THE MICHIGAN DAILY ill Give President's Representatives On Movie Code Iniversity Ickes Brands Smith Attacks As Insincere' Bosses Liquor Code Hitler Keeps German Pre As Symbol Of Reich Unification . 4V eture Dec. 7 :hority On Prehistoric fe To Relate Problem f Modern Biologists of. Ermine C. Case, director of Museum of Paleontology, will de- the third lecture of the Uni- ty Series on "A Modern Biolo- Attitude Towards the Problem Ife" at 4 p. m. Thursday, Dec. 7, atural Science Auditorium. ofessor Case has been a special- n paleontology for 40 years and' fellow of the Geological Society nerica and the American Associa- for the Advancement of ice, member of the noted Philo- ical Society, and a former presi- of the Paleontological Society nerica, of the Michigan Academy cience, and the Research Club He should be well qualified to e the paleobiologists part in de- ining the history, reasons, and rs of life, authorities stated. leobiology is a comparatively re- science which concerns fossils meir relation to life as opposed to ontology, which is the study of Is as bearing on the geological of the strata in which they are d. ery summer Professor Case goes the field fossil-hunting, accord- o Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assist- to President Ruthven, and he ,vered the largest Permian bone in Archer County, Texas. He is cognized authority on the ver- ate life of Permian and Triassic >Iler Returns 'rom Two-Day Surgical Clinic . Frederick A. Coller, professor irgery, recently attended a two- meeting in Boston of a group he. outstanding surgeons of the .try. He is one of 10 members 10 group, known as "The Visiting eons Club," and this is the third that they have met for the pur- of study at clinics. its year the guests, each of whom lowed to bring two friends, were ts of the Lahey Clinic, Boston, :ucted by Dr. Frank Lahey. Their meetings were held at the Mayo ic, Rochester, Minn., and the eland Clinic, Cleveland, 0. ie of the features of the meet- was the witnessing by the visi- of 20 operations at the New and Deaconess Hospital. Doc- from Michigan, Missouri, Cana- Eentucky, Ohio, and Massachu- make up the membership of lub. diatrics Will e Discussed 3y Cooperstack' nong speakers appearing on the ram of the joint meeting of the rican Academy of Pediatrics and Detroit Pediatrics Society Wed- ayt aChildren's Hospital in De- will be Dr. Moses Cooperstack, tant professor of pediatrics in Medical School. se chief topic of discussion will he effects of the depression on Iren, as related to the field. It includes a clinical session in the Ling and a meeting at which Dr. ord Grulee, of the University of ago, will discuss progress made hildren's care in the last 50 years. alth Service Has1 /ddition To Staff recent addition to the University lth Service staff is Miss Jean mberlain, of the dietetics staff he University Hospital, who is do-. part time work for students. Her k will be to advise and keep ;k of students in their problems -Associated Press Photo President Roosevelt, in extending the arm of government over the motion picture industry, provided a 90-day trial period during which he expects a "full report on excessive salaries or other emoluments, both as to artists and as to executives and their families." The President named as his representatives on the picture code authority two film players, Eddie Cantor (left) and Marie Dressler, and A. Lawrence Low- ell, president-emeritus of Harvard. Librarian Important Member Of Cincinnati Symphony Group A member of the Cincinnati Sym- phony, which appears here next Tuesday, who seldom appears on the stage with them, is Ferd B. Weiss, the librarian of the organization. He has been a member of the sym- phony since its organization nearly 40 years ago. His position carries with it considerable responsibility. He is custodian of the orchestral works, numbering thousands of composi- Wallace Gives Federal Award To Ford Dealer Gen. Johnson Concurs In Contract After McCarl Rules In Its Favor WASHINGTON, Dec. 2- P) Henry Ford may not be flying the Blue Eagle, but he is so nearly com- plying with the automobile code that one of his dealers today has a new contract to furnish possibly 700 trucks for the CCC. There may, however, be subsequent study of whether the bid which won the contract for the Bethesda, Md., Ford dealer was under the minimum price fixed by the code. Agreement to award the contract was announced by Secretary Wallace, who said the decision had been con- curred in by Hugh S. Johnson, NRA