THE MICHIG~AN TDAILY AUDY AUR t....A.YA A AA .X .SA UVA .S SATURDAY, JANUARY A. .bl Al £ :l 1 la lA. A. 1T Cl 1 1./ r 1 ea .IG DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. Civil Service Wants Charone Of Postmasters Commission Urges Change As Means For Efficiency In Three Classes Car Dug Out Of California Flood Debris CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY I SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1934 VOL. XLWV No. 73 Notices Hours for Registration and Pay- ment of Semester Fees: Students will register all day Thursday and Fri- day and the forenoon of Saturday, February 6, 9, and 10, in all units ex- cept Law and Medicine. The Cash- ier's Office will collect fees during these days in Barbour Gymnasium under the same arrangements as during the first semester. Doors will be open from 8:00 to 11:30 a. m. and from 1:00 to 3:30 p. m. on Thurs-' day and Friday, and from 8:00 to 12:00 noon on Saturday. Students registering in Law and Medicine must pay fees in the Cash- ier's office at time of registration and classification in those units. Shirley W. Smith. Mechanical Engineering Students: Will those students who are to be candidates for degres in February, June and August 1934 kindly observe the notices on the bulletin board near room 221, West Engineering building. Varsity Band: There will be no trumpet tryouts today. All tryouts have been postponed until second se- mester. The full Band will play at the basketball game Monday, Jan. 8. Meet at Field House at 7:00 p. m. in full marching uniform. Bring march folio. Morris Hall will be open at 6:45 p. m. There will be no truck to take the large instruments. man attendance, a hearty welcome is extended to all upper classmen and townspeople. Congregational Church: Mr. Heaps will speak Sunday at 10:45 a. m. on "Wishing for Wings," an address ap- propriate to the New Year. The Student Fellowship will meet at 6 o'clock for supper which will be followed by an illustrated lecture by Mr. Heaps on "The Sign of the Cross," the story by Wilson Barrett with slides taken from the motion picture. The public is welcome to at- tend the lecture which will be given in the parlor of the church about 6:45. Harris Hall: Sunday evening at seven o'clock, Professor Russell C. Hussey will lead the regular "Con- versatione," his topic will be "Spe- cial Phases of Evolution." St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship Sunday are: 8:00 a. m. Holy Communion, 9:00 a. in. Church School, 11:00 a. m. Kinder- garten, 11:00 a. in. Holy Communion and Sermon, "The Significance of Christ for Modern Thought" by the Reverend Henry Lewis. Graduate Outing Club will meet at the Coliseum for a skating party not later than 3:15 p. in., Sunday, Jan. 6. Please see Mr. Mason, the treas- urer of the club-before entering the building. WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.-(P)-Say- ing it was convinced the removal of all political consideration in the ap- pointment of postmasters -would ef- fect an economy, the Civil Service Commission recommended to Presi- dent Roosevelt today the placing of all first, second and third class post- masterships under civil service law. The commission made the recom- mendation in its annual report, re- newing a proposal made for a num- ber of years, and at the same time expressing the opinion that other administrative offices which are not policy-determing should be brought within the competitive classified .serv- ice. These would include collectors of customs and collectors of internal revenue, as well as deputy collectors of internal revenue, deputy mar- shals and most attorneys. It noted the President recently requested the Postmaster General to draft a bill to provide for appointing of the post- masters of the three classes under civil service ashthe fourth classpost- masters now are appointed. "The chief real duty of the Post Office Department is to collect and distribute the mails satisfactorily and at the lowest possible cost," said the commission. "A postmastership, therefore, is a business office and is not properly po- litical. The commission believes the most practical way of bringing these postmasterships within the competi- tive classified service would be to set by law a definite date, say a num- ber of. years hence, after which all offices of postmaster would be filled through open competition or pro- motion under the civil service law and rules. "In the opinion of the "commis- sion, the law should provide that in- cumbents are not to be brought into the competitive classified service with their offices. The change would ne- cessitate the repeal of existing laws, which provide for four-year terms and confirmation by the Senate. Promotion of worthy subordinates to these higher offices would aid in the effort to make the Federal civil service more attractive as a career." CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Phone 2-214. Placc advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. The classified columns close at ifve o'clock previous-to day of insertions. Box Numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in Advance-11cp er reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line ofr three or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone Rate-15c per reading line ofr one or two insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. 