emergency aid1 fund for women. Miss Mary S. Case gave a $50 Liberty bond to the alumni fund., Approval of the proposal that the University take over the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre was given by the Regents. Details of the arrangement were referred to the finance commit- tee of the *Regents in consultation with Vice-president S h i r 1 e y W. Smith and Dean Alice C. Lloyd. Authorize Appointments Authorization was given the ex- ecutive committee of the Summer Session to make such appointments to the Summer Session faculty as are necessary by the next meeting of the Board. A University committee on postl graduate education is to be formed, with members appointed by Presi- dent Ruthven and approved by thes Regents. The committee will adviser President Ruthven on post graduate1 study in the various units. The Med- ical School, School of Dentistry,r School of Nursing, College of Phar- macy, and the departments of hy- giene and public health and sociology will be represented on the committee at present.x Semester fees in the School oft Music were reduced from $60 to $501 for Michigan residents, and from $72. to $62 for non-residents. This will (Continued on Page 2) Death SentenceI Given To Firstr Scottsboro BoV DECATUR, Ala., Dec. 1.- ()- Heywood Patterson, one of the seven Negroes accused of attacking twot white women near Scottsboro, Ala., two years ago, was convicted today, and sentenced to death. The jury1 had deliberated more than 24 hours.s '-i 4hEa Howrer Is Unable To Give Lecture Today The lecture on "Germany To- day" by Edgar Ansel Mowrer, '13, which was scheduled for 11 a. m. today in Hill Auditorium has been indefinitely postponed, it was re- vealed yesterday. Mr. Mowrer, it was explained, has been forced to give up all his engagements for a time because of ill1n e ss. Overwork on his strenuous speaking tour was given as the cause of his illness. Smoker To Be Held To Honor FootballTeam Large Will Fay,. Union Celebration Hear Yost, Kipke, And New Captain Honoring members of Michigan's fourth consecutive Wiestern Confer- ence football championship squad, local backers of the team will gather for the Union's second annual Foot- ball Smoker at 8 p. mn. Tuesday eve- ning, December 12, in the ballroom. The entire team, coaches, and cheerleaders have been invited to the celebration, according to Robert A. Saltzstein, '34, president of the Union. The main speaker will be a prom- inent coach from some other institu- tion or a Big Ten official, officers stated. Also included on the program will be Fielding H. Yost, director of intercollegiate athletics, Head Coach Harry Kipke, the retiring captain, Stanley Fay, '34, and the captain- elect, whose name has not yet been revealed. Sound pictures of a number of the games on the Varsity schedule will also be featured, Saltzstein said. Re- freshments and smokes will be served. Last year pictures of the Michigan- Ohio State game at Columbus were shown at the smoker and those at- tending pronounced them among the best they had ever seen. It was stressed by officials of the Union that this is the last opportu- nity followers of Michigan's cham- pions will have to honor them for their achievements during the past season. Since the team set a record this year with their fourth consecu- tive win of the Conference title, it is felt that students should reciprocate with a record turn-out. The smoker will be open to faculty and students. Tickets are to be placed on sale early next week at the Union, Hut, Parrot, Wahr's and Slater's at 25 cents.- 75 In Literary College Placed On Probation Highest List Since1927; 193 Students Are Given Warning Notices More students in the literary col- lege were put on probation this se- mester than in any year since 1927, Wilber R. Humphreys, assistant dean, stated yesterday. This year's group numbered 75 as compared with the 1932 record low of 33. Students given warnings formed a new high for the last -seven years, this group comprising 193. Professor Humphreys emphasized that while the majority of students notified were freshmen, upperclass- men, who have been put on proba- tion in past years and who are not included in the present list, also form a sizeable number. "Probation," he said, "does not, of course, have to be removed in a single semester. Many upperclassmen who were placed on probation in their freshman year have yet to be re- moved from it. When it has gone on so far that we see that they must pull themselves up in order to gradu- ate, they are then placed on special probation. This requirement forces them to make a C average in the fol- lowing semester or to withdraw from school." Students who received from the dean's office a notice indicating only that they had a D grade in one sub- ject are not included in the warn- ing list. In their case no letter was sent to their parents, as was done in all other instances. "No general statement can be made," Professor Humphreys added, High Political Position Seen For Alumnus LaGuardia Administrative Job May Be Given Paul J. Kern, Former Student Said To Be Equal Of Assistant Mayor Was Chief Legal Advisor To New Mayor In Recent Municipal Campaign Paul J. Kern, former editorial di- rector of The Daily and president of the Student Council, and now an in- structor in the Columbia Law School, will hold a high position, said to be equivalent to assistant mayor, in the incoming La Guardia administration in New York City, it has been learned from reliable sources. Mr. Kern, who was suspended in his fourth year here in 1929, for a violation of the auto ban, went to Columbia and received a law degree their. Chief legal advisor to LaGuar- dia in the recent campaign, he was termed the closest to the new mayor of all the 1 a t t e r followers. Paul Blanchard, '14, will also hold an im- portant post in the new government, it was said. Discovered Article It was Mr. Kern who unearthed the anti-Semitic article written by Joseph V. McKee, mayoral candidate, about 20 years ago. During the cam- paign he was featured in an article in the New York World-Telegram for his prominent part in it. LaGuardia met Mr. Kern while the latter was working on the Legisla- tive Drafting Bureau in Washington on a fellowship f r o m Columbia. When Mr. Kern returned to Colum- bia two years ago to take an in- structorship, the two remained close friends. The Columbia instructor will be granted a leave of absence to take over his position in the city ad- ministration, it was said. , -Was Active Here As a student here, Mr. Kern was prominent in a large number of campus activities. At the time he was suspended he was not only on The Daily and the Student