chief. For weeks the automobile pur- chases had been held up while of- ficials decided whether the govern- ment could buy from Ford since he had not signed the code. Comptroller General J. R. McCarl held that even though Ford had not signed, his dealers' bids were accept- able if it were complying with code terms. Even Johnson said Ford was com- plying. But subsequently Johnson wondered publicly whether the bid for the trucks -the government may take as many as 700 -was under the code minimum. That was re- ferred to McCarl, who said that was a question for "judicial determina- tion" and not for the purchasing agent to decide. Wallace said the decision to accept the Ford bid was based "on the ad- vice of the comptroller general as the best way to secure compliance with the President's recovery pro- gram."I tions, and worth many thousands of dollars. When the conductor announces his program, the librarian's first task is to check this collection for the in- clusion of the compositions listed. Mr. Weiss must also check all of the parts for accuracy, mark all string bowings, and place all scores on the desks of musicians. The conductor, Mr. Eugene Goos- sens, depends on him to keep the music inperfect condition. There must be no markings other than those notations of the conductor. When there is a guest conductor, Mr. Weiss must make all changes in the notations according to the inter- pretation of the particular leader. Sometimes parts get into bad con- dition and cannot be replaced by purchase. It is then the librarian's task to copy all the missing scores by hand. Not content to merely play the part of general librarian, Mr. Weiss often takes an actual hand in the performances themselves. He plays the trumpet whenever necessary, and assists in the percussion section at almost every concert. Lawyers Urged By Bar Leders To Clean House CHICAGO, Dec. 2--P )-The le- gal profession had before it today the challenge of the president of the American Bar association, Earle W. Evans, Wichita, Kan., that it "clean house" and drive some of the "crooks" from its ranks. Evans spoke Friday night at a ban- quet of the Illinois State Bar asso- ciation and the Chicago Bar associa- tion in honor of the justices of the supreme court of the state,sand he was not long at coming to his point. "It is never the primary object of the legal profession to make money, although we have our black sheep and confidence men," he said. "We never heed the parasites in the profession, who regard it as merely a means of making money and who consider they are licensed to commit all sorts of crimes and misdemeanors on the public. We can not help it." He asked for co-operation in driv- ing out the crooks" and said he was inclined to agree with the public and the newspapers in their belief that the entire profession was responsible for its "black sheep." Disappointed Ambitions Cause Former Candidate To Grumble, He Says WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 - () - To Alfred E. Smith, the public works ad- ministration is a "failure;" to Har- old I. Ickes, Smith is "nourishing a grudge as the result of disappointed ambitions. They said so recently, the former! New York governor in an editorial in the New Outlook and the PWAI chief and interior secretary in an an- swering scatement. Smith, 1928 Democratic Presiden- tial candidate, held that the new $400,000,000 civil works administra- tion is being created to do the job- providing scheduled for PWA, a "crazy, top-heavy structure broken; with bureaucracy and red tape."~ "Without a complete reorganiza- tion of the public works administra2' tion," he continued, "there will be no more public works under way on Feb. 15 to absorb the civil workers than there are today to absorb the relief workers. The civil works program will certainly afford an alibi for the incompetents in the public works ad- ministration." To which Ickes replied: "Mr. Smith is permitting his re- sentment against the administration to run away with his judgment. He is apparently under the illusion that the coining of sarcastic phrases will be misunderstood by sober-minded citizens. "The public works administration has functioned efficiently to date in spite of Mr. Smith and will survive this latest outburst. The civil works administration was a logical develop- ment of the public works program." Detroit Institute Of Arts To Hear Famous Author Will Durant, journalist and author of the famous best seller "The Story of Philosophy," will speak twice on Tuesday, Dec. 12, at