10% srdiscount if paid within ten days irom the date of last insertion. Mi amu tnree lines per insertion. By Contract, per line-2 lines daily, one' month...............8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months......3c 2 lines daily, college year . 7c 4 lines E. 0. D., 'college year..7c 100 lines used as desired......9c 300 linesuasca as desired.......8c 1.000 lines used as desired...7c 2,000 lines used as desired. 6 The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per inch of 7 > point Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Cc per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6e per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10 per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. LAUNDRY WE DO your laundry work fbr one- half the usual price. Phone 2-3739. 8x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x In Storm Flour Hours; Makes Safe Landing -Associr ;ed Press Photo It was necessary to do considerable digging to reclaim cars buried by silt and debris in the southern California flood. This picture shows the extent to which one car was buried at Montrose, Calif. e r " Attorney-General Cmings Ask For Broad Anti-Crie Laws Cognce-t Graduation R e c i t a 1: Margaret MacGregor, student of Professor Palmer Christian, will give a grad- uation recital, Monday, January 8, at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium, to which the general public with the ex- ception of small children is invited. The program in full is as follows: Andriessen: Chorale in D minor; Bach: Prelude and Fugue in A minor; Mulet: Roriace; Jepson: Pan- tomime; Rebuke: Sonata on the Ninety-Fourth Psalm. Events Today Rifle Match: There will be a rifle match between the Women's axed Men's Rifle teams at 8 p. in. at the Women's Athletic Building. Outdoor Club: There will be a splash party tonight at the Intra- mural Bldg., 7:30 until 1.0:00. All those desiring to participate must register with Miss McCormick at the League. Cost: Ten cents for mem- bers, fifteen for non-members. Philippine-Michigan Club: The commemoration of the thirty-seventh anniversary of the death of Dr. Jose Rizal, Philippine national hero and martyr, will take place at 8:00 p. in. in Lane Hall. An appropriate pro- gram has been arranged for the oc- casion which will be followed by a dance. American friends as well as others who are interested to know more about the Philippines are cor- dially invited. Coming Events Economics Club: Dr. D. M. Phelps will address the club on "Economic Conditions in South America" on Monday, January 8, at 7:45 in room 304 of the Union. Members of the staffs in Economics and Business Administration, and graduate stu- dents in these departments are in- vited to attend. All Graduate Students of Educa- cation: Graduate Club meeting, Mon- day, January 8, 7:00 o'clock, Library of the University Elementary School. Miss Ethel Wooden of Pontiac will discuss the content and method of her nationwide study on the "De- velopment of Social Intelligence Through Part-time Education." Freshman Round Table: Next Sun- day morning, 9:30, at the Michigan League' Professor Waterman will speak on the subject "Man's Rela- tion to the Infinite in a Changing World." In addition to regular fresh- Lutheran Student Club: Regular, meeting 5:30 p. m. Sunday, at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, East Washing- ton Street at South Fifth Avenue. The speaker will be Colonel Frederick C. Rogers, head of the Department of Military Science and Tactics. Student-Walther League regular meeting Sunday at 5:30 p. m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. There will be a supper and a Round-Table dis- cussion. Every one is cordially in- vited to attend. Avukah: Open forum given by the Avukah Chapter at the Hillel Foun- dation on Sunday at 7:30 p. in. Ben- jamin Baum, '35, Law, will speak on "Nazi Germany - A Challenge to Civilization." All those interested are urged to attend. Four Facuity Men Get Club Positions Four members of the faculty of the English department were chosen for important posts by the Modern Language Association of America at the annual meeting of that body held Dec. 27 through 29 in St. Louis. Prof. Howard Mumford Jones was re-elected, to the chairmanship of the section on Victorian Literature. Prof. Earl L. Griggs was elected chairman of the section on "Words- worth and His Contemporaries." Pro- fessor Griggs has recently gained added prominence by the publication of a volume of hitherto unpublished letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, which he edited. Prof. C. C. Fries was elected chair- man of the section on Middle English and Practical Phonetics. Dr. Albert H. Marckwardt was elected secretary of the section on present-day English. t t I f i k it ,, 1 Thomas Says War Will' Be Before Peace (Continued from Page 1) 1936 election. He said he would be receptive to a possible union of Farmer-Labor Party adherents with the Socialist Party. Mr. Thomas praised the Roosevelt Administration for its "realization that laissez-faire capitalism is dead" and for the vital Section 7-A of the National Industrial Recovery Act, which gives labor the right to choose its own representatives for collective bargaining with the employing class. The most pernicious feature of the nine-month-old