THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. I ................ .. . ....... .... ...... !M Publish Lists Of' Appointments In All Departments! Wets Attack Their Proposed Tax On Hard Liquor Banquet To Be Held Honoring Two Architects' Walter H. Blucher And G. Give Formal Approval To Designation Of Scholars, Assistants, And Fellows Made By Regentsi All Schools And Colleges Name Aides For Current University Year . = (Continued from Page 1)j Frank M. Reed, Hugh Sebastian, and William H. Tenney. Harold White- hall will hold the rank of instructor. Three assistants named in the ge- ology department are Edward L. Beutner, Kenneth A. Gorton, and Ir- vin; C. Young. In Greek language Herbert C. Youtie was named an in- structor. He is also research asso- ciate in papyrology. Henrietta A. Cook, Jack A. Mintz, and Albert G. Swanson were ap- proved as assistants in the matema- tics department. Archie Bahme was named ateaching fellow in the phi- losophy department. In the physics department, Arthur Adel was ap- pointed as research assistant.sHar- vey V. Rohrer will serve as instruc- tor in the political science depart- ment. In the department of romance lan- guages Stephen M. Lincoln, Clifford H. Prator, and Henry J. Skornia were named teaching fellows. In the so- ciology department Pay L. Coats, Frank Hartung, and Henry J. Meyer were appointed assistants; Kenneth H. McGill, teaching fellow; and Clark Tibbitts, assistant director of Ear- hart Foundation research and super- visor of Earhart Foundation scholars and fellows. I Brown Research Associatte Claudius J. D. Brown was named research associate in the zoology de- partment. In the College of Engineering two other names were approved, as fol- lows: Donald S. Ullock, assistant in the chemical engineering depart- ment; and Harriet Bannasch, assis- tant in the civil engineering depart- ment office. In the Medical School the follow-~ ing names were approved: Anatomy department: C h a r 1 e s Cunningham, Russel Malcolm, Wil- liam Vicary, Jean K. Weston, Fred- erick W. Wilson, and Joseph H. Wit- ter, assistant; and John Barnard and Russel Woodburne, teaching fellows. Internal Medicine Appointments I nit e r n a1 medicine department: Frank H. Bethell and Milton Gold- hamer, instructors; and C. Howard Ross, teaching fellow. In the ma- teria medica department: Fleming A. Barbour and John G. Reid, re- search assistants in pharmacology, and Homer A. Howes, Squibb Fellow! in Pharmacology. Opthalmology de- partment: Don Marshall, John E. Weeks scholar for research work in ophthalmology. Pathology department: Martin A. Bernfield, assistant, and Isador J. Hauser, instructor. Pediatrics de- partment: Janet S. Barnes, instruc- tor. Physiological chemistry depart-! ment: Barker H. Brown, Norbert H. Fell, and Svend Pederson, assistants. Physiology department: George B. Higley and Percy Murphy, assistants. Surgery department: Dorothy Parker,. assistant. - In the College of Pharmacy Rol- -Associated Press Photo The President's Inter-departmental Committee, which Friday proposed a bill to encourage foreign trade and the sale of beer by a $2.60 a gallon tax on hard liquor, since much attacked, is shown here. They are, from left to right, front row: Willard L. Thorpe, director of foreign and domestic commerce; Edward Greenbaum, chairman; Ade Fortas, AAA attorney; Frederick P. Lee, farm administration counsel. Back row: Edward P. Lowry, treasury assistant; Frank M. Parrish, assistant to the attorney general; Dr. James M. Doran, commissioner of industrial alcohol; Dr. Mordecai Ezekiel, economic advisor to the secretary of agriculture; and Harris E. Willingham, .chief of beverage section of the farm administration. These Boys Learn To Tackle Too Well (By Intercollegiate Press) LINDSAY, Ont., Dec. 9.-"Listen, youse guys," said Coach W. S. Breese of the Lindsay Collegiate Institute football team, "why don't you learn to tackle?" The coach took the ball and started down the field. "Here," he yelled, "two of you try to tackle me. Hit me hard." Two of the players hit the coach bard. He couldn't get up. It was found lie had a broken ankle. Pleased, Coach Breese breezed out on a pair of crutches next day. land F. Feldkamp, assistant, was ap- proved. In the School of Dentistry, Alfred L. Rehfield, teaching fellow. In the School of Education: Edward E. Freed, teacher of dramatics; Fran- cis Lake and Manley McDonald, re- search assistants. In the School of Business Administration; Donald J. Bevis, Herbert. Draper, Chester Og- den, George Rubenstein, John Sav- age, Herbert Sharlitt, and Clarence Tappan, assistants. In the School of Music, Chester1 Cole, technical assistant, and Leta Musgrave, chamber music scholar. In the College of Architecture, Beaver Edwards, part-time instructor in, modelling. In the General Library, Eugene Hart, half-time assistant in library extension service. inft'ructors In Hygiene Division of Hygiene and Public Health: William M. Brace, John V.I