the Detroit In- stitute of Arts, according to a recent announcement. Dr. Durant replaces Count Felix von Luckner, who has been delayed in Germany on government business, and who will appear at the museum later. Mr. Durant will speak at 4 p. m. Tuesday on "The Ten Greatest Thinkers of the World," and at 8:30 p. in. on "Russia and America," a .comparison of capitalism and com- munism. Each lecture will be fol- lowed by an open forum. Norman Thomas, celebrated social- ist, speaks twice at the museum Sun- day, Dec. 10. At 3:30 p. m. his sub- ject will be "America and the Next War" and at 8:30 p. m. "An Analysis of Conditions in America." An open forum will follow each lecture. Cap- tain Carl von Hoffman, colorful Rus- sian explorer, will give an illustrated lecture on "Forbidden Trails in Mor- occo" at 8:30 p. m. Saturday, Dec. 9, at the Museum. BLUE SHIRTS CRY 'FRAME UP' DUBLIN, Irish Free State, Dec. 2. - U)-The cry "frame-up!" was raised by the United Ireland party in reply to the government's charge that arms and ammunition were found in the headquarters and homes of mem- bers. If the charge is true, members of the so-called "Blue Shirt" party as- serted, then the alleged confiscated instruments of combat were "plant- ed.'' -Associated Press Photo James H. Choate, Jr., New York attorney, was named administrator for the federal liquor control code. Co-Education Is 100 Years Old; beganIn Ohio Oberlin College Was First in This Country To Give Privilege To Women 1 OBERLIN, O., Dec. 2.--(/P)- Co- education will be 100 years old Sun- day. The first institution of higher learning to adopt co-education, Ober- lin College, founded Dec. 3, 1833, in the heart of a wilderness, by the Rev, John J. Shepherd and Philo P. Stew- art, a former missionary, will observe its centennial with exercises in Fin- ney Chapel. Dr. Ernest Hatch Wilkins, presi- dent of Oberlin, is scheduled to de- liver the Founders Day address be- fore hundreds of alumni and stu- dents. "The grand objects of Oberlin In- stitute," the founders said in 1833, "are to give the most useful educa- tion at the least expense of health and money. "To extend the benefits of such education to both sexes; to bring within reach of the misjudged and neglected sex all the instructive priv- ileges which hitherto have unreason- ably distinguished the leading sex from theirs." When Oberlin, named in honor of Jean Frederic Oberlin, an Alsatian educator from Eastern France, flung open its doors 100 years ago, approx- imately one-third of the enrollment of 45 was represented by the "mis- judged and neglected sex." The college's' policy of admitting women on an equal basis with men was looked upon with distrust in press and pulpit and ridiculed by the public as "heresy." Today, however, more than 80 per cent of institutions of higher learning in the United States are co-educational.I The leader in co-education, Ober- lin, situated 35 miles southwest of Cleveland, also was the first to admit students regardless of sect, creed or race; the first to take a definite stand against slavery; the first to intro- duce physical education courses in the curriculum, and among the first to adopt the "ranking system" of grading, officials recalled today. BERLIN, Dec. 2-(P) -For ob- vious reasons, Chancellor Adolf Hit- ler presumably will leave one im- portant article of Germany's new constitution either open or in terms capable of wide interpretation. That is the article defining the head of the government. While the 86-year-old President von Hindenburg lives and is willing to continue to function, he will con- tinue to head the nation with the title of reich's president. For a while it seemed almost cer- tain that Germany's venerable field marshal might retire after the ple- biscite and reichstag election of Nov. 12. No other than Hitler, himself, how- ever, asked von Hindenburg to con- tinue after Nov. 12. Here's the way a cabinet member explained this to the Associated Press: "Hitler sees in von Hindenburg the one man who is the living connect- ing bond between the empire of Wil- helm I and II, the 'November repub- lic' of 1918-33 and the third reich of the Nazis. "Now that Hindenburg has com- pletely allied himself with his youth- ful chancellor, such a venerable sym- bol of unity, such a bridge between the past and the present, is some- thing that any nation can be happy to have." There is another reason for insist- ing that the aged president remain: von Hindenburg still clings with all the devotion of a faithful imperial