Roosevelt tenure, ac- cording to Mr. Thomas, is the "fail- ure to seize the opportunity to na- tionalize the banks when they were thrown into the Administration's lap." The abysmal failure of the London Economic Conference was also ascribed by the Socialist leader to a diplomatic blunder on the part of President Roosevelt. siderable amount of detail work and accounting. A study of college orders over a period of time reveals interesting things.' Each college has its indi- viduality. No two orders are exactly the same in the type of books se- lected. Some books are ordered by every college on the list. One that has been especially .popular in the last few months is "Life Begins At Forty." WASHINGTON, Jan 5. - (P) -+ Laws to broaden the Federal Gov- ernment's anti-crime powers through regulation of the firearms traffic and prevention of interstate transporta- tion of stolen property will be asked of Congress by Atty.-Gen. Homer S. Cummings. In his annual report to Congress today, Cummings said: "Suitable bills and supporting memoranda will be prepared and made available to the appropriate committees. "Amongst these measures may be mentioned: Regulation of traffic in machine guns and frearms; prison escapes, including complicity of pris- on officers or employes; resisting and killing of a Federal officer; interstate transportation of stolen property; simplification of removal proceed- ings; escape from lawful custody while awaiting trial; waiver of in- dictment in grand jury in certain criminal cases; and regulation of alibi defenses. Asks Law Enactment "Congress should also give serious consideration to the enactment of laws providing for uniformity of practice and procedure in proceed- ings involving the acquisition of land by the Federal Government." Cummings did not give additional details about the legislation he had in mind. It is known, though, that his aides would like to obtain an ex- pansion of the Dyer Act, which makes interstate transportation of stolen automobiles a Federal offense. They feel, too, that extradition proceedings now are so involved in some instances as to delay, if not hamper justice..- There has been considerable discussion also of re- quiring attorneys who plan an alibi Discuss Status Of MilitaryOb jectors COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 5.- (/P)- The status of five students who. would rather be dismissed than par- ticipate in compulsory military train- ing at Ohio State University became a mystery today, as a city-wide con- troversy raged about them. The only definite information from an authoritative source came from J. L. Morrill, vice-president of the university, and a member of President George W. Rightmire's committee on conscientious objectors. Said Morrill: "Obviously, there is but one course for the president to take -- dismis- sal." Dr. Rightmire was unavailable for comment, but previously, on receipt of letters from the five adamant stu- dents, he had said their attitude left "but one possible course." defense to submit their contentions to the prosecution before the trial. Plans Suggested Various firearm control plans have been advocated, among them one by Senator Royal S. Copeland (Dem.), New York, chairman of the Senate Crime Investigating Committee, un- der w h i c h machine-gun dealers would be licensed and Federal rec- ords kept of scratches left on bullets fired from each weapon. Those rec- ords, it is argued, would permit fu- ture positive identification of the firearm from which any bullet was fired. Included in Cumming;s' report were statements by heads of sundry Jus- tice Department agencies, among them one from Pat Malloy, resigned assistant attorney- general in charge of the criminal division, whose place has been taken by Joseph B. Keenan. Malloy said: "It has been the policy to assist state authorities in every manne' possible. Marked progress has been made in this connection with so- called 'racketeering' and 'gangster' cases, as well as those involving kid- naping and extortion." NOTICE ARCADE CAB. Dial 6116. Large com- fortable cabs. Standard rates. 2x LIRETTE'S shampoo and finger wave 75c every day. Dial 3083. 103 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Grey double-breasted over- coat, make Parker-Bridget. U. Hall. Finder notify 2-2286. Reward 235 LOST: Downtown, one pair good gloves, sheepskin lined. Notify Rus- sel Betts, Milner Hotel. Reward. 236 LOST: Dark blue scarf with blue and, white spots. Lost either in or be-, tween R & S Restaurant and Main Library, first week vacation. Call Vanderloot, 2-2541. Reward. 231 WANTED -------- -------_ ZOOM RENT: Young woman to share home with three other young women. Call 6976 or 5606. 237 WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main. 5x TAXICABS TAXI-Phone 9000. Seven-passenger cars. Only standard rates. 