Council, but was also a member of Sphinx and Michigamua, secretary-treasurer of the Inter-fraternity Council, a member of the Varsity Debating squad, the winner of a scholarship his senior year, chairman of the Union Opera publicity committee, had won the extemporaneous speak- ing contest in his second year, had been a track man and a member of the Freshman Glee Club in his first year, and had acted as Ann Arbor correspondent for the Detroit Sat- urday Night. Mr. Kern was suspended in Jan- uary, 1929, until the second semes- ter for breaking the auto ban, but dropped out and went to Columbia. While there he had articles pub- lished in the New York Times, Columbia Law Review, the American Bar Association Magazine, and the Quill, magazine of Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalistic fra- ternity. At the present time in addition to his faculty position at Columbia, he is teaching a course in the New Jersey State Law School at Newark. Campus Big-Shots choose To Run At First Club Meeting The newly formed Preposterous People Club today held its initial meeting. Two B.M.O.C.'S were pres- ent, namely, Gilbert E. (Peko) Burs- ley and Robert A (Prickly-Heat) Saltzstein. The latter was offered the presidency of the club but he declined by saying, "Why don't you make Bursley president? He likes to be president of things." No sooner had Unionman Saltz- stein uttered this daring epithet than he rose to his feet to nominate Councilman Bursley. P e k o, upon hearing this, moved the nominations be closed. The motion was carried, whereupon he was unanimously elec- ted. Peko immediately entered his new office with great vigor and spirit by appointing Assistant to the Dean' Walter B. (for Bud) Rea as Ser- geant-at-Arms and Fellow-Politician Saltzstein as Keeper of the Sacred Key. The President and the Keeper then Expect Upset Of Liquor Bill By Senators Bi-Partisan Group Plans Attack On 17-Member Commission Plan Constitutionality Of State Sale Doubted Opponents Claiming State Has Lawful Right Only To 'Control' Its Traffic LANSING, Dec. 1- (P) - An al- most complete upset of the liquor control bill passed by the House will be attempted in the Senate, it was evident today, During the holiday recess members of the legislature have been poring over the measure. A bi-partisan group of senators had tentatively agreed to offer amendments or a substitute radically altering the bill. The 17-member state liquor con- trol commission promised to be a fo- cal point in the attack. Senators A. J. Wilkowski, (Dem.), Detroit, and Adolph Heidkamp, (Rep.), Lake Lin- den, members of the Senate pro- hibition committee, indicated they are prepared to advocate taking from the present commission the right of control. Senator Ray Derham, (Rep.), Iron Mountain, and others are ex- pecting to collaborate in the attempt. An effort was made in the House to transfer liquor control from the commission to a body made up of the secretary of state, state treasurer and auditor general. It failed, but the Senate will revise the movement to take from the existing commis- sion the almost absolute power to designate merchants and pass on li- censes granted by the House. Another phase of the House mea- sure being scrutinized by the Senate group was that giving the state a monopoly on liquor sales. Under the House bill all liquor sent into Michi- gan for sale would have to be pur- chased by the liquor control com- mission and be distributed to dis- tributors by the state. The question of whether the state has a consti- tutional right under the red, white and blue amendment to enter the liquor business was raised. Oppo- nents of the plan claimed the state is given only the right to "control" the liquor traffic, not to enter the liquor business. Weaver Will Speak Before Round Table "Personality in t h e Changing World" is to be the topic which will be discussed by Professor Bennet Weaver, of the English department, in a talk before the Freshmen Round Table Club at 9:30 a. m., Sunday, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Professor W e a v e r entertained twenty upper class leaders Tuesday at his home. Charles J. Bernard, '34, was unanimously selected by the sports experts for the first team pivot position on this year's All-American team. He was put on the third team by this system last year, but had little opposition for first honors this season. day with about 300 students filing Dancers Fret While their second semester elections. It Photgrahe will continue until Dec. 31, after oographer eps which date a fine of $1 must be paid to classify. Grand marchers shifted impatient- A special feature of this year's al- ly from one foot to another for about phabetical team, which ignores seni- 20 minutes last night at the Pan- ority, is that those who fail to regis- Hellenic Ball while general factotums ter their elections on the day they and assistant floor directors awaited are scheduled may register on any of the appearance of the misadvised the following days. photographer who was to preserve The procedure in short is as follows: the event for posterity. first obtain necessary forms at Room Called from slumber, the camera- 4, University Hall, the Registrar's of- man insisted that he had not been fice; second, consult the advisor who forewarned of the event, but that he signed your card last semester; third, would attend later in the evening. file cards in Registrar's office accord- The picture was taken at 12:15 a.m. ling to the following schedule: Outstanding Aspects Of Liquor Control Act Outlined B Angell The outstanding question raised bution, even-under restrictions, there by the proposed liquor control bill, would be constant attempts to cir- declared Professor Robert E. Angell, cumvent the law under the urge of of the sociology department, is greater profits. whether the interests of the com- Under the plan proposed by Pro- munity are to be sacrificed to the fessor Angell in collaboration with profit motive in the distribution and other men on the university faculty, sale of hard liquor, it was recommended that the state The real issue of liquor control, assume the rights of distribution to Professor Angell said, concurring the retail liquor market, thus doing with the opinion of the Rockefeller away with any incentive of profit, Committee, is whether private indi- and also providing a tremendously viduals shall have almost unlimited large revenue to the state govern- power to sell liquor, without protect- ment. In this way it would be pos- ing the public against the evils of sible, Professor Angell contends, to the saloon and other similar institu- deal effectively with the liquor prob-