officer to the house of Hohenzollern. Obviously, von Hindenburg would see as the crowning feature of the whole work of unification undertaken by Hitler the re-establishment of the monarchy. Hitler's mind, as far as can be learned, is open on the question; but not so the mind of the three groups of followers who constitute the back- bone of his power-namely, the small YESTERDAY SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-An eruption of the Izalco volcano caused considerable ,damage to coffee plan- tations and livestock farms. * * * WASHINGTON -Whether price- cutting in connection with chain stores is unfair competition was the subject of the Federal Trade Com- nission's report on its investigation of the chain store system of retail distribution. farmers, the workers, and the Nazi Storm Troopers. The small farmers are against crowned heads; the workers, while now all organized in one vast Nazi labor front, have nevertheless been thoroughly schooled in Marxian phi- losophy, and the Storm Troopers can conceive of no other person at the head of Germany than The Leader. Many persons speculate that, once the venerable president is no longer at the head of the nation, the chief executive will be called "reich's lead- er." The only chance now given the monarchy by informed political ob- servers is that of Nazism failing to make good economically, in which case Hitler might conceivably take refuge in a monarchy. But the program of economic re- construction is not being allowed to lag. It is being pushed with all the vigor characteristic of the aggressive Nazi government. The economic reconstruction pro- gram, said Werner Daitz, chief of the foreign trade section of the Nazi foreign political division writing in the "Diplomaten-Zeitung," will be governed by five fundamental prin- ciples. He wrote: "The first principle is an ancient farmers' rule: Taxes must not ex- ceed a tithe and interest half a tithe, for otherwise they will become, not conservators and augmenters of the substance, but its consumers." In other words, he said, they will strive to prevent the consumption of more liquid assets than are produced. "The second principle proclaims social peace within the Nazi state instead of the class war of the Demo- cratic state." There will be no strikes, Daitz declared, and no lock- outs. "Thirteen trustees of labor" will decide disputes. 'ADE "ORCHI S By YARDLEY oENcuHtENS NY Al"I TMINT 10 MEN MAJISTY THlE QUEEN OF ENGLAND RIO DE JANEIRO - Col. Charles A. Lindbergh advised Pan-American Airways that he is planning to leave Bathurst, Gambia, for a flight across the South Atlantic to Natal, Brazil, at daybreak tomorrow. LONDON - According to a dis- patch from the Daily Mail, President Eamonn De Valera of the Irish Free State declared to the British govern- ment that he intended to continue his efforts to create an Irish repub- lic. WASHINGTON - Sen. Duncan U. Fletcher, chairman of the Senate stock market committee, said that the recent inquiry carried on by his committee indicated that new stock market laws are in great demand. NAPLES -Russian Foreign Com- missar Maxim Litvinov landed after what he termed "an excellent voy- age" from the United States. A NEW PERFUME Sophisticated and Gay. Reminiscent of an English Garden. PRICE 1.10 AND UPWARDS+ ILL ER DRUG STORE Phone 9797 727 North University i JUST PUBLISHED- The Michigan Calendar--1934 An Ideal Gift attractively printed Views of University in sepia with twenty-six buildings. v i Sunday Dinner Features. Service 12:00 to 2:00 ... 5:15 to 7:30 Stuffed Roast Young Chicken, Cranberries........ 18c Delicious Turkey a la King with Mushrooms......15c Fried Hampton Bay Scallops, Tartar Sauce.......15c Roast Leg of Milk-fed Veal, Dressing ............. 15c '-roiled Tenderloin Steak, Butter Gravy..........15c Breaded Veal Cutlet, Applesauce...............15c Broiled Sirloin Steak, Natural Gravy ............ 15c Tender Juicy Swiss Steak, Tavern . ..............15c All other food portions are five cents each THE TAVERN CAFETERIA mike fingerle, prop. 338 Maynard Street PRICE,- SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS needing to increase or ir weights may have deft- prescribed for them byj pontments w i t h Miss' n. For stout persons who rtrol in their eating, she a.t provide stomach- WAHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE STATE STREET MAIN STREET but not fatten --- - --a'UL a ring ULeIO. p i____________________-- ----- - ----------- -- -__ =4Il I Have You Tried The Breakfast Menu