1x Second Adventure During Month For Mail Pilot Dean W. Burford NEWARK, N. J., Jan. 5. - (R') - Dean W. Burford wrote another thriller of the night skies early today when he brought his mail plane safely down at Newark Airport after being storm-bound more than four hours. It was his second air adventure within a month. Dec. 11 he bailed out of a mail plane over Cambria County, Pennsylvania, when his plane was caught in a terrific snowstorm. Burford took off from the airport at 12:03 a. m. with avaluable mail cargo bound for Pittsburgh. Forty- five minutes later he advised the field by radiophone that his wings were coating with ice and that he was ex- periencing "great difficulty." Heavy fog had settled over Newark and a sleet and rain fall began. The radiophone went suddenly si- lent, and ground officials expressed alarm, fearing that Burford, a vet- eran pilot, might have lost his way in the black, fog-choked skies. Several New Jersey communities reported hearing a plane's motor, and efforts were made to resume com- munication with Burford to guide him to a landing field. Communication was restored at 3:15 a. m., at which time Burford said he had sufficient gas to remain aloft seven hours, and that he would remain in the vicinity of the field until an opportunity to attempt a landing presented itself. He landed at 4:40 a. m. Burford, whose home is Columbus, O., was one of two pilots who took to their parachutes the morning of Dec. 11 when their planes were caught in an Allegheny snowstorm. He landed unhurt, floating down gently while the $35,000 plane crashed and was wrecked. A cargo which included a shipment of dia- monds valued at $75,000 was sal- vaged. Ask Detroit Council For Opinion On City's Cafes LANSING, Jan. 5.-(P)---The State Liquor Control Commission Thursday asked the Detroit Common Council for a recommendation as to the number of places to serve hard liquor by the glass in the Detroit metropolitan area. Under the law, Detroit may have as many as 2,093 glass-sale estab- lishments. Chairman Frank A. Pic- ard, of the commission, said he hoped that the maximum would not exceed 500. Grandsonf Forer Kaiser Says Hitler Isiineptd i 1 a i i i E 3 a t j i NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 5. - (P) - talized the force of its engine and Prince Louis Ferdinand, grandson of set it running again on the highways the former GermandKaiser, says that of the world. "An unfortunate accident!" That much of the world looks at Adolf was the way he referred to the World Hitler in a false light and fails to War. see he is "a human being with an "I won't let myself believe that an- artistic temperament, a creative urge, other 'war is close at hand," he ex- and a desire to bring peace and hap- cfaimed. "Such talk is foolish. The piness to his country." last is yet too fresh in men's minds. A "great democratic upheaval" There is too much to be done con- provided the surge that lifted Hitler structively in the world to talk or and the Nazi forces to power in Ger- dream of the destruction of war." many, in the opinion of the second With all that, the prince shied son of the former crown prince, Fred- away from posing as an expert on erick Wilhelm, voiced recently when'the political affairs of his country he came to New Orleans on a busi- and made it plain that he wanted ness trip. nobody in America to call him Under the Hohenzollern law, the "prince." marriage of his elder brother to a "The very person asking me about commoner puts the prince, who is 26, political conditions in Germany in direct line for the throne should knows more than I do about the it ever be restored. situation if he follows all that is said He likened Germany to a fine old in the press," he continued. "I don't automobile that has suffered much like to be called 'prince' in America at the hands of an undeserved fate. Instead, I prefer "Dr. Ferdinand.' And, he said, Nazi forces under the That title is his by virtue of a leadership of Hitler are functioning Ph.D. degree received from the Uni- as a "new crankshaft" that has revi-; versity of J$erlin. I Purchia sing Office Set Up For Schools (Continued from Page 1) the selection although frequently suggestions are made when advice is asked. Books bought vary in price from as low as 10 cents for a needed pamphlet to $300 or more for ex- pensive reference works. Often, sec- ond-hand works serve the purpose. Some librarians send in small orders several times a week, while others submit large orders at intervals dur- ing the year. Annual expenditures on the grants average over $200,000. Almost 4,000 separate payments have been made since the office was established in February, 1931. This involves a con- 1 r z t a t F SPECIALS ... Steak and Chop Dinners We Serve Only the Choicest Meats SCHLITZ ON DRAUGHT -- ALL BOTTLED BEERS RICE'S RESTAURANT 120 West Liberty ENDS TONIGHT TILLIE AND GUS W. C. Fields Alison Skipwtor/h COMEDY - NOVELTIES - NEWS O'Clock Vaudeville Show GEO. LA TOUR & PEGGY, Puzzling Novelty ELINOR JENET Impersonator of HollywLood Stars MALVIN & REBA, Comedy FLASH BROS, Musical Novelty LI BERAL RELIGION TODAY SEVEN ADDRESSES BY PROF. J. F. AUER, Ph.D. Of Harvard University Author of "Humanism States Its Case" at THE FELLOWSHIP OF LIBERAL RELIGION (Unitarian) State and Huron Streets January 7-14 Dates --Topics -- Hours Sunday Evening, Jan. 7-7:30 "Student Contributions to rli.- gion"^(Auspice;of"Liberal Stu- dents Union) Monday Evening, Jan. 8-8:00 "Teaching Religion in Home and Church" (Auspices of Women's Alliance) Tuesday Evening, Jan. 9-8;00 "The New Reformation in Europe" Wed. Evening, Jan. 10-8:00 "Present Tendencies in Religious Thought" Thurs. Evening, Jan. 11-8:00 "Humanism-- The Swing Awa from Fundamentalism and Mo d- ernism." 11 if CONTJNUOUS TODAY! 10c to 6 P.M. - 15c after 6 SPARKLING NEW MUSICAL HIT! "Rainbow Over Broadway" sir . r_