Fopeano, Elizabeth P. Robinson, and Helen Schultz, instructors; Earl Kleinschmidt, instructor and editorj of public health reviews. In the Health Service Elizabeth Inglis was named part-time clinical assistant. Gust Carlson was approved as part-time cataloguer in the Museum of Anthropology. Eugene Power, pho- tographer for the Early Modern Eng- lish Dictionary. Sandford Meech and Harold Whitehall were approved as assistant editors of the Middle English Dictionary; James Rettger, research associate; and Eleanore Stuhlman, secretary. Marjorie Gra-1 vit was appointed clerical assistant! in the institute of archaeological re- search. YESTERDAY ST. JOHN, Quebec - Canadian au- thorities held two men whom they said were members of a ring which has smuggled approximately $1,000,- 000 worth of gold from Canada into the United States in the last six months. *: * * PARIS - Premier Camille Chau- temps' new cabinet won an over- whelming vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies by a 403 to 63 count. * * * LINARES, Mexico - An explosion' which demolished a sugar mill caus- ed the death of 16 persons. The origin of the blast has not been de- termined. NASHVILLE - Col. Luke Lea and Luke Lea, Jr., convicted of violating the state banking laws, lost their fight in t h e Tennessee Supreme C o u r t to prevent extradition to North Carolina. -* * * WASHINGTON - The administra- tion, through the liquor problem, has opened the way for establishment of a national tax system by which the Federal government will collect all taxes and divide them between the Federal, state, and local govern- ments. This is the opinion of offi- cial Washington. Bailey Speaks On Importance Of Enineerino "Electrical Engineering," conclud- ing talk of the engineering series,I was given Friday by Prof. Benjamin F. Bailey of the College of Engineer- ing over the University school pro- gram on Station WJR. "Electrical engineering is one of the youngest of the professions, but it has grown with enormous rapidity and apparently will continue to do so," Professor Bailey stated. "Can you imagine a world with no tele- phones, no electric light or power, no elevators and no radio, and yet millions of men now alive were born before any of these things were thought of?" The brief history of electrical en- gineering was discussed by Professor Bailey, pointing out the numerous branches of the profession today. The lines most generally followed by the; engineer of electricity are research, invention, d e s i g n, manufacturing, salesmanship, and administration, it was pointed out. "Electrical engineering, and, in fact, all branches of engineering, of- fers opportunity to a wide variety of tastes and abilities. Electrical engi- neering ofIers a field of wide and fascinating possibilities," Professor Bailey concluded. Frank Cordner To Speak At Dinner In Union I A banquet will be held at 6 p.m. in the Union honoring Walter H. , Blucher of the Detroit City Plan' Commission and G. Frank Cordner, Detroit architect, who are giving the' last two in a series of five lectures1 on housing sponsored by the College of Architecture, Thomas A. Crowell, '35A, head of the committee plan- ning the banquet announced yes- terday.' "The p u r p o s e of the banquet, which will feature an informal dis- cussion led by Blucher and Cordner," Crowell said, "is to impress upon the students of architecture the fact that designing a building is only one1 phase of the architect's duties to the7 community."l "The architect must know the sociological condition in the com- munity. We are trying to present theI students of architecture with some of the actual problems that they might meet in actual city planning," he concluded. The third lecture in the series will be given tomorrow at 4 p.m. by Prof. Ernest M. Fisher of the School of Business Administration who will speak on "The Land Problem in Housing." He will be followed at 4:45 p.m. by Cordner who will speak on "The Architecture of Detroit's Slum Clearance and H o u s i n g Project." Blucher will give the last lecture in the series at 7:30 p.m. on "A Study for t h e Rehabilitation of, Blighted Areas with Particular Ref- erence to the Housing Problem in Detroit." All the lectures will be given in the main auditorium of the Architecture building and are open1 to the general public.' 1t'nhi Winner Of Football Contest (o Be on ~let (By Intercollegiate Press)1 ST. LOUIS, Dec. 9.-You don't have to attend football games to know all about them. This was dem- onstrated by H. Wilderman, of Me- nard, Ill. He was the winner of a $100 newspaper prize for predicting the! scores of a selected number of foot-' ball games at major colleges. It turned out Wildernan was Convict No. 4915 in the Illinois State Prison. The present economic situation is loaded with dynamite. --Dean1 William H. Spencer of the University of Chicago. March To Talk On Japanese Art Work A discussion of the high place that Japanese artists have gained in the art of wood block color printing will be given by Benjamin March, lecturer on Far Eastern Art in a public lec- ture on "The Art of the Color-Print" to be given at 3 p. m. today in the west gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall. The Japanese, according to Mr. March, have achieved the finest ex- amples of wood block printing in color in the history of that type of art. They are the only ones who con- tinue this work to any extent. Mr. March will discuss the per- sonalities of the various artists rep- resented at the exhibition. There are twenty-five examples of the painting of the Japanese woodblock masters of the Eighteenth and early Nineteenth Centuries, including originals of Ho- kusai, Harunobu, and Kaigetsudo. There is a collection of lithographs by Kazuma who, according to Mr. March, developed through experimen- tation a high degree of versatile ex- pression in the stone medium. The Japanese artist, who did his experi- mental work in lithography during the years 1916-19, is now concentrat- ing on wood blocking, he said. Stanford Man Says Robins Is Unbiased (Continued from Page 1) him up as lost, he was found aim- lessly wandering about in the Ken- tucky hills. He was cross-examined but could remember neither his name nor anything of the happenings of the previous two months. His lapse of memory was attributed to over- work and nervous strain and he spent several months recuperating. He knows his subject well," said Professor Bassett. "He has spent many years in Russia and has had personal contacts with all of the lead- ers of the Soviet Union." In an advance notice Colonel Rob- ins cites several changes in the Rus- sian government, during the 15-year period, that impressed him. "I was surprised at the air of permanence that was prevalent," Robins said. "The country has settled down to a new social order. Young people had grown to manhood without knowing any other system of living." The tickets for the lecture are on sale at Wahr's and are priced at 50 and 75 cents. CAMPUS TRAVEL BUREAU OFFICIAL BONDED AGENCY announces its seventeenth consecutive vacation schedule 0 Chicago $4.50 Rd. Trip Lowest fares and improved airplane and motor coach service to all points Tickets and information at CHUBB'S 10 a.m.-8p.m. Phone 5672 1' MONROE ALUMNI TO MEET T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of the Alumni Association, will be the principal speaker at the ban- quet of the University of Michigan Club of Monroe to be held Dec. 19. Union College, Schenectady, won its first radio debate from Hartwick College recently. 6. -ii PRINTING-Lowest City Prices THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown -206 North Main Next to Main Post Office Dial 2-1013 WE SELL TYPEWRITING PAPER j ;11 I1 ' -.M.O MILK-ICE CREAM A Complete Line of Fancy Forms and Molds for Your Christmas Dinner Superior Dairy Company Phone 23181 Agent DAVE FALK, '35E CHRISTMAS GIFT SSUGGEST ION$ Books Novels, biography, travel, - p o e t r y, religious, current subjects, etc. All newly pub- lished as well as standard titles. ( Stationery Featuring the newest of Crane, Eaton, Whiting and Cook writing papers in a wide range of price. a- Leather Goods Bill folds, card cases, brief cases, zipper bags, notebooks, 9 ornamental book covers. * Novelties Michigan jewelry, felt goods, book ends, diaries, calendars, bridge sets and playing cards, # Memory books. Fountain Pens By Sheaffer, Parker, Wahl, and Waterman. Children's Books A complete stock of those in- teresting new titles as well as the old favorites- priced from 10c Up. Xmas Cards TAKE HOME THE 1934 MICHIGAN CALENDAR WAHR'S THREE STORES Note These Low Sunday Dinner Prices-Then Remember-- There Is No Compromise With Quality at Mike Fingerle's Roast Young Tennessee Turkey, Cranberries . . . . 18c Broiled Texas Steer T-Bone Steak . . . . . . . . . 19C Broiled Small Tenderloin Steak . . . . . . . . . . 15c Baked Swift's Premium Virginia Ham . . . . . . . 15c Chicken a la King with Mushrooms on Biscuit . . . 15c Broiled Barbecued Style Pork Chop, Tavern . . . . 14c Ocean-Fresh Shrimp Newburg . . . . . . . . . . 15c Fried Deep Sea Scallops, Tartar Sauce . . . . . . . 15c We feature Fresh seafood direct from the Atlantic Sea Coast THE TAVERN CAFETERIA 338 Maynard Street "The Cleanliness Cafeteria" mike fingerle, proprietor On Sale Dec. 10th to Jan. 1st--Return Limit Jan. 15th Round Trip Bargains NEW YORK CITY $14.85 BUFFALO .........$8.10 CHICAGO .........85.00 PITTSBURGH.....$7.60 PHILADELPHIA . .813.35 BOSTON .........$17.60 CLEVELAND ......$5.60 ALBANY ..........$14.75 ST. LOUIS ........$8.50 WASHINGTON ... $12.60 Reductions Good on All Grey- hound Schedules. Special Thru Coaches to New York, Buffalo, and Chicago. All Reserved Seats - No Aisle Passengers. Make Your Reservation Now. Only Campus Greyhound Agents- THE PARROT MICH. UNION BILL O'NEILL JOHNBOLLOCK PHONE 4636 PHONE 4151 a Have You Noticed the Variety of Foods At 1J i"a -y -1 Y-- ,